Paul Enns Wiebe
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from Just Another Dead White Male

11/8/2021

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She buzzed around the patient, dressed in a tiny pink pant suit, armed with a line of floss. 

“Open wide,” she sang.

He opened wide.

S
he accidentally rubbed up against him.

​He flinched.

​“Relax, Rabbi Scheinblum,” she said gaily. “I’m not going to hurt you. That’s Dr. Digby’s job.”

He flinched again.

“Just kidding,” she reassured him. “My job is to take your mind off the coming pain.”

A major flinch. 

She ignored this response and launched into her assignment. One of the questions she’d been asking people as she flossed them up for Dr. Digby was, what did they like best about Kirkland? If they were to name her the one thing they liked best about living in Kirkland, Kansas, one thing and one thing only, what would that one thing be? 

They’d been saying it’s a nice conservative town. Still too much crime in the streets, maybe, and it was getting a little too big, in terms of population, but basically it was still a nice conservative town, knock on wood. They’d been mentioning the friendliness of the people. They’d been saying Kirkland was the kind of a place where family values were allowed to shine through, which accounted for the friendliness. They’d also been saying it was a big happy church-going community where everybody was free to go to the religion of his own choice and there were no Liberals—she guessed that maybe now they were called Socialists (this brought an indisputable flinch)—and very, very few atheists, just a few scraggly professors out at the University, and nobody paid any attention to them anyway, except for maybe a few Sophomores, who’d grow out of it just about the time they started applying for jobs in the appliance department at Best Buy. 
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from Dancing Over the Rays of Light

11/5/2021

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As for the possibility that I had once been a pet, I dismissed it on the grounds that it would require the workings of either reincarnation or metamorphosis, neither of which I believed in, being, as I supposed after having looked long and steadily at the portrait of Jesus, a Christian. But as I further supposed from the fact that I had already entertained the possibility of a committee of Higher Beings, I was doubtless a Christian of the backslidden variety.

Next I turned my attention to the second conjecture, that I was now, or had once been, a child. The first possibility, that I was now a child, was easy to dispose of. My reasoning was that though it is possible for a precocious child to translate French into eloquent English, I had to admit that I was not a member of that class. Well above average, certainly, but not a child prodigy. The latter possibility, that I had once been a child, could not be dismissed so readily: I might be an amnesiac. After some meditation on this possibility, I set the issue in a far corner of my mind, where it might later serve as a working hypothesis.

This left me with the third conjecture, that I was, or had once been, a senior citizen.

If I had once been a senior citizen, I reasoned, then something must have happened to me in the intervening period. That “something” must have involved a change. And that change was either (1) a transmigration, (2) a metamorphosis, or (3) a death.

As for the first two possibilities, I had already concluded that they did not apply, at least in my case; because being a Christian, though admittedly of the backslidden variety, I believed in neither transmigration nor metamorphosis.

​As for the possibility that the change had been (3) death, I discarded it on the grounds that I was still alive, evidenced by the fact that I had recently reached over and shut off my alarm device. What is more, in the Christian view of things, I must thus be in either (a) heaven or (b) hell or, in the Catholic repertoire of endings, (c) purgatory.

Considering the fact that my surroundings were generally of an inferior quality, I concluded that I was not in heaven. Considering the fact that my feet were presumably cold, I was not in hell. And considering the fact that my walls were not adorned with an icon of the Virgin Mother, I was not in purgatory.

​Having refuted the supposition that I had once been a senior citizen, I turned my attention to the remaining possibility, namely, that I was now a senior citizen. 

I ran my fingers over my face and discovered wrinkles. Exploring further, I found those wrinkles to be deep. “Aha,” I informed myself, “I’m old!” I ran my fingers over other parts of my body and found that I had no breasts. A hypothesis formed in my mind. My fingers kept exploring. Soon my hypothesis was confirmed: I was a man. I conflated my two discoveries and concluded that I was an old man. Then, after a long interval of exploration, I found that, though I was an old man, my male parts were in satisfactory if not superior working order.

This latter discovery gave me the courage to sit up and place my legs over the edge of the bed. I noted a cane leaning against the near wall and took this as a sign that my powers of locomotion were on the wane. I speculated that this was a result of an old football injury. I reached out, grasped the cane, inspected it, and found it to be polished and sturdy. It was also of a high quality, as evidenced by its gilt handle, which resembled the head of a duck.
I eased myself off the bed and slowly stood up to determine which of my limbs required this aid. Strangely, I felt no pain. In fact, a quick examination showed that my powers of mobility were approximately adequate. Why, then, the cane?

After giving this matter additional thought, I came to recall the Aristotelian principle that there is a reason for everything. Therefore, there was a reason for the cane. A cane, I continued, is designed to aid a person in the act of walking. This aid is required if and only if there is an impediment. That impediment must be a bad hip. Old football injuries that affect one’s powers of locomotion commonly involve a hip. Therefore, I concluded, the purpose of my cane was to aid me in moving about despite my ailing hip. 
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from my novel, Dancing Over the Rays of Light

11/4/2021

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from Sacred Books & Sky Hooks

11/3/2021

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Mother’s plan for Jean-Pierre’s life had not gone well. At a certain stage in her spiritual odyssey, she had decided that her beloved son would do well as a Presbyterian pastor. He’d balked at the idea, insisting that he was on his own quest. This, he said, had started while he was preparing for the rite of confirmation featured in that version of Christianity. He shared with me the secrets that he’d spent short stints as a Taoist, a Buddhist monk, a late-to-the-game Hare Krishna, an unwholesome mix of American cults, a peace-loving Muslim, and an adherent of several of the apocalyptic sects that periodically raise their horrid heads. And these were only the ones he’d told me about. In our last pre-Summum conversation, he’d confided that his current goal was to become a Hindu guru meditating in a mountaintop cave while, I supposed, muttering sacred words and enjoying the view.
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another bit from Crazy Were We in the Head

11/2/2021

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The first thing you noticed about Abe Hamm, besides the fact that he’d show up in church sporting a bright orange tie under his striped bib overalls and hadn’t gotten around to shaving that morning, was that he was a lover of life. It’s not that he wasn’t religious; it’s just that he could hardly wait to get up in the morning and spread some joy around the place. This would sometimes get him in Dutch with Tante Anna, who could easily be embarrassed, being a Reisender born and bred. He’d say something a bit out of the orthodox, like, “If Jesus was around, I bet you anything he’d be the life of the party.”
She’d tut-tut and sigh and shake her head and say, “Abe, Abe.”
He’d grin like a little kid out from under that ring of electric reddish-grey hair and repeat, “Yessir, the life of the party.”
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    Picture

    Paul Enns Wiebe perpetually asks himself, "What do I want to write when I grow up?"

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