We’re Fucked, Pt. 109: AI-generated audiochapter

A tale for the ages. This audiochapter covers chapter 109 of my ongoing novel We’re Fucked.

Cast

  • Leire: blonde job-giving thief down in the sewers of Riften
  • Asian Jacqueline: I couldn’t find a proper voice from videogames, so I snatched this one from the Eleven Labs library

I produced audiochapters for the entire previous sequence, and I intend to continue until the novel ends or the Netherese orb lodged in my chest explodes, obliterating a city-sized area around me. A total of three hours, eleven minutes and forty-two seconds. Check them out.

We’re Fucked, Pt. 109 (Fiction)


Jacqueline’s Asian mouth, a blush of cherry blossoms in spring, twists into a teasing smile. With her chin raised slightly, she sticks the tip of her ruddy tongue out then slides its moist surface over her upper lip, coating it in a saliva-film that glistens in the honey-golden candlelight.

“Well, does my sweet chérie find this version of mommy exotic and enticing? Have you ever wanted to indulge in the pleasures of the Orient?”

My mind floods with steam-engulfed images of Oriental delights. I’m admiring the neon-lit cityscape that glitters through the windows of a Tokyo penthouse. I’m living it up at a karaoke room, belting out Japanese punk anthems. I’m riding a bullet train, watching the countryside flash past: verdant rice paddies and mist-wreathed mountains. I’m wandering the bustling back alleys of Shanghai, gaping at kaleidoscopic lights and technicolor billboards, passing by women whose faces are powdered white, their lips lacquered blood-red, their bodies swaddled in ornate brocade. I’m gorging on rivers of noodle soup, mountains of stir-fried veggies, steaming hotpots of seafood, and pyramids of deep-fried dumplings stuffed with pork and ginger. I’m lounging in a geisha house, smoking opium, lying with a silk-wrapped, perfume-drenched, slender hostess who can ease the weight of a thousand centuries by fulfilling my darkest, filthiest desires. I’m witnessing the display of a master karateka, her lean and muscular limbs flashing as she lays waste to an entire class of her rivals in a tournament, breaking backs, snapping necks, and ripping off faces with clawed fingers. I’m meditating in a zen garden, bowing before the Buddha, then fucking a monk until his cock spits holy seed into my womb. Maybe the siren song of the Far East does beckon me.

I’m foggy from the heavy fragrances that cling to my brain, from the Asian figure that emerged effortlessly and stands in my mind-murk like an orchid thriving in the humidity of a deep jungle. Jacqueline-but-Asian runs a hand down her form, trailing those sensuous fingers from her collarbones to her belly button, inviting me to stare starstruck at the Oriental splendor. Her inky locks, sleek as polished ebony and gleaming with a blue sheen, spill over her rounded shoulders, flowing down to her curving hips. Where mommy was hipped with a wide pelvis that matched the proportions of her mammoth bosoms, this lady in her prime has the svelte torso and lissome limbs of a ballerina, no stranger to gliding on tippy toes, to spinning and leaping in graceful pirouettes across the hardwood boards of a stage, her spine arched, her arms outstretched, her swanlike neck exposed, all to thunderous applause.

The candles, as they dance their golden light across the bedroom, burning on and on like they’ll outlast this fucked-up reality and whatever lies beyond, give a pearly radiance to Jacqueline’s skin, highlighting in honey her lithe features: below a neck like alabaster, those jutting collarbones; twin firm orbs capped with caramel-pink nipples; the valley carved into the abdomen between the promontory of her ribcage and the arch of her hip, that in the old days could have shielded her womb from marauders seeking a spawn of godhood. I wish to reach out and stroke her delicate skin; I could run my fingertips through it like water.

Jacqueline plants her splayed fingers low on her abdomen, drawing attention to the patch of onyx fuzz, an ancient garden that guards her hidden petals as it glistens in the honey-tinted gloom.

“You’re holding out on me, baby doll,” Jacqueline purrs playfully. “Afraid I won’t like your opinion? Come on now, love, surely you have something to share about this form.”

I swallow the excess saliva, then face her exotic visage.

“You’ve gone and given yourself Oriental features, the fuck-off-you-Western-scum kind, but you look ravishing. I want to drown in soy sauce. Your current tits are smaller than mine, though…”

She grins. In her eyes, fringed with jet-black lashes, the pupils are dilated, and the coal-gray irises shimmer like two starlit pools of silver.

“Oh, darling. You miss mommy’s huge, juicy milkers?”

My head nods without consulting me.

“Always, as long as I don’t have access to them.”

Jacqueline chuckles, which causes her creamy tummy to ripple like a sheet of water.

“I crafted this form to fill the niche of yoga that could be monetized. It’s like the ultimate yoga master. My main body? If I tried with it half of the moves I can pull now, I’d end up in a cast. In fact, let me give you a little demo.”

As she lowers her snowy behind onto the fluffy rug, her hair sways in a long cascade with each motion of the frame, and coils on the fabric like a sleeping serpent. She positions herself lengthwise, showcasing her profile as well as her lean dancer’s legs. Those pale thighs resemble canvases on which to fingerpaint. When I seek her gaze, I meet the seductive glance she’s casting over her shoulder. A warm chill courses down my spine. Knowing me snared, she smirks, then reclines until her head sinks into the rug.

She grasps her right ankle and draws that leg further and further back. With both arms, she embraces its calf as if hugging a lover. She plants her left hand on the sole of that foot, then pushes the leg down until its knee rests on the rug alongside her torso, making her inky locks billow over that calf, bending the limb in a submission hold that would make most of humanity cry out in pain.

“It helps that my usual tits aren’t in the way,” Jacqueline says.

She twists to reach her left leg, then folds it until her toes come close to grazing her vulva. Although she’s torturing herself further, her face remains calm, a picture of peace. Jacqueline must have learned from the fox spirits how to harness the erotic charge of her Asian limbs.

