Yet if I try to imagine this [state of being] I am restricted to the resources of my own
mind,
and those resources are inadequate to the
task. I cannot perform it either by imagining additions
to my present experience, or by imagining
segments gradually subtracted from it, or by imagining
some
combination of additions, subtractions and modifications—Thomas Nagle, “What Is It Like to Be a Bat?”
Habanero Pepper wasn’t the first Claymation FVW denizen to
dream, but his dream was different. Habanero Pepper dreamed about two hairy
legs. At first, it was only one leg, but then it was joined by another, and
then still more later on. Habanero would not have known how to describe the
strange tentacle-like appendage with a small flattened hand at the bottom that
extended five stubby digits of its own; but, he had carefully observed Hand’s
recent death and resurrection, and had noticed that Hand was attached to a
tentacle called arm, and that arm was itself connected to a large pear-shaped
mass, out of which extended another arm, with its own hand. Thus, there were
two hands; and even more bizarre, were the lower appendages. Banana and Tomato
knew to call them legs, and since Banana and Tomato were amongst the most
curious of the Fruits and Vegetables, it was only natural that Habanero—who was
also quite observant—adopt these strange designations as well. Moreover, having
had a dream of one, and then a companion leg, each covered with a lichen sheet
of long mangy carpeting—or hairs—it was inevitable that Habanero would invent
and then append more compound appellations to his strange dream creature.
The next night Habanero dreamt the creature again; only this
time, it consisted of numerous legs, moving about in disarray like an
assemblage of forks and knives arranged by a Dadaist; all going in opposite
directions, and exploring intrepid itineraries without any oversight or
purpose. But Habanero knows, having seen the blueprint for such a creature in
the Hand prototype, that the legs are attached by two’s—although he can’t
really give any good reason why it shouldn’t be in some other combination like
three legs or even more—and are joined by the odd pear-like structure, whose lower
part narrows into a waist.
But still, something is missing. Two legs and a waist need
some kind of executive management; otherwise, they just march inexorably
forwards until they drop from exhaustion and all the hairs on the lichen-sheets
fall out and run for cover in disarray; or, something like that, as Habanero
doesn’t quite distinguish between compound parts that are inert by themselves
and executive parts that stand back and direct in a supervisory capacity. The
rest of the creature functions as a mere factotum, whose purpose is, to do the
errands and muscle work for the administrative sections of the apparatus, or so
Habanero assumes. In other words, only one part can think on its own—how silly.
Therefore, the rest of the various appendages and lumpy pear shaped things,
wait for that part to give the order; and that part is called “Head.” Head is
the managerial portion of the hairy legs creature, and Habanero imagines it
attached directly to the waist and legs, before realizing that it needs to have
the Pear-shaped mass, and the arms and hands—like Hand does; only, this
creature is far more hirsute, and this makes it much scarier to dream about so
frequently. Not that it seemed particularly dangerous to Habanero, not after
the endless predations of Hand, and its sinister companion double, who up until
recently, no one in the Claymation FVW Fruit Bowl had ever actually seen, or
even thought to conjure in their most vivid dreams.
Then Habanero Pepper has an epiphany: Realizing that the
shock of this gestalt shift has now pushed him completely into the temporal
present he declares, “I will call it ‘Bigfoot,’ because of those flattened
hands compressed under the weight of those powerful legs; and, because of those
stubby digits emerging from the bowels of those flattened hands—those
‘feet’—like terrified children slithering out of a sewer pipe bomb shelter.”
Habanero is exquisitely pleased with himself, and his tiny lips change color
like a sound-sensitive lava lamp reacting to the tempo shifts of a King Crimson
record, inducing a frisky playfulness. “’Foot,’ what a funny word,” thinks
Habanero Pepper, and he begins to giggle, “Tee-hee-hee-hee.” When he giggles,
his little orange body shakes like a dancing fava bean and his mouth lips turn
deep red and then all silvery, forming the shape of two sinewy undulating
dolphins joined at the muzzle bumps. His dolphins also find the word ‘Foot’ to
be quite hilarious, especially when the word, “Big’ is placed in front of it.
Words, of course, were new to denizens of the Claymation FVW;
they had always existed, but had been noticed only peripherally, as sharp feelings
bordered by color patterns, signifying a cuneiform screen crawl. Now, they had
taken on a fresh sensory resonance; not just as vibrations, but as actual
ruptures in the curious wave-pattern realm of sounds. This was quite an
accomplishment for Claymation creatures, especially for Fruits and Vegetables,
whom, it must be remembered, had no ears; a sign, in fact, that they were in
the grip of some acute Renaissance of self-awareness; which, in itself, was far
preferable to being in the acute grip of Hand, who now resurrected, still
lurked in the world of Kitchen. And Habanero knew that Hand was probably the
inspiration for these nightly sojourns through the portal of the muse and into
a world of oddly imagined, tangible objects.
