Golden Dreams

Do you remember when I asked you for words so that I could spin them into a story?

No?  Perhaps that’s because that was 4 MONTHS ago, when I was still knee-deep in taxes.

So, about that…here goes.

You know those nights where you remember more than one dream?  Tonight is one of those nights.

In my first dream, I am dancing in a golden wheat field with my husband (that I don’t have), when I fall down a small hill caused by erosion.  Of course, this causes me to exclaim something vulgar, “Abominable, scrumtrulescent goofball!”

Yes, I tend to be verbose in dreams.

Next thing I know, I am in a discussion about antidisestablishmentarianism with Betty White, Edward from Twilight, and Mark Wahlberg.  They are surprisingly astute…I’d love to have another conversation with them.  You’d be surprised to hear the technical words they are throwing around…perhaps I should suggest to my History of the Church and State professor to invite them as guest lecturers (well, except for Edward).

After that, I am sitting at my kitchen table, eating an insipid noodle dish.  All of a sudden, my biology professor is there and anointing my head with oil.  Then he starts blabbering on and on about something controversial: abortion, same-sex marriage, or the war in Iraq.  It’s all a little unclear…what do phenotypes have to do with any of those?

Slam!

“Ms. Thomas, did you have a good nap?” I hear my biology professor–the same man who only moments before was anointing my head–say.

“Wha, huh?”

“I believe you may have been dreaming about the abominable snowman, perhaps?”

Photo by bernat

Okay, Okay, Okay

Several of you have mentioned our fun little word game.   I haven’t been up for it, but I think I’m ready to wow you again with my fiction improvisational skills.

It’s been a while and some of you are new, so here’s how it goes. You name a word–any word within reason (please nothing technical or vulgar!)–and I’ll use all your words in a single story.  Just leave your word in the comments on this post. (No April Foolin’ here.)  Feel free to be as offbeat as you wish…only helps to propel the story in some interesting directions.

I don’t know when I’ll write the story, but I’ll at least give you a couple of days to give a word.  I’ll let you know when it’s closed.

To see what I’m talking about, here are some past stories you’ve helped me create:

Assumption

Blind Date

Frankenstein and Rock ‘n’ Roll

Words Sting

(And I promise I didn’t mean to put them in alphabetical order…that was the order I found them in, promise!)

So, what’s your word?

What’ll the Twist be This Time?

dictionaryThanks, all, for the great comments on my Defined post!  I’d like to think that my blogging is improving the more I do it, and you seem to agree.  What a blessing from God to get to do what  I do.

Since I got positive feedback the last two times I wrote these stories, I decided to make it a monthly thang.  If you know what I’m talking about, then you know the drill.  If you don’t, well, here’s the deal (if you say that like “dill,” it rhymes with “drill”):

Leave me one word in a comment on this post.  Any word, but know that I will shape the story around those words, so if you give me nerdy words, you’ll get a nerdy story.  Not that there is anything wrong with nerds (can’t be hatin’ on my own kind!).

So whatcha waitin’ for…leave me a word!  I’ll be collecting them through late afternoon Wednesday, and will post the story on Thursday.

Photo by greeblie

Storytime Again

Since it was such a hit last time, I thought we’d do it again.  Give me a word, and I’ll combine them into a story!

So, leave me one word in the comments.  Any word, any time between now and Tuesday evening.  Then come back Wednesday to read the story I concoct…hopefully it’ll be as good as last time, but no promises!

Frankenstein and Rock ‘n’ Roll

You all definitely pulled out all the stops when giving me your words! I’d like to think that I have a good vocabulary, so I’m not about to admit how many of your words I had to look up.  The words given to me have been bolded and linked to the responsible party (scroll over and the name will pop up).

Oh, and when you kept giving me nerdy words, I had no choice but to make my characters nerds! Enjoy!

“Boink!” Frank said, hitting Nelson on the head with a plastic beaker.

“Why’d you do that for?” Nelson scowled, totally missing Frank’s unoriginal onomatopoeia.

“Why’d you eat my organic peaches after I just got made at you for eating my cupcake?  I left them macerating in the fridge, not for you to eat when you got your afternoon munchies!  Stop coughing on me…I’m already coming down with the flu!”  Frank only ate organic, because he knew what a bunch of chemicals can do to an animal…his chickens were living proof.  He also tended to be a bit of a hypochondriac, especially now in his latter years.

