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Replying to a comment on:
Lemon Dream vs. Reality (Free verse) by TanHand
Lemon Dream vs. Reality...
I was talking to a friend of mine yesterday, rather, he was relating
this story about how he had bought a crate of lemons from this very
strange convenience store in Brooklyn, with medieval wooden floors and
10 foot deep coolers (where the lemons were). This was especially
interesting to me, since up to that point I had thought that I was the
only person that had that dream. "But no!" he said, "this was no dream."
I'm not usually one to dip my nose in another man's porridge, but I was
too fascinated by this coincidence to not ask for details about the
lemon purchase.
In my dream, the convenience store was staffed by two women, who were
trying to help him pull out the quarter inch masonite shelving upon
which the crates of lemons rested. But the wall behind the coolers was
but 3 feet away, so the shelves (which were 10 foot deep) could not be
fully extended, and so the fresher lemons towards the back were
unavailable to him. Disgusted, he took a can of Bacardi frozen
strawberry/lime juice from another cooler and left the cash next to the
post of the cashier, who was still messing about with the masonite
shelves with her fat friend. You'd think this story ends there! But it
doesn't.
Apparently these two women are real, the money was real, and the lemons
were also real. Not only that, but the sum of the reality of the lemons,
the money and the women is exactly equal to the reality of the
experience as a whole. Like, not just close but suspiciously and eerily
on the money.
The sheer unlikelihood of my dream and my friend's actual experience
possessing such close correspondence has made me wonder about the
viability of the plot of the movie The Lathe of Heaven. I saw The Lathe
of Heaven on VHS a few months ago. Someone made me watch it, and I
thought it was extremely bad. It is basically a PBS television
production about this dude whose dreams inform, or you could even say
manifest themselves into reality after the dream takes place. For
instance, if he dreamed of cherry pie, there cherry pie would be for him
when he stirred. Similarly, if he dreamt of Nuclear war, nuclear war
would happen.
I won't go into the plot of this film any further than I have because as
I said it was an extremely bad film - owing not simply to the terrible
plot but also everything else, which was also terrible. Even the idea of
someone entertaining the possibility of the production of this film
makes you shudder, after you've seen it, in the same way that someone
shudders when they've seen something terrible.
Now, how does this connect to the dream/experience. Well I don't know if
it does. My dream occurred before I had seen The Lathe of Heaven. All I'
m trying to say here is maybe my dreams control reality and I'm just to
groggy and tired in the morning to notice the immediate differences from
the previous night when I went to bed. Or perhaps I'm just so unwilling
to accept the obvious fact that my dreams shape the physical and
spiritual universe that I change my perceptions to accommodate for the
changes I involuntarily make. I'm pretty sure it's either one or the
other.
I am also reminded of the time I got some lemons at Whole Foods in
Providence (the one near Olney St.) and when I set out to make them into
something, found them sub-par in terms of both texture and flavor.
Outraged in a big fucking way, I stormed back to Whole Foods because I
forgot to buy milk. At the checkout counter I confronted the cashier:
"Excuse me but I bought some lemons here just now, and"
Just then I was reminded of that episode of Seinfeld where Kramer
returns Jerry's bad fruit. But I swear to god it didn't even cross my
mind until I was mid phrase,
"These lemons I bought weren't very good."
The cashier asked for an explanation, partly because he really cared
about my lemon issues, and probably partly because I am very attractive
and people just naturally listen to you when you're like that. You'll
also notice that I am not including his exact words here - I don't
remember them, because, conversely, when you are extremely attractive
you tend not to listen to people. Or maybe it was just hard to hear him
because I was also taller than him. Whatever the reason, I don't
remember his exact response, but the gist of it was that I should
explain myself so that he might hook me up with the inside scoop on
their lemons.
"Well you see Durell," (his nametag read "Durell", I remember his name
because I said it) "these lemons are,"
I paused.
"Lemons."
Isn't that clever? What I was trying to do here was use the word lemon
in the sense of the word where it means, like, something that isn't as
good as it looked. Like, in Massachusetts we have a "lemon" law which
allows you to get a refund on a used car within a certain period of time
if it turns out to have major problems you didn't know about at the time
of purchase.
Naturally, I think this law indicates a relentless and thorough
misapplication of bass-ackwards legislative policy. I think we should
have a "lemon" law which eliminates the sales tax on lemons, or anything
sunshiny yellow, perfectly round, delicately fragranced, or in any other
way wonderful, LIKE LEMONS, YES, LEMONS YOU FUCKWADS. But I suppose that'
s a whole fucking lot for a mere taxpayer to ask for in our, quote
unquote, "representative democracy".
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