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2010/02/28

Funker Voft - Friendly Fire



Within a few seconds, their jets came over the hill.
Strafing the soldiers, raining fire on their people.
An unintended sacrifice, of their own lives.
The soldiers at the front, killed by their own nation.

They all died in friendly fire.
And the flames are rising higher.
They are here to hold the ground.
To defend what they have found.

A casualty list in the news, will be a helpful tool.
Creating fear and hatred, supporters of a war.
A necessary means to an end, killing their own soldiers.
Publicity for a new war, to get all the voters.

Apathy

Andrew Largeman: [about to swallow a tab of ecstasy] I guess I'll see you guys later.


Andrew Largeman: We're not playing Spin the Bottle; how old are we? More importantly, how old are they?

Jesse Oh, they're all legal. I think...


Carol: Oh... guys? Don't stay in here all day. I had to take the batteries out of the carbon monoxide detector; it was beeping all night.


Andrew Largeman: You know, this necklace makes me think of this totally random memory of my mother. I was a little kid, and I was crying for one reason or another. And she was cradling me, rocking me back and forth, and I can just remember the silver balls rolling around. And there was like snot running down my nose. And she offered me her sleeve and told me to blow my nose into it. And I can remember, even as a little kid, thinking to myself, this is love... this is love.


Andrew Largeman: It looks nice in here.

Gideon Largeman: Yeah, we've been doing some work to the place.

Andrew Largeman: Really?

Gideon Largeman: No, I don't know why I just said that.


Marla Singer: I got this dress at a thrift store for one dollar.

Narrator: It was worth every penny.

Marla Singer: It's a bridesmaid's dress. Someone loved it intensely for one day, and then tossed it. Like a Christmas tree. So special. Then, bam, it's on the side of the road.

[Grabs Narrator's crotch]

Marla Singer: Tinsel still clinging to it. Like a sex crime victim. Underwear inside out. Bound with electrical tape.

Narrator: Well, then it suits you.

Marla Singer: You can borrow it sometime.

Narrator: Marla's philosophy of life is that she might die at any moment. The tragedy, she said, was that she didn't.

You killed yourself

You killed yourself and didn't think of me.
I can't blame you for that, and yet I do,
For now your pain becomes my legacy.

What agony impelled you not to be?
I loved you-wasn't that enough for you?
You killed yourself and didn't think of me,

Nor saw through my eyes what you made me see,
Nor cared about my life when yours was through.
And now your pain becomes my legacy,

And I must fight to keep my sanity,
For what you did defines what must be true:
You killed yourself and didn't think of me.

I cannot think you did it selfishly;
So great a sacrifice leaves nothing due.
But now your pain becomes my legacy,

And I must sail across that bitter sea
That leaves no trace of joy or residue.
You killed yourself and didn't think of me,
So now your pain becomes my legacy.

Front 242 - Crushed (Obscene)

This heavy heart
Heart that I carry
Still holds the weight of you
And when I fall
As I always do
I'm crushed by the absence of you

Perfection is there
And the expression a stare
A face that leaves no trace of wear and tear
True beauty is cold

Love and hate and human sexual nature
This power is sustained by endless violence and pain
A cycle I can't understand

I'm tired of emotions
They bare me with distortions
They cut me
Screaming "Fuck me"
Wipe them all away now
Let them see through eyes made of stone

This heavy heart
Heart that I carry
Still holds the weight of you
And when I fall
As I always do
I'm crushed by the abscence of you

One look at you
Is everything to me

And when I can
Feel you around me
I'm crushed by the presence
of you.

CRUSHED

They're coming to take me away!

Remember when you ran away
And I got on my knees
And begged you not to leave
Because I'd go beserk

Well you left me anyhow
And then the days got worse and worse
And now you see I've gone
Completely out of my mind

And they're coming to take me away ha-haaa
They're coming to take me away ho ho hee hee ha haaa
To the funny farm
Where life is beautiful all the time

And I'll be happy to see those nice young men
In their clean white coats
And they're coming to take me away ha haaa

You thought it was a joke
And so you laughed
You laughed when I said
That losing you would make me flip my lid

Right? You know you laughed
I heard you laugh. You laughed
You laughed and laughed and then you left
But now you know I'm utterly mad

And they're coming to take me away ha haaa
They're coming to take me away ho ho hee hee ha haaa
To the happy home with trees and flowers and chirping birds
And basket weavers who sit and smile and twiddle their thumbs and toes

And they're coming to take me away ha haaa

I cooked your food
I cleaned your house
And this is how you pay me back
For all my kind unselfish, loving deeds

Ha! Well you just wait
They'll find you yet and when they do
They'll put you in the A.S.P.C.A.
You mangy mutt

And they're coming to take me away ha haaa
They're coming to take me away ha haaa ho ho hee hee
To the funny farm where life is beautiful all the time
And I'll be happy to see those nice young men
In their clean white coats

And they're coming to take me away
To the happy home with trees and flowers and chirping birds
And basket weavers who sit and smile and twiddle their thumbs and toes
And they're coming to take me away ha haaa!


