Monday, November 14, 2011

Butterfly

Huh. So it’s all over. I’m tempted to add: ‘now, baby blue.’ But I won’t, because I know this reference will be wasted on most of you fucks out there, so I’ll just leave it at that.

Yeah.

Except: no.

I can’t. It’s all over. And that’s weird and normal at the same time. Normal, because I’ve been here many times, I mean I got my ‘dumpee member card’ and I’m one stamp away from a small diet soda, so I can’t help but feel kinda excited about it all.
But, also: weird because I thought this was gonna be it, she seemed to be the one, you know? We laughed and talked and listened to the same music and played the same computer games and we could totally nerd out while sipping good booze and we could also get real and deep, while sipping good booze. We’d watch films while sipping good booze, too. And sometimes we would just sip good booze, for the pleasure of it.
I used to call her ‘My little butterfly.’
Yeah, well… you know what? Butterflies are bugs and bugs are gross and should be anihilated like a bunch of Viet-Cong farmers doing their daily shopping in Ho Chi Minh Ville in 1967. Butterflies look beautiful and majestic from afar, but up close, they’re buggy six-legged freaks. Don’t get me wrong: a six-legged woman sounds pretty much like the perfect woman to me, but the bug part? I don’t think so. Dark and scaly and full of pus. And fucking six legs.
I shoulda stomped on her before she did the same to my heart. Don’t go all ‘awww’ on me, or I’ll fucking spit my drink in your face. I’m not feeling sorry for myself, I’m just stating a fact. The cunt was a fucking cunt and I fucking fell for her like a fucking cunt.
That ain’t poetry. It’s just honesty. So sue me. Yeah, do that. Walk up to me with your beautiful angel wings and flutter around and make me admire you and once I try to catch you, fuck off with a fucking moth. But please be aware that if I ever catch you again, I’ll shove a pin through your heart and stab you to my fucking wall, for all my friends to see: Ex-girlfriendus Cuntus, beautiful, deadly, and oh so pointless.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Spewing

So, hey: how about that? Here we are in one of them fancy joints they opened up near from where I’ve been livin’! Used to be, not that far back, if a guy wanted a drink, he could just stumble out of his home in his boxers and his bathrobe and stagger to the nearest liquor store and buy a fifth of whatever for under ten bucks.

But nowadays, it’s all fancy bullshit. The liquor stores have been bought up by the faggoty coffee chains and the wooden Injuns frontin’ the cigar places have been replaced by real-life Mexican sportin’ signs, trying to convince you that your phone operator’s fucking you, so you should sign up with them because, when they fuck you, they have the decency to lube you up first. That’s progress for you.

Fuckin’ hell. I mean, really: Fuckin’ hell pigsty-cuntin’ shit-hole of a goddamn what-the-fuck!
Now I gotta actually get in my car and drive to get to where I wanna get boozed up. Yeah, ain’t that super smart? Oh, don’t get wrong: I did try to go to that fancy-ass supermarket bullshit they opened up. The booze section was all the way in the back, as if it was some kinda kiddie-porn stash. And the looks I got just ‘cause I hadn’t shaved or showered or put pants on, really: what the fuck?! Chill out lady: I ain’t gonna rape you, I just wanna buy this here bottle of fire water and get on home and drink myself into a week-long slumber and I sure hope to Christ I won’t run into you in my dreams. But no: I’m the freak.

Yeah.

They’re wearing speedos and keep ‘running while standing still’ at the cash register, waiting to pay for their juiced-up water bullshit, pretending not to look at the tabloids and wondering how satisfying their bowel movements are gonna be and who’s gonna fuck them this comin’ weekend and if no-one wants to fuck them, then what’s the point of it all? Maybe it’s ‘cause they’re too fat, so they should run some more. Waking up at 6am is too late, if they woke up at 5, they’d have a whole extra hour. So they figure: ‘Fuck that, I’ll drink more Gatorade and do away with sleep altogether and run all night long and then I’ll be skinny and hot and someone I wanna fuck will wanna fuck me back and then it’ll be great, we’ll fuck and run together and then we’ll die, skinny and happy.’

Yeah, I’m the freak ‘cause I enjoy a burger with fries and a cold one on a hot day. Or on a cold day. Or a tepid one. Okay: fuck it: I’ll admit it: I always like a cold one. But still: I’m the freak ‘cause I don’t run every day. Sure, I don’t get laid a whole lot, but who needs it? Once I’m drunk enough, I sleep. When I don’t sleep, I take a great big steamy runny dump or I go buy more booze. Sometimes both. I have no time for sex, or porn or anything like that. My job is hating the people I see. And it’s a full time job, lemme tell you.

Fuck, I got side-tracked, here. I was saying… so we’re at a fancy bar, not a place where cockroaches crawl across the counter, not a place where a 60-year-old toothless whore turns tricks in the men’s room. A real classy joint. A place that tries to be authentic. They put fresh nut shells on the floor every morning. They got Mexicans shelling the fuck out of peanuts all night long just for that. That’s class, baby. If you ask for another round, they actually give you a new glass and they call you ‘sir.’

‘Sir.’

Ain’t that a kick in the fucking balls? Used to be, barkeeps called me by name and I had a tab runnin’. These days, if you wanna pay cash they look at you as if you’d just sucked their one-week-old puppies' assholes with a plastic straw. If you ain’t got a platinum card or a black card or a fucking diamond-encrusted card, then you’re shit.

Now, the places I used to go to? They’re malls. Or fast food or coffee joints, fucking outlets or goddamn mother-cunt yoga places.

Used to be, women got pregnant, then they got big and they resented it, but they squeezed out the brat and went right back to smoking and drinking. If they’d ever stopped in the first place. Now, big moms pat their bellies as if they’re God-like just because a dick squirted into them. They’re proud and touchy and doing yoga and buying bullshit things for their bullshit fetus which will become a bullshit human doing bullshit things in a bullshit world.

Yeah. It’s all bullshit. You don’t agree with me? You don’t? Lemme guess… You’re a college grad, yeah? Yeah, I thought so. You’re… engaged, you got one of them electrical car whatchamacallits, you vote democrat and because one of your co-worker’s black you think you’re not a racist, right? You probably even know a gay couple, so you think you’re so fucking cool. And I bet you go to Jamba Juice once a week and think that carbs and trans-fat and Arabs are Satan’s gift to humanity, right?

Yeah, yeah, I’m leaving. Don’t worry, I’m leaving. And you’re footing my ten-dollar beer, just because you’re an asshole. Yeah, yeah, be offended. But you know what? In a few years, God-willing, I’ll be dead and buried or rotting on the side of a road somewhere or other. Yeah. But, hell: you’ll still be here and you’ll still be a pussy. And I pity you, I do. With whatever’s left of my soul, I pity you and your generation.

Fine, I’m leaving, don’t touch me! Lemme get back to my car and drive home. And if you’re lucky I’ll run over someone you know.  And if you’re not, you’ll be who you are now until the day you die.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Just Once

Thirty-five years walking
On this here land
And I can’t help but think...

