We sat bundled in the shirts on our backs, renouncing our premature return from a night of alcohol and thought. Headlights zigzagged behind us and we ducked into the marble darkness near the chilled muddy earth. Like a mould casted from the raw iron of heat and political distemper, we buried the lives of few shadow walkers under layers of psychological realism. What remained were ten page tributes to these figures’ motion based stereotypical lives. Their stories, sunk into my imagination much like a tattoo on the skin; deep, but mutable. In the cold frost of the air, I sat buckle-kneed waiting for a moment that would outlast my momentary sensuous pondering. Potentiality. The same feeling came to me in a Starbucks Coffee, while reading a Michael Chabon story about penning a superhero for cash. Metaphorically speaking, superheroes don’t have to save the day either. It’s a choice. A beneficial choice. Then, as soon as I put down the warm tea I thought to myself, “Why did I think of this?”
Christopher Uller