Remember when I ran away
And you got on your knees
And begged me not to leave
Because you´d go berserk?
WELL...
You thought you had me fooled
But I just left you anyhow
Because I knew you were
Already out of your mind!
AND...
I´m happy they took you away, haha
I´m happy they took you away, ho ho, hee hee, ha ha
To the funny farm
Where life´s hysterical all the time
And you´ll be sorry I sent
Those nice, young men
In their clean, white coats
And I´m happy they took you away, HA-HAAA!
I thought that you were nuts
And so I laughed
I laughed when you had said
That losing me would make you flip your lid
RIGHT...
It´s true, I laughed, you heared me laugh
I laughed, I laughed and laughed
And then I left
Because I know you´re utterly mad
AND...
I´m happy they took you away, haha
I´m happy they took you away, ho ho, hee hee, ha ha
To the happy home
With tree and flowers and chirping birds
And basket weavers who sit and smile
And twiddle their thumbs and toes
And I´m happy they took you away, HA-HAAA!
You burned my food
You wrecked the house
And this is how I´ve paid you back
For all your cruel, unloving selfish deeds!
HAH...
They´ve got you now
And you´ll get just
What you deserve
For calling me a mutt, you mangy man!
AND...
I´m happy they took you away, haha
I´m happy they took you away, ho ho, hee hee, ha ha
To the funny farm
Where life´s hysterical all the time
And you´ll be sorry I sent
Those nice, young men
In their clean, white coats
And I´m happy they took you away, HA-HAAA!
To the happy home
With trees and flowers and chirping birds
And basket weavers who sit and smile
And twiddle their thumbs and toes
And I´m happy they took you away, HA-HAAA!
To the funny farm
Where life´s hysterical all the time
And you´ll be sorry I sent
Those nice, young men
In theit clean white coats
And I´m happy they took you away, HA-HAAA!


Remember when they took me
To the funny farm
For acting like a lunatic
Because you ran away?
HAH?

Well that was many years ago
And now at last they´ve let me out
I´ve finally made them think
I´m perfectly sane
BUT...

They´re coming to get me again, haha
They´re coming to take me away again, hee hee, ho ho
To the looney bin
Where life was ludicrous all the time
And I´m just crazy about
Those big strong goons
With their clean white necks
´Cause they´re coming to get me again, HA-HAAA!

I thought you were my friend
And so I trusted you
Believed in you
The day you swore you´d always be my pet
BUT...

I trusted you, you know I did
I did, I really did
But then you hit
And I´m not really totally cured
SO...

They´re coming to get me again, haha
They´re coming to put me away again, hoo hoo, hey hey
In a rubber room
With fleas and cowards and burping nerds
And pimple poppers who sweat and snear
And squiggle and speeze and squirt
And they´re coming to get me again, HA-HAAA!

I scrubbed your toes
I cleaned your cage
But all you ever did was pay me back
With cruel unloving selfish deeds
YES...

Well now I´m free
So just wait
I´ll find you soon
And when I do I'll swing you by your tail you hairy ape!
AND...

They´re coming to get me again, haha
They´re coming to take me away again, hee hee, ho ho
To the looney bin
Where life was ludicrous all the time
And I´m just crazy about
Those big strong goons
With their clean white necks
'Cause they´re coming to get me again, HA-HAAA!

To the rubber room
With fleas and cowards and burping nerds
And pimple poppers who sweat and snear
And squiggle and sqeeze and squirt
And they´re coming to get me again, HA-HAAA!

To the looney bin
Where life was ludicrous all the time
And I´m just crazy about
Those big strong goons
With their clean white necks
´Cause they´re coming to get me again, HA-HAAA!

To the happy home
With trees and flowers and chirping birds
And basket weavers...

To the funny farm
Where life was beautiful all the time
And I´ll be ha-a-appy...

OH, NO!

Mind.In.A.Box - Change

 
and I will never see the truth,
this is not a matter of my youth.
I do not need anybody else,
bonds would put my mind into cells.

and I will never know I was wrong,
never listen to those truly strong.
I do not fear anything that's not me,
ignorance is the ultimate key.

but I wouldn't want to live like this forever.
but change myself? never, never!
the very thought sends shivers down my spine.
I'm sure everything, everything will be fine.

I am the one who cries out at night,
for somebody to change my very core.
not sure why I live in endless fright,
doomed to love only myself forevermore.

I am the one who has no real friends,
shallow people flocking to my banner.
always trying to make easy amends,
cherishing my own overbearing manner.

life - always fragile.
I will never change.
love - always fleeting.
I will never change.

life - always fragile.
I will never change.
love - always fleeting.
I will never change.

but I wouldn't want to live like this forever.
maybe I really was too clever.
but I wouldn't want to end like that.
I would die lonely and incredibly sad.

I will never drag myself out of this,
the shadows of my past bogging me down.
feeling lost in turmoil and crisis,
my face forever set in an endless frown.

I have been hurt beyond mental repair,
thence destined to suffer eternal damnation.
no one can be there for me to care,
but without I will never find salvation.

lust - always empty.
but I will never change.
death - always tempting.
but I will never change.

lust - always empty.
but I will never change.
death - always tempting.
but I will never change.

everything is about control.
I must never slip, nor ever fall.
anything is possible for me.
I must never doubt, and finally be free.

and finally be free.

Funker Vogt - Compulsions

 
The dreams still come and go
Lying wounded on a beach
With shrapnel in my leg
My only weapon is a knife

And there is this golden fluid
A bag full of tiny bottles
Its a promise for relief
The key for my survival

So I feel, yes I feel the need
To lock myself up in a room
Squirt some morphine into my veins
To leave this cruel world for a while

And when I close my eyes
I find myself somewhere else
In a world built on illusions
Where compulsions are expelled

Out of a need I had to use it
Although I never thought I would
And before I was aware
This need was present every day

A golden mirror for my soul
Will be injected through a syringe
Slowly creeping up my vein
To hit the center of myself