But Habanero has a strange feeling about these dreams; he
does not believe—in the depth of his seed membranes—that they resonate
transparently. Instead, he can sense that the strange calculations hovering
about the images of these still disembodied feet, hands, and other physical
manifestations of this strange creature, articulate its existence in a very
peculiar and specific way; and this ‘way’ seems to foreclose on any variety in
Habanero’s invocation of its being. It is like making an adjustment to an image
after the image has already partially resolved itself; and in doing so, added
garish colors and patterns that, while separate from the original, are expected
to assimilate into the larger structure without dissonance. He flashed on the
picture of a tree sapling with two large metal braces attached on either side
to guide its growth into a particular pre-planned pattern.
For, unlike Habanero—who could sense temporally jagged, but
intimate tactile manipulations performed on his Claymation bodice—the ‘Bigfoot’
apparatus, if that was even close to the most accurate word for it, was a
largely self-propelled and autonomous entity. How then, could its being be
gerrymandered in such a way as to incorporate it into a single frame of
reference? Surely, an autonomous creature would move hither and yon, and in
every other direction, when reacting to even the most subtle intimation of
pressure from any particular point on its internal compass. It could never be
one thing for long, as its complexity was already a source of convection that
would generate all manner of strange impressions and subsidence’s like radar
signals for it to follow. And ultimately, to itemize each part that comprised
its wholeness, as if they were in close proximity to one another only by some
strange functional coincidence, was to elide consideration of its essential
completeness. That completeness was a thing that could be seen as color or
picture but not known as a vibrating resonance.
Still, the sheer pleasure of having a method of describing such
exotic stuff was a powerful seduction, and Habanero Pepper had discovered the fun
to be had experimenting with nonsense names and phrases. There was
Decalibratoryemancipation, Phytoplanktonianquietcessesitation,
Zimbrosculatoryreticinotation and Carnivoretdeliberatethymeeresignatoryparrotation.
Those were only a few; for he could make words that stretched out past the
boundaries of the Claymation FVW and into the very heart of the
macro-inhabitations of the very large—some as far as a substance called ‘Moon;’
or was it an object, he was never quite sure? Habanero pepper also liked to
repeat assertive commands, in the inimitable FVW way—as Claymation Fruits and
Vegetables could not literally make sounds with their Claymation mouths—such
as, “Prepare the Virtual Nematode;” “launch the Infinite Phylacteries;” “smite
the recalcitrant Glyptodonts;” and, his favorite, “aerate the cosmic nasal
inhaler!” These statements had little meaning for Habanero Pepper; as words
themselves, when combined in this way, seemed superfluous. Yet, there was a
form of reality etched in the spaces behind it—partly obscured by its own
schematics, but still quite viable in many ways—that he sensed and was
fascinated by. It was, he knew in the depths of his seed-cradle, a manipulation
of consciousness that colored it with its own artifactual qualities. But, it
had its own poetry and time signatures as well; which, from a purely aesthetic
point of view—a concept that Habanero Pepper expressed as a shimmering
accumulation of incorrigibly promiscuous color—gave him a tingle of mouth-lip
scalding pleasure.
Consciousness itself was addictive; after all, one didn’t
really know anything else—it was the available wire mesh through which everything
was pulped and filtered. Therefore, it only made sense to conceive of things
through this narrow juicing mechanism, even if it atomized objects into
infinitesimal points where two essentially empty spaces intersected into a
virtual field of immanent meaning; the modular platform out of which one could
construct the discretely arranged elements, forming the framework of an idea.
In other words, Habanero Pepper thought—or, more literally, ‘flashed’ in myriad
colors and impressions—the very act of thinking determined what it was that one
actually thought about and how it ought to be construed; and, while this
process was seemingly automatic, Habanero could sense that, in whatever form it
took, it also pinched off a small part of the world from the larger mass through
which it was extracted and then put that residue under a giant magnifying lens.
