Where was I? Yes, the institute. I remember.
(Can?t you feel it dear townspeople? The deep freeze is near over. We?re rounding the curve of our perpetual orbit, slanting ever-gracefully towards the sun.)
Yes, my parents brought me to that dreadful building. There were no iron gates, no stone battlements, no twisted trees. The building was quite drab ? an office building masquerading as a hospital. No. It was a hive mixing the two things in equal parts. No, it was a prison. The people in the offices were inmates just as much as those in the rooms. It was a prison in the same way that a school is a prison by the very fact that it is an institution, and its institution-ness weighs on the minds of those dwelling within. Even those who work in an ?institution? of whatever sort, can?t escape the institution when they go home at night, because they carry the institution within their brains, informing their perceptions in institutional ways, so that a person ceases to be a person, but an extension of the institution to which they are affiliated. An institution thrives on discomfort, on unnatural colors. Within their walls, institutions create an alternate reality that has nothing to do with the reality outside. When one looks out from an institution, one does not see the world, but the world as seen from an institution. Institutional windows distort. For example, I remember looking out the window of my cell at people on fire. On fire, they walked down the street. On fire, they read flaming newspapers and boarded inferno-busses to work in four-alarm high-rises.
My mother and father followed me through the hallways, up to a doorway. Past that doorway I had to go alone, stepping through the door and onto the carpet of the head therapist. The doctor sat at a long mahogany desk that was for too big for his diminutive frame. He looked at me, adjusted his glasses and smiled.
?Hello son, don?t be afraid. My name?s doctor Wood. Please, take a seat.? The doctor waved a small graceful hand towards a leather chair, the arms of which were flaked and raw. It seemed that I was seated there instantly, as if that were my natural place. As I told him about the little man in the wall and his promise, my ministrations to the rats, my growing sadness; Dr. Wood nodded and took notes on a yellow pad. When I finally fell silent, he cleared his throat, stuffed the yellow pad in his top drawer, opened another, and withdrew a kerosene lamp. He snapped his fingers and the room went dark. The darkness arrived so unexpectedly that I did not have a chance to be surprised by it. After what seemed like a minute, but was probably much shorter - a span of time in which I floated outside of myself, an intermission where I comforted in my invisibility, entertaining thoughts of non-existence - a puff marked the striking of a match. I watched the tiny flame find its home within the glass-box lantern, watched it cover the wick in a smooth arc. A soft light seeped back into the office, and I saw Dr. Wood?s face shining like the moon. On the wall behind him was projected one of the most marvelous images I have ever seen?
But more on that later. The town?s silence begs me to sit at my window and stare at the empty corner and its marvelous spot of streetlight. Electricity, that sustaining flow of civilization, is with us again.