Adjacent to the School in Green Bay

Ninva

Анна Ахматова
Reaction score
377
Unlike most places, Green Bay had this indescribable clearness that wouldn't be missed in any other place: the sky was stale with perverted oxygen molecules that found themselves on the soccer fields of the nearby elementary school; the sun beat down rather than shined; and there was this distinct feeling of isolation that only a whistling empty lot could make you feel. As far as the eye could see, nothing, upon nothing but perhaps trees, asphalt, and hills upon hills with green grass – on top of this were buildings made of limestone. Upon one of these hills was a plateau where my school rested, I sat on the adjacent hill, looking down from my nestled spot next to a tall elm. My grandpa told me that such elms were dying out, one by one.

And this thought was like me – nestled on the adjacent hill with the bulk of my other, important thoughts elsewhere beyond that little spot. But like all my thoughts, this one particularly concerned me, as if the notion of a present danger towards this tree was there and not there all at once. Stumbling down the hill, illusions of my grandpa's bald scalp, crooked nose – then green grass, hence the word "stumbling." Perhaps this doesn't make much sense to you, and you're wondering why I'm thinking about elms when there's a school there, sitting on the plateau; but what's there is emptiness.

It'd be impossible to go inside the school without getting up, and I was happy where I was. I was thinking about an elm tree, which now passed my mind, falling upon only images of my classmates playing some violent and gay game: freeze tag. There was something missing, and that was that these kids kept appearing and disappearing. Each time I looked up, they would appear and then blur out, and as I became more aware of this, they blurred into blurs of blurrity.

Once a blur became into being, more things shone themselves – such as the lack of swings, so I made them be there because I like swings. And I got up to swing on them, but they weren't there. As my foot reached before me, I stumbled – stumbled hard. I hit the grass, and there I was: nestled on the adjacent hill.
 

esb

Because none of us are as cruel as all of us.
Reaction score
329
I could feel the emptiness before the end of paragraph two, really liked the description in the beginning. Seems the narrator had quite the imagination. Gives an eerie feeling though throughout the story, as if certain things exist and certain don't.
 

Fatmankev

Chef, Writer, and Midnight Toker
Reaction score
240
Wows. That ending really falls about halfway into absurdity. It seems to me like you're going for this abstract writing style that belies a deeper message, something I'm afraid I've always had trouble with; I just prefer not to have to make my own interpretations and to know exactly what the message is. That being said, it was an interesting piece full of vivid imagery and a sense of your true voice, and the wry humor behind it. Worth reading, even if it went a bit past me at points.
 

Ninva

Анна Ахматова
Reaction score
377
"That being said, it was an interesting piece full of vivid imagery and a sense of your true voice, and the wry humor behind it."

That is probably the best compliment I have ever received. Thank you!
 

KaerfNomekop

Swim, fishies. Swim through the veil of steel.
Reaction score
613
Reminds me of being ensconced in my own memories. A beautiful past corrupted by the entropy of the future.
 
General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.

      The Helper Discord

      Members online

      No members online now.

      Affiliates

      Hive Workshop NUON Dome World Editor Tutorials

      Network Sponsors

      Apex Steel Pipe - Buys and sells Steel Pipe.
      Top