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Forum Name: Eyrie Miscellaneous
Topic ID: 271
#0, Wow, I... what?
Posted by Gryphon on Oct-11-13 at 07:57 PM
The other morning I had the most amazing dream.

Korra from (The Legend of, obviously) and I (no, don't roll your eyes, keep reading, it's way wackier than that) were trying to find some specific person in this crazy little town in the Canadian Arctic, which we knew nothing about and didn't have a map of - just their address on a crumpled printout of an email. (For what purpose we were seeking this person and what the email was about were not mentioned, though, in the way of dreams, I felt like I knew.)

The town was this insane seaside collection of preposterously steep hills and narrow streets, with ramshackle houses and a lot of "temporary" structures made up of jumbled stacks of CONEXes and things, like what you would get if you crossed a Rio de Janeiro favela or that hillside neighborhood Jackie Chan drove a car through in Police Story with one of H.P. Lovecraft's tumbledown New England fishing villages. It had a wildly convoluted street plan for a community of its size, spiced up with occasional dead ends beyond which were arbitrary drops over walls and things - just incredibly treacherous and hard to navigate, particularly if you were doing it in a beat-up mid-'80s Lincoln Town Car with the help of a doggedly cheerful but spectacularly hapless and inept Indian (Bengali, I think) cabdriver named Harun. And it was dark. I don't know what time it was, in the Canadian Arctic that could just mean it was January, but it was dark and this was not the kind of town with extensive street lighting.

I think we hired Harun in Montreal, so at that point he'd driven us something like 1500 miles. This may explain why we didn't fire him, or indeed strangle him, after he drove or backed the Town Car off the aforementioned freefall dead ends, for the third or fourth time, trying to find our address in the darkened, madness-inducing maze. I'll say this for that car, though, it sure was sturdy. Despite repeatedly driving (albeit very slowly) off sheer drops of at least the height of a CONEX, it never seemed to get seriously damaged, and we were not killed to death at any point. After a while it just became part of the routine. Harun would think he saw a shortcut, Korra and I would shout at him not to do it, he'd go for it anyway, we'd grit our teeth and hang on, and the Lincoln would fall down another cliff, after which Harun would say "Oh. I guess not" and carry on. At one point I asked him, "How much for the car? Because frankly all three of us would be better off," and he just smiled ruefully, probably having heard the same from fares he'd nearly killed and/or gotten lost in artillery testing ranges many times before.

Oh, did I mention this town, despite being a) minuscule and b) above the Arctic Circle, was presently in the grip of a gang war? Well, it was, between a band of yakuza and some tracksuit Draculas from the Russian Mob. At one point while we were stopped at a streetcorner so Harun could check his map (which was a London A to Z, so one wonders what good he thought it was going to do him), a couple of the yakuza - impeccably dressed, grim-faced and ceremonial, the one in the lead looked like Tomoyasu Hotei - came up and opened the front passenger door, then, without a word, stuck his hand inside in the international "give me money" gesture. Very direct.

I had no cash and told him so; without changing his expression at all, he withdrew his hand, reached into his inside pocket, took out a paper-wrapped pair of restaurant chopsticks, and thrust them into the car for me to take. "You understand?" he said. "Um, no," I said. He nodded firmly, and then - apparently satisfied - he and his shorter colleague turned to go.

At which point they were set upon by four tracksuit Draculas, the leader of whom tackled the lead yakuza from behind while gleefully shouting, "Pazhalusta!" (Which means "you're welcome"; I think my subconscious wanted him to be saying "welcome," as in "welcome to whatever this town's name is," but I don't know the Russian for that, so it dug out "you're welcome" as in "please and thank you" instead.) There followed a quick but comprehensive four-on-two beatdown against the side of the car, after which the Russians wandered off laughing heartily and occasionally mooning the yakuza, while they, in turn, dragged themselves off to lick their wound. One got the impression that this was business as usual, and it had all happened too quickly for us to do anything about it. (Also, the car was so battered by then that the doors might not have opened in a timely fashion.)

