Poetry? Oh-No-etry!

Visa

He’s got a $100 bill
pressed to my forehead
and I’m shaking.
“Calm down,” I say
“we can work this out
let’s not be rash.”
And he snaps back with
“There’s no ‘let’s’ because there’s no ‘us’.
There’s me and you
but soon you’ll be outta here.”
He cocks back on Ben’s nose
and asks if I’d like to speak my mind
before it tumbles like spare change
on the pavement and down the street.
I beg, but it falls on deaf ears
like he’s just walking by, pretending I’m not there.
He says for every moment I waste
he’ll charge interest and tack it on to a principle.
I know he’s about to do it.
He focuses, and I examine my life,
the annual percentage of time well spent.
His arm shifts and he blows my right hand clean off.
“Now go out and make money,
you little son of a bitch.”
I run out into the cold night, clutching my stump,
only half as good at begging.

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Money Jungle

I Found That Essence Rare (October 5, 2006)

               I find things alone, when I’m alone. The sizes of things impress me. The look in a small dog’s eyes, the blank stares of cities living in fear. I look for deeper things, the Essence, whatever I am. Discovery is replaced by immutable laws. Perhaps it isn’t that we are moving too fast. Maybe we move fast to distract ourselves from this: nothing lays along the path of the speeding train. It’s over the hill.

               I lived in Ireland for three months for no good reason. I looked for the Essence and found it. But could I have found it in Wilmington, Delaware? Too bad we only get one spin at the wheel. Anyway, I threw a party once and it was a good time. Talked to two Spanish fellows about poetry. There we were, off to the side in a cheaply constructed bedroom turning anything in sight into chairs and beer coasters, getting riled up about poetry. They recited some things I knew and didn’t know. I slang a few on them. One friend remarked how great it was to meet people who could do this – just relate to each other over language barriers and the Atlantic. The Essence.

               The great tragedy of culture, that which can communicate Essence, is its absorption of All Things. All Things illuminate and contaminate, and it all comes out in the wash to a big, fat nothing. And it’s loud. That’s a dangerous way to build a speeding train.

               By the way, if you want to accelerate your search for the Essence, surround yourself with those who don’t speak English. The struggle to perceive and communicate the Essence will be like a beating bass drum in your heart.

               It’s not all good when it’s happening. I had a few different crushes in Ireland. No less than three simultaneously. But they amounted to a Big Fat Nothing.

               Here, the Essence is being pounded flat. It’s no wonder – Essence requires bravery, confidence, knowledge and openness. But there is always a murderer, a blemish, a contorted fact, an unflattering mirror.

               Bruce Lee once instructed to take what works and abandon everything else. The Gang of Four once said, “I found that Essence rare/ it’s what I live for.”

               I once said all this here about the Essence without fully understanding it. I’m dead now, as you’re reading this. Maybe. Wherever I am, I understand the Essence because I’m part of it. Maybe.

               Here’s how it happens to me: I’m walking along, minding my own business, and suddenly a small dog with big eyes, a big man with beady eyes, a strange building alone or 50 normal ones in a row, a joke that gets it so right, a powerful person getting it so wrong, a place that looks like home for anyone and everyone, shoes that command respect, music that’s accidentally good, noise that forms sonic structure, a car sexier than any woman, a hub cap sprung loose rolling cleanly through a crosswalk, people I want to know, children who stare at me, old people frowning, a waterfall of coffee into a cup, a mansion with wall-to-wall books in every room …

               These things, they take my breath and stiffen me up, slap me on the back. My tendons, muscles and ligaments tighten across my bones, calibrated closer to the Essence and ready to be plucked. I turn a corner and a new gale blows through me, playing a new tune.

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Money Jungle

Long Distance Dedications

This is Elwood Kasem, bringing you long distance requests from our listeners:

Elwood,

            My house has been invaded by flies. I’ve spent all week swatting them with the fly swatter and now I think they’re aware of me because they’re all sitting on my ceiling. I am a short woman, 5’1”, and cannot reach and I think they know this. They laugh and mock me. Tonight I’m buying a pair of boots with suction cups on them. I will walk up the wall, then onto the ceiling where I will swat the little bastards to death. 

            To send me up the wall and upside down, could you play Lionel Richie’s “Dancing on the Ceiling?”

            Thanks,

            Lady X

Dear Mr. Kasem,

            I work at an organ donor clinic in West Memphis, Arkansas. Many people are coming into the office looking for body parts, but, as you probably know, some are hard to come by. Right now I have ten applicants in the next room waiting for a new pair of eyes. Alas, here in West Memphis, inbreeding has led to eyes so crossed they eventually form a single eye in the forehead that needs to be surgically removed. The bad news for them is that I only have one set of eyes. I’m about to go into the room and break the news. Your program is playing in the waiting room, so it would help me a great deal if you could you play “I Only Have Eyes For You” by the Flamingos.

            With much appreciation,

            Dr. Horace Weatherbee , M.D.

