1729 lines
83 KiB
Plaintext
1729 lines
83 KiB
Plaintext
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invocation:
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&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&
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&` '&
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&` the undiscovered '&
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&` country '&
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&` '&
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&` 29MAR93 vl: . '&
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&` is: .... '&
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&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&'&
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(c) copyright 1993 sdi, inc
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s.r. prozak & l.b. noire !
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spo
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nsored&
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created&wri
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*==+==+==* tten&edited&pro
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*sdi,inc.* motedexhaustivelyby
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*==+==+==* spinozarayprozak&labete
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noire,foundatcblanc@pomona.
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claremont.edu&rm09216@nyssa.swt
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.edu&groupsontheusenet&dedicatedtot
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thestudyofliteraturelife&humanunkind..
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:-----/------/-----/-----/-----/-----/-----/-----/-----/----/----:
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:the undiscovered contents: :
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: :
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:. brief villification of theory & functionality :
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:.. musings in solitude after a primal clash of wills :
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:... random poetic ramblings section :
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:.... stoner adventures, vol. v :
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:..... virulent interlude of emotional attrition :
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:...... the lust of the flesh, the shine of the skin :
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:....... interpolation & contributor biographornication :
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:-----/-----/-----/-----/-----/-----/----/-----/-----/-----/-----:
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vitiation:
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for the christian, it is all in having an erection or having no erection
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at all, being the deprived victim of a lack of stimulus or of
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conditioned stimulus withdrawl so that some cannot be mustered. the
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systematic approach to our reduction constitutes perhaps the greatest
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threat to jargon ever engendered, and perhaps therefore vindicates our
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initial villification of all that is unsensed.
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consider the tribal music of the african tribes migrating through the
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american south to become the blues; despite its complete technical
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eclipse in the face of the conventionally accepted forms of music (which
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as we know eclipse all popular music) it has a quality its adherents
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classify as 'soul,' which we of greater experience can experience as
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'authenticity.' consider the artwork of lesser artists, who without the
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ability to skillfully craft every brushstroke produce prodigious works
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of splattered paint and concrete pantyhose, which they insist has
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artistic merit.
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we, of course, know differently. grammatical errors undermine the lowly
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texts of those who do not possess the assiduous persistence necessary
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for subversion of the graphical complexity...
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thus here in academia all is safe. the walls are thick and constructed
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of multi-dimensional bricks, upon which we have heaped the
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categorizations, upon which mount the administrations, upon which pile
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the routes of publication, visualization and popularization. remember:
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a little knowledge is a dangerous thing.
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-- the hon. robert chezvick
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solidification:
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Plan:
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she tore my heart from my chest and held it in her bloody hand before my face.
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however, the shock did not appear on my face.
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you see, she forgot the human heart continues to beat outside of its host.
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however, the shock did not appear on her face.
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you see, she forgot the careless sadism and realized what it was.
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a tear fell from her eye.
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i died, yet my heart lived.
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continuing to throb in her hands.
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phoenix
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- ---
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One word does the work. She'll not even think about what's she's doing
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while she's doing it. I see it to this day. More pain inflicted. I bare it
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and turn away thinking the pain is worth the few and far between moments of
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pleasure. I turn away and head downstairs in disgust seeking a different, or
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rather, more stable source of comfort...
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EOT
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- ---
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the radio screams to me, "is there anyone out there?" i turn it off. if only
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it was that easy. three days pass. "what happened? try to kill yourself
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again?" no, just thinking about you. same thing, i suppose. i was only
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concerned and the punishment for the crime of caring is patronization. you
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don't think you deserve to be treated that way? what about the trust i gave
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you. perhaps we shouldn't make promises we can't keep? then don't tell me you
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love me. i take back what i said, go ahead and push me away. it's going to
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make the final task that much easier since i know it's inevitable.
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there is no plan, can't you see that?
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- ---
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i know the story, but it all worked out. trust. trust me. trust you. trust
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everything. i'll sit by your side and guide you through hell. i've been there
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many times before. hold my hand and i'll lead you home. then i'll let you go.
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- ---
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words are a deceit. as we stand with our arms intertwined, our bodies becoming
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one, i'll admit my fear. you'll ask of what i'm afraid. i'll tell you i'm
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afraid of my dreams becoming reality again.
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- ---
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she arose from the ashes of a long-dead dream scoffed by all. with the warmth
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of the surrounding summer night, she repeated everything. then she took it away
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as easily as she gave it. now she is sitting across from me. the name is true
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this time and the story is true. now the little flame disappears in the night.
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to be seen again? who knows? who cares? who knows who cares?
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-- la bete noire
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fragmentation:
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solis
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sun-burnt impressions
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of the sun's love on soft skin.
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glowing eyes,
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fire from within...
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burning with the cool
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of an icy storm
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cold yet hot enough
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to keep me warm.
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(fern)
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Raincloud
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The power of the storm
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The magic of the rivers
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Part of a swarm
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Winds fly through the timbers
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Growing in power
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Then shrinking so small
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Herald the shower
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That brings life to us all
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Welcome the freedom
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Blow out the sun
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This is your kingdom
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Never be done
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Playing the rainstorm
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Singing the sky
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Go on perform
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You never shall die
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(w. francis)
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"a question"
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how do you
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make love
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to someone
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who
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does not matter
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in your eyes
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a world
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built around
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this shell
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to carry someone
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and deliver
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it
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coming to realize
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the grasp of
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reality
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at the end of
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this nightmare
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shared
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phoenix
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you live again
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from dying embers
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to dance
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again
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laugh
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and a tear
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seems it rather
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?
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this is
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not
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all that
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exists
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to be
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equal
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for I
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am alone in my nightmare
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and you
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are still there
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(lbn)
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virtual
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rain across a nipple like a nose
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beneath the faucet under skies
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emotive eyes the ceiling blue
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or maybe brown which is more honest
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so they say in the dry days
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rain down the arms with upturned hands
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stretching outward upward gone
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to tug the sky & heart & mind
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wonders of a world unkind.
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(srp)
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stoner adventures, vol. v
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reduction:
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The world split like a windburnt lip opening beyond
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the crack of my door. It was safe to go outside, so I
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did; the sunlight exceptionally bright momentarily teared
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my eyes and staggered me back for the safety of the
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doorway, but I had lost that haven in my blind wandering,
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and so like someone seeking shelter from the downpour I
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ran into the bright Saturday. Fourteen Christians who
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were picketing my apartment building screamed at me that
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I was a user of evil weed, a servant to Satan, and that I
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would go to hell if I didn't accept my father. My father
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who? I thought, and then wondered if these people knew
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they were already acting like my parents.
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I met Spike at the bus station and together we went
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to Spike's buddy Miles' apartment, at which we arrived
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after much climbing over air-conditioning units, steam
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pipes and forgotten rusted ladders over the collected
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roofs of several drearily similar apartment buildings.
