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Induced Coma

Page 6

by Harold Jaffe


  He suffered a broken jaw, neck, back, pelvis, and tailbone, spent four months in the hospital, six months in rehab, and will be disabled for life.

  His ER physician submitted paperwork for the record, which Guinness officially recognized in 2007 and cited in its 2013 edition.

  Hot Sauce

  A posse of Tampa cons is offering a taste of what jail is like.

  No locks, bars, shackles, anal rape . . .

  None of that.

  But you’ll need a brave stomach to swallow even a dash of their “Jailhouse Fire Hot Sauce.”

  Minimum-security Hillsborough County Jail inmates offer their sauce in “Original,” “Smoke” and “No Exit” varieties, all made from jail-grown chili peppers.

  They came up with the recipe and started selling it on eBay in 2009.

  Since then, they’ve made $10,000 in profit. Each bottle costs $7.

  The profits go to the prison to purchase “basic supplies.”

  Marcel

  was adopted as a “therapy cat” at a nursing home for the elderly.

  When Marcel was five months old the staff noticed he would curl up with patients about to die.

  In one instance preparation was made for the death of one patient but Marcel chose the bed of another; the person he lay with died first, taking staff by surprise.

  About Marcel’s uncanniness: one theory is he is responding to a pheromone inaccessible to humans. So far he has accurately “predicted” 79-and-a-half deaths.

  Marcel remains unchanged by his celebrity, spending most of his day snoozing / snorting catnip.

  DIY

  When Wu broke his left leg in an industrial accident 10 months ago, surgeons implanted a steel plate in his leg.

  This year at his medical check-up Wu’s leg seemed to have healed enough to remove the plate. But he refused the procedure because of the expense.

  Instead, inspired by an American movie in which one of the characters successfully operates on himself, Wu used a kitchen knife, a screwdriver, pliers, and cheap liquor to remove the plate in his leg.

  Snake eyes. He ended up back in the hospital where his leg was amputated above the thigh.

  Futurismo

  In the Thirties, the Russian-born philosopher Alexandre Kojève taught a seminar on Hegel. He explained how Hegel’s discovery of the motor of history—the struggle for equal recognition among individuals—led to the discovery that history was about to end in what Kojève called a “homogenous universal state.”

  This state would be a set of global administrative and economic institutions run by technically competent technocrats free from traditional politics.

  At the social level it would mean the disappearance of most of the human characteristics that drove history in favor of the cultivation of consumption, erotic satisfaction, sports, and virtual entertainments.

  Brainwave

  A “Tantric master” broke his own world record by standing engulfed in ice for 72 minutes.

  Moses Moon, 48, stood on a Manhattan street in a clear container filled with ice for an hour and 12 minutes.

  Moon controls his body temperature through Tantric meditation, a spiritual discipline associated with Buddhism.

  Moon previously set the world record for full body ice contact endurance in 2004, when he immersed himself in ice for an hour and 11 minutes.

  Moon’s feat kicked off BRAINWAVE, a month-long series of spectacles in New York exploring how art, music and meditation affect the brain.

  Boot

  A man has been accused of locking his two sons in the boot of his car while he visited a sailing shop.

  Police say the man left the children alone in his Pontiac Trans Am for 23 minutes.

  The man claimed the children, aged three and six, enjoyed “playing in there.”

  The man pleaded not guilty to two counts of assault and reckless endangerment of a child and was released on bail.

  The children have been placed in the custody of their mother.

  The man’s lawyer told the judge that his client “loves his children and is extremely distraught.”

  Cucumber Coffin

  Paa Joe, of Ghana, designs the coffin his customer requests. It could be in the shape of an airplane, rhinoceros, cucumber, lobster, black mamba, bright orange Mercedes Benz, or Coke bottle.

  “The lobster could be for a fisherman, the cucumber for a grocer, the Benz for someone who worked in the automobile industry,” Paa Joe explained.

  Paa Joe said the idea hit him when a customer requested putting his dead grandmother in an airplane-coffin to transport her to heaven because the grandmother, alive, had never left her village.

  Paa Joe’s workshop processes orders from all over the globe.

  Funkee Hairstyles

  An Islamic council in Indonesia has issued a fatwa on females who practice yoga and/or straighten their hair, which they describe as “inviting moral danger.”

  The same religious body is reportedly issuing a fatwa banning dreadlocks, mohawks, punk haircuts and “funkee hairstyles.”

  Contemptible? Consider the competing religious orthodoxies.

  Hypo

  China has warned anyone found guilty of hypodermic attacks such as were employed in protests in the northwest regional capital of Urumqi would face the death penalty.

  29 people have reportedly been detained over the hypodermic attacks in Urumqi.

  Chinese officials blame Uighur Muslim separatists for the incidents.

  A Chinese

  naval vessel came perilously close to a US warship during a tense exchange in the South China Sea.

  USS Cowpatty, a guided missile cruiser conducting war games, was forced to maneuver to avoid colliding with the Chinese ship, which inexplicably had crossed in front of it and halted.