A familiar tingle stirs inside me. I lean back to place my palms flat against the surface of the bed, bracing my weight, my right hand centimeters from the discarded thong. The shock has melted into a trance-like state. My mind is a page scrawled on with the vision of an Oriental goddess, the embodiment of Japanesque perfection, stretching her limbs in the flickering candlelight.

With her face buried in the rug, and her ebony mane pooled around her head and chest, Jacqueline assumes the downward-facing dog posture, thrusting out the white swell of her ass, making her buttocks wobble gently. I’d bite into those cheeks until they oozed pink.

Beginning in a supine position, she lifts her pelvis off the floor, arching her flexible spine like a bow. As her body curves upward, her abdomen stretches taut, and her ass tightens into two plump mounds. After she finds balance on her shoulders and the crown of her head, she appears suspended in mid-air.

In her upside-down face, from beneath her dark lashes, her eyes dart to the corners so they can meet my gaze. The pinkish-orange glow traces the flat bridge of her nose, and plays upon the contour of her lips.

“See?” Jacqueline asks. “I can do all sorts of crazy poses now.”

“That’s cool.”

A glossy mass of darkness, a waterfall of night that contrasts with her ghostly skin, falls down her back in a shining curtain. As it shifts, the inky tresses sway gracefully, nuzzling the curves of her feminine figure.

Jacqueline has levered herself upright.

“Love, do you recall that external hard drive I lent you, filled with naughty videos I wanted you to watch? Now, which of my girls was your favorite?”

My heart, set aflutter by Asian magic, skips a beat. I’m assailed once again by the image that has haunted my daydreams ever since I peeked into the abyss: wavy locks of copper hair floating in a pool of bubbling cum.



Author’s note: today’s song is “Heartbeats” by José González.

I keep a playlist with all the songs I’ve mentioned throughout this novel. A total of a hundred and seventy-four videos so far. Check them out.

Leire peeked into the abyss back in chapter 45.

I produced an audiochapter for this part. Check it out.

Life update (08/16/2023)

After I spent the last hours of yesterday afternoon playing Baldur’s Gate 3 (a 97 on Metacritic, well deserved), and this morning on the train rereading Asano’s Nijigahara Holograph (one of his earliest, lesser works), I entered the office only to be greeted by the secretary and a coworker giving me a weird look. I greeted them, I walked to my workstation, then I heard them speaking in hushed tones, which, as far as I’m concerned, is extremely disrespectful in an office. I felt someone looking at me, so I glanced over my shoulder only to realize that the secretary was staring at me. What the fuck is wrong with people so early in the morning?

What was wrong is that the prick whose medical leave I’m covering has returned to work, and is currently sitting at his workstation. I have covered his suspicious leaves plenty of times (they sometimes take months, for no apparent reason), and whenever he returns, he never informs anybody of it, which is the least you can expect from a worker who knows that someone’s contract will end the moment he comes back.

I started laughing, then walked to my boss’ office. He had noticed that the prick was back. My boss seemed more pissed than me. “If we had known that he was going to return, we would have hired you to cover the vacation of X coworker, and instead we’ve gotten someone who has never worked in the field before. It’s not right.” Nothing we can do; it’s legal to refuse to inform in advance that you’re returning to work, and I’m not sure that the guy is aware enough to realize that others will get pissed at him because he’s screwing them over.

You see, this idiot is one of the craziest motherfuckers I have ever met, that are still somewhat able to hold a job. Whenever he has nothing to do, sometimes for hours, he browses Explorer windows idly, looking at the same files over and over (I know it because often I have sat down at a workstation from which I could see his computer screen). Other coworkers have told me that they think he speaks to himself on the phone, maybe to pretend that he’s working; most of the time he does talk very low into the receiver, and the snippets of conversation didn’t seem like the kind produced in the process of trying to solve a ticket. To be fair, though, we also had a coworker who would take calls and waste about fifteen to twenty minutes talking to users about her personal problems, to the annoyance of my boss and everyone around her (at least me).

Regarding the prick, he’s also done more troubling shit like following coworkers around in the hallways, standing very close while staring them in the face, and waiting outside of the bathroom when the coworker he was following clearly intended to lose him. When asked irately what the fuck he was doing, he answered with some variation of “Oh, nothing.” My main boss doesn’t engage him anymore, because the one time he yelled at him, the prick sicked some union guys on him and nearly got his job in trouble.

As you can imagine, most coworkers avoid that guy, and pray that they won’t get paired with him alone during the afternoon shifts; the times I had to endure that shit, I was forced to do the work of two people, usually because he refuses to do any work that his bosses don’t explicitly assign to him, even though the bosses, who don’t work afternoons, have made clear that in the afternoons the worker on the phone is the one assigning the tickets, so when I’m on phone shift, I would end up forced to resolve those tickets because the users would chew me on the phone otherwise. He has also resolved erroneously some tickets to the extent that my boss, suspecting the results, assigned me his tickets, only for me to realize that either he was incapable of resolving the incident, or screwed up deliberately. And those are the cases I know about.

Anyway, I’m thirty-eight years old and I’m always glad when I become unemployed. That means more time to write, to read, to play Baldur’s Gate 3, to work out, to go on walks in the woods, and to masturbate to vile shit. What’s not to love? I don’t have a social life nor expensive hobbies, so I have dozens of thousands in savings for when the world inevitably comes crashing down on me.

I’m about halfway through writing the current chapter of my novel. You know, in case you happen to be one of the very few people in this dying world that cares about my fiction. So I can look forward to waking up at six in the morning, sitting at my desk in my underwear, and losing myself in my inner world of unhinged depravity. Oh, what a joy! For a possibly brief time, I can disappear from reality and its many burdens.