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When I asked Spike why we were doing this, he said that
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it was the result of Miles' landlord being upset at his
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nonpayment for some days, and if we went in the front, we
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were going to get a lecture (Miles' landlord is actually
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a middle-aged woman who would scream at the minions of
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Satan for a buck they owed). Climbing down the ultimate
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fire escape, I wondered why I always thought of Miles as
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Spike's Buddy Miles. Maybe it was because when I was
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introduced to him, Spike threw his arm over Miles'
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shoulders and said something like, "This is my good buddy
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Miles." It wasn't until a few years later that I
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realized how often that phrase means absolutely nothing,
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and how Spike with his traditional clairvoyant bravado
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had ridiculed the traditional superficial usage and known
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that Miles would someday be a good friend, all in one
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cartoon-character sentence. Sometimes I forget how sharp
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Spike is, and sometimes unforgivably I forget how kind
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Miles is, how much of a great friend he is to me.
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Miles has never had much money, but I suspect that
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comes from his outrageously profligate habits. All of
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his money flowed like blood into his dope buying or bong-
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making, and so much more brushed off onto his friends
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like gold dust at a carnival, scattering in the snow
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outside his door when they left. His apartment had two
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rooms, both a sallow shade of milky chalkboard green,
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with wide white windows clumsily stuck in their frames in
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various stages of aperture. Next to his one-mattress
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worn bed was a large old-fashioned gas pump, with six
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goldfish swinging complacently in aqueous breezes over
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some form of purple light, which gave the entire setup
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the appearance of having emerged from beyond the upper
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limit of our planet's atmosphere. Something was vaguely
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strange about the actual hose and nozzle, but the rest
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looked legit, although I knew Miles too well to suspect
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that this was anything but what it was. "Okay," I said,
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when Miles came into the room, "Where does the dope go?"
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Miles smiled broadly, the resounding nature of his
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personality echoing through the halfshut-eyed haze that
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announced his state of being a high-ass, or someone who
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has smoked well enough to be visible, which for stoners
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like us can be quite an effort to attain.
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"I'm obvious, aren't I?" he intoned in his gentle
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voice, much like his gentle fingers working overtime on
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the gaspump bong to make sure each seal was tight, each
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fixture working. By the looks of it, he had worked
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doubly hard on restoring it, bringing it even to the
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level where it could be converted, resurrected from its
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decrepit state. "I wanted something big, with flair," he
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said, issuing his two customary statements for announcing
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the creation of his latest oddity. "And I wanted
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something glass --it's easier to clean, and shows you a
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prettier hit -- something (if glass) big and stationary,
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so that it wouldn't be broken immediately. Also, it had
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to have some means for quick inhalation, and this caught
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me, from the junkyard south of here," he said, opening
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the top where to my amazement, flowed a slender glass
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tube into the glass cavern beneath. Crowned at the top
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with a large wooden bowl (a veritable dope altar) mounted
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on a metal proboscis resting inside of the glass tube,
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the gas pump bong was conceivably the greatest invention
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for mental destruction I'd ever seen. Another tube, much
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wider, ran from the open-air part of the glass bowl to
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the main part of the pump, presumably to the opening of
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the hose, and still another tube ran into the water from
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below, which Miles informed us aerated the tank and
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scrubbed the water, so that the six fish -- Huey, Louie,
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Dewey, Sleepy, Skewey and Screwey ("I'm Dopey," Miles
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explained, when asked, smiling under red eyes) --
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wouldn't choke on water clogged with vitiating dope
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sludge. As this explanation wound down with Miles left
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staring absently out a window, I heard Spike rustle
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behind me and reached out my left hand for the best bag
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of our bestest homegrown I knew he would be handing me.
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"Miles, we brought you a present," said Spike,
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wiggling a corpulent bud inches from Miles' protrusive
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nasal organ. "This baby's gotta go, or we're over the
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legal limit carrying this bag around." Miles snapped
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back to us, eye to eye. One of the most ferocious
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stoners I know, Miles is an exceedingly gentle man who
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has no luck with life, but needs no gods except his own
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two feet and his unfathomable good will. Another volume
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will be written when I see Miles turn down a bong hit,
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especially off of one of his new creations.
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Stuffing the green bud into the large bowl, Miles
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told us he was glad that we had come along. "I'm bored,
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and there is a need for movement," he said. "This body
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wants to journey to the end of the boredom, wants to
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move. It has a thirst for energy expenditure, just to
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make the universe spin around and around, before death
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comes sagaciously to spittle us," he said slowly. Not
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having smoked since the day before, I was essentially
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sober, and also sort of bored, so I agreed. "Where do we
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wanna go?" I asked into the stilled air as Miles took his
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first hit. This was an amazing spectacle in itself, with
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Miles sucking until his face became red on one side of my
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vision and the chamber filling with opaque smoked dyed
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purple swelling out the other side, with Spike's face
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leering over the glowing bowl somewhere in the middle.
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Miles leaned back, sucking in a huge flow of smoke as
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Spike yanked out the dimming bowl, with its shining stem
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trailing out after it like a sword pulled from a
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scabbard. Spike motioned me to go next, poking the
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faintly smoking contents of the bowl with a blackened
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finger. Spike lit it for me as well, and I drew in an
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expanding breath to fill the chamber, watching it grow
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milky and then fill with solid violet smoke. I signaled
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Spike to withdraw the bowl as I performed the inverse of
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a howl, drawing in as much smoke as my lungs could hold,
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seemingly not enough but yet almost and now enough, then
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the hotness swelling like sweat in me, the magma I had
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swallowed into my lungs, but I able to hold it, keeping
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the painful constriction feeling good as the velvet
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creeping fingers of dope overwhelmed my brain.
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I leaned over to look at Miles. His face cherubic
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in its serenity, he was about a tenth of a bong hit from
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passing out. "Miles?" I said, and he blew cheerful smoke
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into my face, making a circle with his thumb and
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forefinger to say he was disturbed by no unruly gods.
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Miles lived a life like that; he gave a shit about what
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mattered to him, like friends and making things and doing
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nice things for random people, it seemed. He wasn't one
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of those cheesy smiley people who go around pretending
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everything is great and good and fine and well, who
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always smile at babies and hold open doors, but a person
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who would do solid things, sometimes insignificant in
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anything but the emotional significance, and would do
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them so wholeheartedly that you never doubted that he was
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doing them only because you and not he absolutely needed
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them done.
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Once when I was suffering a long day in the quiet of
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the rain in my apartment, sort of distressed after a
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girlfriend had left me (after which I had vowed to become
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an asexual, one who sleekly avoids entrapment with either
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sex, but you see what became of that) whom I had sort of
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cared for, not really but kind of yeah I think so now
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that it hurts-ishly. My door took two knocks and swung
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open to my yeah, and there was Miles, his traveling grin
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on (his traveling grin being his drawn-out absent face
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which barely has a smile on it, giving him the impression
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of being a careless traveler, but in fact means he is
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observing everything, ever watchful, even if it happens
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to be the good chance that he's royally high) and a brown
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bag in his hand. The framed High Times centerfold I was
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hanging fell immediately, and I yelped an obscenity, this
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falling-short being been the last small failure on a
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giant stack of them towering over my head. Miles started
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talking, doing what the Californians call "talking shit"
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when they're in a good mood, that is, randomly speaking
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about various trivial topics of amusement, assigning
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pretended value to often the most mundane and
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inconsequential things in trade for a laugh.