Following this incident, Harun somehow managed (with the aid of a street map of London!) to find the cross street we needed, but, flushed with success, he then overreached and chose the wrong side street, plunging once against through the darkness into someone's garden and then, with a hideous crash, into a (nicely furnished! I guess they have IKEA in Crazy Arctic Town) living room, where an elderly couple were watching TV. They seemed not too surprised that a battered Lincoln had just plowed down their garden retaining wall and into their living room - perhaps this kind of thing happens around there all the time - and were hospitality itself, informing us cheerfully that this was 505 whatever-the-street-was, and we wanted 509, which was right next door. In fact, they were so accommodating, they suggested that we should just walk from their place instead of trying to get the car out again.

Harun came with us, possibly because he was at a loss about what else to do, possibly because we hadn't paid him yet (I rather doubt we intended to by that point), and possibly because we'd all been through so much on this search that he felt he was part of the team by now. Korra and I didn't object, so evidently we either agreed or were just too punch-drunk and bruised from riding over cliffs in the Lincoln to put up a fight. We made our way down a preposterously steep and icy sidewalk, across the neighboring street (which was why there was no 507 - nice touch, subconscious!), and up onto the stoop of the brownstone townhouse(?!) at 509. Korra rang the doorbell,

and I woke up, so I guess we'll never know who lived there or what we wanted with them that was so important we'd endure all that to get there.

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#1, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Mercutio on Oct-11-13 at 10:23 PM
In response to message #0
I'd pay at least twenty dollars to play this videogame. Sixty if you got David Lynch to produce.

Also, stay off the drugs, Ben.

-Merc
Keep Rat

Except maybe the ones you need to live. Those are probably okay.


#3, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Gryphon on Oct-11-13 at 10:36 PM
In response to message #1
>Also, stay off the drugs, Ben.

None involved, unless atorvastatin can cause wacktastic lucid dreams.*

--G.
* it can't
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#2, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by trboturtle2 on Oct-11-13 at 10:26 PM
In response to message #0
Write the entire story and post it....

Craig


#4, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Polychrome on Oct-11-13 at 10:46 PM
In response to message #2
I think he just did.

Polychrome


#6, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Gryphon on Oct-12-13 at 01:00 AM
In response to message #2
>Write the entire story and post it....

That's all of it I got. No idea why Korra and I were looking for someone in a mad little town in northern Nunavut, or indeed how we knew each other (though, as is the way in dreams, I had the fully contextual sense that we did, and had for some time; this was not our first rodeo together). Interestingly, I don't think we were the UF versions of us, as this was plainly happening in the present day.

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#11, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Nathan on Oct-12-13 at 03:30 AM
In response to message #6
>>Write the entire story and post it....
>
>That's all of it I got. No idea why Korra and I were looking for
>someone in a mad little town in northern Nunavut, or indeed how we
>knew each other (though, as is the way in dreams, I had the fully
>contextual sense that we did, and had for some time; this was not our
>first rodeo together). Interestingly, I don't think we were the UF
>versions of us, as this was plainly happening in the present day.

Obviously, at some point there will be a Pro Bending video game and Korra will therefore qualify to appear in Warrior's Legacy.

-----

"V, did you do something foolish?"

"Yes, and it was glorious."


#12, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by MoonEyes on Oct-12-13 at 04:27 AM
In response to message #11
>Obviously, at some point there will be a Pro Bending video game and
>Korra will therefore qualify to appear in Warrior's Legacy.
>

That was pretty much my instant response too, yes. This sounds entirely, and gloriously, like something out of WL. We can but hope that it will be included, in SOME manner.


#14, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Gryphon on Oct-12-13 at 12:40 PM
In response to message #12
>>Obviously, at some point there will be a Pro Bending video game and
>>Korra will therefore qualify to appear in Warrior's Legacy.
>
>That was pretty much my instant response too, yes. This sounds
>entirely, and gloriously, like something out of WL.

Ha, that hadn't occurred to me, but you're right, there is a certain similarity of tone.

In that case, this version of Korra is probably from Nunavut (though evidently not that particular town), unless WL-Earth has some kind of mysteriously habitable enclave in Antartica somewhere, Savage Land-style, where...

...

... pardon me, was just thinking of the "Savage Land" fanart costuming trope as applied... to...