The jobs?
They served
Their purpose and
Paid my booze, often.
My rent,
Sometimes.
My girls,
Always.

Yes, the girls,
Let’s talk about them…

I keep a stash of could-have-beens
Deep in the chambers of my heart
And the regrets are busting
The flood gates open.
Some were fond of me,
Probably.
But none will remember me
Or miss me when I’m gone.
I’ll be an anecdote, at best.

The friends?
Well, they shake my hands
And pat my back when they want to.
But when the darkness creeps up,
I am left alone to fight off
The demons.

All I have to show
Are a handful of acquaintances.

Drinking buddies,
Gossip mongers,
Happy in-love people
Who don’t have time
For a guy
Reminding them of
The realities of life.

So, what do I have to show?
Besides a collection
Of books and films I am still
Paying for?
Besides a heart bursting at the seams
And a life going moldy at the edges?
Not much.

Things could be worse,
Don’t we all know that…
But why can’t they be better,
Just for a short while
Or at the very least:
Just once?

A Picture of Her

I came across a picture of her
with her new beau.

The pain is as sudden and unexpected
As it is ravaging.
My heart still skips a beat at her sight,
And I wish I could go back a few
Minutes ago when I was blissfully
Unaware of who she had chosen,
Unaware of how the person whose
Lips she graced with hers
Looked like.

They are gazing at each other and,
Had the photo been of
Anyone else, it would be lovely
And heart-warming.
But as it is, it brings me nothing but pain
And the feeling of loss
Truly hits home.
Finally. Irrevocably.

Who knew I’d still feel like that after eight months
Of not hearing from her?

I can’t help looking at their eyes and
Their smiles.
Two young people in love,
Happy, unaware of the world
That surrounds them.

How I want her
-Need her-
To look at me like she looks at him
Just once more.
I remember her smile and her eyes,
Mere inches away from my face,
Her head resting on my pillow.

I can’t help thinking that
He doesn’t look that much better than me.

So why him? What’s his secret?

Where did I go wrong?

Does he realize how lucky he is?
Does he know how blessed he is?
From the way he’s looking at her,
I am guessing that he does.
And that makes it all the more
Painful.

And so I force myself a cynical thought:
Soon his heart will
Be shattered like mine,
One day, perhaps, he’ll be
Looking at a picture of her
With her new beau.

That day, I’ll feel sorry for him,
And I’ll start hating the new guy.

But never as much as I hate myself
For letting her go.

Monday, May 9, 2011

Sickness

His laugh was a thunderous ‘haw haw haw,’ just like a cartoon baddie or some black-hatted villain from the westerns he used to love watching on AMC. When people first met him, they usually thought he was faking it, as some sort of strange joke that they were the butt of. But he wasn’t, he really did laugh like that and you could never really get used to it, no matter what. So, after a while, you just tried to not make him laugh, which was no easy matter, as he always had a joke up his sleeve. And his jokes were funny, so you had to laugh and what he got off on was making people laugh. So there you were, laughing, snickering, or giggling and soon the ‘haw haw haw’ would echo throughout the house. Deep down, I think he knew his laughter bothered people and what I loved about him is that he just didn’t give a damn.

When I first heard he had cancer, I couldn’t believe it. I was having my morning coffee in my un-tied bathrobe, which was getting a bit too tight at the gut; I was gazing out of the kitchen window at the neighbor’s dog taking his umpteenth dump on our lawn, when I heard my wife sobbing. I turned around and noticed her eyes were filled with tears. I didn’t know what to say, it just seemed too early for tears and drama, especially on a Saturday.
She was sitting at the table, her fingers busy twirling a napkin ring. She took a deep breath and looked at me, saying she had something to tell me, that she just couldn’t keep it all for herself. My first thought was that her friend Bonnie had cancer again, that her breast tumor was back and that this time, it was malignant. But when she started her sentence with “my dad,” it took me a second to fully understand what she was talking about.
Her dad. My father-in-law. Raymond. Ray to his friends. He had cancer. Not just any cancer, oh no, but liver cancer. Inoperable.
“Don’t they do liver transplants?” I asked my wife.
“They do, but they can’t. It’s too far ahead.”
“Didn’t Ray get check-ups every year?”
“He did, but he never talked about his liver. Even though he’d been in pain for the last few years.”
Few years? I couldn’t believe it! Why hadn’t he talked to his doctor about it? Or to us? Or to anybody, for that matter?
“Because he didn’t want anybody to worry.”
I set my cup on the counter and sat down facing her.
“Well, we’re worrying now, so why is he telling us now?”
“Because he’s...”
She couldn’t finish her sentence, but I knew what she was about to say. “Because he’s going to die.” And soon.
I felt a deep irrational anger. Anger because: how dare he die on us?! How dare he get cancer? We’d have to call the mortuary, we’d have to “shop” for a coffin, for a plot at the cemetery... How in the world to you go about doing that?
Of course, I hated myself for thinking that way, but I didn’t know how or what else to think. This was all new to me; I didn’t know how to react. In movies, they usually break down in tears, hug and realize how fickle life is and in the end, everything changes for the best. But in real life? In real life you mostly stay quiet, keep the tears in, and think back on the good times. You also want to spend as much time with the soon-to-be-departed, but at the same time, you don’t really want to see that person at all, because you want to remember him the way he used to be: healthy, funny, strong. Not frail, sickly and gray looking. Because that’s how they look: gray. As if life was slowly fading away. Of course, that’s exactly what’s happening, but who knew death was gray?

And so on that day, my wife and I spent the morning in silence, avoiding each other’s eyes and looking out the window, at the kitchen table, at the trinkets we had amassed during out fourteen years of marriage, at the curtains that needed ironing, at the carpets that needed washing, and at pretty much anything else that was inanimate. It felt trivial to feel thirsty or hungry. It felt trivial to be too cold, or too warm. Everything we took for granted was unimportant. Everything we would usually complain about felt ridiculous. Because how could we complain? Next month, we’d still be alive with our so-called worries. But Ray wouldn’t be. So, really, truly: how could we complain?
In a way, I resented Ray dying: Because I couldn’t complain to him. People love to bitch and moan about their problems but, most importantly: they love to have people feel sorry for them. How can you complain about the hole in your new shirt to a cancer patient? And if you can’t complain about your life, what is there left to talk about? Well, you have to listen to the cancer patient complain about his life and the rotten luck he’s having and you just have to care and you hate that. Because cancer tops it all. It’s the ultimate complaint, the ultimate answer to everything: “Oh yeah? Well, I got cancer.” Nothing to say to that.

