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LigSlipped
Published: 2005-09-10 07:43:15 +0000 UTC; Views: 4515; Favourites: 69; Downloads: 324
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Description Now.

“What are you doing?”
“Oh, don’t worry. And be quiet.”
“What the hell are you doing?”
“Look, it won’t take more than a minute.”
“Somehow I doubt that.”
“Oh, shut up. I don’t need your help.”
“You may not need my help, but you clearly need professional help.”
“What? Professionals do this kind of thing?”
“…Are you always this stupid? I’m just wondering for future reference.”
[Silence]
“…Hey?”
[Silence]
“Oh, don’t be that way.”
[Silence]
“…Oh God.”

---

There was a time when I was eight years old. It wasn’t a terribly eventful time. Basically, my mother took me to the mall and we window-shopped. Then we left. That was it. That was the time.

It was the results of that time that were rather stupendous.

Apparently, as I would learn later in life, we’d walked past a security camera or two on our way out. The tape would show a little girl holding tightly onto thin air as she walked energetically through the mall while talking her own ear off. Someone noticed this at the time and called on a security guard to make sure everything was all right. The security guard was feeling particularly lazy that day and couldn’t be bothered to do his job, so he simply alerted every other security guard on the premises that there was a girl wandering about on her own. The guards didn’t check the original guard’s area, assuming that he’d done it, and my invisible mother and I were able to leave the mall without conflict.

My mother had never left my side. The only problem was that she simply didn’t show up on camera. I didn’t learn anything about this until about eight years later. That time was eventful.


Then.

4/08

I got home from school today and my mother was doing the most bizarre things. I mean, weird on my mother is not uncommon; she’s not the most average of mothers you’ll ever meet. But this was bordering on freaky.

I guess it’s my fault that I’m potentially traumatized by this. I crept into the kitchen without really making any noise. I stopped and watched when I saw what she was doing.

She was talking to a wall.
Like it was a person.
She kept calling it by my name.

I get that I’m not supposed to just watch without telling her I was there, but I was just fascinated. I couldn’t help it. Eventually I backed out of the room and left her to her wall conversations. But, really… doesn’t that seem more than a little weird?

---

Looking fervently around, she made sure that nothing was going to go awry. Elements were off, children were out, husband was working. She wandered over to the sofa and lay down.

But this time, before she got distracted again, she questioned what she was doing.

It was dangerous, this kind of thing. That much was obvious. Bad things had happened in the past. And maybe her husband was right; maybe it was getting out of control.

Nonsense! Protested the ever-present voice in the back of her mind.
How is that nonsense? It’s common sense, whispered a tiny voice she didn’t recognize. While you’re gone, you have no idea what’s really happening.
“Mother?” she whispered aloud.
Close. It’s just you, projecting my wishes. You know it’s wrong. You’re getting too far in.
That was the unfortunate thing about it, wasn’t it? Her kids were starting to give her funny looks when she went and they were home. Or, so her husband said.

You have to follow him, said the ever-present voice.
“Another day,” she said aloud. “I thought it was decided that I didn’t want to know.”
And she fell silent again.
She considered what she was doing. It wasn’t directly harming anyone, and golly, it was fun.
She smiled.
And she slipped away.

---

I saw her running down the hill. Finally, after an hour of waiting. I should have walked home.
“I’m sorry!” she shouted as she ran. I looked down.
“Where’s the car?” I asked quietly.
“I’m sorry,” she repeated breathlessly as she came to a stop.
“Yeah. Okay. Where’s the car?”
“I…” she frowned. “I didn’t think to bring the car.”
I brought my eyes up to her red face. “I see that.”
“I’m sorrrrrry,” she whined.
“Fine! Fine, mom. Let’s just go.”
“Sweetie…”
I pretended not to hear. I walked for a good long way before the pounding in my ears subsided enough to tell that she wasn’t behind me.
It was my sixteenth birthday that day. She hadn’t remembered. Two days later we had the conversation.


Now.

