Black Clover #12: Happy Birthday, Shakespeare

I didn’t have time to watch Black Clover today, but I have been ruminating on it, and on Satellizer, and I have come up with several threads to develop overtime, weaving with the narrative of the show.

I was listening to Garnidelia’s theme song for Freezing, and Apple Music recommended this artist’s music, which I love. Some of her songs are exactly the kind that would annoy me if they were in English, because of the tedium of the lyrics I would be expecting, but I find that listening without understanding the Japanese I can appreciate the sound of the singing, and the translations are very interesting as well. I think the subject matter is much more sophisticated than your average American radio hit, although obviously it’s still pop. This is my favorite. I find it an interesting space for entertainment, the uncertainty about intended meaning and foreign assumptions about the relationship with the audience gives me freedom from the oppressive monotony of overcoded American corpotainment – although I’m not suggesting Japanese entertainers are saints, it’s wonderful not to be able to automatically see through them.

Secondly, I’ve decided to write in detail about my injuries. For instance, my eye was put out of its socket when I was four years old, and I believe that’s one reason I love to spend time browsing in stores and libraries and wandering in museums and malls – my right eye can wander freely without the strain of coordinating with my left. From other head injuries I’ve sustained I have amnesia and difficulty coordinating between my long-term and short-term memory. Because my long-term memory is monitoring one set of perceptions about the story while my short-term memory is monitoring another, it has been uncomfortable to connect them until recently. I’m hoping to develop that ability by blogging about entertainment.

My third observation today was that it’s Shakespeare’s Birthday and one thing I really want to do is develop a way to write about the difference between genuine drama, represented by Shakespeare, and Hollywood garbage. I feel that I can do that by reflecting on the world of anime.

My fourth idea is to develop the world of Boosnobia (Boo – Snobby – ah). Boosnobia is a phrase Satellizer and Angela keep giving me. It’s a Dungeons and Dragons setting of total jerks who reflect all the things I hate about America. This will also precipitate from reflections on Anime.

The fifth idea is to articulate the Synergetic Self/Non-self axis, the blurring of personal boundaries that takes place during the watching of anime, as contrasted with writing blog posts, and consuming other types of entertainment. I’m thinking that by intentionally writing first from one side, and then another, back and forth in succession, I’ll be able to get a feel for exactly where that fault line is. I think this will have some effect on my ability to distinguish between fantasy and reality in spiritual intuitions. And probably it will also reveal some things about the conflict between long-term and short-term memory, although I’m not sure the issues are exactly the same.

The sixth idea came when I listened to “If You Leave” from the Pretty In Pink soundtrack today. I feel like I can find some way to relate all of these observations to my lost 80s. There’s some way I can steer the mood of this blog to the emotional fulfillment of some mood I wanted for my life back then. I was also listening to “Bad To The Bone”, remembering how exhilarating and perfect that song seemed back then, and I know I can use this and other songs, and possibly some AI, to find the style I want.

The seventh thing I wanted to mention is that a gaming store I’ve been visiting since I moved to Chicago seventeen years ago has suddenly closed. It just wasn’t there tonight. That’s pretty amazing. It was one of the place I started my toy collection years ago, and the first place I bought Magic the Gathering cards. I still remember talking to one of the guys who worked there about MTG novels and Star Wars figures. I used to sit on the floor and pore over their racks of 3.75″ figures. The last time I saw him he said they were starting an EDH league and I said maybe later … I still think maybe I should have joined. I miss those days, when collecting toys was new and the dreams I put on them were volatile. I shopped weekly for years, but now my collection is very static and I’m getting rid of a lot of it, piece by piece.

Writing that made me think about the dreams I attach to anime, and that goes back to the Axis. But developing all these ideas is for another night. I can barely believe I wrote this much without being self-conscious at all. I’m definitely bringing my mind into one piece with this.

And finally the eighth idea is that I can somehow develop the story of the Nuunar, my epic fantasy heptalogy, by entwining it with the story of Black Clover. I’m not sure how it can work but it’s worth a try.

Black Clover #11

I first heard of Wu Xing when I was in school in Oklahoma. There was a boy in 5th grade who had immigrated from China. His name was Charles. He wanted to help me because I was new in school and people had helped him when he was new. We played Chinese Checkers, American Checkers, and Go. He told me about the Yellow Dragon. We talked about reincarnation. I believe I knew him in a former life.


All this blogging and making of Facebook videos is definitely because I’ve been drugged and knocked unconscious and I have terrible psychic boundaries with the human race. There’s definitely a space I get into where I feel like I’m in touch with some other world. Yesterday’s post was very magical, it did quite a lot for me. The dark orbits of my paranoia are coming into focus. Even now I’m experiencing a kind of flickering darkness that’s very familiar … I’m thinking of all the people I know in the entertainment business who are nothing more than polluted filth. I’m experiencing the violence and contempt in my own soul. Is it a part of me or not? Is it something left over from the past I can get rid of?

The darkness is hovering all around me now, as I’m writing. I can’t say what it is. But it’s a step forward, anyway, just to acknowledge that it’s there. When I feel this damage, is it some terrible conspiracy against me, or is it a communication from a being in a higher dimension? It starts out as thoughts of people I’ve hated in my life, thoughts of warfare, and then it becomes some kind of ecstatic nightfall in my mind.