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A Scanner Darkly

Freck Suicide Narrator: Charles Freck, becoming progressively more and more depressed by what was happening around him, decided, finally, to off himself. There was no problem in the circles where he hung out and putting an end to yourself. You just bought a large quantity of downers and took them with some cheap wine. The planning part had to do with the artifacts he wanted found on him by later archeologists. He had spent several days deciding, much longer than he had spent deciding to kill himself. He would be found lying on his back, on his bed, with a copy of Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead and an unfinished letter to Exxon, protesting the cancellation of his gas credit card. That way, he would indite the system, and achieve something by his death, over and above what the death itself achieved. At the last moment, he changed his mind on a decisive issue and decided to drink the pills with a connoisseur wine, instead of Rippler Thunderbird. So he set off on one last drive, over to Tiny's Liquors, which specialized in fine wines, and bought a bottle of 2001 Azalea Springs Merlot, which set him back almost seventy dollars. Back home again, he uncorked the wine, let it breathe, drank a few glasses of it, tried to think of something meaningful but could not, and then, with a glass of Merlot, gulped down all the pills at once. However, he had been burned. Instead of quietly suffocating, Charles Freck began to hallucinate. The next thing he knew, a creature from between dimensions was standing beside his bed, looking down at him disapprovingly.
Freck: You gonna read me my sins?
[Creature nods]
Freck: Eh, it's gonna take a hundred thousand hours.
Creature: Your sins will be read to you ceaselessly, in shifts, throughout eternity. The list will never end.
Creature: [starts reading] "The Sins of Freck"
Freck Suicide Narrator: Charles Freck wished he could take back the last half hour of his life.
Creature: [Creature continues to read] "... theft of fingernail clippers...” "... you did knowingly and with malice...” "... punched your baby sister, Evelyn...” "... December, theft of Christmas presents...” "... one billion lies...”
Freck Suicide Narrator: One thousand years later, they had reached the sixth grade, the year he had discovered masturbation.
Creature: [Creature continues to read] "... November fourteenth, Percodan... Vicodin... Cocaine...”
Freck Suicide Narrator: Charles Freck thought, "At least I got a good wine."

Linkin Park - In The End


It starts with one thing
I don't know why
It doesn't even matter how hard you try
keep that in mind
I designed this rhyme
To explain in due time
All I know
Time is a valuable thing
Watch it fly by as the pendulum swings
Watch it count down to the end of the day
The clock ticks life away
It's so unreal
Didn't look out below
Watch the time go right out the window
Trying to hold on, but didn't even know
Wasted it all just to watch you go
I kept everything inside and even though I tried, it all fell apart
What it meant to me will eventually be a memory of a time when

I tried so hard
And got so far
But in the end
It doesn't even matter
I had to fall
To lose it all
But in the end
It doesn't even matter

One thing, I don't know why
It doesn’t even matter how hard you try, keep that in mind
I designed this rhyme, to explain in due time
I tried so hard
In spite of the way you were mocking me
Acting like I was part of your property
Remembering all the times you fought with me
I'm surprised it got so (far)
Things aren't the way they were before
You wouldn't even recognize me anymore
Not that you knew me back then
But it all comes back to me (in the end)
You kept everything inside and even though I tried, it all fell apart
What it meant to me will eventually be a memory of a time when I

I’ve put my trust in you
Pushed as far as I can go
And for all this
There's only one thing you should know
I’ve put my trust in you ...

Project Mayhem

10 Steps Toward World Domination (Project Mayhem)
  1. Invoke an external and internal threat in order to convince the population to grant their rulers extraordinary powers.
  2. Establish secret prisons that practice torture, prisons that are initially few in number and only incarcerate social pariahs, but that quickly multiply and soon imprison “opposition leaders, outspoken clergy, union leaders, well-known performers, publishers, and journalists.”
  3. Develop a paramilitary force that operates without legal restraint.
  4. Set up a system of intense domestic surveillance that gathers information for the purposes of intimidating and blackmailing citizens.
  5. Infiltrate, monitor, and disorganize citizens’ groups.
  6. Arbitrarily detain and release citizens, especially at borders.
  7. Target key individuals like civil servants, academics, and artists in order to ensure their complicity or silence.
  8. Take control of the press.
  9. Publicly equate dissent with treason.
  10. Suspend the rule of law.

London After Midnight - Republic

 
You're being used.
You're being lied,
to in a desert without water.
You are desperate to believe,
you're like a lamb led to the slaughter.
Self deceive you won't believe,
you're like a child seeking mother.
You need guidance,
you see violence as a way to control others.

Do you think that ignorance sets you free?
Has slavery made you all you can be?
Is cruelty your new authority?
Do you think the lies are convincing me?

I don't care if you hurt.
I don't care if you're blind.
If its too late to convince you,
then I don't care if you die.

You're in the dark,
you're in the depths,
you're in an ocean of disease.
You've lost control to those who know,
life as pain and lust and greed.
And in the end,
can you defend the things,
you say that you despise?
Can you see the cold and naked,
truth that's there before your eyes?

Do you think that ignorance sets you free?
Has salavery made you all you can be?
Is cruelty your new authority?
Do you think the lies are convincing me?

I don't care if you hurt.
I don't care if you're blind.
If its too late to convince you,
then I don't care if you die.

can you see?
You'll never be free.
can you see?
You'll never be free.

I don't care if you hurt.
I don't care if you're blind.
If its too late to convince you,
then I don't care if you die.

So die.
So die.
So die.
So die.

Dust Brothers - This Is Your Life


And you open the door and you step inside
We're inside our hearts
Now imagine your pain as a white ball of healing light
That's right, your pain
The pain itself is a white ball of healing light
I don't think so

This is your life, good to the last drop
Doesn't get any better than this
This is your life and it's ending one minute at a time

This isn't a seminar, this isn't a weekend retreat
Where you are now you can't even imagine what the bottom will be like
Only after disaster can we be resurrected
It's only after you've lost everything that you're free to do anything
Nothing is static, everything is evolving, everything is falling apart

This is your life, this is your life, this is your life, this is your life
Doesn't get any better than this
This is your life, this is your life, this is your life, this is your life
And it and it's ending one-minute at a time

You are not a beautiful and unique snowflake
You are the same decaying organic matter as everything else
We are all part of the same compost heap
We are the all singing, all dancing, crap of the world

You are not your bank account
You are not the clothes you wear
You are not the contents of your wallet
You are not your bowel cancer
You are not your grande latte
You are not the car you drive
You are not your fucking khaki's

You have to give up, you have to give up
You have to realize that someday you will die
Until you know that, you are useless

I say let me never be complete
I say may I never be content
I say deliver me from Swedish furniture
I say deliver me from clever arts
I say deliver me from clear skin and perfect teeth
I say you have to give up
I say evolve, and let the chips fall where they may