“Hi!”
“Thank God! I had no idea where you’d gone. You just sat there, and… and didn’t say anything. I thought you’d done it for a moment. Do you realize how supremely idiotic that would have been? After what it did to your… hey, are you okay?”
“Yes! Fine! Let’s go!”
“…Go where?”
“Where were we going?”
“…We weren’t.”
“We weren’t what?”
[Grin.]
“Going.”
“Going where?”
“Anywhere.”
“Oh. Okay! Let’s go!”
“…”
[Slap.]
[Grin.]
“Ow!”
[Grin.]
“Stop grinning! I just hit you. This means that you should stop acting like such a little freak!”
“Oh. I’m sorry if my behavior displeases you.”
“There. That’s better. Good. Sarcasm. That’s…”
[GRIN.]
“…Oh my GOD! You were being serious!”
“Was I not supposed to be?”
“…You’re acting seriously… oh. Oh… oh dear. You’ve done it, haven’t you?”
[Grin.]
[Sigh.]
“Okay. Let’s go, then.”
“Let’s go!”


Then.

“You’re home.”
“I am.”
“It’s about time.”
“I was busy.”

She was busy.

“You should have called.”
“I was busy.”

She was busy.

“So? I had dinner on the table waiting for you an hour ago! Where have you been?”
“I lost track of time.”

She lost track of time.

“Mom! Don’t you see something wrong with this picture?”
“No.”
“I’M ACTING THE PARENT! I’m sixteen, and I am more mature than you are. Get a grip, mom!”
“Don’t you sass me.”
I had to laugh. It was just too funny. Then I sat on a stool and moved on.
“I got an interesting phone call today.”
Mom frowns. “Since when are you sixteen?”
I threw off a wave of anger and continued. “A court case of some kind was being reviewed from eight years ago. Some guy wants parole or something. The cops went over the security tapes from a mall and they found something fairly remarkable. Ten points if you can guess what it was.” I watch my mother. She looks at the floor. I can’t tell if she’d even heard a word until:
“A little girl wandering alone.”
I raise my eyebrows. “And that’s ten points to the lady in the kitchen. Double your score if you can guess who the girl was.”
“It was you.”
“That’s a whopping twenty points.” It was at that point that I realized I was about to lose my temper in a big way. “What aren’t you telling me.” I didn’t bother to state it as a question.

Mom sighs and looks up at me for the first time all night. She looks tired and old. Tears well. She sits down on a stool across from me, and she explains.

---

“Sweetie…” she whined at her daughter, who pretended not to hear. The mother watched her child as she stalked away, leaning into the wind but probably not really feeling it.

She wished she knew what her daughter was thinking.
[Idea + Smile.]

She positioned herself so that she wouldn’t fall during the short time between when she slipped away and when auto-pilot kicked in. She closed her eyes, made the connection, and went.

But she was still there.

She felt the familiar sensation of complete lack of responsibilities or boundaries as rose above herself and laughed at her corporeal form. She made sure the auto-pilot was operational, and then concentrated.
Daughter.

foom poof twang
there.

And then she was in her daughter’s mind. Two totally different people sharing the same thoughts and sensations for a while. Her daughter could not sense her there, and though aware of her existence, she couldn’t sense her daughter. All at once, she was her daughter while still maintaining her own existence. That’s the way it was. She could just slip away; her body preformed standard actions automatically. She could become a part of anyone. Mostly, she just concentrated on random and jumped to a perfect stranger, just to see what their life was like.

It was absolutely amazing. She loved it. It allowed her to understand people better, and it gave her this entire sense of… freedom.

And now she was her daughter.
Whose thoughts were mean and bitter; who felt so angry with her mom for not fixing herself, whatever was wrong with her; who was thinking about what she’d make for dinner tomorrow in case her mother didn’t show up again.
Wait… no footsteps. She isn’t following me.

And then she was expelled. It wasn’t intentional, though that was usually the way things went. She could control when to expel herself. But not this time. It was almost as though the moment it was realized that she wasn’t there, her daughter had automatically and unconsciously expelled her from her mind.

She soared back home, where auto-pilot had taken her body via taxi. It was a shock to be back; moreso than usual.
Oh, God, said the ever-present voice in unison with that of her mother. You’ve royally screwed up this time.
“I need a concentrate,” she muttered aloud.
No! her mother's voice insisted uselessly. Remember what I said, child!

Husband.


1977

“My dear, this is a power you need to use with caution. It’s too easy to get addicted to it, and it’s not meant for amusement purposes. Use it only in extreme situations, child.”
“Mother, I’m not sure I understand…”
“Nor will you until you try. You’re sixteen now; I think you’re old enough to understand the responsibilities attached with it. Remember that if you get out of control—"
“Cut the power off before it becomes too late. I’ve got it.” She sighed. “All right. Tell me what I need to do.”

