Thursday, November 14, 2019
Trapped in the Darkness Essay -- Papers
 Trapped in the Darkness       It's dark, indescribably dark. Usually there's moonlight, artificial     light, starlight, something, but not here; there's nothing. I try to     move, but I am restrained. I listen, but I hear nothing. I smell but I     smell only something clinical. If it wasn't for my heart pounding and     my lungs racing to catch up, I might imagine I am dreaming, but I'm     not. I'm not!       I fearfully reach out with my right hand and, afraid of what I might     find, I try to resist the temptation to clench my fist. With each     centimetre I stretch comes a new level of terror. I reach further and     further, shivering in anticipation of what I might find. Shivering     allows me to feel the clothes I'm wearing and bringing with it the     frightening realisation that I'm not wearing the jeans and shirt I was     last night. I'm dressed in something quite different.       I bring my hand back, from its outward reach, to touch my waist: it     feels like a jacket. I slide it up to my neck. I feel fabric: it's a     bowtie. I'm in a suit. I rarely wear suits. Reluctantly I force my     hand to resume its search for a clue to where I am. It's an     unspeakable dread, not to know what I might find. I reach out my hand.     Thud. It hits something. I hesitantly stroke the face of the object     that it met. I reach out in another direction. Thud. And then I reach     out in another. Thud. Increasingly alarmed by this feeling of being     trapped I rub the surfaces with my hand, hoping they will yield some     clue to my situation. I feel all around me, but it's futile. My sense     of desperation mounts.       Realising that senses alone won't help me I try to remember what I did     last night. It was my bi...              ...ain. There is a slight jolt and I'm stationary. Thank God! There's a     low hum, like the hum of machinery, and I'm moving again, but not     rocking this time. This time the movement seems quite linear, and as I     begin to relaxà ¢Ã¢â ¬Ã ¦       There is a roar, like the roar of a furnace which causes my heart to     quicken, my lungs to race and my mind to panic. Tiring of this     torture, I just want it to end. It's hot. My God it's hot! I begin to     perspire; the air thins and I gasp for oxygen. My feet blaze, and     suddenly I realise that this is no nightmare; this is no illusion. I     scream in agony. Aware of the inferno approaching my feet, I start to     convulse, fitting in a futile effort to break free from my constraint.     Flames rupture the coffin that restrains me, and the foul smell of     burning flesh is masked by the inevitability of death.                            Trapped in the Darkness Essay -- Papers   Trapped in the Darkness       It's dark, indescribably dark. Usually there's moonlight, artificial     light, starlight, something, but not here; there's nothing. I try to     move, but I am restrained. I listen, but I hear nothing. I smell but I     smell only something clinical. If it wasn't for my heart pounding and     my lungs racing to catch up, I might imagine I am dreaming, but I'm     not. I'm not!       I fearfully reach out with my right hand and, afraid of what I might     find, I try to resist the temptation to clench my fist. With each     centimetre I stretch comes a new level of terror. I reach further and     further, shivering in anticipation of what I might find. Shivering     allows me to feel the clothes I'm wearing and bringing with it the     frightening realisation that I'm not wearing the jeans and shirt I was     last night. I'm dressed in something quite different.       I bring my hand back, from its outward reach, to touch my waist: it     feels like a jacket. I slide it up to my neck. I feel fabric: it's a     bowtie. I'm in a suit. I rarely wear suits. Reluctantly I force my     hand to resume its search for a clue to where I am. It's an     unspeakable dread, not to know what I might find. I reach out my hand.     Thud. It hits something. I hesitantly stroke the face of the object     that it met. I reach out in another direction. Thud. And then I reach     out in another. Thud. Increasingly alarmed by this feeling of being     trapped I rub the surfaces with my hand, hoping they will yield some     clue to my situation. I feel all around me, but it's futile. My sense     of desperation mounts.       Realising that senses alone won't help me I try to remember what I did     last night. It was my bi...              ...ain. There is a slight jolt and I'm stationary. Thank God! There's a     low hum, like the hum of machinery, and I'm moving again, but not     rocking this time. This time the movement seems quite linear, and as I     begin to relaxà ¢Ã¢â ¬Ã ¦       There is a roar, like the roar of a furnace which causes my heart to     quicken, my lungs to race and my mind to panic. Tiring of this     torture, I just want it to end. It's hot. My God it's hot! I begin to     perspire; the air thins and I gasp for oxygen. My feet blaze, and     suddenly I realise that this is no nightmare; this is no illusion. I     scream in agony. Aware of the inferno approaching my feet, I start to     convulse, fitting in a futile effort to break free from my constraint.     Flames rupture the coffin that restrains me, and the foul smell of     burning flesh is masked by the inevitability of death.                              
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