Tomorrow I’m going to get on a plane and fly to my hometown, as I’ve done at the end of every December since I moved away nine years ago. My father will pick me up from the airport, and upon seeing him in the baggage area, I’ll remember once again that when I think of him, I still picture him the way he looked years ago instead of the elderly man he undeniably is now. Despite my best attempts, I’ll run out of things I could possibly think of to talk to him about before my bag even comes down the chute, which can only bode for a very long ride home in a car that will never break the speed limit at any time.
I’ll feel that first blast of freezing air when we walk through the automatic doors into the breezeway leading to the short term parking area, and I’ll remember how silly I was for thinking that the fifty-five degree low I experienced that morning actually qualified as “cold.” I’m flying to a place during a time of the year when fifty-five degrees would officially signal the end of the world.
The first ten minutes of my entrance into the house I grew up in will succeed in being the most overwhelmingly melancholy event that have happened to me all year, and this sort of dark cloud with a blazing sun behind it will hang over my head until I’m halfway through the returning flight. Greeting my mother in the kitchen will be such a carbon copy when I did it last year, and the year before that, and the year before that, that we might as well just skip it. But that would never happen of course. And I’m sure I’ll smell the dinner she’s making as I excuse myself to take my bag upstairs to the bedroom.
The following days will feature many more occurrences that will be so familiar that I might be tempted to believe I’m living through some prerecorded repeat, or fallen into a time warp, except that I’ve gotten to the point now where even that feeling has become such an inherent part of the experience that I just go with it. This sentiment of déjà vu is as much my doing as anything else. Part of me wants nothing to ever change, and therefore I go through the same motions year after year as a kind of celebration that I still can, and perhaps in the hopes that it will mean I’ll be able to it all again the next year. Slight evolution has occurred in the customs over the years. I don’t make the yearly visit to my grandmother’s house anymore since she passed away two years ago, naturally. And a few other relatives have passed on as well. Awful as it sounds, sometimes I have to remind myself that they’re gone and that their house won’t be on the yearly tour that my father and I take when we “go visiting.” I swear though, it’s not that I’ve forgotten them already. It’s just that I can barely comprehend the fact that they no longer exist.
I take my own little tours, alone. One is a marathon walk around the neighborhood near my parent’s house, down the streets and through the backyards that I used to run through when I was a kid because I thought that I had every right to. I remember so many things that I hadn’t thought of for so long that sometimes I have to think really hard about whether they really happened to me at all, or if I saw it all on some TV show or read it in a book. I also make it out to the area closer to downtown where I lived for a year and a half after graduating from college. I packed a multitude of experiences into that short time, and as it was the last place I lived before I moved away, the question of whether I should have left at all always creeps in. Every year it becomes a little easier to answer.
One of the greatest things about going back used to be seeing all the friends I left behind. Every year it gets a little harder to get them all together more than once or twice, and for an ever-shorter length of time. I guess it says something about the changes I’ve gone through as a person that it barely bothers me anymore if I fail to see some of them at all. On the other hand, I couldn’t imagine not getting to see my nieces and nephews, now all teenagers. It makes me wonder if it’s because I’ve become more familial over the years, or just if I never stopped being a teenager and therefore want to be around people on my level.
When it’s time to head back to the airport and catch my flight home, I’ll be ready to leave. Taking a break from my life is always great, but at some point I always want to get back to it. At least once during my stay, my father will have asked me when I plan on moving back for good, and of course I’ll once again have to tell him that it’s not a possibility I’m considering in the near future. I’ll try to ignore his unspoken but obvious sadness as he accompanies me into the airport and through the ticket line, then accept his offer to sit in the Au Bon Pain and have a coffee or orange juice before saying our goodbyes and entering the line for the security check. I’ll feel bad for experiencing such relief that I’ll soon be on my way back to where I’ve come to feel most comfortable in the world while my dad is sitting there next to me feeling like the time has gone by much too fast, recognizing that it will probably be another year before I’ll return. These years fly by so fast that a twelve-month span tends to lose its meaning and worth, and yet you just have to wonder how many more of them there will be at all. Everything stays so much the same for so long until one day nothing is ever the same again.
And in two weeks I'll be sitting in the chair that I'm sitting in right now, but with a fresh perspective and a broadened idea of my existence. My normally myopic view of my existance will be widened to include the knowledge that I came from somewhere, and I have a history, and there's a whole world out there that I conveniently ignore for fifty weeks out of the year. This perspective will fade however, day by day, until, by the middle of January, I will have forgotten it all, only to be remembered once again next year.
Tuesday, December 20, 2005
Monday, December 12, 2005
I was in a restaurant with a big group of people last weekend. It was a late night gathering of actors after the play we appeared in was over, drinking margaritas and eating free chips in the Mexican restaurant that I always seem to end up in for decompression after a performance. Who I end up sitting with on any given night is completely dependent on what play I’m in at the time, and who I’m in the play with, and who came to see the play that night that was induced to join us afterward. We usually end up with anywhere from four to fifteen people. The host at the front desk of the restaurant sneers a little bit every time we walk in the door. We never know exactly how many people we’ll have in our party. When we underestimate, we end up having to switch tables at least once after it’s been set, and when we overestimate, we end up with a lot of unused table space that could have accommodated a much larger, better-tipping party. But every now and then we just happen to guess right, and that’s what happened this weekend.
