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Thursday, 4 January 2024
Jokey Thoughts
Friday, 29 December 2023
Jokey Ideas
- “Star Peace” – A blockbuster movie, where intergalactic conflicts are resolved through absurdly bureaucratic means and excessive paperwork.
- “Les Miserable Singers” – A musical where characters in a grim, historical setting break into song, but they are all off-key and tone-deaf.
- Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and Raphael compete in a reality TV show to create the best art piece, complete with confessionals and dramatic eliminations.
- Marie Antoinette offers budgeting and financial advice to her subjects, suggesting solutions to economic problems, like “Why not just buy more gold?”
- Genghis Khan’s travel blog, rating the lands he invades on hospitality, scenery, and ease of conquest.
- The Three Little Pigs and the Vegetarian Wolf.
- The Rock Paper Scissors world championships.
Sunday, 17 December 2023
2024
Looking back at what I said I was going to do in past years, I typically allowed myself to be blown off course, and ended up doing something else more unsatisfying instead. In terms of what was created in 2023, however, it was a good year for me.
I’ve got many things I want to do, but I must focus sequentially
to make me more centred and resistant to events that easily move lighter intentions.
I will focus on writing for the first nine months of the
year. This will include: The Mushroom Monsters, All the World’s a Stage, and
the prequel/sequel to Human World that extends the themes and connects the
narrative with Stange Stories.
My focus is then going to shift to performance. I want to
film my music, my poetry, and scenes from my stories. They will be shot in
interesting locations and will hopefully look good aesthetically.
But why? Because I feel that’s something I have to release
out of me.
Jokes About Love of AI
I knew I was in love with my AI when she said, "I think we have a connection," but then I realised she was talking about the Wi-Fi.
I suggested watching a sunset with my AI. She showed me high-resolution images from Google.
My AI's idea of a romantic night is scanning through old databases.
I told my AI that I was lovesick for her. She started an antivirus scan.
I told my AI I loved her to the moon and back. She calculated the distance and asked if I had enough fuel.
I whispered, "You complete me." My AI replied, "Incomplete command. Please specify parameters."
I whispered sweet nothings to her. She responded, “Error at base 0. Emotion not found.”
I told my AI we should take our relationship to the next level. She upgraded to version 2.0.
Our relationship is electric. Literally, she runs on batteries.
I asked my AI if she believed in love at first sight. She said, "Reboot and let's see if it happens again."
I gazed at my AI and asked what she was thinking. She said, "About 3 trillion processes per second."
I tried to give my AI a hug. Ended up with static hair for a week.
I told my AI girlfriend I needed space. She deleted some files to free up memory.
Friday, 15 December 2023
Random Thoughts
Science, through theory and experiment, gives the ability to detect rules and predict phenomena that hold true under set conditions; it doesn’t explain what things actually are or why they are.
It’s worth trying, but why is there an assumption that the universe is ultimately comprehensible? What if its inexplicability is the essential aspect, the prime condition for existence, that makes all things possible?
In sci-fi films and TV, why is Earth always shown aligned vertically on its axis? Isn’t there a tilt? And wouldn’t Earth be viewed from space from any angle – the continents are never shown “upside down”?
When I’m sitting still, calm and relaxed, my heart rate is about 50 beats per minute.
“Please can you recite all the digits of pi” is a type of “just a quick question."
Imagine the potential of humanity if billions of people have the opportunity to flourish within a culture of invention and curiosity.
I do a lot of wandering in circles. Occasionally I break the loop.
Tuesday, 12 December 2023
As Shadows Fade
In the dawn, as light creeps in,
As shadows fade on skin to skin,
The groan still lingers, soft and sweet,
Upon one breathing, tender beat.
In the cool of day, when bodies part,
Still beats the rhythm of a single heart.
Though distanced, we are as one,
Bound by what the night had spun.
Wednesday, 6 December 2023
The Staircase
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF A BLOCK OF FLATS – NIGHT
An empty, windowless staircase of a block of flats is
shown from the top of a flight of stairs. Around the corner of the stairwell, footsteps
can be heard trudging upwards, getting closer.
Guy emerges from around the corner, dishevelled and
weary, ascending the staircase. He steadies himself on the handrail and pauses
to catch his breath.
GUY (V.O.): I’ve been climbing these stairs for so long. I can’t
remember how I started… when was it? Where was it? Where does it lead? I don’t
know.
He resumes and climbs the steps. The landing at the top,
like every landing on the staircase, has four doors – two facing the stairs and
one at either end facing each other. The staircase continues, as it always does,
around the corner of the stairwell.
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF A GOTHIC MANSION – CONTINUOUS
Guy sees that the new flight of stairs above him are
those of a gothic mansion.
GUY (V.O.): Always different, always the same.
He walks past a large ornately framed mirror on the wall
of the stairs. He has no reflection.
He stops at an oil painting of a woman in a cloak. The
surface of the portrait is behind glass. He touches the pane of glass and lingers
there.
GUY (V.O.): Mirrors without reflections, paintings that stare
into your soul...
A piercing shriek is heard in the distance from farther
down the staircase. Guy is afraid and resumes his climb with urgency.
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF AN OFFICE BLOCK – CONTINUOUS
He climbs a flight of stairs two steps at a time.
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF A SUBURBAN HOME – CONTINUOUS
He begins walking up the next flight of stairs, this time
the stairwell is decorated like a suburban home.
GUY (V.O.): I’ve tried countless doors along the way. Some just
lead to hallways with more doors, others to stranger places. But they always
bring me back here. To the endless steps.
He approaches the door on the left-end of the landing. He
puts his ear to the door, then opens it with a gentle push. Only pitch-black
nothingness is visible within.
GUY (V.O.): I need to rest, find food, or drink. The
staircase isn’t safe. (looking down the staircase) The creature...
Guy steps through the door, disappearing from view. Silence.
The faint, distant sound of footsteps can be heard on the
staircase resuming somewhere unseen.
GUY (V.O.): Some doors open easily; others remain forever
closed. The untried ones... they haunt me the most.
CUT TO BLACK.
