These days, they’re in the news about a woman who cut her husband’s head off and put it in a box and then passed it on to a friend. Something like this. The image of the disembodied head was so strong that it didn’t let me fully note the rest. But it seems that the killer bought a chainsaw to cut the corpse and the chainsaw got stuck and did some research on the internet to see how to fix it. I once purchased one of these saws for pruning a tree and returned it the next day after verifying its cutting capacity. I saw the branches of the pine tree fall not like pieces of wood, but like branches. I was about to amputate my leg because of my inexperience. It was a very traumatic experience, so I said to myself “never again”.
When I was little, my parents went to the movies to watch a crime movie one day. After my mother returned, she took out rubber gloves and sharp knives from the kitchen. At first I didn’t know why, but gradually, based on listening to a few words here and there, I realized that the killer in the movie used those gloves and that knife to cut the corpse so as not to leave a trace. . . . I wondered if my mom was afraid to use those objects on us, or if she got rid of the fact that we were going to use them on her. Sometimes I dreamed that he was walking down the hall at night with his gloved hands waving a knife, and sometimes I dreamed that I was the one walking down the hall with that sinister demeanor. Better not give yourself a chance to find out who you are. Thanks to that movie, we can say that my mother started killing us before we got into the habit of killing.
Even today, I think of my mother’s pangs of conscience when I put on latex gloves to scrub the pans that pile up. And if I feel the gaze of one of my children on me while I wash, I blush as if I’ve discovered the true function of the gloves I put under the sink. Life is so confusing. The head of the man kept in a box reminded me of this sentence that all families hide a corpse in a closet. That head is in a way everyone’s.
Source: Informacion

Ben Stock is a business analyst and writer for “Social Bites”. He offers insightful articles on the latest business news and developments, providing readers with a comprehensive understanding of the business world.