The cast of the play I’m in right now is a pretty fun and easygoing group of people, so the after-show get-togethers have been mostly enjoyable and amusing, even if they lack in excitement. These days, that’s just fine with me. Last Friday was a pleasant group. We sat in the outside patio in the back of the restaurant at one of my favorite tables because it’s round and in the corner, near a heat lamp. The conversation began as it always does, talking about the show that night, the love-hate relationship we all have with the audience, slyly gauging the true opinion of our show from the one member of our party that saw the play that evening, etc. Drinks were had and free chips were eaten, and the conversation began to progress and fragment into smaller groups, as conversations do. This is a process that I’ve always been fascinated in; the way subjects dovetail into others, and how the people in attendance pick and choose which ones they’re most interested in at any time and add what they can at opportune times. It’s at these times that my true place in the world becomes most evident to myself. I am an observer. I’d rather sit amongst the swirling eddy of thoughts whisping around me, letting the streams of thought take their natural course, not adding or changing a thing, just to see where it all ends up. But sometimes I begin to wonder, is it really because I’m an observer, or is it because I’m dull and unoriginal? Have I learned over time through negative conditioning that my adding input or attempts at cleverness are mostly met with little consideration, and sometimes even annoyance? It’s all so much easier to just let it all go by sometimes, and I’m right back at my dining room table as an eight year old listening to my parents and aunts and uncles jabber away as they play cards.
The conversation turned to raising children and politics, and I withdrew. The table was split with two, sometimes three, concurrent topics simultaneously in progress. For a moment I tried to take them all in and chart their individual development, but I quickly became tired. Though I like to think I care about the state of the country, my knowledge of current events and how things really operate is superficial at best, and hearing the fine details makes my brain hurt. Likewise, the concept of parenting and children in general is one that awes me, but I wasn’t in the mood for a lot of dutiful head nodding and cute smiling during another anecdote of a kind of experience I can hardly imagine having in my own life. I began to stare into space, and when that happens, I know from a lifetime of experience that my sociability for the evening is as good as over.
Something different happened this past Friday, however. I caught the eye of the fellow cast member sitting across from me at the circular table. His name is Chris, and I could tell he had, himself, momentarily washed ashore from the currents of dialogue presently raging around us. And I had the sudden, strange urge to be the founder of some new topic, the less important the better. So, looking at the plate before him (he had actually ordered food, sometimes some of us actually do that), I commented that “you can’t go wrong with rice and beans as a side.” He agreed, and quickly our particular strain of frivolity became a discussion of the strange nature of condiments, how they seem so natural for some foods but should never go near others. Our dialogue about relish really seemed to catch the attention of the politicos and parents, and I have to admit that I was, in some way, a tiny bit offended when they broke off from what their previously oh-so-important discussions to join in on our little chat. But I also felt empowered in some strange way.
So no, I can’t add anything new or enlightening in a discussion about how Bush is screwing up our country. And yes, conversations about raising a child make me feel a little empty and cause me to wonder at what point long ago my life began to deviate from everyone else’s. And the fact that I feel like such an outsider even among folks that I seem to share so much with on the surface is kind of dispiriting. But that one little victory was my reminder that when you bravely stand up and pave your own little road, sometimes other people want to drive on it, even if at first you never really had much hope of it going anywhere special.
The cast of the play I’m in right now is a pretty fun and easygoing group of people, so the after-show get-togethers have been mostly enjoyable and amusing, even if they lack in excitement. These days, that’s just fine with me. Last Friday was a pleasant group. We sat in the outside patio in the back of the restaurant at one of my favorite tables because it’s round and in the corner, near a heat lamp. The conversation began as it always does, talking about the show that night, the love-hate relationship we all have with the audience, slyly gauging the true opinion of our show from the one member of our party that saw the play that evening, etc. Drinks were had and free chips were eaten, and the conversation began to progress and fragment into smaller groups, as conversations do. This is a process that I’ve always been fascinated in; the way subjects dovetail into others, and how the people in attendance pick and choose which ones they’re most interested in at any time and add what they can at opportune times. It’s at these times that my true place in the world becomes most evident to myself. I am an observer. I’d rather sit amongst the swirling eddy of thoughts whisping around me, letting the streams of thought take their natural course, not adding or changing a thing, just to see where it all ends up. But sometimes I begin to wonder, is it really because I’m an observer, or is it because I’m dull and unoriginal? Have I learned over time through negative conditioning that my adding input or attempts at cleverness are mostly met with little consideration, and sometimes even annoyance? It’s all so much easier to just let it all go by sometimes, and I’m right back at my dining room table as an eight year old listening to my parents and aunts and uncles jabber away as they play cards.
The conversation turned to raising children and politics, and I withdrew. The table was split with two, sometimes three, concurrent topics simultaneously in progress. For a moment I tried to take them all in and chart their individual development, but I quickly became tired. Though I like to think I care about the state of the country, my knowledge of current events and how things really operate is superficial at best, and hearing the fine details makes my brain hurt. Likewise, the concept of parenting and children in general is one that awes me, but I wasn’t in the mood for a lot of dutiful head nodding and cute smiling during another anecdote of a kind of experience I can hardly imagine having in my own life. I began to stare into space, and when that happens, I know from a lifetime of experience that my sociability for the evening is as good as over.
Something different happened this past Friday, however. I caught the eye of the fellow cast member sitting across from me at the circular table. His name is Chris, and I could tell he had, himself, momentarily washed ashore from the currents of dialogue presently raging around us. And I had the sudden, strange urge to be the founder of some new topic, the less important the better. So, looking at the plate before him (he had actually ordered food, sometimes some of us actually do that), I commented that “you can’t go wrong with rice and beans as a side.” He agreed, and quickly our particular strain of frivolity became a discussion of the strange nature of condiments, how they seem so natural for some foods but should never go near others. Our dialogue about relish really seemed to catch the attention of the politicos and parents, and I have to admit that I was, in some way, a tiny bit offended when they broke off from what their previously oh-so-important discussions to join in on our little chat. But I also felt empowered in some strange way.