Nelson’s habit of eating Frank’s food only exacerbated the poor relations between them.  Working fifty-hour weeks side-by-side, just the two of them and a dozen transgenic chickens, can do that.  Everything about Nelson annoyed Frank: his greasy combover, his need to always have the last word on every “discussion” of Battlestar Galactica, the DeLorean he drove, the way he always smelled faintly of cotton candy.  That said, he was the best research assistant he could hope for, as Nelson had both enough knowledge of genetically-altered lab animals and electric circuits.  If he was ever going to find a way for chickens to generate usable electricity, it was going to be with Nelson’s help.  And of course, there was that other thing.

“I’m sorry, Frank, but they just looked too scrumptious.  Here, have the last…”  Nelson didn’t get to finish placating his co-worker as the lab suddenly was filled with a splendiferous light.

“What…what…is…THAT?” Nelson managed to blubber out, entirely discombobulated.  The light slowly faded until he, Frank, and presumedly the dozen lab chickens, were sitting in the dark.

Oh, no.  It’s finally happened, though Frank.  What a breakthrough!  I can’t tell Nelson yet, though.  “Uhh, uhh, maybe it’s a pterodactyl?”

“That’s not funny!  What do you think this is, Jurassic Park?  This is the real world, not a Michael Crichton novel!”

Nelson’s right, this isn’t funnySomething that close to home isn’t funny.  Frank could hear Nelson snuffle in the dark, obviously scared.  He’s got a good reason to be frightened…but he doesn’t know it yet.

Frank waited a few seconds more before switching on the breaker.  Nelson ran around franctically, checking on each of his favorite chickens, for they were all indeed his favorites.

“Of course the chickens are fine, Nelson.  This has nothing to do with the chickens.”

“What do you mean, this has nothing to do with the chickens?  The only reason why we are here is to work with these chickens, and try to get them to generate electricity!”

Now is finally the time to tell him.  “Uhh, Nelson?  I have something to show you. I mean, someone.”

For once, Nelson was silent.  He had been working in this underground lab in Oxnard, California for years, and he had never seen this serious look on Frank’s face, even when he was deep in thought.

Frank walked up to the wall, and perfunctorily pulled on the refridgerator.  Much to Nelson’s amazement, the fridge moved out easily, allowing a glimpse into the next room.  Not being able to hold himself back, Nelson rushed into it and took a look around.  On one wall, there were chicken cages, just like there were in the lab he spent most of his time in.  On the table sat a laptop, it’s screen filled with a plethora of numbers, tracking the hemoglobin counts of the various chickens, just like Nelson had just been doing.  But the thing that surprised him most was the persnickety man in a lab coat and combover, checking on the chickens with care.

It was his doppelganger, dressed exactly as he was, with a nametag that read, “Nelson Daniels,” apparently performing the very same tasks that the original Nelson was in the other room.  And this other man, Nelson’s double, looked just as shocked to see him.

Rushing into the room after Nelson, Frank wanted to explain to Nelson and Nelson what was going on.  After all, they had been subjects of a scientific experiment since they were babies, so they had the right to know.  Just as Frank had collected his nerves to speak, the first Nelson spoke up.

Verily, you are my very image!”

” ‘Verily?’  You’re a little proud of your simple vocabulary, aren’t you?  After all, you’re nothing but a plebian!”

“ME, a plebian?  You’re just like me!  Uber balding, callipygian [Dana]…”

“What does my butt have to do with anything?  Do you want me to moon ya?  Do you just like to throw out inconsequential, fancy words?”

SUPERCALIFRAGILISTICEXPIALIDOCIOUS!”

“Does that make you feel better?” the second Nelson questioned in disgust.

Finally, Frank was able to make himself heard above the dueling technicians.  He explained how the old Nelson and the new Nelson were identical twins split at birth, raised by two families as identical as can be, and taught the exact same things by the exact same tutors.   After their schooling, they were placed in these identical labs, given the exact same task: to genetically alter chickens to be able to generate electricity.

“As you both have realized, you,”–Frank pointed to the new Nelson–”succeeded, while you,”–pointing to the original Nelson–”failed.”

Being the brilliant scientists that they were, the Nelsons questioned in sync, “Okay, then what was the variable?”