At eleven, my wife and I got dressed. We were going to pay Ray a visit. Of course, I knew that we’d be wearing fake smiles and that we’d talk about everything except his disease and his dying, and we’d pretend to be cheery and it would all seem so fake; but we’d all pretend it wasn’t. He’d even crack a joke or two and his laughter would sound weak and frail and I’d realize that I was going to miss this laugh that I used to dislike so much. I also knew that as soon as we’d be back in the car, my wife would start sobbing and I’d have to hug her and pat her on the back and tell her that things would be okay and she would say “no, that’s the point, nothing’s gonna be okay!” And so I’d have to stay quiet and hold her until the sobs subsided and I’d be able to put the key in the ignition and drive back to our house, where we’d probably have a drink and she’d cry some more and tell me she didn’t feel like cooking dinner tonight and I’d play the understanding and caring husband, telling her she shouldn’t even worry about that, that we could order something in, and so I’d pay thirty bucks for lukewarm Chinese food that she wouldn’t even eat and I’d tell her she just had to eat something and she’d tell me she wasn’t hungry, that she just wanted to go to sleep and so she would go upstairs while I ate the by-now-cold spring rolls, and I’d watch some TV before cleaning up and joining my wife in bed. She’d be wide awake, of course, crying and staring at the wall, curled up into a ball, and I’d hug her some more and tell her things I didn’t really mean, such as “everything will be okay.” This time she wouldn’t contradict me, because she’d want to believe it.
            We would then finally fall asleep only to wake up the next morning, more tired than when we’d gone to bed, and we’d realize we hadn’t dreamed it all, that we were still surrounded by reality and impending death. Worst of all, I’d have to keep pretending I was the strong type and comfort her, making sure I didn’t cry in front of her. One day, maybe she would be thankful for all of this, but it would be too late because by then I’d hate her for having forced me into becoming the strong type, because I never was the strong type and always hated hiding my feelings. After all, Ray was like the father I’d never had. But by then, I’d have become so good at masking my emotions that I’d also be able to hide my resentment of her. She’d eventually realize my feelings had changed, but she’d still pretend she loved me because of how good I had been when her father had passed away, and so we would keep living this lie until one of us died.

We got in the car and drove to see Ray, me already dreading everything that was bound to happen, but nonetheless ready to start acting the great tragedy that would become our life.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Shame

Shame… Fuck… What’s shame? I mean I know what shame is, I know you know what it is and if you can’t put it into words, you’re gonna run for the nearest Webster’s. But let’s be deep, man, let’s go all out. Let’s  talk about shame and what it really is. For me? I don’t know, there are so many levels of shame, you know? I mean, it can be shame from yourself, you know: you’re staring at your goldfish and your mind starts to wander, it wanders, you wonder, you can’t help it: what would it feel like to get a blow job from a big gold fish? You know? That perfect ‘O’ mouth, no teeth… we’ve all thought about it. Then our brain goes ‘wait, whaaaat?’ and you look down in shame, because you’re one sick motherfucker, you know.

Or, I don’t know, your brother catches you jerking off your dog. Your brother’s a bit disturbed, I mean therapy is a given at this point. Lying down on the couch, gripping tissues, asking ‘Why? Why?’ all the time. The dog was happy, if a bit confused. But generally happy. Then again it kind of always was sporting a big goofy grin. But, no: I’m sure he was happy. And possibly frustrated. Because, well, when you brother walked in on your little canine debauchery, you stopped. So that’s one frustrated retriever, you know? And the shame? The shame you felt as you made eye contact with your brother? That shit ran deep. You were deeply ashamed, because you’re one twisted twat.

But you get over that, you say it’s youth’s folly and you move on, somehow. The shame I’m talking about here is the kind that sticks with you like body odor on Easter Sunday. You know: the sun’s blazing, you’re wearing a suit, you ran out of deodorant the day before and you were too busy twiddling your woman’s vag to go out and get some more. So now you feel sweat pooling into your shoes and a fucking creek is forming between your shoulder blades and a lake is forming in your ass crack. And you smell, man, you smell worse than a pile of corpse. Anyway, what was I saying? Yes… The shame that sticks with you…

For example, you start working somewhere new and there’s this girl just sitting there. And your heart skips a beat, you know? She’s just so… So incredible. You know? Then she looks up and smiles at you and you think you might pass out, you have to remind yourself to breathe. It might be love at first sight, I don’t know, or maybe it’s just asthma or all those years of pepperoni pizzas finally catching up with you and this is it: your heart attack is upon you. But no, you’re alive, you feel a bit dizzy and you smile back and you don’t know what to say, so you don’t say anything. You grin like a retriever. And this goes on and on. You get nervous around her, you can’t talk to her, but you want to, but you don’t know what to say, so you don’t because you can’t. But you should, you know you should. But you just don’t. Idiot. So, one day she casually mentions that she hates coffee.

Now… Coffee’s your life. I mean you live for coffee. If they made coffee suppositories, you’d shove them in your ass five at a time, that’s how much you love coffee. If you had to wake up and your coffee machine was broken, you’d just run into the bathroom and slash open your wrists, because without coffee: what’s the point, you know? You love coffee so much that you sometimes think  about chewing on used coffee filters and you think that if you commercialized a candy called ‘Used Filter,’ you’d be a millionaire. And if you went bust, you wouldn’t give a shit anyway because then you’d have a gazillion of those candies just for you. So, yeah: you love coffee. More than sex, more than shitting, more than your PS3. If anybody told you: ‘Yeah, I’m not a big fan of coffee,’ you’d go nuts. They’re not saying they don’t like it, just that they don’t love it. If anyone told you this, you’d grab the nearest blunt object and bash their brains in, because fuck them really. ’You don’t like coffee? Oh, no? How do you like having your brain leak down your forehead, you stupid cunt?!’

So, okay: you feel strongly about coffee. And this girl that makes you dizzy tells somebody else she hates coffee. So you vouch right then and there that you’ll stop drinking coffee. And you do. And she doesn’t know it, and even if she did how would she understand how much you love coffee anyway? But that’s okay, you did it for her. Because, well… She’s worth it. So worth it that you still don’t talk to her.

But one day… Yeah, we’re getting to the shame part, hold your horses… One day you’re home and you’re a bit drunk because you finally opened that bottle of vodka somebody gave you for your last birthday and you’re listening to sad-shit music. Not gay music, just sad. You know the kind. I’m not talking Lilith Fair, here. I’m not talking about Sondheim or whatever. But good sad music. Tindersticks, maybe, or even Antony and the Johnsons. Yeah, so they’re gay, that’s not the point. The point is: you’re drunk, listening to music. And alone. And your mind drifts to Her, that creature who probably doesn’t even know your name. But you got her email because some asshole co-worker likes to forward shit to everyone. The fuck sent you a video of a cat rollerblading or something like that and, at first, you’d decided that, okay: tomorrow I’m bringing a shotgun to work and this asshole is going down. But then in the ‘To:’ line in that email, you noticed Her name. Her email. This sent an electric charge in your brain and your feet felt tingly for a second. It was like finding the Holy Grail. You didn’t know why, you didn’t know what you’d do with it. But it felt important to have it. And to see her name on your screen. So, you had her email. Thanks to the forwarding douche. God bless this fucking douche.