What about that Baldur’s Gate 3, huh? Best, most immersive gaming experience since The Witcher 3 in 2015 and Skyrim in 2011. Some fancy game designer said that good games are a series of interesting decisions, and BG3 has taken it to heart.

A small example: at one point you come across the member of a society of intellectuals (two members of which I already met: one a hobgoblin and the other a mind flayer), who asks you to steal an egg of a brutish sentient species, so they can raise it in a kind, peaceful environment and prove whether their brutish ways are a matter of nature or nurture. My fighter, a member of that sentient race, suggested that we killed the stranger for her impertinence and devious ways. This issue seems black and white: stealing a future child for profit is a rather evil choice. But once you find the hatchery, you find out that the sole egg they have left has taken so long to hatch that they’re about to destroy it. Stealing it is right then? The face of my party is a beast at persuading people, so I managed to convince the custodian, who also wanted to avoid destroying the egg, to give it to me, after ensuring him that I would raise the child in a loving environment. After I left (more accurately, escaped) that building, I considered whether we should keep the egg and potentially ruin it, as we are a band of adventurers who know nothing of raising a kid, or give it to a society that wants to use the future child as a lab rat, but in a peaceful environment in which the child will be taken care of. What’s the right choice?

The team behind this game seems to have gone through every choice in the game and balanced the sides. There’s a point very early in the second act when you are supposed to meet the inquisitors of a race of multidimensional aliens who call themselves the githyanki. One of your team members stole an artifact from them, and they want it back real bad. They explain that the artifact, which belonged to them in the first place, is instrumental to stopping the evil designs of the worst people in the D&D universe. You should give it to them then. But the person inside the artifact tells you that under no circumstances should you return it, because the artifact is the only thing keeping your team from turning into mind flayers due to the parasite they put in your brains. Should you lose the one thing that keeps you and your friends alive in order to potentially save all sentient beings in the many dimensions? Are the githyanki lying? Is the sentient being trapped in the artifact lying?

Here’s one possible resolution to that extremely tense encounter, which involves meeting the goddess of those interdimensional aliens. This game has a cast of about three hundred voice actors, who were motion-captured as well to properly depict their facial expressions.

Regarding the people you come across in your bizarre adventures, treat them kindly or like a bastard, and you can be sure that you will experience the consequences, although often not in the ways you expect. During a potential siege by goblins, I convinced a couple of young people to be strong and fight. After I took care of the goblins by slaughtering every single greenskin freak I found (except one in a village, because he was cool, and another one who ended up in a cage), the two young people managed to get captured by some even worse people because they confronted them instead of fleeing. Now their remaining family member is pissed at me.

You have come across a special game when you want to avoid upsetting the nice characters in it, and want to brutally murder those who hurt others who don’t deserve it (like when, for example, someone pushed an innocent gnome lady into lava). Can’t wait to expend a significant part of the upcoming couple of weeks (hopefully) of unemployment losing myself in the grand fantasy that is far better than anything I have access to in real life. And in fifteen days comes Starfield, the next Bethesda RPG, biggest one they’ve ever done.

Life update (08/11/2023)

This morning, as I was reading on the train to work, I found myself unable to comprehend the printed symbols: I could tell that my eyeballs were capturing images, but my brain refused to process the contained information. I closed my eyes and tried to snap out of that confusion. In the darkness I spotted a jagged line of glitchy light. I was coming down with a migraine.

When I got off the train, I still had to drag myself to a bus stop, then stand inside, surrounded by dozens of people, until we reached the hospital complex where I work. I could barely process my surroundings; it felt like my brain was trapped behind a few layers of insulation. Performing any task at a human level becomes a huge struggle, so as soon as I sat down at my workstation, I gulped down some ibuprofen and hoped that my senses would return. Once they do, I know that it will come accompanied by a nausea-inducing headache that usually lasts a couple of days, but that’s still better than the experience of looking at words and being unable to process what they mean.

You see, I’m taking beta-blockers due to my heart issues, which should help prevent migraines as well. It’s a testament to how much stress I endured the previous day that the following one, soon after I woke up, I faced a migraine. Yesterday I was tasked with handling the move of a few computers and printers from the first floor of a building to the fifth and sixth. One of those computers was a custom-made workstation used by internal medicine for analyses and whatever else they do. I found myself having to carry a very weighty computer tower upstairs from the fifth floor (which technically isn’t part of my job, but the orderlies could have screwed it up). I also had to set up a dozen or so workstations and ensure that they were connected to the network (which involved visits to the corresponding network racks), that their programs worked, and that they could print through some of the available printers. Such a task involves coordinating with the local supervisor, nurses, and other types of human beings.

I tried to get back into weightlifting recently (I own dumbbells and a barbell, along with plenty of weights). I used to train regularly years ago, but I have discovered that I’m much, much weaker than I used to be, in part surely because of my health issues, and that my heart is prevented from pumping fast enough in case it reaches the rates of 180-200 that it hit during my last episode of arrhythmia. I have never felt comfortable in this body with which I was burdened, but these last few years the decay has gotten to me. I feel old and broken. On the train I have felt myself wishing I could get away with telling someone to give me their seat, because my back was hurting. It’s such a relief to know that life only gets harder from here on.

My lack of energy is also troubling, although expected. By four in the afternoon I’m done for the day, and I must be content with vegetating (browsing the internet, playing video games, etc.) for the rest of the day. It’s a good thing that I don’t have a social life, because I wouldn’t be able to handle going out in the afternoons to spend time with people, and I’d quickly resent them. Also, because I’m extremely introverted, the interactions I’m forced to tolerate at work drain me quickly. I almost feel myself desiccating.

I haven’t written any single word of my ongoing novel in a week or so. To be honest, I have barely missed it. Baldur’s Gate 3 has kept me entertained. The current sequence of my story requires lots of freewrites along with heavy emotional investment, and real life insists on dragging me back to its vacuous mundanity that erodes the heights that I glimpse when I’m immersed in the artistic process. Whenever I feel guilty for stepping away from my “art,” I remember that I write because it allows me to survive reality, but if I’m keeping myself distracted in some other way, I can give myself a break. It rarely lasts for a couple of weeks anyway, until I start feeling like I’m losing my mind.

