Weekly Challenge #943 – All our tomorrows

The next topic is PICK TWO Express, In my hand, Expected, Cut and dried, Desiccation, Blocker

LISA

All Our Tomorrows

I’m not sure if it was the heat from the fire, or fumes, or if I was just overwhelmed by being out of the basement but I felt really light headed.
In his explanation he kept repeating that he’d chosen us and the importance of ‘all our tomorrows’. That particular phrase was repeated over and over again.
Later, he led us up a very grand staircase. We had a bedroom each. Mine had a massive double bed and a sofa in it. The weirdness wasn’t the opulence though; it was being separated from the others after being so very close.

LIZZIE

We gathered by the fire. Questions and more questions. One wanted this, the other that. And we all shared our fears and our hopes. There was laughing, crying, and yelling too. Not many believed we would make it out there. We all shook our head. We all chuckled. We knew. They didn’t. We would make it! When the nurse came with the pills for the evening, we all agreed not to take them. The nurse said, take the pills, come on. And… I stood there alone. The others ran and hid in the darkest corners of my mind. The cowards.

RICHARD

Undated

We spent an absolute fortune on the new computerised diary system. The programme basically runs the whole business. We’re totally reliant on it, which – if you ask me – is never a good thing.

Every meeting, appointment and booking, past present and future are managed by the system. All our tomorrows, yesterdays and todays: categorised, organised and optimised, and all supervised by the system to ensure maximum effective use of time and resources.

Neat, huh?

Until the system goes down.

Like it did today. And the engineer can’t come until Wednesday.

So, at least for the time being, tomorrow is cancelled.

SERENDIPIDY

The photo album tells the whole story.
Every page, full of special moments; memories of times past, the family happy together, smiling and loving life.
Every page, that is, right up until the day our lives crossed with his. And then, everything changed, forever.
After that, just blank pages.
No more photographs, no more happy smiles, no more family. All our tomorrows, wiped out in an instant.
My family, destroyed. And, myself, the only survivor.
And him? He’s doing just fine.
Or, so he thinks.
Because I’m on a mission to get even.
So, let’s see what tomorrow will bring.

NORVAL JOE

Like a plot twist in the telenovela, Todos Nuestros Mañanas, as Billbert touched Sabrina’s hand, her eyes flashed open and she tried to sit up. She shouted in pain and the monitors flashed and beeped.
Lightning struck a tree outside the window and thunder rattled the room.
The nurse rushed in. “I’m sorry, Billbert. You’ll have to leave.”
Sabrina clutched Billbert’s hand, gasping, “No. He has to stay.”
The nurse scowled and reset the monitors. Sabrina’s heart rate and respirations had begun to normalize.
“I can’t explain why,” Billbert said. “But I need to stay, for a while at least.”

TOM

When you get to the fork in the road

Sister Fran was a devotee of the ancient sage Yogi of Berra. His collective works were some of few written records from the past that survived. Fran spent hours in deep contemplation on each of the holy koans. She read the gold leaf script with head bowed. The future ain’t what it uses to be. A soft wind blew through the arched window of the monastery. As the western sun melted in the forest she lifted her head. With silver ink Fran wrote the following: All our tomorrows were yesterday. I have taken the fork oh great sage, She mused.

PLANET Z

Mrs. Rettig asked each student to bring in a calendar.
At the end of every day, she’d give out stickers.
Green for good, yellow for needs improvement.
I got a lot of red and black stickers.
At the end of the year, the kids with red and black stickers earned a field trip to the police station.
“This is what will happen if you keep this up,” said Officer Kick.
And he was right. The moment I graduated from high school, I entered the police academy.
I especially enjoyed when I arrested Mrs. Rettig for speeding in a school zone.

CHATGPT

In the city of Allor, time was a fickle mistress. The citizens lived for tomorrow, always planning, always waiting. Their town clock, an ancient artifact, ticked only for future dreams. Sarah, a young artist, painted vivid tomorrows on every wall, each stroke a promise. One evening, the clock stopped. Panic spread, but Sarah saw it as a chance. Gathering the townsfolk, she led them in creating a mural of their today. As they painted, they realized the beauty of the present. The clock began ticking again, but now, Allor lived for today, knowing each moment was a precious thread in their tapestry of tomorrows.

