In The Stone Under The Dust Her Name Is Still Engraved Monday, Sep 28 2009 

It’s a little after seven in the morning, and I’m driving east on I-90, wearing a suit and keeping one eye on the road while I attempt to relight a wind-extinguished joint. A weekend A.M. conservative radio host rants against the propaganda of the H1N1 virus scare, as I am on the way to a funeral to mourn a person who has just died from it. Normally, I’d find myself uncomfortably incensed, but it doesn’t really register. Perhaps I’m reeling from a lack of sleep. Perhaps I’m high. Perhaps it just hasn’t hit me yet.

Daylight blooms into a soulless grey sky, and the landscape slowly devolves from city to suburb to country. And it hasn’t hit me yet. Around nine, I stop at a small gas station in the middle of nowhere and pick up a tall Pabst. The clerk looks at me with a hint of apprehension and asks if I want a bag. It still hasn’t hit me yet.

Driving along the fields, I sip my beer and think about serving her quintuples in oversized styrofoam cups, charging her high fives. I think about her large and warm eyes. I think about idle chatter during cigarette breaks. I think about that whole town, vibrant and driven, because of people like her. A community of unbridled enthusiasm, yet to be put into its place by the ways of the world. Still nothing.

I pull into the church parking lot, the modest building standing out in the middle of nowhere. It feels like a Guns ‘N Roses video. I sit in my car for a moment before stepping out to see Karen, a beautiful acquaintance from the past, her lips bent into a rarely seen frown, her pale face red from the tears. She nods solemnly to acknowledge me. I see Alan, with an unexpected beard and a ponytail, emitting the same expression.

And it hits me. Kimi is dead. And I am still alive.

It’s not the specter of death that gets to me, nor the gravity of the loss. It’s the impermanence and the unfairness. Here I am in a fucking cornfield, wearing a suit, staring into the faces of pain, the faces who no longer parade down High St. without a care. And Kimi is dead, and I haven’t slept, and I’m twenty-six years old and I drive prostitutes around for a living and I’m an adult. I am an adult.

It wasn’t supposed to be this way.

I make quiet hellos in the parking lot, splash some water on my face in the bathroom and take a seat in a pew, staring at the photo of her lifelessly emitting from the projector. An attempt at a hip Christian song plays on loop. As people fill in I daydream about taking a bullet for this one. It’s not so much a daydream as a plea or a silent prayer. Just go back, and take me. I’m an asshole, I drink too much, I do too many drugs, I hurt too many people and quite frankly I’ve never really wanted to be here. And she’s the one who has to go?

The room swells and swells and swells. Ushers scramble to find more seating. I can’t help but think that whether they know it or not, this is everyone’s deepest fantasy. As morbid as it sounds, what more can we ask for, but to have an unexpected turnout for the mourning of our demise?

People clumsily share their memories of Kimi into the microphone, and towards the end of the ceremony, a bald pastor lectures theatrically about the need for Christ to save our souls. He makes little mention of Kimi except to use her name as a means to promote what he’s selling. I think he means well, but he’s the furthest thing from well that I can think of.

His words bring me back to reality — life is not fair, nor is it logical. Good people will do bad things. Bad things will happen to good people. Kimi is dead. And I am alive.

After the ceremony I hug Rebecca in the parking lot. Her face, like Karen’s, is puffy and red. I can feel her organs pumping as I hold her. After the casket has pulled away, all of us make avoiding small talk and take far too much time to plan a trip to Bowling Green for pizza.

I eat a few slices, make a few wisecracks and have a few rum and Cokes before heading off to blow a tire a quarter mile into the turnpike. I wrestle off my suitcoat and light a cigarette, resting against the guardrail while cars whir by. I think about Kimi, and how life isn’t fair.

But I am still alive.

We had a neo-Jesus walking amongst us, and we didn’t recognize it until it was too late.

But I am still alive.

The Jets Were Lousy Anyway Saturday, Sep 26 2009 

Dawn is just starting to seep into the sky as Kelly wearily turns the key into her door. The hallway smells like laundry. She goes off to wash the fluid of strangers from her body while I change out of my work clothes and pet her attention starved cat. I imagine it must be a bit of a sacred ritual, the cleansing. There are no photos of her family in her apartment. There are many black and white photos with matching frames that express trend rather than vision. It almost seems like a designed set. She has a copy of Mystic Pizza on DVD. Nonetheless, it is the apartment of an adult.