Dear Elwood Kasem,

            You may have read about me in the news. I was on an elevator in Houston, Texas when a man got his head caught in the elevator’s closing doors. The elevator jerked up quickly and the man was decapitated. His body lay outside on the floor but his head was in the elevator car with me. For 15 agonizing minutes before I was rescued by firemen, I stared at this man’s face, at once full of expression and yet frozen at the instant of his death. To help me cope with these images, I was hoping you could play “Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell” by Iggy and the Stooges.

                                                            Your fan,

                                                                        The Elevator Lady

Dear Elwood Kasem,

            I have gastrointestinal problems. I shit three times before lunch and the rest of the day I could go at a moment’s notice, like a voodoo lady is poking my voodoo doll’s belly with a bottle of Pepto Bismol. I’m in here so often I’ve started naming each toilet. If you could play “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On” by Jerry Lee Lewis, I think it would make me feel better.

                                                            Sir Shits-A-Lot

Elwood Kasem,

            I don’t know if you gonna get this or read it or like it or play it, but here goes: Me and my buddies, all combat veterans, got some shotguns and we’re going to break up a peace rally in Memphis today. These queer, college boy peaceniks have got it coming to them. Can you play Prince’s “When Doves Cry?” It gets me and the boys in the mood!

                                                Yers,

                                                            Gerald Fortesque

Dear Mr. Elwood Kasem,

            Well, it’s that time of the month again. I use Ultra Lights with wings mostly. Funny thing happened the other day. My religious group chose me this time for the fertility ceremony, so I had to spend all day tied to the roof of the barn naked. Boy it was a windy one. All I could do to get through the day was sing one song over and over. The ceremony has ended but I don’t think I can get the song out of my head until I actually hear it. Could you play “The Wind Beneath My Wings” by Bette Midler?

                                                Love,

                                                            Windy in Wyoming

Yo, Elwizzood Kielbasa,

            Me and my friends always play you in the mornin’, dog! We’re your biggest fans! We play you every time we move those bowels, beeoch! Anyway, last night me and my posse decide we gonna git it on with a eatin’ contest. Now my friend Pedro, we call him Petey Pickle cuz he got a tiny pecker, he says we should go low fat on this one to watch our weight. He gets us these Subway sandwiches and shit. So I’m all, “Let’s get our munch on, beeoch!” So we eatin’ and eatin’ and man, I dunno what my dealy-o was, but during the contest I couldn’t keep it down. My puke bucket was brimmin’ cuz, fo’ shizzle! My boys kept handin’ me Cold Cut Trios, Chicken Pizziolas and what not. Petey Pickle’s all “Eat more, beeoch!” I was pukin’ so much I couldn’t tell him, “Yo, I’m out like sauerkraut!”

            I know he’s listenin’ to you now, so you gotta play “We Don’t Need Another Hero” by Tina Turner off the Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome soundtrack.

            Thanx, Beeoch!

            Jizzared McSubwizzle

Dear Mr. Elwood,

            I work at a shitty company doing boring work. The mere sight of my boss makes me want to do unspeakable acts. I’m quitting someday soon, but I’ll need a good reference from him. Then I can do my unspeakable acts. Please play “Patience” by Guns N’ Roses all day, everyday, until I say it’s ok to stop. If you don’t, I know who you really are and where you live.

            I can’t wait to do unspeakable acts on someone.

            Regards,

            Sicotic Sammy

Dear Elwood Kaysim,

            I’ve heard other listeners write in to talk about strange cult behavior, so I thought I’d find a few sympathetic ears here.

            I was flying from the Fiji Islands to Utah this summer when a huge problem occurred. My religious sect, The Forever Ancient Order of Satanic Cow Herd Worshipers Against Right-Wing Zealots (FAOSCHWARZ), phoned me in Fiji where I was making acquaintances with young men. FAOSCHWARTZ needed a cow heart badly for the summer’s Feast of the Moo-Cow ceremony and demanded that I return with one. Their original heart was devoured by Sammy the Alpha Llama, the mascot of our neighboring sect in Utah, the Worshipers Alpha Llama Masquerading Arduously in Righteous Transcendentalism (WALMART).

            Long story short, my stopover at San Francisco International Airport was a problem: we didn’t pass inspection. The cult is not understanding of such things and my life is basically forfeit. But, since they’re Tony Bennett fans, perhaps if you played “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” they’d make mine a quick death.

            Yours truly,

            FAOSCHWARZ #106 (Billy W.)

Dear Elwood,

            Yeah, so, I’m this faceless DJ in a nu-metal band. I scratch a record during the intro and bridge of every song. During my down time, by which I mean the verses and choruses of every song, I’ve been taking a correspondence course in Clown College because I want to be a lead singer in my own nu-metal band some day. I figure I have the other prerequisites to be one — daddy abandoned me, mommy was a drinker, my stepdad fucked me. I just can’t seem to shake this sadness. If I could just stop crying and act the fool all the time, I could get to be the vocalist and get the real money and attention. Could you please play Smokey Robinson’s “Tears of a Clown?”