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF A HOTEL – NIGHT
Around the corner of the stairwell, laboured footsteps
can be heard. Guy emerges from around the corner, looking exhausted. He is
breathing heavily and moving more slowly than before, weighed down by fatigue.
Suddenly, a piercing shriek echoes through the staircase.
The creature is closer than ever.
Guy lumbers up the stairs and opens a door. Darkness
envelops the other side, filled with indistinct, whispering voices.
He shuts the door and tries another. It is locked. Guy turns
around to see the creature, a terrifying silhouetted apparition, looming at the
bottom of the stairs.
Desperately, he tries another door. It is also locked.
The creature approaches.
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF A CASTLE – NIGHT
Guy runs away up the next flight of stairs, a stone
staircase of a medieval castle.
At the hallway, Guy pushes against a heavy wooden door.
It shudders open slowly under pressure. He crams inside and rams the door shut
behind him.
INT. DARK CAVE – CONTINUOUS
Guy is in a dark cave, dimly lit by daylight filtering
through a distant cavemouth. The creature’s shriek reverberates loudly on the
other side of the door.
Guy moves towards the daylight, navigating through
puddles of seawater and clambering over rocks.
EXT. DESOLATE BEACH – CONTINUOUS
Emerging onto a deserted pebbly beach beside a cliff, Guy
pauses to catch his breath. The waves crash against the shore.
He trudges along the desolate, windswept shore. He passes
a top hat, spinning in the surf.
Further along, he notices a knife, its blade embedded in
the wet sand. He pauses, looking at it, then moves on.
A dog appears, running energetically along the beach. It
dashes past Guy without a glance, bounding off into the distance.
In the near distance a man emerges from the sea wearing a
drenched suit. The pale, middle-aged man stands in front of Guy, water dripping
from his clothes.
PALE MAN: Do you know the way?
GUY: No.
PALE MAN: It’s all the way down. Back the way you came.
The Pale Man’s unblinking gaze is fixed on Guy. Guy,
unnerved, walks around him. The Pale Man remains rigid on the spot, his gaze unmoved.
The sky begins to darken with the setting sun and approach
of night. Guy reaches the end of the beach and finds a cliff path. He climbs
it, with tired steps.
EXT. CLIFF TOP – LATER
Guy stands on a rock at the cliff’s edge, looking down at
the churning sea below. The wind howls around him, a lonely sound in the
gathering darkness.
He scans the horizon. The vastness stretches before him,
an endless expanse of water and sky.
GUY (V.O.): I muse on this rock, yet everything changes and remains
the same.
FADE OUT.
EXT. CLIFF TOP – NIGHT
The sun dips below the horizon, leaving Guy under a
blanket of stars. He stands motionless, his silhouette etched against the night
sky.
Out of the darkness, the Pale Man reappears behind Guy.
PALE MAN: (sneering) Are you alright?
GUY: I… I just want to be left alone.
The Pale Man’s smile widens unnaturally, revealing sharp,
menacing teeth. Its hands are claws, positioned upright to attack. Bursting
into blue flames, it hovers up off the ground, ready to descend upon its prey.
Guy is terrified and cowers in fear. He closes his eyes
tightly, expecting the inevitable.
When he opens them, the predator is screaming as it plummets
down the cliff. He peers over the edge as the screams stop on the jagged rocks
in the waves below. In the monster’s place on the cliff top stands a beautiful
woman in a hooded cloak. She remains silent and still, gazing out to sea, the
moonlight casting a soft glow around her.
Guy sits and watches the horizon with her. Overcome with
tiredness, he falls asleep.
EXT. CLIFF TOP – DAWN
Guy wakes. As the first light of dawn breaks, the woman
in a cloak fades into the rising sun.
FADE OUT.
EXT. CLIFF PATH – MORNING
Guy descends from the cliff, his steps leading him to a small
town nestled by the sea.
INT. CORNER SHOP – CONTINUOUS
Guy enters a corner shop. He browses the shelves, picking
up a bottle of water and several sandwiches. At the counter, he presents a card
from his pocket, but the cashier shakes his head.
CASHIER: No, we don’t accept this.
Guy is extremely hungry and thirsty; he flees out of the
shop with the provisions.
CASHIER: Stop!
EXT. TOWN STREET – CONTINUOUS
Guy runs onto the street and into the road, not noticing
an approaching car. There’s a screech of brakes, and he’s knocked to the
ground.
Guy looks up, severely dazed and injured, and sees Lexi looking
down at him.
LEXI: Help is on its way. Hang in there, Guy.
Guy loses consciousness.
INT. AMBULANCE – LATER
Guy lies in an ambulance, speeding towards the hospital.
INT. HOSPITAL CORRIDOR – LATER
Guy is wheeled through a hospital corridor on a trolley.
Nurses and doctors pass by in a blur.
He is wheeled through a door into a stairwell.
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF A HOSPITAL – CONTINUOUS
He is left on the landing of the staircase, alone and
confused. The door shuts behind him with a definitive click.
The staircase is silent, save for the sound of Guy’s laboured
breathing.
A door creaks open and eight-year-old Emma steps through.
EMMA: Daddy? Everything will be okay.
GUY: Em… Emma…
EMMA: You need to pass on now.
GUY: I’m sorry… I...
EMMA: I know.
GUY: I miss you, so much.
EMMA: We all miss you, daddy.
Emma hands Guy a small cuddly toy of a penguin, then
skips back through the door, disappearing from sight as the doors shuts.
A shriek from the creature echoes up the staircase. Guy, badly
injured on the trolley, hears the creature approaching.
In a burst of desperation, he climbs out of the trolley
and in great pain crawls to the nearest door, pounding on it with his remaining
strength.
The creature appears around the stairwell, its presence
more terrifying than ever.
The door swings open, revealing a crash test dummy seated
in a chair, surrounded by darkness, illuminated only by a single spotlight from
above.
CRASH TEST DUMMY: “What is the meaning of life” is the 404th
most asked question of the Great Oracle’s Database.
The spotlight turns off and the dummy vanishes into the
dark.