So no, I can’t add anything new or enlightening in a discussion about how Bush is screwing up our country. And yes, conversations about raising a child make me feel a little empty and cause me to wonder at what point long ago my life began to deviate from everyone else’s. And the fact that I feel like such an outsider even among folks that I seem to share so much with on the surface is kind of dispiriting. But that one little victory was my reminder that when you bravely stand up and pave your own little road, sometimes other people want to drive on it, even if at first you never really had much hope of it going anywhere special.
Friday, November 25, 2005
I wish I could bottle Thanksgiving Weekend and take sips from it all year.
Here's a random observation that I just wanted to get down before I forget: I was watching A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving last night, and I noticed something that never occurred to me before in the dozen other times I've seen it in my life. Near the end of the show in the final sequence, Snoopy and Woodstock prepare their own Thanksgiving meal and enjoy it outside Snoopy's dog house. I guess it's meant to be some sort of funny denouement to the episode, playing on the fact that the meal Snoopy had just previously served to Charlie Brown and his friends consisted of popcorn, toast, pretzel sticks and jelly beans. And then there's the dog and bird, enjoying a true feast. It is damn funny, actually. In previous years, I let the little joke distract me from the somewhat horrifying thing taking place on the screen. But last night, for some reason, I was able to forget the context and see the reality: little Woodstock gleefully eating a turkey, prepared and cooked by his friend, a dog. I'm not exactly certain what about that whole scenario freaks me out so much. It's not very much unlike those Pizza Hut commercials a couple years ago which featured Miss Piggy salivating over pizzas topped with bacon and sausage. But this was even more heinous, watching this bird being served the food by his canine friend, as if Woodstock and Snoopy's relationship had evolved to some sinister level, having the effect on the bird's mind that cancelled out any obligation whatsoever to his own species, including the promise not to cook and eat them. Maybe I'm just thinking too much about the whole thing. I'll stop now.
In other news, I'm house/petsitting for some friends. I was going through their CD collection today, and for the most part it's pretty slim pickings for such a music snob like me, but I did find a copy of Sensual World by Kate Bush. It's not a CD I own, for one reason: it contains the song This Woman's Work. It's been years since I've heard that song, but I had no doubt that no amount of time could dull the effect that that song has on me. Just for old time's sake, and maybe as a bit of a test, I turned off the TV, dimmed the lights, put the CD in their stereo, forwarded to track 10 and sat on the couch. It was just me and their cute dog sitting there, and I could swear that even little Annie felt the very air of the room change as that first piano chord struck and Kate's voice emited her first achingly beautiful "oooh-ooooh." We sat there and listened to the entire song; mine and the dog's eyes meeting momentarily near the middle, as if we were checking on each other and also perhaps giving a little support. Her sweet glance was in vain however, and when the climax of the song hit, I did as I always do and wept like a baby. Damn you Kate Bush and your gut wrenchingly beautiful song.
Here's a random observation that I just wanted to get down before I forget: I was watching A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving last night, and I noticed something that never occurred to me before in the dozen other times I've seen it in my life. Near the end of the show in the final sequence, Snoopy and Woodstock prepare their own Thanksgiving meal and enjoy it outside Snoopy's dog house. I guess it's meant to be some sort of funny denouement to the episode, playing on the fact that the meal Snoopy had just previously served to Charlie Brown and his friends consisted of popcorn, toast, pretzel sticks and jelly beans. And then there's the dog and bird, enjoying a true feast. It is damn funny, actually. In previous years, I let the little joke distract me from the somewhat horrifying thing taking place on the screen. But last night, for some reason, I was able to forget the context and see the reality: little Woodstock gleefully eating a turkey, prepared and cooked by his friend, a dog. I'm not exactly certain what about that whole scenario freaks me out so much. It's not very much unlike those Pizza Hut commercials a couple years ago which featured Miss Piggy salivating over pizzas topped with bacon and sausage. But this was even more heinous, watching this bird being served the food by his canine friend, as if Woodstock and Snoopy's relationship had evolved to some sinister level, having the effect on the bird's mind that cancelled out any obligation whatsoever to his own species, including the promise not to cook and eat them. Maybe I'm just thinking too much about the whole thing. I'll stop now.
In other news, I'm house/petsitting for some friends. I was going through their CD collection today, and for the most part it's pretty slim pickings for such a music snob like me, but I did find a copy of Sensual World by Kate Bush. It's not a CD I own, for one reason: it contains the song This Woman's Work. It's been years since I've heard that song, but I had no doubt that no amount of time could dull the effect that that song has on me. Just for old time's sake, and maybe as a bit of a test, I turned off the TV, dimmed the lights, put the CD in their stereo, forwarded to track 10 and sat on the couch. It was just me and their cute dog sitting there, and I could swear that even little Annie felt the very air of the room change as that first piano chord struck and Kate's voice emited her first achingly beautiful "oooh-ooooh." We sat there and listened to the entire song; mine and the dog's eyes meeting momentarily near the middle, as if we were checking on each other and also perhaps giving a little support. Her sweet glance was in vain however, and when the climax of the song hit, I did as I always do and wept like a baby. Damn you Kate Bush and your gut wrenchingly beautiful song.
Two days off in a row and I still have two more days to sleep in. Someone a long time ago really knew what the hell they were doing when they put Thanksgiving on a Thursday. I'm guessing it was some indian, or maybe a pilgrim. Makes me want to thank them by going to a casino, or eating some oatmeal. Actually, I might be thinking of quakers with that last thing. Well, whatever.