So, you’re home and, hey: you’re so drunk it feels like a good idea to email her. So you do. Deep down, whatever’s left of your reason is on its knees begging you to reconsider. I mean at this point your reason is John Turturro in the woods in ‘Miller’s Crossing.’ But you’re Gabriel Byrne, you go ‘fuck it!’ and you start typing. And you pour your heart out. Not too dramatically, but honestly, if a bit drunkenly. But not so drunkenly that you forget to read it a few times, correcting the grammar and punctuation and what have you. And before your reason turns itself into the shark from ‘Jaws’ and snaps at you, you click ‘Send.’ Then you light up a smoke, fart, and pour yourself another drink.

In the morning, hey: guess what?! Shame. Not shame because you got drunk and wrote her, no. You did what you had to do. But shame for feeling this way about a girl who doesn’t know who the fuck you are. Shame for feeling like a teenager. Shame for acting like a pimply prick. I mean, okay, you think about her all the time. You don’t even think dirty filthy thoughts, but nice ones: looking at her, listening to her, having dinner with her, making her laugh. You can’t imagine sleeping with her, because you know she would never do that with you. And you know you could never have such a girl. But being her friend, maybe make her fall in love with you, maybe. Why not? Stranger things have happened. And one day, maybe, she’ll take your hand in hers and then you’ll know you could die happy. You can’t even imagine kissing her, because if you do, you might pass out.

That’s shame, buddy. You’re a thirty-something guy fantasizing about a younger girl. Don’t get me wrong, it’s not like she’s 12, no: it’s not that kind of shame. I mean, she’s not that much younger. But she is younger. And beautiful, with that smile of hers, and those eyes and the long flowing hair, and… Yeah, anyway. Whatever. You feel shame for not talking to her, shame for feeling that way about her. Shame for being a coward. Shame for being a fool.

And then, you know what? She never replies to your email. Is it because she didn’t read it? Is it because she doesn’t know who you are? Is it because you didn’t actually send it? Is it because you freaked her out? You’ll never know. Because you stop going to work, you never see her again. Instead you sit in dark bars, get drunk and talk about her to people you barely know.

One day, three months after that email, you actually write her another email, apologizing for having written to her. And when you click ‘Send,’ the shame you feel is so overwhelming you look at your heater and imagine yourself strapping a belt around the hot pipe, putting your head in that leathery noose, emptying the vodka while taking a few dozen sleeping pills and going to sleep, strangled by Morpheus.

No, not ‘The Matrix’ guy.

Fuck you, man, you asked me about shame, so I’m telling you. What? You didn’t ask me? Well, fuck you anyway. Buy me another drink and I’ll tell you about sorrow. 

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Excuses

Why not...
well...
come on...
just a...
very quick...
painless...

who would even...
no one would...

maybe one or two people...
but, come on...

but I've run out of bullets,
my rope is frayed,
I can't afford a belt,
the bridge is too far,
I haven't paid my gas bill,
My toaster's in the shop
my knife is dull,
my brain is soft

I'm a coward,
I'm a procrastinator,
I'm a whiner
I'm a loser
I'm a pain.

Come on, really...
Why not?
Come on!
It'll be painless!
Quick!
No one would miss you!
No one would know.

But...

But.

Youth

Isn’t it strange? Isn’t it? I think it is… I was seen as a monster, but not that long ago… Not that long ago, I was 14 and watching a sitcom and there was this girl, not much older than I was, and I thought she was the prettiest woman I had ever seen, I thought she was spring incarnate and it’s probably the first time I felt anything that remotely resembled love. One day, my parents asked me if I liked her and I stupidly, and innocently, said that I did, that I wish she could be my wife. My parents and my siblings laughed, and they seemed so happy that I had a crush on some actress. They kept saying: ‘Oh, my little son likes Alyssa!’ And, well: I did. I was embarrassed that they kept saying it, but it was true, so okay.

Then I turned 17 and I met a girl who was the same age as me and we kissed and we slept together and I thought I had met my soul-mate, we were so made for each other, it wasn’t even funny! Until she met Richard and thought he was leaner and hotter and sweeter than I was and left me for him. I was heart-broken, but I had my Nintendo to fall back on, so it was okay.

When I turned 22, I met my second long-term girlfriend. She was 21 and people said we made a beautiful couple and I really think we did, we were sweet and innocent and we also fucked like rabbits on death-row whenever we were alone. But then she met someone who was nicer and smarter and older, but that was okay, I was old enough to get wasted by then.

Then I moved to Europe, to a country where the age of consent was 15, and that’s so wrong and gross. But I was 25 and I was lonely and I was horny, so I fucked women and I fucked girls and I fucked kids. 15 to 24, they were all fair game and I tapped all them asses, because I could and because they were willing and because I could. I really could.

In my mind, I still thought of that actress, who was about the same age I was. In my mind, I was still that kid, longing after an actress who could have been my classmate.

Then things happened so fast…. One day, I was 37. Fuck. But I was still the same kid. I was still attracted to firm thighs, flat stomachs, soft lips and innocent eyes. Once upon a time, it was cute and sweet that I had those thoughts, but now it was just creepy and wrong and disturbing. My body had aged, my hair had thinned, but my mind had stayed the same.  I was still me, I was the same boy. A boy in a man’s body. How could I explain that? Well, I didn’t have to. My girlfriends were usually between 19 and 23, and yes: that was young. My friends, with their children and their grandchildren and sometimes as widower or more often than not divorces, well, I was envying them, sure: They had a family. But I know that deep down they were envying me because I was an almost 40-something and I was getting 20-something poon. And fuck: if that’s not happiness, then I don’t know what is.

Problem was: the older and fatter and uglier I got… Yes: uglier. They say an elderly man looks better than his young self, but that’s bullshit. Maybe you look better if you exercise every day or at least swim once in a while. But if you’re a fuck-up like me, sitting on your couch and drinking whiskies doesn’t make you age well, trust me. So, as I was getting older, I found myself disgusted by the women of my age: flabby skin, liver spots on their hands, saggy tits, fat soft asses. And the older I got, the better the young girls looked. And I don’t mean the 15 or 16 years olds (although a couple of my friends’ granddaughters, well forget about it: I’d tap them asses any day!). I mean the 22 year olds. Or even the 26 year olds. But by then I was just a dirty old man.

How did that happen? One minute I’m a teenager who likes a teenager and everyone thinks it’s so cute. The next minute, I’m still me, I still like young girls. But I’m 60-something so it’s not okay. Well, fuck.