“The only variable was that one of you was only allowed to listen to classical music his whole life, while the other only rock ‘n’ roll.”

The original Nelson muttered under his breath, “I knew that music was rotting my brain…”

Marie

This is the 5th and final part of my storybook series.  See What is in a Name?, Rumplestiltskin, Tikki Tikki Tembo, and Isantim.

After eating the sandwich, I laid down for another nap.  Little did I know that this would be the last dream before my child was born.  This dream was by far the scariest of all the dreams, however I will never forget it.  It is the story that gave the name of my child, though you might laugh at the dream itself, but it is great to have a memorable story that I can tell my daughter as she grows up.

I dreamt that I am witch.  As a witch, I am quite evil and almost terrify myself.  My biggest desire is to gain wealth for myself.  The easiest way to do this is by making the wealth come to me.  I live on a farm of sorts, so the kind of wealth I seek is animals of great value.  This is convenient because I have all sorts of power over the animals, but the only way I can exercise them is to become an animal myself.  My husband, though he has no magically powers (nor does he in reality) cannot really stop me, but he is full aware of my crazy doings (is that not grounds for divorce?).

One day, I go out and decide to gain my neighbor’s cattle.  I decide to turn into a werewolf of all things in order to bewitch the cattle into going to the market with me that I may sell them to make very good profit.  I sneak out at night after my husband was asleep, and under the light of the moon I turn myself into a werewolf.  I am so scary looking!  As I start approaching the cattle, I hear a noise from behind me.  It is my husband, pitchfork in hand.

“Marie!  Marie!” he calls out.  Apparently that is my name.

The sound of him calling my voice is enough to make me snap out of my werewolf façade and turn back into a human.  It takes me a few minutes to loose all that hair, but I do and I go running into my husband’s arms.

At that moment I woke up and realized that indeed, I was in my husband’s arms.  “I want to name our little girl Marie,” as my water broke.

Retold from:
“A Witch as Werewolf” by Karl Bartsch
(originally published in Sagen, Märchen und Gebräuche aus Meklenburg (Wien: Wilhelm Braumüller, 1879), v. 1, no. 185, pp. 150-151).

Isantim

This is part 4.  See What’s in a Name?, Rumpelstiltskin, and Tikki Tikki Tembo.

The next afternoon, I had another dream while I was taking a nap.  In this one I am a tortoise, which is a very odd feeling.

I, as a tortoise, go to a feast hosted by a hippo king.  This hippo is quite the character, and has seven hippo brides.  Their pink outfits are adorable as they are covered with ribbons and bows.  As I look at the feast table, my mouth begins to water.  There are rows of turkey and asparagus sandwiches interspersed with spoonfuls of creamy peanut butter.  To top it all off, there was a fountain of chocolate milk with Oreos floating in it.  I cannot wait to begin to devour the food before me, but there is a rather large obstacle in my way.  The hippo king stands up as if he is going to give a toast, but instead, he says that no one will be allowed to eat because no one knows his name.  Instead, we just all come and eat his food.  He dismisses us all, and I vow to find out his name so I can indulge in this stockpile of rich food.

I somehow know where the hippo and his wives go to drink water, and so I wait out, hoping to catch his name.  A couple of his wives, who are larger than the rest, had a harder time walking away from the watering hole, so I bury myself in the muddy path just enough to be a stumbling block for a hippo.  Sure enough, one of these last wives stubs her toe on my shell, and calls out to her husband, “Help!  Isantim, my dear, I have stubbed my toe!” 

I jump out of the ground and yell, “Aha!  I now know the name of your husband!”  Then I turn to the hippo king and say, “Your name is Isantim!”

As Isantim approaches us, I ask to make sure it is okay that I reveal his name to all the animals that we may partake in his wonderful feast.  Next thing I know, we are all sitting around the feast table enjoying the food that I had been eyeing.  It is so delicious that I wake up from my nap craving a turkey and asparagus sandwich topped off with chocolate milk.  However, the name Isantim does not leave a good taste in my mouth, so I decide to cross it off the list of possibilities for my child’s name.

Retold from:
“The Hippopotamus and the Tortoise” by Elphinstone Dayrell, edited by D.L. Ashliman
(originally published in Folk Stories From Southern Nigeria, West Africa.  London: Longman, Green and Co., 1910).

There’s one last post in this series, to be posted at a later date on a day when I don’t have anything else to say.