Wednesday, November 16, 2005
This might be the golden age of standing up for things. Everyone has an opinion on everything, and there are more outlets than ever through which they can make those opinions known, loud and clear. The TV media seem to be clamoring for standpoints and soundbites to the point now that they’ll give almost anyone some airtime if that person has something unique to say, or at least looks pretty while saying it. We’ve become a society constantly on the lookout for something to ruminate upon and form an opinion about, the more extreme the better. No wrongdoing or irritation, no matter how slight, can go on without acknowledgment and having some attention drawn to it. No underrepresented segment of a population, or even an individual with a bone to pick, has any excuse for not being heard. After all, this is the age of the almighty blog.
Well, now that I’ve succumbed to this new age myself, I think it’s about time that I take a stand. I’m irritated by a lot of things, quite honestly, and I think I’ve finally built enough gumption concerning one particular thing be passionate enough to plant my feet and shout my feelings on it from the mountaintop.
I refuse to bag my own groceries.
I work eight hours a day, forty hours a week in order to earn the money to go to a grocery store, select what I want to buy, put it down on that movey-thingy, and have someone ring it up. Now, let me be clear: no matter how much my purchases begin to pile up on the other side, and if I happen to have chosen a checkout aisle that doesn’t currently have someone standing there waiting to retrieve my groceries and bag them, I will not be guilted into bagging them myself. Not by the checkout person, not by the people in line behind me who doubtlessly will have to wait a little longer, and not by anyone who happens to be with me. It’s something I simply refuse to do.
I’ve long been conscious of the fact that a grocery store will usually have fewer baggers on hand than open checkout lanes, causing a sort of musical-chairs situation. The baggers go where needed the most at any given time. That’s perfectly fine. What usually happens is a bagger will eventually notice my things piling up and come over to assist. But sometimes that doesn’t happen, and it’s left to the checkout person to bag them him or herself. That’s an unfortunate outcome, but not anything that would even come close to making me feel obligated to help.
I’m sure there will be those that find my views on the subject disagreeable and maybe even infuriating. “Where does he get off thinking he’s above bagging his own groceries?” they might ask. “Doesn’t he realize how hard those grocery baggers work for such little pay? Don’t they deserve all the help we can give them?” I will say that I do feel bad for them. And I do appreciate the job that they do. But we all have jobs to do, and while what I’m about to say may not be popular, it’s true: they should have done better in school if they didn’t want to bag groceries for a living. There, I said it, and I stand by it.
If any news outlets would like to press me any further on my potentially incendiary comments, please contact me at the email address I provided on my profile.
Well, now that I’ve succumbed to this new age myself, I think it’s about time that I take a stand. I’m irritated by a lot of things, quite honestly, and I think I’ve finally built enough gumption concerning one particular thing be passionate enough to plant my feet and shout my feelings on it from the mountaintop.
I refuse to bag my own groceries.
I work eight hours a day, forty hours a week in order to earn the money to go to a grocery store, select what I want to buy, put it down on that movey-thingy, and have someone ring it up. Now, let me be clear: no matter how much my purchases begin to pile up on the other side, and if I happen to have chosen a checkout aisle that doesn’t currently have someone standing there waiting to retrieve my groceries and bag them, I will not be guilted into bagging them myself. Not by the checkout person, not by the people in line behind me who doubtlessly will have to wait a little longer, and not by anyone who happens to be with me. It’s something I simply refuse to do.
I’ve long been conscious of the fact that a grocery store will usually have fewer baggers on hand than open checkout lanes, causing a sort of musical-chairs situation. The baggers go where needed the most at any given time. That’s perfectly fine. What usually happens is a bagger will eventually notice my things piling up and come over to assist. But sometimes that doesn’t happen, and it’s left to the checkout person to bag them him or herself. That’s an unfortunate outcome, but not anything that would even come close to making me feel obligated to help.
I’m sure there will be those that find my views on the subject disagreeable and maybe even infuriating. “Where does he get off thinking he’s above bagging his own groceries?” they might ask. “Doesn’t he realize how hard those grocery baggers work for such little pay? Don’t they deserve all the help we can give them?” I will say that I do feel bad for them. And I do appreciate the job that they do. But we all have jobs to do, and while what I’m about to say may not be popular, it’s true: they should have done better in school if they didn’t want to bag groceries for a living. There, I said it, and I stand by it.
If any news outlets would like to press me any further on my potentially incendiary comments, please contact me at the email address I provided on my profile.
Thursday, November 10, 2005
It’s a beautiful day. I just took a walk during lunch and stopped in at a few stores. I’m not even going to pretend to be angry about the fact that they were all playing Christmas music over their speakers and had decorations up on November 10th. Yes, it’s all so commercial and begins earlier every year. But I love it.
Not trying to jinx it, but for no particular reason, I’ve been feeling better lately than in have in a long time.
Enough of that though. What I want to talk about today is my friend Mikey. Actually, he’s not really a friend of mine. I’d say he’s more of a friend of friends of mine, but my friends don’t really like him either. Which is one of the many good things about the fact that he’s leaving town next week and heading back to home, for good.
Mikey entered our lives a couple years ago, on his way back from serving as a marine in Iraq. Naturally, he decided the best place to start his civilian life would be in a large, harsh city that mostly disagrees with the war he just got done fighting, offered no concrete leads for his employment, and where he knew very few people. What is here, however, is our friend Kevin. Mikey is in love with Kevin.
I should say right now that Mikey is completely straight, despite quite a lot of evidence that might suggest otherwise, such as his aforementioned man-crush on Kevin. During his first weekend here, he kissed a man. It was a cross-dressing man. You might think that’s hard to believe in a oh-sure-like-he-really-didn’t-know sort of way, but you have to remember that Mikey had just gotten back from serving in the military in the constant company of nothing but men, so his perception of what women look like was probably a little compromised anyway. And I’m here to tell you, that guy made one hell of a convincing woman. Not that I would have gone anywhere near his/her face with mine, but when you add in the fact that Mikey just really isn’t all that smart, what you’ve got is a lot of factors leading up to a perfect storm of an accidental homosexual incident.
