Wednesday 9 May 2012

Only The Lonely.


Only The Lonely

Ken pushes the heavy, red, velvet curtain aside with a sagging hand. He enters the reception area. With one brief glance the woman behind the counter says, “Room 17, Candy’s available”. He nods curtly and makes his way towards the stairs through the empty doorframe at the back of the room. He begins to climb. When Ken reaches step five he pauses to catch his breath and flex his poor, aching joints. He needs this. He knows that he needs this. It’s certainly embarrassing, but equally as necessary. So, he continues up the stairs, his decaying teeth whistling as a whisper of air is dragged into his tired lungs.

 When he reaches the top he pads heavily across the heavy, red carpet to number 17. Opening the door, he steps inside and places his money on the table. The room has only five things in it: two comfortable chairs placed close together, a girl in the left-hand chair, a large mirror placed behind the chairs, presumably for decoration, and Ken.. The room is familiar to Ken. He knows that it’s the same as all the other rooms here. He knows the protocol here, too. So, he places himself in the free chair and tries to relax a little. He runs a weathered hand over his lined face. After the slightest of breathless, not-quite-hesitant pauses he closes his eyes and gets the thing underway. He lifts his right hand and places his palm on the girl’s. Wrist to wrist. Fingers intertwined. And he sits.

The first few times he had tried to make conversation with whichever girl he found himself next to. He soon learned that things only became more awkward that way; he soon stopped trying.  This is why Ken just sits. Ken just sits hand in hand with the girl, avoiding looking at her at all.

After half an hour she says, “That’s half an hour”.

His half an hour over Ken says “Thankyou” and stands up.

Ken even smiles. And with a newly perfect set of teeth and newly smooth skin, and with a new energy back in his soul, Ken is rather handsome. Newly handsome Ken slips out of the room, leaving the chairs, the girl, and the mirror.

The mirror. The mirror is not a mirror. Well, it’s not just a mirror. It’s a two way mirror. And behind it there are two doctors. Well, one doctor and one almost-doctor. A student doctor. The student doctor looks up at the experienced doctor with  confusion. His young face looks almost horrified, in fact.

“What on earth…” The student doctor somehow squeezes out the words around the wide ‘o’ of his mouth. “He was… he was aged.”

“Yes.” Replies the experienced doctor.

“So, it’s true, then? It really happens?”

“Yes. And it’s important that you understand why.”

The experienced doctor begins his explanation, placing his clever, logical words carefully and clearly into the mind of the student. He says:

“You have heard that the only way to die is through loneliness, and this is very accurate.  So, everybody has the capability to live forever, because of this. You have barely known what it means to age beyond what you know as full maturity, which happens at what age?”

“Thirty”

“Good.  At the age of thirty, men and women cease to age, with the exception of the lonely. The lonely age past thirty, sometimes to the point of death. And do you know why this is?”

“Erm… No?”

The experienced doctor sighs. The student doctors, really, should do their research. They should understand this already, it is happening all around them, constantly. But they never do. He so often finds himself having to explain the mechanics of the aging process to his students. And because he so often finds himself having to explain, he has the explanation all ready in his mind. This particular explanation he can reel off with little thought at all. He explains to the student how the body registers loneliness through lack of physical contact. And the sensors for contact control the aging centres of the brain. He reminds him that loved body is healthy and strong, pointing out that child grows tall when he holds his mother’s hand. That the kisses of a teenager’s first love will mature him towards adulthood. And, how all acts of love after that point, a father’s firm hug or a daughter’s cuddle, anything with care, maintains the health and vitality of a person.

The experienced doctor pauses to rub his eyes. His job can be tiring, at times, especially when he’s teaching things to students who don’t do their research. Still, he must teach. So, he goes on.

He goes on to explain lack of care is detrimental. How, without care the aging process is rapid. That the body can be tricked. But, he explains, that he, as a doctor, would not recommend this. It is bad for the psyche and for the contact sensors. He tells the student how body can be tricked by certain chemicals that are sent to the aging centres of the brain. That physical acts that would normally imply love trigger these chemicals, even when they are careless. But this is not good for the brain, he stresses. The lonely still continue to trick their brains and their bodies, though. Touch-houses such as this one continue to quietly flourish throughout the world.

He asks the student if he still understands.

“Yes, I think so.” Answers the student.

The experienced doctor doesn’t look too impressed. He sighs again, quietly, so that the student doctor isn’t quite sure if he sighed at all.

“Okay, let’s go back to Ken. He may help you to understand more fully”
The two turn around to look at a small screen behind them. The screen runs a feed of the CCTV camera from the reception area. On the screen the two can see Ken still talking with the receptionist. He is standing up very straight, flashing his perfect teeth in a perfect smile. He uses his hands to gesticulate a lot while he talks. Overall, Ken looks very lively.

“That, you see,” says the experienced doctor to the student, “is how much of an effect just half an hour of care can have on even the most aged man.”

The student nods.

Back on screen, Ken says something that seems to make the receptionist laugh a lot. Ken has, in fact, just told her a very funny joke, and the reception area rings with the sound of her reaction. After this, she tells Ken that it’s been very lovely to talk to him, but that she has something that she really must take care of. Ken flashes that perfect smile and says goodbye. The two doctors watch him make his spritely way off to the edge of the screen.

The student doctor now understands the difference that holding a person’s hand can make, in a medical sense. There is just one thing that he does not understand.

He asks “Why, though? I understand how it works, but if it all works as you say then why doesn’t everybody live forever? And why would Ken keep coming here? Why wouldn’t the lonely just let themselves go?”

After releasing his questions, the student doctor shifts his weight from one foot to the other. This whole experience is strange to him.  He isn’t used to thinking about these things.

The experienced doctor does his best to respond. The experienced doctor also does his best to maintain his patience. Or, at the very least, to maintain the appearance of patience.

“Well, Ken is still very young, as are a lot of the lonely. At eighty years he is not at all ready to be old, and not at all ready to die. Ken, though has no family to care for him or to show him love.  Ken’s wife left a few months ago. And Ken’s grandparents will help to answer your other question. Only last year they decided, as many 743 year olds do, that they were satisfied with the span of their lives. So, they avoided each other’s touch for six weeks and quietly and happily died of old age. Very few people choose to live eternally, there is only so much time that a person can fill. And, in any case, those that choose to try to live eternally find that they become fully content with their lives no older than 1,000 anyway.  They then do what Ken’s grandparents did, they avoid touch and fade away.”

The two men are quiet for a little while. The student doctor is thinking about everything that he’s just learned. It’s a lot to take in, but it all makes sense. He repeats the gist of it to himself, in a steady way, inside his head. He likes to do this to make sure that he takes in what he has been told. The experienced doctor watches the student while he thinks.

When he is sure, the student says, “I understand.”

“Good.” Says the experienced doctor. “It is important to understand. No one wants to get old, and no one wants to die. It’s very impractical. But no one really wants to live forever. That’s impractical too.”