This is your life, this is your life, this is your life, this is your life
Doesn't get any better than this
This is your life, this is your life, this is your life, this is your life
And it and it's ending one-minute at a time

You have to give up, you have to give up
I want you to hit me as hard as you can
I want you to hit me as hard as you can

Welcome to Fight Club
If this is your first night, you have to fight
When I saw you there in the shadow of the setting sun
When I saw you there in the shadow of the setting sun
You looked so beautiful
You looked so beautiful

When I saw you there I couldn't resist your tender kiss
When I saw you there I couldn't resist your warm caress

You had so much to give
You had your time to live
Christfuck christfuck

I will bring us through this

As always I will care you kicking and screaming
And in the end you will thanks me

You had your time to live

Cry cry cry cry cry cry cry cry
Cry cry cry cry cry cry cry cry
Cry cry cry cry cry cry cry cry

Cristfuck

Waking Life Excerpt - Self Destructive Man

(Main character walking down the street with a man who is holding a can of gasoline - J.C. Shakespeare.).
A self-destructive man feels completely alienated, utterly alone. He's an outsider to the human community. He thinks to himself, "I must be insane." What he fails to realize is that society has, just as he does, a vested interest in considerable losses and catastrophes. These wars, famines, floods and quakes meet well-defined needs. Man wants chaos. In fact, he's gotta have it. Depression, strife, riots, murder, all this dread. We're irresistibly drawn to that almost orgiastic state created out of death and destruction. It's in all of us. We revel in it. Sure, the media tries to put a sad face on these things, painting them up as great human tragedies. But we all know the function of the media has never been to eliminate the evils of the world, no. Their job is to persuade us to accept those evils and get used to living with them. The powers that be want us to be passive observers. Hey, you got a match? And they haven't given us any other options outside the occasional, purely symbolic, participatory act of voting. You want the puppet on the right or the puppet on the left? I feel that the time has come to project my own inadequacies and dissatisfactions into the sociopolitical and scientific schemes, let my own lack of a voice be heard.
(He pours gasoline all over himself and lights himself on fire.)

Ambition

Reach for the moon.
Even if you miss, you'll still be among the stars.
...Suffocating.

