A - Kind Of Madness Dthrip Better

Yesterday, I rearranged the salt and pepper shakers on my kitchen table forty-three times. Not consecutively. Throughout the day. I would walk past, see that the pepper was on the left, and feel a small, exquisite violence in my chest. So I'd swap them. Then, ten minutes later, the salt would look wrong on the right. Swap again. By the sixth swap, I wasn't sure which arrangement I actually wanted. By the twelfth, I realized: there is no correct arrangement. The Hum knows this. It is not trying to help me find order. It is trying to exhaust me into a scream.

By Dthrip The first time I noticed it, I was buttering toast. The butter was too cold. The knife caught a crumb. The crumb fell onto the linoleum. I stared at that crumb for seventeen seconds. Not because I was counting. But because something behind my eyes had begun to count everything. a kind of madness dthrip

For three hours.

That is the kind of madness I mean: the kind that looks like diligence. The kind that wears a collared shirt and pays its bills on time and never misses a dental appointment. The kind that smiles at the pharmacist and says, "Just the usual," while inside, a tiny, furious god is rearranging the vowels in the word refrigerator to see if it spells anything ominous. Yesterday, I rearranged the salt and pepper shakers