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I was sitting quietly by myself in someone else's space.

I was a little anxious.

I could feel that I didn't fit. The walls were full of memories and habits and aspirations that weren't mine.

Not ghosts, not hostile, just not to do with me.

The weather of another personality.

All houses are haunted houses.

I am sitting now in my own space. Settled. Attending to my own weather. Listening to the noises I don't normally bother to hear: the hum of the computer, the clock that goes plonk, plonk, plonk quite slowly like water dropping into a galvanised tank and the other clock that goes tick tick tick quite fast like an insect.

Date: 2006-11-14 04:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] solar-diablo.livejournal.com
Do you suppose that when you're gone you'll occupy the same space, and give the living the same feeling?

I often wonder why ghosts seem so obsessed with routine. Is it simply a refusal to accept their condition that they cling to the trappings of their former life? You'd think the undiscovered country would inspire them to explore a bit, not become housebound.

Date: 2006-11-15 10:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
I think you're right. Most ghosts are muddled, traumatized human souls who don't want to move on into the afterlife. They're stuck- and the stuckness manifests in obsessive, repetitive behaviour.

And then, of course, some ghosts aren't souls at all- just impressions left behind in the ether.

Thats ace

Date: 2006-11-16 03:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] riklaw.livejournal.com
I really like that Tony

Fantastic you should turn it into a piece of poetry

BB Rik

Re: Thats ace

Date: 2006-11-16 11:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
Cheers.

This is about as close to poetry as I get these days.

Maybe it's a prose poem.

Date: 2006-11-17 01:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jackiejj.livejournal.com
Thank you for your fine description of your clocks and your space.

I've moved into a rental house, as you know, and it never feels like mine. It's haunted, so to speak, by the people who lived here--the landlord women who won't allow me to take up the ugly carpet because it was theirs (forty years ago, when they were growing up! Can you imagine how awful it is now? But sentiment rules, and in their minds it's still lovely brown and soft, not the old rubbly blanket it's turned into over the years).

I wonder when it will become my own home? Probably never, because for some reason I don't love it here--the ceiling is too high: I rattle around in this big place.

I'm like the fishwife in the fairy tale who keeps getting her wish and is never satisfied.

(I'm already ready to move on, get a place without a brown carpet.)

I want to haunt my own house. I'm an interloper here. The carpet reminds me who really lives here: two girls in the 1950s.

Date: 2006-11-17 05:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
I like high ceilings. I supose it's what I'm used to.

Do these women expect to move back in some day? I can't think of any other reason for them wanting to preserve it as a shrine to their childhood.

Date: 2006-11-17 08:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jackiejj.livejournal.com
The sisters plan to eventually sell the house to the church next door. It seems to be an old plan.

I can't imagine what their problem is--one lives in Georgia (five hours away) and the other in California. They never come here.

I'll buy another house someday, and paint every wall. (These are all ivory, forever--I'm not allowed to paint, have pets, or pull up the awful carpet. But it's still a pleasant house, somehow. I just itch to be free of their haunting it, in their hovering way.)

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