Oh, God, how well she remembered it! It was so familiar; every detail, every second of it, she remembered, eighteen years later. The day her mother had told her about the power every female in her family possessed. The single most influential day of her life, ranking above her marriage, above the birth of her child. It was the day she discovered.

She followed her mother’s instructions and felt herself rise above her body. She simply hovered in place, taking in the sensations… or lack thereof. No need to breathe; no cold feet under the floor. It was incredible. She saw herself grin below her. Then she remembered to activate the auto-pilot. She watched herself wander around the kitchen and fix herself a glass of milk, and then sit at the kitchen table, waiting patiently.

Satisfied with the fake version of herself, she concentrated hard.
Random.
All at once, she wasn’t in her kitchen anymore. She wasn’t even her anymore. According to the memory she was sharing, her new name was Jill Carson. She walked about with a backpack around her shoulders and a thousand thoughts a second going through her mind.

She didn’t pay any attention to the mind, though; mostly she relished the strange sensation of the wind through someone else’s hair. The cars drove swiftly by and Jill looked around at them. She caught a thought: I wish I hadn’t bought that massive 20" television. Maybe then I could afford a car and this walking down the highway gig wouldn’t be getting so old.

She smiled and let Jill be on her way.
Expel.
Random.

She wasn’t Jill Carson anymore with her large telly and lack of car; she was an elderly woman named Ethel McGill.

Ethel sat in a large and very ugly flowered chair. She blinked heavily and watched the people of similar age as Ethel around her. She could hear the people talking to Ethel, but since she couldn’t hear them, Ethel clearly wasn’t listening. Ethel held a cane out in front of her. It’s depressing, Ethel thought. I’m sitting here surrounded by people I hardly know and they’re speaking to me like we’re old friends. Well, we are old; there’s just nothing friendly about it. I hate them, and they hate me. It’s the way things work here. Perhaps I’ll talk to Johnny and convince him to break me out of here… he was, after all, the one who put me in.

Ethel was right; it was depressing.
Expel.
Home.

[Jolt.]
“Woo!”
“You’re back?”
“I am. That was…”
“Extremely dangerous. It may have been fun, and it may have been unique, but you must understand how dangerous it is. This power is a privilege and a responsibility. You mustn’t use it more than once a month. Once you get above that point, you know you have a problem, and you must—“
“Turn the power off, mother. I understand.”
“I hope you do, child. I hope you do.”


Then.

I was laughing.
“Stop it!”
I was still laughing.
“I’m not kidding, kiddo.”
It was just so FUNNY!
“Look. Okay, fine. You wanted to know what my ‘problem’ was, I told you. If you can’t deal with it, that’s fine.”
“No… it’s just I… haha… I can’t help but think… that… you’re absolutely… hahahaha… INSANE, you know? Hahahahahahaha.”
“I’m not. Why do you think I didn’t appear on the tapes? When I slip, I don’t appear on camera because my soul isn’t there. It’s somewhere totally different. It’s amazing. You’ll never experience anything like it.”

She was serious.
My laughing tapered.
“Heh. Yeah, well, whatever.”
Her eyes lit up. She just stared at me for a while, apparently having some kind of internal battle. Then she finally blurted, “Try it.”
“What? No!”
“Come on.”
“Mom, no.”
“Why not? You’ll believe me, then.”
“No, I really don’t think I will.”
*whimper, whine*
“Whining won’t get you anywhere,” I added.
“Try it. Just Concentrate.”
“I’m not going to ‘jump’ into another person. That’s totally invading their privacy. And also, you know, impossible.”
“It’s not. It’s genetic. You kicked me out of your mind, I know you have the pow—“

“…You were in my mind?”
“…I… no, I was… just… I was… no!”
“YOU were in MY MIND?”
“Sweetie, you have to understand…”

I stood up. “No, mom. You have to understand. I don’t know why I believe all this nonsense, but what I do know is that this is not good. This power you have? It’s no good. It invades people’s privacy. It invades my privacy. Stop, mom. Get over it. You don’t need to be someone else.”
“…mimble blimble…”
“You have a problem. Get a grip and get over yourself.” I left the room.
“Your father’s having an affair.”
I paused. I didn’t look back. “I know. Can you blame him?” I walked out of the house without waiting for a reply.

---

That was the last time I saw my mother alive. That night she slipped away and was too upset to remember auto-pilot. She went from random to random all night long, but by morning her body had died. She was stuck to roam.