            Thanks man,

            Scratchy No-Face of the Twystud Brygayde

E,

            Can’t talk much (stop). Ate crazy cheese/hamburger/brawtwurst combo with no water (stop). Constipated beyond belief (stop). You must play “Push It!” by Salt-N-Pepa (stop it).

                                                                        Constipate Ed

Els,

            Hey, man! You’re the greatest, man! I’m speeding down the highway, doin’ 115 mph as I’m writing this! Ahhh! Goin’ to my doctor’s office to smash his shit up! What does he know about pills that cools MFs like us don’t, right man! I . . .

            Oh, boy, better slow it down. Slow it down. Gotta be calm here. I can’t keep doing this stuff. People see me as a freak. They don’t like me. I’m not normal. Things would be better if I just went away forever.

            Can you play Jimi Hendrix’s “Manic Depression”?

            Thanx,

            Bri Polar

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Money Jungle

Interview

            “The critics say you’re pandering … you pander to your audience.”

            “Pander?  I don’t see that.  I want them to like me, I guess.  That’s how it is up here, in my head, but when it comes out I think it’s complicated enough to be art that challenges.  I suppose the critics want me to hate the audience, is that it?”

            “That seems to be it.  They say, ‘He’s said what he has to say and now we’re left with complex structures, weird narratives and entry level discourses.’  That was in the Times.”

            “Those things are vices, structure and narrative?  They’re fundamental to the art form!  Why keep it stagnant?  Why not explore the constructs we’ve used since the beginning?  And in the meantime, weave in a subtle message.  Are my messages ‘entry level?’  Ok.  Simple truths are the most important ones, therefore they bear repetition.  Does a bell need only to be rung once?  Or a gong?  Tell a Buddhist he is simple, entry level.”

            “That’s a good argument, but also a good example of what they mean.”

            “How so?”

            “You just brought up Buddhism, briefly, and gave a short example that argued your point, yet painted Buddhists with one stroke … as gong-bangers.”

            “I see.  You know, it’s like playing catch with your head – if you miss, your head won’t drop because it’s on your shoulders.  Look, I’m not an expert on the things I put in my art.  That’s just it!  It’s art, not school!”

            “So going back to the structure and narrative …”

            “I play around with those things so that the observer has something for the first go around, and when they come back.  I put something in for the fifth, fifteenth and fiftieth trip.  It’s like I’m packing lunches in a fortune cookie shaped like a Mobius strip.”

            “Do you believe in that bullshit?”

            “Wholly.”

            “What do you want your gravestone to read?”

            “‘Here I am, because there I was’.”

            “What’s your favorite curse word?”

            “Trans-fatty acid.”

            “When you get to heaven, what would you like God to say?”

            “He should say, ‘Loved your stuff.  One question though …’”

            “That’s all we have for tonight.”

            “Thank you.”

            “I have to take my meds now.”

            “Right.  My rec time is over.  I have therapy in five.  Let’s do lunch sometime … and maybe a puzzle.”

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Money Jungle

✌🏼Peace✌️ ❤️Love❤️ 🤘🏾Death Metal🤘🏿

Speaking in Tongues

Ho! Pigs! (Ho!) Me! (Ho!) Ego! (Ho!) Mustache! (Ho!) Turbocharged! (Ho!) A word that means sex! (Ho!) 

Dunananat-nat-nannanananananananana! Woosh!

(toots scoop!)

✌🏿❤️🤘🏽✌🏼 ❤️ 🤘

So Easy

It would be easy. With this stuff here. I hit it like ⏩ Papp! Papp! Papp! ⏪ I make you unnerstand. CUZ I’M DEVLISH when it comes to dat! I wear the horns in this here relationship!

✌🏿❤️🤘🏽✌🏼 ❤️ 🤘

Flames Go Higher

The FLAMES are rolling down Santa Monica Boulevard. Pink scarves trail over their shoulders, leather chaps frame their denim clad buttocks. It’s an army, all with cowcatcher mustaches. The light turns green and it’s time to GO! They’ve got soul, and they show it by coordinating pounds – fisting pounds – as they ride. One potato, two potato. They peel into Hollywood, ripping the pavement as they go HIGHER!

✌🏿❤️🤘🏽✌🏼 ❤️ 🤘

Bad Dream Momma

“I got off with her in, like, 3 minutes. I mean, she was that hot. So, I blow out like … ‘Money? Say huh?’ … And I run downstairs straight into the Den Mother, the madame, the old crow. ‘She loved your monkey! Now pony up!’ I cold-cocked her with my pimp stick and said, ‘When you wake up, it’ll just be a bad dream, momma!’