It’s two in the afternoon on a Friday, and the one thing I’m looking forward to the most is putting my VR headset on, pulling my pants down, and masturbating to some carefully-arranged porn scenario in Virt-A-Mate. Last time it involved Cammy from the latest Street Fighter; a have your cake and eat it too kind of situation. But in matters of the penis, one needs some novelty, or else the old stick can be hard to stimulate. It certainly doesn’t help that the beta-blockers vastly lower my libido. VR aside, some of those kinky ASMR artists do wonders. Oh, if only some MILF could whisper in my ear that I’m a good boy and that I don’t need to change anything about myself, while actually meaning it. In another life, perhaps.

Aren’t you glad you read through this stupid entry? Here’s a creative promotional video that Joel Haver did for Baldur’s Gate 3:

Review: Pluto, by Naoki Urasawa

Three and a half stars.

The author of this series, Naoki Urasawa, created 20th Century Boys, one of the classics despite how convoluted it became by the end. In addition he also made Monster, for which he’s likely more acclaimed, but to be honest I have twice failed to get through the opening chapters of that series; along with its expository dialogue, Urasawa’s view of the world, as depicted through his narrative choices, irks me.

There’s a moment in 20th Century Boys in which a spunky teen girl stops a murderous gang war by scolding the participants. This happens in an otherwise very serious narrative. And the mindset behind such a narrative choice, which I could call a pollyanna perspective, pops up relatively often in his stories: people who hate others for reasonable motives suddenly flip and forgive the culprits to the extent of crying for them. Bad people tend to be forgiven even though they caused the deaths of numerous innocents. The good guys should also never kill anybody, because killing is bad, although keeping those people alive causes further deaths in the future.

His series Monster starts with what’s supposed to be a shocking moment of moral corruption or whatever: a Turkish immigrant laborer in Germany has his surgery delayed because the mayor comes in with an injury. The author treats this as an abhorrent development, particularly because the first guy was a stereotypically-depicted downtrodden person. In a heavy-handed manner, I was supposed to feel outrage at this injustice. Sorry, if I’m awaiting surgery for any of my many problems, and suddenly Elon Musk gets wheeled in first because he needs emergency surgery, I would understand even if I would curse at the heavens. Elon Musk’s decisions affect far more people than I do, and so would a mayor’s than a random laborer’s.

Anyway, this series I’m reviewing is a homage to one of the most memorable arcs (apparently) of Osamu Tezuka’s legendary Astro Boy, from back in the sixties. It has nothing to do with Pluto the planet; it refers instead to the Roman god of mortality. The story takes place in an optimistic future in which most societies have become super advanced and have created robot servants. Some of those robots, particularly the cutting-edge ones, could easily be confused for humans. Our protagonist, one of those advanced robots, works as an investigator for Europol. He faces a string of murders in which the victims are both humans and robots, and a robot may be responsible. Due to the laws of robotics, lifted straight from Isaac Asimov, that’s not supposed to happen.

What follows is a thriller that could have been far more compelling. Urasawa is a masterful plotter, but often as subtle as a jackhammer, and he abuses moments in which he’s about to reveal something important only to leave us in a cliffhanger. I don’t recall any other manga author that has been making thrillers with that sort of Western flavor, and I’m grateful, because to me it feels cheap.

The story is interesting, has good stakes and intriguing characters, but for me it fails mainly in the execution and the worldbuilding. Regarding the execution, apart from the points mentioned before, it goes for sentimentality that doesn’t hit the right notes as far as my black heart is concerned, and the worldbuilding in regards to how those robots are built and what they’re capable of doing sounds more like magic than technology. A couple of moments grasped at intriguing psychological insights regarding how both robots and humans are puppets; in the case of humans, because we’re manipulated and compelled to act based on emotions that are mostly out of our control. There were also interesting parallels with early 2000s history: alternate versions of the US and Iraq play a role in the narrative, and plenty of the characters were involved in an alternate version of the war between both nations, including the notion that this alternate Iraq may have developed weapons of mass destruction.

A high-quality anime adaptation is in the works, to be released on the Netflix platform. Here’s the trailer:

Life update (08/07/2023)

As I mentioned at least in one previous entry, ever since I returned to work after my six-months-long break, the vibe at the office has changed for me. Beyond objective changes like the main boss refusing to greet me nor look me in the face, and some other coworker doing pretty much the same (in addition to whispering and murmuring about me from two meters away), I’m getting the feeling that something else is at play: last Friday, as a different coworker was whispering nearby, I caught a glimpse of him glancing at me, and I felt myself going into fight-or-flight mode. What’s your beef with me, motherfucker? But that same guy had been talking to me normally the previous day. To this minor incident I had to add numerous other impressions I have gotten at the office since I returned to work. I feel that plenty of the coworkers, as they pass me by, are projecting malice at me.

On top of that, there was a moment when I realized that my bowels weren’t complaining as much as five minutes ago. But I didn’t go to the bathroom, did I? My rotten guts never stop hurting spontaneously. Yes, I recalled having taken the decision to get up and walk to the bathroom, but I hadn’t retained any single memory of having done so. I don’t remember any other recent instances of such clear-cut short-term memory loss.

Something else had changed in my life ever since my last contract ended: due to my heart injury (I got diagnosed with atrial fibrillation, which is the least dangerous kind of arrhythmia), caused by Moderna’s so-called booster, I’m now taking beta-blockers in perpetuity. They were a good fit for me not only because they would prevent my heart from going haywire like it did during my latest episode of arrhythmia, when my heart rate got as high as 190-200, but it also helps with migraines, tremors (I don’t have them yet, but both my father and brother do), anxiety and PTSD, and obsessive-compulsive disorder, which affect me to different extents.