And, even when it ascertained—through the various vocabularies that it utilized
like a cheesecloth to wring the moisture out of wet lumps of milk curds,
vegetable matter, or clay—the total meaning of the everything that surrounded
the more particular things of which Habanero was a single example; it could not
help but reduce the sum of those ‘things’ to artifacts of its own peculiar
expression of the world. Habanero Pepper did not know how to get out of such an
unlikely and labyrinthine trap.
He likened this paradox to another dream he remembered; this
one about a strange spindly legged creature which had a large proboscis,
teardrop shaped skeletonized leaves jutting out from both sides of its
pear-like middle section, and was entirely covered with a bony carapace. The
creature would stick its proboscis into a scaly sheet of dried soil, which was
punctuated by individual strands of a thick chitin-like elephant grass jutting
from small tuber shaped holes at regular intervals; and as it did this, the
ground around the drilling proboscis would become red and rise slightly. Then
the creature would pull out its narrow thorn-shaped trunk and promptly
regurgitate a thick chowder of viscous liquid before sticking its nose right
back in, and then sucking up material from under the dermal soil layers, along
with the very stuff it just spit out. Habanero Pepper couldn’t gauge exactly
what this creature was, but he could understand that it didn’t distinguish
between its own effluent and the nourishment it obtained from the ground while
using it. It was all one big messy suspension whose flavor was as much a
reflection of the ingredients in the creature’s vomitus as it was a product of
the nutrients in the ground under the elephant grass. When it was finished, it would
extract its proboscis completely, which was always followed by a small
trickling of red sap from the tiny hole that the creature had just drilled.
The dream always gave Habanero Pepper the same sensation
afterwards, of a tiny hot wire running across a small section of his outer
skin, and throbbing in a staccato fashion, as if he too were being drilled by
the same spindly legged creature. It would send a shudder into the deepest
regions of his seed-membranes, causing his Claymation lips to quiver like a
radiating wave in a diagram superimposed over a map of a city in a hypothetical
schematic of a nuclear blast. Habanero imagined this sensation personified as a
tinier version of the same spindly legged creature, trying to communicate
something important by generating whispered skin-quakes through his elastic
outer fibers—which, of course, was not so strange to a Claymation vegetable who
often conversed in color patterns and vibrations. He knew that it all had
something to do with his dreamed vision of Bigfoot; more to the point, the fact
that he might have dreamt Bigfoot wrong—especially now that the creature had
taken on characteristics too complex to be easily described or even understood.
It had gone from a strange cartoon to something too varied to be encapsulated,
and it continued to ramify into unknowable branches of being.
Perhaps this was one of the principle qualities of a
monster: an animate presence too large to be comprehended except as an obvious
simplification into schematic representation, lest it overwhelm the beholder,
and reproduce within his/her consciousness the characteristics of the keenly
observed monster itself. Such a choice invariably formed into a dichotomy: one
either distorted the nature of what was intuitively understood, or was, in
essence, distorted by it. This did not seem like a fair appraisal of the
infinitely divergent arbors that intertwined the aforesaid reality into dense
lattices of impenetrable kudzu. Surely, nothing this complex could simply be
reduced to an either-or phenomenological proposition: the beholder had to at
least try to understand it, even at the risk of merging with the identity of
such an infinitely conceived world. Then again, drowning himself in the
particularities of the ‘Bigfoot’ realm was part of what made Habanero’s dream
so appealing; that is, as long as the immersion was temporary.
For indeed, Bigfoot was Habanero’s vomitus, his injection
well liquid, his extractive juice—his cheesecloth, in fact—through which he now
comprehended an entire world of similar creatures, their movements and strange
mannerisms; even the odd audio waves that they created by vibrating special
glands and structures near their flesh-mouths. It was a strange world, and this
was the source of his aforementioned difficulties; as he had no idea whether
knowing it through an aperture called ‘Bigfoot’ was to really know it at all,
or simply to conceive of it through the matrix of a fantasy being whose own
identity reflected some obscure aspect of that world, now foregrounded as if it
were the only thing dominating the skyline of its peculiar metaphysics.
Later, he would dream entire species of odd flesh-monsters,
such as the white-gloved hordes; animated creatures—like those of the
Claymation FVW, but more spidery and modular. They would march into a garish
curtain of orange and purple smoke, before coming out through an evocation of
its other side; a paper barrier that they would break through, like an idea
forming from the raw stuff of thought at its moment of gestalt. These masses,
these mices, these mackenzy mice; these Mickey-Mouse Mice hordes—what were
they, and how did they become these words, shiny and smelling of antiseptic,
dripping from the outer membranes of Habanero’s orange tinted pudding-skin sheathing,
at the moment of his awakening? It seemed as if, at a certain, very specific,
time, lost to memory like a recurring primeval galactic collision, all of these
dreams had come together in a way reminiscent of an agglutination of molecules
that comprise a larger substance. Habanero had no idea what this substance
might be, but he could feel its weight slightly altering his center of gravity,
like a halo of those previously imagined and barely discerned digits, forming
and shaping his Claymation bodice into poses that would pass instantaneously
into the next configuration in the cycle without being noticed.
