But I Never Dressed Like a Goth. Not Even in High School…

September 22nd, 2007 Tasha Shayne Posted in death, ghost, paranoia 5 Comments »

I’m afraid to die.

I’m afraid of how I’ll die. deathcrossbones.JPG

Once I took this sociology class in high school and we spent a few weeks learning about execution. Looking back, I’m not sure why we spent so much time discussing it, but we learned about various forms of torture and capital punishment that were now outdated (in most states and countries), such as the guillotine, or the electric chair.

The class must have affected me deeply because my father nicknamed dinnertime, “Tasha’s Death Hour.” I would play my own version of the “Which Would You Rather?” game: “I think I’d rather be drowned than hung,” I’d say as my mother would set down her salad fork with a pungent look of disgust. “When you’re drowned, you supposedly experience intense burning like you’re head’s going to explode. But, personally, I’d prefer that to having my sphincter give out.”

It took a couple of semesters’ break from sociology for me to formulate new concepts about death. In fact, I tried to avoid thinking about it at all, because when I did, my family would find me in my room, staring wide-eyed at the wall for hours wondering how any of us make it to the end without something horrific happening to us.

I was successful concentrating on life until Halloween came around. For the first time, I began to see the value of the cable hook up in my room and watch the Travel Channel. Hour-after-hour, I’d learn about haunted towns in the US and Europe and stories of their hauntings. It never occurred to me to think about what happens after death; I was only fascinated with the tales of deceit that lead to death and tormented souls (none of the spirits who stick around seem to have died of natural causes).

It took me a few weeks to recover after Halloween. I think I began to focus on life more when the Travel Channel switched from stories of hauntings to stories about the best restaurants in the Bahamas. Until then, even a swaying drapery would leave me in an irreconcilable state of dread that could only be assuaged by playing loud music and repeating to myself “This is stupid” about fifty times (really quickly and in a fetal position).

And it wasn’t until last night when I watched Godard’s Pierrot Le Fou that I began to think of death again. Several scenes scared the hell out of me; people were being murdered left and right – being shot to death, having scissors stuffed into their necks…Jean Paul Belmondo’s character was nearly drowned by having his head and face wrapped in his lover’s pretty, red dress and a portable shower head hosing down his nasal cavities.

After about two hours of these scenes, I began to think a little more philosophically than when I was in 10th grade and went to sleep after praying: God, please let me age fast so I can die happily in my sleep.

It seems that when people make it to the end without experiencing one of the many paths to death presented in Pierrot Le Fou, they’ve won some kind of a race; They’ve been luckier than most to make it from start to finish without falling into a sewer.

I’ve been thinking though, isn’t that just what life is? We are born (and unfortunately, bthat’s not a choice we have any control over) and then we die. The whole point of doing anything in life is just to make our journey more interesting and pass the time. Call me a pessimist, but it’s true. Nothing really matters except birth and death.

No way I’m having kids. I don’t want to put someone else through this ridiculous cycle. Okay, so you have a “great” life, you “accomplish” things. All that means is you’ve distracted other people really well in your lifetime, made their time of existence a little more bearable. Good for you, you’ve done a mitzvot. I say, if you don’t kill anyone and let other people get through the race peacefully, you’re a good person.

Odd that what’s managing to distract me from this crazy life cycle is watching films on death.

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Rabid Ghosts and Bourbon Tingles

August 27th, 2007 Tasha Shayne Posted in school, ghost, music 1 Comment »

candlesAnd now it’s 2007. I’m a senior at the University. I just watched the film “The Others” and it scared the hell out of me, launching me into curiosity about the paranormal. I netflixed all the more-realistic ghost-story films I’d ever seen like “The Sixth Sense” and “What Lies Beneath”. How could so many people write about ghosts and how could there be so many ghost stories, so many unexplained incidences and sightings if they didn’t exist?

There was a Ghost Society at our school. I showed up to one of the year’s first meetings.

“My name’s Tasha and I’m new,” I told them, feeling like I was introducing myself at an AA meeting. I was still standing in the doorway of the meeting room it took me forever to find (208 in the Quinn’s English building). I ended up ten minutes late.

“Come in, come in,” a tan girl with red hair beckoned me with a crooked finger. I went in, wondering if she could be a natural redhead. “Do you believe in ghosts?”

There were only four other people in the room. Some society. “Yes…”I answered slowly. “I do believe in ghosts.”

The redhead jumped excitedly from her seat to my side, “You’ve come to the right place!”

Read the rest of this entry »

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I, Opera Spectre

August 24th, 2007 Tasha Shayne Posted in school, ghost, music 2 Comments »

MackeyLet’s flash back to three years ago when I was a freshman on this campus. I used to wander around at nights in an almost-trance state, thinking about my life and what I wanted to do with it. I had been practicing classical voice since I was eleven and had always dreamed of being an opera singer. Problem was, I had a deathly fear of the stage and every time I had even an audience of one, my voice would pop and I would imagine myself naked in front of that person.

On one of these steamy summer nights, I had to use the bathroom and decided to see if one of the buildings was open. I tugged on a heavy door that was twice my height, and to my delight, it opened. I went in, found my bathroom, and came out with a somewhat pensive and crazed look on my face. How many of these buildings were open to exploration?
That night, I followed my course schedule and went to the buildings all my classes were in. Along the way, I spotted a majestic looking building – historic looking with a mysterious light within it. I ran up to it as Julie Andrews ran up to that hill in The Sound of Music just before she spun around and sang “The Hills are Alive with the Sound of Music”.

I tried the door and, predictably, it opened. Read the rest of this entry »

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