Which brings us to about two weeks later.


Now.

“Hi!”
[Elbow in ribs.] “Stop that. You’re not usually so friendly to your neighbours.”
“Oh. Sorry!”
“Just be quiet. Let’s get you home.”
“Let’s go!”
“And stop walking so funny. You look like freaking Frankenstein or something.”
“Oh. Sorry!”
“Shut up!”
[Knock.]

[Creeeeeeak.]
“Well, hi there, girls. You know you don’t have to knock.”
[Smile.]
“I know, sir, and thank you, but… we have a situation. See, your brilliant daughter here decided to follow in her mother’s footsteps with the whole, slipping away thing, and her auto-pilot isn’t very convincing.”
“Hi!”

[Hesitation.]

“She told you everything?”
“Yeah. The night her mom told her, she got seriously freaked and she slept over at my house. Told me everything. I didn’t believe it at first. I don’t think she did, either. But, here she is, slipped and a little dipped, too.”
“Let’s go!”
[Sigh.]
“All right. Get her inside.”

[Jolt.]
holy god that was amazing great fun adventure freeing.
[Grin.]

“Hey. Are we back now? No more with the creepy flying around being other people?”
“Huh? Oh, yeah. Hi.”
“Are you actually the stupidest kid ever? I’m just wondering. I asked you this before, but you didn’t answer because you were kind of gone.”
“What were you thinking? What possible good could have come of it? Your mother died of it! Doesn’t that mean anything to you?”
“It does, of course it does! But, dad, you won’t believe who…”
“Then stop being such a fool. There is no good. It is no good.”
“Dad, guys, both of you. Just, calm down, and let me tell you who I…”
“No. I don’t even want to hear it.”
I realized I couldn’t tell them, and sighed dramatically. “All right. Okay. I’m on board. No good. It won’t happen again. I just… I had to try it. I had to see what it was she loved about it so much. But I’m done. That’s it. No more. I won’t go again.”

[I’ll see you again tonight, mom. They may not want to see you, but I do.
Just wait a while. I'll be there.
Nothing can stop me.]
Related content
Comments: 80

missyxlee [2006-06-25 07:29:50 +0000 UTC]

one of the most intriguing stories, I've read in a long while

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to missyxlee [2006-06-25 17:05:27 +0000 UTC]

Aw, thank you.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

MewSeeChi [2006-03-13 21:53:46 +0000 UTC]

I really don't know where I was going with that comment now that I'm able to continue, so I'll just end off with "excellent work" and be on my way ^^ oh and a serious congrats on getting a DD on your writing. That's a serious accomplishment.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

MewSeeChi [2006-03-13 00:00:34 +0000 UTC]

oo whoa.. ok that was really good. I'll admit, I was totaly lost to begin with, but it's a good thing if you ask me! In school I've been taught to answer the main questions of "who, what, when, where" in the first 2 paragraphs max. You don't do that. THANK GOD! You tell me almost nothing to begin with, but do so in a way that tells me that there is SOMETHING going on, and I'm just dying of curiousity to find out what it is. Names are over-rated. Have you ever seen the movie "Waking Life"? If not, you should. There was a part in it which was talking about why writing is better than movies (hehe, I love how controvercial that was). They were saying about how when you read it something, you have the freedom of imagination. You can picture the characters however you wish. But when they make it into a movie it becomes more limited. It's a certain character in a certain place, of a certain hight, talking in a certain way. There's little to no imagination involved in it. That's what names do. They limit the character. It's like, when you name a character Bob, the reader will imidiately have an image in their minds of this character Bob. But without the names.. I just like it so much more. I feel more free to imagine, to interpret things in my own light.
I have more to say but I must go for now. I'll continue this comment soon ^^

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

rylfntasy [2005-11-24 08:29:33 +0000 UTC]

She was talking to a wall.
I mean, like it was a person. Kept calling it by my name.

Was that her auto-pilot not working well or something?

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to rylfntasy [2005-11-25 00:03:35 +0000 UTC]

Pretty much. She was addicted to it to the point where she didn't care what her autopilot did anymore; she just threw it on (or... so to speak) and went.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Rachastock [2005-11-24 07:30:01 +0000 UTC]

I did like it, but I also had to read it again. It was pretty confusing the first time round 'cause the first bit didn't seem to make sense and sometimes I didn't know who was talking. The second time round it made sense and i could work out that some of the bits were future tense and some past.

