by: Kelvin A. R. King | Story In Progress | Last updated Jun 15, 2024
Jason wakes up in a nursery with no memory of the night before.
Waking
up is always the shittiest part of the day for me. In that moment before I open my
eyes, the disorientation is nauseating. I don’t feel like myself. I don’t know where
I am. Most of the time, I don’t even know who I am.
It’s not
like I want to wake up that much. I don’t have anyone or really anything. I’ve
got my tiny studio apartment and just a few pieces of furniture. I don’t really
have any friends or family that’s going to miss me, not even a pet. I guess
really my therapist is probably going to be looking for me. I mean he’s legally
obligated to, but deep down I do know he is the only one that really cares.
I’m that
depressed and lonely guy that everyone glances at once, feels sorry for, and
then averts their eyes until I’m no longer in view. I don’t even blame them.
I’m never really put together anymore, not after getting kicked out of college.
I bet I smell too because sometimes I don’t remember to shower before going to
find food somewhere.
I know
I’m just 20, but I really think that I’ve figured out the truth to life and
society. Success is just luck. Some people manage to wake up with parents who
give a crap about them, help them make the right choices, and all that happened
is that in the womb, they just won the lucky ticket.
They
won, and I didn’t.
Okay, I’m
done thinking about this crap. I’ve got to get up and get something to eat. I’m
fucking starving. When I roll over on my side and stretch, my body feels weird.
I crack open an eye, and nothing is making sense. I’m surrounded by wooden
bars, and I’m in one of those rooms fancy people have for little kids. There are
tons of toys of all different shapes, sizes and colors on the shelves and all
kinds of furniture placed around the room.
Where
the fuck am I?
My ears
are ringing, and I can feel the panic building in my chest. I pull back the
blanket covering my body, and nothing could have prepared me for this. My
entire body is the size of a kids. My shaking hands are smaller and chubbier. I
don’t even remember ever being this small. Even my clothes are my size too. I’m
dressed in some blue pajamas that zip up in the front, like this was bought right
out of one of those baby sections in the store.
I sit
up, and the first thing I notice is how unsteady I feel, like more than the
usual disorientation in the morning. It’s like my movements are sloppy and
uncoordinated. I flex my toes, and even that feels out of sorts. I stand up,
and before I can even fully put my weight on my legs, I topple over and land on
a pillow face first.
I sigh
with relief because my face was so close to smashing into the wooden bars, and
I know how much that would hurt for the next week. Well, I guess that’s assuming
this whole thing is real because I’m honestly not fully convinced. I try to
stand again, and this time I hold onto the wooden bars for support. Peering
over into the room, it all seems so surreal. They’ve got framed posters and shit.
Like these people have got to be making really good money, because I’ve never
seen a kid’s room so well stocked like this–not even in movies.
Next
thing I know, the door opens, and a woman comes walking in. Her black hair is
pulled back into a ponytail, and she’s obviously of Hispanic descent, average
height for a woman, with a medium build. I swear I’ve seen her before, but I
honestly have no idea where or when that was. She’s smiling at me, and as soon
as she reaches the crib, she pats me on the head and rubs at my back. It’s like
she can sense my distress or something. I wonder if she knows whatever is going
on and maybe she will fill me in.
“What
the hell is going on?” I ask, or at least try to. Because nonsensical babble
spews out of my mouth instead. Like even I hear it, and I have no idea what the
fuck is happening. I know for sure I’m trying to talk, and it’s not coming out
right. I don’t have a speech disorder. Did I have a stroke or something?
“What is
happening to me?” I try again, and all that comes out of my mouth is, “Wa-up-me?”
It’s
like I can’t talk properly, and for a second it looks like she’s listening
intently and maybe she understands what I’m trying to say.
“Does
the little Jason want some breakfast? Are you hungry for some num-nums in your
belly?” she reaches over and rubs at my belly, and I am just stunned.
No. There’s
no way any of this is real. It’s illogical. It’s impossible, and yet she
knows my name. I still feel the aching pain in my stomach of being hungry,
and the room looks, feels and smells so realistic, much more than any dream
I’ve ever had.
She
reaches for me, and I instantly move backwards in the crib until my back
touches the bars behind me.
“Aw, my
little boy doesn’t want to come to Mommy today?”
Mommy? What the fuck? I’ve got to
believe this is some weird dream because it was Mother’s Day or some holiday
and I’m imagining having a mom or something. Yeah, this is all in my head, and
I’m going to wake up at any moment.
She
reaches in, grabs me and puts me against her hip, and I am so scared of falling
that I immediately latch my arms and legs around her. She holds me with one arm
and uses the other to place me on a table. I guess she trusts that I won’t jump
over the sides because she turns her back for a second and grabs some wipes.
I’ve
never been one for much babysitting or dealing with brats in general, but I definitely
know what she’s doing when she unbuttons the bottom of my pajamas. I immediately
put my hands over my undies. Even if this is a dream, I’m not gonna let a
stranger see my junk. That’s not happening.
“No,” I
say, and that one actually seems to come out right.
She
smiles, “No? Is a little someone feeling grumpy today?”
I glare
at her. I don’t know why she insists on always talking back to me in that
sing-song voice.
“No,
don’t touch me,” I cross my arms, and again the words are all garbled and
actually sound like, “No twe me,” but at least the tone and nonverbal cues
don’t get lost in translation.
It looks
like she seems to understand, so she puts down the supplies she had in her
other hand. “I guess Mr. Tickles is going to have to wake up a sleepy little
boy,” she says and pretends to look around for something.
“Wait,
no!” I plead, and it sounds like, a short shriek, but before I could try again
to form coherent words, she attacks me with tickles and reflexively I’m
giggling and shrieking. For a second, I get lost in the laughter, and it feels
nice, like a release I never knew I needed. She stops tickling me, and while
I’m giddy and relaxed, she takes the opportunity to take off my PJ bottoms.
I stop
caring about what she’s doing while I’m high on whatever endorphins are
circulating in my brain. I notice all the clouds painted on the ceiling, all
white and fluffy, just like something else in my peripheral vision. I look back
at the woman, and I notice some diapers in her hand, and that’s all it takes to
make me explode.
“No!” I scream
and start kicking at her.
“Jason,
no!” she says firmly and grabs both of my legs in one hand and wags her index
finger in front of my face. “I don’t know what’s gotten into you this morning.”
I growl
at her, mostly having given up on using words to convey my feelings. I try to
pull my legs out of her hold, but her grasp is unyielding. I try again and
again until I completely tire myself out. I guess this woman is really patient
because she just waits silently until I finally still from all of my exertion to
finish diapering me.
Dream or
not, I’m pretty pissed that she actually put a diaper on me. I glare at her
some more when she slides a pair of shorts onto me and puts a small shirt over
my head.
She
purses her lips while looking at me. “It looks like Mr. Tickles needs to make a
return,” she says and before I have a moment to scramble away, she rubs my pits
and toes, making me a giggly and relaxed mess once again.
“Alright,
now you’re ready for some breakfast,” she smiles, pinches my cheeks and
pulls me into her arms.
Jason's Journey
by: Kelvin A. R. King | Story In Progress | Last updated Jun 15, 2024
Stories of Age/Time Transformation