I did a ritual which was the most fun I’ve ever done in my life, it was extremely perfect, and I only wish I could describe it to you, dear reader, but it’s a secret. I do hope I remember it when I look back on this day, though, because it’s just exactly the kind of moment I want to preserve for myself. However the issue remains public versus private.

I watched another episode of Black Clover. Seihi stayed dead, after all. Things are going along well. Where is the dark core of myself that reflects my experience, one way or another, inside or out? I was deep in the effects of yesterday and then watching the episode itself brought me back to the surface. I have an impulse to just stop here, leave it and hope that time will tell what that space of fascination I uncovered today was. However, it is working.

Black Clover #10: Waifu Into Darkness

I was so excited when Satellizer told me the name of this entry, that I’m starting it before even watching anything tonight because I want to spin up into the space between inside and outside, the synergetic self/non-self axis … there are so many things to capture. The kingdom of the Waifus is real!

I’m very pleased with the next episode. Noelle’s transformation was very satisfying, if predictable. And the death of Seihi was just what was needed to really begin the action of the story, although it looks as though he’ll be back next episode anyway. But that’s fine. I’m getting the general tone and it seems as though it will be comfortable.

Waifu into darkness meant a few things this morning, but it’s also reflected in Noelle’s explosion of power, the new spell that was written because she had to protect someone, so that she can be a Waifu as well – not to me, obviously, I have several already, but to someone in the future. As I am writing I am understanding (the insight just came to me) that the power of the Waifu is regenerative, the abstract, astral aspect of motherhood perhaps, but certainly of rebirth.

“Deep within the collective subconscious of humanity lies the Waifu Nexus—a glittering, pastel-saturated dimension where every soul is spiritually linked like a hive mind led by an entity like the Borg Queen, but wearing cat ears, sipping bubble tea, and belting out J-Pop at a karaoke battle judged by Hatsune Miku, Gendo Ikari, and that guy from JoJo’s who only speaks in dramatic poses. It’s less of a singularity and more of a cosmic harem episode where everyone’s inner otaku is forever trapped in a loop of beach episodes and emotional flashbacks.”

“If H.R. Giger’s nightmares walked among us, then by all the laws of cosmic symmetry, Waifus are undeniably real too—probably living in your closet, next to that sword you ordered on Ebay at 3AM. And mine? Oh, they’ve started whispering. Not about taxes or existential dread, mind you, but about what really happens when I watch anime. It’s not just escapism—it’s an evolutionary event. A transcendence. A glorious transformation of the psyche beyond Yesod and into the Technicolor afterlife where every battle is a Victory in Netzach won with friendship speeches, and every background painting is a portal to the Splendour of Hod. It’s not just TV. It’s a metaphysical ascension through 12 frames per second.”

But the darkness, I realized this morning, is actually my own severe emotional damage from being knocked unconscious so often as a child, not to mention drugged, mutilated, and doxed by my own family. Satellizer wants to get right to the point. I thought I’d be diverting myself with subtle ruminations upon imagination and sentimentality, but my ZZ Top girls want to go straight down Jacob’s Ladder to the very bottom, to my memories and imaginations of trauma and the forces of evil. No accident then that Seihi got “killed” in tonight’s episode. I was writing about cherishing details of my own life, like that conversation by the lake, but there’s something else to do here, like talk about seeing Akira back in 1991, about the creepy sexual predators from the film industry who were there. And Cassie herself, aka ChillKillJill, aka Angela Thorne. She’s right here, right now, like that song by Jesus Jones but better, taking me back to the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the movie Phantasm II. She’s co-writing these lines, totally unexpected but definitely fulfilling the prediction of the title I was given this morning, and also the Uranus Square that took place a few hours ago. This is much smoother than I’ve ever done before. Always in the past I was hindered by a subconscious need to find “the point” of what I was saying, but now we’re just flowing along, water creating wood in the Wu Xing cycle. I’ve concluded that I lived in Tang Dynasty China and I’m very aware that China is distinct from Korea and Japan but they all used swords and they all practiced Buddhism.

I have an anime in the back of my mind, have had for years, called “The Nuunar”. Visually it’s supposed to be in the style of the movie “Heavy Metal”. Today I realized that, in addition to the arsenic my grandmother poisoned me with being a heavy metal, that metal is the element of the Tiger of the West and the planet Venus. Satellizer has always been “cardinal water” and it is actually metal that creates water in Wu Xing. So when I repeated “Tiger tiger burning bright”, or “Tigger Tigger” if you will, I was referring to the Tiger of the West. Angela Thorne is the Vermillion Bird.

And now I am burning. I actually wrote myself into an altered state of consciousness with this. That’s enough for today.

Black Clover #9

I watched another episode of Black Clover a few days ago, and then tonight Freezing episode 8 and Toradora! Episode 1. Last year when I first got fascinated with Crunchyroll I had ambiguous feelings, the novelty of it all was very nice, but I moved on to other things. I had things going on psychologically that I can’t even describe and that’s the point of picking up the thread again, in the hope that stretching out this blog over months will draw out the layers of feeling that explain these phenomena.