Veronica Decides To Die

On 11 November 1997, Veronika decided that the moment to kill herself had – at last! –
arrived. She carefully cleaned the room that she rented in a convent, turned off the heating,
brushed her teeth and lay down.
She picked up the four packs of sleeping pills from her bedside table. Instead of crushing
them and mixing them with water, she decided to take them one by one, because there is
always a gap between intention and action, and she wanted to feel free to turn back half
way. However, with each pill she swallowed, she felt more convinced: after five minutes
the packs were empty.
Since she didn’t know exactly how long it would take her to lose consciousness, she had
placed on the bed that month’s issue of a French magazine, Homme, which had just arrived
in the library where she worked. She had no particular interest in computer science, but, as
she leafed through the magazine, she came across an article about a computer game (one of
those CD-Roms), created by Paulo Coelho, a Brazilian writer she had happened to meet at a
lecture in the café at the Grand Union Hotel. They had exchanged a few words and she had
ended up being invited by his publisher to join them for supper. There were a lot of people
there, though, and they hadn’t had a chance to talk in depth about anything.
The fact that she had met the author, however, led her to think that he was part of her world,
and that reading an article about his work could help pass the time. While she was waiting
for death, Veronika started reading about computer science, a subject in which she was not
in the least bit interested, but then that was in keeping with what she had done all her life,
always looking for the easy option, for whatever was nearest to hand. Like that magazine,
for example.
To her surprise, though, the first line of text shook her out of her natural passivity (the
tranquillizers had not yet dissolved in her stomach, but Veronika was, by nature, passive),
and, for the first time in her life, it made her ponder the truth of a saying that was very
fashionable amongst her friends: ‘nothing in this world happens by chance’.
Why that first line, at precisely the moment when she had begun to die? What was the
hidden message she saw before her, assuming there are such things as hidden messages
rather than mere coincidences.
Underneath an illustration of the computer game, the journalist began his article by asking:
‘Where is Slovenia?’
‘Honestly,’she thought, ‘no one ever knows where Slovenia is.’
But Slovenia existed nonetheless, and it was outside, inside, in the mountains around her
and in the square she was looking out at: Slovenia was her country.
She put the magazine to one side, there was no point now in getting indignant with a world
that knew absolutely nothing about the Slovenes; her nation’s honour no longer concerned
her. It was time to feel proud of herself, to recognise that she had been able to do this, that
she had finally had the courage and was leaving this life: what joy! Also she was doing it as
she had always dreamed she would – by taking sleeping pills, which leave no mark.
Veronika had been trying to get hold of the pills for nearly six months. Thinking that she
would never manage it, she had even considered slashing her wrists. It didn’t matter that
the room would end up awash with blood, and the nuns would be left feeling confused and
troubled, for suicide demands that people think of themselves first and of others later. She
was prepared to do all she could so that her death would cause as little upset as possible,
but if slashing her wrists was the only way, then she had no option – and the nuns could
clean up the room and quickly forget the whole story, otherwise they would find it hard to
rent out the room again. We may live at the end of the twentieth century, but people still
believe in ghosts.
Obviously she could have thrown herself off one of the few tall buildings in Ljubljana, but
what about the further suffering caused to her parents by a fall from such a height? Apart
from the shock of learning that their daughter had died, they would also have to identify a
disfigured corpse; no, that was a worse solution than bleeding to death, because it would
leave indelible marks on two people who only wanted the best for her.
‘They would get used to their daughter’s death eventually. But it must be impossible to
forget a shattered skull.’
Shooting, jumping off a high building, hanging, none of these options suited her feminine
nature. Women, when they kill themselves, choose far more romantic methods – like
slashing their wrists or taking an overdose of sleeping pills. Abandoned princesses and
Hollywood actresses have provided numerous examples of this.
Veronika knew that life was always a matter of waiting for the right moment to act. And so
it proved. In response to her complaints that she could no longer sleep at night, two friends
of hers managed to get hold of two packs each of a powerful drug, used by musicians at a
local nightclub. Veronika left the four packs on her bedside table for a week, courting
approaching death and saying goodbye – entirely unsentimentally – to what people called
Life.
Now she was there, glad she had gone all the way, and bored because she didn’t know what
to do with the little time that remained to her.
She thought again about the absurd question she had just read. How could an article about
computers begin with such an idiotic opening line: ‘Where is Slovenia?’
Having nothing more interesting to do, she decided to read the whole article and she
learned that the said computer game had been made in Slovenia – that strange country that
no one seemed quite able to place, except the people who lived there – because it was a
cheap source of labour. A few months before, when the product was launched, the French
manufacturer had given a party for journalists from all over the world in a castle in Vled.
Veronika remembered reading something about the party, which had been quite an event in
the city, not just because the castle had been redecorated in order to match as closely as
possible the medieval atmosphere of the CD-Rom, but because of the controversy in the
local press: journalists from Germany, France, Britain, Italy and Spain had been invited, but
not a single Slovene.
Homme’s correspondent – who was visiting Slovenia for the first time, doubtless with all
expenses paid, and determined to spend his visit chatting up other journalists, making
supposedly interesting comments and enjoying the free food and drink at the castle – had
decided to begin his article with a joke which must have appealed to the sophisticated
intellectuals of his country. He had probably told his fellow journalists on the magazine
various untrue stories about local customs too, and said how badly Slovene women dress.
That was his problem. Veronika was dying, and she had other concerns, such as wondering
if there was life after death, or when her body would be found. Nevertheless – or perhaps
precisely because of the important decision she had taken – the article bothered her.
She looked out of the convent window that gave on to the small square in Ljubljana. ‘If
they don’t know where Slovenia is, then Ljubljana must be a myth,’ she thought. Like
Atlantis or Lemuria, or the other lost continents that fill men’s imaginations. No one,
anywhere in the world, would begin an article asking where Mount Everest was, even if
they had never been there. Yet, in the middle of Europe, a journalist on an important
magazine felt no shame at asking such a question, because he knew that most of his readers
would not know where Slovenia was, still less its capital, Ljubljana.
It was then that Veronika found a way of passing the time, now that ten minutes had gone
by and she had still not noticed any bodily changes. The final act of her life would be to
write a letter to the magazine, explaining that Slovenia was one of the five republics into
which the formerYugoslavia had been divided.
The letter would be her suicide note. She would give no explanation of the real reasons for
her death.
When they found her body, they would conclude that she had killed herself because a
magazine did not know where her country was. She laughed to think of the controversy in
the newspapers, with some for and some against her suicide committed in honour of her
country’s cause. And she was shocked by how quickly she could change her mind, since
only moments before she had thought exactly the opposite, that the world and other
geographical problems were no longer her concern.
