by: Kelvin A. R. King | Story In Progress | Last updated Jun 15, 2024
I’m
not going to lie, even though I hate the morning. I’m really a breakfast sort
of guy. On the
way downstairs, I notice the scent of fresh blueberries in the air. It smells
heavenly, and whatever we are having in this dream, I want some of it.
Still, I’m
a little miffed that she feels the need to carry me all the way downstairs, but
I can imagine it’s faster than I could walk down myself, as small as I am now. The
staircase is one of those winding ones, and I wonder if I’m in a mansion. I’ve
only ever seen something this grand in movies and pictures in magazines, never
in real life, so this dream might actually be really cool, aside from the baby
thing.
As we
got down the last step, I heard a guy call out to her, “Alysa? I’m in the
kitchen,” and I recognized this voice for sure. My heart is racing; I can feel
the beating in my chest. I feel like I’m trembling in anticipation.
Before
the woman, Alysa, even says his name, I already know the man is Isaiah, my
therapist. He looks so real, just like his dark skinned, Indo-Trinidadian self.
He’s a bit short for a guy, with a medium build, like a carbon copy of the guy.
Wow.
“Thanks honey,”
she says, “I brought Jason. He’s a little grumpy this morning.”
They
chat for a second while Alysa is putting me in the baby chair for breakfast,
and my eyes are glued to Isaiah. I can’t believe he’s in this dream, and I’m
having one of playing house with him and his wife. Looking closely, I think I’m
actually dreaming him – well them – up maybe a tad younger. This dream
clone talks like him with the same inflections and mannerisms and everything.
Oh my
god, I remember her too. I have met Alysa before at Isaiah’s office when I go
to therapy, sometimes she passes me in the waiting room, and every now and then
I say hi back. This dream is insane. I actually feel guilty for a minute. It’s
gotta be some kinda psychological thing that I’m having a fantasy of being my
therapist’s kid or something. I don’t even need to pay anyone to tell me I’m
fucked in the head. It’s obvious to me, and I don’t have a degree.
Isaiah
catches me staring at him dumbfounded, and he ducks to make eye contact with me
and smiles, “Are you ready to have some num-nums in your tum-tum?” he walks
over to my and pats my head.
I glare
at him, but I don’t say no. I actually am hungry, and I really want whatever
they are having that smells so good. I just wish they would stop talking to me
like that. I just haven’t really figured out how my new vocabulary works to
tell that to quit it.
Isaiah
doesn’t disappoint, and he delivers my breakfast to me. When he places the
plate on my table, I lick my lips, too ready to dig in. It’s gourmet food,
better than I ever had before: homemade pancakes, eggs and chopped up fruit. I
reach my hands for the food, and Isaiah immediately pulls the plate out of my
reach.
The hurt
must be visible on my face because Isaiah immediately says, “Don’t worry baby
boy, you’re gonna get your num-nums just now.”
I watch
sadly and silently as he cuts a piece of the pancake with his fork and knife before
holding it up to my mouth. For a moment, I decide if it’s worth my dignity to
eat like this. I’m already sitting in a baby chair in a stupid diaper being
subjected to incessant baby talk. Am I really willing to debase myself further?
Fuck it.
Yes, I am. That food smells absolutely amazing. I lean forward and take the
bite of food from the fork, savoring the textures and tastes as they flood my
senses. It’s amazing. I take bite after bite, and by the time we’re done, my
eyes are closed, and I feel so happy and content.
God,
this dream is so weird but oh so good. Before Isaiah sits to eat his own food,
he puts one of those little kid bottles on my table, I guess for me to drink
while they chat. Between sips, I listen to their conversation.
“It
looks like Jason really enjoyed his breakfast,” Alysa says and takes a sip of
her coffee. “I was planning on taking him to Dr. Alvarez for his boosters. Do
you want to come with?”
A
doctor? This dream is really taking this pretty far, but I’m not going to sweat
it. I’m not actually going to the doctor. I wonder if this is just one of those
lucid dreams people talk about where they are having really vivid dreams, but
they know that they are dreaming the whole time. Yeah, that’s what this is
like.
“I can’t,”
Isaiah says, and I can see how apologetic he looks, “I have a meeting with the
board that I can’t miss,” he runs a hand through his hair. “I’m sorry.”
“It’s
okay,” Alysa smiles, stands up and gives Isaiah a quick peck on the cheek while
she gathers the dishes, “It should be really routine, and I’ll get Jason a
little treat afterwards.”
I guess
while she’s washing the dishes, Isaiah’s job is to deal with me. So, he
unbuckles me from the kiddie seat and places me on the ground. I’m honestly a
little surprised since it’s my first time getting to walk on my own two feet. I
feel a little unsteady, but it’s doable if I concentrate on it.
Left.
Right. Left. I chant to myself for a little bit, and I’m enjoying pretending
I’m a soldier marching to war. I can hear the beat of the drums and the sound
of the trumpets. Before I know it, I’m humming bits and pieces of the marching
songs I know.