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I was so fascinated by this bizarre entity whom I
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barely knew at the time (Spike must've told him about my
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difficulties) that his oddball talk about things most
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would never have heard in their heads in a few millennia
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that I forgot to notice that he was aligning my picture
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with a pencil produced from somewhere in his workshirt,
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and carefully nailing it in. He punctuated his last
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sentence, something about the amazonian javelina, with
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the final hammersmash to put the nail into the aging
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plaster. "And so..." he trailed off.
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"Thanks," I said. "Want a beer?" I asked. Miles
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shook his head no thanks, in a way that said I would if
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possible but I must abstain. At the time for me, that
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made a lot of sense, having experienced a few alcoholic
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difficulties on my own, in the same staggeringly
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dangerous way children find lightsockets and crease their
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brains with electric fingers, in the way that is almost
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as dangerous as some people with their gods.
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I opened a cheap local beer and turned around to see
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Miles sitting at the table with his nonchalant
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noncommittal look and a children's walkie-talkie in front
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of me, complete with some form of decoration declaring it
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to be from alien worlds. "What's that?" I asked, sort of
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foolish-looking (mainly because the beer I had thrown out
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had to be number thirteen or more for the day). "Partner
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to this," he said, drawing out another one from under the
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table. I almost laughed, then wondered am I taking the
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world way too seriously? and so thanked him, and brought
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out my bong. Miles and I smoked a large bowl, and he left
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me the walkie-talkie. "S'got this neat jobbo," he said,
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"that turns it on when the other one is calling. So if
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you're bored, gimme a ring." He left it with a fatty, a
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jay wrapped from whole paper and lusciously ripe green
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bud. From then on, Spike and I used the little walkie-
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talkie to summon Miles. I've never seen another one like
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it, or even anything close. I'm not sure that the
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cartoon character that endorses it even exists.
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I had been lost in thought, but returned as Miles
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got up. Something like that happens with dope: you'll be
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walking into the bathroom and thinking how pretty the
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tiles are and how neat the toilet dispenser is and how
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rad the mirror is and then suddenly, like a lightning
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bolt out of nowhere, it will hit you that you have
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absolutely no idea what you're doing in the bathroom. If
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you don't panic, you might remember the pressure in your
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bladder and figure out why you were there in the first
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place.
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Spike Miles and I went into the other room, which
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was a bathroom, kitchen, and sofa-room all in one, mainly
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because the sofa fit between the toilet and the stove.
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Somewhere in a corner were some crates, upon which rested
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some random tools (although Miles was able to borrow most
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of his, even in areas where he knew noone) and some
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random tinned food. Miles had never been much of a cook,
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and I doubted the presence of much cooking paraphernalia
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in the room. However, we all fit on the sofa, except
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Miles who pulled in a battered chair stolen from a hotel
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lawn some years ago. We talked for a while, saying
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dreamy things and enjoying our freedom to do nothing, and
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then smoked some more, and talked, and played endless
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games of Centipede on the video machine Miles had found,
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bought for scrap for $15 and repaired, setting it up next
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to his toilet. "Capacitor in the screen," Miles said,
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firing it up and yanking once on the screwdriver taped
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into the coin slot. Spike was up first, and played a
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good game, and then I was up, and then we played against
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each other, and soon it was very dark outside, and we
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were smoking once again, all of us very so sweetly high,
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drifting in a cloudless sky like puffy lambswool
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mistballs. Miles was saying something to Spike about a
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place owned by a good friend of his no cover drinks
|
|
cheap, a band occasionally pretty good and not too far
|
|
off, and so when my game was finished Spike tapped my
|
|
shoulder and we went, out into the chilling night but
|
|
only for a few blocks, with a door blown open by the
|
|
smell of whisky cigarettes and sweat being the portal
|
|
into this new quickly-moving and blurry place.
|
|
I took a seat at the bar, and immediately noticed a
|
|
large green and muscular snake sliding between six
|
|
glasses placed like a spread-out Olympic symbol, but I
|
|
turned on my elbow to ignore it and looked over the dance
|
|
floor, where thousands of sleek women shimmied up and
|
|
down, glistening in green sequined dresses, next to men
|
|
in shining silk suits softly seguing to the music, and
|
|
all of this beneath a blazing green and red interchanging
|
|
lights display, all of it almost blinding but intensely
|
|
occupying for my eyes. Miles and Spike took a booth, and
|
|
I was long in joining them, for they sort of laughed at
|
|
me and said the word "highass" and I said something sort
|
|
of like "fuck yeah baby" and they laughed even more. We
|
|
got drinks, and listened to the band, which was a weird
|
|
carnivorous eclectic blues, drawing us in like smoke to
|
|
the face of a stoner, tugging on our souls like the knife
|
|
of a surgeon under anaesthesia, sort of a resonating
|
|
heart-mumbling type of thing. Spike spotted a slight
|
|
blonde and went to talk to her, bringing her back for
|
|
drinks, and Miles (being not great looking but a very
|
|
amiable guy with a knack for excellent smalltalk)
|
|
returning with a woman from Ohio with brunette hair and
|
|
an intriguing wide mouth, and I staring out into the mass
|
|
of bodies and not wishing to be a drag excused myself
|
|
readily to go suck on a drink and spent a few more
|
|
minutes warming the bar, dragging on a Dos Equis, a beer
|
|
made by miserable expatriate Germans in the heartland of
|
|
Mexico. Maybe that is what it takes to find something,
|
|
isolation and misery, alienation and perseverance.
|
|
Life sort of drifts by you when you're stoned, and
|
|
the "sort of" is as necessary to the meaning of that
|
|
phrase as the "drifts." I can never exactly peg the
|
|
feeling of being stoned when I'm not, and when I am, I
|
|
never think to really define it, just to record it. I am
|
|
not the serious type when I am stoned, as much as Spike
|
|
or Miles would be. By "serious" I mean that they believe
|
|
in leading functional lives while stoned, doing the
|
|
mundane and the extraordinary while baked halfway to
|
|
oblivion, and although sometimes I enjoy that, with the
|
|
gritting life I lead as a film student, always under that
|
|
"am I not good?" and "will I make it?" conundrum balanced
|
|
against my own feelings of pure genius (ego-induced
|
|
sustenance) and self-doubt and life-angst-weariness, my
|
|
main purpose when stoned it to be stoned, to be
|
|
driftlessly aimless, to observe and contemplate, to feel
|
|
and resonate, but not to try to do anything but be
|
|
stoned, but be useless. This is my highest and best use
|
|
when stoned anyway, because I'm not as hardcore as Spike
|
|
and Miles and am usually pretty detectable. It was
|
|
somewhat wearing off.