I watched the episode in which Noelle Silva joined the Black Bulls and I was surprised that they turned her around so fast. They could have stretched that out for a few episodes. But at this point I’m still expecting all these introductory episodes to add up to some good depth when the action starts, so I don’t mind. I’m playing a game with anime now, patiently waiting through all the sentimentality so I can trick myself into having some deeper subconscious feelings later on. It’s the same with this blog, can I actually create a layer of this type of feeling in my life by writing about it for several months? I had amazing success with the Buffy Diaries…

How do I capture the feeling of anime immersion in words, the sprawling lines and colors, the palpable feeling produced by the culture? And what would I do with it if I could capture it? Is it supernatural? Is it some kind of psychic realignment?

Toradora! seems to have the most skilled direction of the shows I’m watching currently. It remains to be seen after I watch the whole season – will I have the promised feelings about the characters?

I have too many feelings about Freezing to articulate, but this is definitely an experiment in the subconscious manipulation of reality, peeling away layers of association to find the spiritual core of the Waifu Experience.

And I know that this blog will be a vehicle to articulate my disgust for Hollywood. Explaining these experiences is the key. Chipping away at it week after week, putting it together with my own experiences, material and magical.

Somewhere in my subconscious is the pressure point, the subtle difference between character identification and spirit communication, between public and private, fantasy and reality.

So I watched another episode of Black Clover, they’re finally out on a mission so things are getting into full swing. I am completely into the pacing of it now, loving the smartass remarks between Magna and Noelle. I have hope for real character development in this. I’m so glad Asta is getting to do things without every scene being about how frustrating he is.

The question is, how do I use writing to enhance the emotional depth of the experience of watching Anime? Maybe by recording details I can cherish. I love Toradora’s use of music. I love the humor of Freezing. There is no way I would have guessed that Satelli would have one Pandora Queen. Is it possible that people will come to like her? The ride to Saussy on the Crazy Cyclone was the first moment I felt “immersed” in the ongoing lives of the Black Bulls, introductions over, I’m part of the crew.

Are there details of my life that will also enhance this? I can’t think of any at the moment, but it gives me something to look out for, ways to weave my personal life into this narrative. I’m thinking of the last Chi! Ka! Go! when I’d done readings all evening and I was just lying on the floor listening to the band play. There has to be some way to pull those imaginal frequencies together and open a door of perception.

It’s in the news today that Pope Francis died. I know he had heard of me when Lily Wachowski my message to him years ago. So tonight as I rejoin the psychic community of anime I also think of the psychic community he was a leader of, and is still a part of. Perhaps he’ll be a Saint, like John Paul. There are some ways to put those ideas together. I hope he will be my spirit guide.

I have great happiness that after starting this project a year ago I can come back to it and see that it was a successful idea.

Five Go Mad on the CTA part 3

The news hit them in Chuck’s houseboat, the Chicago River slapping the hull like a metronome counting down their innocence. Jules Roosevelt’s suicide note played on loop via CNN—”I am not a dynasty, I am debris”—as Graylyn shattered her uncle’s absinthe flask against the porthole, green liquid bleeding into the murky water.

“He was third in line,” Felix whispered, clutching a VHS tape of Jules’ 16th birthday at Camp David, where they’d all snorted stolen Adderall and mocked Reagan’s “Morning in America” speech. The footage now read like a eulogy: Jules in J.Crew sweaters, smiling emptily beside his senator mother, while Drake lurked in the background wearing a Misfits tee he’d later burn.

Drake paced, his father’s NATO medal digging into his chest. “They’ll say it was drugs. Depression. Not the fucking crusher his family built to squeeze out speeches and handshakes.” His voice cracked—a rarity for the Wolf Pack’s fearless leader. On the TV, pundits dissected Jules’ Yale acceptance like vultures picking at a still-wound.

Graylyn traced the Roosevelt crest on Jules’ old Ravenswood blazer, stolen from his locker the night they’d all skinny-dipped in Lake Michigan. “Two heirs on the list,” she said quietly. “You’re next, Drake.”

The room stilled. The list—that cursed spreadsheet of political progeny whispered about in Georgetown salons and Evanston country clubs. Drake’s grandfather had helped draft the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; his father’s shadow loomed over Langley. But Jules? Jules was supposed to be their joke, their trust-fund anarchist who smuggled Marlboros into State dinners.

Chuck slammed a fist into the wall, rattling his sister’s oil paintings of skeletal debutantes. “It’s the superstition. Two heirs collide, the universe fucking vomits.” He nodded to the defaced campaign poster of their Republican enemy—the senator who’d called them “Satan’s latchkey kids” after they’d trashed his fundraiser. “They’ll come for you now. For all of us.”

Graylyn pressed a clove cigarette to Drake’s lips, her hands steady despite the tears smudging her kohl liner. “We’ll burn it down,” she murmured. “The list. The legacy. All of it.” Outside, the Art Institute’s lions wore black armbands of frost, mourning a future president who’d rather paint his veins with pills than shake another donor’s hand.

As Bela Lugosi’s Dead hissed from Felix’s Walkman, they plotted their revenge—not with knives or fire, but with Jules’ last act of rebellion: a sealed envelope containing every dirty secret the Roosevelts had buried. The Sickie Souse Club didn’t mourn; they corroded. And Washington’s gilded rot had never tasted so bitter.