Now I’m on my kitchen floor, my pasta are getting over cooked in the boiling water, my cat is somewhere or other cruising for pussy, literally. And the world is fading and that’s not cool. I’m old, but I want a few more hours. One more hour, so I can call my friends, okay: my acquaintances, okay: the people I talk to once in a while, and say good-bye. Just one more hour so I can call the girls I dream about every night, the girls who could never love me and who made me who I became. The ones, I dreamt about almost every night. Yes: I want to punch them in the face and smash their noses, but I mostly want to kiss them and hold their hands one last time. I want them to be near me. I want them next to me. I want one of them nearby. I want my fingertips to brush their young firm flesh one more time. But it’s much too late. I can already hear the worms eating my decaying flesh.

What almost makes me smile is to imagine them old as well, lonely or better yet: dead. That’s petty of me, I know. I’m such a child, aren’t I? But I can’t help thinking about them. About all the shes. All the hers. I say ‘all,’ but really, there were only two. Possibly three.

And I would really like one of them to remember me. But she won’t, she can’t. She won’t even know I’m gone. And if one day she hears of my demise, she’ll go: “Who? Oh, yeah… that name sounds kinda familiar. But I don’t know. Who cares anyway, right? Pour me some more wine, honey.” 

Open Letter

Dear One,

What I was doing in Istanbul, I do not know, but there I was. Gotta say, I wasn’t impressed by the minarets, the food, nor the women who all looked tired, worn out, pockets under their eyes, looking almost dirty, as if they spent their nights caring for an army of wailing babies. The clean-looking ones were overfed and wore jeans that were too tight.
Anyway, I was walking one day, somewhere or other, it all looked the same to me: cats everywhere, old blind men begging, the smell of half-cooked kebabs and dog piss in the air. But I saw a bar and entered, hoping to find some solace in the guise of a whisky or two. The Crow, that place was called. At least that’s what I guessed, since it was in Turkish, but there was a giant picture of a crow inside, even though it looked more like an ostrich to me. In any case, I found a table somewhere upstairs, and that’s when I saw you.
My first thought was that you couldn’t be Turkish, you were too beautiful… Casually – but tastefully – dressed, you were sharing what looked like a Campari with a dark-haired man, one of ten million in this God-forsaken city. I became jealous of him, instantly. I felt I had more to offer than him. Even physically, which doesn’t happen often. I kept stealing glances at you, hoping you’d return my gaze, but your elbows were on the table, head in hands, enthralled by the banalities the guy was probably spewing out. I could tell you had long legs under those blue jeans and the slightly-tight T-shirt you wore let me guess you had small, firm, well-defined breasts. They made me think of apples freshly fallen from a tree, begging to be bitten into, and I was more than willing to oblige, to see their stars. I wanted to bury my nose in your long hair and feel the smoothness of your skin. Our bodies would be one, entwined for eternity in a sea of peacful slumber.
In short: I wanted to fuck the living shit out of you.
Then, after what sounded like a rather contrived laugh, you got up to go to the bathroom, or so I guesssed. I didn’t think twice about it, I also got up and followed you upstairs. ‘There must be a God,’ I thought as I saw the WC was mixed. Or maybe it wasn't. I just conveniently decided to ignore that fact, though.
I waited behind the door (after checking whether you had locked it or not) and imagined you with your panties between your ankles, a light golden spray coming from close to what I wanted my fingers to fondle. Then the lock clicked and the door opened. There you were. You gave me a polite smile. I didn’t think: I grabbed you, pushed you inside and locked the door behind us. What happened next is ours, and ours only. You might think you didn’t want it, but somehwere deep inside you did, I’m sure of it. I understood rather quickly why you had come up here: it was your time of the month. But I didn’t care. I removed and threw aside that white spongy plug and enjoyed you flowing around me. In fact, it somehow made it better.
I’m sorry I hit you.
You were starting to be too loud. I’m sorry I destroyed that perfect face of yours. Sorry about punching your nose so many times. Sorry I banged your head against the toilet bowl. And the mirror. I sure hope that silvery shard wasn’t too painful to remove from your eye.
I figured that once I had you, nobody else should. Why would you, anyway? I am sorry I left you behind, sorry I left. Unfortunately for you, the music in the bar was too loud for people to hear us. Funny, Nick Cave’s “Straight To You” was playing. A sign, surely. People didn’t notice me leave and the day after, I was back home in the civilized world. This is my letter to you, my love. I miss you. Do you miss me? I hope so. I shall return to Istanbul very soonish. Hope to see you there.

Very sincerely yours,

Me

Friday, February 25, 2011

The Game

As the cigarette was slowly dying in the ashtray,
She undressed and showed me her new bra.
I feigned enthusiasm and hoped she’d soon leave
So I could watch the game.
Her hips gyrating, her tongue licking her upper lip,
She kept eye-contact and I thought of getting more gin.
Soon she started grinding her panties against my crotch
And sooner still I came in my underwear.
I pushed her off, calling her names,
Thinking of the laundry I now had to do
To get that stain off from my shorts.
She swore at me and scratched my face
With her badly painted nails.
But soon, all was back to normal
And I could finally watch the game.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Parties

Just another evening, home alone, time to party. Because, yes: I like parties, I like to have fun. As far as I can see, the only problem with parties is that they’re full of people. Boring people, drunk people, slobbering, dancing, talking people. Parties would be much better without them, don’t you think?

And so I organize parties for myself, what’s wrong with that? First, I get dressed up, a nice suit, no tie, no need to look stuck up. Then I make myself a cocktail. That’s another thing about parties: you go there, sometimes in the cold, sometimes in the rain, sometimes in the snow, sometimes in all of the above, and your only reward is a lukewarm beer in a cheap plastic cup. So it’s not so much a party as provided shelter for the next few hours. A homeless shelter at that, with drunk and annoying people. Okay, this isn’t fair… a homeless shelter would actually have people congregating for the same reason: a warm bed. And I’m sure they’d have interesting stories to tell. Instead, you have to plaster on a smile and answer the same questions over and over again: ‘So, what do you do? How do you like it here?’ Who cares what I do? I didn’t know I was supposed to bring my resume with me. For a while, I just started lying, I was saying: ‘I’m a maze designer.’ Or ‘I skin livestock.’ But I became a victim of my own smart-assness and they asked more questions, wanting to know more. As for the how do I like it here question, well, I walked for thirty minutes in the pouring rain to find a cab, then I spent too much money on said-cab and walked five flights of stairs to get here. Now I’m drinking non-imported beer that’s not even cold. So, in short: I hate it here so much, I want to jump out the window, but me doing so would nullify all the effort I put into getting here. So I’m staying for now, although if you keep talking to me, one of us will end up dying, and it’s not gonna be me.

Surprisingly, people seemed to get a bit offended at that.

So, now: parties just for me. I dress the way I want to dress without hearing people saying I overdressed or underdressed. I don’t need to hear people pretend to like my outfit and, more importantly: I don’t have to look at people silently judging me with a look.  I also get to drink what I want to drink: a Martini, a Scottish single malt or Czech beer. Or all three, who cares? It’s my party!

I know, if I hate going to places so much, why don’t I organize parties at my place? Well, because 1: I am too kind to impose this on the few friends I have left. And 2: those friends would just come over empty-handed and imbibe all the good booze I have stashed, so screw that.

