When you are not with me, remember and keep me close. If you do not feel me, concentrate a little and I am there. There’s this song that I can’t stop listening to that makes 3/4 sense, and that’s good enough. It’s a divorce song, or a 3/4 divorce song for me. It says about 3/4 of what I feel about you. The truth, lies, heartbreak, and all.
Author: admin
-
‘ve seen a lot of things
My landlord’s got a new girlfriend and I can tell she’s trouble. I saw them walking down the road tonight to get a slice of pizza. She was in these black skin-tight shorts and he was in that same old baseball hat that hugs the skull like balding dudes like me and him like to wear these days. She kept on having to pull the little black shorts out of her crack as they walked ahead of me. I just paid the rent yesterday, so now he acts like he doesn’t know me.
My experience with the landlord is that he has a bluebird made of plaster on the back wall of his front porch. He also has a kitchen sink, and easy chair, and a large roll of copper tubing on the same porch. Once a month I go to his house across the street, usually in the cover of darkness, and leave the largest check I write every month in his mailbox, in the process committing a federal crime.
His experience with me is that I leave that check and he let’s me live in this house that he got for a steal, and that he occasionally fixes a leaky faucet.
Under my landlord lives a British guy named George of whom I know little. He loves Princess Diana and hate Charles and Camilla. He takes my recycling out to the curb, usually three days before the city picks it up.
George works for the landlord and, according to the neighborhood homeless guy, handed in his two-week’s notice a few days ago and is moving on to greener pastures. What I know of George, he was likely semi-homeless once as well, and he is recovering from colon cancer. -
Please, let it go…
After being beaten decisively in N.C. and not winning by the desired or expected margin in Indiana yesterday, Hillary Clinton today vows to fight on, stating in so many words that “she must continue to stand up for what she believes in.”
Is it me or has what either of the candidates “believes in” become more and more difficult to discern as this campaign has gone on?
We know that both candidates are solidly “democratic” in most of their stances, but, as far as I can see, there’s little that separates either of them on most of the issues. They have similar approaches to many issues (e.g. health care), and both have yet to propose any substantive plans for other issues (e.g. the economy).
As the campaign has gone on longer, issues have taken a back seat to personal attacks. The energy put forth by both campaigns is purely being used for spin, media manipulation and smear. That energy could, and should, be being put toward developing a real platform and agenda that can be used to defeat McCain in November.
It’s time for Hillary to step down and let the general election campaign to begin in earnest. It’s time to start making plans and figuring out how we are going to really handle the mess in Iraq, the failing economy and it’s international ramifications, the economic disparity between the rich and (increasingly) poor, environmental protection, etc.
For Hillary to continue the contest at a point in which it is mathematically impossible for her to get the nomination (unless she manages to pull strings within the party and gain an overwhelming majority of the remaining superdelegates, which would run the risk of alienating voters by making them feel disenfranchised), is just an act of too much pride on the part of Sen. Clinton. Sen. Obama has the lead in pledged delegates and overall delegates, his speeches are more inspiring (and despite this being downplayed by his opponents, inspiration is sorely needed in the current domestic environment), and there’s not much that separates either candidate on most of the issues.
It’s time to stop the insanity, save that $6.4 million of her personal money, and get on with the business of beating McCain in November.
Please, Hillary, please… just let it go. -
How it moves
So I was lending this book to K the other night. It’s a book about Jackie O. Cultural studies. She and her mother saw the dresses at a museum once and she’s all about it. I met the author once right after I was of age. We were both drinking at a party in his honor. I spent the rest of the night in the corner, planning my escape route.
When I gave her the book I briefly flipped through the pages an realized I had stowed photos in between the pages. I think they are photos that you saw once: Amanda in bra and panties, Robert with more hair, Amanda’s prom picture etc. I think you tried to show my mother the more interesting of the photos once.
I took your picture once while you had on less clothes than that, and I believe you were un-encumbered with the whole thing. You don’t look happy, but not sad either. I don’t know. Those pictures are gone, but not in my mind. I can conjure with ease.