Regarding migraines, I suffered them at work so bad that I couldn’t understand anything I was reading, and could hardly string sentences together. Migraines terrify me, as they offer a taste of how a stroke might affect a person permanently. In fact, migraines increase the risk of suffering one. John Fowles, a writer whose work I respect a lot (at least two of his novels), suffered a stroke that wiped out his need to write. He never did again. He said in an interview that the stroke had killed his imagination. If it happened to me, I can’t imagine myself living past that point.

Anyway, I have become addicted to these beta-blockers the same way one does to any such drug that he or she has to take in perpetuity. There are serious risks involved with cutting back. And as I was reading up on the long-term effects of this drug, I came across this page, paper or whatever: Neuropsychiatric Consequences of Lipophilic Beta-Blockers.

Over time, common side effects seem to be:

  • Fatigue: for sure. I can barely walk upstairs and by four in the afternoon I’m done for the day, which is why I have moved my writing time to five in the morning. I’m having a very hard time returning to weightlifting; I have found myself much weaker than I used to be.
  • Depression: I wouldn’t know. I think I have integrated depression to such an extent that I only notice the worst cycles. I’m not sure I know how the world feels like without some level of depression.
  • Sleep disorders and nightmares: I experience very vivid nightmares, or what others would likely consider nightmares, but that feel like more vivid versions of my usual OCD-induced intrusive daydreams. I’m somewhat immune to them.

Last of all, hallucinations and delirium. That’s part of the issue here: I may have become delusional, have slipped into psychotic thinking, and it’s very hard to prove your way out of that when plenty of elements in your surroundings contribute to those impressions. I endured through my late teens in full-blown psychosis accented by a couple of guys who were genuinely trying to ruin my life, along with a physical fight I got into with an older drug dealer who wanted to prevent any classmate of his stripper girlfriend from talking to her. I made the mistake of trying to mediate, as my mother taught me. I didn’t fully understand back then that some people just want a target.

I was pretty much raised by a single mother (my father is around, but has brain damage from abuse and possibly some degree of autism). I was taught that you can solve every issue by talking, that two people won’t argue unless both of them want to, that violence is never the answer, and that the worse someone behaves, the more justified they must be in doing so. A let’s say feminine mindset that she has never grown out of despite the constant evidence to the contrary, a mindset that I had to shed in order to survive in the real world. That’s the kind of bullshit that produces societies in which criminals rule and decent, now castrated people are persecuted, while those in charge of ruining everything believe themselves to be great human beings.

Anyway, this last month I have been getting an updated taste of how it feels to stew in impressions and feelings that you suspect may not have interpreted reality correctly, no matter how much your brain emphasizes that they did. Due to autism, I have always known myself to think and react differently, which has led me to question plenty of my internal processes; this is the cherry on top.

How could I solve this issue? I can’t stop taking the beta-blockers, so I may need, like during the worst periods of depression, to sit tight and get used to the dark. An expression that I’ve had to use plenty of times, and that also reminds me of those many hours I spent in the dark, sitting on the stairs of random apartment buildings, waiting for the school hours to pass until I could return home, because I didn’t think I would survive high school otherwise.

I haven’t started writing the next scene of my ongoing novel, that four or five people care about. I have spent the whole weekend playing Baldur’s Gate 3. What a masterpiece. I would have never expected a RPG to offer fully motion-captured dialogue for every single character you come across, and generally very well acted too. For example, the compelling first encounter with a shady devil, one of the many people in this game who offer you help in exchange of potentially even worse consequences.

Too bad that this player has his or her avatar walking around with that mask on; I always take it off the moment I stop disguising myself. This is a game in which you can talk to certain dead people, but they will refuse to answer if you were the one who killed them, so at times disguising your form comes useful.

The companions that make up your team are fascinating as well. It had become a trope in such grandiose RPGs, like the Mass Effect series, that you would grow closer to your companions only to end up having sex with one or more of them close to the climax of the story, and afterwards the relationship would stop growing. In Baldur’s Gate 3, the first intimate moment for me involved my female fighter pursuing my character for sex, which for that relentless alien only means physical relief. This is the alien in question:

I grew tired of that “fling” quickly (she’s too abrasive for me), but I delayed telling her that I wanted to stop having sex; I wasn’t ready to find out how she would react. There was also an uncomfortably intimate moment with my male wizard, involving magic. At the moment I’m considering getting burned by a half-demon barbarian who escaped from the hells.

You can tell that this game was made by people who love their craft. Best RPG-makers in the business at the moment, above and beyond and all that. They even designed every goddamn goblin individually. I’m about forty hours in, but it feels like I haven’t gotten through any significant quest yet. Those who have finished the game claim that the experience only improves after act one.

Along with Starfield, that comes out in a month, I feel that we may be in the best year of gaming since 2015. I can’t wait to get home and keep discovering the strange stuff that this game will throw at me. That first encounter with a beholder nearly made me shit myself.

Life update (08/02/2023)

Jeez, it feels like I just wrote one of these. But I have nothing better to do now other than wait for tomorrow afternoon to come, so I may as well write about a few things in my mind.

First of all, the vibe at work has worsened. In short, back in January my contract was about to end. My boss offered me a finagled new contract that I’m sure wasn’t very legal, but I refused because it lowered my wages by thirty percent. I also was sick of working there, had experienced my second episode of arrhythmia recently, and I wanted to rely on unemployment benefits for a while. Last month I returned to work only to find out that the aforementioned boss (main boss of the place) no longer wants to acknowledge my presence. I could understand that. However, recently I have realized that another coworker has gone from speaking to me cordially (before my last contract ended) to refusing to look at me as well as return my greetings, and is generally being a dick.