So, dressed the way I want, drinking what I want to drink and, finally, listening to what I want to listen to. 
When I want to listen to it.

Some parties have so-called DJs, who are just people who want to show the guests how cool they are and how edgy their musical tastes are. Or they just have no taste at all and we’re stuck with Celine Dion or Aguilera for most of the night. I’d rather drown in a puddle of poodle-vomit than listen to a Celine Dion song. Not a fan of Aguilera either, but she’s kinda doable, so that’s okay. Kinda.

So, I’m listening to my own songs, dancing if I want to, drinking and sitting if I want to. I do what I want, it’s my party, I’m alone, no one is grabbing my hands forcing me to dance, squealing and thinking that this is exactly what I want to do. Seriously, bitch: if I’m chain-smoking and hanging on to my drink while lodged in the sofa, do you really think it’s because I want to boogy?

I’m dancing around my apartment, smoking as much as I want, without having the need to step on the balcony to be face-to-face with a blizzard, just because smokers are now a notch below rapists in our society’s eyes.
I smoke, I drink too much, I sing along and make a fool of myself, but the only witness is the mirror on my wall.

The reason to have parties is to see people you don’t want to see and work on a hangover for the next day. My parties are better: I get the hangover, but without going through all the idle chit-chat.

And, hey: pressure-wise, meaning women-wise: no problem. I don’t have to feel butterflies in my stomach when I see a beautiful woman. I don’t have to think about what kind of shit I could say to start a conversation, hoping to be clever. I don’t have to see another guy beat me to her and see them exchange phone numbers. I don’t have to watch happy couples kissing and dancing and laughing and talking. No, all of this is spared when I am face to face with my mirror.

Some people might think this is sad, but I tell you: tomorrow you’ll be waking up next to your loved one or next to whomever you picked up the night before, and your head will hurt and you’ll be nauseous and you’ll have to talk with that person over breakfast.

Me, I’ll be nauseous, sure, but I’ll be alone.

All alone.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Shut it!

What the--?!?!
Whoa!
Close the door, close the door! Close the fucking door! For God’s sake, for Satan’s love, for all that is holy and whole and for all the holes in the universe: close that motherfuckin’ door! No, really: close it! What the fuck?! Come on! How else am I gonna say it? Close it, shut it, make it un-open, mind that gap and make it disappear, ‘cause I fucking mind the fuck out of that fucking gap! So, close it, please, really, pretty please, super please: close it! For fucking fuck’s sake!
Yeah, so I swear, so what? Get used to it! I’m in here doing my thing and you’re in there fucking things up with my thing. I’m doing my thing, it’s my thing and myself, it does not involve you, so fuck off and close the door behind you because fuck off, really. What’s my language gotta do with it? Seriously! I swear, yeah! Woopdee-fucking-doo!  I say fuck, so fucking what? Really! Close the door na-fucking-ow. That’s right, I’ve managed to nudge fuck in a one-syllable word. So fucking what? You gonna sue me? No? Then please close that fucking door!
I’m up to no good, I’m doing things you don’t wanna know about, I’m choking and pulling and oiling and rubbing things you don’t wanna know about, trust me. Really. Fucking trust me already. So close that motherfucking door before I tear it off its hinges and shove it so deep up your ass even your spelunking cock of a husband won’t be able to find it, not with his spelunking cocksucking friends, not with his cocksucking spelunking equipment, and not even, and especially not with his cocksucking cock. Yeah, I’m saying your husband is gayer than a day in May and I’m not saying that’s wrong, I’m just saying you’re gonna have to wait a long long time before he decides to spelunk your grotto. You dig?
So, come on: close that fucking door! I don’t know how else to tell you! It’s awkward enough as it is, but here I am monologuing or soliloquing or whatever! You’re looking at me and I’m spewing my shit, and I mean my shit is spewing out of my mouth for now, okay? But all I want is for you to close that fucking door, so why aren’t you closing, shutting, that fucking fuck of a fucking door? Don’t you know that the sooner you shut it, the sooner I’ll shut up? I’m on a roll, I can’t stop, I’m a whirling, swirling, spinning Dervish on a quest and you’re the ground I trample to find the truth, the absolutism, the ultimatism, the totality, the whole.
Yeah, whatever: close that fucking door before I get up and punch the living shit out of you. Literally. I’ll stand up, walk to you and punch you so hard you’ll shit this morning’s breakfast into your cheap K-Mart pants and then you’ll weep and cry and go on Sally Jesse or Geraldo or whoever is out there nowadays and you’ll moan about how much of a monster I am and you’ll talk about the time you shat your pants that time I punched you so hard, which is about to be right now if you don’t close that fucking door. Really. Don’t make me get up, woman. Consider this a friendly warning.
Yeah. Stare at me if you must. Look at me if you can. Talk to me if you have to. Speak if you are able to. Fuck! See what you make me do?! You turned me into a fucking English-as-a-Foreign-Language teacher and for that alone you deserve to lose your teeth and your tits and your eyes and your face. And your bowels and your flesh and your scalp and your liver.
Seriously: I will punch the face off of you if you don’t at this very moment turn around and close that fucking door behind you.
Atta’ girl! Good! Thanks! Great! Good. Really. Okay. Nice. Thanks. For your sake, really: thanks. Okay. Close it all the way. Yeah. And yes: I’ll be right down for dinner.
Thanks for letting me know, mom.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Single

He enters and straight away
he smells the cheap perfume
and the cigarette smoke.
The broken dreams
and the sexual desperation.

The music is insanely loud,
the floor is a burial ground for
Marlboros, Winstons, Pall Malls and Camels
and the weak and the ugly are spewed out
before the final strike of the 2 AM gong.

He sits on a stool,
casually flicking the ashes of his smoke
on the used up carpet.
He drums his fingers on the counter,
pretending to like the song that’s playing,
even though he’s never heard it before
and actually hates it.

He sips his beer and once in a while looks around,
without looking around,
hoping to make eye contact with a woman
who could be might be should be
going home with him.

Then it’s time for everybody to be kicked out
and he stumbles on the sidewalk,
turning his collar up.
The flashing red of a street light
is reflected in a puddle of sick in the gutter
and he lights one last cigarette,
hoping The Amazon will step out
and leave with him.

But he drives home alone with himself
and, in his cold bed, all his hate and anger
squirts out into his fist
before he falls asleep and dreams of what
could be might be
Will be.

He enters and straight away
he smells the cheap perfume
and the cigarette smoke.
The broken dreams
and the sexual desperation.

The music is insanely loud,
the floor is a burial ground for
Marlboros, Winstons, Pall Malls and Camels
and the weak and the ugly are spewed out
before the final strike of the 2 AM gong.

He sits on a stool,
casually flicking the ashes of his smoke
on the used up carpet.
He drums his fingers on the counter,
pretending to like the song that’s playing,
even though he’s never heard it before
and actually hates it.

