The Artist Exists and Creates. Period.
Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall

The Artist Exists and Creates. Period.

For the average American, the creation and performance of art is something Someone Else Does and yet another thing to be consumed rather than experienced. This is why it is so easy to buy into the premise that, in order to justify the existence of the artist in society, it is necessary to either demonstrate that the art entertains the largest number of people or provides some quantifiable service to those in need. 

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Best to Swim More Graciously
Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall

Best to Swim More Graciously

If you want me to hear your story, you must agree to hear mine—that's the exchange. Does it surprise you that if you bark your rage in my face that I stop listening? Does it shock you that if you tell me to shut up and just listen without the humility necessary to hear my tale, that I'm not interested or moved?

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Financing Disappointment
David Himmel, Fiction David Himmel David Himmel, Fiction David Himmel

Financing Disappointment

At that moment, Lou had eight thousand-five hundred dollars to his name. Give or take the few bucks from his unemployment checks that would be left after trying to pay his credit card bills. Looking at the bank statement, it felt good having all of that money staring back at him. He didn’t want to ever spend it. But it was already as good as gone.

Lou drove to Goldberg Jewelers in Skokie and bought Michelle’s eight thousand-sixty-four dollar engagement ring.

“Congratulations,” said Art, shaking Lou’s hand.

“Thanks.”

In the parking lot by his car, Lou threw up.

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Why You Were Blocked (Instead of Beaten on the Street with a Baseball Bat)
Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall

Why You Were Blocked (Instead of Beaten on the Street with a Baseball Bat)

We are evolved. We can simply press our mouse or trackpad as it hovers over a blue box on the screen and BLOCK people.

At this point, my Facebook and Twitter BLOCK list is as long as my right forearm because it is just easier to BLOCK you than to come find you and hurl epithets that let you know exactly how I feel about you. BLOCKING is facile when compared to an open-palm slap.

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Notes from the Post-it Wall — Week of August 6, 2017
David Himmel, Post-It Wall Notes David Himmel David Himmel, Post-It Wall Notes David Himmel

Notes from the Post-it Wall — Week of August 6, 2017

• I think that the best thing for all of us—this global community—is a nuclear war. It’ll remind us—those of us who are left—how devastating the nuclear option is. It’s been too long since anyone witnessed the destruction the Bomb wields and as a result, we’ve become desensitized to it, which is exactly why the two chubby children think it’s fun to throw threats of a fiery endgame around. So yeah, bring down the fury of hot hell. Maybe it’ll knock some sense into us. Bonus: I won’t have to worry about paying my quarterly taxes next time around.

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Music Machine
Mike Vinopal Mike Vinopal Mike Vinopal Mike Vinopal

Music Machine

In some ways, I am the luckiest guy in this fair city of approximately three million.  I have had the pleasure & the honor of playing my music on some of Chicago’s finest stages.  I have gotten to relish in this electric feeling surrounded by various permutations of the incredibly talented friends I keep so close.  

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I Will Back Down
Chris Churchill Chris Churchill Chris Churchill Chris Churchill

I Will Back Down

I am not concerned with being right on every single thing that spews out of my mouth or from these typing fingers. I usually don’t like to dig in. If you come after me in a comment section, I will read the comments. I will read your comments and the next guy’s comments and the next guy’s comments and this might go on for a while. Then I might get tired and play guitar for a while instead. Maybe I’ll hang out with my wife. Or maybe I’ll wash the dishes. Or maybe take a nap…you know, let the old subconscious straighten out my feelings before I come back.  Sometimes it takes a lot to back down. But, I assure you, I can do it.

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The Lies We Tell (and The Blanket Acceptance of Them)
Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall

The Lies We Tell (and The Blanket Acceptance of Them)

"We're all such a pack of liars," he said at one point. "We go to some show that we think stinks and afterward we tell them 'Good show!' as if these people don't already know their show stinks. We lie to each other all the time."

He was right. We do constantly lie to each other and then we accept these lies because we're supposed to—as if by lying and accepting the bullshit, we are providing grease to the friction of social grace. We lie and acquiesce to the lie because it makes us feel better.

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The Choice to Participate in the Soup of Offensive Ideas Makes You Stronger
Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall

The Choice to Participate in the Soup of Offensive Ideas Makes You Stronger

At this point, most people have heard my tale of my early days as a homophobic dickface who, when confronted by a close friend who happened to be gay, worked through the fear and loathing to become a more decent human being (or at least a less monstrous, bigoted one).

I'm glad for the experience because it taught me a couple of things that have stuck over the years:
• Bigots can change if they want to.
• Lectures from strangers about tolerance are trumped by the disdain of someone you love.
• College is a place where being a stupid jackass who then learns to be a more educated jackass is the point.

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Dog Day — A Dystopian Story
Fiction Guest User Fiction Guest User

Dog Day — A Dystopian Story

To combat a rabies epidemic, Chicago of the near future decides to enforce "Dog Day," whereby owners are forced to unleash their pets for 24 hours. The events of the day are seen thru the juxtaposition of animal and owner.

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Wanna Try a Radical Experiment?
Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall

Wanna Try a Radical Experiment?

There once was a boy. He was a boy born of privilege but also of extremely poor health. A rich, sickly boy. Temporarily blinded as a child, a stomach condition that left him in pain most days, back pains that would persist his entire life. It being the late 1800’s, the medical profession was less than helpful.

As he grew older, his health got worse and he began to struggle with depression and thoughts of suicide.  Because his father was wealthy and had influence, he was enrolled into Harvard Medical College. Willing to try anything rather than live as a suicidal invalid, he signed up for an anthropological expedition to the Amazon rainforest. He contracted small pox in the jungle and nearly died.  

The young man managed to return home to a disappointed father, nearly 30 years old, still unemployed, a failure at everything he had ever attempted, with a body that betrayed him and wasn’t likely to ever get better. Despite every advantage and opportunity he had been given in life, he had failed them all. The only constants in his life seemed to be suffering and disappointment. The man fell into a deep depression and planned to take his own life.

But first he decided to try one last thing before biting on a pistol.

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Gaps In Humanity
J.L. Thurston Jenni Thurston J.L. Thurston Jenni Thurston

Gaps In Humanity

We all know the generation war has raged for as long as there have been generations to fight it. But with times changing rapidly and trends flickering by like flashes of lightning, it is becoming easier to separate generations into opposing tribes.

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Tell Them One Thousand-and-One Times and Then Change Your Tactic
Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall Don Hall

Tell Them One Thousand-and-One Times and Then Change Your Tactic

If you were watching that parent scream at his child, you might suggest he try another tactic rather than hostility and demands. You might suggest that another approach to his child might bear a more fruitful result. You might suggest that his frustration and rage, while perhaps completely justified, is not achieving the result he wants. And, sure, he might tell you to stick it up your ass but at least you tried.

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