Free from the suffocating leather dress, her hair still stringy and wet, coltish legs now sheathed in denim, we drive to the third shift bar, basking in the dead lights of the buzzing but dormant commercial district, where we join an odd gathering of cops, working girls, factory workers, war veterans and insomniacs. We sit in the corner and our ice sloshes around the rocks glasses like barely perceptible piano tinkling.

“I always wanted to go to the San Diego Zoo,” she says, blowing smoke out of the side of her mouth.

“Why’s that?”

“Sounds like a nice place…when I was younger my class went to the Cleveland Zoo, and when I asked the teacher what the best zoo was, he said San Diego.”

“Ever been to California?”

“No. Vegas once,” she says biting her pinkie nail in contemplation. “But we all need that place…we’ve never been but know we want to be there.”

“Only place I want to be is places I’ve already been…places I can no longer be.”

We finish our drinks far too fast. The ice has barely melted. I rise to get another round but she grabs my wrist. Fleetwood Mac plays on the jukebox.

“I’ve got it…I had a good night.” She says it without bravado, or shame or monotony. It just hangs in the air. It’s accepted.

I know she had a good night, because I was there. Or near there. Sitting in the hotel bar, or listening to the classic rock station in the car, while she had her good night.

Her hair has started to dry, flourishing into a marble-like swirl of its two-tones. She could pass for twenty-five, claims she is twenty-nine, and is probably thirty or thirty-one. Here at the bar her make-up is subtle. At work, it’s rather garish, not exactly tacky, but a mask of sorts. As she slides into the booth, she squeezes the lime into my drink and drops the remnants of the rind into the glass. I note that the bartender and two others are looking at me.

The color has washed from the film of my life. It’s an indie film, a rerun from the 70s’, anything but real.

“What do you think of Fleetwood Mac?” I ask, as if I expect to learn something important from the answer. Call it a stereotype or just a personal generalization, but I find that if a woman has some deep admiration for Stevie Nicks, they are more likely than not batshit crazy.

“I adore Stevie Nicks,” she says, sipping from her glass. I like batshit crazy. “You?”

“I dig ‘em.”

“Yeah, they’re good,” she says for no reason whatsoever, and we fall into a brief silence where we stare at each other, not dotingly or longingly or nervously. We just stare. It’s accepted.

It’s light out when Kelly wearily turns her key into the door once again. We each have a Bartles & Jaymes Pina Colada from the fridge and play with the cat for a minute before we sulk off to the bedroom, where we whisper languidly and fall asleep.

I’m Sick But I’m Pretty Thursday, Aug 13 2009 

The man sitting across from me may have provided your buddy with the bundle that stopped his heart. He may have been the one who sold the pill that was slipped into your sister’s drink. It’s entirely possible that he will one day indirectly contribute to the death of this writer. He didn’t shove the shit down our throats, but his prints are all over the instrument of death.

He is a saavy businessman or a heartless sociopath, depending on who you talk to. To hear him tell it, he’s merely providing a service, a good time, an escape. According to the sobbing mother who unsuccessfully pleaded desperately against his parole, he floods the streets of our city with poison and decay, and should be caged like the animal that he is.

So which is it?

“S’go down to your school dis weekend…goo’a money in Costa-Q’s in colleges,” he says flatly, with a smile. “Frat boys eat dat shit up, eh?”

“I don’t need to fuck around with roofies, man,” I say, plugging one nostril and taking a sniff from the glass bullet cradled in the other hand.

“Wha’s the big deal, eh? You coak a pretty young ting up for de first time, you nail her…das not the same ting? You buy hair juan too many beers. Same.”

“Maybe it is, maybe it isn’t.”

“Jah’stafy what you do, damn what you don’t…no?”

“Pretty much…but I still don’t need to fuck around with roofies. No offense.”

“Noan taken.”