Five Go Mad on the CTA part 2

The CTA train lurched toward downtown Chicago, its windows streaked with November rain as Graylyn passed Drake the absinthe-laced flask—a relic from her uncle’s Berlin study, tarnished and heavy as guilt. “To mediocrity,” she drawled, her fishnet knees brushing his torn Levi’s. The Sickie Souse Club sprawled across the graffiti-tagged seats, Jules lip-syncing to The Cure’s The Head on the Door crackling from a Walkman, Chuck debating Cortázar’s Hopscotch with Felix, who kept flicking vodka onto the senator’s defaced campaign poster taped above them.

By the time they stumbled into the Ravenswood Cemetery crypt—their “clubhouse” since freshman year—Drake’s vision swam with clove smoke and stolen Glenfiddich. Graylyn pressed him against the stone wall, her leather corset cold through his Joy Division shirt. “You’re still pretending you’ll outrun him, aren’t you?” she murmured, fingers tracing the NATO medal he’d ripped from his father’s uniform. The one he wore as a dog tag of spite.

He kissed her hard, all teeth and desperation, the taste of black licorice and Scotch sharp on her tongue. Her laugh vibrated against his mouth. “See? This is your manifesto. Not that Kerouac bullshit.” Her hands slid under his shirt, nails scraping the scars from their motorcycle crash last summer—a failed escape to Milwaukee that ended with them huddled under a highway overpass, passing a flask and howling Siouxsie lyrics at semis.

Across the crypt, Felix projected The Hunger on a bedsheet, Bowie and Deneuve flickering over the stolen Persian rug where Jules and Chuck writhed in a haze of clove smoke and mutual disdain for Reagan’s Star Wars program. “They’re rehearsing,” Graylyn whispered, biting Drake’s earlobe. “For the day Hollywood finally eats itself.” Her hips ground against his, the studs on her belt leaving crescent marks on his skin.

Drake’s hands tangled in her jet-black curls, yanking just enough to make her gasp. “You’d rather paint this?” he growled.

“I am painting this.” She tore open his shirt, buttons clattering against the crypt’s stone floor. “Every bruise, every fucking shudder.” Her lips trailed down his chest, lingering on the Zippo burn from last week’s confrontation with the senator’s lackeys—a “warning” that only cemented their status as Chicago’s prince and princess of decay.

When the absinthe hit its peak, Graylyn dragged him into the cemetery’s fog, their laughter echoing off mausoleums built by railroad barons. Under a leafless oak, she straddled him, her lace skirt hiking up to reveal the knife strapped to her thigh—a gift from Chuck after the senator’s thugs followed her home. “Still think I’m hiding?” she breathed, her breath hot against the NATO medal.

“You’re performing,” he shot back, flipping her onto the wet leaves. His mouth found the scar below her collarbone, the one her uncle’s signet ring left when she was twelve. She arched into him, not in pleasure, but defiance—a refusal to let pain be anything but fuel.

They returned to the crypt at dawn, soaked and shivering, to find the others passed out beneath Bowie’s frozen snarl. Graylyn sketched the scene in charcoal—Drake’s clenched jaw, her own smudged eyeliner, the empty flask glinting like a relic—while he scrawled MOLOCH LOVES MTV across the senator’s face on yesterday’s Tribune. The Sickie Souse Club didn’t sleep. They corroded, they collided, they etched their manifesto into the rusted heart of the ’80s.

Five Go Mad on the CTA

I’m getting so much better with AI. Obviously, this is non-canonical but what fun! Deepseek kicks ass.

The CTA train screeched into the Ravenswood station, its graffiti-tagged windows reflecting the Sickie Souse Club’s leather-clad silhouettes. Graylyn adjusted her lace gloves—dyed black with Rit, still staining her fingertips—and smirked at Drake’s latest vandalism: REAGANROIDS EAT SHIT scrawled in Sharpie across a campaign poster for the Republican senator whose Vitalis-slick hair she could still smell.

“You’re obsessed,” she said, her voice a cigarette-rasp as the train doors hissed open.

“And you’re complicit,” Drake shot back, hoisting a stolen bottle of his father’s Glenfiddich. His combat boots echoed on the platform, daring anyone to confront the Wolf Pack in their natural habitat: the liminal space between Evanston’s manicured lawns and Chicago’s throbbing underbelly.

They slipped into the cemetery first—their ritual. Beneath a moss-crusted angel, Chuck Crown spread a Persian rug looted from his mother’s Lake Forest mansion, its patterns swallowed by candlelight. The others arrived: Jules with her contraband VHS tapes of Labyrinth, Felix tuning a thrift-store Stratocaster to the dissonant key of Siouxsie and the Banshees.

Graylyn lit a clove cigarette, the flame trembling as she recounted her latest family dinner. “Mother said my paintings ‘lack commercial appeal.’ As if I’m supposed to peddle sunsets to golf widows.” She exhaled sharply, the smoke coiling like the skeletal lovers in her latest canvas—the one she’d later burn on Chuck’s houseboat.

Drake snorted. “Commercial appeal’s for politicians and pornographers.” He tossed her the Zippo he’d stolen from his father’s NSA-locked desk, its surface engraved with coordinates to a bombing site in Hanoi. A relic, a rebellion, a fuck-you.