She wrote the letter.That moment of good humour almost made her have second thoughts
about the need to die, but she had already taken the pills, it was too late to turn back.
Anyway, she had had such moments before and, besides, she was not killing herself
because she was a sad, embittered woman, constantly depressed. She had spent many
afternoons walking gaily along the streets of Ljubljana or gazing – from the window in her
convent room – at the snow falling on the small square with its statue of the poet. Once, for
almost a month, she had felt as if she were walking on air, all because a complete stranger,
in the middle of that very square, had given her a flower.
She believed herself to be completely normal. Two very simple reasons lay behind her
decision to die, and she was sure that, were she to leave a note explaining, many people
would agree with her.
The first reason: everything in her life was the same and, once her youth was gone, it would
be downhill all the way, with old age beginning to leave irreversible marks, the onset of
illness, the departure of friends. She would gain nothing by continuing to live; indeed, the
likelihood of suffering only increased.
The second reason was more philosophical: Veronika read the newspapers, watched TV,
and she was aware of what was going on in the world. Everything was wrong, and she had
no way of putting things right – that gave her a sense of complete powerlessness.
In a short while, though, she would have the final experience of her life, which promised to
be very different: death. She wrote the letter to the magazine, then abandoned the topic, and
concentrated on more pressing matters, more appropriate to what she was living, or, rather,
dying, through at that moment.
She tried to imagine what it would be like to die, but failed to reach any conclusion.
Besides, there was no point worrying about that, for in a few minutes’ time she would
know.
How many minutes?
She had no idea. But she relished the thought that she was about to find out the answer to
the question that everyone asked themselves: does God exist?
Unlike many people, this had not been the great inner debate of her life. Under the old
Communist regime, the official line in schools had been that life ended with death and she
had got used to the idea. On the other hand, her parents’ generation and her grandparents’
generation still went to church, said prayers and went on pilgrimages, and were utterly
convinced that God listened to what they said.
At twenty-four, having experienced everything she could experience – and that was no
small achievement – Veronika was almost certain that everything ended with death. That is
why she had chosen suicide: freedom at last. Eternal oblivion.
In her heart of hearts, though, there was still a doubt: what if God did exist? Thousands of
years of civilization had made of suicide a taboo, an affront to all religious codes: man
struggles to survive, not to succumb. The human race must procreate. Society needs
workers. A couple has to have a reason to stay together, even when love has ceased to exist,
and a country needs soldiers, politicians and artists.
‘If God exists, and I truly don’t believe he does, he will know that there are limits to human
understanding. He was the one who created this confusion in which there is poverty,
injustice, greed and loneliness. He doubtless had the best of intentions, but the results have
proved disastrous; if God exists, He will be generous with those creatures who chose to
leave this Earth early, and he might even apologise for having made us spend time here.’
To hell with taboos and superstitions. Her devout mother would say: God knows the past,
the present and the future. In that case, He had placed her in this world in the full
knowledge that she would end up killing herself, and He would not be shocked by her
actions.
Veronika began to feel a slight nausea, which became rapidly more intense.
In a few moments, she would no longer be able to concentrate on the square outside
her window. She knew it was winter, it must have been about four o’clock in the afternoon,
and the sun was setting fast. She knew that other people would go on living. At that
moment, a young man passed her window and saw her, utterly unaware that she was about
to die. A group of Bolivian musicians (where is Bolivia? why don’t magazine articles ask
that?) were playing in front of the statue of France Prešeren, the great Slovenian poet, who
had made such a profound impact on the soul of his people.
Would she live to hear the end of that music drifting up from the square? It would
be a beautiful memory of this life: the late afternoon, a melody recounting the dreams of a
country on the other side of the world, the warm cosy room, the handsome young man
passing by, full of life, who had decided to stop and was now standing looking up at her.
She realised that the pills were beginning to take effect and that he was the last person who
would see her.
He smiled. She returned his smile – she had nothing to lose. He waved; she decided
to pretend she was looking at something else, the young man was going too far.
Disconcerted, he continued on his way, forgetting that face at the window for ever.
But Veronika was glad to have felt desired by somebody one last time. She wasn’t
killing herself because of a lack of love. It wasn’t because she felt unloved by her family, or
had money problems or an incurable disease.
Veronika had decided to die on that lovely Ljubjlana afternoon, with Bolivian
musicians playing in the square, with a young man passing by her window, and she was
happy with what her eyes could see and her ears hear. She was even happier that she would
not have to go on seeing those same things for another thirty, forty or fifty years, because
they would lose all their originality and be transformed into the tragedy of a life in which
everything repeats itself and where one day is exactly like another.
Her stomach was beginning to churn now and she was feeling very ill indeed. ‘It’s
odd, I thought an overdose of tranquillizers would send me straight to sleep.’ What she was
experiencing, though, was a strange buzzing in her ears and a desire to vomit.
‘If I throw up, I won’t die.’
She decided not to think about the stabbing pains in her stomach and tried to
concentrate on the rapidly falling night, on the Bolivians, on the people who were starting
to shut up their shops and go home. The noise in her ears was becoming more and more
strident and, for the first time since she had taken the pills, Veronika felt fear, a terrible fear
of the unknown.
It did not last long. Soon afterwards, she lost consciousness.
When she opened her eyes, Veronika did not think ‘this must be heaven’. Heaven
would never use a fluorescent tube to light a room, and the pain - which started a fraction of a
second later - was typical of the Earth. Ah, that Earth pain - unique, unmistakable.Error!
Reference source not found.
She tried to move and the pain increased. A series of bright dots appeared, but, even
so,Veronika knew that those dots were not the stars of Paradise, but the consequences of the
intense pain she was feeling.
‘She's coming round,’ she heard a woman say. ‘You've landed slap bang in hell, so
you’d better make the most of it.’
No, it couldn't be true, that voice was deceiving her. It wasn't hell, because she felt
really cold and she was aware of plastic tubes coming out of her nose and mouth. One of
the tubes - the one stuck down her throat - made her feel as if she were choking.
She made as if to remove it, but her arms were strapped down.
‘I'm joking, it's not really hell,’ the voice went on. ‘It's worse than hell, not that I’ve
ever actually been there. You’re in Villette.’
Despite the pain and the feeling of choking, Veronika realised at once what had
happened. She had tried to kill herself and someone had arrived in time to save her. It could
have been one of the nuns, a friend who had decided to drop by unannounced, someone
delivering something she had forgotten she had ordered. The fact is, she had survived, and she
was in Villette.
Villette, the famous and much-feared lunatic asylum, which had been in existence
since 1991, the year of the country's independence. At that time, believing that the partitioning
of the former Yugoslavia would be achieved through peaceful means (after all, Slovenia had
only experienced eleven days of war), a group of European businessmen had obtained
permission to set up a hospital for mental patients in an old barracks, abandoned because of