Some would think that I’m throwing you a softball here. Let’s face it — this cat is a scumbag. There’s no two ways about it. But maybe that’s why I chose to tell you about him. Forgiving the scumbags is the hardest part, isn’t it? The thing that separates us from the morality of Christ that so many in this country purport to want to achieve? Maybe it’s not as easy as we think or want it to be.

Let’s mix it up a bit — what about the kid from the mill town who sends an Iraqi’s brains across the sand? He killed someone’s kid, someone’s dad, someone’s husband. Is he is just doing his job, serving his country proudly? Or did he just kill a man in cold blood? Which is it?

What about the CEO of the cigarette company? Or the woman who sits in a cubicle and deems your cancer to be a ‘pre-existing condition’? The person who robbed you, who raped you, who broke your heart? Where do they land? What about you?

What about me?

“Jew want to stick aroun’, some girls on de way,” our original subejct says. “Fine tings. We hit the bar, eh, Shakespeah?”

“No roofies,” I say coldly. He laughs.

“Den no booze, no cocaina…no even a cigarette,” he says with a smile. “Es no goo’a for dem.”

The buzzer goes off, and after examining the grainy, black and white security camera, he presses a button to let them into the lobby. They’re Latin girls, in their late teens or early twenties, wearing less clothing than most girls I know wear to bed. They chew their fingernails and shift their legs back and forth, balancing in their heels, unaware that we’re watching them.

“Jess kidding,” he says, slapping me on the shoulder and heading towards the door. “Dee’s ones are so dumb, jew need no pills…only words.”

I’m wrong and I’m sorry.

…But, Yes, I’m Still Running Sunday, Aug 9 2009 

When the evolutionists pitch you their case, they always leave out one key component. One integral idea that is tied to the hip of their theorem, and yet they don’t acknowledge it. De-evolution. You simply can’t have one without the other, and yet these folks would have you believe that the chart of our existence can only go up, up, up.

The Days Inn near 90 is notorious for having a sizable chunk of its business stem from underage parties and interstate drug trafficking. Diego and I pull up in a car neither of us own, windows down, the commercial light spilling across the landscape, ‘Only In My Dreams’ blaring from the speakers.

“Is that Debbie Gibson?” a young and pretty girl asks incredulously/flirtatiously. She sits next to her friend, smoking cigarettes outside of the card-only annex entrance.

“You bet your ass it is,” I  grumble with a smile, tossing my cigarette butt as I walk by. It had another three or four good hits left. Just felt right at the moment.

“Room 305!” she calls out as we pass, no doubt in consideration of Diego and his square jaw, tea skin, Anglo blue eyes and flowing black ponytail. He laughs with a shake of his head.

“First business,” he says casually.”Den girls.” Diego is so fake that I couldn’t make him up if I wanted to.

Forty-five minutes later we find ourselves in 305, drinking beer and snorting lines with our newfound friends. Conan talks from the chained-down television, but no one listens. The art is compromised of sailboats and cabins. The bedspread is maroon and itchy. The carpet is visibly stained. There’s a notepad waiting on the desk, and I want to write in it…but would anyone want to read it?

I end up talking with a chunky Italian girl. Her hair is wavy and greasy looking. She reeks so badly of hairspray that it makes me nauseous. Barely respectable breasts hang from her tank top, sheathed by a purple bra purchased to imply sexuality. Her razor thin jean shorts aren’t suited for her. She reminds me of Bristol Palin. She’s void of any intellectual thought, and we have absolutely nothing in common. She’s perfect.

These days I can only sleep with women that I am not attracted to — either physically or mentally. If there’s a single spark, I run for the hills.

Diego has the best-looking girl in the bathroom, and the others mill about the cubicle, so for privacy we move to the car in the parking lot.

It’s cramped, but she manages to mount up and slide her underwear over. As she thrusts I fantasize about someone sneaking alongside the window and blowing my brains out. I use the image of white hot steel racing through the flesh of mind in order to get off. It’s quick. It’s flashy. Mind erasing. I can see the neon of the Days Inn logo backwards in the windshield.

It hasn’t been the same since I took this path. These days it either doesn’t work, doesn’t shoot or shoots too quick. I don’t seem to care…this fact alarms me more than anything.

