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Monday, July 23, 2007 

Clone story 6

I have a snippet from one source today:

'Clones Make Good Sense', a treatise on Normatives in Creative Production
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by Ed Cris

When the Our Lady (Paula Undergreg) wrote "I don't think I need to tell you, clones make good sense" in the Summer of our Seventh Year, the congregations of aware producers throughout the world realized after much deliberation that she was right -- she did not need to tell us; we knew it already. And it is in the knowing that so many of our practitioners succeed before trying. Thus the Pre-Try movement was born. We [they] immortalize those moments found before making attempts in the fashion agreed upon by scholarly authorities. Like cultures of bygone days, we make divine our smaller mysteries. A clone is more than an extension of one's self. It is a whole self. The idea of the Whole in iterative reality is not new to scholarly authorities or general producers. But even the Our Lady (Paula Undergreg) would be bemused by its use today. She saw clones as benevolent catalysts of sense magic. And intrinsic in her terms were aspects of extension and piece-oriented architecture. Wholeness would seem to negate the moment. Today we are less bloodless in our interaction. We [not they] compromise, seeking to coalesce the piece with the whole and in-so-doing, honor the Our Lady (Paula Undergreg) and perhaps amuse her a little. We hope the corners of her mouth are turned upward just-so, revealing depressed dimples, that her eyes betray feelings of some mirth, and that her teeth become unbridled and bared - their even whiteness an anathema.