ample acceptable amiability

At a young age, Hakon learned he was different.

Everyone else was always talking about something. Hakon only liked to listen.

It wasn’t that he was unsure of what to say. He thought other’s cared what he had to say, too. He just didn’t find talking all that appealing.

As he grew older, he became more adept at communicating with his face and body language–allowing him to become more and more silent without others really noticing.

His family was surprised to see how popular he became once he went to college. They had all been very concerned he would be unable to make new friends or find a romantic partner.

They underestimated how much people like talk and how rarely they feel heard.

Hakon eventually found himself as a sort of therapist. He didn’t offer advice or anything like that. Most people spoke of the same concerns–not being seen or heard, masked as something else. Every conversation, they felt like the other people were just waiting for their turn to speak.

But not Hakon. So they’d talk to him, and feel better.

True to his nature, he sat quietly while Maryl gave guidance to Courtney.

“This applies to you, too, Hakon,” Maryl said, detecting his distraction.

Part of the Twelve Stories collection.

The Water Shine Persists

Technically, Courtney’s eyes were colorless. That’s the case for all so-called blue-eyed people. If it were possible to look into her eyes with no light present, her iris would be colorless. She loved this fact.

She was pretty sure it was a fact.

Sitting on the beach, Maryl requests that Courtney focus.

“Sorry,” she says. “I got lost in thought.”

“You don’t need to apologize,” Maryl replies. “When you notice, or when someone else notices, that you’ve lost focus, simply return to the object.”

“Sorry, object?” Courtney ventures to ask.

“Again, do not apologize when you have done nothing wrong. The focus or object of the practice. In our case, the object is the horizon.”

Courtney stops herself from apologizing again and directs her gaze to the horizon.

“Remember, when it feels right, when the reflection of the sun on the surface begins to fill your eyes, close them quickly to trap the light, and then just watch,” Maryl instructs.

Courtney follows Maryl’s instructions. With her eyes closed, she sees the electric glow behind her eyes coalesce into a scene, but the next thing she knows, she’s thinking about how she can almost taste the salt of the sea through her nose.

Part of the Twelve Stories collection.