I've got this weird ability to mentally project my surroundings into an unspecified near-future perspective. It's most pronounced while viewing scenery from a moving car, when I'm taking in lots of landscape. I have a cinematic imagination that's constantly panning and zooming behind my forehead, rendering the "present" into something more like a premonition. Nothing is exempt; landmarks, vehicles and buildings can abruptly seem brooding and post-apocalyptic. Apparently my brain has a deep, secret need to occasionally see the world in a desolate, depopulated context -- something like the ruinous city explored by Bruce Willis' character in "12 Monkeys."
On a more overt, conscious level, I dig entropy. I tend to gawk at abandoned movie theaters, neglected, fissured parting lots, seedy roadside motels, derelict buildings with shattered windows. I'm strangely attuned to the colors and hues that signify decay. I marvel at crumbling industrial sites and blighted factories with the zeal of an archaeologist. There's a perverse magic to these places, a palpable sense of the otherworldly.
CDs in my stereo:
"Outside" David Bowie
"Under the Pink" Tori Amos
"Paris" The Cure
"Remain in Light" Talking Heads
"The House Carpenter's Daughter" Natalie Merchant
Quick comment without reading cuz it's bed time.
ReplyDeleteYou are a Cylon Skin Job because you project.