Over the past couple years, Mikey has supplied as us all with a lot of entertainment, most of it at his expense. It’s a tradeoff really, as laughing at him is really the only thing that eases the difficulty of being around him. I don’t like to sound mean, but Mikey is, well...an idiot. He says a lot of inappropriate things at the worst times, he’s completely lacking in basic social skills, and he’s unable to understand how everyone else in the world isn’t as obsessed as he is with sports and the whole going-overseas-and-bombing-the-hell-out-of-a-whole country thing. Frankly, we all felt too bad for him to completely nix him from our lives. Besides, he kept getting our new phone numbers. But now that he’s leaving, we can all just sort of sit back and remember the good times without the accompanying bringdown of knowing we’ll have any more of the bad.
Number one on the list of all-time great Mikey moments is when he was brutally attacked for absolutely no reason by my friend Desiree’s cat. Buffy simply scurried across the room, claws extended, tail swollen and back arched, and swatted at Mikey repeatedly like he was a living, walking, screaming scratching post. That was also the night Mikey later single-handedly caused my friend Keith, one of the sweetest, calmest people I’ve ever known, to stand up and threaten Mikey’s life during a hand of Texas Hold ‘em Poker. Was Mikey cheating, you ask? Hell no. We’d been spending the previous hour trying to explain to Mikey how to play. That was one of many times at least one of us had to leave the room or run the risk of strangling him.
In his time here, he was banned from three bars. He fell in love with one bartender at a local bar, who, as Keith once put it, might very well be the ugliest woman on the planet. She refused to go out with him. As his grand finale, and serving as the reason why he’s leaving town a couple months earlier than he had planned, Mikey got fired last week from the packing company he had worked at for two months. The reason? Wait for it: stealing bubble wrap. Except he didn’t even steal it. The security cameras clearly show him walking out to his car with a wad of bubble wrap in his hand, opening the car, throwing his sweatshirt in, and then returning to work with the bubble wrap still in his hand. So conspiring to steal bubble wrap then.
This Sunday night is the Farewell Mikey party. Because, after all is said and done, he’s someone that was part of our lives for at least a small part of it, and we all wish him well. And just to show our good will, we’re all pitching in for a gift card for free gas.
That way, if he runs out of money on the trip, by that point he’ll probably be far, far away.
Not trying to jinx it, but for no particular reason, I’ve been feeling better lately than in have in a long time.
Enough of that though. What I want to talk about today is my friend Mikey. Actually, he’s not really a friend of mine. I’d say he’s more of a friend of friends of mine, but my friends don’t really like him either. Which is one of the many good things about the fact that he’s leaving town next week and heading back to home, for good.
Mikey entered our lives a couple years ago, on his way back from serving as a marine in Iraq. Naturally, he decided the best place to start his civilian life would be in a large, harsh city that mostly disagrees with the war he just got done fighting, offered no concrete leads for his employment, and where he knew very few people. What is here, however, is our friend Kevin. Mikey is in love with Kevin.
I should say right now that Mikey is completely straight, despite quite a lot of evidence that might suggest otherwise, such as his aforementioned man-crush on Kevin. During his first weekend here, he kissed a man. It was a cross-dressing man. You might think that’s hard to believe in a oh-sure-like-he-really-didn’t-know sort of way, but you have to remember that Mikey had just gotten back from serving in the military in the constant company of nothing but men, so his perception of what women look like was probably a little compromised anyway. And I’m here to tell you, that guy made one hell of a convincing woman. Not that I would have gone anywhere near his/her face with mine, but when you add in the fact that Mikey just really isn’t all that smart, what you’ve got is a lot of factors leading up to a perfect storm of an accidental homosexual incident.
Over the past couple years, Mikey has supplied as us all with a lot of entertainment, most of it at his expense. It’s a tradeoff really, as laughing at him is really the only thing that eases the difficulty of being around him. I don’t like to sound mean, but Mikey is, well...an idiot. He says a lot of inappropriate things at the worst times, he’s completely lacking in basic social skills, and he’s unable to understand how everyone else in the world isn’t as obsessed as he is with sports and the whole going-overseas-and-bombing-the-hell-out-of-a-whole country thing. Frankly, we all felt too bad for him to completely nix him from our lives. Besides, he kept getting our new phone numbers. But now that he’s leaving, we can all just sort of sit back and remember the good times without the accompanying bringdown of knowing we’ll have any more of the bad.
Number one on the list of all-time great Mikey moments is when he was brutally attacked for absolutely no reason by my friend Desiree’s cat. Buffy simply scurried across the room, claws extended, tail swollen and back arched, and swatted at Mikey repeatedly like he was a living, walking, screaming scratching post. That was also the night Mikey later single-handedly caused my friend Keith, one of the sweetest, calmest people I’ve ever known, to stand up and threaten Mikey’s life during a hand of Texas Hold ‘em Poker. Was Mikey cheating, you ask? Hell no. We’d been spending the previous hour trying to explain to Mikey how to play. That was one of many times at least one of us had to leave the room or run the risk of strangling him.
In his time here, he was banned from three bars. He fell in love with one bartender at a local bar, who, as Keith once put it, might very well be the ugliest woman on the planet. She refused to go out with him. As his grand finale, and serving as the reason why he’s leaving town a couple months earlier than he had planned, Mikey got fired last week from the packing company he had worked at for two months. The reason? Wait for it: stealing bubble wrap. Except he didn’t even steal it. The security cameras clearly show him walking out to his car with a wad of bubble wrap in his hand, opening the car, throwing his sweatshirt in, and then returning to work with the bubble wrap still in his hand. So conspiring to steal bubble wrap then.