I think you need to work on the minds of the people that she jumped into. They are just not realistic people. Jill Carson is alright, but Gina Fortune is really unbeliveable for me.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to Rachastock [2005-11-25 00:02:31 +0000 UTC]

I wrote that section very quickly. I will make it better in the edited version; mostly I just wanted to portray the concept rather than the people.
Thank you very much for commenting and giving such lovely critique. I appreciate it greatly.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

deirdre-a [2005-11-24 06:07:29 +0000 UTC]

well you do have to read it twice, but when you do... wow. i love it ^_^

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to deirdre-a [2005-11-24 06:09:01 +0000 UTC]

I'm glad! Thank you so much for reading it twice and then commenting.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

deirdre-a In reply to Lig [2005-11-25 00:07:07 +0000 UTC]

youre welcome.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

chickendog [2005-11-24 06:01:29 +0000 UTC]

Wow, I should have expected more comments on this great story. >.> Anyways, I liked how you didn't tell us who's view it was from, but let the reader guess and decide. The whole choppiness added to the story in my opinion. I'm not very good at reviewing prose, but will say that your dialogue is just great! Seriously, it sounds like someone could just say it and it would sound how people talk. You know? Most often times people don't speak in whole sentences... Alrighty, I'll quit making a fool of myself. XD

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to chickendog [2005-11-24 06:08:11 +0000 UTC]

Yes! This comment just made me realize that my story isn't confusing, it's just interpretable at all different angles.

...I mean, that was my intention. I knew that before....
Eh heh.

I'm glad the dialogue tickled you. It doesn't matter that you don't know anything about prose; I don't know anything about traditional art and I go and say "this was out of proportion" and the artist will say "it's supposed to be that way" and I'll go "Eh heh". It's a good time. Besides, prose is one of those things you don't need to know much about to comment well, which you have done. Thank you very much!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

chickendog In reply to Lig [2005-11-25 23:17:51 +0000 UTC]

lol, I meant like people can write dialogue and it doesn't necessarily mean it sounds like a real person talking... In English, my crazy teacher was talking about that and I kind of realized that. But yeah, a definite good read!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

adstantes [2005-11-24 05:16:37 +0000 UTC]

I know you said you've made it school friendly, but in all seriousness what's the use of school if they don't allow you to create your own style/use a style that suits you better at the time. Surely, if you pointed out to them that you're drawing upon many experiences to create this wonderful peice, they'd understand and actually read it how you've created it. (If I'm way off track now, just slap me and I'll thank you ).

Anyway, congratulations on the DD. I really enjoyed 'Looks Like I Slipped', the opening few paragraphs made me think quite hard about what/who was talking and I'm glad it did, because as I read further into the story everything began to slip into place and voilà I slipped right into the story.


Fantastic stuff, !

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to adstantes [2005-11-24 06:03:37 +0000 UTC]

My English teacher is a very old-fashioned fellow. I think that if I gave a piece like this to him, he might send it back with the words "it's not vegan enough" written right across it in red ink.
Valid point, though.
Thank you very much! I'm glad the story brought you into it instead of the other way around.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

adstantes In reply to Lig [2005-11-24 06:48:14 +0000 UTC]

Tell him from me, he wouldn't know what a vegan was if it came up and bit him on the bum.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to adstantes [2005-11-24 23:59:16 +0000 UTC]

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Isadora-Karilonnes [2005-11-24 04:17:15 +0000 UTC]

Whoa, I really liked this. It was somewhat confusing in the beginning, but then, it's late at night here, anything will be confusing. It was a great idea.
-Isa

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to Isadora-Karilonnes [2005-11-24 04:27:06 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for your comment! I promise to do something about the confusion, really.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

M1NAM1 [2005-11-24 01:56:40 +0000 UTC]

I like it- the non-chronologicalness (fear my vocabulary) DOES work. It was sad where all that random-ing lead, though.

I'm sure there are people out there who think they have this power, some way or the other. Gotta fave this one.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to M1NAM1 [2005-11-24 02:07:56 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for the comment, and also the fav!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Davros [2005-11-24 01:29:30 +0000 UTC]

This is really cool - the choppiness works fine, no-where near as confusing as something like Mrs Dalloway and that's considered a masterpeice.