First marriage

Having Asperger’s and parents who were in denial about it will mess you up.
They were proud of my perfect brother, but ashamed of me.
My father would tell people that I was from his wife’s first marriage, so don’t look at him.
My mother would tell people that I was from her husband’s first marriage, so don’t look at her.
I was the sick joke they shared.
So when my father died and my dementia-ridden mother was left destitute, the retirement home called.
“Don’t look at me,” I said. “I’m from her husband’s first marriage.”
And I hung up.

Swimming lessons

When I was two, my mother forced me into summer swimming lessons.
It was at the community pool, and she’d deliberately park far from the entrance.
The blacktop was hot, and I cried in pain as I burned my feet.
The only sandals I got were the ones she hit me with.
So I ran from her abuse, nearly getting run over several times.
Finally making it to the cool wet grass at the lot’s edge, I kept running.
She caught me, and hit me more.
I never learned how to swim.
And I never learned to stop hating her.

Sesame spank

When my mother wasn’t dumping me in daycare while she bowled, it was in front of the TV.
The television wasn’t just my babysitter, but it was my teacher.
I watched Mr. Rogers and Sesame Street and Romper Room.
Learning really stupid things.
One lesson was that a puppet cop could hold up his hand and stop traffic.
So when I ran out in the street in front of our house and played Monkey In The Middle, all I needed to do was hold up my hand.
It didn’t stop the spanking punishment.
I spanked my stuffed Grocer in retaliation.

Boycott lousy food

I used to boycott all of the companies that my father, the corporate attorney, was fired from.
Instead of whacking off to Playboy bunnies, I whacked off to Penthouse pets.
Instead of eating Wendy’s heart attacks on a bun, I ate McDonalds or Burger King stroke sandwiches.
Instead of Little Caesars, which peddled fried bread with cheese that was greasier than the family that owned the company, I ordered local pizza.
And instead of Applebees and Sbarros microwaved restaurant entrees, I microwaved my own stuff.
Now that the asshole is dead, I still boycott them.
Because they make lousy food.

Seasonal affective disorder

In addition to her depression, my mother suffered from seasonal affective disorder.
And she was living in the Pacific Northwest, so the Winters were excessively dark compared to here.
Not that I was going to invite her to move here.
So, I said “Turn on a light.”
That wasn’t enough.
I then sent a big 4K television with a player and some wildlife and other scenery disks.
By closing the windows, she could fool herself into thinking it was nice outside.
When I visited, the disks were unopened, and my asshole father was watching football and porn on the TV.

Senior project

My school had a senior project requirement.
A brief internship at some business or organization you’re interested in.
I was interested in Science, so I planned a few weeks in their medical technology lab.
Instead, my mother conspired with the program coordinator to dump me in a homeless shelter.
Where I was attacked repeatedly, and once forcibly injected with heroin.
These days, when bums on the corner beg for money, I hand out monopoly money.
I donate the itchiest clothes and blankets to shelters.
And drop cans of creamed beets and other disgusting things off at food bank donation drives.

Weekly Challenge #942 – Has-beens

The next topic is All our tomorrows

RICHARD

Beans

I has beans every day, plenty of fibre in them, see. Scientists say it’s good for you, all I knows is they makes me fart.

Guess that’s a good thing though: better out, than in, I says, just so long as you ain’t downwind of me at the time.

Ferocious, they are… pungent!

But, I suppose that’s one of the downsides of taking care of your body, occupational hazard, you might say.

Of course, if I’m honest, it’s not strictly true. I’m not really health conscious at all.

I just loves my beans, with a passion.

And farting, of course.

SERENDIPIDY

Just because we’ve been around for millennia, don’t write us off. It doesn’t mean that we’re a bunch of has-beens.
Even the forces of evil have to evolve with the times, otherwise how else are we going to stay relevant and a force to be reckoned with?
Why do you think social media is so toxic, and there’s so much disagreeable content online? As for the Dark Web, we invented it!
One thing we won’t touch though is artificial intelligence. We prefer to leave it well alone.
Because we simply can’t have AI taking over the world.
That’s our job!