But tonight I first got weepy, like I can do at times, about Amanda again. It wasn’t the half naked pictures. It really was that prom photo. The one of her before I knew her, but the one that looks like her about the time I met her. I guess I am getting so old. I really knew her shortly after a prom photo? When did I come to know you? Seems like ages ago now.
The bra and panties was taken while on the Outer Banks. I used to take trips like that. I used to want to take trips like that. I wanted to take that trip with you, sans needing intimate photographic coverage. Those photos just make you think too much. They just make you want even when want is not what you need, because need and want are such different things, right?
Or are they. I sit here tonight looking at those photos and missing something I don’t desire any more, but desiring something that I have no photos immediately available of. I know it’s a broken record, but I wish you were here tonight. It gets lonely (yadda yadda yadda). I’ve got pictures in my mind. I wish when I went in that other room, there was more than loose sheets and pillows to discover.
I think of you in that way still, but mostly I think of you happy. Hopefully, I’ve said something that made things different, and the look you give moves all of the stars around the sky – at least a little.
I’m such a sap. -
Staring at a lake
There’s too many dudes that feel the way I do about you. Are you worth all these songs? It would be easier if what Chris says is true. She thinks you love me. I ain’t that man, or am I? I know I deserve you as much as you deserve me. And that’s flipping this whole thing on its head. Take me to your friends and let’s be married. Let’s be married and be happy. And when we’re happy there’s nothing beyond us.
I miss you when I sleep. Especially these days. -
A dream
You, see I awake, but not really. This is a dream. I have marshmallows in my ears and I am trying to roast them, but I keep singeing my sideburns. There’s a topless mermaid trying to put on a sweater, and two kids bouncing on an abandoned box spring. A dude, 6’3″ and blonde, tosses a racquetball at my head, and I violently shift and avoid being hit, only to lose the marshmallow which falls into the fire, and promptly melts. I can hear whippoorwills in the trees some half mile off. I am taking a walk in the woods with a gray figure. I climb a poplar tree, or what I believe to be a poplar tree, a 100 foot sapling. I lose my grip and start to fall again. I awake and it’s the back of your head I am looking at. Then I awake and it’s that damn down pillow again.
-
This is not funny
A man walks into a bar; this not a joke. He first asks the bartender for a glass of water, at which point, the bartender explains that if you ain’t paying, you ain’t drinking. The man bursts into tears. The bartender asks why the long face. Really, this is not a joke.
It seems that the old guy’s wife had run off with another guy, leaving early this very same morning while he was still in bed. If that wasn’t enough, the Camaro-driving sonofabitch ran over his what-would-be-best hunting dog, if only he ever hunted. The dog could climb a tree and throw the raccoon to its death, or say he said.
So his old lady is gone, and his favorite dog is dead, and all he can think to order is a glass of water, because she took the money in the Maxwell House can in the kitchen that they had been saving for a trip this summer to Panama City Beach, and she took the bank card from his wallet on the dresser, and the checkbook which was also on the dresser, and the credit card was long overdrawn, and to top it off, it’s Veteran’s Day, a fucking bank holiday, and the old guy fought in the first Gulf War, and through much VA therapy had just learned to manage his PTSD, but he couldn’t get any cash out to buy a drink after his woman ran off with another man, who ran over his favorite dog, as they made their getaway.
Lord knows how he’s going to afford the colonoscopy and all, especially after being laid off down at the factory.
This wasn’t the shittiest day ever, or even week. This is the shittiest life on record.
The bartender acquiesces and gives him the glass of water, and a shot of Kentucky Gentleman chaser on the house. That was about the time the Asian geisha-style siamese twins walked in with the midget, but we will save that one for later.
Then this leather fag walks into the bar just like it’s 1980 and it’s San Francisco, which it isn’t. He’s got brass knuckles on one hand, and a cricket bat in the other just to increase his odds. He stomps over to the guy, who’s now in the middle of his first house gin and tonic, and smacks him square in the jaw with the knuckles and then square on the knee with the bat as he descends from the stool to the floor.