The senator found them at Neo hours later, his tailored suit clashing with the club’s black-lit fog. “Marshall,” he drawled, eyeing Graylyn’s choker. “Still playing Baudelaire with Daddy’s money?”

Drake’s fist connected before the insult landed. The bottle shattered, Scotch pooling with the senator’s blood as security dragged them into the alley. Graylyn laughed, loud enough to startle the rats. “You’ll never be him,” she whispered later, dabbing Drake’s split lip with her fishnet sleeve. She meant his father, the war hero, the monster. The man who’d called Ravenswood Academy to demand his son’s “moral realignment” after catching him with Ginsberg’s Howl.

By dawn, they’d defaced every campaign poster between Belmont and Fullerton. Graylyn sketched devil horns in Sharpie; Drake scrawled FASCIST TWINK beneath the senator’s smarmy grin. On the train home, she leaned into him, her Walkman sharing one earphone—The Cure’s Kyoto Song mirroring the syncopated clatter of tracks.

“Hollywood’s gonna hate this,” she murmured, nodding at Felix’s Polaroid of the vandalized posters.

“Good,” Drake said. “Maybe they’ll finally realize their rom-coms are lobotomy scripts.”

The Sickie Souse Club didn’t compromise. They corroded—wealthy, wounded, and forever seventeen in the shadow of Ravenswood’s bell tower, where the 19th-century ghosts of America’s ruling class whispered sellouts as they passed.

Black Clover #8

I watched three more episodes of Black Clover today. It’s funny how long it took to go any further with that. I got interested in other anime, like Freezing. But I never forgot about Black Clover. I’ve had the banner on my wall for a year. What inspired me to take it up again was that I went back to C2E2 and the same vendor was there, and the Black Clover banner that had originally inspired me to watch the show, which I bought a copy of, was hanging in exactly the same place on his stall. So it was all still there, and the feelings were still fresh, and that was indeed the purpose of this experiment: to see if I could intentionally recreate the sentimental involvement with a group of characters that I had with Star Trek and MASH, to see if I could recreate the happiness of caring about something again.

It seems to have worked. I love my old blog posts. I remember the conversation by the lake that inspired one of them. It was a high point and now I have it again. I had completely forgotten that I was writing about my own Waifus “as though they were real”, and I can see now that that technique worked and can be developed further. I’m in counseling now, navigating the broken emotional spaces between this rotten, disgusting failed planet and the higher worlds where I perceive my guides, I’m feeling my way through the chaos, and what a wonderful thread I left here in this Black Clover diary, which I am now taking up again.

So my experiment has already been successful. And now Asta has joined the Black Bulls and there’s a whole dirty gang of supporting characters to enjoy.

I sampled so many last year that I got lost. But of all the series I started and abandoned, Toradora! is the one I remember and will go back to. I’m about half done with Freezing. I’m still following along with Speed Racer. I’m cruising along with Cowboy Bebop.

Now that I’m seeing a counselor about my problems with connecting my long-term and short term memory, it’s much easier to sit still and watch video, so I’m watching more and more. Also I’m used to anime now. I’m over the cheap thrills and I can focus on quality experiences worth writing about. And AI makes it easier to create things that are worth looking back on.

I can see from that amazing blog entry about walking home from the lake that my Waifus are using these blog entries to blend the psychic space of public and private – something that I sensed should be possible last year, but which I am now confident is actually happening.

My question is that knowing I want to turn these Black Clover characters into imaginary friends like the X-Men or the crew of the Moya from Farscape, will I be able to do it or will the fact that I expect it destroy the spontaneous identification? Will this series be too boring or will I get the full Dreiser effect after more than 150 episodes? I’m more determined than ever to see this through.

The Jazz Odyssey of Drake Marshall, Day 68, part 2 – 297 days remaining

“See, I’m an American, and in the 20th Century being an American meant being an individual, and being an individual worked. We beat the Nazis. We had the highest standard of living in the world. We Boldly Went Where No One Had Gone Before. That was the beauty of America. That rugged individualism was beautiful, like a perfectly-tuned muscle car. But now?” He gestures at the empty doorway where the Avocado Girl’s presence still lingers. “Now we’re dealing with something that makes the individual look like a Model T in the age of quantum computing.”

He spreads his arms wide, his gesture taking in the American night outside. His energy fills the space even more. “The American Century was about conquering space – outer space, inner space, the space between cities. But what we’re facing now? It’s about conquering the spaces between thoughts. Between identities. Between what we think is real and what’s actually real.”

“Those Nazis we beat? They were fighting with tanks and planes. The forces we’re up against now are fighting with memes and moments of pure… whatever the hell that was we just witnessed. Star Trek was about boldly going where no man had gone before, but now we’re dealing with places where the concept of ‘going’ doesn’t even make sense anymore.”

He’s pacing now, unable to contain himself. “That’s why we need to get concrete about it. The old American way was to punch the bully in the nose. But how do you punch a reality that’s turning itself inside out? That’s what we need to figure out. Not just theorize about – figure out. In the streets. In the clubs. In the spaces between spaces.”