Getting bored, I put everything I have into it until my dick is wet and cold. I am ready to depart. Back in the room, I have to wait for Diego to emerge from the bathroom, squirming as she traces her finger along my upper arm and kisses me on the cheek after everything I say, drawing her index finger to my chin and pulling towards something I will retract from.

I am assuming that she wants something hedonistic. I just wanted a fuck. I want to share her obliviousness, and she wants to be what she think I am.

Diego surfaces, and we exit. Abruptly. Coldly. Fake numbers. We laugh about it on the way back to his place.

I would’ve been happier if I’d stayed home and read a book.

Why do we pine for people instead of moments?

Open My Mouth And Out Pops Something Spiteful Thursday, Jul 23 2009 

Brain cancer. Lung cancer. Breast cancer. Pancreatic cancer. Rectal cancer. Bladder cancer. Cervical cancer. Stomach cancer. Ovarian cancer. Bone cancer. That’s some nasty stuff right there. Black, rotting, and destructive. Shit will eat you alive. Fast, if you don’t catch it in time.

But what about the cancer of anger? Of hatred? Of regret? Those will eat you up far faster. The pain is worse. Much harder to endure. No ribbon for that. No charity walks for loathing of the self, of others, of the world. Not much funding for cancers of the soul.

No cure. The disease mutates. We implement ‘cures’ for slavery, for lynchings, for ‘whites only’, yet it still thrives inside. Now they just think ‘nigger’ instead of saying it out loud. We learn to bury the word ‘bitch’ or ‘cunt’, but it still festers. We bury the past. But we don’t kill it. We don’t let it die. We project it. Displace it. We must not recognize it’s presence in our bodies, our souls.

They call it ‘remission’. Remission. The lack of a previously present disease. The forgiveness of sin. The reduction of a prison sentence. ‘Remission’ is synonymous with ‘cure’. But is it, really? And if so, why don’t we just say ‘cured’?

Because it might come back. And if it can come back, it’s not dead. It’s inside us, somewhere, buried, waiting to re-emerge.

I am in remission. The hate, anger, and regret remains inside of me, waiting to eat me alive.

For the past two months, I start every day by tailgating it. Within thirty minutes of waking, I crack the first beer, or pour the first drink, and sit in the folding chair I’ve propped in the center of the front lawn. I play Gary Glitter’s ‘Rock ‘N’ Roll, Part 2′, and then Warren Zevon or REO Speedwagon or Journey. I sing along loudly. I dance without thought. I point and make gestures. Neighbors driving to work or walking their dogs or mowing their lawns stare. Sometimes I think they want to be me. Sometimes I know they pity or loathe me.

As the day passes, I move on to a dealer’s apartment, or a friend’s house,  or a bar. I imbibe whatever is available to dilute my mind. Drink. Snort. Shoot. I fuck who I can, so long as I don’t care about them. I punch who I feel deserves it. It’s amazing what an unexpected haymaker coming from the back pocket can do. The dull thud, like hitting dough — it gives the illusion that I’m letting it all go.

I drive drunk. I mouth off. I smoke too much. I clog my arteries with greasy food. I pay for beer with dimes, without shame. I am described as ‘fun’ or ‘carefree’. If you smile while you do it, not many question it. They believe in remission, much like they believe in the politician’s promise of ‘change’.

I speak and write tersely. Description is superfluous. I write only when I am too numb to feel the impact and meaning of my words. I avoid those who care for me. I chase those who don’t. I only commit to actions I do not have to ponder. I pretend to believe in nothing in the name of self-preservation. I avoid an active life, because an active life will cease the so-called remission.

Smile. Fake it. Fuck her. Hit him. Just do it. Don’t think. Thinking is a disease. Thinking is weakness. Weakness gets your throat ripped out. What’s worse — a severing of the jugular or a slow, painful death? We don’t fear death. We only fear fear.

I am not defined by my disease. I am only shackled to it.

If I can forgive you, I can forgive myself.

How crazy do I sound? Is it any crazier than what you repress? What you think you’ve sent into remission?