|
|
I didn't notice when the woman sat down next to me,
|
|
nor when she ordered a drink, but sometime after her
|
|
first sip I turned to catch a look at her (luckily as she
|
|
looked away burrowing purse money for bar tab). My eyes
|
|
fortunately drifted away before she looked back, and I
|
|
heard her speak, a mellifluous pleasant yet strong voice,
|
|
like the chin of an ancient warrior teaching his
|
|
children, and so my eyes drifted back to her. Dark, dark
|
|
brown hair, almost black, and brown eyes soft and bright
|
|
without overly reflective lustre, giving her the look of
|
|
someone attractive yet less suited to this antipensive
|
|
plastic place than even I. Physically, she was admirable,
|
|
although not a goddess, with a face that was beautiful in
|
|
many lights, I supposed, but was uncertainly so now. It
|
|
felt like rain. I was attracted, and there was tugging
|
|
in my chest, which put into my mind the idea to inform
|
|
Spike and Miles that I was leaving, to grab the bag and
|
|
go, when I turned to spot them and caught her eyes
|
|
immediately. Sudden shock, and all my mouth could form
|
|
was "hi" and some kind of introductory apology, and even
|
|
more sudden shock when I noticed her purse slung to her
|
|
hip and her drink pushed ahead on the bar, as mine was.
|
|
She responded with her pleasant voice, and her purse
|
|
relaxed, sliding resignedly down her back. She picked up
|
|
her drink, and quietly asked a few question, if I came
|
|
here often, and I managed to acceptably interact with
|
|
her, answering her questions, introducing myself more
|
|
fully than name and mixed drink preference. I was not
|
|
out of shock for the night: she mentioned she'd seen me
|
|
leave the table over there, and suggested shyly we
|
|
adjourn there, as maybe we could hear ourselves think?
|
|
Laughter, glasses up into the air, and we over the waxed
|
|
sliding floor back to the table. On the way over I think
|
|
I caught the eye of the guitarist, who must have winked,
|
|
but I am not sure I saw it.
|
|
Now the booth was closing in, etc, but I wasn't too
|
|
afraid, but really curious and immensely out of reality,
|
|
barely able to mix introductions. Laughter flew like
|
|
swallows above the heads of the band, who had increased
|
|
their tremendous speed-blues attack to resound entirely
|
|
through the hall, widening it and sending it shooting
|
|
afar like thousands of electric sparks showering around
|
|
the amazed human, catching him, spinning him, flinging
|
|
him into the deep and probeless depths of space, sending
|
|
him rising in those, or maybe falling, as with no
|
|
direction given there can be no ascension or descent.
|
|
Their guitarists played with their fingers singing along
|
|
the cable, moving like fighting birds or maybe mating
|
|
birds, sending out waves and sheets of flowing tones,
|
|
covering out heads in still-glowing sparks, warm and
|
|
cold, life in all. Behind the drummer even crouched
|
|
their vocalist, the feral life of dawn alive in his
|
|
halfshut eyes, his mouth murmuring so many phrases like
|
|
candy:
|
|
|
|
our child we cradle
|
|
ending our nights alone
|
|
singing our blues so softly
|
|
rising waking eyes, to-day morning
|
|
unbroken bringing us the dew
|
|
why not why not why not
|
|
flowers spotted with our blood
|
|
so much ocean for today
|
|
here is this our love
|
|
it dares the gods in their slumber
|
|
not to kiss the eye of the sun
|
|
vengeful spitting death retiring
|
|
coral sea running to the sun
|
|
on those dovewings we sail away
|
|
watching as the day grows long
|
|
our love is chancing, rising, limitless
|
|
unquenchable and deep, and immortal
|
|
like the depth of sinking night
|
|
|
|
It was a lovesong that didn't make sense, gibberish
|
|
to the wearied and fearful, and soon I returned to the
|
|
table, hoping that I wasn't appearing to be too much the
|
|
dreamy stoner. I seemed to have held her interest, and
|
|
the entire group talked for some time, until Miles had
|
|
left with the attractive blonde whose blue-painted
|
|
eyerims made her look much like a dove, but whose soft
|
|
voice spoke a sad loneliness. The women at the table
|
|
thought they were going to an apartment somewhere to have
|
|
sex, but Spike and I knew that Miles saw in her eyes
|
|
pain, and would grow to be someone maybe days from now
|
|
maybe years or months she would cry to, would be aided
|
|
by, and would probably never have sex with except in her
|
|
mind. I could tell he wanted to end the reflection of a
|
|
scar inside of his chest in her eyes, wanted to help.
|
|
Miles knows too much of this world to be of it.
|
|
The woman with Spike who called herself Simone
|
|
excused herself somewhat after that, leaving Spike a
|
|
phone number on a napkin, and a promise. Spike grinned
|
|
behind her back with the smile of the doubtful, but he
|
|
tucked it into his wallet nonetheless, giving under his
|
|
eyelids the querying look of possible departure to me,
|
|
the unsaid male equivalent of should I leave you two in
|
|
this carnival land? carnival, or carnal, I wasn't sure
|
|
which. The woman with me caught the look and nailed
|
|
Spike with a counter-request to stay, not in an
|
|
unfriendly way but hurriedly, as if fearful of
|
|
abandonment, or maybe of interest. I didn't wish him to
|
|
leave, and wasn't sure about the sex thing, or even the
|
|
stay thing, and so my look was blank but amiable, which
|
|
she checked before asking him to stay. Somehow in her
|
|
voice there was approval which told me she now feared me
|
|
less, but in a way so much more. I couldn't fathom it,
|
|
so we spoke of trivial things, Spike talking to her about
|
|
basketball, her sitting between me and him, I carrying on
|
|
occasionally about making salsa, one of my favorite
|
|
culinary adventures.
|
|
The band wailed on, increasing in tempo, as the
|
|
darkest part of the night arrived. I looked at my watch
|
|
and realized we had talked until the hour before dawn,
|
|
the hour of death, or the hour of life. A single blast
|
|
announced a drumstick slamming into rim: I heard blues
|
|
merge into some form of deathly noise, and saw the band
|
|
members grappling with demons on the stage, the steely
|
|
green bodies of the demons grasping instruments with
|
|
their claws and running the metallic nails down each
|
|
string, sending out the harshest howls and screams heard
|
|
ever by man. A guitarist grasped his instrument back,
|
|
clutching it like a precious child, and the demon
|
|
extruded his protrusive face and spat a tempered tongue
|
|
through the man's body, letting him slide off it howling
|
|
blood out his throat in his agony. An amplifier
|
|
exploded, letting the stale sunlight of fire and insanity
|
|
peak the stage. Smoke poured over demons' shoulders as
|
|
they ripped the arms from the other guitarist, slashing
|
|
him with claws until one finally fired a tongue through
|
|
his skull, dropping him limply into the flames. This is
|
|
the void of your insanity growled a demon harshly
|
|
delivering a potent backhand to the drummer's face,
|
|
crushing a potentially handsome set of features and
|
|
sending him through a wall. Spike and the woman next to
|
|
me wheeling, in the background of my eye, helpless in
|
|
indecision, knocked out of their matrices of being able
|
|
to deal with this by the shock, me slow-motion, focused
|
|
on the scene erupting. A serpentine woman in her green
|
|
glowing dress at the front stared helplessly into the
|
|
eyes of the first demon, who tore at her dress, slashing
|
|
her skin, and leaving her blood on the burning stage, she
|
|
screaming and him howling, the entire scene blurry as I
|
|
heaved a cheap chair through the window behind us,
|
|
leading first Spike and then my new acquaintance through
|
|
the jagged hole. Behind us, the club erupted into
|
|
flames.