... anyway! Probably from Nunavut, unless she's a from western Canada or Alaska, or possibly a Siberian Yupik, though that last doesn't seem at all likely somehow. Or I suppose she could be a Greenlander.* The Inuit peoples really do have the most fantastic geographical range.

--G.
* "Remember where I found you? Homeless? Friendless? Unemployed? In Greenland?"
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#5, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by SpottedKitty on Oct-12-13 at 00:04 AM
In response to message #0
While I was reading this, I thought I could hear the soundtrack from the big car chase in Bullitt.

--
Unable to save the day: File is read-only.


#7, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by eriktown on Oct-12-13 at 01:24 AM
In response to message #0
Oh, man. That's a heckuva dream. It reminds me of one I had while I was in college...

So - as a sort of preface, not part of the dream itself - one mellow evening my friend Ross was sitting out on the porch of the house he shared with a number of my friends. He was talking with his roommate as she smoked, and she was lining up those spent little Camel filters in a row on the railing like suicides poised to jump. She started flicking them off, one by one, onto the front lawn. As she did so, Ross (ever the humorist) started creating high-pitched little soundbytes for each one. The one that stuck in my mind, and the minds of everyone else who spends time at the Temple of Shub-Niggurath, was "I commit myself to the soft grass belooooowwww..." as the little cigarette filter plunged to earth.

This phrase apparently literally haunted my dreams that night.

I found myself in a large mansion that belonged to a crime lord of some sort, and the BATF had planted a bomb in it, which was about to go off. I had to get out of the house before the bomb exploded, so I ran out the back door and dove into the lake behind the house. After swimming along underwater for a few seconds, I realized that this close to the explosion, the hydrostatic shock might kill me. So I rooted around the lake bottom for a moment until I found a maintenance tunnel, of all things.

I opened it up and went through, entering a tunnel that took me back into the house. Great. Back at square one. This time, I chose doors more wisely, and ran out the front door, across the front lawn and into some woods. Just as I hurled myself behind a fallen log, the bomb went off and little bits of masonry pelted the ground around me. Miraculously unscathed, I poked my head back up and surveyed the damage. The house was by and large still standing, but it was making ominous creaking noises that suggested it might fall at any moment. There was one section of the house that bore a remarkable resemblance to a gigantic curio cabinet. As it turned out, to my suprise, it was a curio cabinet. The door of the cabinet swung aside, and this is where things got really odd.

Inside the house-sized curio cabinent were about ten shelves, each of which held several ornaments, toys and statuettes. On the top shelf was a four-foot-high statue of the Virgin Mary. The statue came to life, walked to the edge of the shelf, and in a voice remarkably like the high-pitched one Ross used for the falling cigarette butts, proclaimed "I commit myself to the soft grass belooooowwww!" as she fell three stories onto the front lawn of the mansion. The curio cabinet teetered dangerously behind her prostrate form, and the items on its shelves began to fall around her. Finally the cabinet creaked forward and came crashing down on top of the whole mess.

With that, I woke up.

My brain is weird.


#8, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Gryphon on Oct-12-13 at 01:47 AM
In response to message #7
The maintenance tunnel leading unexpectedly and unhelpfully back to the house is straight out of one of those click-on-the-scenery adventure games from the early VGA era. :)

The Virgin Mary was a nice touch, too. It reminds me, randomly, of the Catholic church near where I used to live in Waltham. It's one of those weird avant-garde ones from the '60s, all domes and Raygun Provincial deco accents, and outside on the grounds is a statue of Jesus. I think He's supposed to look like He's suffering - hands upraised, eyes turned up to Heaven - but the sculptor couldn't quite make the expression work, so it looks for all the world like He's just utterly frustrated, throwing up His hands in disgust. "Oh I give up! For My sake, you people."

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#9, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by DaemeonX on Oct-12-13 at 02:27 AM
In response to message #8
Did the conexes alternate in a beat up red, almost orangish, with a beat up blue, sky blue?

I had a dream about a month ago in which I was trying to track down my son, who had of course been abducted by a gang of thugs, in what looked to be a mountainous cliff based area. The houses that I remember where a white two story affair that looked like this:http://goo.gl/maps/oGw8g just more maintained.