He sips his beer and once in a while looks around,
without looking around,
hoping to make eye contact with a woman
who could be might be should be
going home with him.

Then it’s time for everybody to be kicked out
and he stumbles on the sidewalk,
turning his collar up.
The flashing red of a street light
is reflected in a puddle of sick in the gutter
and he lights one last cigarette,
hoping The Amazon will step out
and leave with him.

But he drives home alone with himself
and, in his cold bed, all his hate and anger
squirts out into his fist
before he falls asleep and dreams of what
could be might be
Will be.

Hey kid

Hey kid, pull up a seat, get a load off, put your feet up, chill out, relax, cool down, rest. Please. Yeah… So… Yeah… So you want to marry my daughter, huh? Yes, no, please: lemme finish. You’re a good kid, your dad’s a good golfer and all. But you want my baby, my little girl, that’s a… that’s… you know, it’s not… It’s a… Well, you know what I mean. You’re doing the honorable thing, here, but come on: why so soon? Why now? I mean, look at my wife and I, we… we had ten years of happiness. Pure joy. And then 20 years of misery until that old cunt finally had a stroke and drowned in the hot-tub. I’m sorry, I don’t mean to make you uncomfortable, really I don’t, but that’s just the way it is, son. Love dies, it doesn’t last. Sure, you’re lucky if you got it and enjoy it while it lasts and all, but when love dies, that’s more painful than getting hit in the balls by a golf club swung by a drunk Jack Nicholson, lemme tell you. I know. Trust me. Really. That’s why we couldn’t have a second kid. But anyway… My baby girl… I don’t know, I mean she’s 23 but I can’t imagine her getting married. I can’t… Well, let me be honest: I can’t imagine her being sexually active. I mean I just shook your hand. Maybe that hand I just shook was in my baby’s pussy recently. No, no, don’t be uncomfortable! I’m being honest, here. That’s what I do: I speak from the heart. But, yeah: imagining your dick in my daughter, I don’t know, it’s… it’s too hard. No pun intended. Okay, how big are you? Come on, don’t be shy, loosen that belt and lemme see your cock. Oh, come on: I was in the army, I’ve seen my share of cocks, don’t be so shy. Come on: drop ‘em. Look, if you don’t drop your pants, I won’t let you marry my baby. Yeah, there you go. So, let’s see… Huh… Good thing I’m wearing my glasses! Ha! Just kidding, relax. Jeez, kid, you ever thought of trimming that foliage? Well… Okay, you know what?... I guess I can imagine your cock in my baby’s pussy, I can live with this thought. I mean: I’m sure she can barely feel it, right? Oh, come on: don’t be like that, we’re men, we’re talking! We’re shooting the shit, just taking it easy! So… tell me… How often do you fuck her? Yes, I’m serious. Do I look like I’m not serious? And for God’s sake, pull your pants back up, what is this, Dicks ‘R’ Us? So... yeah… How often do you have sex with her? Come on, ball-park figure… Yeah? Oh, yeah? That often? Yeah? And do you make her cum? Come on, don’t be shy! Yeah, sure: have a drink. So: do you? Make her cum? Oh, yeah? Good for you. Good for you! You gotta please your woman, trust me. Yeah. Yeah… So… does she blow you? Come on, don’t be like that! Sure, have another drink!... Yeah? She does? Is she good? Yeah? Good, I’m glad she got better. What? No, no, I didn’t mean anything by that. A joke. You know, one of them jokes people say. Just that. Yeah… So, yeah… Let’s have a drink and forget about all of this, huh? Yeah: let’s. Cheers. Let’s go back to the party, what do you say? Yeah, yeah: let’s. Oh, but, uh: before we do, just uh… Well: drop them pants once more. Never mind why, just do it, sonny boy!

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Spoke Too Much

“She spoke too much, she spoke too much. She just spoke too much. I'm not looking for excuses, I'm not looking for your forgiveness. She just spoke too much, what else can I say? She spoke too much! I'm not taking the fifth, and I’m not saying I was right. All I’m saying is I wasn’t wrong. Really. You understand. You’d have done the same thing. Seriously. I mean… I mean how many questions can the bitch ask? Seriously. ‘Do you like my new shoes? What did you get me for Christmas? What’s wrong with you? Is my make up on okay? What do you want for dinner? Do you love me?' and on and on and on. I mean, for fuck's sake: Enough with the questions already! Stop talking! I'm going crazy, here! Okay, for those of you who have nothing else to do, here are the answers to the questions, in the same order:
- No, they’re fugly.
- I didn’t get you shit yet, it’s only September, for crying out loud!
- Well, since you asked, actually: I can’t stand you, your mean eyes, your fat legs, your dirty hair and your forever-yappin’ mouth!
- No, you look like a deranged raccoon who’s just been raped in the Sahara by a retarded badger!
- I want food, that’s all I want and that’s all I need, so get behind the stove and cook and if you can't manage that, then call for a goddamn pizza, light sauce, extra pepperoni!
- Do I really need to answer that?
There. Now you know. I didn’t love her anymore. She used to be young, she used to be leggy and beautiful and tight all over. Then she got older and chubby all over. Even her pussy felt like a slab of ten-year old bacon left to rot in the sun. Yeah, I know, I shouldn't be saying shit like that. My lawyer told me as much. But shit, come on: You're a man, too. You know how it is. Sure, we gotta be PC and all that shit, but come on: If we didn’t have to, we’d be tellin’ them what’s what: ‘I work, I toil, I sweat, I put food on the table. You clean, you cook, you raise the kids and you shut the fuck up.’ Is that too much to ask? Back to the fucking middle-ages is what I say. Nowadays, men are weepy and weak and gotta talk about their feelings. Fuck that shit. I wanna smoke, I wanna eat a rare steak and I want head whenever I ask for it. Really, is that too much to ask for? Is that sexist? Okay, then call me sexist, scream all you want! ‘Just cook me my steak and get on your knees and swallow what’s coming to you!’ Okay, okay, don’t get mad, I’m just explaining things to you, here. Really. I’m a decent guy once you get to know me. I vote Democrat, I’m in the PTA, I don’t run red lights, I wash my crotch daily. No, I don’t want your pity, I’m just telling you how it all happened… What? I’m not telling you? Okay, I’ll tell you. Sure... What the hell…
I worked hard all day, dealing with asshole bosses who think they know everything. I get home, I expect dinner, but no: she’s watching The West Wing and Toby and Josh are mad at each other, so she can’t be bothered to fry me up some beans. So I get in the kitchen, pissed off. I look for a pan, how the fuck am I supposed to know where the pans are? I look and I look, and I find what your honor calls ‘Evidence Number 2.’ That gives me an idea, so I run to the garage for Evidence Number 1. Then I walk to the living room and find Evidence Number 3. Okay, okay… In short: In the living room, I find the glass ashtray. I don’t think: I just pick it up and hit her over the head. The ashtray breaks, her head doesn’t, but she falls down screaming bloody murder. Insulting me. The nerves on the bitch! To calm her down, I lean over her, grab her thinning whitening hair and hit her head against the floor. Only three times. Not five, like the DA’s been saying. Honest to God! Only three times. She shuts up, thank heavens. She’s stunned or whatever. With my left hand, I pry open her lips and with Evidence 2, my trusty pair of pliers, I grab hold of her tongue. I pull it out. Gently, mind you, gently. I didn’t break no teeth like the DA said. Anyway, then Evidence 1 comes into play. The scissors, yeah… So, I’m pullin’ out the tongue with one hand and I got scissors in the other. You know the kind. The kind school-children use to cut up shapes in colored papers and what have you. You know: small red plastic handles, round edges. Safe to run with and shit. So, anyway… Her tongue’s out, her eyes are bulging, her hands are flapping. Good thing I was smart enough to sit on her chest and block her arms with my knees. I ‘open’ the scissors, I bring ‘em closer to her pink in-mouth muscle. And I took a moment. That’s right, I did. I savored the moment. Do you know how satisfying it was when the blades closed down on her tongue? Do you? I bet you don’t. Well, lemme tell you: it was quasi-orgasmic. It was like cutting through raw veal. Soft, with just a tiny bit of resistance. Blood was flowing everywhere, but that was okay. I started cutting my way down. Squish-squish went the blades. Kinda like: ‘squish squash, I was taking a blood bath.’ But the truly amazing part was when I hit the nerve. The smallest of resistance was felt in the blades and then a satisfying soft crunching sound. And the tongue was dead. Red was everywhere, but I knew she was done talking. For good. Finally. So really, if anything: you should be thanking me. Her yapping is at an end. I did the world a favor. My advice to them fucked up Muslims is: don’t bother sewing a girl’s poon, sew her mouth and then fuck her senseless. That’s more logical. Right?... What? What did I say? What? Oh, I’m the crazy one, here?! Okay… How about we talk again in a few years. I bet you’ll come running to me, asking for advice. In the meantime, I’m guessing I’ll be in solitary, right? Yeah… You know where to find me. Kumbaya to you, your honor.”hit. I wanna smoke, i waand gotta talk about theor feelings. n sto be leggy and beautiful and tight all over.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Loneliness