|
|
In a small cafe, one of the few left in our city, we
|
|
discussed the club's incineration abstractly. The end
|
|
result figuring left the police at as much of a loss as
|
|
ourselves, but no desire to go back. "I don't want to
|
|
see that again, to see what's left," my companion said,
|
|
shivering outwardly as I was inwardly. Dawn rose above
|
|
us, over her shoulders coming beautifully, and we talked
|
|
a bit more before Spike introduced the concept of sleep,
|
|
and suddenly I was tired and Spike was gone, and I didn't
|
|
really know what to do, and we talked a bit more, I paid,
|
|
and we left splitting to go to our locales. I spent the
|
|
trip home thinking of a word, and came up with nothing
|
|
for her but delightful, or maybe fine, perhaps even
|
|
exquisite, for the evening, feeling foolish for using
|
|
formal and dated words, but so incapable of expressing it
|
|
with something similarly vague. She left an impression,
|
|
that of being as in a hazy blue springsky day way,
|
|
carelessly beautiful, and I was attracted to her, which
|
|
frightened me as I fell asleep in a softborn morning,
|
|
with thoughts of words spoken out of the mouths of the
|
|
past.
|
|
Rising at noon the next day, I went down to the
|
|
newsstand and bought a paper with no news in it. Nothing
|
|
had happened in the city but a tax increase, and it was
|
|
all editorials, a few for it, a few more against it, but
|
|
most indecisive, as was the style of journalistic
|
|
decisiveness during that time. I sat in another small
|
|
cafe, drinking coffee as last night, pondering my next
|
|
option, when something in sunglasses sat down next to me
|
|
and there she was and I looking like hell. A flowing
|
|
deepsea blue wispy skirt and an aqua t-shirt of the hue
|
|
of the Indian jewelry they sold near my house when I was
|
|
a child. "Good morning," I said, and she returned the
|
|
thought, and said very politely that I looked like hell,
|
|
and I said yes and how did she look so very un-hellish?
|
|
I think that received a blush and she may have almost
|
|
left, but instead she answered that she had just risen,
|
|
and was walking by when she noticed someone looking a lot
|
|
like me looking like hell and stopped in for a chat. She
|
|
ordered coffee, and I expressed my gratitude to
|
|
unspecified powers that she had, as I hadn't remembered
|
|
to get her number last night oh er sorry this morning,
|
|
and she laughed and said I had her name, did I need a
|
|
number? to which I blushed and concurred, shaking my head
|
|
with a touch of the incredible feeling of similarity to a
|
|
sunbaked brick after smoking mounds of dope the night
|
|
before.
|
|
We talked for a while, and then she said she had to
|
|
run on to work soon, but I caught the word soon and asked
|
|
where she worked and she said well oh she worked as a
|
|
writer of scripts for television and I asked more, and so
|
|
she sort of relaxed and admitted she had no office
|
|
schedule but was behind, and then asked what I did, and I
|
|
said film student, which was true I explained although I
|
|
was enrolled nowhere as film school was too far from
|
|
reality to even think of art and I expected a bad
|
|
feedback but her nod didn't look like a yeahsure nod, but
|
|
something too far entrenched in her belief in the same
|
|
not to expect it from me. She said something about me
|
|
not looking like a film student and a beret, which we
|
|
both laughed, and then she mentioned a question that I
|
|
liked beer (she'd noticed that I had picked a Dos Equis
|
|
the night before, asking the bartender especially if any
|
|
was handy) and invited me up for one. Delightedly I
|
|
accepted.
|
|
Work was a typewriter crouched like a faithful dog
|
|
on the dining table next to her kitchen, amidst piles of
|
|
paper, and she suggested we move out of her dark and
|
|
sharply square apartment to the balcony, which caught so
|
|
much sun, and although bright on my eyes was so much
|
|
nicer, with all of our skin and eyes shining in the
|
|
light. I asked why she didn't bring her typewriter out
|
|
to work, and she said she couldn't when working on real
|
|
work, but I noticed on the small glass table the marks
|
|
left by the rubber feet on the bottom of it, and almost
|
|
said something but realized the importance of not
|
|
stabbing into the guarded portions of someone's life. We
|
|
had beers, beautiful Simpatico pouring like cold molten
|
|
gold into long thin glasses, and talked some more, making
|
|
some jokes about coming home, and trying to find some
|
|
excuse for ourselves for being out so fashionably late,
|
|
acting like college kids. Many jokes in that, and we
|
|
were drinking quite a bit of her beer, and I asked if she
|
|
was really going to work and she denied it, said no, so I
|
|
suggested we find a place for lunch and she laughed
|
|
saying dinner is more like it, and so I said hold and
|
|
I'll be back and went out noticing I had a good buzz not
|
|
just from alcohol in the hall, and went back home to get
|
|
money, a shower, and some new clothes, and then hit some
|
|
small markets for good beer and the careful preparations
|
|
for a chicken barbecue, having noticed the paucity of
|
|
edibles in her refrigerator, which reminded me of mine
|
|
when I actually worked, which made me feel somewhat
|
|
shallow. I also remembered three lost cheap plastic
|
|
beads, huddling around the edge of her glass table, which
|
|
reminded me of something in the mouths of the past.
|
|
She was still on the porch when I returned, a good
|
|
forty minutes gone by, and seemed almost surprised to see
|
|
me, but only surprised at that moment, as if knowing she
|
|
would see me again. I carefully mixed mustards and sauces
|
|
and produced chicken in a pan of hers (unused, part of a
|
|
set lost or broken) and we had more beers, she admiring
|
|
my taste (I had guessed a stretch and chosen Warsteiner)
|
|
and I admiring her movements which seemed to stretch out
|
|
of her as a center of energy into the world around her,
|
|
adding energy to it and thus creating more, defying all
|
|
of conventional science. We ate with the setting sun,
|
|
and made jokes about nocturnalism.
|
|
The night slipped over the daytime earth's orb
|
|
quickly, finding us casually engaging in light romantic
|
|
gestures on the couch until we awakened to head out, and
|
|
she said something about that Spike guy, and so I sort of
|
|
called him, not really wanting to but feeling the
|
|
pressure of her eyes on me to screw up, wondering if he
|
|
was competition or protection. We all showed up at a pub
|
|
hidden behind a large laundry, one of our favorite
|
|
habitats for us impecunians, and found a table made from
|
|
the hood of an Edsel, suspended in glass and bolted to a
|
|
base made from the engine block. Spike and the Marquis
|
|
had showed up, each with a female companion, Spike's
|
|
being a somewhat traditional dreamy film student type,
|
|
and the Marquis bringing a woman with wild red hair like
|
|
a lash, who spoke fervently about the difference between
|
|
greens in nature, and the power and beauty of each with
|
|
its moods. I was on the end, my companion next to me,
|
|
and Spike beyond that, which worried me as he would lean
|
|
over to her and speak in half-whispers, often them both
|
|
laughing and then sort of smiling at me, which then led
|
|
me to get up from the table presumably to visit the head
|
|
but she intercepted me some time later as I was standing
|
|
by the phone and asked me what's wrong? i said nothing,
|
|
literally, and she apologized but more explained, just
|
|
joking, but then said it would not happen more and gave
|
|
me a sweet and deep kiss which I returned, and then she
|
|
vanished, and Spike was over in a little while, and said
|
|
look man i know what's up, would i do that? no (both of
|
|
us), a smile understanding, just goofing around.
