A woman--she was from Canada--stopped Davis on his walk to lunch and gave him a tiny, heart-shaped tart with the words “Be Mine” printed on the front.
He smiled and said, “Be mine . . . be mine! I don’t want to ‘Be Mine’. I don’t want to be yours, theirs, hers, that, I don’t want to BE anything.”
Moving on he turned to her, "Well, actually, I apologize. What I meant to say was I can't be yours; I can just BE." The two shared coffee, later.
[12/24/2001 8:39:49 PM]
Davis believes he's acutely aware of the "order-of-things," as he calls it. People say of Davis that he's "out there." Thing is, Davis is acutely aware. Davis writes. He has a keen interest in psychology and philosophy--the nature of things. Davis is in the process of writing a thesis/manifesto that will reveal, what he calls, "The Great Secret." Davis will site his acute comprehension, of the universe by way of his mind's observations. Some ideas in the thesis will include : relative perception and his patented five human senses Disney cartoon comparison; suggesting one could trust the senses "like he could trust politicians."
Davis meets Ian, an early-stage drunk, at Joe's (rename later) Davis unknowingly romances Ian with his talk about molecular manipulation, and with mention of his "reflective theory of love", which stems from his earliest of works when . . . Nearly complete with his first thesis he tells of hearing (in a moment of doubt) a distinct voice saying, "Love these words and they'll love you back."