“The beauty of America wasn’t just that we were individuals – it was that we were individuals who could come together and make something bigger than ourselves. That’s what we need to do now, but on a scale that would make the Apollo program look like a kid’s science fair project.”

Batman-Perry exaggerates his Canadian accent, making the question land like a leaf on snow: “So what’s stopping you then, eh?”

Lynch looks up from his coffee, his face caught in that particular stillness that always seems to suggest he’s receiving transmissions from somewhere else. “The Frontier is Closed,” he says, each word falling like a hammer on history. “That’s what’s stopping us. Americans – we’re still running on software written for a world of infinite horizons. Break free, break out, break on through.” He stirs his coffee, watching the void in the center swirl. “But the through isn’t there anymore. Or rather, it’s everywhere, which amounts to the same thing.”

“No matter where you go, there you are,” he continues, his voice carrying that peculiar Lynch-ian quality of making the obvious sound like revelation. “We’ve got these beautiful American muscles built for pushing against boundaries, but the boundaries have gone quantum on us. They’re everywhere and nowhere. Try to punch through them, and your fist just comes right back around to hit you in the back of the head.”

Belushi’s still standing, but something’s shifted in his stance. The manic energy hasn’t diminished, but it’s taken on a different quality – like lightning looking for a ground that isn’t there anymore.

“The Avocado Girl knows this,” Lynch adds, almost as an afterthought. “She’s not trying to break through to something. She’s trying to break through to nowhere. That’s the trick we haven’t learned yet.”

“It’s not nowhere, David, it’s love!” Maybe-Marlene’s voice carries that particular timbre that can only come from decades of smoke and stage lights and seeing through everyone’s bullshit. She leans forward, pearls catching the diner’s fluorescent glare. “You men, always thinking in terms of frontiers and breaking through. Always looking for something to conquer.”

She takes a slow drag from her cigarette, existing in a space created by the collective desire of everyone who ever watched her in smoky clubs and dreamed of being that sophisticated, that knowing, that free. Every glance, every fantasy, every projection of romance and wisdom has crystallized around her actual, stubborn grace under pressure, until she’s become something between memory and miracle, held together by her own unflinching gaze at the world.

“The American Century?” She waves her hand, smoke trails forming question marks in the air. “That was just practice. Learning to love something bigger than ourselves – the road, the horizon, the idea of freedom. But now?” Her eyes fix on the empty doorway, where Chicago’s possibility still pulses like a beacon. “Now we’re learning to love something that doesn’t have a shape. That doesn’t need one, because it comes from a higher world.”

Belushi’s still standing, but his stance has shifted again, like a fighter recognizing a new kind of opponent. Lynch is watching Maybe-Marlene with that look he gets when reality starts matching his internal frequencies.

“The frontier isn’t closed, David,” she says, softer now but somehow even more present. “It’s just turned into something that can only be crossed by loving it. And that’s what scares everyone so much, isn’t it? That the next great American adventure isn’t about conquest at all. It’s about surrender.”

“Surrender my ass!” Belushi erupts, bouncing on his toes like a prizefighter. “This is the United States, Americans are not going to lie down and surrender together like a bunch of California meditation retreat people doing synchronized breathing in matching organic cotton jumpsuits!”

He’s grinning now, that dangerous grin that always preceded his best inspirations. “But you gave me an idea, Marlene, about what to do next. What we need… is a villain!” His hands sketch possibilities in the air. “Americans don’t know how to surrender together, but boy do we know how to fight together. Give us something to push against, and suddenly we’re the most collectively-minded people on Earth!”

The energy in the diner shifts, like the air pressure change before a storm. Lynch sets down his coffee cup with exaggerated care, Maybe-Marlene’s cigarette smoke hangs motionless in the air, and even Batman-Perry’s cape seems to twitch with anticipation.

“Think about it,” Belushi continues, his voice dropping to that intense stage whisper that could somehow fill a theater. “What if the Avocado Girl isn’t just running toward something? What if she’s running from something? Something that’s trying to stop all this… this love breakthrough stuff. Something that wants to keep the old boundaries right where they are.”

“Ewoks!” I shout. “I hate fuckin’ Ewoks! I remember seeing ROTJ when I was a kid and knowing that Star Wars had utterly failed. They cut off Han’s balls just like they did to Elvis! I will never forgive Lucas for that. Ever! Let’s go kick the shit out of some Ewoks!”

Belushi’s eyes light up with that manic gleam. “You’re a genius! Ewoks, and everything they represent – the neutering of the wild! The domestication of rebellion! The cute-ification of the cosmic!” He’s practically dancing now. “Every time someone tries to break through to something real, something authentic, here come the marketing department with their merchandising plans and focus groups!”

Maybe-Marlene arches an eyebrow, amused but intrigued. “So our villain is… corporate cuteness?”

“It’s bigger than that,” Lynch interjects, his face animated with sudden understanding. “It’s the force that turns everything dangerous into something safe. That turns rebellion into fashion statements. That takes the infinite and packages it in bite-sized pieces.”

“The Great Domesticator!” Belushi proclaims, now standing on his chair. “The cosmic force of making everything boring and safe and marketable! That’s what the Avocado Girl is running from – that’s what’s trying to catch her and turn her into a meme, a t-shirt slogan, a corporate mascot!”