“I guess
someone wants to play pretend this morning,” I hear Isaiah say, and I’m taken
out of my stupor to focus back on him. Gnawing at me in the back of my mind, I
need to know what the fuck that was. Did I really start acting like a kid? But
first, I need to know if Isaiah knows that I’m not a little kid, especially not
his kid.
“I’m not
a baby,” I try to say, but it just comes out as “I no gebby.”
“No, you
aren’t,” Isaiah emphasizes, fixing my shirt. I know that he has no idea what I
was trying to say, and he’s just placating me like everyone does when they talk
to a little kid.
I growl
in frustration. Fine, I’ll make this as simple as I can for him. I point at
myself, and say, “I,” and then I say, “wike,” and I point at him and say, “Youh”
Isaiah
claps, smiling wide. “Aw my little boy is learning sentences,” he praises and
gives me a hug. “I like you too, baby boy”
I sigh. This
is so much harder than I thought it would be. I really don’t know want to say
to these people to get them to understand that I’m a baby. This dream has been
going on for so long, so I guess the point of it is to figure out how to tell
them I’m a grown up and then it will be over.
Isaiah
sits me down to watch some TV. He turns on some baby show and leaves the remote
in the middle of the coffee table. He goes back to the kitchen, I guess to help
Alysa finish the cleanup from breakfast. I sit cross-legged on the floor
watching the show. One minute into it, I’m bored to death. It’s one of those tv
shows where they are teaching letters and numbers.
I stand
up, careful not to lose my balance and reach over the table to reach the
remote. It’s hard since it’s in the middle, and I have to stand up on my tiptoes
to reach it. I grab it and I start channel flipping until I get to something
fun. I got to the sports channel, and there’s MMA fighting on.
It’s a
good match. The guy who’s winning really seems to have a lot of energy, even
though it looks like it’s the latter half of the fight. I feel bad for that
other guy; he’s really taking a beating. I’m surprised he’s managing to stay in
the fight. The guy in red finally gets the other in a chokehold, and just when
the count starts, I hear Alysa shout, “Isaiah! Did you put Jason to watch MMA
fighting?” she takes the remote out of my hand and immediately shuts the TV
off.
Isaiah
comes back to the living room, “Of course not,” he looks over to me and back to
Alysa, “He must have changed the channel on his own.”
“We
talked about the screen time thing, Isaiah,” Alysa says, taking me by the hand
and leading me towards the back door, “He needs free play to facilitate
age-appropriate development.”
“Yes
honey, you’re right,” Isaiah says, following behind us. Isaiah gives a nervous
chuckle. “I forgot, but I promise I’ll try to be more proactive about it,” he
skips ahead of us, and slides open the back door.
This is
one of those things that’s the weirdest part of everyone treating me like a
baby. I don’t really get much of a say in anything. First, they take away my TV
at the best part, and now I’m being taken outside when I didn’t even sign up
for this.
Alysa
leads me over to a small sandbox in the yard, lifts me in and sits me next to a
bucket. She hands me a shovel and says, “Now, you play in here,” she kisses me
on the forehead and turns to walk inside.
I can
hear Alysa and Isaiah talking some more, but I can really make out what they
are chatting about. The walls of the sandbox are high enough that I can’t climb
out easily. Great. Now, I’m stuck outside until they decide to come get me.
At
first, I lie down on the sand and look up at the sky. It’s a warm day, but
there’s a little wind so it’s a bearable heat. I wonder if we’re actually still
in Florida in this dream. I lose myself for a little while just relaxing and
looking at the blue sky with whitish streaks. When I sit up again, I can still
see Alysa in the house, and it looks like she’s cleaning up. I don’t see
Isaiah, so they must have finished their talk.
I crawl
over to where the bucket is, and while I was shoveling some sand out of sheer
boredom, an idea hits me. Why don’t I just draw in the sand to tell them that
I’m not a baby. I think I can still spell just fine! I carefully crawl over to
one side of the sandbox, and I start etching into the sand, “Help, I’m an
adult.”
It takes
a lot of work because my motor skills aren’t the best as a baby. I’ve got to
steady myself with both hands to make the correct shapes with good indentations
in the sand. When I’m almost done and starting on the word, adult, I start to
notice that I really need to pee. I stop immediately, and I sit down. I try
really hard to hold it, like I close my eyes and everything because I can’t
believe this is really about to happen. It feels like I’ve just run a mile on a
gallon of water. Fuck, I really need to pee.
I try
waving towards Alysa to maybe get her attention so she can help me, and she
never makes eye contact with me. You would think they would pay more attention
to a little kid they left outside, but nope; they just ignore me. I curl into
myself to desperately try to hold it. I close my eyes to concentrate as hard as
I can. Ugh, please no. I’m 20 years old; I can’t pee my pants.
Oh god
it’s happening. I can’t stop it.
Jason's Journey
by: Kelvin A. R. King | Story In Progress | Last updated Jun 15, 2024
Stories of Age/Time Transformation