For example, yesterday I entered the office only to realize that the guy whose workstation I was occupying had returned from vacation, so I had to pick another workstation. I switched on the PC of the guy whose medical leave I’m technically covering, but he’s the kind of nuts who altered the BIOS of his work PC in such a way that we can’t figure out how to reach Windows (not that I put that much effort in figuring it out, because I don’t want to be involved with that guy’s stuff). Then I moved to what I thought was the only other free workstation, that belongs to the aforementioned guy who had stopped greeting me. I thought he was on vacation, so I used it for a while. Then I was informed that he wasn’t actually on vacation, but had to travel to another hospital for a ticket. I finally settled for a fourth computer (which ended up having problems later on, but that’s beside the point).

When the guy who is acting weird returned, he went to his pal, who sits opposite me, and started whispering and murmuring about me (I understood “he reset my computer,” which I had to do because it was blocked with his user, as we usually leave them). A guy in his fifties acting like a schoolgirl. I could tell that his pal, who usually looks fed up with life, didn’t want to get involved in his grievance.

After a few years of tolerating the neuroses of this place, and particularly after my heart injury, I have become more and more retiring. I refuse to look up at people’s faces as I’m passing them in the hallways. I’m in one of those “I want to quit but that’s not feasible” kind of situations. I fantasize about winning the lottery, gaining the power to make everyone in my life forget about my existence, shapeshifting into a less disgusting form, etc. In general I just want to be done with it all.

Like thousands of people on X (formerly Twitter), I have been following the news of this LK-99 stuff, a supposed room-temperature superconductor fabricated by some reputable scientists in South Korea. I have joined the masses that read the excited posts in which materials scientists argue with each other, while the rest pretend to know what the fuck they’re going on about.

Some laboratories around the world have replicated the material, which is extremely promising. However, there’s further testing to be done. Apparently the original formula required lead and copper, but Chinese scientists have determined that gold works better than copper in that formula, which is a bit disappointing (gold is far harder to get, as well as geographically and politically limited). Anyway, the Korean scientists who have published the paper will either win the Nobel price or end up disgraced (and/or in a Korean drama).

A room-temperature superconductor is the holy grail of materials science. It would be apparently like discovering fire, like going from the wheel to steam engines. I’m talking a quantum computer on your desk. It would revolutionize every field.

As the last topic of this entry, Baldur’s Gate 3 comes out tomorrow. The Baldur’s Gate series is a legend in the genre of RPGs; I first enjoyed it about twenty-five years ago. It’s based on the Dungeons & Dragons ruleset, which has accumulated a tremendous amount of intriguing and convoluted lore. The third entry has been developed for these last seven or so years by the best studio making CRPGs these days.

I feel more or less like a kid waiting for Christmas. I love cinematic games with an insane amount of choices and reactivity, and Baldur’s Gate 3, that has been in Early Access for the last three years or so, has proven itself a worthy contender for best RPG ever made.

Here’s the trailer (one of them anyway):

When I get home from work tomorrow, I’ll spend the entire afternoon either playing the game or just creating my player character. Such games also allow you to lose yourself in the fantasy for long stretches of time, which I require to prevent reality from crushing me like a bug.

See ya.

We’re Fucked, Pt. 108: AI-generated audiochapter

Put a collar around my neck and take me for a walk. This audiochapter covers chapter 108 of my ongoing novel We’re Fucked.

Cast

  • Leire: sassy job-giver down at the Ragged Flaggon in Riften
  • Asian Jacqueline: couldn’t find a proper voice in video game voice lines, so I picked one from the Eleven Labs library

I produced audiochapters for the entire previous sequence, and I intend to continue until the novel ends or I turn into a spider and lose my sentience, whichever comes first. A total of three hours, three minutes and fifty-six seconds. Check them out.

We’re Fucked, Pt. 108 (Fiction)


My brain concedes that this East Asian woman standing before me will stick around, instead of dematerializing as suddenly as she manifested naked in Jacqueline’s bedroom. She’s in her early twenties. Epicanthic folds narrow her slanted eyes. Their black pupils and charcoal-gray irises scintillate like tiny galaxies in the twinkling candlelight, that also caresses her pale skin devoid of wrinkles, blemishes, or visible pores. Her flat nose culminates with an upturned tip framed by small nostrils, followed by lips like painted watercolor, pink as blooming roses.

Although I remain intoxicated by the candles’ scent, the shock has snapped me out of my sex haze and rebooted the paranoid routines. As I gawk slack-jawed at the intruder, my lips part in speechless confusion. Jacqueline has vanished. My hands have gone cold, and I realize that I’m clutching at the bedclothes. I have become a child again, lost in a bustling city, desperately searching for a familiar face.

When the Asian creature opens her rosebud of a mouth, a feminine voice, clear and pure like a stream trickling over smooth stones, drifts between her gleaming white teeth.

“Take as long as you need.”

I can’t mistake that hint of a French accent. I swallow past the lump in my throat.

Tu parles… le français?”

Her brows knit together in concern.

Oui. It’s still me, darling. Fluent in French, Spanish, and English.”

My chest swells, then releases the pressure with an exhalation that comes like a first breath after holding it underwater. I’m a child who has found her mommy. However, a flood of questions crashes against the walls of my skull.

“H-how can you turn Asian? Is that something humans can do and I had failed to notice?”

As her eyes squint into two thin slits, a giggle, melodious and infectious, bubbles up from that exquisite visage, sparking an ember-like warmth in my chest. Jacqueline-but-Asian tilts her head, and her waist-length tresses cascade over her bare shoulder in a gleaming onyx tide. She stretches her lips into a mischievous smile.

“As far as I know, I’m unique in that regard. Who can say for sure, though? Until a few years ago, I would have thought all of this impossible. But I can change my form, and you, ma chérie, can communicate with beings from other dimensions.”

“I-I guess. Sounds like I’ve gotten the short end of the stick.”