|
|
Spike called a friend of ours named Ernest, who was
|
|
an old stoner, who possessed a bong (water-pipe) made
|
|
from a Ming Vase an employer had left to him, him wishing
|
|
wondering what it was, bored, tired of life, made it into
|
|
a bong. When told of its value (about six grand i am
|
|
told) Ernest swore, and said that he had thought love was
|
|
greater than money when he made it, but now wished for
|
|
money. I spoke to him after Spike and Ernest howled out
|
|
in much the same voice, "I'm not sure anymore now. I
|
|
don't know what love is worth, and I'm pretty sure money
|
|
is convenience, or at least dope, translated. I do know
|
|
I value my friends -- my men friends -- as they are the
|
|
only thing I can hold onto like a saddlehorn, and ride
|
|
out the times when they sling me up and down." I
|
|
sorrowfully excused myself from the night's festivities
|
|
at Ernest's, and asked Spike to give him some of the
|
|
Malachi's homegrown. The Malachi is an astronomer, who,
|
|
when his observatory ran out of cash, chased everyone out
|
|
and used the giant telescope (modified) to focus
|
|
starlight on his plants, producing some beautiful
|
|
("cosmic" was the joke) green bud that you could smoke
|
|
for hours and not pass out, but be so high that your
|
|
highness translated everything with precision into
|
|
beauty, and truth, and the lack of the search thereof.
|
|
Our table being somewhat far off from the main, and
|
|
in a darkened corner, someone produced a rolling paper
|
|
and someone else some fluffy green bud, and soon we had a
|
|
monster three-paper jay floating around the table, smoke
|
|
rising like a wedding dress from the gleaming block. She
|
|
smoked with us, cautiously but obviously enjoying it,
|
|
sort of drifting among us, laying her head on my
|
|
shoulder. "Red rain..." drifted by on the stereo, past
|
|
the swerving laughter of our companions. Beers went
|
|
around many times, and some food arrived, and we all
|
|
spoke and laughed and had some trouble coughing up the
|
|
cash for the bill before we left, dispersing like a
|
|
shattered bottle upon hitting the curb.
|
|
She and I ended up together, which we sort of knew
|
|
would happen, and wondered where to wander next, it being
|
|
relatively early versus our last night, only three a.m.
|
|
I was desperately looking for an excuse not to go by my
|
|
domicile, as it was in its customary condition -- my
|
|
fridge hung open, shot nights before by the retired
|
|
federal agent down the hall who had run into my room
|
|
screaming "THE RAILROADS ARE RUN BY OPIUM SMUGGLERS" and
|
|
fired seven wild .45 rounds into the kitchen before
|
|
collapsing under the collective weight of two bottles of
|
|
tequila, after which I let him spend the night, and there
|
|
being a broken window and most of a Ford Pinto on the
|
|
floor, me being "holding" the parts for a friend until
|
|
all suspicion was clear, and mainly, there being massive
|
|
fingers of watermark stain dripping down from the
|
|
ceiling, leaving the walls looking like slices from a
|
|
cave, and the broken lights and dense moisture leaving
|
|
little doubt that one was in a cave, and sofa literally
|
|
burned in half by Amon and I some months ago when stoned
|
|
so much we passed out leaving the burning cherry to
|
|
neatly gut it until the smoke became so thick we awoke to
|
|
put it out with our stale beer, only later realizing that
|
|
it made the apartment unlivable -- but she intercepted
|
|
that with the suggestion that we return to her apartment.
|
|
I accepted.
|
|
Incredibly dark within her apartment, me reaching
|
|
for the switch but my hand stopped simultaneously with my
|
|
lips opening, us intertwined and then falling for the
|
|
couch. Both begging for what must happen and the
|
|
softness yet ferocity of it surprising both. It started
|
|
with a kiss exceeding the cool depths of ocean, moving us
|
|
backward with the gentle touch of a wave, then the
|
|
unfrantic hurried removal of clothing, somewhat graceful
|
|
like falling in the moonlight. I took a nipple into my
|
|
mouth and massaged it with my tongue, then running the
|
|
warm wet tip up to her soft parted lips, black in the
|
|
darkness, but red with warmth and energy, grasping mine
|
|
like the hands of an old friend, and tongues tackling and
|
|
tangling as we joined in ecstatic motion. After her
|
|
pleasure peak and sighfallen exhaustion, she joined me
|
|
once again in the agony of excessive sensual joy as I
|
|
came, holding me and caressing my ears and soul with
|
|
whispers and moans, not of the pornographic cartoon type
|
|
but the true satisfied yearning, like our ferocious deep
|
|
kisses. An hour's light sleep left us up, in the mood
|
|
of frankness such a thing does to two interested human
|
|
beings.
|
|
We talk more, and I tell her I have no parents, that
|
|
my first father was gone and I was a bastard, and that
|
|
the grandparents and uncles and public institutions that
|
|
raised me didn't care until I did what they all expected
|
|
(I fucked up: busted, Jan 22, 19-something, carrying an
|
|
ounce of best Zoroastrian bud, but she didn't mind, said
|
|
something about stupidity of drug laws quietly so not to
|
|
stop me) and then they released me and I could go to film
|
|
school and drop out and make odd abstract movies,
|
|
although right now I was between films. Jokes about art
|
|
films around. I got up to go to the bathroom, bent back
|
|
down to give her a kiss, and then went into the white and
|
|
clean can. As I was pissing I looked down at my penis,
|
|
quietly hiding softly in my hand, and realized that
|
|
although the sex had been really very nice I hadn't
|
|
wanted it so much as to need it, and that we both didn't
|
|
need it at all. I saw some of that in her eyes when I
|
|
returned, but not the entirety, which sort of scared me.
|
|
I got the impression that she had been very still
|
|
while I had been gone because her left hand had only
|
|
moved slightly, to pull up the sheet and tuck her hair
|
|
back behind a small soft ear. She pulled the sheets aside
|
|
for me, and I pulled myself in and kissed her once,
|
|
softly, and she was sad seemingly and so I pulled her
|
|
over and asked and she said something about parents, and
|
|
I said I'm sorry if I hit a nerveness and she said, no,
|
|
but that she had had a father once, and he had been a
|
|
drunken bastard, and that he had thrown her and her
|
|
mother out, and that she knew her father, and was sorry
|
|
she did. I said I was sorry and she said it wasn't my
|
|
fault, and that it didn't matter much, myself
|
|
interrupting with a query about the nature of her crying
|
|
and she saying no no that's not it, it's just me being
|
|
emotional trying to laugh it off. It was like joking
|
|
about art films. I smoothed down her hair, trailing it
|
|
down her smooth back and running my hands around her
|
|
shoulders like a sculptor, willing her and moving her
|
|
into gentle sleep, which she lapsed into after maybe a
|
|
half hour and slept with her hand and wrist in mine until
|
|
she stirred into a small ball an hour almost later. I
|
|
slid blankets down my legs and went out onto the balcony,
|
|
pulling a towel over me, smoking the joint I'd left in my
|
|
wallet for this purpose. It's always a good idea to have
|
|
one when you want to think. I stared out at the night, a
|
|
swimmingly shimmering night, all stars flying high over
|
|
shifting clouds, reminding me of the way someone's eyes
|
|
suddenly snap open to find you looking at them. Miles
|
|
had once said how reflective the night is, but I couldn't
|
|
find it. There was no resolution to that night, except
|
|
that the depth of it must be beyond measure. I could
|
|
almost feel the heaviness of the clouds, and fearing
|
|
their birthright would soon come.
