“The key to growth is the introduction of higher dimensions of consciousness into our awareness.”
-Lao Tzu
Chapter 1: Arise, awake, and stop.
Aseem woke up with a big fat drool linking his lips
to the black-tiled floor of his home. It wasn’t anything out of the ordinary,
but nothing commonplace too; pretty much like real life, yet not completely so.
Drowsily, with the slits of his eyes clamped intermittently at the ends by
solidified eye matter, he got off his bed, stretching his arms, in effect creating
a number of overlapping cracking sounds of limbs shifting gears and springing
from disuse into activity.
Everything about his home was pitch black, like it
had always been; the blackness eased Aseem’s eyes immensely, providing a
comfortable recess from the nightmare-esque visions of blinding white light he
had been harrowed by during the night.
He still reminisced vividly his initial lessons
from Arbitron as a child, when he was lectured at length about the irrelevance
and randomness of reveries, of the arbitrary mind process that ‘spat out’ or
‘spilled over’ some seemingly perceptible but eventually inconsequential chunks
of information into his sensory-perception system. The bottom-line was that
dreams, nightmares, visions and such were to be overlooked at the onset, and to
discern or scrutinize or hold them in observance would invite nothing but
misery. And that was that.
The Arbitron whirred to life upon sensing Aseem’s
movements; it kept close, ginger tab on each and every one of Aseem’s activities,
even his mental upheavals, ambitions, unconscious thoughts and so on. If there was
to be a dictionary where Aseem lived, the term ‘privacy’ would not find itself
a spot in it.
“Coffee, black,” Aseem fed his aural response to
Arbitron by the vibration of his vocal cords and the simultaneous compliance of
his jaw muscles, tongue and mouth; all of it happening, to the delight and
amazement of the detached observer, at the very same time as his calf muscles,
femurs and countless other localized bodily systems allowed him to walk across
the floor, cover about four yards, and disappear behind the enclosure that was
the excretion bay.
Coffee was served after the excreta generated
overnight in his body were ejected (with a little help from the suction
machine) in the excretion bay. He proceeded to drinking his favorite hot cup of
black coffee, tastier than anything he was privileged enough to taste.
The amazing utility of Arbitron in everything from
preparing food, providing knowledge of affairs of worth, control of body
activities to being a source of mild entertainment and sexual fulfillment did never
strike Aseem as out of the normal; and justifiably so. It was the Arbitron
itself that had made him aware of the astonishing truth of the world, the world
that did not exceed beyond the four walls of the, well, world. No matter how
many romantic and wishful leaps of imagination Aseem took, the boring truth
remained, after all, the only truth; the objective, deadpan, singular truth.
One principle that had been fed to him over
repeated lessons during his adolescence was that the simplest explanation to
any occurrence is most probably the truth, or the closest to it. He liked to
kid himself into believing that such a fundamental inference could have been reached
even without it being pointed out to him by the Arbitron, but another of the
most basic principles conveniently nullified this line of thought too. It went something
like this:
When
engaged in a problem of any importance or difficulty, it is never enough to keep
in mind that the ‘primary human instinct’ is always wrong, and will lead to
misery.
Learn
to gauge this impulse, suppress it, and then use it as a beacon of how not to do the given task, instead
employing the direct opposite line of action.
As to what defined ‘primary human instinct’ and
‘misery’ was mentioned only in passing, in a tasteless, bland manner; the only
to way engrain them into one’s active memory was by rote learning. And rote
learning was something he had practiced to manifest in himself through rote
learning itself. It was like breathing; years before he was taught about it, he
had been doing it as a basic function for his existence.
As he sipped at the coffee in small mouthfuls, his
sight instinctively flitted to the corner of the wall farthest from him, where
nondescript, dull-grey outlines formed a meaningful mathematical figure against
the pitch black background:
09:09:00
Exactly nine, 60-second time intervals had passed
by since he had been woken up by the Covert Hiber-Rise, one of the many cutting
edge features added to the Arbitron in its latest update, a direct download
from Aseem’s right-brain potential knowledge vault.
