The Lost City of Hope
There lives amongst us a vast population separate but identical in flesh. They walk under clothing, uniforms, and cover, circulating air through their hollow form. They are filled with intangibles, intentions, perceptions, judgments, and rabid emotions. Like ghosts, their transparency is apparent, yet our senses respond to their matter. They look like us, like they are indeed people, with all of our unique qualities. We expect them as themselves, without even realizing that hope, without even defining it a hope of ours. They appear that much alike us.
This city is a nightmare not unlike the horror films of Resident Evil, 28 Days, or any of the other countless zombie flicks that turn the seemingly human into a creature of raw fleshly instinct. Yet, even worse, there is no flicker in their eyes, no distorted faces, no long fangs or dragging limbs of indication. A guise of the regular, the normal, the average, the drastically ordinary middle covers them from insight and discernment. They wear professional attire, uniforms, jeans and t-shirts, shorts and sandals, boots and camouflage.
And here I am. Lost in this city. I have been here all year, lost and losing my way. The ancient stars are different here, as unrecognizable as the traitors and impostors that I am sworn by an unbreakable oath to support. It is my mission here, to support them, to assist in their success. And, as I think about it now, the ultimate success and rise to power of this population of hollow humans is more frightening to me than the true terror of Hell itself. Empty souls, constantly feeding themselves without ever satisfying that which drives them to consume each other. I never knew such a transformational evil existed in those who were once children, walk with two legs, use thumbs, grow hair on their heads and wear sunglasses. My conscience is in a traumatized shock. Stared and stunned, flashing strange galaxies. I am hurt, but feel no pain; I am sad, but feel only indifference; I know who I am, but I cannot discern the individuals around me. A thunderstorm or the sun itself could hover closely above my bare head and I still would not be in want.
Like Hollywood zombies, I wonder if this population has been consumed by an alien infection. Perhaps it starts at the heart, eating away all compassion and empathy. It might disturb the nervous system, leaving its host to shake uncontrollably with adrenaline rushed rage. And at the worst stage, could the infection explain the disappearance of the host's bones? Everyone I see infected is left without a backbone, pacified into an almost jellied electric form, reacting like a limp joint to the slightest red rubber triangle bumps and breezes of conflict.
The metaphorical population I have described is the literal group of 45 U.S. Army soldiers I am a part of. I am deployed here with them, and have been since January. I cannot literally describe these people. They rarely appear to be people still, but mainly live as barely animals. Inanimate objects give me a better vocabulary to describe them. A door that only slams closed, never open. A mirror that criticizes every person it reflects (his motto is proudly preached by him as “Perception is reality.”). A legal pad and buddy fountain pen cynically recording their perception of broken laws, even violations of gravity. A badge representing authority disregarding the authority of badges. A 'New King James' Bible hosting the stripping competitions of red party cups. Dumbbells following their reflections in gym mirrors like cats on laser pointers. Communism spreading democracy by strictly enforcing communism. Humans dressed as soldiers, assuming their identity, acting the part, childishly and furiously denying their alter-egos, punishing each other for lacking in heroism.
I am scared I have become one of them. I am afraid I did not adapt to the best of my ability. There is no telling what has happened to me while I was and while I remain here. I wait to come home, to rediscover my old surroundings, arriving at the reunion of my civilian relatives, and looking in the mirror for the first time in months. I hope the mirror lies to me. I cannot wait to shed this uniform.
1 comment:
Wow. I don't have any other words. This left me speechless and my thoughts running in ways they never have before.
~Until next time~
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