Monday, November 21, 2011

Dutch Brothers, "The Gay Rave" (PT1)

  I woke up and had to pee.  I sat up on the side of the bed and faced west and saw nothing but gray through the blinded windows sighting over the roof of the building just outside.

   I slithered out of the blankets, taking care not to wake her as I rose.  I gazed adoringly upon her sleeping corpus and placed a delicate kiss upon her forehead before making my way downstairs to do my thing.  

  When I returned she was awake, upright in bed, rubbing the spot on her cheek where a bit of drool had glued it to her pillow, and she was watching me as I approached.    I laid down beside her, grabbed her thigh under the covers and asked ; "How are you, Darling?"

  "My stomach doesn't feel so good" she replied, the words twisted and thick with both her accent and proximity to recent sleep, and they fell from her mouth like overripe figs from a low branch.  I stared at her for a moment trying to decipher what she had just said, and then understood.

  "Jesus!"  I said  "You need a waffle!"

  Momentary reluctance,  a bit of fidgeting under the sheets with her nightgown, and then she was over the tipping point and at last upright and standing, weaving back and forth slightly, risen like Lazarus from his terrible cave, and she made her way down the stairs calling back to me something about gathering her clothes and putting her hair on so we could go out.

   Fifteen minutes later, we were driving down the street, headed south, looking for pancakes house.

   It was early and grey and cold and a Sunday and every door and window was closed and denying us.  But Fate must have been looking out for us this morning , for in no time at all an overweight pair of people dressed all in black left the dense fog to our left  suddenly began to lumber across the street directly in front of our car like a Sasquatch sighting,  BUT -  CARRYING STYROFOAM TO-GO CONTAINERS!

   "Fuck."  I announced, my voice flat in disbelief  "Look at that."

   The  pair took their time crossing the street in front of us, and we waited, watching silently, licking our chops like some wild cats watching gazelle.

  After they passed Eve asked sadly "What do you think they had in those boxes?", her lower lip quivering with want.

  "I'm not sure" I replied, grinding gears as I frantically searched for reverse with bad shift bushings,  "It looked like breakfast though."

   I finally found my gear and peeled out a short distance as those people jiggled, ever smaller, shrinking in parallax across an empty parking lot.   I then stabbed the gear lever into first and dropped the clutch and chased after them, frantically lowering my window at the same time.    The two people hopped backwards away from our approach, their to-go containers swinging heavy and pendulously from a white plastic bag wrapped around the thick wrist of the man.  As my window dropped out of the frame entirely, where once was glass was now these surprised  and curious faces, their bodies bent slightly forward so as to look inside our car, at us, to judge if we were friend or foe.

   After I waited for just a beat of silence - to maintain a certain degree of drama - I gave them my biggest smile  followed with "HIYA!.  Whatchoo got in those boxes, if you don't mind me asking?"

   Eve, now unable to control herself, leaned across my lap so as to be able to look up through the portal at the round faces presented there, and in doing so her wig slid off to the left several degrees.  Shoving her hairpiece back with one hand impatiently, she began to demand   " Ya'll got some WAFFLES in them bags?   Speak up now! Where'd you get them waffles at?"  before I cut her off.

  "Get back woman!"  I ordered "Mind your hair! You'll frighten these good people." I tried to shove her away with my free hand, but Eve was too strong, her will too strong, and she remained there sideways in my lap, flapping her eyelashes suggestively in some lewd act of silent pleading.

   I looked back up at the two fidgeting people standing before me and made an apologetic face,  and said "I'm sorry.   My friend here does not feel well.   Would you happen to know where a person -   correction -  a couple of CIVILIZED people - could purchase a waffle in this fine town?"

   "Yeah!"  Eve added her two cents, and then actually winked at them.

     Well., I've got to hand it to her, the wink must have done the trick, for the man visibly relaxed and began to talk, scratching his goatee with the giant wrist from which the food bags were suspended.

   "OH."  He began  "You want waffles?  These aren't waffles here,"  he chuckled, shaking his huge head "we got some Thai food.  We're on a diet.   We don't eat waffles no more.  Not supposed to anyway.." he said, and gave the woman standing next to him a look.    "Well... they got some good waffles up at the Biscuit Palace.   It's just a few blocks away.   You go up two streets there and turn right..."

    The directions were interrupted by a sudden monstrous outburst of laughter from Eve, who had adjusted the rearview at her own face and had found something amusing there. The man stopped talking and stared, not understanding, mouthbreathing.

  "Carry on..."  I reminded him

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Liberation

  For as long as he could remember all these thoughts were going through his head, faster than he could possibly recognize them.   The glimpses he managed to see in focus for brief spells were radiant, some shooting sparks, others black and heavy.  He thought of these ideas and thoughts as colors, shapes, and the older he became the more there were, pushing each other around, bumping into each other, some joining into one, others splitting into two or more.