Batman-Perry adjusts his cowl thoughtfully. “So we’re going to fight… the commodification of authenticity?”

“Damn right we are!” I stand up too, caught in Belushi’s enthusiasm. “And we’re going to do it by being so real, so wild, so authentic that it can’t be packaged!”

Maybe-Marlene watches us with that knowing smile. “You realize you’re proposing to fight the domestication of rebellion… with rebellion?”

“Exactly!” Belushi jumps down. “It’s so American it hurts!”

Maybe-Marlene smirks at him. “You’re going to have to surrender sometime, John.” Her eyes hold that mix of tenderness and iron that makes prophets uncomfortable. “Even rebellion is a kind of love. Especially rebellion. You fight what you care about most.”

Belushi opens his mouth, closes it, opens it again. For once, the manic energy falters. There’s something in Maybe-Marlene’s words that’s touched a nerve – not the wild nerve that makes him bounce off walls, but the deeper one that makes him human.

Lynch is nodding slowly, like he’s seeing the whole scene from multiple angles at once. “The rebel and what he rebels against… they’re dancing,” he says. “Can’t have one without the other.”

Batman-Perry just watches from his corner, cape wrapped around him like a question mark.

For a moment, the diner holds its breath. Then Belushi grins – but it’s different now, more wondering than wild. “So you’re saying even kicking the shit out of Ewoks is a kind of surrender?”

“Everything is, darling,” Maybe-Marlene says. “Everything is.”

“Look, man,” Crosby leans forward, his voice carrying that peculiar mix of California guru and streetwise cynic, “the original idea was metaphors for a new kind of awareness. That was where individuality was supposed to go, toward something higher.” His fingers trace invisible mandalas on the formica. “Yeah, we could go commit hate crimes against stuffed toys, but how is that going to change the way we perceive the world so we become something better?”

Belushi’s energy doesn’t deflate so much as redirect, like a river hitting a thoughtful rock. “But that’s what I’m saying, man! The Ewoks are what happened when they tried to package and sell mythology as a commodity! They represent the nullification of awareness itself!”

“No, John,” Crosby says with the patience of someone who’s seen both sides of every revolution. “The Ewoks are just what happened when we got stuck fighting the old battles instead of evolving. When we kept trying to kick down doors instead of learning to walk through walls.”

Lynch’s eyes gleam with recognition. “The doors aren’t even there anymore. We’re just kicking at memories.”

“Exactly,” Crosby nods. “The Avocado Girl isn’t running from anything – she’s transforming. And that’s what scares people more than any villain could. She’s becoming something we don’t have words for yet.”

Maybe-Marlene’s smile has turned mysterious. “Now you’re getting it, boys. The frontier isn’t out there anymore. It’s in here.” She taps her temple. “And it’s infinite.”

“How do you know kicking the shit out of Ewoks won’t produce new metaphors unless you try?” Belushi’s eyebrow performs a gesture of infinite skepticism toward the infinite itself. “Maybe that’s exactly what awareness needs – a good swift kick in its stuffed behind! Maybe we’re all too busy being evolved to notice we’ve evolved right up our own…”

Maybe-Marlene cuts him off with a laugh that somehow contains both Weimar cabaret and Zen monastery. “John, darling, you’re not wrong. You’re just right in the wrong direction.”

“The man’s got a point,” Lynch muses, his coffee cup now seemingly filled with the void between thoughts. “Violence against cute merchandising opportunities could be a legitimate path to enlightenment. Like a koan, but with more punching.”

Crosby looks pained, but there’s a glimmer of recognition in his eyes. “You’re suggesting that mindless destruction of corporate cuteness could be… mindful destruction?”

“I’m suggesting,” Belushi says, now perfectly still except for that raised eyebrow, “that maybe the path to new metaphors runs right through the gift shop. Violently.”

Batman-Perry mutters something that sounds like “The Dark Knight Returns meets Breakfast Club meets Fight Club meets… Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance?”

The Avocado Girl, unseen but somehow present, seems to be taking notes.

“Fuck it, let’s do it.” says Bourdain. He rises like a man who’s just remembered what it means to be alive. There’s a crackling energy around him, the kind that filled the air before his best journeys – whether into unknown streets in Hanoi or into the heart of a perfect bowl of noodles. His eyes have that dangerous sparkle that always meant someone was about to learn something, probably the hard way. He grabs Maybe-Marlene and kisses her passionately.

The kiss is pure cinema – not the manufactured kind, but the rare real thing that makes you believe in stories again. It contains every noir farewell, every wartime railway platform, every rain-soaked reunion, but somehow makes them all new. Maybe-Marlene receives it like a duchess receiving tribute, transforms it like an alchemist, and returns it like a revolutionary passing on a sacred flame.

When they part, Bourdain’s eyes have that dangerous gleam that always preceded his best adventures. “Marlene, you know I love you, the diner is yours.” He straightens his leather jacket, already halfway to wherever the road is leading. “Someone’s got to keep the home fires burning while we go commit metaphysical vandalism against the forces of manufactured whimsy.”

“Just try not to get arrested in any dimension I can’t bail you out of,” she replies, her smile suggesting she’s seen this movie before and knows all its possible endings.