Jacqueline lowers her head. She wipes at the corners of her eyes with her delicate fingers, brushing away the dewy beginnings of tears, even though she’s grinning. She lets out a soft sigh.

“Oh, what a relief. I’ve been dying to drop the bombshell on you ever since our first date in that Irish pub, but I thought I would never dare. The what-ifs drove me mad. Now that I have entrusted you with my burden, will you accept it? Will you stay by my side and make mommy happy?”

My heart swells. I want to spring off the mattress and throw myself at Jacqueline even in her Eastern incarnation.

“Don’t you know the answer to that question? I have come to terms with far more outlandish shit. In love, we accept each other even when we violate the laws of reality.”

Jacqueline presses a palm over her breastbone. A blush has tinted her cheeks, and those irises, deep as a starless night, shine in the candlelight like mirror-coated buttons.

“So… can you turn into other animals?” I ask. “Non-humanoid ones?”

She flashes a coquettish grin.

“Why, would that get you off?”

“Most things can get me off. But I’m just curious.”

“I was reluctant to try, in case my intelligence disappeared along with my human form. I worried in vain, though. When I attempted to transform into a dolphin, it didn’t work.”

“Why a dolphin?”

“Pretty sure I read that dolphins have a similar brain size. They’re also graceful and adorable.”

I shrug.

“They do hold a special attraction, perhaps a precognitive certainty about humanity’s doom. Did you attempt this transformation in a pool…?”

“Nope, in our living room. I planned to switch for a couple of seconds, then transform back into my gorgeous human body and laugh it off.”

I picture a bubblegum-pink dolphin, its skin shiny and rubber-smooth, flopping and hopping about, slapping the living room carpet with its flukes. A pair of meaty breasts squeeze and jostle against each other, nestled between the pectoral fins. Mommy stranded forever as a Delphinidae, her squeaking pleas unheard or unheeded until the SWAT breaks into our humble home and the operatives shoot their harpoon guns.

“I asked the universe for help,” Jacqueline continues, “and this is what it granted me. It’s been a fun if somewhat hollow ride.”

I rub my eyelids, trying to dispel the image of those dolphin tits.

“You are so unique, yet you waste your precious life working at our office, filling Excel spreadsheets with Arachne knows what unholy nonsense. You should be employed by an international spy ring to infiltrate criminal gangs, corrupt governments or evil corporations.”

She tosses her head, causing her obsidian mane to billow around her naked torso, and giggles like a schoolgirl.

“We need to keep our little miracle going, my love.” Jacqueline tucks in her chin, giving me a coy glance under her inky lashes. “Now I wish you had the power to turn into a cute little kitty.”

“Sure, I have often wished I could transform into a beast and escape humanity. But what would you do with a kitten me? Stroke my furry tummy? Cuddle me to sleep? Feed me milk?”

Her mouth widens into a toothy grin.

“I would put a collar and a bell around your neck, then take you for walks around the neighborhood. I’d let you sniff the asses of stray cats and dogs. Once you had done your business, I’d reward you with a bowl of milk and catnip cookies.”

My pulse picks up, and heat creeps onto my cheeks, but I’m too stupefied to get horny.



Author’s note: today’s song is “Anthems for a Seventeen Year-Old Girl” by Broken Social Scene.

I keep a playlist with all the songs mentioned throughout this novel. A total of a hundred and seventy-three videos so far. Check them out.

I produced the audiochapter for this one. Check it out.

A little bug has gotten inside my monitor and died there. Apparently that’s a thing that happens.

Life update (07/28/2023)

Yesterday, as the train was carrying me back home from work, I reflected on the unique strain that my job provides, one that I didn’t experience as a programmer. I work as a computer technician for a big hospital complex, big enough that the tasks sometimes pass through a few departments before they get solved. However, our office receives most of those tickets first, and deals directly with the users. Once we determine that we can’t solve the problem because we aren’t supposed to (hardware issue, some printer needs ink, it’s related to a malfunctioning machine that belongs to the electromedical department, etc.), we push the tickets away and hope that they don’t come back. However, whenever I do that, it injects a growing anxiety in me; those other groups may take days, a week, or even more to solve them, but I’m the one that will receive angry emails and/or calls from the users, who seem to believe that our office solves every little issue that involves machines in this hospital complex. As a consequence, I dread every email I receive, and particularly the phone calls. In fact, virtually every interaction with human beings in the context of my job is bad news.

I’m dealing with two such cases this week. In one ticket, the supervisor of a neighboring department, who is on medical leave, couldn’t access her workstation remotely. This usually means that the computer is switched off, but in this case, as I found out in person, it was stuck in a repair cycle, and wouldn’t reach Windows. We aren’t supposed to fix such issues, so I pushed the ticket to the department that does, and notified the annoyed supervisor.

In another ticket, a doctor couldn’t open the analyses of test results in the corporative app. That’s a big deal, because they need to do so for almost every patient. I hadn’t come across the specific issue, that seemed to be a bug in the app. I contacted their developers. They told me to reinstall the program and ensure that the PC ended up with the correct version. However, the app still refused to open the analyses. The developers told me that in previous cases, the corporative Windows image needed to be applied again (an annoying, time-consuming process that involves basically redoing the software of that PC, including Windows, so that we end up with a fresh installation). Our office doesn’t do that, so I pushed the ticket to the corresponding department through the usual channel (an intermediary department that’s supposed to validate these movements).

Yesterday I got angry calls from the users of both tickets. Why isn’t the matter solved? I was tempted, as always, to tell them that I’m no longer responsible for those tickets, but because they may end up stirring up trouble for me, I looked up the state of both tickets. Regarding the supervisor’s computer, the corresponding group had assigned the ticket to one of their technicians, but he hadn’t written any update. I walk to the supervisor’s office. I realize that the other department hasn’t touched the PC in the two days they’ve had the ticket.