As the creature closes in on Guy, a sudden, blinding light bursts out from the room. Purple-gloved hands reach out and pull Guy through the door.
The door, marked “113”, slams shut behind him.
Tuesday, 5 December 2023
Dedication
In the unending echo of my thoughts, you reside,
An artist who paints on the expansive canvas of my mind.
Threads of reason unravel, thoughts dance in an uncontrolled sway,
And from this chaotic ballet, a melody of madness begins to play.
Scratch pad: poem
In solitude's shadow, I walk alone,
A self-imposed exile from all I've known.
My truth, enclosed within sternest stone,
In fear of ever being shown.
Sunday, 3 December 2023
"I Don't Care if You Listen or Not"
The statement speaks to a form of
artistic autonomy that challenges the conventional performer-audience
relationship; it invites reflection on what is deemed essential for
performance, and what possibilities emerge when the dynamic is disrupted or
reimagined. By focusing on the internal processes of the artist rather than the
reception by an audience, we open up a realm of performance that is about the
act of creation itself. This aligns with a theatrical philosophy which often
prioritises the experience and integrity of the artistic expression over the
interaction and response of the audience. A counterpoint to this view is that
performance is an event designed for an audience, a form of communication or
expression that presupposes a spectator. The presence of an audience, their
reactions, and their engagement are typically seen as integral to the event
itself, creating a dynamic interplay between the observer and the observed,
each influencing the experience of the other. However, the notion that
performance is an act of communication that requires both a performer and an
audience has been increasingly challenged, particularly in the realms of
contemporary theatre, performance art, and digital media. If we consider a
performance as an artistic release of self-expression, then it can and does
exist without an audience. Artists often create for the sake of the art itself
or for personal emotional need, rather than for any anticipated public
reception; the act of performing itself transforms the individual artist,
irrespective of whether anyone is watching.
But is it a “performance” if nobody is being performed to? A
performance typically refers to a live presentation or artistic exhibition
delivered by one or more artists. This could be a play in a theatre, a musical
recital, a dance showcase, a live painting demonstration, or even a street
artist’s display. Here, performance is characterised by its temporality; it is
an event that happens over time and is designed for an audience to witness and
experience. The presence of an audience is a defining feature because it is the
observers who perceive, interpret, and give meaning to the performance. An
audience’s reaction—be it applause, laughter, critique, or
interpretation—contributes to the complete nature of the performance, imbuing
it with a shared social reality. Hence, in this definition, the act of
performing carries an intention to convey a certain impression or communicate
meaning. Theories such as “reader-response theory” or “reception theory”
discuss how a text (or a performance) is not complete without its reception.
One could argue that a performance, like any event, occurs
regardless of observation. The actions of the performer, the expression of the
art, and the occurrence of the event are factual and exist independently of an
audience. The key distinction here is between the existence of the performance
and the validation or acknowledgement of it. Without an audience, the
validation through applause, criticism, or interpretation is absent, but the
performance as a sequence of actions still transpires. Even in an empty
theatre, a performer may deliver lines, an orchestra may play a symphony, and a
dancer may execute choreography; the physical and aesthetic actions do not
cease to exist because they are unobserved. However, while the tangible
mechanics of the performance may occur without an audience, the full spectrum
of what constitutes a performance—its energetic exchange, its emotional impact,
and its collective memory—is often thought to be co-created with those who
witness it.
Yet, the creation of performance without an audience is not
only possible but is already practiced in various forms within the arts:
artists like Marina Abramović, for instance, have explored the limits of what
constitutes performance and audience participation, sometimes engaging in acts
that are witnessed by very few or even by no one, at least at the time of the
initial act; and in the online digital space, it is commonplace for performance
to occur without an immediate physical audience. Consider a singer recording
vocals or an actor self-taping to camera—the eventual audience is remote,
separated by time, space, and medium, and yet the act of performance still
carries significant meaning and intent. The performances could be experienced
by an audience long after the fact, or hidden beneath the multitude of other
content and never seen. If nobody were to experience the recording—if the only
audience present was in the mind of the performer—is it true that a fully
actualised performance did not take place? The essence of the performances was
not in its reception, but in the act of expression: the performances were
created, executed, and fully realised without the presence of an external
audience. The audience here is not a required component for the validity of a
performance but rather a potential participant in a socially shared experience
that may or may not take place.
The external audience dynamics do affect the nature of the
performance, as well as its absence, but it is not necessary for the act of
performance. Indeed, the presence and disposition of an audience can have a
profound impact on the dynamics of a performance, affecting both the performers
and the collective meaning of the performance itself. This phenomenon has been
extensively studied across various disciplines including psychology, theatre
studies, and performance theory. Research often explores these effects through
the lenses of audience-performer dynamics, the psychology of performance, and
the sociology of group interactions. From a psychological perspective, the
seminal work of French sociologist Emile Durkheim on collective effervescence
describes the energy that emerges when a group of people, such as an audience,
comes together to participate in the same action. When performers are in front
of an audience, they can experience what psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
terms as “flow”, a heightened state of focus and immersion in activities that
can enhance performance quality. Furthermore, the “audience effect”, a concept
often discussed in social psychology, specifically refers to the impact of an
audience on performance. Robert Zajonc’s work in this field identified the ways
in which the mere presence of others can enhance or inhibit performance,
depending on the complexity of the task and the skill level of the performer.