The dude asks what the fuck did you do that for, and the queer says that’s because your daughter ran off with my old man.
The midget with the four gold rings in each ear plays a song on the juke box.
He says that wasn’t my daughter, that was my wife. Mr. Castro feels so bad he buys the guy a Grey Goose martini and they spend the next half hour licking wounds and talking about what they lost. Then they talk about church and childhood. Then about the rough start the Astros are off to. They talk about the midget and the siamese twins, and Mr. Tightpants says he almost switched sides for some Arabic siamese twins that he ran across while trying to figure out something to do during the first Gulf War. The two realize they have something in common – the Gulf War – not the siamese twins or wishy-washy sexuality.
The homo says he has to leave to throw his ex’s shit out into the street so the whole neighborhood will know what an asshole he is, and thus will know that a period of mourning will ensue behind the doors of his house. Don’t come asking for a cup of sugar.
That’s when the ducks come in, and man were these some rich ducks. They start ordering rounds of drinks for the whole house, but being ducks they were lightweights, and most of them started passing out under tables, on the bar, in the toilet. One was even found asleep floating around in the bathroom sink. He was a small duck.
The bartender brings three of the leftover duck drinks to the old guy and he drinks them all: peach schnapps, amaretto sour, shot of Jaeger from the duck with the frayed Astros hat.
About this time the bartender says something along the lines of last call, only to be followed by you don’t have to go home, but you can’t stay here, or if you don’t work at the bar, or you are not fucking someone who works at the bar, get the fuck out, or something like that. The guy thinks briefly of propositioning the bartender – a feeble attempt at eeking out a few more moments here and a few less moments at the house that was once their home.
The siamese twins leave, each trying to weave in an independent direction. The midget follows trying to push his face into the unified ass of the twins. The ducks all start to awake and stir and depart the bar in a V formation. Quack, quack.
Then there’s the veteran, the man, now alone. He thinks of the street girls out on the boulevard. He thinks of the all-night liquor store. He thinks of his 10-years-his-junior wife on the way to Panama City Beach with his Panama City Beach money and a guy in a fucking Camaro, with t-tops. He thinks of how easy it is to be a drunk when your life has gone to the crapper, and how being drunk at such times, can make the whole world seem new again.
He thinks he shouldn’t have mixed all those drinks, but beggars can’t be choosers. -
You… still
I am still so in love with you. When you leave, I don’t want you to. When you are not with me, I want you to be. When I am away, I want to come back to you. I am ashamed.
-
‘m a survivor…
Tornadoes tore through downtown and a few surrounding neighborhoods here in Atlanta last night. My experience with it was just of some hail falling at my house with heavy rain, a cancelled trip to the bar, and not much else so far. Apparently my office, the CNN Center, was heavily damaged, but when I checked my work email just a few minutes ago, I was told that we would be back open for business on Monday. I hope all of the news will just hold off until then. If you were planning to do something newsworthy, please wait.
The upside of this is that the electricity at my house did not even blink during the storm. This in a neighborhood where the whole power grid will often fail when just one neighbor adjusts his or her thermostat in the summer. Not even a flicker during this storm and it was one of the worst I have seen in the 4 years I have lived here.
And now, since it is an election year, we have to find someone to blame for the storm, and I am pointing our finger at the Georgia Governor, Sonny Perdue. If you do not recall, back in November the governor held a prayer vigil on the steps of the capitol to pray for relief from the drought that is going on in Georgia.
A few days later, lo and behold, it rained. My friends joked that of course Sonny had consulted with weather.com before deciding when to plan his vigil so that he could increase the likelihood of his “rayers” being answered. It all seemed a fluke.
But wait a few months, it seems as if his prayers have been answered now. Just a few months later. God works in mysterious ways. At the governor’s behest, He has been sending us enough water in a 48 hour period to singlehandedly cut the drought damage in half. In the process, it took part of the roof of the Georgia Dome, the World Congress Center, windows at the CNN Center, and 20 houses in the Cabbagetown neighborhood.
Thanks Sonny! Be a little more careful with the state-sponsored prayers in the future.