Heartbreak Motor Oil And Bombay Gin Tuesday, Jul 21 2009 

Every bender has a brief period of pure tranquility. In this eye of the storm, you tend to believe that every conversation is memorable and every moment priceless and meant to be embraced with reckless abandon. You no longer hold rigid value in money, and every song sounds as fresh as the first time you heard it. The girl you’re fucking appears to be the girl you want to be fucking in that immediate moment. The dim lit bar at lunch hour seems exactly where you want to be. Those that poison your conscience no longer seem all that dangerous. Empathy drips off of you. It’s a lot like love in that regard.

Dale is a grizzled Nam vet. He drinks Miller Lite and prefers standing at the bar over sitting.  He doesn’t talk about the war, but he alludes to it every now and again, and from there it just seems to hang on his every word. According to his stories, he’s covered just about a quarter of the earth.

“Oh, Hong Kong?”, he’ll say, raising his eyebrows, snorting and laughing, losing himself in the past. An inside joke that exists to no one but him.

Tonight we’re betting drinks on mid-level cable boxing.

“Next round says red trunks wins,” I offer. A boxing match is almost always decided before the first bell rings. Just watch their eyes. More often than not, the first one to look away is going down.

“Sure…Mexican kid looks tough.” We’re not looking at each other. Our eyes listlessly follow the television, afraid to look at one another or ourselves. The Mexican kid rolls his neck and snorts like a bull, imperceptibly darting his eyes towards the canvas.

The simple truth is that if I don’t figure out a way to enjoy this – and I don’t mean the impending free drink, but rather the sitting broken in a dive bar with someone equally broken, disgusted, confused, jaded, addicted and alone – if I can learn to say fuck it and enjoy Dale’s company…I have a shot at this thing. If I can find beauty in this, I can find beauty anywhere.

But I don’t seem to want to. I find beauty in the unattainable. And making distracting bets with Dale as we murder the brain cells that cause us to ponder ourselves is most certainly attainable. I find beauty in destruction; of my life, of my relationships, of my liver, of my brain and of myself. Of everything I know and feel and love. Because most of that is, thus far, unattainable — no matter how hard I try, I don’t seem to be able to destroy my soul. I seem to be able to destroy relationships fairly well. And my life. With ease. But the soul lingers.

The Mexican kid gets whacked with a nasty right cross midway through the fifth. Dale buys me a round and we toast.

“Write a story about that, cocksucker,” he says with a wink and a smile.

Had A Beer And Felt Sorry For Myself Friday, Jul 17 2009 

I am me. Through all of the impermanence, this is the only truth that remains.

I spat in a girl’s face after fucking her once. Like, right after fucking her. She was a near-prostitute, emaciated and pale with mousy hair and protruding ribs, her pubic hair in need of a trim. It’s been a few years since I’ve fucked someone I was remotely attracted to. It’s just easier this way.

I groaned something intelligibly about an impending ejaculation, and she scurries backwards and lines her head with my dick, shaking back hair and smiling. My life turns into a pornographic film. This has happened to me a precious few times before. But you never get used to it.

“Go ahead.”

I directed towards the ground and fired into the carpet, and before I knew what I was doing, I cocked back and fired a ball of spit right into her face. Upon the realization, she began flailing at me in a fit of rage. I handcuffed her wrists with my hands, my thumbs resting on the bony knobs.

“You asked for bodily fluid on her face,” I said, panting. “Think about that.” I collected my things and left. It wasn’t that long ago.

I recall the incident while sitting solo in a bar. I watch National League scores scroll at the bottom of the screen and order one more. I’ve completely given up. I’m standing impatiently over the stove of the universe, waiting for my brain to fry. I don’t know who I am anymore. And I am me.

I smoke some weed in the parking lot with some kids that recognize me, stop at the gas station for one more, and return home, eager to be anesthetized and unconscious.

At the root of everything I love, there is me. This is the only truth that remains.

The Door’s Open, But The Ride Ain’t Free Wednesday, Jun 17 2009 

They stand around with their arms cocked in a position they unconsciously believe exudes class and intelligence, clutching mimosas and champagne and imports, wearing fedoras and bohemian-yet-expensive sundresses (stitched by Hondurans for pocket change) and thick-rimmed glasses. They sport chemically-treated hair and talk about Rush Limbaugh like I talk about women who – despite scorning me in a vapid manner – I still desperately want to fuck. They golf clap and discuss vacations and have the nerve to bitch about the ‘rich elite’, painfully unaware that they are a part of it. They think stroking a check to Obama or PETA absolves them. They think that their parents funding a pseudo-starving artist life in academia somehow separates them from the rest of the animals. They praise the reading I give, oblivious to the fact that it admonishes them. I glean drinks from them as I smile and nod.