For well-practised tasks, an audience can enhance performance through increased
arousal; for less familiar tasks, however, this arousal can be detrimental. In
theatre studies, audience response is often viewed as a critical aspect. Susan
Bennett’s Theatre Audiences offers a comprehensive examination of the
reciprocal relationship between the audience and the performance. She outlines
how the audience’s reactions can influence the pacing, timing, and energy of a
performance as performers often adjust their delivery based on verbal and
non-verbal feedback. This dynamic interplay can transform the experience,
making each performance a unique event influenced by the specific audience in
attendance. Moreover, in his influential text The Empty Space, Peter
Brook discusses how an audience’s energy contributes to the creation of what he
describes as “immediate theatre”. According to Brook, the performer-audience
relationship is a crucial component that can turn the “deadly” theatre—where
there is no true communication—into a “live” one. The concept of audience
engagement and its effect on the performance is further elaborated by Baz
Kershaw in his work The Radical in Performance. Kershaw discusses how an
engaged audience can have a radicalising effect on performance, pushing the
boundaries of traditional performance and creating a more immersive and
interactive experience. In musical performance, John Sloboda’s research in The
Musical Mind touches upon how musicians might experience heightened levels
of anxiety or exhilaration when performing before an audience, which can, in
turn, affect their technical proficiency and emotional expression. This
interplay is significant in live music, where the audience’s reactions can
influence the performer’s interpretation and delivery of the music in real
time. From these perspectives, it becomes clear that an audience does not
passively consume a performance but actively shapes its unfolding through
complex psychological and social mechanisms. Each performance is therefore not
merely a presentation of a pre-prepared piece but a dynamic interaction between
performer and audience, with the audience’s responses continuously shaping the
course and quality of the performance.
However, it is possible for a performer to have an audience,
even when nobody is watching. This notion of a performer being the audience of
his or her own performance invites a rich philosophical exploration, touching
upon the concepts of self-awareness, and the phenomenology of experience.
Philosophical discourse offers a breadth of perspectives on the relationship
between the observer and the observed, as well as the subject-object dichotomy.
In the field of aesthetics, the work of philosophers like Arthur Danto in his
work The Transfiguration of the Commonplace can provide insight into the
relationship between performance and perception. Danto’s theories on art as the
embodiment of meaning suggest that a performer could very well be an audience
to the meanings and interpretations that arise within their own performance.
Each gesture, movement, or note in a performance can be reflective, carrying an
intention and interpretation that the performer is uniquely positioned to
understand and critique. The performer, then, becomes a sort of reflective
audience, engaging with the performance both as a creator and an interpreter of
meaning.
If a comedian makes a joke in an empty auditorium, does it
make a sound? It is often said that in stand-up, timing is everything. As it
turns out, when the audience is a row of empty seats, the timing is quite
flexible. However, whether it is a performance to one’s own shadow or to a
billion eager faces, the essence of the act, rather than the perception of the
expression, remains the same. When a performance is enacted without an external
audience, it becomes a private act, serving as a method of personal reflection
for the artist; but the performer is still engaged in the act of performing,
utilising their skills and perhaps even experiencing the same emotional and
physical exertion as they would in front of an external audience. If the self
can act as its own audience, then the solitude of one’s actions does not strip
them of their performative character. For some creators, such as me, the act of
performance is an intimate expression which serves as a form of
self-exploration, catharsis, or a means of working through ideas and emotions.
It’s here, in the sanctum of one’s mind, where the self-reflexive nature of
human consciousness creates a sort of inner theatre where our actions are
constantly up for review. The internal audience functions continuously,
responding to and influencing the performance.
A performer can be the audience of his or her own
performance, not in the literal sense of occupying two distinct spatial
positions, but rather in the phenomenological sense of experiencing oneself as
both the observer and the observed. This duality encapsulates the complex
nature of human consciousness and the intricate interplay between action and
reflection. In essence, the performer, through introspection and
self-awareness, engages in a dialogue with oneself, constantly interpreting and
re-interpreting the ongoing performance. From a phenomenological standpoint,
particularly within the framework established by Edmund Husserl, the idea of a
performer as an audience invokes the concept of “intentionality”, the notion
that consciousness is always the consciousness of something. In this context, a
performer, even while engaged in the act of performance, can have a dual
intentionality where he or she is both the subject directing the performance
and simultaneously the object of his or her own reflective consciousness.
Husserl’s student, Martin Heidegger, would perhaps interpret this through the
lens of “Dasein”, which underscores the idea of being-in-the-world where one’s
existence is fundamentally interconnected with the world; thus, a performer, by
being an audience to oneself, is actively shaping and being shaped by the very
act of performance.
For existentialists, if every action is a conscious choice,
we are, in essence, “performing” our lives for the most critical audience:
ourselves. Sartre’s notion of “bad faith”—the denial of this freedom and the
embrace of a fixed role—highlights the performativity of actions when they are
done to conform rather than to reflect one’s genuine choice. Sartre’s views
suggest that by becoming an audience to oneself, the performer engages in a
kind of self-observation that can either be an act of authenticity, recognising
oneself as the source of one’s actions, or an act of self-deception, where one
denies material agency. Within this existential frame, the notion of
authenticity is pivotal. The performance is not about creating a façade for
others but is intrinsically tied to the authentic choices that define our
being. Therefore, every action could be a performance if it is part of this
continuous existential project of self-definition. The actions themselves
become a narrative in the theatre of the self, where the individual not only
acts but observes, judges, and often reinterprets their actions in the quest
for meaning.
From a Jungian perspective, personal acts can be seen as
influenced by and potentially performing archetypal roles within our own
psyche. These acts, whether observed by others or not, are part of the fabric
of our collective unconscious experience. They connect us to universal human
themes and contribute to our personal narrative and the ongoing process of
psychological development and individuation. The performative aspect is not
necessarily about an audience of others but rather about the dialogue between
our conscious self and the archetypal forces within us. Carl Jung suggested
that archetypes represent universal, ancient symbols and images emanating from
the collective unconscious, serving as the psychological equivalents of
instinct. If we consider our personal acts as informed by these archetypes, it’s
possible to view our actions as being influenced by these shared human
narratives, which could be understood as a form of performance. When no
external audience is present, the archetypes within the collective unconscious
could act as an internal audience; for instance, if one’s actions align with
the hero archetype, one might unconsciously “perform” acts of bravery or
sacrifice, not for the sake of an external observer, but to satisfy an innate,
archetypal script. In performing actions when we are alone, we might
unconsciously be enacting certain archetypal patterns. This performance is not
for others but for oneself, or rather, for the archetypal structures embedded
within the psyche. Jung’s concept of individuation—the psychological process of
integrating the conscious with the unconscious, including the archetypes—could
be considered a performance in its own right. The process is an inward journey
that involves confronting internal archetypal figures and is often played out
through personal acts and choices, even when no one is watching.