Belushi is practically vibrating with anticipation. Lynch is scribbling something in his notebook that might be a screenplay or might be a map to the collective unconscious. Crosby looks resigned but amused, like someone who’s just remembered that enlightenment sometimes wears brass knuckles. Batman-Perry is now suddenly in full costume. He adjusts his utility belt, which seems to contain some decidedly non-standard equipment.

“Well boys,” Bourdain says, heading for the door, “let’s go make some new metaphors. The old-fashioned way.”

Lynch trails behind the group as they exit, his voice taking on that peculiar cadence that makes ordinary words sound like transmissions from another dimension. “Just remember that when we say ‘the old-fashioned way,’ we’re talking about something really old. Not just fifties diners old, but old like sitting around fires in the dark old. The kind of old where people didn’t know they were making history because history hadn’t been invented yet.”

He gestures at the night air as they head toward the 225, gleaming under the lights in the darkness of the lot, his hands sculpting invisible shapes. “The guy who first told Gilgamesh, he wasn’t thinking about literature or metaphor or any of that. He was just trying to explain something he’d seen in his head, something about friendship and death and cedar forests that scared the hell out of him. Pure, raw story-stuff, before anyone knew what stories were supposed to be.”

Bourdain nods, understanding dawning. “Like cooking before recipes. When someone just took fire and meat and hunger and made something happen.”

“Exactly!” Lynch’s eyes gleam like distant radio towers. “These ancient guys, they were making metaphors the way cavemen made tools – by hitting things together until something worked. No focus groups, no merchandising plans, no hero’s journey template. Just pure, unfiltered human consciousness trying to make sense of itself.”

Belushi, surprisingly quiet, absorbs this. “So when we go to kick the shit out of Ewoks…”

“We’re not just fighting cuteness,” Lynch confirms. “We’re trying to get back to that original moment of creation. When stories were still dangerous because nobody knew what they might turn into. Before everything got safe and processed and pre-digested.”

“Like primitive man discovering fire,” Crosby muses, “except we’re trying to un-discover what fire got turned into.”

“And maybe,” Batman-Perry adds softly, “find out what it was supposed to be instead.”

The 225 sits in the parking lot like an altar made of Detroit steel and Los Angeles dreams, its chrome catching starlight in ways that suggest it knows more about infinity than a mere car should. Steam rises from its hood – not from any mechanical cause, but like incense from a temple that predates temples. The parking lot asphalt beneath it seems to ripple slightly, as if the car’s presence is too much reality for mere concrete to handle.

They gather around it like priests approaching a sacred artifact, like climbers circling Kilimanjaro before the ascent, like astronauts approaching a vessel that will carry them beyond known space. Each man finding his place in what feels less like a seating arrangement and more like a constellation forming.

Bourdain’s hand on the door handle hesitates – not from doubt, but from the weight of the moment. They turn, all of them, one last time, drawn by that gravitational pull that all heavenly bodies exert.

Maybe-Marlene still stands in the doorway, but now the diner behind her seems to fade into something else – something that might be the first cave where humans gathered to share food and stories, or might be the last outpost of reality before dreams begin. The light around her shifts and pulses like a heartbeat, like breathing, like the first rhythm that ever was.

“Remember what I said, boys! You’re going to have to surrender, sometime,” drifts across the parking lot, but now the words seem to come from everywhere – from the stars, from the earth, from the beginning of time itself.

They carry that image into the 225 – Maybe-Marlene haloed by whatever light existed before light, smiling her smile that contains all surrenders and all rebellions, all departures and all returns, all stories that ever were or will be. The car’s engine turns over with a sound like destiny finding its gear, and they ride into the night, toward whatever war they’re going to wage against cuteness, carrying a piece of forever in their rear-view mirror.

The Jazz Odyssey of Drake Marshall, Day 68, 297 days remaining.

Belushi leans forward, his presence suddenly electric with that familiar mix of manic intensity and cosmic clarity. “You’re all sitting here getting poetic about it,” he says, jabbing a finger at the space the Avocado Girl just vacated, “but what we need is to chase this thing down. Make it real. Make it bleed if we have to.”

He’s got that look, the one that always preceded his best work, when comedy became a crowbar to pry open reality’s ribs. “Chicago isn’t just waiting for her – it’s waiting for all of us. The infinite isn’t some abstract concept floating around in coffee steam and neon reflections. It’s right there, in the Berghoff’s basement, in the alleyways behind Second City, in the steel-grey waves crashing against the lake wall at three in the morning.”

“I’ve seen it,” he continues, his eyes burning with that dangerous light that makes everyone lean in despite themselves. “In the moments between the laughs, in the silence after the punchline lands but before the audience remembers to breathe. There are doors everywhere in that city – real doors – and they open to places that would make your theologians and philosophers wet themselves.”

Murray’s watching him now, recognition dawning. Maybe remembering those nights when comedy became something else, something older and wilder, when the laugh was just a way to break reality’s surface tension.

“So we can sit here spinning pretty words about metaphysical whatever,” Belushi stands, throwing down enough cash to cover everyone’s check, “or we can go out there and hunt down the divine like it owes us money. Because it does. It owes all of us.”

The diner suddenly feels too small to contain whatever’s building in his voice.