✌🏿❤️🤘🏽✌🏼 ❤️ 🤘

English Girl

The last picture I have of my parole officer is this: he’s lying in the grass next to the Tower of Pisa in Italy. The tower is leaning. He is lying in the grass with the Tower over his shoulder. His pants are down and his cock is out and stiff. He looks like he’s comparing the arc of his shaft to the lean of the building, as if using it to measure the curvature by some geometrical theorem. Or maybe he’s saying he has the Tower of cocks. In the picture it is late, dusk, and I assume the tourists are gone. The real story is in who took the pic: the parole officer met some ENGLISH GIRL who, apparently, turned him on to things he had never heard of in his 27 years on the job.

There’s a message on the back of the pic:  🍆Keep Up the Good Work!🍆

✌🏿❤️🤘🏽✌🏼 ❤️ 🤘

Stacks O’ Money

🎶One here, one there. Slip this bill in your G-string, lower that drawbridge. I’ve got mountains of honey, sugar.🎶

🎶I bought the magic beans, gave them to my girl. She planted the boogie tree and the fruit grew. Then she gave it all to you-know-who.🎶

✌🏿❤️🤘🏽✌🏼 ❤️ 🤘

Midnight Creeper

J. Weatherbee was armed with a can opener. He jimmied the lock on the back door and entered the kitchen. The remnants of house party food were cooling on the counter. He reached for a spatula caked in cherry filling. Laughter seeped in from under the door. J. Weatherbee snatched and ran. Through the door, out the back gate and into the woods.

His behavior had earned him the name MIDNIGHT CREEPER. No party was safe. He could throw his own party with everything he had stolen. A full kitchenette squirreled away, hidden in Jack McCormack’s back woods.

✌🏿❤️🤘🏽✌🏼 ❤️ 🤘

Already Died

She ALREADY DIED, so when Mark called to say it was over, that they should just be friends, Kim could acquiesce. This was because she was a ghost now. Kim’s body was in bed and the spirit was in the kitchen, but its arm reached through the wall to the phone in the dining room and the other arm stretched across town to Mark’s house where she could message his throat with her cold, translucent hand.

✌🏿❤️🤘🏽✌🏼 ❤️ 🤘

Kiss the Devil

Host: “Ok, everyone, it’s time to play … KISS THE DEVIL! Archangel Gabriel is our first contestant. Welcome, Arch!”

Archangel: “I will not kiss the dark one.”

Host: “Well, you’ll sure be tough to beat now. Folks, meet our next contestant: Ozzy Osbourne!”

Ozzy: “Uh … uhh … Sharon!”

Host: “She’ll be along soon. Our final contestant, a bow-tied neo-conservative from Bob Jones University, is Douglas Christie!”

DC: “Yes, hello. I’m game as long as the devil isn’t a Black man.”

Host: “Yikes! Was this skit terrible from the start?”

All three contestants: “Yes!”

✌🏿❤️🤘🏽✌🏼 ❤️ 🤘

San Berdoo Sunburn

I’m in a body cast due to an unfortunate bank safe accident in South Carolina. With my one good finger I point at things and tap to the songs on the radio. But why would I ever feel sore? After all, I’m going cross-country with my girl, Courtney. She’s driving, and I’m pointing and tapping. She can be a pain in the ass, but I love her. In fact, that’s her name, Love, but she’ll be changing that soon. I plan to propose. I just need to get out of this body cast and get to LA, where my pale skin will probably burn up in a heartbeat.

✌🏿❤️🤘🏽✌🏼 ❤️ 🤘

Wastin’ My Time

List:  Reading, watching TV, jacking off, computer, food, junk food, drinking, sleeping, moaning, weeping, trying on clothes, thank you notes, writing in low light, counting money, calling accountants, praying, braying, loving, leaving

✌🏿❤️🤘🏽✌🏼 ❤️ 🤘

Miss Alissa

She was a friend of a friend, and we were never properly introduced, and she had a thing for McCormack and people said she drank too much (What fun!) and I tried to get her attention telepathically when she was nearby, Health class in high school, where my only contribution to the classroom discussion was reading condom directions incorrectly, and I considered dropping my history class to get into hers but then realized I was stalking too close with my voodoo dance.

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Money Jungle

Corpse Ash Dance

            It’s time to hold both hands to your face and think of the worst things you did today.  Did you lie to a coworker with your feigned interest?  Did you rape somebody?  Was your bill unpaid?  Think of these things with closed eyes and hands flatly praying.  Lay hands and bless your head.  Pressure will boil the sludge in you.  It tickles your throat and wants to come back up.  Remove your hands and regurgitate the hours.  Live another day and repeat.

            I charge my captors with the theft of my precious minutes of my youth.  You had the wrong man.  I was a nice person when I met you – you, a promising and attractive jailer.  People warned me.  And I said, “Yeah, yeah.  I’ll sign here, there and everywhere.”

            But ah, ho hum, we move to a new present, new presents, new president.  And we build Babylon onwards and upwards to reach the god we made to love us.  And if we find the wrong god, we’ll still believe and climb higher.  The one we made up has to be up there somewhere.