This Sunday night is the Farewell Mikey party. Because, after all is said and done, he’s someone that was part of our lives for at least a small part of it, and we all wish him well. And just to show our good will, we’re all pitching in for a gift card for free gas.
That way, if he runs out of money on the trip, by that point he’ll probably be far, far away.
Wednesday, November 09, 2005
My day-to-day life all takes place within a five to ten square mile bubble. It’s been that way for the past six months, since I moved to a new apartment closer to where I work and do everything else I do. Though I don’t really miss the commute in the mornings and evenings, and I’m glad to have the extra money once spent on gas, it still feels a little weird to me that my whole existence can be contained in such a small area. There’s a whole big giant world out there, and I subsist almost completely in a pinprick-sized portion of it.
Most of my time is spent at my eight hour a day job, and then another eight hours or so goes towards sleep. My calculator just told me that that leaves me with another eight hours daily to go out and exist in this big crazy world we live in. And I spend a lot of that watching TV. But I do sometimes leave the apartment and venture out. Like, if the power goes out or something.
It’s my relative lack of movement in the outside world that makes me all the more amazed by the fact that I keep seeing the same guy with uncanny frequency. I see him walking around at least once a week. And it began long before I even moved down here. I’ve walked past him, on the other side of the street from him, seen him walking by from the window of my office or some restaurant, driven past him, and almost run into him a few times. He literally must walk continuously around the area for me to have seen him as many times as I have.
The reason I always notice him is because he’s odd looking. Not so odd that anyone would run away screaming or even point and laugh really, but he sticks out. He somewhat short, say 5’6”, in his 50’s perhaps, with what I would call a black pompadour for hair, probably dyed, and always wears unfashionably big sunglasses. He’s very Italian looking, in a retired mob thug kind of way. Two qualities about him really stick out to me more than anything else though. One is that he has extremely long arms and big hands for his body, giving him sort of an apish appearance as he walks because they swing behind him with every step. The other is that he always dresses warmly no matter what the weather. That really bothers me. I can’t personally think of anything worse than going for a long walk and not dressing appropriately for it, especially if it means wearing a long sleeved turtleneck on a sunny 90-degree day. You’d think that as much as this guy walks, he’d check the weather report before leaving his house.
But does he have a house? That’s the question that always naturally pops into my head. Where is he coming from, and where does he go back to…eventually? I forgot to mention that he walks pretty fast, sort of giving the impression that he really has something to do and a place to go, unlike the typical homeless people in the area that merely saunter and wander.
I don’t know why I care, but one day I’d like to follow him. I know that sounds crazy, but if I’m ever out on some Saturday with nothing special to do and he should walk by, I think I’d just like to see where he goes and where he ends up.
Assuming, of course, I’m dressed for it.
Most of my time is spent at my eight hour a day job, and then another eight hours or so goes towards sleep. My calculator just told me that that leaves me with another eight hours daily to go out and exist in this big crazy world we live in. And I spend a lot of that watching TV. But I do sometimes leave the apartment and venture out. Like, if the power goes out or something.
It’s my relative lack of movement in the outside world that makes me all the more amazed by the fact that I keep seeing the same guy with uncanny frequency. I see him walking around at least once a week. And it began long before I even moved down here. I’ve walked past him, on the other side of the street from him, seen him walking by from the window of my office or some restaurant, driven past him, and almost run into him a few times. He literally must walk continuously around the area for me to have seen him as many times as I have.
The reason I always notice him is because he’s odd looking. Not so odd that anyone would run away screaming or even point and laugh really, but he sticks out. He somewhat short, say 5’6”, in his 50’s perhaps, with what I would call a black pompadour for hair, probably dyed, and always wears unfashionably big sunglasses. He’s very Italian looking, in a retired mob thug kind of way. Two qualities about him really stick out to me more than anything else though. One is that he has extremely long arms and big hands for his body, giving him sort of an apish appearance as he walks because they swing behind him with every step. The other is that he always dresses warmly no matter what the weather. That really bothers me. I can’t personally think of anything worse than going for a long walk and not dressing appropriately for it, especially if it means wearing a long sleeved turtleneck on a sunny 90-degree day. You’d think that as much as this guy walks, he’d check the weather report before leaving his house.
But does he have a house? That’s the question that always naturally pops into my head. Where is he coming from, and where does he go back to…eventually? I forgot to mention that he walks pretty fast, sort of giving the impression that he really has something to do and a place to go, unlike the typical homeless people in the area that merely saunter and wander.
I don’t know why I care, but one day I’d like to follow him. I know that sounds crazy, but if I’m ever out on some Saturday with nothing special to do and he should walk by, I think I’d just like to see where he goes and where he ends up.
Assuming, of course, I’m dressed for it.
Thursday, November 03, 2005
I once hit a deer.
It was in a bar, and he was being mouthy. He said crude things to the girl I was with, so I punched him. I’m not proud of it. A brawl broke out, and things got scary when he started ramming me with his antlers. It’s a good thing he was young, as his antlers were quite small.
The police were called, and they arrested him. They let me off with a warning. Even I have to admit that the cops seemed a bit biased in the situation. I even felt a bit guilty as the police car drove away, lights flashing, with the deer tied to the roof.
It was in a bar, and he was being mouthy. He said crude things to the girl I was with, so I punched him. I’m not proud of it. A brawl broke out, and things got scary when he started ramming me with his antlers. It’s a good thing he was young, as his antlers were quite small.
The police were called, and they arrested him. They let me off with a warning. Even I have to admit that the cops seemed a bit biased in the situation. I even felt a bit guilty as the police car drove away, lights flashing, with the deer tied to the roof.