They’re merely confused and selfish people, much like myself, and I would feel the same alienation and disgust if I were at a gun show or Captain’s patio or anywhere anymore. But I can’t take much more of these creeps. I need to get out of here.

I excuse myself after my fourth or fifth rum,  driving further downtown, where the buildings get older and more warped, the skin darker, the lives more desolate and hopeless. I feel more in sync here. I have a place here. Duke – on cassette – is my soundtrack. The highway lights blur by at the pace of my thoughts, my confusion, my failures.

I purchase a few deuces from a familiar foot soldier and head back towards the beach, towards the whiter faces, the sunnier lives and the newer building structures — towards home. The Newport cigarette billboards that fluctuate ethnicity depending on highway location, the voice of Phil Collins, the intoxication — it means nothing anymore. Nothing does.

I focus on the pain rather than the beauty. That is my flaw. I laugh at myself — I am a complete fraud. We all are.

I sing along with Phil Collins.

I load up a spike and send it barreling through my veins and lay dormant on the empty landscape, the wet sand clumping onto my jeans. I stare at the moon and think of girls I’ve fucked and society and humanity and myself, in that order.

“And though she will mess up your life, you want her just the same,” I say flatly out loud, to no one but myself and the moon. I can’t decide if I’m talking about the drugs or the women. I realize this is a pathetic metaphor and am glad that no one heard me. Springsteen seems more fitting than Phil. Cooler.

I am a joke. We are all jokes. If I had a purpose, I would act differently. Perhaps this explains the joy of parenthood. The reason to settle down. Play the game. Walk the line.

If there’s a trend in my twenty-six years, it’s that I’ve always had everything I ever wanted, and upon realizing what it was, wanted nothing to do with it.

I load up another fix and hope it takes me away from here. I wish I had more to say.

I Know That It’s Yesterday That You’re Blowin’ Away Saturday, May 16 2009 

“Tilt your head back.” Her eyes point to the gutted ceiling, a ribcage of rotting wood over rusted pipes and bunches of multicolored wires. The room is roughly the size of a dorm, containing a two-inch thick bare mattress on a flimsy metal frame, a suitcase under a pile of clothes, a filthy hot plate and a greasy-haired kid slumped against the wall in a fetal position. One of the grime-frosted window panes is busted out, and there is a torn and faded Rocky Horror poster on the otherwise empty walls. It smells like moth balls.

Out-of-place loners stalk the hallways, glancing at us as they pass — a dead ringer for Jeffrey Dahmer clad in Salvation Army donations, a pudgy Middle Eastern man with a turban and a permanent scowl, a weary-eyed and ashy-skinned black woman in a nightgown. Down the hall a pair of tone-deaf junkies wail away on a guitar and a drum in a room with the door ripped off. Across from them is the community kitchen, where fruit flies dance over encrusted bits of Ramen and a mountain of dishware that would likely make mothers everywhere cry. The shared bathroom a few doors over is splattered with vomit, shit, piss and blood, spiders having made a permanent home in the rust covered shower.

“Thank you,” she honks, her nose clamped with a blood stained tissue. She is terribly gaunt and pale, her torso plastered with all sorts low-rent tattoos — tribal patterns, spiderwebs, bleeding hearts, knives, etc.

“I’m Dan.”

“Kib,” she says, turning to meet my eyes. I tilt her head back into position.

“How old are you, Kim?”

“Ibe twenny.”

“And what brings you to a place like this?”

“I lib ear.”

“A little too much coke?” She nods. “And that’s all?” She nods again. “And the crying?”

“Wooden you be?” She pulls the tissue from her nose, a small fleck of it catching on her nose ring. I gently grab her jaw and examine her stained nostrils. When she moves, you can see every bone in her body shifting beneath her pale skin.

“It looks like the worst is over…keep pressure on it for awhile longer.”

“So why are you here?”

“I came for the show,” I say, pointing towards the off-key wailing down the hall.