            Stab City, HELL – Dateline Infinity – Two youths, 13 and 13, dialed pi into a rotary telephone naked while a surrealist painted the scene with one hand while the other was embarrassed, caught red handed by a cop in a bunny suit on Quaaludes bought from Rush Limburger in the back of a new drug store that only sells non-salt margarine made in Belize by teatless young milkmaids who dial for pies delivered from a Rotary Club.  The police had no comment.

            A filthy confession:  This all means something, as the sections inform each other and enlighten to my general disposition.  I want to say things that make sense, but since nothing does, I say things that don’t, to speak truth.  It’s my job.

            This is a story about a man who was murdered, the woman who killed him, the family that covered it up, the man who loved her anyway, the town that couldn’t wait to forget it all and the man who wouldn’t let them.  The end.

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Trash Talk

Birth of Sasquatch

… Like in a movie, the writer types and concentrates hard and then he rrriiiipsss the sheet of paper out of the typewriter and sets the last page down on a stack of paper that is at least one whole ream and that’s when the writer’s editor calls him on the phone and the writer says “yeah, yeah, I have it now, I’ve just finished, I’m taking it down to UPS and overnighting it to you, it will be there tomorrow morning, on your desk, bright and early” and as the writer sets the manuscript down on the passenger seat of his 2004 Subaru and fast-draws his seatbelt across his precious body he feels a sense of accomplishment and then pulls away from his log cabin and goes down the winding drive to the main road. Suddenly, an eight-foot-tall Sasquatch steps in front of the car and the car’s bumper taps the Sasquatch’s shins and it gets rageful and punches a hole through the engine block of the Subaru with one paw and punches a hole through the chest of the writer with the other. The Sasquatch takes the manuscript because he has heard that after humans take shits they like to wipe their asses with expensive paper and the Sasquatch thinks if its good enough for the humans …

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… Or it’s like when you watch a movie about a journalist breaking the big story but she lives in a small city and her editor thinks she’s an asshole because she never gets her work in on time but when she does it wins all the Pulitzers so why the editor is pissed is a mystery, maybe he has hemorrhoids and needs to use baby wipes when he shits, but anyway …

The journalist lives in a rustic/modernist loft above the city that she writes about, the beat she covers, the stories that are under her purview, and the journalist is sitting at a sleek writing table in front of industrial-strength windows and there is a purple, floofy couch behind her with looseleaf papers and news papers and an iPad strewn all over it and the journalist is listening to an audio recording, transcribing a quote and playing back the audio to see if it matches what the source said, and she types and types and then there is a call from the editor that the journalist lets go to voicemail because he’ll understand once he sees the fucking story, the important thing is to get it all down on paper even though nobody uses paper anymore (eww paper) …

She takes a shit and uses her bidet and as she does, checks her phone. There is a message from the editor saying “this better be worth it” and she thinks you betcha boss man it will be, just give me a sec and as she’s about to leave her bathroom and rush back to her desk and click SEND, there is a knock at the door and she doesn’t want to answer it but maybe it’s the super coming to fix her kitchen sink so she says “hold on a sec” and then the doorbell rings again …

She opens the door and before her stands a Sasquatch wearing coveralls with his name, Maurice, stitched in cursive on his breast pocket and he’s carrying a toilet plunger and he punches his hand through the journalist’s chest and watches as the life drains from her eyes. The Sasquatch proceeds to the bathroom, rips the bidet out of the wall and carries it off like in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest

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Or its like the writer for the new Netflix show who is on set to take notes from the producers who feel that the show needs a new love interest and they want it to be hot and steamy but the thing is the show is about Sasquatches and their lovemaking has yet to be told in any media whatsoever and the writer doesn’t know what to write and he is at his wits’ end (which admittedly isn’t very far) …

This writer wears a helmet and body armor because he’s heard of the Sasquatch-on-writer crime that strikes whenever some bullshit cliched character shows up on a TV show or in a movie: the serious writer living in a cabin in Vermont, the overpaid journalist working some backwater like Utica, or …

The writer for the new Netflix show, he’s a nerd and he likes things that are meta. I’m not sure how I’m going to murder this asshole but I imagine he could get killed through the only open part of his body armor which would be the butthole, yes that’s perfect, all the Sasquatches take turns on his butthole, and now Sasquatch lovemaking has been told through this media so problem solved …

But maybe a more fitting end is that this writer turns into a Sasquatch but not from a Sasquatch bite but from having a Sasquatch take a shit on him, you see the reason there are so few Sasquatch sightings is that to make a new Sasquatch a Sasquatch has to shit on a person, and then that person turns into a Sasquatch upon the next, full toilet flush …

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Trash Talk

Humidifier Crank

I tried a backflip into the pool the other day. Hadn’t done that in decades. I’m 46 and I shouldn’t be doing backflips. The Centers for Disease Control says so. They’ll come and put a mask on my plugged nose. The FBI will confiscate my flippers and snorkel.

I’m ashamed to admit it, but … after 46 years on this planet … I still don’t know what I’m gonna do … when Hulkamania runs wild on me …

Not Hulk Hogan

You don’t want to live in an airtight house. You will suffocate. You will dislocate. And chocolate. Where’s this choco – lesterol? My kids think about a house that can just float away if it needs to move. Like a ship, watertight.