These scheduled updates had been preset to happen at
various stages of his life, and ended only at the age of 50 (which is the
minimum human age limit as per The Obligatory Charter for Human Development),
when the adaptability of the human body to any further advancements in the
Arbitron started to decline, finally ending at a state of complete mental
degeneration, or senility, at the age of 68. It was sharply ironic that it took
all of 18 years for man to reach the peak of mental and physical capability,
only to lose it years later in roughly the same amount of time. It conformed
perfectly to the Exalted Prescient Utterances of the Unnamed (EPUU), the holy
word of that which transcended creation and human life itself, that which
stretched beyond the world of the room in which Aseem resided.
The Arbitron was a wondrous contraption of input
and output centers and collective consciousness of all human understanding and
wisdom. All condensed in physical form in the shape of the jet-black world that
was the room. Its multi-pronged
functionality controlled and regulated every aspect of the small world Aseem
inhabited. He himself had gaped with amazement when, in his advanced-level education
he had learnt that the formation of the world had taken place with the birth of
his great-great grand ancestor, Ardhamanas.
It was documented in the then-Arbitron that he was
half-human and half-Unnamed, making him the closest any remotely human
individual could come to being the venerated creator of the room itself. Ardhamanas
was created, not unobviously by the creator, the Unnamed. Naming the Unnamed
was forbidden as per the EPUU, the word of the Unnamed itself. Even to think of
the Unnamed in any manifestation or figure or form amounted to heresy and
punishable sacrilege, if detected by the Arbitron.
On the same account, Aseem had once, during his
routinely chores, stopped in his tracks to realize to his horror that he had subconsciously
been thinking of the Unnamed in the form and shape of a human being, with his
long, golden locks of hair caressing his broad, robust shoulders, and a loose
wheatish cloak with which he covered his bosom, flowing in the light breeze
inside the four black walls of the world. His stature was long and lean, his
fingers dainty and feline, borderlining on the inhuman. His arms were stretched
ahead in benevolent acceptance and head glowing reverently in a faint, grayish
halo.
Before this utterly nonsensical figure could take
complete shape, an amoebic tentacle suddenly detached itself from one of the
four walls, almost as if emerging from nothingness. Simultaneously, the cool,
husky voice of the Arbitron (another update from Aseem’s right-brain potential
knowledge vault) flooded the world with Verse 266 of the EPUU:
Thou shalt never, in voluntary course of action or otherwise, think of
restricting Me, Your Creator, the Unnamed, into the trifling moulds of human
figure, nor shalt thee demean and belittle Me by confining me to the meager
names of the Human language that I have so benevolently bestowed upon thee. The
punishment to any such act of callousness and extreme ignorance will be no less
than 25 whips on the blasphemer’s derrière at the hands of the Arbitron. Peace
out.
Aseem knew he had breached the law of the land in
his blatantly ignorant act of blasphemy. He braced himself for what lay ahead,
even as the Arbitronic tentacle pressed him down hard on the black floor.
Another arm detached itself out of the wall, and approached him ominously, with
him lying spread eagle on his chest, helplessly regretting his momentary lapse
of conduct. This arm being the whip-arm, was more solid and sharper at the
open-end than its amoebic counterpart. The arm stopped about a foot away from
his skin, and then suddenly swung over and struck his behind with immense
momentum.
“One,” announced the Arbitron in his clear, penetrating voice. Aseem winced in pain and repentance.
“One,” announced the Arbitron in his clear, penetrating voice. Aseem winced in pain and repentance.
Forgive
me Unnamed, for I have sinned. Forgive me in the name of the Unnamed; let me be
free of any further thoughts of corruption and heresy, thought
Aseem as the flogging went on.
Two. He
gulped. Forgive me O Exalted One, for I
have sinned.
Three. He
spat a mouthful. Forgive me…
5 comments:
Keep going, buddy! Its extremely engaging and very readable. Can't wait for the next chapter. But i advise you to not publish it here. Write the entire story, get it published in the form of a book and then make some money. Seriously.
Regards
The_Jaatni
awesome. waiting for chapter 2. hope you haave it all planned out. i'll hate it if you stop in the middle.
i have less than 10 chapters planned out. that will be the complete length of the story. i'm positive i'll meet that mark! :) thanks Aina and dada!
Hey!!! That good!! that's seriously great!!! you must continue!!! dont wait for others to comment on this one!! just go ahead !!! you got to complete this thing dude!!!
Asimov wouldn't come as close as matching you.
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