The Sensory Tax

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The world is a series of subtractions.

I remember the taste of a ripe peach—the explosion of sweetness, the fuzzy skin, the juice running down my chin. That was 1926. Then came the first tax. I woke up on a Tuesday in 1950 and realized that everything I ate tasted like wet cardboard. The flavor of the world had been deleted.

I didn't panic. I had the gift. I had the eternity. I figured I could live without taste. I had the sights, the sounds, the smells. I had the city.

Then came the smell of rain on hot asphalt. I loved that smell; it smelled like possibility. In 1980, it vanished. Suddenly, the world was odorless. The perfume of a woman, the stench of the subway, the aroma of roasting coffee—all gone.

I began to keep a list. A ledger of losses.

Sight: 2010. (Wait, no, I still have sight. But the colors are fading. The reds are becoming brown, the blues are becoming grey. I am losing the saturation of the world).

Hearing: 2030. The roar of New York became a muffled hum, then a whisper, then a void. I spent three years thinking the world had gone silent, only to realize it was just me.

Now, it is 2060. I am sitting in a glass box in Midtown, watching the holographic advertisements flicker in the smog. I have one sense left: Touch.

I can feel the coldness of the glass. I can feel the vibration of the trains beneath my feet. I can feel the texture of my own skin, which remains as smooth as a river stone.

I spent my first century chasing pleasure. I spent my second century chasing power. I spent my third century chasing knowledge. And now, in my fourth, I am chasing a feeling. Any feeling.

I walked to the window and pressed my forehead against the glass. It was cold. That was the only information I had. Cold.

I remember a girl I loved in the twenties. I remember the way her hand felt in mine. I try to conjure that feeling, to recreate the warmth, the pressure, the electric spark of connection. But the memory is a sketch, and the sketch is fading.

I wonder what happens when the last sense goes. Will I become a ghost in a machine? Will I be a consciousness floating in a vacuum, aware of everything but experiencing nothing?

I reached out and touched the surface of my desk. It was smooth. I closed my eyes and tried to imagine the taste of a peach. I tried to imagine the smell of rain. I tried to imagine the sound of a saxophone.

But there was only the cold. And the cold was enough.

***

**Objective Tensor Encoding (OTMES v2):** - **Core Tensor**: (M3_Satire: 8.0, N2_Passive: 0.8, K1_Individual: 0.9) - **MDTEM**: V=0.7, I=1.0, C=0.5, S=0.2, R=0.2 - **TI**: 54.1 (T3 Martyrdom Level) - **Theta**: 225° (Absurd/Sinking) - **Energy**: 11.8 - **Code**: OTMES-V2-B6-S06-L160


Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

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