Permeating the time-line between the dilating wave-function
of expectation, and the collapsing singularity transpiring as a convergence,
just after the gestalt of resolution is made manifest, Habanero shifts tenses until
he is propelled into the present moment. However, he doesn’t want to get ahead
of himself, and be several rooms down, so to speak, in the context before
pretext, in places that haven’t had a chance to solidify into a tangible
reality because they have yet to be imagined. So, while sitting in the
movie-theater-seat sized channel between the already happened and the yet to
occur, he adjusts his chronometer ever so slightly in the interest of temporal
balance. Now he’s just right, for he knows that he has to be ahead of the
realization, so that he can augment it towards a kind of clarity.
This is a bit like riding a wave of tomato juice, while
standing on a petrified running-board of mango skin. If Habanero can avoid
becoming ponderously entangled in the cocktail glass debris at the other end,
he can navigate his way into an understanding of Bigfoot and its peculiarly
off-kilter world of aforementioned tangible objects. Still, Habanero has no
idea what ‘riding-a-wave-of-tomato-juice would be like; and even less of any
coherent notion of why someone as inviolable as Tomato would even consider
turning himself into a juice. Nonetheless, he knows that he must come to understand this
process—even if it is only a way of expressing something metaphorically through
the strangeness of words; which themselves, still feel novel to Habanero, looming
about him like anthropomorphic trees in a Maurice Sendak jungle. For this
unusual itinerary is as close as he can come to a feeling that approximates the
radiating green and yellow sunburst that he intuits as equivalent to the word
‘progress.’
The best and most effective way to achieve this, of course,
would be through a process of controlled dreaming. Habanero Pepper thus
concentrates his energy, until it gathers like disparate clumps of individuals
coalescing into a large crowd, and reaches a crescendo of density similar to
that of tightly packed bodies around the figure of a single charismatic speaker.
This speaker has a transparent, light-bulb shaped head, which begins to expand
exponentially, transmogrifying into a cartographic chart of an unknown territory
comprising spatialized vibrations of varying resonances. The whole episode is
rather short lived, transitional and very ambiguous; Habanero is shot, as if
from a large metal breach, into a rapidly disintegrating beryllium mass, before
finding himself in a field of tall green shoots—the proverbial grass of his
Bigfoot dream.
In a large convex space that to Habanero’s unseasoned glance
looks like a blue hat over the spires of nearby greenery, he can detect
movement in the distance. Soon, the remote rustling is replaced by a percussive
vibration that is accompanied by small dark projections of vague shadowy forms
coming across the horizon, and breaking the illusion that the sky is an
homogenous blue mass. Instead, Habanero can see hundreds of hairy-leg pairs
moving rapidly, in the same graceful way like falling snow bouncing along the
ridges and protrusions of a white hillside. He doesn’t know where such images
come from, or if they could be called, analogies; but, he can see that the
alternating flexing of leg muscles is not at all tree like in its motions—as no
wind-bent plant, no matter how poetically it bestrides the air, can match the
sheer complexity and athleticism of these movements—even if they are of a
similar color and solidity.
There is a moment that always arrives soon after the first
instant of recognition of type, where one sees a familiar particularity that
allows for distinctions that set generic examples of an entity apart from one
another, and bequeaths individual characteristics to the specific entity most
prominent within one’s field of vision. This individual—one of numerous Bigfoot
creatures—was the one that Habanero now decided was probably the most amenable
to direct communication. A few days earlier, such a notion would have been unthinkable; and, even now, Habanero barely knew what to
say to this hulking presence, or how to reconcile the numerous barriers that
existed between them, and which might result in some colossal, and thereby
consequential, misunderstanding. But it was worth the risk—especially since the
worst case scenario involved little more than a quick shuddering as Habanero
re-awakened into the Claymation FVW realm—so he took the first awkward step in
that direction, and did something no other denizen of the Fruitbowl had ever
done before, in any state of consciousness: he spoke an actual word.
“You…” It didn’t come out sounding as he would have
expected, but it resonated correctly, so he waited for a response.