Human beings are things made mostly of water that try desperately to keep it out of their basements.

I’m writing a screenplay about a wild goose chase in a casino. Tentative title: Gooses Are Wild!

Goose

Haters in my life? Point ’em out! I don’t know what I did. I don’t know what I need to do. Get your revenge before it’s too late. Did you know that people my age die? Often. Unexpectedly. I’m sure they didn’t expect it either.

My name is Richard Corinthian Leather, but everyone calls me Rich.

Rich Corinthian Leather

In the movie Ghost, Whoopi Goldberg becomes the conduit for Patrick Swayze, aka P-Swayz. P-Swayz convinces Whoopi to talk to his wife, Demi Moore. When she finally accepts that Whoopi is possessed by P-Swayz, they make love. In the film, there is a cut so that the viewer sees P-Swayz and Demi begin to make out. But here is the weird part. In the reality of the movie, if you were in that room watching, perhaps in a closet with a camcorder (one of those big, shoulder-carry styles because this was the early nineties), you would see Demi Moore make out with Whoopi Goldberg (I mean the characters they play of course). So, as much as all three want it to be Demi and P-Swayz, she can only work with Whoopi’s body. And Whoopi’s body doesn’t have a cock. At least, I don’t think so. Demi makes love to a woman physically but to her husband mentally. I would think, though, that the discrepancy between what your mind is feeling and what your body is touching would throw you out of it. Or does P-Swayz penetrate her with his ghost dick?

Can I go through tribulations by themselves or must there always be trials beforehand? And can I just go through one tribulation rather than many? What is the International Department of Cliches’ guidance in this matter?

Cli-Ché Guevara

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Short Stories

Rolling in the Deep

            There was once a beautiful building by the bay, one that gleamed a bright brown in the sunset hours. It did no harm to anyone. Generations of New Yorkers lived inside it, from the 1920s on. The building housed talented artists, criminals, boys and girls, women of science, men of letters, grandmas of warm cookies, uncles of ill repute, and cats (but no dogs because they were not allowed).

            Through no fault of its own, the building was sinking. As it sat in Manhattan, the city itself was subsiding, as it had since the last ice age. Scientists said that the Great Sinking – as the building preferred to think of it (if it could be said that the building had any thoughts) – had been occurring at 1.6 millimeters per year. And for over one hundred years the sea levels were rising. This had been the century of decline, literally.

            The beautiful building was sinking into the bay and nothing could be done to stop it. Engineers had their hands full with more pressing matters, like pumping water out of the basement of the nearby hospital. Firefighters were farther inland, setting up a new elementary school. The police focused on directing traffic away from the flood zone.

            To be forgotten about could hurt anyone, and if it could be said that buildings had feelings like people and dogs, the building would feel hurt. But little did it know it would soon fall victim to Cupid’s arrow.

            The octopus is known to be the most intelligent invertebrate of the sea. There are more types than humanity could ever dream; sneaky mollusks that they are, they have maps to the deepest, darkest ocean spots ingrained in their minds. In short, what man knows of the octopuses is but the tip of the octopi iceberg.

            The largest octopus could not enter man’s thoughts without causing panic, for it is a creature that takes up all the shadows and all the darkness man can imagine. If one true monster exists at the depths of man’s consciousness it is the Giant Octopus, not because it is specifically lethal to man but because man is in no way a threat to it. Man has discovered the giant Pacific octopus, which can grow up to 30 feet wide and weigh over 600 pounds. Impressive, but a mere flea compared to what lies beneath where light can reach.

            If it is possible for a building to have feelings, can it cry out in pain or sorrow? If so, we know that sound travels faster in water than in air. Did the Giant Octopus hear such a cry? Is that why it turned its slit-shaped eye in the building’s direction? And if a building can have feelings, can the Giant Octopus move out of the shadows to take a closer look? And if all this can happen, why can’t Cupid’s arrow ricochet off the building’s facade and shoot into one of the octopus’ three hearts?

            Yes, there was love brewing in tres corazones. Yes, warm feelings were crackling in the hearth of every apartment on each floor. As the building sank, the Giant Octopus rose to meet it

            As Cupid’s arrow was finding its marks, there were residents of the building who were falling out of love. As they saw their floors tilt and their walls buck, they thought, I’m coming out downside wrong on this deal. It’s time to split. Falling out of love with your place of residence is better than falling out a window of your sinking apartment complex. So, split they did.

            And that sinking feeling was all around town. Every New Yorker wondered who would be next. Who would go home to find that their dwelling had lost air like a flat tire. Who had lost some inches off their vertical like a ballplayer.

            Nobody really cared about the buildings themselves, just the stuff inside.

            The building that was sinking, the one that would soon fall head over heels, the one suddenly empty inside, was not an Art Deco masterpiece like its 1920s brethren. It was eight stories of plain, clean brickwork, and it let everyone walk all over it.