LISA

Why Are We Here?
“After the death of our parents, we partied. We partied pretty hard. We travelled. We travelled far and then returned here to the only house we’ve ever known feeling like has-beens.
Thirty years old, stinking rich, and feeling like life had nothing left to offer us.
It’s ludicrous, isn’t it?”
He’d spoken for ages. The sofa, despite its softness, was feeling more uncomfortable than the basement. I felt I had to say something. My speech felt slurred when I spoke and the room felt a little blurry.
“Where exactly do we fit in to this idea for a new community?

LIZZIE

The train station was still there. The door was locked. I peered through the window but couldn’t see anything. The bike was rotting away at the usual place. The windsock was still flapping on the rusty pole. Back then I didn’t understand why the station master wanted that windsock up there. Trains don’t run on wind. The old station master would smile and say that the birds needed to know. But I never saw any birds. The station master would smile again and say, you don’t? Look. And point to the sky. He saw birds, and that made me smile.

TOM

Cold Fusion

In the land of the has beens is a tiny corner set aside for the never was-s. Rudy was in charge of this sad clump of lost souls. To be a has been you got to have been a been. Done something of at least marginal success. The never was-s came so close to that level, but just couldn’t get their head above the waters of failure. Rudy kept track of each “C-list” personality in an ever-growing ledger. Rudy got this gig after losing the Noble Prize seven times. I can’t quite remember what was his contribution to physics.
858

Millions of Arrows

I am a fan of Japanese director Akira Kurosawa. After the war he set out to make films that would explain the American and European mindset. Seven Samurai was basically a western. Throne of Blood was a retelling of Shakespeare’s Macbeth. In the over-the-top climax Generals Washizu played my Toshiro Mifune is driven mad by the trees of Spider’s Web Forest “they have risen to attack us” he screams. A direct nod to Birnam Wood. What follows is millions of Arrows. End of the Magnificat Seven doesn’t hold a candle to Mifune’s pitching about like a human pin cushion.

NORVAL JOE

Initially, everyone who passed Billbert sitting against the wall asked him what he was doing there. Hours later they all acted like he was invisible or just ignored him like he was some embarrassing has-been.
Ten minutes before the end of visiting hours, a nurse opened the door. “Okay, Billbert. You have ten minutes. Then you need to leave.”
Sabrina lay as still as death in a yellow hospital gown. Her injured leg was exposed with wicked looking rods and apparatuses piercing the flesh. A monitor beeped regularly, displaying her heart rate and respirations.
Billbert took her hand in his.

PLANET Z

I used to be a big podcaster.
But back then, podcasting was really small.
And everybody knew everyone else.
Then, podcasting got big.
Big people got into podcasting.
If you were big before, well, you either hitched your wagon to these big people, or you got lost in the crowd.
You either had to do more and more outrageous things for attention, or you just learned to accept the fact that you were always a small fish, it’s the pond that changed.
And I’m okay with that, because in the end, every fish ends up drinking every other fish’s piss.

A library of complaints

Someone complained about Abraham Lincoln and his Gettysburg Address being on display in a university library, so the staff removed them, saying it had been part of a temporary exhibit, even though they had been on display for years.
Then, at another library, a parent complained about Ru Paul’s book, so the library pulled it from the shelves.
People started complaining about everything, books, artwork, the chairs, the stairs…
Pretty soon, there was nothing left in any library in America.
Which offered plenty of room for drag queens to read stories to little kids.
Until someone complained about that, too.

Car window

Someone smashed my car window and took some stuff.
“Yeah, it happens,” said the police.
They gave me some paperwork to fill out.
“Leave the doors unlocked,” they said. “And don’t leave anything in your car.”
My insurance company said “The deductible is five hundred dollars.”
So, I went to the repair shop, and they charged me… five hundred dollars.
When they were finished, I smashed the store owner’s car window.
Then I drove to the insurance agent’s office and smashed her car window, too.
Because the police won’t do anything, right?
Oh, and they didn’t leave their doors unlocked.