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	<title>Post Pop Pulp Magazine &#187; Ursula Bester</title>
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	<link>http://www.postpoppulp.org/magazine</link>
	<description>Speculative Fiction Pulp Mag</description>
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		<title>The Therapist</title>
		<link>http://www.postpoppulp.org/magazine/author/ursula-bester/104/the-therapist</link>
		<comments>http://www.postpoppulp.org/magazine/author/ursula-bester/104/the-therapist#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 10 Dec 2000 15:01:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ktoffler</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ursula Bester]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://postpoppulp.org/magazine/uncategorized/104/the-therapist</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Moebius Psychology I first put the special red, tinted paper in front of them, smiling. It was important that they feel relaxed, comfortable. True, they were generally unreceptive, drooling, faces impassive as granite. But their cloudy eyes revealed a hidden turbulence lurking just under the skin, burbling like a napalm brook with a mind of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><i>Moebius</p>
<p>Psychology</i>
<p>	I first put the special red, tinted<br />
paper in</p>
<p>front of them, smiling. It was important that they feel<br />
relaxed, comfortable. True,</p>
<p>they were generally unreceptive,<br />
drooling, faces impassive as granite. But their</p>
<p>cloudy eyes revealed<br />
a hidden turbulence lurking just under the skin, burbling like</p>
<p>a<br />
napalm brook with a mind of its own. Sometimes, I imagined they had<br />
merely been</p>
<p>exposed to some intense cold wind, freezing their skin<br />
into a thin prison of flesh,</p>
<p>locking them away mutely. If they spoke,<br />
it was only to themselves.</p>
<p</p>
<p>STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">	Then, I would turn on some music,<br />
usually Schoenberg,</p>
<p>which played while I lay out a range of the<br />
crayons. This part was very important; I</p>
<p>had noticed early on that<br />
most of these patients, suffering from  a very specific</p>
<p>combination<br />
of psychological catatonia?s in which I had come to</p>
<p>specialize,<br />
responded very sensitively to ritual. Slowly, like a tortoise,</p>
<p>they<br />
would pop their heads out, their hands grip the crayon I placed<br />
there, and</p>
<p>they would begin to draw.</p>
<p STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">	While drawing, their</p>
<p>personality would<br />
change. I cant really describe it, words frequently fail</p>
<p>to<br />
communicate such an abstract quantity as a ?personality change?,<br />
but I will try.</p>
<p> Once the element of time was removed, it was as if<br />
they began to merge into a single</p>
<p>class, a unit separated only by<br />
space. The drawings, the ways in which they all drew</p>
<p>similar themes<br />
in similar ways, their expressions, movements, and</p>
<p>formal<br />
characteristics, all combined into an uncanny resemblance of<br />
something which</p>
<p>could almost be grasped, but hung out just outside of<br />
vision. After they finished the</p>
<p>drawings, they would go into small<br />
convulsions, as if the journey back to catatonia</p>
<p>was a violent<br />
compression of time and distance.</p>
<p STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">
<p>Returning home late as usual from my<br />
office, I locked the new drawings in the large</p>
<p>metal box I kept under<br />
my bed. After a small dinner, spent gazing out the window at</p>
<p>the gray<br />
midtown buildings which composed the sky of the city, I would be<br />
drawn to</p>
<p>open the box and once again gaze at the range of drawings,<br />
trying to detect the common</p>
<p>thread, trying to place together the<br />
pieces of a logical puzzle from the scattered</p>
<p>fractions of irrational<br />
impulse. I had no end of troubled, exhausted nights, staring,</p>
<p>moving<br />
two drawings together then apart again, combining and recombining<br />
them into</p>
<p>their specialized combinatorics, using only the laws of<br />
psychological inquiry and</p>
<p>sustained hypothesis as my guide.<br />
Eventually, I would collapse into bed, falling into</p>
<p>a troubled sleep<br />
of dreams and confusion.</p>
<p STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">
<p>It must have been the dreams that led<br />
me to find the order.  True, at first I thought</p>
<p>I was a little<br />
overboard; I could laugh at myself.  But it was laughter tinged</p>
<p>with<br />
desperation; since my first publication in a  prestigious psychology<br />
journal,</p>
<p>the rest of the world had dropped away, taking my childhood<br />
with it. I recognized the</p>
<p>symptomatic tunnel vision of career<br />
specialization, but the tunnel had suggested a</p>
<p>journey, something at<br />
the end of it which had a stronger gravity than the desire to</p>
<p>see<br />
around me.</p>
<p STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">	It started with two specific</p>
<p>drawings.<br />