high maintenance costs.
Shortly afterwards, however, the wars commenced: first in Croatia, then in Bosnia.
The businessmen were worried. The money for the investment came from capitalists scattered
all round the globe, from people whose names they didn't even know, so there was no
possibility of sitting down in front of them, offering a few excuses and asking them to be
patient.They resolved the problem by adopting practices which were far from commendable in
a psychiatric hospital, and for the young nation that had just emerged from a benign
communism, Villette came to symbolise all the worst aspects of capitalism: to be admitted to
the hospital, all you needed was money.
There was no shortage of people who, in their desire to get rid of some family member
because of arguments over an inheritance (or over that person’s embarrassing behaviour),
were willing to pay large sums of money to obtain a medical report that would allow the
internment of their problematic children or parents. Others, fleeing from debts or trying to
justify certain attitudes that could otherwise result in long prison sentences, spent a brief time
in the asylum and then simply left without paying any penalty or undergoing any judicial
process.
Villette was the place from which no one had ever escaped, where genuine madmen -
sent there by the courts or by other hospitals – mingled with those merely accused of madness
or those pretending to be mad. The result was utter confusion, and the press were constantly
publishing tales of ill-treatment and abuse, although they had never been given permission to
visit Villette and actually see what was happening. The government was investigating the
complaints, but could get no proof; the shareholders threatened to spread the word that foreign
investment was difficult in Slovenia, and so the institution managed to remain afloat, indeed, it
went from strength to strength.
‘My aunt killed herself a few months ago,’ the female voice continued. ‘For almost
eight years she was too afraid to even leave her room, eating, getting fat, smoking, taking
tranquillisers and sleeping most of the time. She had two daughters and a husband who loved
her.’
Veronika tried to move her head in the direction of the voice, but failed.
‘I only saw her fight back once, when her husband took a lover. Then she kicked up a
fuss, lost a few pounds, smashed some glasses and - for weeks on end - kept the rest of the
whole neighbourhood awake with her shouting. Absurd though it may seem, I think that was
the happiest time of her life. She was fighting for something, she felt alive and capable of
responding to the challenges facing her.’
‘What's all that got to do with me?’ thought Veronika, unable to say anything. ‘I'm not
your aunt and I haven't got a husband.’
‘In the end, her husband got rid of his lover,’ said the woman, ‘and gradually, my aunt
returned to her former passivity. One day, she phoned to say that she wanted to change her life:
she'd given up smoking. That same week, after increasing the number of tranquillisers she was
taking because she'd stopped smoking, she told everyone that she wanted to kill herself.
No one believed her. Then, one morning, she left a message on my answerphone, saying
goodbye, and she gassed herself. I listened to that message several times: I had never heard her
sound so calm, so resigned to her fate. She said she was neither happy nor unhappy, and that
was why she couldn't go on.’
Veronika felt sorry for the woman telling the story, for she seemed to be doing so in an
attempt to understand her aunt's death. In a world where everyone struggles to survive
whatever the cost, how could one judge those people who decide to die?
No one can judge. Each person knows the extent of their own suffering, or the total
absence of meaning in their lives. Veronika wanted to explain that, but instead she choked on
the tube in her mouth and the woman hurried to her aid.
She saw the woman bending over her bound body, which was full of tubes and
protected against her will, her freely expressed desire to destroy it. She moved her head from
side to side, pleading with her eyes for them to remove the tubes and let her die in peace.
‘You're upset,’ said the woman. ‘I don't know if you're sorry for what you did or if you
still want to die; that doesn't interest me. What interests me is doing my job. If the patient gets
agitated, the regulations say I must give them a sedative.’
Veronika stopped struggling, but the nurse was already injecting something into her
arm. Soon afterwards, she was back in a strange dreamless world, where the only thing she
could remember was the face of the woman she had just seen: green eyes, brown hair, and a
very distant air, the air of someone doing things because she has to do them, never questioning
why the rules say this or that.
Paulo Coelho heard about Veronika's story three months later when he was having supper in
an Algerian restaurant in Paris with a Slovenian friend, also called Veronika, who happened
to be the daughter of the doctor in charge at Villette.
Later, when he decided to write a book about the subject, he considered changing his
friend's name in order not to confuse the reader. He thought of calling her Blaska or Edwina or
Marietzja, or some other Slovenian name, but he ended up keeping the real names. When he
referred to his friend Veronika, he would call her his friend, Veronika. When he referred to the
other Veronika, there would be no need to describe her at all, because she would be the central
character in the book, and people would get irritated if they were always having to read
‘Veronika the mad woman,’ or ‘Veronika the one who tried to commit suicide’. Besides, both
he and his friend Veronika would only take up a very brief part of the book, this part.
His friend Veronika was horrified at what her father had done, especially bearing in
mind that he was the director of an institution seeking respectability and was himself working
on a thesis that would be judged by the conventional academic community.
‘Do you know where the word “asylum” comes from?’ she was saying. ‘It dates back
to the Middle Ages, from a person’s right to seek refuge in churches and other holy places.
The right of asylum is something any civilised person can understand. So how could my father,
the director of an asylum, treat someone like that?’
Paulo Coelho wanted to know all the details of what had happened, because he had a
genuine reason for finding out about Veronika's story.
The reason was the following: he himself had been admitted into an asylum or, rather,
mental hospital as they were better known. And this had happened not once, but three times, in
1965, 1966 and 1967. The place where he had been interned was the Dr Eiras Sanatorium in
Rio de Janeiro.
Precisely why he had been admitted into hospital was something which, even today, he
found odd; perhaps his parents were confused by his unusual behaviour, half-shy, halfextrovert,
and by his desire to be an ‘artist’, something that everyone in the family considered
a perfect recipe for ending up as a social outcast and dying in poverty.
When he thought about it – and, it must be said, he rarely did - he considered the real
madman to have been the doctor who had agreed to admit him for the flimsiest of reasons (as
in any family, the tendency is always to place the blame on others, and to state adamantly that
the parents didn't know what they were doing when they took that drastic decision).
Paulo laughed when he learned of the strange letter to the newspapers that Veronika
had left behind, complaining that an important French magazine didn't even know where
Slovenia was.
‘No one would kill themselves over something like that.’
‘That's why the letter had no effect,’ said his friend Veronika, embarrassed. ‘Yesterday,
when I checked in at the hotel, the receptionist thought Slovenia was a town in Germany.’
He knew the feeling, for many foreigners believed the Argentine city of Buenos Aires
to be the capital of Brazil.
But apart from having foreigners blithely compliment him on the beauty of his
country’s capital city (which was to be found in the neighbouring country of Argentina), Paulo
Coelho shared with Veronika the fact just mentioned, but which is worth restating: he too had
been admitted into a mental hospital, and, as his first wife had once remarked, ‘should never
have been let out’.
But he was let out. And when he left the sanatorium for the last time, determined never
to go back, he had made two promises: (a) that he would one day write about the subject and