|
|
Back inside I found her still asleep, so I left a
|
|
note and went home. A note tacked on the door reminded
|
|
that I hadn't seen Spike in some time, and mentioned
|
|
something about some fine Thracian bud he'd inherited
|
|
from a friend going to jail for a smuggling offense. A
|
|
friend of mine had once compared jail to marriage, saying
|
|
that both reduced all of your outward options, leaving
|
|
you only the ability to lash out or to take within,
|
|
making you either an angry young man or a bitter old one.
|
|
I never understood either -- it was like having a child,
|
|
being married. No matter what, eventually you'd fight.
|
|
No matter how long, eventually the child or lover or
|
|
whatever would age and die, and you'd have to watch,
|
|
unless you were dead first. Or unless the relationship
|
|
died on its feet and you didn't mind watching the other
|
|
die. And even as the head emerged in birth, how could
|
|
you tell it would love you, and even more frightening,
|
|
that you would love it?
|
|
In high school, my best friend Tony and I double-
|
|
dated two sisters, who if they weren't twins were very
|
|
close to it. We split up after dinner, and Linda and I
|
|
ended up at a secluded outdoor location talking, necking,
|
|
and almost making out. Halfway through it I realized that
|
|
Linda and I were probably equally inexperienced, and
|
|
neither really interested in each other but in the
|
|
incident, and when I asked her if this was true, she
|
|
replied with the look of the glumly bored that it was,
|
|
and so I walked her back to my house, where she borrowed
|
|
some clothes and we played an exhilarating game of one-
|
|
on-one, mainly because she was an all-star teen athlete,
|
|
with a future and desires for children and office jobs,
|
|
and I was a stoner with hopes for making odd films and at
|
|
best dying alone as the first light of public scrutiny
|
|
hit my work. When we returned for her sister and Tony,
|
|
he was gone and she was in copious tears, having made out
|
|
with him, assumed there was some real interest and not
|
|
just inexperience, and then hit the root nerve of
|
|
desperation when she learned somehow that he had done the
|
|
same, neither knowing or sure, but both hoping too much
|
|
to make sense. There was much screaming, and the sister
|
|
wanted to see neither of us again, so I took them both
|
|
home and left Linda with a "please call me" but never
|
|
heard from her again. I then went back and spent twenty
|
|
minutes calling Tony's name to bushes, before I found
|
|
that he had vanished into a nearby phone both to observe,
|
|
and there had fallen into a troubled sleep. From then on
|
|
in high school I had given up pretty much on the romantic
|
|
process, sticking to sex as a commodity when I could get
|
|
it, and dope or beers when I could not. There was one
|
|
exception, but that is history too vital to relate here.
|
|
Falling asleep, I thought I dreamed of her,
|
|
silhouetted and then swimming with me through the night.
|
|
It was a dream where nothing was real, at least in the
|
|
sense that nothing stayed the same for more than a few
|
|
seconds. A doorknob twisted as a pretty silver-pink
|
|
little snake around my hand, and then bit savagely into
|
|
the pinker flesh. She cried out, beautiful in the
|
|
moonlight, and I saw it was not my hand, but then it was
|
|
my hand that had been bitten, but she was feeling the
|
|
pain. And then she was bandaging it, and telling me it
|
|
was just because she had never felt pain before, and was
|
|
curious to see what it was like. But I saw in her eyes
|
|
that that was not true. I awoke to the feeling that I
|
|
had never slept, and made a large cup of coffee to get me
|
|
moving. I felt motion, the kind of motion that breeds on
|
|
motion and motivates, a continual going, something
|
|
unknown to me for weeks. I called a few people whom I
|
|
knew I needed to recruit for my next film, something I
|
|
was planning about the nature of power, and how it is so
|
|
much like sculpting from gold (props were going to be a
|
|
problem), and then called her up, and the phone rang on
|
|
for a while but noone answered and no answering machine
|
|
snatched the line from the grasp of faltering hope, so I
|
|
hung up. I went into the kitchen and opened the
|
|
refrigerator, but a four-foot green mamba snake encircled
|
|
my last beer, leaving me to slam the door and head back
|
|
to the other room to pick up the phone. I grabbed it:
|
|
six pauses before a drumbeat and her voice floated onto
|
|
the line, like vibrating water as the ripples drift out
|
|
from a penny thrown in, for luck, for remembrance, for
|
|
hope. "I thought you'd called," she said, sounding
|
|
younger but more isolated than I'd ever heard her before.
|
|
"I did," I said hesitantly, which I think she heard in my
|
|
voice because she quickly embarked on an explanation,
|
|
talking about showers and doors and everything else, but
|
|
I saw in my mind a silverpink snake wrapping around a
|
|
phone handset, frustrated at being unable to get inside.
|
|
Halfway through, she cut off with an inhalation like one
|
|
about to cry, and then asked straightforward with the
|
|
force of an army if I wanted to do dinner. I was in
|
|
accord, she named the place, and the phone went down
|
|
without either of us listening to say if the other said
|
|
goodbye, except that I may have lingered softly singing
|
|
out my customary "take care," an epitaph to many an
|
|
illstarred conversation.
|
|
I had some hours to kill until eight in the evening,
|
|
so I showered and wrote out a basic outline of a script,
|
|
the kind that is all full of notations like "that
|
|
character meets that other character (the one with the
|
|
mohawk) and goes to the special bar mentioned before,
|
|
where they fall in love" and really means nothing other
|
|
than a desperation to get to work but a lack of materials
|
|
or thoughtpath, the direction shooting uncontrollably
|
|
into the air. This left me with about two hours left, so
|
|
I showered again, and thought of her as I had been doing
|
|
all day, leaving my unable to work, and called again, but
|
|
got nothing but more ringing. This time I couldn't feel
|
|
if she was there, listening, hoping, fearing. It was as
|
|
if the silverpink snake had let me go, allowing me to
|
|
drift in the listless night.
|
|
Six flags sagged limp against giant swordlike poles
|
|
daring the sky to revenge as I left the front door,
|
|
starting out into the relentless heat. The night was
|
|
beginning, so full of potential, and I was retreating for
|
|
some sense of backup. I crossed the forehead-like sidewalk
|
|
with a quick gait, but stopped for some reason, driven back
|
|
by the heat, or maybe a dream, and turned back toward my
|
|
door. The sight of a tiny glassine lizard, red eyes like
|
|
jewels under water, twitching his brazenly sharp tail three
|
|
times before quickly disappearing into a bush by the door. I
|
|
could feel his tiny red needle-eyes on my back as I retreated
|
|
toward my objective. Insecurity shook my shoulders and
|
|
weakened my ankles.