Jeff, a middle age man, no known occupation, who hadn&#8217;t spoken in<br />
years,</p>
<p>had done the first one. A half oval, with intricate designs<br />
comprising its interior,</p>
<p>lay bisected by the page. Outside the oval,<br />
dark, childlike scrawls swarmed, while</p>
<p>inside, light pink smooth<br />
shapes lay as if protected inside the half egg.  The other</p>
<p>drawing<br />
was by Jane Doe #4, an unknown woman in her seventies. This drawing<br />
showed</p>
<p>a typical childish composition&#8230; a crude house with curly<br />
smoke coming from the</p>
<p>chimney, green grass, and a tree. Inside the<br />
house a bulbous dark shape lurked behind</p>
<p>a crude curtain, almost as<br />
if it was a smudge upon the drawing sheet. But above the</p>
<p>door to the<br />
house she had drawn a full oval, similar in design to that of</p>
<p>Jeff?s<br />
drawing. With the aid of a magnifying glass, I was able to examine<br />
the</p>
<p>oval&#8217;s detail, and it was astounding. I still am unable to<br />
understand how a crayon</p>
<p>could physically create a microcosm of such<br />
intricacy, but I am much closer to</p>
<p>accepting it now. I have no<br />
choice.</p>
<p STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">	The</p>
<p>oval&#8217;s similarity drew me<br />
immediately to John Doe #7, whom I had taken to calling</p>
<p>?Ted?.<br />
Ted did drawings of only one object, over and over, in different<br />
scales,</p>
<p>colors, and a varying technical ability; a tall candle<br />
supported by a distorted candle</p>
<p>holder of ornate decoration, an<br />
extended circle with a point through the</p>
<p>middle.</p>
<p STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">	A couple of weeks after I had lain</p>
<p>out<br />
all the drawing with circles in them on my bed, my patients began to<br />
refuse all</p>
<p>crayons except red and black, and only rarely, green.<br />
Their images very definitely</p>
<p>began to degenerate, become more<br />
childlike and rough. I made the mistake of asking</p>
<p>some colleagues of<br />
mine about this, but they would attribute it to nothing more than</p>
<p>an<br />
environmental factor, if not pure coincidence. I do not know if it<br />
was they who</p>
<p>began to shun my persistent nagging questions, or if I<br />
grew more and more hostile to</p>
<p>their dismissals, which seemed to me<br />
highly unprofessional. Whichever it was, I grew</p>
<p>hesitant, I extended<br />
publishing deadlines, missed meetings and forwent the writing</p>
<p>of<br />
grant proposals. I survived off of my private practice only, scraping<br />
by,</p>
<p>digging into my savings more and more.</p>
<p STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">
<p>Eventually, even through the<br />
disintegration, I could see images of a more simplistic,</p>
<p>unified<br />
formalism arise. Like puzzle pieces, I could find lines that<br />
continued off</p>
<p>of one page and onto another. I stopped paying<br />
attention to whose drawings were whose,</p>
<p>I did not gather time, dates,<br />
environmental data, psychological observations or names</p>
<p>on the<br />
individual drawings. By ignoring the separation thus, the patterns<br />
began to</p>
<p>become more clear. One drawing had been ripped in such a way<br />
that it seemed to fit</p>
<p>exactly the tear of another. Images, lines,<br />
shapes fractured and came together only</p>
<p>when two or three sheets were<br />
joined. I noticed that viewing the drawings by the light</p>
<p>of a single<br />
candle somehow made the images clearer. The flickering light,<br />
suspended</p>
<p>in the center of the drawing, created a sense of liveliness<br />
and suggestion that</p>
<p>pierced the film of separation I felt from the<br />
drawing as a mere drawing, and hinted</p>
<p>at an organic pattern of<br />
indefinable permutations. I moved my bed out into the kitchen</p>
<p>and<br />
turned the bedroom into a huge mosaic, closing and double-locking the<br />
door</p>
<p>whenever I was out.</p>
<p STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">	At work, I noticed the</p>
<p>people whom I<br />
normally met throughout the day looked at me a little strangely.</p>
<p>It<br />
was true, I hadn&#8217;t washed my suit or clothes in a while, though I<br />
washed</p>
<p>infrequently in the kitchen sink. I started to become afraid<br />
they were going to bring</p>
<p>about a halt to my work, that my days of<br />
collecting drawings were perhaps numbered,</p>
<p>and this increased my<br />
involvement. I would search through hospital records for those</p>
<p>who<br />
had similar psychological histories to those I had studied, and rush<br />
through</p>
<p>the paperwork, sometimes filling in lies, making up reasons<br />
and references, just to</p>
<p>get access under the guise of therapy to more<br />
scribbles. I collected them in furtive</p>
<p>five minute ?interviews?<br />
conducted in hospital rooms, beds, wheelchairs. Carrying a</p>
<p>sketchpad<br />
and wearing a white doctor lab coat, I drove to a local sanitarium<br />
and</p>
<p>snuck into the exercise yard. Pretending to be a staff member,<br />
giving the few</p>
<p>patients whose symptoms I recognized crayons and<br />
paper, receiving quick sketches, I</p>
