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Sunday, August 2, 2020

Dreams. What Do They Mean?

dreams


Twelve years ago, I went to visit my sister and her family, whom I hadn't seen for years, for Christmas in Kingston. My sister and I spent one morning visiting with a friend of hers and after the friend left my sister dive-bombed the couch and lay down, moaning that something was really wrong with her head and to call an ambulance. When the ambulance drove by the house, which was way out in the sticks, Jamie, her husband, watched it go by and didn't make any attempt to go out and flag it down, and I had to tell him to get out there and flag it down when it came back. The two, very young emergency crew came in and started asking my sister a list of questions, taking so much time that I went into the room and told them to hurry it up, we had an emergency here.  
Laughing one minute with a friend delivering gifts, splayed out on the floor the next, an emergency. By the end of the day my sister was dead, an aneurysm. We were all in shock. I stayed on longer with my brother-in-law to process what had happened and in the meantime, I learned more about him and his relationship with my sister. My father had never liked his son-in-law, called him a 'bum' whenever he made reference to him, yet he wasn't a bum, he was just trifling, but we got along, had a few laughs over drinks and we all moved on with our lives. After I returned home overseas, I had a dream about him:  
We were staying overnight in a cheap hotel. I sat in a chair and looked at my brother-in-law as he lay sleeping across the other bed in the room, a functional, drab, brown. We stopped in for the night and now I couldn’t remember where we were or where we were going. I couldn't say why, I don't know why we were there, but an overwhelming urge overtook me as I stared down at his face against the pillow. I got up and went to the bathroom.   
I came back with a hammer in my right hand and watched him again as he snored, sprawled out over his side of the room, his glasses on the side table, a book open on his chest, his hairy legs splayed on the bed and I felt sorry that he was now single, all alone, on his own after so many years. A widower. My sister died, left him and now he was lost. I gripped the hammer in my hand and stood over him. I looked at the back of his bald head, his face turned sideways, his heavy beard, his face streaked with the pink lines of sleep and I raised my arm and slammed his head with the hammer, drawing it quickly back up again. He groaned and lifted his head slightly. I whacked him again and the claw of the hammer stuck in his skull, in his forehead and his his head went down and didn’t move again. I stood over him, still, quiet, watching as the life slowly left his body. I tore the hammer out of his skull and hit him again and he groaned.  My brother-in-law was now my ex-brother-in-law. 
I slowly sat back on the armchair beside his bed and watched him take his last breathe. It was visible, the body shutting down, shrinking back into itself. Now why did you do it, what are you doing, what’s the matter with you?  I sat forward in my chair and looked at him, the hammer stuck in his smashed forehead. Why did I do that?
A calm descended and fell into me, I felt no fear and glanced at him, the blood trickling down his forehead, gathering and spreading under the side of his face, staining the pillow; he was now on his side. His arms were up over his head, as if reaching for something. To defend himself perhaps, to stop me piercing his forehead with the hammer. 
I gathered up the blankets from the drab hotel bed and spread them around his body, picked up my suitcase and left, driving off into the dark - not anywhere, just away. I had nowhere to go and drove until I woke up beside a river and there beside the river, not too far, a family splashed in the water. I lay on the grass and after a few minutes, fell back to sleep and slept long and hard, the best sleep on the best surface in the world. The family spoke to me when I woke again and I told them that.
I was back in the car, driving, wondering if anybody was looking for me, but no cops were on the road. But suddenly they were; cops at the side of the road, checking license plates, looking inside cars, looking for something. I kept my head down and drove by and none noticed until one checked the number on my plate and I saw him in my rear view, staring, running to his car. Cops surrounded me and I wondered what it would be like to be in jail. I had some vitamins, perhaps if I ate them all I would die before they brought me in.
What would it be like in jail? I envisioned other women, with hammers of their own. Could I do a lifetime? Who would I have to fight?  I pulled over.

Monsanto - Evil Deeds, Evil Seeds


Many scientists have warned about having reached the  'tipping point' with regards to climate change. In other words, we are at a point of no return, fatal damage has been inflicted on the planet and nothing we can do will reverse it. And it's only getting worse.  The Carbons Major Report of 2017 found that 'more than half of global industrial emissions since 1988 – the year the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was established – can be traced to just 25 corporate and state-owned entities.'

The Carbons Report is a study on emissions, but the world has been stricken for decades by manufacturing chemical giants such as Monsanto, Dow Chemicals, DuPont and BASF (the largest chemical manufacturing plant in the world with 69.2 billion in earnings for the year 2017).

Monsanto, the archetypical corporation and grandfather of all chemical manufacturing, has polluted water, contaminated food, ruined health and destroyed lives and in the while, created new diseases. Since its inception nearly one hundred years ago, and with the overt complicity of those agencies created to safeguard the company, Monsanto has been destroying the planet.   

It would be easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than a Monsanto corporate executive to get into heaven. Monsanto is responsible for PCPs, the godsend of mankind, which turned out to be a disaster, but by the time it was discovered, it was in everything.  Poisoning the water we drink, the ground, the food. 

Organizations set up to protect us, like the FDA, EPA and Health Canada are working in tandem with those very corporations. Bureaucrats go from government positions to corporate positions and back, a revolving door of corruption and conflict-of-interest. Congressmen and senators have been bribed and bought off by large corporations.   

The common man.  He has his gun loaded beside him to protect his family and his home from whatever hell is coming, but he's already dead. He's been dead for years. The killers slithered into his home, years before, like an odorless gas, striking his family down with disease and disorder when he was watching television, drinking Diet Coke, snacking on Lays Cheese Flavor Chips and dreaming of the day when he, too, would be rich.  He became obese, perhaps morbidly and thereby immobile, and while he was eating and protecting his right to bear arms, his right to a clean life was gone.