            The Giant Octopus was a loner by design. He wasn’t made to socialize. He didn’t know if there was another of his species around for a thousand miles, let alone a suitable mate. He had lived in the murky depths for so long, it seemed like darkness was all that existed.

            The fish that swam overhead never saw him, and the other octopi were snobs. No man would dare to sink so low, their vessels not able to manage the pressure.

            The Giant Octopus spent most of his life in blackness because he thought he deserved no better. Then he simply looked up and saw his love slipping down towards him. He knew he wanted more.

            When the first tentacle wrapped around the base of the structure, people saw it and remarked, “What?” Their interrogative had a tone of incredulity. In other words, they couldn’t believe what they saw.

            There are videos on social media labeled “sea monster dragging building down NYC,” “giant squid attack in Manhattan,” and “Loch Ness on East Coast.”

            People talked about a monster destroying their beloved building, the one they neglected to paint for decades. The one with cracks in the foundation. With holes in the roof.

            One thing that the building and the Giant Octopus didn’t know (and really, how could they?) is that this is the way everyone sees love from a distance when they know nothing. Someone is the victim of it, someone is the monster, someone is always dragging the other one down to their level.

            Would you believe that there were even older, more established buildings situated more inland that had a view of the entire romance? Would you believe that they looked down on the building and what it wanted? Can you believe that they judged it harshly, remarking that it was throwing its life away with this sea trash?

            An octopus arm can rejuvenate like a building floor can renovate. For so many years, the two lovers looked over the water at the same moon in the same night sky, separately, just from different angles, high and low.

            They had so much in common and they never knew it.

            Did the Giant Octopus reach out from deep, chilly waters into fresh New York City air, wrap its tentacles around the building and drag it down to its level, down in the briny deep? Or did the building, seeing the undulating cephalopod rising upwards in the moonglow, rush its own demise to meet it?

            Whichever the case, the lover’s clinch happened slowly. The Giant Octopus was tentative, holding its breath (both in nervousness and because it couldn’t breathe out of water). The building did everything slowly, and falling into its lover’s eight arms was no exception.

            They had plenty of time to back out if this wasn’t a sure thing.

            Much later, the people who didn’t get it and the fish that didn’t get it and the buildings that didn’t get it will see (either with their wall-eyed gaze or via photograph) the eight-limbed leviathan and the no longer pristine eight-story structure canoodling at the bottom of the ocean, eight tentacles weaving their way through eight windows on eight levels, the tips emerging from the opposite sides, a meshed embrace. Those fish and those people and those buildings will say they saw the whole thing: when they met, the initial connection, and the two of them rolling into the deep blue. And those fish and those people and those buildings will say that they knew it would work out all along.

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Short Stories

Broken Crown

            On a warm summer night, Jack staggered through the door of the one bedroom shack quietly, or as quietly as the fifth of whiskey would let him.  He hung up the pail on the peg in the mantle over the fireplace and turned to the bedroom.  It was nearly pitch black and he had to remember where his ten-year-old son, Jack III, usually left his toys, but it was hard in the dark with his blood pumping straight whiskey straight to his brain.  He reached for the knob of the bedroom door, not noticing the sliver of light coming from underneath, but when he saw his wife, Jill, sitting up in bed, he wasn’t surprised.  This is how it always was. 

            Jill, with one eyebrow raised, asked for an explanation.  But Jack had given up long ago.  She was much better at reconstructing the events of the night without his help.  He stood there, his head back and his arms outstretched as if to say “I’m ready.  Let’s get it over with.”

            “Let me guess.  Tonight it was the dwarves.  They came by the distillation center, offered to take you out for a few at Beast’s Tavern.  I can tell.  I can smell the whiskey, and you only drink whiskey with miners.  I should have married one of them!  A steady job pulling diamonds out of the earth.  They didn’t get caught up in the fairy tale of fame. They had their moment and went back to work, and now they’re all millionaires.  Well, the pigs must have come by too and talked you into eating cheeseburgers out of the trough.  As usual, you can’t do it right and you get slop all over your clothes.  Then you got rowdy and Beast himself had to throw you out.  Don’t try to deny it!  I can see the scrapes from his claws.”

            Jack was still standing with his arms outstretched, taking it, like every night.  He turned his right arm towards her to show off the wound on his elbow from Beast where the oaf had grabbed him.  Jack reasoned that Beast was always angry on account of losing his looks and losing his girl.  Rumor was she ran off with another prince to some place called Hollywood, but it sounded like that place was made up.  Everybody in town always said they felt sorry for him, but then he would come out of the back room of the bar to check a receipt or to talk to a customer or, in Jack’s case, to bounce someone out, and everybody took one look at his face and remembered why they hated him so much. 

            Jill wasn’t finished.  She said haughtily,  “Where’s your pail?”

            “I hung it by the fire.”  Jack’s voice was almost growling as he slumped into bed.  Why couldn’t she just leave it alone? he thought.  Every night it was the same damn story with her. 