More importantly I remember there being these conexes stacked all over the damn place in this alternating dingy red and blue pattern while trying to traverse this town to rescue my son.

There was a lot of action and beat downs in this dream that I don't remember all that clearly, but I DO clearly remember the conexes.


#10, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Gryphon on Oct-12-13 at 02:32 AM
In response to message #9
>Did the conexes alternate in a beat up red, almost orangish, with a
>beat up blue, sky blue?

Yes; also dark green, and some had probably originally been white.

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#19, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Offsides on Oct-13-13 at 03:40 PM
In response to message #8
>It reminds me, randomly, of
>the Catholic church near where I used to live in Waltham. It's one of
>those weird avant-garde ones from the '60s, all domes and Raygun
>Provincial deco accents, and outside on the grounds is a statue of
>Jesus. I think He's supposed to look like He's suffering - hands
>upraised, eyes turned up to Heaven - but the sculptor couldn't quite
>make the expression work, so it looks for all the world like He's just
>utterly frustrated, throwing up His hands in disgust. "Oh I give up!
>For My sake, you people."

Would that be this church? I'd never seen the statue before (I've always passed it on Newton St.), but I've always called it "The Beehive"...

[...] in order to be a realist you must believe in miracles.
-- David Ben Gurion
EPU RCW #π
#include <stdsig.h>


#20, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Gryphon on Oct-13-13 at 03:47 PM
In response to message #19
>Would that be this church?

Why yes it would! (Note, in particular, the "pod" off to the left, which we always assumed was some Catholic equivalent of the link tower Tron used to communicate with his User. You'd go in there to get your disk reprogrammed with the subroutine needed to crash the MCP.)

>I'd never seen the statue before (I've always passed it
>on Newton St.), but I've always called it "The Beehive"...

Heh, we used to call it "the JesusDome", even though it isn't really a dome.

There are a number of really rather wacky postwar Catholic churches in that area. There's another one over in Burlington, I think, that looks kind of like a bunker or the single-story lobby porch section of a late-'50s Holiday Inn, except that on the roof, instead of a steeple, there's this fantastical metal... sculpture... thing, like some kind of sci-fi intergalactic communications antenna. It's like the architect was trying to put a transistor-radio-era spin on the whole "communications channel to God" metaphor.

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#21, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Offsides on Oct-13-13 at 05:22 PM
In response to message #20
>>Would that be this church?
>
>Why yes it would! (Note, in particular, the "pod" off to the left,
>which we always assumed was some Catholic equivalent of the link tower
>Tron used to communicate with his User. You'd go in there to get your
>disk reprogrammed with the subroutine needed to crash the MCP.)
>
>>I'd never seen the statue before (I've always passed it
>>on Newton St.), but I've always called it "The Beehive"...
>
>Heh, we used to call it "the JesusDome", even though it isn't really a
>dome.
>
>There are a number of really rather wacky postwar Catholic churches in
>that area. There's another one over in Burlington, I think, that
>looks kind of like a bunker or the single-story lobby porch section of
>a late-'50s Holiday Inn, except that on the roof, instead of a
>steeple, there's this fantastical metal... sculpture... thing, like
>some kind of sci-fi intergalactic communications antenna. It's like
>the architect was trying to put a transistor-radio-era spin on the
>whole "communications channel to God" metaphor.

I suspect that the difference in our analogies has to do with our ages when we "named" them. I was a toddler, riding with my dad to preschool at Brandeis. But I totally see what you mean...

Offsides

[...] in order to be a realist you must believe in miracles.
-- David Ben Gurion
EPU RCW #π
#include <stdsig.h>


#22, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Zox on Oct-13-13 at 07:22 PM
In response to message #20
>Heh, we used to call it "the JesusDome", even though it isn't really a
>dome.

"We don't need another hero; He's already shown the way home..."
--from the Saint Max Beyond JesusDome soundtrack

:)


#13, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by mdg1 on Oct-12-13 at 08:50 AM
In response to message #0
Sounds a bit like the infamous car chase in CASTLE OF CAGLIOSTRO.

Oh, and perhaps the Russians were saying "you're welcome" for saving you (for a loose enough definition of "saving") from the Yakuza? Did you manage to hang onto the chopsticks?