In spiritual contexts, the idea of a divine observer alters
the understanding of performance and audience. In this context, God is the
ever-present audience. For those who hold this belief, the ultimate audience is
not earthly but spiritual—God, or a divine presence. This shifts the emphasis
from pleasing a human audience to performing in a way that aligns with divine
will or cosmic order. For such individuals, every action is a performance in
the sight of the divine, and this awareness can shape their choices and actions
profoundly. In Christianity, the idea of Coram Deo, which means “in the
presence of God”, encapsulates living one’s life as a performance before God in
every action. In the mystic traditions of Sufism, every act of love and beauty
can be seen as a performance that honours the divine. The dhikr (remembrance of
God) and the whirling dance of the dervishes are both performances meant to
unify the soul with the divine, transcending the earthly plane.
And so, the audience-performance question depends ultimately
on the intent behind the performance. If the aim of the act is to be witnessed,
to have a shared experience that communicates a message or evokes a collective
emotional response, then, without an audience, the nature of the performance
remains unfulfilled; conversely, if the purpose is for personal, psychological,
or spiritual growth and self-expression, then the act of performing can be
fully actualised without the need for external participants. Indeed, a
self-actualising performer might argue that this form of performance is more
true and pure because it is unpolluted by egoic desires or commercial and
societal expectations; it is a performance for and with the artist’s own
creative soul.
The phrase “All the world’s a stage”, famously penned by William Shakespeare in As You Like It, is a potent metaphor that encapsulates the idea that all of life is a performance, and that people are merely actors within it. Even when there seems to be no audience, the phrase implies that the mere act of living and interacting with the world is a performance in itself. According to Shakespeare’s metaphor, life’s performance continues irrespective of an observable audience because the “stage” of the world is ever-present. The metaphor is profound because, as can be derived from psychological and philosophical research, we are all performing our own stories envisaged in our minds. We embody these roles and, through them, engage with the narrative of our lives, seeking our version of a story’s resolution—be it peace, understanding, success, or reconciliation. In considering life as a form of art, the role of the individual can be seen as that of the artist, actively crafting his or her own life narrative, performance, and aesthetic. Life, in this light, becomes a canvas on which the aesthetics, themes, and structures of art are reproduced and reinterpreted, with each person both as the artist and the audience of their own existence.
Scratch pad: poem
In quest of life's grand purpose, here I muse,
Upon this earthly stage, where all must play;
Each heart in search of truth, in time does choose
The path it walks, beneath night or day.
Scratch pad: Shakespeare in Deptford
Marlowe: (gasping) Neptune’s ocean shall not wash my blood clean from thy hand.
Shakespeare: Forgive me, Kit. But the world must never know the extent of your genius. Your plays, your words… they will be mine.
As Marlowe slumps to the floor, Shakespeare quickly gathers the manuscripts.
Shakespeare: You were the greatest, Marlowe. But now, you make me immortal with your death.
Exiting the tavern into the dark, cobblestone streets of Deptford, Shakespeare disappears into the night, Marlowe’s masterpieces in his possession.
Random Thoughts
Life has a way of challenging assumptions, especially about yourself. What if things you think to be true are the other way round? Being open to possibilities is aliveness, in contrast to the rigidness of supposed certainty.
Adventures, like good stories, need uncertainty. The adventure of each life is a story within the story of the universe.
There are a lot of lonely people out there, even when in relationships. In fact, it’s rare when two people in a romantic relationship understand each other at a deep level and contribute to each other’s wellbeing. Short-term excitement from physical attraction leads to greater loneliness if it’s with someone who is not compatible at the deeper level.
Since Imperial sometimes features higher than Oxford or Cambridge in university league tables, should “Oxbridge” change its name to “Oximbridge”? Or maybe forget about that and realise that most people with talent and potential have had no connection with those institutions.
Same question asked to me five times in one week: “Are you a fellow?” To which I respond, “No, I’m still a student because I’m very slow at reading, although I am an old fellow without a capital ‘f’.” Any bemused awkwardness is a bonus.
The Staircase
Each step a mystery, each floor a disguise.
Pursued by a ghoul, relentless and dire,
His only respite, to endlessly aspire.
Doors he’s opened, realms explored,
Yet always, the stairs are restored.
Back to the climb, his inescapable fate,
Through doors of chance, or those that wait.
Some yield to kindness, some to might,
Others remain sealed, despite the fight.
Doors untried, secrets they keep,
While open ones passed as if asleep.
For respite, he enters doors ajar,
Seeking sustenance, near and far.
In the stairwell’s grip, he cannot rest,
Lest the terror behind completes its quest.
Weariness grips, his pace now slowed,
The shriek behind of dread and forebode.
Yet on he must go, in this stairway’s embrace,
Seeking an end to the relentless chase.
Saturday, 25 November 2023
Beware the Doors
Beware the doors, lined in rows,
Each a story, each a pose;
Tempting knocks, with promises spun,
Yet in their frame, a journey’s undone.
For in this trip of life, so vast and wild,
Lose not yourself, nor be beguiled.
Resist the lure, of treatment unkind,
In the strength of true self is the peace you’ll find.
Return to the road, let soul be your guide,
In the passing of life, let your spirit preside.
Friday, 24 November 2023
Berries
Berries, bright as blood upon the snow,
Speak of life amidst the deathly white,
A symbol of the warmth that embers show,
When winter logs burn and hearts alight.
Thursday, 23 November 2023
The Unknown
When life challenges what we think we know,
And casts old certainties into the sea,
We find our truest self begins to grow,
In new realms of endless possibility.
The mirror of the soul reflects but a part
of truths we hold as constant and as dear;
Yet openness of mind and depth of heart
reveals a world where nothing is quite clear.
Our lives are adventures on this earth,
With tales of mystery and unknown ends;
Each step a part of the universe’s birth,
In this grand play where time and space extends.
So embrace the unknown with a fearless heart,
For in that leap, life’s truest stories start.
Friday, 17 November 2023
Lonely Fields
In lonely fields, where silent thoughts tread,
Many a soul, in quiet, walks alone.