Is it the grandma that the daughter and friend are visiting at the end? Maybe we could see whom the daughter is slipping into in that final scene - maybe she could already be mis-using the ability by inhabiting some boy she likes - just a passing reference would do. Just a thought. If you're anything like me though you get to a stage where you can't really be bothered changing anything anymore

It's really good likes, excellent idea and well worked. Don't get rid of the choppiness. After all the story is about jumping from one mind to another. Good stuff!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to Davros [2005-11-24 01:51:36 +0000 UTC]

Actually, it was meant to be the daughter's dad. Gosh. I really did to a whammy on the lack of identifying features, didn't I?
Well, no problem. Thank you for your kind words; I'm glad the choppiness is appreciated.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

slingshot40 [2005-11-24 00:45:57 +0000 UTC]

That was bizare. It's extremly chopy, a little too much so. The style of your writing also makes it somewhat difficult to assosciate with the characters. The idea is a very good one though. So I dunno, I would say that you have something but that it still needs a bit of work in order to be realy nice.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to slingshot40 [2005-11-24 01:52:57 +0000 UTC]

I'm angry with the characters. I love the idea and I tried to portray it in an original fashion, but the characters never really worked for me. I plan on fixing them sometime in the near future.
Thank you ever so much for your comment. I appreciate it greatly.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

slingshot40 In reply to Lig [2005-11-24 16:11:55 +0000 UTC]

That's a problem. If the characters aren't liked by the writer then they won't be portrayed well. I'll be interested to see how you do this so called "fixing".

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

j-adD [2005-11-24 00:14:01 +0000 UTC]

Interesting but also pretty boring. It feels like they are trying to be human yet by your kind of movie script writing they just fall as sort-of-alive-humans. Everything feels a little chliché (especially with the persons the daughter jumps into, I mean come on) not just mystical and weird as I think it should. The the time jumping and person swapping, it's just no good because it doesn't work out smooth and it seems like you can't really decide if you want people to understand everything or nothing, so you go with the middle part and everything just get dull. And for a not-ordinary-human-story it was a pretty boring teen curiosity ending. Maybe you should rewrite it with more descriptions and more use of the senses and make it feel more like the novel/movie memento, don't make it feel like a bored teenager story with a sixth sense-twist like it is now in it's "movie script state", but that's just what I think. Not my cup of tea, but keep writing!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to j-adD [2005-11-24 01:49:19 +0000 UTC]

What a unique perspective.

I'm boggled enough by this comment that I don't know how to respond.
I'll take everything you said into perspective. I can honestly say that I appreciate this comment quite a bit. Thanks for the honest critique, it's always what I aim for.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

j-adD In reply to Lig [2005-11-24 16:59:11 +0000 UTC]

No problem, I didn't feel like I gave that much creative criticism, which is bad but that's just what I thought. Keep it up!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lig In reply to j-adD [2005-11-25 00:05:30 +0000 UTC]

No, no. Thoughts in their purest form help matters. I might have been slightly offended if you hadn't lightened the tone at the end, and I understood your intentions were constructive. Thanks again.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

j-adD In reply to Lig [2005-11-25 17:01:37 +0000 UTC]

Good, cause I didn't mean to offend... peace

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

TwoSteps-FourLetters [2005-11-23 22:53:29 +0000 UTC]

That was genious.
I liked the choppiness and the jumping from person to person, regardless of how confusing it was, but the confusion is probably part of what I liked about it.
Interesting style.

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Lig In reply to TwoSteps-FourLetters [2005-11-24 01:46:54 +0000 UTC]

Aha! A fan of the confusion! This makes me happy. I'm glad you appreciated the style!
Thanks for commenting; I always appreciate it.

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TwoSteps-FourLetters In reply to Lig [2005-11-24 02:47:31 +0000 UTC]

So welcome.

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ZaneSama [2005-11-23 21:23:28 +0000 UTC]

That was actually pretty chilling. A little confusing at first, with the jumping time line, but once you get into, it makes a really good story.

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Lig In reply to ZaneSama [2005-11-24 01:45:22 +0000 UTC]

Chilling is an interesting way to describe it... I'm pleased someone got such an impression from it. Thank you for the comment!

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ZaneSama In reply to Lig [2005-11-25 02:41:40 +0000 UTC]

Oh you're welcome. It was nifty.