(b) that he would wait until both his parents were dead before touching publicly on the issue,
because he didn't want to hurt them, since both had spent many years of their lives blaming
themselves for what they had done.
His mother had died in 1993, but his father, who had turned eighty-four in 1997, was
still alive and in full possession of his mental faculties and his health, despite having
emphysema of the lungs (even though he'd never smoked) and despite living entirely off
frozen food because he couldn't get a housekeeper who could put up with his eccentricities.
So, when Paulo Coelho heard Veronika's story, he discovered a way of talking about
the issue without breaking his promises. Even though he had never considered suicide, he had
an intimate knowledge of the world of the mental hospital - the treatments, the relationships
between doctors and patients, the comforts and anxieties of living in a place like that.
So let us allow Paulo Coelho and his friend Veronika to leave this book for good and
let us get on with the story.
Veronika didn't know how long she had slept. She remembered waking up at one point
- still with the life-giving tubes in her mouth and nose – and hearing a voice say:
‘Do you want me to masturbate you?’
But now, looking round the room with her eyes wide open, she didn't know if that had
been real or an hallucination. Apart from that one memory, she could remember nothing,
absolutely nothing.
The tubes had been taken out, but she still had needles stuck all over her body, wires
connected to the area around her heart and her head, and her arms were still strapped down.
She was naked, covered only by a sheet, and she felt cold, but she was determined not to
complain.The small area surrounded by green curtains was filled by the bed she was lying on,
the machinery of the Intensive Care Unit and a white chair on which a nurse was sitting
reading a book.
This time, the woman had dark eyes and brown hair. Even so, Veronika was not sure if
it was the same person she had talked to hours – or was it days? - ago.
‘Can you unstrap my arms?’
The nurse looked up, said a brusque ‘No’, and went back to her book.
I'm alive, thought Veronika. Everything's going to start all over again. I'll have to stay
in here for a while, until they realise that I’m perfectly normal. Then they'll let me out, and I'll
see the streets of Ljubljana again, its main square, the bridges, the people going to and from
work.
Since people always tend to help others - just so that they can feel they are better than
they really are - they'll give me my job back at the library. In time, I'll start frequenting the
same bars and nightclubs, I'll talk to my friends about the injustices and problems of the world,
I'll go to the cinema, take walks around the lake.
Since I only took sleeping pills, I'm not disfigured in any way: I'm still young, pretty,
intelligent, I won't have any difficulty in getting boyfriends, I never did. I'll make love with
them in their houses, or in the woods, I'll feel a certain degree of pleasure, but the moment I
reach orgasm, the feeling of emptiness will return. We won't have much to talk about, and
both he and I will know it. The time will come to make our excuses - ‘It's late’, or ‘I have to
get up early tomorrow’ - and we'll part as quickly as possible, avoiding looking each other in
the eye.
I'll go back to my rented room in the convent. I'll try and read a book, turn on the TV
to see the same old programmes, set the alarm clock to wake up at exactly the same time I
woke up the day before and mechanically repeat my tasks at the library. I'll eat a sandwich in
the park opposite the theatre, sitting on the same bench, along with other people who also
choose the same benches on which to sit and have their lunch, people who all have the same
vacant look, but pretend to be pondering extremely important matters.
Then I'll go back to work, I'll listen to the gossip about who's going out with whom,
who's suffering from what, how such and such a person was in tears about her husband, and
I'll be left with the feeling that I'm privileged: I'm pretty, I have a job, I can have any boyfriend
I choose. So I’ll go back to the bars at the end of the day, and the whole thing will start again.
My mother, who must be out of her mind with worry over my suicide attempt, will
recover from the shock and will keep asking me what I'm going to do with my life, why I'm
not the same as everyone else, things really aren't as complicated as I think they are. ‘Look at
me, for example, I've been married to your father for years, and I've tried to give you the best
possible upbringing and set you the best possible example.’
One day, I'll get tired of hearing her constantly repeating the same things, and to please
her I'll marry a man whom I oblige myself to love. He and I will end up finding a way of
dreaming of a future together: a house in the country, children, our children's future. We'll
make love often in the first year, less in the second, and after the third year, people perhaps
think about sex only once a fortnight and transform that thought into action only once a month.
Even worse, we'll barely talk. I'll force myself to accept the situation, and I'll wonder what's
wrong with me, because he no longer takes any interest in me, ignores me, and does nothing
but talk about his friends, as if they were his real world.
When the marriage is just about to fall apart, I'll get pregnant. We'll have a child, feel
closer to each other for a while, and then the situation will go back to what it was before.
I'll begin to put on weight like the aunt that nurse was talking about yesterday - or was
it days ago, I don't really know. And I'll start to go on diets, systematically defeated each day,
each week, by the weight that keeps creeping up regardless of the controls I put on it. At that
point, I'll take those magic pills that stop you feeling depressed, then I'll have a few more
children, conceived during nights of love that pass all too quickly. I'll tell everyone that the
children are my reason for living, when in reality my life is their reason for living.
People will always consider us a happy couple, and no one will know how much
solitude, bitterness and resignation lies beneath the surface happiness.
Until one day, when my husband takes a lover for the first time, and I will perhaps
kick up a fuss like the nurse's aunt, or think again of killing myself. By then, though, I'll be too
old and cowardly, with two or three children who need my help, and I'll have to bring them up
and help them find a place in the world before I can just abandon everything. I won't commit
suicide: I'll make a scene, I'll threaten to leave and take the children with me. Like all men, my
husband will back down, he'll tell me he loves me and that it won't happen again. It won't even
occur to him that, if I really did decide to leave, my only option would be to go back to my
parents' house and stay there for the rest of my life, forced to listen to my mother going on and
on all day about how I lost my one opportunity for being happy, that he was a wonderful
husband despite his peccadillos, that my children will be traumatised by the separation.
Two or three years later, another woman will appear in his life. I'll find out - because I
saw them, or because someone told me - but this time I'll pretend I don't know. I used up all
my energy fighting against that other lover, I've no energy left, it's best to accept life as it
really is, and not as I imagined it to be. My mother was right.
He will continue being a considerate husband, I will continue working at the library,
eating my sandwiches in the square opposite the theatre, reading books I never quite manage
to finish, watching television programmes that are the same as they were ten, twenty, fifty
years ago.
Except that I'll eat my sandwiches with a sense of guilt, because I'm getting fatter; and
I won't go to bars any more, because I have a husband expecting me to come home and look
after the children.
After that, it's a matter of waiting for the children to grow up and of spending all day
thinking about suicide, without the courage to do anything about it. One fine day, I'll reach the
conclusion that that's what life is like, there's no point worrying about it, nothing will change.
And I'll accept it.
Veronika brought her interior monologue to a close and made a promise to herself: she
would not leave Villette alive. It was best to put an end to everything now, while she was still
brave and healthy enough to die.