AUTHOR.CALHO: If I didn't write it, I would be hitch hiking cross country to Maine and then Alaska in that order. While taking frequent breaks to spread leaflets. And sit in diners. And write on things because I wasn't at a computer. I may still do that in a few years. Writing this also helps me forget about and better understand the limitations of being human, and keeps me busy enough to allow me no free time to burn the world down.

THEMATIC.ABOUT : Collapse often. The things that hold people together and hold them apart and scatter brains. The things that make thoughts go boom. The things that ooh and aah and [expletive deleted]. Sometimes poking around the margins where responsibility ends and the only one to look to is the Original Equipment Manufacturer and say "but, I already pressed 9 for more options and the menus are exactly the same. Can you just replace it?" The answer will be: "please hold." Sometimes hanging out in dark corners. Sometimes following the train tracks. Looking for ways out and ways in and all the while sharing the things seen and heard and done and drawn and written and scorched and healed and teased and caged and dreamed along the way.

11/6/15

Dear (_____)

Dear chance,

I never know who exactly it is I am going to meet or where, for that matter.  At least, with the drug trade, it is a calculated risk.  Alone often?  Yes.  The benevolence of strangers.  I like to believe they are taking a risk too.  Each one is a gate to a new network.  An interface.  Thrilling and horrifying in its own span of minutes.  No safety nets.  Out of network.  Fringe.  Where the rubber meets the road, so to speak...  or flesh.  Every time you walk out that door you may not come back.  I hate thinking about it.  So many dice rolls.  I never thought I'd reach, or understand, a place where high risk, high risk beyond my control, was the way forward.  Trying to figure out what's inside the black boxes I meet is tiresome.  I worry for the day I read one wrong.  I have no idea how that game ends.  I don't traffic in violence anymore.  I wonder if I had to, if I absolutely had to, would I have enough time to realize I had to and turn the switch inside me, hidden inside a safe inside a safe inside a safe, before the game ended.

Sincerely,

a glass combination lock wired to a dead circuit switch hooked up to fifteen piezoelectric crystals encased in a three inch thick asphalt sealed... beside the infrared lens array connected to... feeding into a phosphorous anti-warship grade mine.

P.S. safety first.

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