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Ratafluke [2005-11-23 20:26:16 +0000 UTC]

I took two reads, and the second reading made understanding it much easier. Knowing the rest, I figured out what's going on in the first part, and by now I've also figured out how to tell mother and daughter apart. Haven't yet figured out how to differentiate between daughter's conversation with mother and with friend... but my interest didn't hold for a third read.
Without the hint to read it several times, I might have been utterly bewildered... the way it is now is like a puzzle to solve that reveals an interesting picture :]

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Lig In reply to Ratafluke [2005-11-24 01:43:58 +0000 UTC]

This made me smile.
I'm glad you read it twice, and thrilled that it made more sense after the second.
The dialogue! It's driving me up the wall now that I see it from that perspective. I promise, I promise I'll fix it.
Lovely analogy, with the puzzle thing. I'm thrilled that you like it and appreciate the comment greatly.

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blackorchid5583 [2005-11-23 20:22:24 +0000 UTC]

Interesting, I like it.

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Lig In reply to blackorchid5583 [2005-11-24 01:20:55 +0000 UTC]

Thank you!

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blackorchid5583 In reply to Lig [2005-11-24 01:31:31 +0000 UTC]

Your welcome

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metasquares [2005-11-23 19:35:27 +0000 UTC]

Maybe this is what you were going for, but it's very unclear who is speaking at what time.

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Lig In reply to metasquares [2005-11-24 01:23:40 +0000 UTC]

It wasn't at all what I was going for; I was intending to make the reader pay more attention than even I'm accustomed to paying when I read prose. The fact that I didn't give the characters names probably led to the confusion.
Thank you for commenting, and especially for being honest.

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metasquares In reply to Lig [2005-11-24 02:59:50 +0000 UTC]

You're welcome. Aside from that, it's a very good story... it's just very confusing to read due to that issue.

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Sonneillon- [2005-11-23 17:54:15 +0000 UTC]

“You’re father’s having an affair.” --> that should be "your"

Hrm. My comment is going to be so much shorter than everyone elses... >.> This is a very different genre for me. I haven't actually read anything like this before o the experience was interesting. There are some elements that I definitely like, such as the actions in brackets - reminds me of IRC I also think that, despite how confusing the dialogue can sometimes be (who is talking to who), the spacing and how it is being presented works quite effectively. I'm a huge fan of dialogue so this is definitely something i'm happy with. As I mentioned earlier, sometimes it's a little hard to pick up who is talking to who (daughter to mother, daughter to friend, etc). I feel that perhaps you could make this a little clearer. This doesnt need to be in the dialogue, but maybe before it. Maybe if you mention something unique to the certain character before you start the dialogue.

As one of the previous people said, this story catches you, and there's almost no excuse to stop reading. I agree that perhaps the end needs a bit more punch...

otherwise, this was very interesting. i'm not used to reading things like this (genre) but this was definitely less nauseating than some other stuff I've read this week. I'm happy with this Well done!

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Lig In reply to Sonneillon- [2005-11-24 01:41:17 +0000 UTC]

I loved this comment so much. It told me everything. Thank you so much for that.
Also, you caught a grammar error! Augh! I suppose I was so wrapped up in my own story by that point that I forgot to think about what I was typing.

Okay, back to praising you on your critique skills. I'm glad the short phrasing or what have you was effective, and I suddenly understand that the mother/daughter daughter/friend sections might be terribly confusing. I looked at it from that perspective and pretty much went "whaaaat?". It's madness, and I'll fix that. I just... don't know how yet.

The end. I rewrote this and I liked the end better. I look at it now and I'm amazed that I haven't fixed it yet. I'll do that once the hubub dies down so everyone's happy.

I'm glad my story didn't nauseate you, and thank you again for the thorough and honest critique.

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Mondo-The-Maniac [2005-11-23 17:31:43 +0000 UTC]

Hmm...as it was stated earlier, this is extremely choppy. I wasn't sure if you were attempting to make this out to be a poem or prose, but you submitted it under prose, so disregard my earlier statement. It's hard to follow through the whole thing DUE to the choppiness, and maybe I could help you out with that.

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Lig In reply to Mondo-The-Maniac [2005-11-24 01:35:35 +0000 UTC]

Okay.
I appreciate this comment very much, by the way; thank you.
But I need you to define "choppy" for me.
Are you meaning that the paragraphs aren't complete (much like this comment), or as in the sections aren't long enough and it jumps?

It does sort of seem like poetry, doesn't it? Maybe THAT'S what you meant by choppy?
...er, I'll be quiet. Thank you for the honest comment.
(your avatar makes me go ick. I like it.)

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