Tuesday, November 01, 2005
I heard once that what makes children special isn’t what they don’t know and all the things they aren’t aware of, but the innocent and remarkable ways they interpret everything they see, hear and feel as they experience the world around them. It makes sense. If ignorance equaled cuteness, we would love and adore blondes instead of merely wanting to sleep with them. Likewise, the fact that I don’t know how to ice skate doesn’t make me more endearing; it only makes me not gay.
When I was very little, the first time I saw the crescent moon in the sky, I naturally assumed that it was a floating, bitten-off thumbnail of a giant. I went on believing that for a long time. I remember thinking that the fact that it changed shape and became more circular as the month went on certainly seemed like a strange thing for a giant fingernail in the sky to do, but I just chalked it up to be one of those things a grown up could explain but that I wouldn’t really understand anyway, so I might as well wait until I’m older. There were lots of things like that when I was little.
I’ve long ago gotten over the pride I once felt at learning that the moon is in fact just a big rock floating in space, and furthermore that we’d already landed on it and took a little stroll a few years before I was born. I also regret learning the truth that trolls don’t live under bridges. I mean, not that I want a troll under every bridge or anything. That would really suck for all those people in Oakland that have to commute to San Francisco every day, having to deal with some goblin jumping in front of their cars at any given moment. But I do think the occasional troll living under a small wooden backcountry bridge here and there would kind of perk things up a little, especially if it’s the bridge over the river on the way to grandmother’s house. That would make me feel that amazing things exist in the world. The closest thing to trolls in the real world are the homeless people that I walk by every day at lunchtime, but they only make me feel sad. Although a lot of them probably really do live under bridges.
Why is Paris Hilton the closest thing we have to a princess? Why does our president have to make fairy-tale villains look harmless in comparison? How did pharmaceutical companies take the idea of magic beans and turn it into something so sinister and abused? Why does my personal dragon that I have to slay before I can have my happy ending have to involve resolving debt, and constantly fixing car problems, and never feeling totally at ease with anyone at all really, and just generally never knowing if I’m winning or losing, or even if I’m really in the fight in the first place?
I guess I don’t want to know less than I do. I just wish I could perceive it all in some special way again. Even if I were dead wrong about everything, it would make some beautiful kind of sense, if only to me.
When I was very little, the first time I saw the crescent moon in the sky, I naturally assumed that it was a floating, bitten-off thumbnail of a giant. I went on believing that for a long time. I remember thinking that the fact that it changed shape and became more circular as the month went on certainly seemed like a strange thing for a giant fingernail in the sky to do, but I just chalked it up to be one of those things a grown up could explain but that I wouldn’t really understand anyway, so I might as well wait until I’m older. There were lots of things like that when I was little.
I’ve long ago gotten over the pride I once felt at learning that the moon is in fact just a big rock floating in space, and furthermore that we’d already landed on it and took a little stroll a few years before I was born. I also regret learning the truth that trolls don’t live under bridges. I mean, not that I want a troll under every bridge or anything. That would really suck for all those people in Oakland that have to commute to San Francisco every day, having to deal with some goblin jumping in front of their cars at any given moment. But I do think the occasional troll living under a small wooden backcountry bridge here and there would kind of perk things up a little, especially if it’s the bridge over the river on the way to grandmother’s house. That would make me feel that amazing things exist in the world. The closest thing to trolls in the real world are the homeless people that I walk by every day at lunchtime, but they only make me feel sad. Although a lot of them probably really do live under bridges.
Why is Paris Hilton the closest thing we have to a princess? Why does our president have to make fairy-tale villains look harmless in comparison? How did pharmaceutical companies take the idea of magic beans and turn it into something so sinister and abused? Why does my personal dragon that I have to slay before I can have my happy ending have to involve resolving debt, and constantly fixing car problems, and never feeling totally at ease with anyone at all really, and just generally never knowing if I’m winning or losing, or even if I’m really in the fight in the first place?
I guess I don’t want to know less than I do. I just wish I could perceive it all in some special way again. Even if I were dead wrong about everything, it would make some beautiful kind of sense, if only to me.
Monday, October 31, 2005
A man told me to beware of thirty-three
He said “It was not an easy time for me”
But I’ll get through
Even though I’ve got no miracles to show you
- “Dishes” by Pulp
So it’s come to pass, and I’ve officially achieved thirty-three. My birthday on Friday was sweet. I took the day off work, saw a movie, had lunch with a friend, and celebrity-sighted Michael Keaton reading a newspaper in a café. I’m not one for putting a lot of weight in omens, but I fail to see how running into Batman on one’s birthday could mean anything other than guaranteed good fortune for the year ahead.
I don’t remember seeing any celebrities on or around my thirty-second birthday that would have suggested how the future year would unfold, but the tenor of past 365 days was akin to wandering into a Sizzler and witnessing the annoying redhead from One Day at a Time snuggling with Alan Thicke at a corner table. Need I say more?
I didn’t hear you if you answered, so here’s more. I’ve never personally sucked on the genitals of a donkey, nor do I know anyone that has (or at least nobody that has admitted to having done so, though now that I think about it, I probably know at least a couple), but the general consensus is that it’s an experience that is mostly negative (from the sucker’s standpoint; no one ever thinks of how the donkey feels). Well, thirty-two sort of sucked donkey balls.
Hopefully then I can be forgiven for seeking a glimmer of hope in happening to happen on Mr. Mom on my special day. The fact is, I’ve been a longtime fan of Mr. Keaton. And why not? He’s brilliant. I mean, he was the Purple Panda on Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood. Not a lot of people know that. What range! From panda to president, from snowman to speechwriter, from Beetlejuice to…that guy he played in Night Shift. (Bill Blazejowski, but no one knows that. Even I had to look it up.)