   Gradually, he began to notice that all these ideas in his head were spinning more or less in the same direction like a color wheel, some faster than others, some larger or more colorful, but all going in the same circuit! He thought he may have begun to hear a faint buzzing at this time from inside his ears, which he could tune out easily enough when he had to go out in the world and mingle, but he could tap into it at any time.    He would sit on his bed with his eyes closed and watch the images swirl and listen to the hum they made.    These were truths.   These were the secrets that everyone knew about, but no one would mention out loud.  He had a firm grasp on these ideas.  He felt that he was closer to a becoming by staying in tune with these particular vibrations.   He was, in fact, right.

  By choice, and then habit, he spent less and less time out there, and more time inside his private space.   His thoughts became more powerful.   He could bend spoons, and levitation became easy for him.  He began to be noticed when he left his building.  Police cars followed him.   He drew too much attention out there, and he knew they knew he knew.    He would be detained while going for a walk.  He began to recognize officers and know them by name, and once he learned that they could not tell the truth, he stopped speaking to them or trying to provide answers.    People were stupid, he thought, and those that could recognize the truth would speak that language and make themselves recognized for it.

   The hum was recognized as many many voices, whispering the ideas to him.   The spinning became faster, and the colors and sparks and shapes all began to blend into one big mass, he could watch it as clearly as if it was in a big glass jar in front of him.  It was like a nuclear reaction, or what he imagined the universe looked like before the Big Bang, the pitch of the voices rising higher and higher, slowly over months, he could not turn them off anymore, trips to the store impossible, eye contact too frightening to attempt, he could only stay inside and press the heels of his hands to his closed eyes and try to understand what he was supposed to do with all these secrets.

   Finally, there was a flash as the matter crossed some sort of event horizon and blinded him momentarily.   Then, he was blinded by the silence that followed.  He removed his hands from his eyes.   He listened intently.     There was only one voice now, clear and high.   There was only one thought.  He was a machine with a single purpose.  He was set free.   He was going to go do what he was meant to do.  He was going to go scratch his mark.   He was going to go make a difference.

Mister Nice

Isaac Marcus Nice was born 45 years ago into a well-to-do family which lived on top of the hill in the big avocado green house. He was the youngest of three children and was the happiest and most trouble of the bunch.

I.M. Nice was always drawn to the darker, more sinister aspects of life. His own childhood provided very little in the way of dark experience, his was a privileged upbringing, without any of the usual complaints of absent or drunk parents, being ignored, or drug abuse - either participating in or being audience to.

He had the attitude of a small, vicious dog. He was loyal and protective, but could turn suddenly and bite the mailman. And like a small dog he also could not be trusted to be left alone in a car, or other enclosed area containing delicate or expensive items as he had a tendency to destroy these things out of curiosity or boredom. I.M. Nice required constant monitoring.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

I do not want your son to be found dead in a bathtub.

 You will be volunteering at the doggie-rescue place when you receive the phone call.   You will feel your face go numb as you ask "WHAT?" into the phone for the second time.

   You will drop the leash you were holding, and the dog you were walking, the crazy big one, will not run away, because animals can sense things.

You will say to yourself:   'I thought everything was better now.'     Your mind will go back to the last time you saw him, what you talked and laughed about.  You will remember that day and recall that he seemed happy.

   You begin to drive home, and your hands shake.   You turn the radio on, and then off, and then back on, but you can not find a station you want to listen to.  You feel like you are forgetting something.   You reach across to the passenger seat and feel around.  You left your purse back behind the counter of the doggie-place.    You pull the car over and adjust the rearview mirror to look at yourself.

  

  

2011: How it played out

Highlight reel:

 December 2010:  Recovering from extreme melodramatic downward spiral/ birthday/ perceived loss culminating in bridge-incident and subsequent scars.  Eminem album.  Die Antwoord.  The Land Rover 109s.   Confusion.   Faulkner/ Portis.


 December 22nd, 2010 : HAPPY NEW YEAR!   Celebrated, alone, early.    The following week spent with a cat, otherwise alone, in my front office under blankets, watching movies.  This marked the beginning of a stretch of clean living/sobriety.  

  December 30th(?)  - Airport collection.   Surprised at positive attitude of collectee.   Some catching up ensued.  Mutual mentionings of new era beginning.

  January 4th(?) -  Saw 'True Grit' at the local movie theater.  Was terrific.   The conversation that followed this viewing was even better.   Feelings revealed, explanations provided,  reciprocity admitted, I felt free to move on, finally.   I was told I did not need to move on.   This night marked the ushering in of a new way of thinking around here, notable features being I was not being unrealistic or deluded.  I become convinced 2011 is, INDEED, going to be amazing.


   The following weeks:   Characterized by a marked increase in writing,  regular gym visits, no drinking, an extreme feeling of optimism (married to a new anxiety that this may all sour easily - it feels almost too good to be true), lots of time spent  walking, talking, eating, making plans.

    Valentine's Day:    It mattered.    Sort of.   Earrings.  Removal of existing earrings.

  More weeks pass.  944 job.   Citroen wagon job(s).  Reappearance of friend from distant past, who becomes central player in this world/story.   Feeling good, feeling lucky.  Feeling exposed, feeling a little crazy.