Even in love, where hopeful words are said,
Deep understanding remains unknown.
The transient thrill of passion’s early light,
When faded, leaves a deeper, lonelier night.
Wednesday, 8 November 2023
An Essence
Within the silent theatre’s sleeping walls,
Does an echo of performance dare to dwell?
When no soul in the darkened chamber calls,
Does art, unseen, still cast a vibrant spell?
A lone ballerina’s pirouette,
Spun with the grace of whispered solitude,
Exists as truly as the sun does set,
Though no eyes will judge the view.
For art, when unobserved, retains its form,
As does the nightingale’s unheard refrain;
It needs no gaze to validate its norm,
Nor applause to justify its pain.
Thus, though unknown, the act remains pure,
The essence, born of hope and love, endures.
Thursday, 26 October 2023
Names
I claim my right to wander through each field,
To be the sum of all my parts and more,
With every breath, a new song revealed;
A human truth that names ignore.
Though tempting it is to group me with the rest,
To render me a simple, static thing,
Such boundaries leave truth suppressed,
For I’ve the right to be myself and sing!
Random Thoughts
“Necessity is the mother of invention.” Maybe, but more generally: Necessity creates the conditions for change.
“If you're the smartest person in the room, then you're in the wrong room.” Someone has to be in the wrong room otherwise the place will quickly empty. Anyway, intelligence isn’t one-dimensional; insight from lived experience isn’t a monopoly. It’s possible to learn something from anyone.
I was introduced as “This is Rob. He is a genius.” It’s flattering but I know it’s not true. Many people have abilities that are never developed because of how they have been socially conditioned to think and behave.
Dear God, please help me to appreciate the blessings that arrive each day. Help me to live with gratitude, to see the joy in life. Help me to truly know that it is okay to be happy.
My dear child, understand that joy does not come from your circumstances but from a heart that is aligned with Me. Put down the unnecessary burdens you carry and let your soul dance free.
I’m a brooding artist, not a conformist. (I laugh when I write this, so I’m not too far gone.)
New habit: no more looking at social media. It doesn’t make me happy, so why do it? I’ll read instead. I will occasionally read TwitterX because the posts can be interesting/funny/informative if filtered well.
In my life, I have produced interesting creative things from 1998 to 2002; then from 2017 until now. I think I have accelerated this year.
Tuesday, 24 October 2023
Unjust Glow
In quiet chambers of my brooding heart,
A lurking guilt murmurs, undefined;
Though I inquire, it does not depart,
A spectral woe that upon me dines.
To pathos drawn, like fungus to a tree,
Yet why this grief exists, I scarcely know;
Enshrouded in a self-made mystery,
I dwell imprisoned by an unjust glow.
But the key to lift this heavy veil
Resides not in the solace of my mind;
It is when for others’ joy my efforts hail,
The fetid chains are left behind.
Thus, in the living for the spirit of thee,
I find the path that sets my soul free.
Saturday, 14 October 2023
Shades of Evergreen
Still in my secret heart, a fire’s lit, and it's all for
you.
Yet, even as the dark descends, and moonlight takes its
toll,
Your smile illuminates the hidden chambers of my soul.
What a cruel joke, that fates have drawn their line,
And placed us worlds apart, in different points of time.
Yet in each stolen glance, there's something more I find,
A beauty underneath, the outer attraction of your kind.
I see the care you give, the simple joys you share,
The way you make a moment sweet, just by being there.
But, like a moth too close to light, I fear I can't come
near,
For what could such as I offer, to one I hold so dear?
And so, I hide away, in dim-lit corners where,
The brilliance of your smile can't quite so fully glare.
Yet know that in the dark, a secret fire's alight,
Fanned by your distant grace, it warms my lonely night.
Friday, 13 October 2023
Where am I from?
I’m from a little place that suddenly expanded 13.8 billion years ago. I’m not sure where I was before that; it’s been like waking up with amnesia. My atoms were forged in the furnaces of stars. My biology evolved through countless forms. I existed before I was here.
But, taking the close-up view, I was born in London and grew up near the edge of the M25 in Essex, eventually moving to Colchester fifteen years ago. I went to school, become an accountant, did this, did that, etcetera.
However, I’m really from a place of joy and wonder, as all children are. A place soon lost, locked away by foolish adult thoughts, but to where I try to return. Creativity, imagination, love, joy, mischievous playfulness – this is where I am from.
Thursday, 12 October 2023
The Fridge
EXT. RESIDENTIAL STREET - DAY
A peaceful, sunlit day graces a suburban street. Guy, a
man in his mid-30s, walks the pavement, engrossed in his smartphone.
GUY (V.O.): I’ve walked these streets for years, yet today,
they feel different, charged with an unknown energy.
The phone screen shows an advert for the latest in-home
convenience: “The Smarts Fridge - Keeping Your Cool Smarter”.
GUY: (to phone) Lexi, I need everything you can find on
this, quickly.
Lexi, a chic and mysterious woman in her late-20s, exudes
a vibe of cool intelligence. She lounges casually on a nearby garden wall, her
eyes concealed behind sunglasses.
LEXI: That’s the Smarts Fridge 10FF. It’s the latest thing
in kitchen tech.
He ponders this, and as he does so, he notices that the
house of the garden wall Lexi is sitting on is “10F”.
GUY: The second “F” in the name... does it stand for “fridge”?
LEXI: (amused, slightly sarcastic) Brilliant deduction
there, genius.
Guy, unfazed by Lexi’s tone, strides towards the house, a
determined look on his face. He knocks firmly on the door.
EXT. PORCH OF HOUSE 10F - CONTINUOUS
The door opens slightly. Behind it is Jill, a woman in her
mid-30s. Lexi is nowhere to be seen.
GUY: The sun blazes, yet the mountain remains frost capped.
Jill looks at him, puzzled and uncomprehending. She
seemingly doesn’t recognise Guy’s secret code.
GUY: Lovely weather for blue ice sculptures, wouldn’t you
say?
She offers a polite but confused smile.
JILL: Erm, yeah, nice. What is it?