So, here’s to thirty-three and the hope that the next year will bring great fortune, good health, and incredible opportunity. And that I’ll run into Angelina Jolie on October 28th, 2006, newly separated from Brad Pitt.
He said “It was not an easy time for me”
But I’ll get through
Even though I’ve got no miracles to show you
- “Dishes” by Pulp
So it’s come to pass, and I’ve officially achieved thirty-three. My birthday on Friday was sweet. I took the day off work, saw a movie, had lunch with a friend, and celebrity-sighted Michael Keaton reading a newspaper in a café. I’m not one for putting a lot of weight in omens, but I fail to see how running into Batman on one’s birthday could mean anything other than guaranteed good fortune for the year ahead.
I don’t remember seeing any celebrities on or around my thirty-second birthday that would have suggested how the future year would unfold, but the tenor of past 365 days was akin to wandering into a Sizzler and witnessing the annoying redhead from One Day at a Time snuggling with Alan Thicke at a corner table. Need I say more?
I didn’t hear you if you answered, so here’s more. I’ve never personally sucked on the genitals of a donkey, nor do I know anyone that has (or at least nobody that has admitted to having done so, though now that I think about it, I probably know at least a couple), but the general consensus is that it’s an experience that is mostly negative (from the sucker’s standpoint; no one ever thinks of how the donkey feels). Well, thirty-two sort of sucked donkey balls.
Hopefully then I can be forgiven for seeking a glimmer of hope in happening to happen on Mr. Mom on my special day. The fact is, I’ve been a longtime fan of Mr. Keaton. And why not? He’s brilliant. I mean, he was the Purple Panda on Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood. Not a lot of people know that. What range! From panda to president, from snowman to speechwriter, from Beetlejuice to…that guy he played in Night Shift. (Bill Blazejowski, but no one knows that. Even I had to look it up.)
So, here’s to thirty-three and the hope that the next year will bring great fortune, good health, and incredible opportunity. And that I’ll run into Angelina Jolie on October 28th, 2006, newly separated from Brad Pitt.
Thursday, October 27, 2005
Does anyone actually read these things?
Tomorrow is my birthday. Thirty-three doesn't seem to be much of a milestone, except when you consider that it was the age that Jesus died. I guess that means that if you've reached three decades and three years without either inspiring people to worship your word, or pissing off an empire enough to nail you to some perch, you can pretty much give up on future generations ever getting a day off of work in your name.
Or maybe not; what was Martin Luther King, Jr. doing at the age of 33? I'm not sure offhand how old he was when he was shot, but there was a guy who obviously didn't get to the Jesus Year and go "Oh well, screw it, might as well call it a day for the whole martyrdom thing. Maybe I'll take up pottery."
I'm very tired. The thought of taking up pottery sounds every bit as exhausting to me as taking on any empire, even one as misdirected and silly as the one I live in. I can't think of a single inspiring thing to say to anyone. No one's listening anyway. I pass a guy almost every day on 3rd Street Promenade who just stands on a corner, yelling a bunch of stuff. I can't believe he's never lost his voice. (Actually, for a while he had a bull horn, but the police probably told him he couldn't use it.) I've certainly never stopped to hear what he has to say, nor has anyone. I mean, how useful could it really be? He's at least not utterly insane, like a lot of the poor souls on the Promenade. I've heard enough of him to know that he's at least forming cogent thoughts, even if they're not original or meaningful. To be honest, every time I see him, my mind fills with the question of why in the world wouldn't be bring a soap box to stand on? I mean, if circumstances ever led me to a pastime of yelling what was on my mind on a street corner, you'd better put BIG money on the fact that I'd be toting a big ol' soap box and standing on that sucker.
My point is, though...
I have no idea. I'm just really tired. And I have nothing I feel I need to say anymore. Thus, a perfect candidate to start a blog. And this is the perfect day to do it, because it's not a special day at all.
On a brighter side, I wasn't really looking forward to crucifixion anyway.
Tomorrow is my birthday. Thirty-three doesn't seem to be much of a milestone, except when you consider that it was the age that Jesus died. I guess that means that if you've reached three decades and three years without either inspiring people to worship your word, or pissing off an empire enough to nail you to some perch, you can pretty much give up on future generations ever getting a day off of work in your name.
Or maybe not; what was Martin Luther King, Jr. doing at the age of 33? I'm not sure offhand how old he was when he was shot, but there was a guy who obviously didn't get to the Jesus Year and go "Oh well, screw it, might as well call it a day for the whole martyrdom thing. Maybe I'll take up pottery."
I'm very tired. The thought of taking up pottery sounds every bit as exhausting to me as taking on any empire, even one as misdirected and silly as the one I live in. I can't think of a single inspiring thing to say to anyone. No one's listening anyway. I pass a guy almost every day on 3rd Street Promenade who just stands on a corner, yelling a bunch of stuff. I can't believe he's never lost his voice. (Actually, for a while he had a bull horn, but the police probably told him he couldn't use it.) I've certainly never stopped to hear what he has to say, nor has anyone. I mean, how useful could it really be? He's at least not utterly insane, like a lot of the poor souls on the Promenade. I've heard enough of him to know that he's at least forming cogent thoughts, even if they're not original or meaningful. To be honest, every time I see him, my mind fills with the question of why in the world wouldn't be bring a soap box to stand on? I mean, if circumstances ever led me to a pastime of yelling what was on my mind on a street corner, you'd better put BIG money on the fact that I'd be toting a big ol' soap box and standing on that sucker.
My point is, though...
I have no idea. I'm just really tired. And I have nothing I feel I need to say anymore. Thus, a perfect candidate to start a blog. And this is the perfect day to do it, because it's not a special day at all.
On a brighter side, I wasn't really looking forward to crucifixion anyway.
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