            He laid down next to her and closed his eyes, rubbing the bridge of his nose.  She started going on her usual tirade about his behavior.  His mind began to drift back to the good times. 

            Jack couldn’t remember what life was like before he met Jill.  He supposed he did the normal things like playing with friends and tipping cows.  His father, Jack the First, had been a rich man.  He climbed a beanstalk and tricked some giant out of his gold.  Wound up with a good bundle, but he lost some in a settlement with the three bears who held him responsible for dropping that giant on their house.  But Jack’s dad had plenty left over and their family lived pretty well off compared to the rest of town.  In fact, he remembered, his father never had to work after that.  Jack Sr. went out every night around town telling the story of how he had beaten the giant.  It was a much better story than any other; way better than the one told by the girl with the red riding hood.  (Red Riding Hood was still around, no longer little, drinking every night, telling that same pathetic story, the riding hood now looking dark gray from years of wear.)  In the midst of a boring story, Jack Sr. would walk through the door of Beast’s and everyone would turn their attention to him.  The way they lined up with offers to buy him a drink.  And eventually he’d tell the tale.  Jack Jr. never tired of hearing it.  It was all he could remember of his childhood.  Well, that and the pail. 

            Jack forgot when and where he had found the thing and had no memory of his first trip to the well.  It seemed like something that had always been in his life, and when he was young, he had thought that was all he would ever do.  But then he met her. 

            Jill was a distant niece of Cinderella, and therefore still under the jurisdiction of that same fairy godmother.  This made her quite interesting among the girls in town.  Jack had noticed her, but hadn’t thought much of her.  But a funny thing happened when he was about twelve.  Some call it fairy dust, others believe it’s something called puberty.  After that, she became Jill

            Jill quickly became the woman of his dreams, replacing Snow White.  With those bouncy braids and freckled cheeks.  Oh, how he wanted her. 

            When Jack Sr. threw a party, most of the town was there, including Jill.  Young Jack watched her from across the room, wondering what she thought of him, whether he was good enough for her.  Jack’s mother, Goldilocks, asked him to take his pale up the hill for some water.  Goldilocks, who was always very perceptive, suggested to Jill that she accompany him.

            Nervous as he was, Jack felt ready to make the trip up the hill he had made over a thousand times.  They both held the handle of the bucket as they went up, not saying a word.  He walked very stiffly as he thought of a suave comment, something Jack Sr. would say.  What did his father say to his mother when they met, Jack wondered?  “How do you like your chair, how do you like your porridge …” and then added with a lascivious grin, “how do you like your bed?”  He could say stuff like that because he was Jack Sr., the giant slayer.  Jack, on the other hand, was nothing yet.  Suddenly, he remembered this new story he had heard, one about a land where things called machines do all this menial work for you and people sit in their living rooms all day watching a glowing box that told stories, and the people who lived in this place never had to worry about anything except getting pieces of paper with letters on them, and this place was called “college.”  Jack made up his mind to ask Jill if she had heard about college once they reached the well. 

            But they never made it.  Jack tripped over a glass slipper and fell down the hill.  Hurt like a sonofabitch, Jack remembered.  He never admitted it when he told the story, but falling down and hitting all those little rocks had been more than he could bear, and since that time he’s never gone up another hill.

            At the bottom of the hill on that fateful day, Jack lost his senses.  He knew he lost his senses because he said something like, “Ouch!  My aching crown!  I think it’s broken!”  It didn’t sound like him to use an archaic word like “crown.”  He was apt to say, “Oy!  My bleedin’ brainpan!” 

            Still dizzy, he felt a weight on his body and breath in his face.  Opening his eyes, he saw Jill, dazed and groaning, on top of him. 

            A decade later, as Jack stretched out in his bed, he smiled to himself as he thought, And that’s where the term ‘knocked up’ comes from

            “What are you smiling about?”  Jill was still there, still ranting about the same thing. 

            “You’re not thinking about that old story again, are you?  Jack, that happened ten years ago!  Nobody cares!  You walk into Beast’s with that pail every night, but does anybody ask you to tell the story?  No!  There is no story!  We fell down a hill!  Millions of people fall down all the time!  You think you’re famous because you fell down?  You’re not even that good at falling down!  You only did half the job and gravity did the rest, but you can’t accept it, can you?  Every night it’s the same thing . . . “

            Jack had become a master at falling . . . asleep.  Sleeping to the sound of her crazy talk.  “You’re not famous!”  “Nobody cares!”  “Throw the pail out!”  Sometimes she raved about this “gravity” stuff, one of her wacky ideas.  But he knew.  Just like his father, Jack was a living legend.  Whenever anyone in town fell down they thought about Jack, and Jill too, even though she didn’t want any of the attention.  Fine with me, Jack thought, as he slipped into sleep.  He dreamed of the box with the colored images telling his story, things called posters and t-shirts and merchandise, and a thing called “Disney.”  And he felt happy, as he always was, and as he always would be. 

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