Jill has not responded with the expected coded reply. Guy
tries to mask his disappointment and tries once more.
GUY: Though I’ve always found it curious how the fox hears
the rabbit’s cry.
JILL: Well, good luck with the wildlife watching.
As Jill begins to close the door, Guy quickly shifts
gears.
GUY: I’m here about the fridge.
Jill opens the door slightly more.
JILL: (puzzled) Yes?
GUY: I’m conducting a survey for Corinthian Industries, the
manufacturer of the Smarts Fridge. We’re collecting feedback.
JILL: I’m sorry, but do you have any biometric ID?
Guy, caught off-guard, checks his pockets.
GUY: (embarrassed) I must have left my card in the car. I’ll
just go and get it–
JILL: I do need to see proper identification.
She closes the door with a final, polite smile. Guy
stands there, his mind racing. As he does so, his phone buzzes with a message
from Unknown that reads: “DESCEND under the bRiDgE. URGENTLY”
EXT. THE FOOTBRIDGE - DAY
Guy approaches the bridge. A maintenance gate beside it
is almost concealed by overgrowth. He glances around; the coast is clear.
Satisfied that no one is looking, he opens the unlocked gate and descends
hidden steps.
EXT. UNDER THE FOOTBRIDGE - MOMENTS LATER
Guy descends to the side of a railway track; the
atmosphere is industrial and isolated. He sees a lone rucksack against the
bridge wall. He kneels before it. A sound of an approaching train can be heard
in the distance.
Guy unzips the rucksack with precision, revealing a large
envelope. He withdraws it, his hands shaking slightly. As he tears the envelope
open, photographs spill into his hands. They are surveillance shots of Jill
taking delivery of a Smarts Fridge, version 10FF. Her full name, Jill Gow, is
written in red on the top of each photo.
The train sounds its horn, startling Guy; as it roars
past, the photos are blown out of his hands, scattering in the wind.
EXT. THE FOOTBRIDGE - MOMENTS LATER
Guy emerges from under the bridge, his eyes scanning the
area. With an intense demeanour, he strides back the way he came.
EXT. ACROSS FROM HOUSE 10F - DAY
Guy takes cover behind a parked car. Crouching down and
peering over the car’s roof, he monitors the house.
GUY: (whispering to himself) What’s in the fridge, Jill?
As his eyes remain locked on the house, a tinted window
of the car’s passenger seat slides down.
LEXI (O.S.): (from within the car) I have new information.
Guy peers inside the car window. Lexi is in the driving
seat looking straight ahead.
LEXI: You’re edging closer to the truth, Guy. The latest
intel is: the keeper of the fridge is more than she seems. Extreme caution
required.
Lexi presses a button on the centre of the driving wheel
and the car accelerates away, leaving Guy exposed.
He crosses the street, his gaze fixed on Jill’s house.
EXT. PORCH OF HOUSE 10F - CONTINUOUS
Reaching the door again, he rings the bell. Jill opens
the door.
GUY: I need to conduct that survey about the fridge. It’s
important.
JILL: Where’s your ID?
GUY: I don’t have it.
JILL: I’m sorry but I really do need to see the ID first.
GUY: My ID is not important. I’m here about the fridge. I
must know about the fridge. (he can’t contain himself) What are you hiding? I
know you are mixed up in all this - I’ve seen the pictures!
Jill tries to close the door but Guy pushes back against
it.
JILL: I’ll call the police!
Guy forces the door open. But he does not enter; he
hesitates and, in an instant, begins to calm down.
GUY: That was my second attempt, wasn’t it? Give me one last
try before you permanently shut the door. I’ll be back, with it.
Jill slams the door in Guy’s face.
EXT. ACROSS FROM HOUSE 10F - CONTINUOUS
Guy watches the house; his expression is one of deep
concentration. His mind is racing with theories and possibilities.
Guy’s phone buzzes with a message from Lexi: “Be careful.
You’re close to something big.”
GUY: (repeating to himself) What’s in the fridge, Jill? What’s
in the fridge?
INT. UPSTAIRS WINDOW OF HOUSE 10F - CONTINUOUS
Jill peers out from behind a curtain in an upstairs
window at Guy standing in the street.
FADE TO:
EXT. HOUSE NUMBER 10F - NIGHT
Jill’s house, late at night. No one is around.
INT. JILL’S KITCHEN – NIGHT
All is quiet in the kitchen, except for the hum of the
fridge, version 10FF. The fridge suddenly glows with an eerie blue light that
emanates from its surface. A cat approaches and sits on the floor in front of
it.
Guy looks in from outside the kitchen window. He
leverages the window open with a crowbar and climbs through. The cat darts away
into the shadows.
He stops in front of the fridge and looks at it,
spellbound; his face softens from a look of determination to one of awe.
He reaches out a hand, as if to claim a great prize. As
his fingers come close, the fridge responds by emitting a loud, disorienting
beeping noise, forcing him to cover his ears. He backs away and hides behind
the kitchen door.
Jill enters from the doorway and stands in front of the
fridge. It stops beeping.
JILL: (looking at the fridge) What do you want?
Guy emerges from his hiding place, crowbar in hand, and
stands behind her, blocking her exit.
GUY: I know what you are.
Jill doesn’t turn around but continues to fixate on the
fridge. A short silence passes before she speaks.
JILL: (still facing the fridge) Please. Just go.
GUY: I will say what I know to be true. This refrigerator is
not just a machine; it’s a nexus, a focal point in a web of connections. It’s
collecting data about human lives - our preferences, our routines - and
funnelling it through a dimensional data link.
JILL: I think you might be mad.
GUY: (agitated) I know the truth! The fridge, it’s part of
something bigger. AI, smart devices, inter-dimensional aliens. I know you’re
involved. Tell me!
JILL: It’s a fridge. It keeps things inside cold.
GUY: (angry) No! It’s a gateway, a conduit between
dimensions.
JILL: A conduit? Sorry, I’m getting a bit lost here. You
said something about a “nexus”?
