It’s like trying to learn anatomy by studying clothing. This is what I say when Tracy asks me how to interpret the world. Not trying to feign wisdom, I’m just really tired of clothes, especially shoes. But really, don’t fuck with me, do you respect me enough to be clear? This isn’t what she said, but I worried that’s what she was thinking so I began for real.
Are we magic? Let’s assume not and accept we’re made up of stuff that obeys the law. So some bit of light hits your eye and does it register immediately deeper in your head? Nope. Something takes some nonzero time to wriggle down a neuron path and only later take on a color. Even though it’s probably a really short amount of time, this means that everything you see is actually some refraction of what happened in the past. Same with everything else you get from the outside. We’re just in some deluded bubble out of time here, a world of yesterday at best.
And is this nipple mauve? Or, the nipple of a few moments ago at least. All we know is that it’s bouncing certain types of frequencies and not even a frequency has color. We ignore most of them and concoct some beautiful deranged representation. Call it mauve. Forget the sophomore tedium of whether we share them and instead revel in the fact that your yellow is a glorious hallucination of your own personal creation, however unchosen. A world of figment pigment that exists nowhere in the universe outside your head. Same with everything else you get from the outside, texture, taste, and tone. It’s all otherwise a colorless unity, maybe some more energy here, less there, but nothing without us providing both the paint and the veil.
Tracy keeps this in mind and tastes my mauvelessness. She swims or bobs in this glory for a time before the bottom falls out. This endless abyss isn’t even black. Does she shudder or ripple? I can’t really tell, but I roll onto my side and face her. I tell her she’s beautiful. What do you mean by that, she asks.
Are we magic? Let’s assume not and accept we’re made up of stuff that obeys the law. So some bit of light hits your eye and does it register immediately deeper in your head? Nope. Something takes some nonzero time to wriggle down a neuron path and only later take on a color. Even though it’s probably a really short amount of time, this means that everything you see is actually some refraction of what happened in the past. Same with everything else you get from the outside. We’re just in some deluded bubble out of time here, a world of yesterday at best.
And is this nipple mauve? Or, the nipple of a few moments ago at least. All we know is that it’s bouncing certain types of frequencies and not even a frequency has color. We ignore most of them and concoct some beautiful deranged representation. Call it mauve. Forget the sophomore tedium of whether we share them and instead revel in the fact that your yellow is a glorious hallucination of your own personal creation, however unchosen. A world of figment pigment that exists nowhere in the universe outside your head. Same with everything else you get from the outside, texture, taste, and tone. It’s all otherwise a colorless unity, maybe some more energy here, less there, but nothing without us providing both the paint and the veil.
Tracy keeps this in mind and tastes my mauvelessness. She swims or bobs in this glory for a time before the bottom falls out. This endless abyss isn’t even black. Does she shudder or ripple? I can’t really tell, but I roll onto my side and face her. I tell her she’s beautiful. What do you mean by that, she asks.