<p>would rush back home and resume<br />
taping and shuffling, sometimes completing a section,</p>
<p>sometimes<br />
feeling something was missing and rushing out again.</p>
<p</p>
<p>STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">	In the mirror, my face had become<br />
gaunt,</p>
<p>unrecognizable. But by now, two thirds of the floor was<br />
finished. I could feel the</p>
<p>closeness of a goal. My heart beat in a<br />
constant state of hypertension, driven by edgy</p>
<p>suspense. The last<br />
group of drawings was almost complete.</p>
<p</p>
<p>STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">	That was when I received the phone<br />
call. My office had</p>
<p>been shut down by the state board of regulators.<br />
I was under investigation by the</p>
<p>American Psychological Association,<br />
threatening to revoke my license. But I didn&#8217;t</p>
<p>care. I was so close.<br />
By that evening, only a few pieces remained, and I felt so</p>
<p>confident<br />
in my vision of the whole that I sat down and shakily sketched out<br />
the</p>
<p>remaining pieces. In a trance, I became only aware of the<br />
scraping of the crayon and</p>
<p>its mysterious lines upon the rough paper<br />
surface. Done, I returned to the bedroom and</p>
<p>carefully lay them in.</p>
<p STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">	Shutting the door behind</p>
<p>me, I lit the<br />
single candle at the center of the room. The huge ornate oval</p>
<p>came<br />
flickeringly alive. Patterns washed and rippled the surface of the<br />
drawings,</p>
<p>ripping them apart and reforming them as if alive. I felt a<br />
sense of awe in the</p>
<p>presence of a huge micro-organism, teeming with<br />
life from another scale, a life which</p>
<p>existed alongside our own and<br />
yet was invisible, dead to the daily life of our vision.</p>
<p>Its segments<br />
existed in parts, each locked away in their individual prisons,</p>
<p>in<br />
hospitals and rooms, over the centuries and throughout the world.</p>
<p</p>
<p>STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">	As I watched the surface, immobile,<br />
unable to move, I</p>
<p>saw larger shapes form inside the dancing patterns.<br />
Shadows, as if diffracted through</p>
<p>a prism, swarmed like clouds across<br />
the surface. Though moving, they suggested another</p>
<p>form behind the<br />
shifting lines and shapes; I felt suddenly cold, though sweat</p>
<p>was<br />
poring through my skin. A shape, large and dark, moved behind the<br />
screen. My</p>
<p>vision slowly began to fade, as if  a smoky white film had<br />
arisen from the dark</p>
<p>corners of the room. My mind became hazy, unable<br />
to hold any thought under the</p>
<p>influence of the movement and fog.<br />
Muscles throughout my body became slack and numb. I</p>
<p>sunk down to the<br />
floor, my mouth agape, trying to breathe in the heavy dank air,</p>
<p>each<br />
inhalation becoming more difficult to complete. Soon, the dark room<br />
was</p>
<p>completely subsumed into the white haze over my vision. The dark<br />
shapes in the fog</p>
<p>multiplied and came towards me, swarming around me,<br />
comforting and smothering me. Then</p>
<p>I was gone.</p>
<p STYLE="margin-bottom: 0in">	When next I opened my eyes, I</p>
<p>stared<br />
straight into the blinding sun. The blue cold sky around me was<br />
crystal</p>
<p>clear. I felt the hardness of cement and grass on my bare<br />
back, on the nakedness of my</p>
<p>thighs. I do not know how I got there,<br />
or where the people came from to take me to the</p>
<p>bed where I now lay.<br />
But every now and then, I am put into a wheelchair and moved to</p>
<p>a<br />
small room, where a young man, fresh in face and  motivation, sets<br />
down a piece</p>
<p>of paper and crayons in front of me. And I begin to<br />
draw.</p></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>I love you Alice B. Toklas Planet</title>
		<link>http://www.postpoppulp.org/magazine/book/400/i-love-you-alice-b-toklas-planet</link>
		<comments>http://www.postpoppulp.org/magazine/book/400/i-love-you-alice-b-toklas-planet#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 May 1996 13:01:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ktoffler</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pure Pulp]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ursula Bester]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://postpoppulp.org/magazine/uncategorized/400/i-love-you-alice-b-toklas-planet</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Ursula Bester I love you Alice B. Toklas Planet Publisher: Black Hole Press Year Published: 1996 Bibliography Information and notes: &#8220;Lesbian/Gay Science Fiction dealing with transgender and gender/alien issues.&#8220;]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Ursula Bester</h2>
<h1>I love you Alice B. Toklas Planet</h1>
<p> Publisher: <i><b>Black Hole Press</b></i></p>
<p>Year Published: <i><b>1996</b></i></p>
<p>Bibliography Information and notes: &#8220;<i><b>Lesbian/Gay Science Fiction dealing with transgender and gender/alien issues.<b></i>&#8220;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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