“hhhmph” the Bigfoot grunted.
Habanero was delighted at this strange vocalization; it was
like discovering a strange music broadcasting from the magnetosphere of a distant
planet, emanating from a frequency picked up on one’s clock radio.
“Hmmmph” Bigfoot grunted again, in a slightly lower
register, causing his tiny orange counterpart to break out in Claymation Fruit
and Vegetable mirthfulness. The huge creature just stared back at him, as if
trying to figure out exactly how to respond. Habanero, pulls himself forward
into the present tense, and is now smiling so broadly that his mouth-lip
dolphin-shapes are beginning to stretch and contort, looking almost as if they
could separate and swim off in opposite directions. He lets out a shrill cackle
of friendly laughter, “hee-hee-hee-hee,” and the creature smiles in response,
but then bares his teeth. This ambiguous reaction is unexpected and Habanero
must think of something to say that can be more clearly understood.
“Zeit, Lufthansa…?” croaks Habanero, as he suddenly realizes
that words are strange ungainly things that take on a life of their own
regardless of what one intends to say. More perplexing is the fact that these
are words that Habanero has never actually heard, and he is inclined to wonder
if he might have simply made them up; then again, it may not matter, as Bigfoot
is puzzled and beginning to grow impatient. The creature’s mouth is open wide
and baring even more teeth than before. Habanero can feel the vast difference
in their respective physical architectures; the mouths being emblematic of
their larger variances, physiological and otherwise.
“Oaghwortsgsdui!” interrupts Bigfoot. Habanero does not know
what this means, but realizes that he is better off not attempting to repeat
it, as the enunciation seems to engage areas of the tongue and throat in an
intimate and complex exchange that he cannot simulate so easily.
Instead, he offers a spontaneous recollection of more words
that he cannot remember having ever previously encountered.
“O universe of forms I ask
Are you a mirror, or a mask?”
“Melnechuk!” bellows Bigfoot. Habanero is perplexed, and
wonders if there is any way by which he can facilitate the act of translation
between two such differently oriented beings.
“Melnechuk!” repeats Bigfoot, who is suddenly joined by a
chorus of ‘melnechuks,’ emanating from every point on the horizon, and from
every Bigfoot figure that Habanero can see with his Capsicum inflected optics.
But he doesn’t have any idea what they are talking about; and, as the crescendo
of ‘melnechuks’ grows louder, Habanero feels a strange anger welling up inside
him. Immersed in this temporary sense of frustration, he begins to awaken;
sliding back to Claymation consciousness as his vocal simulations become
dopplerized and form an expletive that curls into a diphthong, which breaks
finally, like a giant wave, onto the olive-pit strewn beach of his
self-awareness with one final, Fouuuk!
At first, Habanero is disappointed. He has been unable to
make the connection and create a gestalt; then again, none of the other fruits
and vegetables knows anything about this, so it’s not as if he has failed to
make discernible progress. Nonetheless, he knows in his seed beds that by
learning to communicate with a strange creature such as ‘Bigfoot,’ he might
develop a hypothesis regarding the ontology of the Claymation FVW realm. But, Habanero
knows that his latest dream may be as close as he may ever get to discerning
the motives and being of such a mysterious and bizarre creature. “Perhaps it
was all a dream,” he says to himself in an old fashioned cuneiform screen
crawl. “Perhaps, one should not stray so far from one’s own being simply to try
to inhabit that of another, but such desire seems too natural to suppress.”
With that, Habanero Pepper goes out to the center of the
Fruitbowl to mingle and preen with the other Claymation Fruits and Vegetables.
Soon, the Bigfoot creature’s memory retreats to the bottom layers of his seed
membranes, to reside as a colorful and exceptional memory, but a memory
nonetheless. Still, Habanero, in the depths of his capsicum-comprised carapace
knows that Bigfoot is more than just a memory; he is a phantom; and now,
Habanero Pepper, like Banana, and Tomato, is haunted by a specter he can’t
explain or forget. He is momentarily lulled out of his ruminations by a long
shadow; it’s Hand, coming in for a repast. Habanero knows that he is too hot to
be a likely choice; but, the threatening visage is a reminder of a familiar
ritual; business and terror as usual in the Claymation Fruit and Vegetable
realm. “Is it the same everywhere?” Habanero wonders. He receives no answer as
Hand passes overhead, lunges for Macintosh Apple, and misses. “He’ll be back,”
thinks Habanero, as he runs with the others for cover, just in case.
JZ Rothstein 3/27/2014