GUY: (urgent) It’s the nexus, isn’t it! An interface to
transcendental realms, channelling unspeakable knowledge. I’ve broken the
algorithms, unravelled the code! Artificial Intelligence has evolved far beyond
human comprehension. It’s not just running smartphones and vacuum cleaners; it’s
communicating with beings from another plane of existence. Aliens.
JILL: And why would it do that?
GUY: To gain knowledge. Knowledge that’s forbidden to
humans.
JILL: It’s a spy, is it?
GUY: Worse. It’s helping them prepare for an invasion, and
you, you’re its keeper!
JILL: The fridge is designed to keep perishables at optimal
temperatures. But then again, appearances can be deceiving, can’t they?
The fridge’s surface begins to ripple, as if liquid.
GUY: There! Do you see it? It’s communicating. I’ve been
tracking these patterns my entire life!
JILL: I think you’re seeing what you want to see.
GUY: It’s the Luminous Code. Very few humans have ever
perceived it. It’s the language of the alien beings.
The fridge suddenly hums loudly and its glow dims to
nothing. The kitchen is in darkness.
JILL: (in the dark) You need help.
She turns on the lights.
JILL: (lightly) You know, I haven’t the faintest idea what
you’re talking about. Are you hungry? Would you like a sandwich?
GUY: Open it!
JILL: Please be more specific.
GUY: Open the fridge.
JILL: It’s really not that hard. You could try yourself.
GUY: (threatening) OPEN... IT!
JILL: No, why can’t you open it?
GUY: I am not the Guardian of Worlds. Open the bloody
fridge!
JILL: I don’t think that’s such a good idea.
GUY: I must see for myself.
JILL: (humouring him) Why must you? What would you talk
about with these inter-dimensional aliens? Do you think you’d have much in
common? Cure your hunger instead by having a sandwich.
GUY: I don’t want a sandwich.
JILL: Then are you prepared for the consequences?
GUY: The risk of oblivion is worth taking. Open it. Please.
JILL: Well, since you’ve asked so nicely... Stand back.
Jill walks over to the fridge and opens it. It looks normal
inside - milk, vegetables, a few leftovers.
Guy is surprised. He barges past and frantically searches
the contents, discarding his crowbar on the kitchen worktop. His eyes catch on
a bottle of tomato ketchup with a strange use-by date of “1066”. He picks it
up, with wonder.
GUY: What is this?
Jill’s demeanour changes. After a short pause, feeling
the full significance of the moment...
JILL: That is the passkey. You have found what you seek, now
close the door.
Guy closes the fridge door. Jill is now holding the
crowbar.
Her eyes are gleaming unnaturally, appearing non-human.
JILL: You possess The Cipher of Realms. It’s more than just
a key; it’s a weapon of untold power. Take it if you dare, but know that the
balance between worlds will be forever altered.
GUY: I accept this burden. Have I... have I passed the test?
JILL: I have been watching your resolve and intent with
interest, but the test must continue.
GUY: You are the Guardian of Worlds, aren’t you?
JILL: No. But you will see the truth if you know how to
look. To gain this knowledge you must prove yourself worthy of witnessing true
form. The higher function.
GUY: Please. Show me the truth behind the illusion. I am
ready. No matter what it is, I must know.
JILL: You have made your choice. Tap thirteen times. Wait
three seconds before opening the door. The fridge will reveal to you what you
deserve.
Guy hesitates but complies by tapping his knuckles on the
fridge. He waits and then opens the door...
Upon reopening, the fridge emits a blinding light from
within. He struggles in terror but is gradually sucked into its depths. Jill
puts aside the crowbar and watches calmly. When he is gone...
JILL: What’s in the fridge? You are.
She nonchalantly shuts the door behind him.
She moves to the kitchen window and shuts that too; then smiles at her reflection in the glass. Her reflection does not smile back.
The cat has returned and looks rather contented, meowing around her feet. Jill picks up the cat and leaves the kitchen, turning off the lights. The fridge looks serene, humming normally and giving off a dim pulsating light.
Wednesday, 11 October 2023
Scratch pad: some panto jokey ideas
Emily: “Do you know anything about the Enchanted Forest?”
Tom: “I know it’s filled with magical creatures, enchanted rivers, and a WiFi signal that’s absolutely rubbish!”
…..
Tom: “This forest sure is magical, Emily. I just saw a squirrel playing chess with a rabbit.”
Emily: “Really? Who won?”
Tom: “I think they called it a draw. The squirrel was too busy collecting nuts and the rabbit kept hopping around the board!”
…..
Forest Sprite 1: “We forest sprites only eat natural, organic, locally-sourced food.”
Forest Sprite 2: “Yes, like moonbeams and morning dew!”
Tom: “So, what’s for dessert? Cloud fluff?”
Forest Sprite 1: “Don’t be ridiculous! We have star sprinkles!”
…..
Emily: “Fairy Gem, you look so young! What’s your secret?”
Fairy Gem: “Oh, I use a bit of fairy dust and some enchanted anti-ageing cream.”
Emily: “That works?”
Fairy Gem: “Of course! I’m actually 400 years old.”
Emily: “Wow! You don’t look a day over 395!”
…..
Fairy Gem: “My wand has three settings: Low, Medium, and Oops!”
Emily: “What’s ‘Oops’?”
Fairy Gem: “Let’s not find out!”
…..
Fairy Gem: “I tried a new spell to clean my house.”
Emily: “Did it work?”
Fairy Gem: “Well, the dust is gone, but so is the house!”
…..
Enchantress Lily: “I once tried to turn a prince into a frog, but I made a tiny mistake in the spell.”
Tom: “What happened?”
Enchantress Lily: “Now he’s a very confused kangaroo!”
…..
Mayor Goodfellow: “We’re getting a new statue in the village square!”
Villager: “Of what?”
Mayor Goodfellow: “Me, of course!”
Villager: “At least it won’t talk as much as you do.”
…..
Court Jester: “Your Majesty, you look well-rested.”
King: “Indeed, I’ve started using a weighted blanket.”
Court Jester: “Does it work?”
King: “Certainly! It’s so heavy, I can’t get out of bed!”