I don't like Mondays - a song lingering on the periphery of my memory, and I'm not sure who sung it.
But it's official, I don't like Mondays.
I've been procrastinating since last Thursday, telling myself I have to get the next part of one of my stories written, but I keep putting it off. I'm not sure why but it always seems like this, and I have to force myself to sit in front of the computer screen, and come up with the goods.
I didn't do anything on Sunday, and, as a writer, I guess that's not very good. I'm supposed to be writing a page, or a hundred or thousand words a day, just to keep the juices flowing.
I'm not in the mood. I sit and stare at the computer screen, and nothing is coming. Is this the first sign of writer's block?
I dig out several articles on how to overcome it and start putting their suggestions into action. No. No. Maybe. No. I don't think it's writer's block.
Perhaps I need some inspiration so I go to my tablet playlist, spend 10 minutes trying to find the headphones that were carelessly discarded on a seat that had a lot of other stuff on it, by one of my grandchildren the last time they were here.
And, yes, the tablet was left in the middle of playing a Minecraft video which has drained the battery. Now I can't find the charger!
Back at the computer, holding a dead tablet, and a pair of headphones, inspiration is as far away as the mythical light at the end of the tunnel. Today perhaps it will be an oncoming express train.
Perhaps a pen and paper will work.
An idea pops into my head...
...
Is it possible the passing of a weekend could change the course of your life?
An interesting question, one to ponder as I sat on the floor of a concrete cell, with only the sound of my breathing, and the incessant screams coming from a room at the end of the corridor.
It was my turn next. That was what the grinning ape of a guard said in broken English. He looked like a man who relished his job.
What goes through your mind at a time like this, waiting, waiting for the inevitable? Will I survive, what will they do to me, will it hurt?
The screaming stops abruptly, and a terrible silence falls over the facility.
Then, looking in the direction of where the screams had come from, I hear the clunk of the door latch being opened, and then the slow nerve-tingling screech of rusty metal as the door opens slowly.
Oh God, Oh God, Oh God, no.
....
No writer's block. But I have to stop watching late-night television.
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