“Funny,” she says, dabbing her nose with her finger and examining it.

“You laugh or you cry.”

“Close the door,” she warns as I fish a cigarette pack from my pocket. “They’ll hound you if they see them.”

“Who’s the stiff?” I ask, closing the door and lighting two in my mouth.

“Thanks,” she says, taking the cigarette. “That’s James. He’s my…I stay with him.” She takes a drag and mulls something over. “I fucking hate him.”

She leans over me to ash her cigarette in the soot-stained sculpted tinfoil near my knee. As she coils back, she tries to kiss me, her upper lip still stained maroon. I jerk away.

“Sorry,” she says, lowering her head and sliding her hands between her knees.

“No big deal.”

“I just thought…”

“It’s OK…really.”

“Thanks for stopping by to help…I mean, I would’ve been fine, but…most of the people here don’t care…or they’re just afraid of each other.”

“I know what you mean.”

We sit in silence for awhile, working at our cigarettes and wading through the muck of our own minds.

“This place is Hell.”

“I know.”

Two-Thousand Other Dirty Lovers Must Be A Sucker For It Monday, May 4 2009 

Drinking and laughing and yelling and singing and fucking as if it were the last Saturday of our lives, free to sketch out fresh caricatures and disperse the energy that burns. Unbridled possibility in a sundress. Liberation from the chains. A distant memory as I plod along the sidewalk, on my way to a bar where nobody knows my name. Cars buzz by as I pass underneath a gun show billboard, bathed in the dead light from above.

The place is dim and the people hang over their drinks. We smoke, and ash in cups of water. A few guys in the corner sing John Prine lyrics and laugh, exposing broken teeth. The laughter feels as if it’s in slow motion, the picture blurred, pulsating, distorted. It is as nauseous and fuzzy as the last year or so. I meet a kid named Kenny about my age, and wonder how he came to be here. He has a ballcap, a square jaw, flip-flops and a joint.

“Let’s go chase some pussy,” he says.

“I only chase ghosts.” I don’t think he gets it, but I do, and that’s enough for me.

We drive to a party he knows of. The air is heavy with beery breath and sweat. The colorful dresses draped over shifting golden thighs do nothing. The nerve ends only flicker enough to power a few flashes of distant memory. There are no conversations worth recording. No thoughts of note. No clarity. I am alone in a universe of self-absorption, spending sixty minutes of every hour in a bleakness of perpetual regret and loathing. I can’t decide if I should roll my eyes or be afraid.

I take one into the bathroom, anyway. Seven of us smoke a joint in a cramped back room and I gulp down Solo cups as fast as I can and drop in the proper ear-catching stories and after a game of beer pong and a cigarette I’m smelling the entrance of her innards, a mix of oysters and vinegar with a hint of rot, my elbows cooling on the tile floor. She’s nothing special, but it’s this or that. The aforementioned bleakness must give way.

I am reliving the memories I pined for under the billboard, but there is no longer feeling or thought. There is only motion. The legs move, the lungs pump, but like a runner in the middle stages, my mind is entirely clear, dead to the world, observing this body in motion without emotion. Everything is a blur. I don’t want to be here. I don’t want to be there. I cannot become attached. I am unwilling or unable to adapt.

She tosses her hair and makes sounds and I try as hard as I can to come. I want to get out of here. I need another drink. I’m only doing this because my old self would’ve wanted me to and because Gore Vidal told me to never pass it up. I just want someone to hold my hand, and this bird isn’t that someone. Let’s just smooth out our clothes and get out of here.

I leave the party after being socked in the jaw by a beer pong opponent. I can’t quite recall the details. I ran my mouth, and the only thing that seems to come out these days is spite. Kenny attempts to mediate but the truth is I wanted to take a shot. I deserve it.

I grab a can of beer amidst the fray and head off into the mystic Kentucky night, using it to cool my throbbing jaw. I find myself back in my neighborhood, and through charm I manage to track down a few complimentary bumps of heroin. Sitting on my porch, I drink my icepack and stare at the same moon that we all see and lose myself in my own head. My soul has become punch-drunk. It is a shell of it’s former self.

I am unwilling or unable to adapt. Just hold my hand while I come to a decision on it.

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