#15, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Gryphon on Oct-12-13 at 12:42 PM
In response to message #13
>Oh, and perhaps the Russians were saying "you're welcome" for saving
>you (for a loose enough definition of "saving") from the Yakuza?

I doubt it, the guy was pretty plainly not talking to us. The Russians didn't seem to care about us one way or another, they just wanted to beat up some yakuza.

>Did you manage to hang onto the chopsticks?

They did not appear again. I'm assuming I put them away in my jacket, on the premise that they would probably be important again later.

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#16, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by mdg1 on Oct-12-13 at 06:15 PM
In response to message #15
>>Did you manage to hang onto the chopsticks?
>
>They did not appear again. I'm assuming I put them away in my jacket,
>on the premise that they would probably be important again later.

Go look, I'll wait. :D


#17, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Gryphon on Oct-12-13 at 06:38 PM
In response to message #16
LAST EDITED ON Oct-12-13 AT 06:41 PM (EDT)
 
>>>Did you manage to hang onto the chopsticks?
>>
>>They did not appear again. I'm assuming I put them away in my jacket,
>>on the premise that they would probably be important again later.
>
>Go look, I'll wait. :D

Alas, the jacket I was wearing is not available for inspection, on account of I do not actually own a WWII-vintage United States Army Air Force Jacket, Shearling, Type B-3 (heavy bomber crews, for the use of).

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#18, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by mdg1 on Oct-13-13 at 05:32 AM
In response to message #17
Ah well... your dream self has excellent taste. :)

#29, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Croaker on Sep-19-22 at 02:52 PM
In response to message #17
>>>>Did you manage to hang onto the chopsticks?
>>>
>>>They did not appear again. I'm assuming I put them away in my jacket,
>>>on the premise that they would probably be important again later.
>>
>>Go look, I'll wait. :D
>
>Alas, the jacket I was wearing is not available for inspection, on
>account of I do not actually own a WWII-vintage United States
>Army Air Force Jacket, Shearling, Type B-3 (heavy bomber crews, for
>the use of).
>
>--G.

Could be UF-Gryph in OWAW/GG, but what he'd be doing that far up in Farawayland, I dunno.

Maybe the Yaks were trying to tell him to go to a particular restaurant to pick up the next leg of the fetch quest?


#23, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Gryphon on Dec-09-16 at 07:29 PM
In response to message #0
Rezzing this thread because a) this is still the awesomest dream I have ever had and b) the other day in GTA Online I more or less duplicated Harun's car.

(Yeah, the Albany Emperor looks more like an '80s Cadillac than an '80s Lincoln, but the car that does look more like a Lincoln is only available as a two-door.)

Had to stop and get a selfie with my handiwork.

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#24, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Nathan on Dec-10-16 at 00:48 AM
In response to message #23
LAST EDITED ON Dec-10-16 AT 00:49 AM (EST)
 
Ye gods. Driving around in that thing in a Nunavut winter? What were you and Korra dressed for, climbing the Vinson Massif?

-----
Iä! Iä! Moe fthagn!


#25, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Gryphon on Dec-10-16 at 01:00 AM
In response to message #24
>Ye gods. Driving around in that thing in a Nunavut winter? What were
>you and Korra dressed for, climbing the Vinson Massif?

To be fair, the missing door and windows are a function of the GTA5 car damage model, and may not exactly reflect conditions within the dream. On the other hand, at no point in the dream did the car ever get going particularly fast, except when it was falling off things, and we were fairly well-dressed. Well, I was, I was wearing a sheepskin bomber crew jacket. Korra doesn't give a damn about the cold, she's from the South Pole. :)

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#26, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Spectrum on Dec-11-16 at 02:40 AM
In response to message #25
Well, given the dream described, at least the seatbelts still worked?

#28, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by MoonEyes on Dec-13-16 at 03:36 PM
In response to message #23
Still say this would make an EPIC Warriors Legacy story, or part of one!

...!
Gott's Leetle Feesh in Trousers!


#27, RE: Wow, I... what?
Posted by Kendra Kirai on Dec-11-16 at 10:31 PM
In response to message #0
I think that was less a dream than a visitation by the wandering spirit of Hunter S. Thompson.