  Galina Korzhova

  was arrested in the southern town of Volzhsky on suspicion of hypnotizing a bank teller into giving her more than 2.6 million rubles. She is suspected of having robbed 14 other banks in a similar manner.

  During the bank’s lunch recess, Korzhova introduced herself to the teller in the commissary, promising to get her profitably married, while actually hypnotizing her: Teller will place rubles in a leather satchel then meet after closing time outside the bank on Communist Street.

  There the bewitched teller gave Galina Korzhova the rubles.

  There the police, hot on Korzhova’s tail, apprehended her.

  Mephisto

  Kool kicks. Black-on-black monk strap. Doc Marten?

  Mephisto.

  Does anyone still read Faust?

  Doubtful.

  Mephisto. Outsourced to Indonesia, right?

  Due south of Indonesia.

  You don’t mean . . .

  I saw the lasts. I met the maker.

  You met Mephisto?

  Correct.

  Who else did you see down there?

  Blake. Artaud. Yukio Mishima.

  You spoke with Blake?

  No.

  You spoke with Mephisto?

  He spoke.

  What did he say?

  Do what you’re doing.

  Meaning your writing?

  Correct.

  What in your writing does the fiendish shoemaker approve of?

  Comforting the afflicted.

  Ah.

  Afflicting the comfortable.

  Mephisto prefers the latter, obviously.

  Maybe.

  One Stolen Shoe

  When a shoemaker with failing sight found a single shoe missing from his shop in the western Belgian town of Maldegem, a Gypsy amputee was the immediate suspect. Authorities were alerted and straightaway apprehended the man who fit the shoemaker’s description. The shoe was not recovered.

  Smoothie

  A Vernal, Utah woman was being held on an attempted murder charge Wednesday after police say she spiked her roommate’s mango smoothie with antifreeze six-and-a-half years ago.

  Shannon Jane Plack, 37, was arrested this week i
n Eugene, Oregon where she remained jailed pending extradition to Utah.

  Police say Lester Fraumeister, now 59, nearly died when Plack bought him a smoothie at a convenience store, dumped half of it and poured in antifreeze.

  The 2008 case went cold until a jilted boyfriend of Plack’s, awaiting trial on an unrelated case in Arizona, came forward with new information, authorities said.

  Testicle

  A female ripped off her ex-boyfriend’s testicle with her bare hands.

  She became enraged when he rejected her advances during a house party.

  She ripped off his left testicle and tried to swallow it, before spitting it out.

  A friend handed it back to the male saying: “That’s yours.”

  The Almost-Planet Pluto

  Champion skater Taig Khris wowed thousands of onlookers in Paris when he attempted to set a new world record for the highest roller skate jump, leaping from the third floor of the Eiffel Tower . . .

  Eiffel Tower ain’ nuffin’. I watched some shaved head loon rollerblade off the almost-planet Pluto and land intact smack dab in the “Mall of America,” over there in Minnesota. You know what he done? Removed his skates, bought some state-of-the-art doodad in the Apple Store then stopped for a quadruple mocha decaf latte with low-fat rice milk at Starbucks.

  Dialogues with Death

  Did you purchase those white wingtips from J. Peterman?

  Why, yes, Death whispers.

  Recent purchase?

  Yes.

  There is a rent on the left side of the left shoe.

  Really? I’m not surprised.

  One must expect inferior quality from J. Peterman.

  But don’t you just adore his prose?

  *

  Is this the end of the end?

  It is the end of your debauched cycle.

  Will Yourself reappear in whichever cycle succeeds this?

  Depends on technology.

  Your Techno-Reich means to live forever.

  Or at least for a thousand years.

  If that’s how it plays out, I will consort with virgins.

  Noir

  Layin’ in my blood waitin’ on the medics.

  What’s takin’ so long?

  Don’t make no dif to me, Jack.

  Jus’ me and them lights.

  Death, right?

  How you say it? Beckoning?

  I like that.

  Don’t feel no pain.

  Maybe I’m already dead.

  Jus’ my heart, man.

  It still ain’t quit.

  INDUCED COMA

  SOURCES

  Bangkok Post

  BBC

  CLG

  Al Jazeera

  Le Monde

  La Prensa

  El País

  Japan Times

  The Free Library

  Yahoo & Google

  The NY Daily News

  The Half Moon Bay Review

  The Huffington Post

  The Independent UK

  The Guardian UK

  Mr. S Leather

  AlterNet

  The Village Voice

  The Progressive

  Erowid Psychoactive Vaults

  Multiple miscellaneous sources on- & off-line

  My epigraph is a treated version of a Peter Ustinov quote.

  HAROLD JAFFE is the author of 22 volumes of fiction, novels, docufiction, and essays, most recently Anti-Twitter: 150 50-Word Stories, OD, Paris 60, Revolutionary Brain, Othello Blues, and Induced Coma: 50 & 100 Word Stories. His books have been translated in France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Japan, Cuba, Turkey, Romania and elsewhere. Jaffe is editor-in-chief of Fiction International.

 

 

 


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