Hmmm, right, yes. Good one. Right. Let me light a cigarette before I answer… Yeah. Smoke helps my brain, you know? Watch the road, will ya? So… yeah… Your question was: ‘what’s loneliness?’ Yeah. Great question. Especially coming from a happily-married 28 year-old. No, really. No sarcasm. I’m callin’ it as I’m seein’ it. Anyway... So… Loneliness. Shit, I don’t know. If you gotta ask then you can’t know, that’s pretty much it. But okay, I don’t mean to avoid the question or dance my way around it or whatever. I’ll tell you what loneliness is. Sure I will! Will you understand? Probably not. Do I care? Probably not. So we’re even, Steven. It’s all cool, Raoul. It’s the shiat, biatch. Anyway. Yeah… So, loneliness, for me. For me, mind you, not for other people. But you asked me, so I’m guessing it’s my answer you want, my wisdom, my point of view, right? Right. So, loneliness, let’s see… Okay… Yeah, okay: it’s going to get a haircut when you don’t need one, hoping an at-least-mildly-attractive woman will do it. Because, you see, when you’re lonely, you’ll take any kinda contact you can get. Physical contact. So if a so-so girl, who happens to be wearing a skirt and boots and who happens to have a stomach flatter than Belgium starts fondling your scalp, well… For the next 50 minutes you’re almost content. Because a woman who would not give you the time of day in an overcrowded bar at two in the morning now massages your skull. Yes, you’re paying her, but I’m guessing that money is better spent on this than on the empty moans of a cheap whore. But that’s just my guess, I’ve never paid a whore. And what about that? Loneliness is when you feel so overwhelmingly alone that you know that a so-called ‘lady of the night’ won’t do it for you, because: what’s the point? Sex isn’t the answer. Meaningless sex is definitely not the answer. Because, even if you pay the hottest girl in the universe to straddle you, she’s still just your employee for the next hour and at some point you’ll have to walk all the way home and you’ll have to shower, hoping you don’t have some weird STD, and you still have to get in your bed; and you have to fall asleep. Alone. And even worse: you have to wake up alone, drag yourself out of bed for god-knows what reason, shuffle your way to the coffee-maker, force yourself to not look out of the window, knowing that if it had snowed the previous night, things would be just a little bit worse. And a little worse, at that point, is a lot. It’s the thing that might push you over the edge. So you pray for non-snow, you pray your coffee will be strong enough, you pray a friend will call you at some point during the day to invite you for a drink. But if it happens, and it seldom does, if it happens, you’ll turn it down because you just love wallowing in your self-pity. You say you hate being alone, but you live for it. How’s that for a paradox? Loneliness is when you wanna call a friend and you flip your phone open and realize that all the numbers saved in the phonebook are work contacts or, at best, mere acquaintances. Loneliness is getting a thrill when you start using a new stick of Chapstick. Loneliness is taking up smoking just so you’ll have something to unwrap every once in a while. Loneliness is when you start hating, I mean truly hating, your shower-curtain rod ‘cause you know there’s no way in hell that it’ll hold your weight dangling at the end of a rope. Loneliness is when you’re pissed off ‘cause you don’t know where to get a good rope and you don’t want to ruin your best belt… Loneliness, loneliness: it’s dreading the weekends because then there’s no reason to go to bed early, you simmer in your thoughts, sipping a lukewarm whiskey, feeling abandoned by the world. Even worse than having no reason to go to bed, it’s having no reason to wake up. Tomorrow will be another long, lonely, sad day. And then there’s still Sunday. And on Sunday you’re not only sad ‘cause you’re alone, you’re also sad because you have to work tomorrow. Another paradox for you! And… And… Anyway... Yeah. Shit… Sorry, I kinda went off on a rant, here. Sorry. Really. But I think I answered your question. Being lonely is being alone for so long that you can’t interact in society anymore. Loneliness is the most addictive of drugs. It’s when you’re with someone and talk non-stop because you’re so used to talk to yourself that you forget that other people also want to talk. It’s when you’re with your with friends, having fun, and you’re already dreading the end of the night because while they’ll all return home to their loved-ones, you’ll go home alone. In the morning, they’ll have breakfast with their significant others and you won’t. And you’ll think about them. Them: the ones you left, the ones who left you. The Lenkas, the Petras, the Annas, and all those other names that end with an ‘A.’ Loneliness sucks. Loneliness is great… Anyway, that’s my answer. Now, if you don’t mind, keep driving and shut the fuck up. ‘Cause if you ask me another question like this, I swear to God, I’ll punch you in the neck so hard I’ll end up squishing your aorta between my knuckles and your window.
Just kidding, of course.
Now gimme another cigarette and focus on the road, we still got a ways to go.