Chapter 12: The Paralysis of Possibility
Michael woke up. It was not because of the alarm, nor because of the sun. It was because of the echo of a phrase in his head.
"You're not alone."
The first thing he did, before he even got up, was to pick up the phone. He opened SoundCloud. The comment was still there. He read it again. And again.
A smile was drawn on his face. A real smile, not the ironic grimace he'd grown accustomed to. One Hundred Points of Impact. A comment. One person. It was all I needed.
He got out of bed with an energy he hadn't felt since he came into this universe. He no longer felt like a ghost. He felt like an artist.
He went to his makeshift studio, made himself a coffee, and sat down in front of his laptop. The air in the room felt different. It was no longer a cell of frustration. It was his workshop.
With renewed confidence, he invoked the System. The neon cyan interface appeared, familiar and strangely comforting. On the corner, he saw his new balance: 100 PI. It wasn't much, but it was tangible proof. The system worked.
'Okay,' he thought. 'What's next?'
With a thought, he opened his inventory. Holographic covers floated in front of him, a menu of possibilities. They no longer looked intimidating. They looked like tools. Weapons.
He was motivated. The victory with "Ghost Boy" had shown him that he could do it. I could take those guidelines, that pain, and turn them into something real. Something that connected.
He leaned forward, studying the covers, feeling a surge of creative power. The world was silent. It was time to make more noise.
…..
The ten holographic covers floated in front of him, a menu of possible futures. They were no longer intimidating; they were an arsenal. But having an arsenal and knowing what weapon to use were two very different things.
His gaze fell first on Runaway. He felt its weight, its complexity. The single-note piano melody. The three-minute outro outro. A cold and logical voice in his head spoke instantly.
'No way. Not yet.'
He looked away from her. He was too small, inexperienced and unknown to release that song. It would be sacrilege to try now. He discarded it without hesitation.
'Okay. So which one?'
His mind began to analyze the other options, not only because of their titles, but also because of their sounds, their textures.
He looked at the "Drugs You Should Try It" guide. I remembered it perfectly. It wasn't a song; it was an atmosphere. A journey.
'I could do that one,' he thought. 'It would be a production challenge. The beat is super atmospheric, it's all about the layers of synthesizers and the use of auto-tune as an instrument, not a corrector. It would show that I'm not just a guy with a guitar.' But doubt assailed him. 'Is it too early? Too experimental? The people who connected with "Ghost Boy" might not understand it.'
His gaze jumped to another option, one that represented the opposite end of the spectrum: "Paris" from $uicideboy$.
The memory of that song was dark and threatening. The atmosphere was oppressive, the 808 bass sounded like an end-of-the-world alarm, and the lyrics... they were pure nihilistic aggression.
'Or I could go this way. To send everything to hell. It would be a statement. Pure raw energy.' But the risk was evident. 'It's too dark. It could scare people. They might think I'm just another screaming rapper.'
Frustrated, he returned to the safer options. His gaze fell on Ghost Girl.
'It makes sense. "Ghost Boy", then "Ghost Girl". I continue with the theme of the ghost. I create a brand.' But it felt... predictable. 'What if I pigeonhole myself? What if people think I can only do that?'
She closed the "Ghost Girl" guide with a thought. Their attention was diverted to Star Shopping and Life Is Beautiful. Guitar melodies, melancholy.
'The tone. People liked the tone. Maybe I should give them more of that.' But again, doubt. 'Is it too early to repeat myself? It would look like I'm a one-trick pony.'
They were all good options. And that was the root of the problem. Each path was valid, each one would lead him to a different place. And for that reason, he could not decide.
He got up from his chair and began to walk around the small room, over and over again. He felt paralyzed by freedom. The motivation of the morning had turned into crippling anxiety.
He opened a blank project in Ableton. He stared at the empty screen. The cursor blinked, waiting for an order he didn't know how to give.
The joy of having connected with someone had transformed into the pressure not to disappoint. And that pressure had left him completely blocked.
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
Michael was leaning against the wall of his studio, staring at Ableton's blank screen. He felt completely blocked. The motivation of the morning had evaporated, leaving only cold anxiety.
His phone, which was on the desk, vibrated. A message. He ignored it.
A minute later, it vibrated again, this time with the insistence of a call. The name "Jake" appeared on the screen. With a sigh of annoyance, he answered.
"What's wrong?"
Jake's voice burst into the receiver, loud and full of energy, a brutal contrast to the silence of the room. "Gray! What are you up to? Don't tell me you're locked in your cave of sadness again."
Michael didn't answer.
"Listen," Jake continued, "there's a massive party going on at the Sigma Chi fraternity house tonight. That of the university. It's going to be crazy. You have to come."
Michael's first instinct was to refuse. 'No. I have to work. I have to choose a song.'
"I don't know, Jake. I have to work on something," he said, his voice a murmur with no energy.
"Brother, you've been working non-stop for months. Take a night off. We'll pick you up at ten o'clock." And before Michael could protest, Jake hung up.
Michael put the phone down on the desk. He looked at the empty screen of his laptop. The cursor was blinking, waiting. The silence of his house suddenly felt oppressive.
He remembered the last party. The noise. The disconnection. The encounter with Clara in the backyard. The escape.
He realized that forcing creativity wasn't working. He was going around in circles, drowning in his own options.
Maybe Jake was right. Perhaps what he needed was not more silence to think, but more noise to stop thinking.
He picked up the phone again and wrote Jake a message, surprising himself.
"Okay. I agree to go. I need to clear my head for a while."
Jake's response was instantaneous. A simple emoji of a muscular arm.
Michael smiled for the first time in hours. I didn't know if the party would help. But at least, it was something different. It was a plan. And at that moment, a plan was all I needed.
…..
A few hours later, the daylight had completely faded. Night had fallen, and with it, a decision.
Michael sat down in his study. He stared at Ableton's blank screen. I no longer felt the pressure to fill it. Not tonight.
With a methodical movement, he put the empty project away. He called it no_title_blocked.als. Then, he closed Ableton Live. He turned off the studio monitors, the soft click of the switches a sound of finality. Finally, he picked up a small cloth bag and carefully covered the Neumann microphone. I was closing the workshop at night.
He left the room and closed the door, leaving behind the silence of his creative space.
He went to his bedroom. He took off the worn-out hoodie and sweatpants he wore to be at home, his work uniform. She put on a pair of dark jeans and a clean black hoodie. He put on his low sneakers. It was his armor for the outside world.
He looked at himself in the mirror. The same tired boy looked back at him, but now there was a different purpose in his eyes. It was not the gaze of the creator, it was that of the observer.
He was standing by the front door, keys in hand, when he heard the sound of a horn from the street. It was Jake.
He opened the back porch door and stepped out into the cool night. He sat down on the step and lit his last cigarette. Smoke swirled in the cold air, visible under the dim light of the porch. He didn't think about music. He didn't think about his options. He simply watched as the embers of the cigarette slowly burned.
The horn sounded again, this time more impatient.
Michael took one last drag and extinguished the cigarette butt against the concrete.
'Okay. Let's see what happens.'
He got up, opened the front door, and plunged into the night, leaving behind the silence of his study and the paralysis of his decisions.
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A/N
Hello everyone!
Sorry for not uploading a chapter yesterday, I've been very busy.
Today I will upload 2 chapters to make up for yesterday's.
Remember that you can follow me on Patreon and subscribe to read advanced chapters of this and other fanfics.
I would like to know what you think of the fic, what you would change, if it goes too fast, slow, etc. I read your comments.
Mike.
@Patreon/iLikeeMikee
