Curiosity (XII).
Whitfill, Patrick
So much of what we refer to as progress depends on the continual efficacy of Moore's Law. My mother once slept with a Moore. The equation which determines the likelihood of one's birth mother's desire to have sex with a college friend of her youngest child is written on public restroom walls, coded in the etchings for cock and balls. According to science, Moore's Law will fade out; progress will peak, then slow, then require a massive revision. So often, what we consider stopped has so much inertia that, from our vantage, its progress appears stagnant. Movement occurs via variety. It takes a certain degree of arrogance to determine the actions of others, as such: one child cannot predict the sexual needs of his mother. I make rules because I believe in the significance of appearances. I refuse to believe otherwise. When I visit my mother, I never let myself see her as a lady who fucked a friend of mine from college. This has all taken too long to happen. By now, the Mars Rover has bumped into enough rocks to recognize the limits of itself. In forty minutes, a radio signal can reach the surface of Mars. In forty minutes, a network drama detective can solve a rape. Or start to solve a rape, drinking coffee. In forty minutes, I can forget the names of every kid I went to kindergarten with. In forty minutes, a war can go untelevised. I consider this a testament to Moore's Law. I consider Moore's Law a testament to my mother. I consider my mother a testament to whatever indomitable nobility there is between need and sex. Hello translates in more than one language as Peace. When I first met the man who later seduced my mother, I said Hello, and what I meant was, Please don't hurt me. I can be your friend. I pose no threat. I do not mean you harm. I consider this a weakness nearly enviable, like having thumbs for every finger. On my first day back home, my father told me about the eleven possible dimensions, how gravity, as one, proves how osmotic existence is. Look, he said, and lifted his arms above his head. I just defeated gravity. In some ways, we become gods before we become men. In some ways, we lose one dimension to help prove the other ten exist. How do I see my father in relation to the dimensions which proves he is my father? Like this, I say, and I lift my head above my arms, and I lift my arms above my father, and I drag my father into the air. When no one is looking, I lift us both into that blue, unfragmented, undestroyable progress of sky.