I write an update in the ticket to emphasize that the user is bothering us about it. Nothing. I write the technician an email. No response. As I’m doing this, the supervisor writes me an email to indicate that she’s losing her patience. I talk to my boss. He understands the situation and writes an email to the computer technician from the other department to prioritize the task. The technician does respond in this case, and assures him that he will try to fix it during the morning. It’s now the following day, and they haven’t written an update. I’ll have to pursue them, likely through our boss, to figure out if they’re in the process of solving the issue. Otherwise, I’ll be forced to deal with the supervisor again.

Regarding the second ticket, related to the fact that a doctor couldn’t visualize the analyses of test results, I found out that the ticket was stuck in the intermediary department that’s supposed to approve the move. No idea why. I wrote them to unblock it. No reaction. When the doctor bothered me again, I told her that it was out of my department’s hands, and that she should call HQ and complain so that it reaches the proper department. They reacted a few minutes later, and finally pushed the ticket through.

Obviously I can’t stand this job. I was trained as a programmer, and I’m quite good at it, but I couldn’t get reliable employment; I was either let go or not hired after an internship because I’m weird and “wouldn’t work well in a team.” Now I’m too old and outdated to return to that field. Still, it’s a testament to my luck in life that now I’m stuck in a job that I can hardly tolerate due to my neurological issues (autism mainly). Interacting with humans in person makes my skin crawl, as I can’t predict what they’re thinking nor how they’re going to react, and I have to force myself to speak, stringing words together into coherent sentences, because my instinctive reaction is to keep quiet. Most interactions make me feel as if I’m betraying myself.

Unsurprisingly, turnover rate is somewhat high for this job. Some of my coworkers have moved out to greener pastures, preferring even relatively mind-numbing administrative positions instead of this shit.

On top of that, I’m quite sure that the main boss of my department wants me out. Seven months ago, before my last contract ended, he offered me a finagled contract through a company that received a grant for some biomedical research. I would be on that company’s books, but working normally at my regular office. However, that would not only mean that I wouldn’t receive “experience points,” that contribute to my ranking (which determines how often they call me back to work), but I would also get paid 30% less. I only work to earn money (writing doesn’t pay, folks). If I’m not working, I could get on unemployment benefits for about a year, so doing the same work, which erodes my mental and physical health, for 30% less money is an automatic no. I’m quite sure this annoyed my boss.

Now, not only he hasn’t looked me in the eye in the whole month I have been working here, but he goes to the extent of calling the other guy who shares my name, and who sits on the other side of the long desk I sit at, while I’m seated in the middle of their line of sight (meaning that the boss is calling my name even though he’s referring to the guy who’s seated on the other end of the line that intersects me). I’d love to be invisible, and I’d prefer if human beings didn’t interact with me in person, but this situation suggests that one of these days the boss will snap at me or give me worse shit, so my anxiety is forced to anticipate that situation.

However, this whole business with my boss could be in my head. I never know if the impressions I get of people are correct, as I don’t understand their motivations nor can predict their reactions. When I approach someone at work, I can’t tell if they’re going to listen to me or angrily tell me to fuck off. I’ve had cases of people sharing with me that someone clearly hated me (in the sense of, “can’t you tell?”), even though from my side I was approaching them cordially. Once, during my short stint in college, I found myself seated alone in one side of the classroom while the rest, shortly before the professor arrived, moved deliberately to the other side leaving me alone there, and I never found out why. I have no choice but to stay in a defensive stance and be generally paranoid. I have also been taken advantage of by human predators, particularly when I was much younger.

This morning I woke up with a worse discomfort than usual in the left side of my chest. It’s not muscular, because I don’t feel anything when I massage that area. The soreness in my heart in the early hours of the morning has been worse these past six months or so than it was in the first year after I got the so-called booster jab, Moderna’s, that gave me atrial fibrillation (arrhythmia), a permanent heart injury for which I’m taking medication in perpetuity. I can’t be arsed to look it up, but a few days ago I got ahold of a peer-reviewed paper (not that peer-reviewed seems to mean much these days) that stated that 1 in 35 people received heart injuries due to the Moderna booster. Most days I suspect that a significant percentage of people who got the jabs will drop dead in a few years, including myself. One of my coworker’s brother, a semi-professional football player, dropped dead in the shower from a sudden heart issue, even though he got tested regularly through his team. Another coworker’s friend, a healthy man in his forties, had a heart attack and died. Many studies out there have proven objectively that excess deaths have been overwhelming these past couple of years. Was this gross incompetence, or is everything working as intended?

I considered writing at length about the recent elections in Spain. Before the previous ones, the socialists hired the same companies that provided the machines that regularly malfunction in favor of a certain political party during the US elections. The socialists claimed that the goal was to (unilaterally) fortify our elections and provide anti-hacking measures. What confidence can we have that our elections, and I mean every Western country’s elections, are legitimate? How many cabinets are infiltrated with WEF goons who openly work towards a global unelected governance in which the citizens will receive expiring money as long as they don’t annoy their masters (if they do, they won’t even be able to pay for food)? I have little doubt that they’ll end up pushing CBDC in every country.

Other than exciting news such as the UFO stuff (most of my family, including myself, saw one in the early 2000s) and the possibility of a room-temperature superconductor (I want a quantum computer on my desk), everything seems to be getting worse and worse and worse and worse. Our countries are already unrecognizable from how they were twenty years ago. What is there to hope for? Do you want children to suffer through this nightmare?

Despair aside, I’m eagerly waiting for Baldur’s Gate 3 to come out, which will potentially be the best RPG ever made. A cinematic experience with off-the-charts reactivity and a tremendous amount of options to solve (not always murder-related) problems. You can also sort of have sex with a bear. Once BG3 comes out on the 3rd, I expect to do little else in the afternoons than lose myself in that fantasy. Then, a month later, Starfield.

Bye bye!