|
|
Reassurance came willingly with a stoner shaman like
|
|
Spike at hand; we loaded his custom-made bong crafted
|
|
from eighteen inches of marble, and smoked out a bonghit
|
|
to level the gods. The gods of night, and the gods of
|
|
day, all in retirement, with the sky smudged as it often
|
|
is in the indecisive period before the skin of the sky
|
|
slits and the water falls, the troubled instant silence
|
|
before a death or a tempest. The door opened with an
|
|
afterthought knock, and Ernest stood before us.
|
|
Something was wrong, Ernest's eyes told us, but he
|
|
wouldn't tell us and so us all stoned and unknowing and
|
|
helpful gave him a bonghit, which must have been the last
|
|
thing he needed. Ernest collapsed onto his knees, and
|
|
the breath of alcohol soaked in smoke covered our faces
|
|
like raindance masks. Vomit spurted from his mouth,
|
|
filtered by teeth, and Spike and I dragged him through
|
|
vomit like his own blood to the bathroom, where we
|
|
learned in some sadness that his youngest Amelia had
|
|
fallen to the mischance of a bus, misguided in confusion
|
|
at the end of a Friday, its front bumper killing her
|
|
instantly on her sixteen-dollar secondhand trike. Ernest
|
|
had done what we all do; crying is like an accumulation,
|
|
a certain number of things that on every level of your
|
|
life build up until nothing can resolve them, and then
|
|
the sky explodes throughout your eyes and sadness takes
|
|
over until you are made ill with it, and then it recedes,
|
|
and you retreat back into the world, a little unsure but
|
|
hopefully somewhat purged, as nature sculpted you, to go
|
|
on, with all of the functional choices of a paramecium or
|
|
earthworm, surviving for the sake of itself. This was
|
|
the last great tragedy Ernest could take for a while, but
|
|
he would not cry, and so he left his weeping wife and
|
|
drank a bottle or two of red whisky and halfway through
|
|
his last drink looked down and saw it was all blood, and
|
|
ran to the only place ("good friends they will keep you")
|
|
he knew was safety, and we were the only gods there.
|
|
Spike and I sat Ernest down, gave him water and more
|
|
smoke (this stops the puking, it keeps it all down, which
|
|
at this point was okay because the toilet was red as
|
|
blood, within it small demons swimming, their cackling
|
|
calling of laughter annoying and frustrating in anger and
|
|
pain, and so I flushed them down deep to the sewers, but
|
|
here they resided, as their echoing calls came up through
|
|
the pipework and into our souls) and let him cry, and
|
|
when he cried himself to sleep and looked safe I pulled
|
|
an old blanket from camp (back when home was home and
|
|
things were simpler but much more oppressive, when camp
|
|
in its myriad fears was so much a release) over him and
|
|
hurried to her apartment. Noone answered to my ring, so I
|
|
went to a side window from the hall, where I could see
|
|
her on the balcony, a single fragile wineglass held by
|
|
the stem. I called her name and she set it down,
|
|
unshaking when I expected a collapse, her stern strength forcing me
|
|
into retreat in the hall, but I called again, and she
|
|
turned away, gesturing with a finality words couldn't
|
|
say. Finally, she went inside and closed the door, and I
|
|
knew as I battered the door that the lights were going
|
|
out, the sobs receding, and that I would probably not see
|
|
her again, as a silvery snake was guarding her lonely
|
|
phone. A manager of the building came up and told me
|
|
that I couldn't carry on like that no more, sorry buddy
|
|
can't let you disturb the clients, and I walked past
|
|
eighty doors with old ladies in white hair each head
|
|
retreating as my footsteps came near but each set of eyes
|
|
still catching my hurt and delighting in mercy that I was
|
|
not them.
|
|
I walked down in the warm night, the cicadas and the
|
|
traffic building a wall around me without me, feeling the
|
|
immense potential even beyond the immediate weighting
|
|
sadness which pulled me down. I wandered into a
|
|
playground and sat down, on the nearest object which I
|
|
could find, a child's merry-go-round, the kind I would
|
|
ride when younger, with noone else to push it having to
|
|
run and run and run holding the handholds and then jump
|
|
on at the last minute and spin, spin, singing in the wind
|
|
until dizziness knocked me into the center, and I would
|
|
look up into the vibrant sky away from the sun and the
|
|
entire world around me flashing, converging, but
|
|
unthreatening. I sat there afraid to cry and in the
|
|
summer darkness some children came by, and I was aware of
|
|
them by their laughter and then by their work; they
|
|
pushed me around until it was too fast, and as the world
|
|
spun upon me I crushed my eyes in tears, and woke up
|
|
running quickly out of the rain of their laughter.
|
|
Spike's place with dried eyes, Ernest in the next
|
|
room, Miles, Amon, Michel, Susan, and Mel clustered
|
|
around a large bong, a huge head of plastic over the
|
|
bowl. In it glowed homegrown, Spike and my best, and
|
|
congratulations flowed from the rest. I asked Spike
|
|
where's Ernest he pointed away; I found him all peaceful,
|
|
asleep and safe. Ernest is a warrior. I talked for a
|
|
few minutes to his sleeping face, then left that
|
|
disturbed pleasant countenance to go with my friends. At
|
|
this point most couldn't speak, this being killer kind
|
|
bud that Spike and I had perfected from the beginnings of
|
|
our smoking, cross-breeding to achieve the heaviest
|
|
impact of any kind bud ever created. We didn't know the
|
|
THC levels, and joked that they couldn't be measured.
|
|
This was our choicest stuff, like the sacrifice for some
|
|
prodigal son come home, smoked in Spike's newest
|
|
instrument of obliteration.
|
|
People chanting for me to take a big hit I inhaled,
|
|
and sucked down a world or two of lifetimes, and fell
|
|
back immediately hearing the background voices that's so
|
|
big a hit oh he will be so stoned so stoned, and then I
|
|
felt empty and hollow the way a cheap car drives, and
|
|
lightheaded and sat down, and I was so stoned I couldn't
|
|
think, but beyond even thinking there was knowing, and I
|
|
wondered why I'd taken the bong hit, since I was still
|
|
here, so stoned I couldn't remember that I was stoned,
|
|
and sort of knew that I hadn't stepped out and gotten
|
|
stoned at all, but was just here living as if
|
|
uninterrupted. I took another, got a beer, sat down and
|
|
stared out the window, which I'm sure produced giggles
|
|
but soon those subsided as the killer bud took over and
|
|
everyone found themselves too stoned to realize or to
|
|
relate but too stoned to be anywhere but here in this
|
|
world, watching it flow like the world beyond a merry-go-
|
|
round, watching it much as a goldfish must perceive the
|
|
outside of the bowl.
|
|
I left after a while, and went back to her
|
|
apartment, but I couldn't knock, almost feeling her
|
|
breathing, but not feeling her mind. Then I started; I
|
|
couldn't even feel the breathing, and she was probably
|
|
out at a club. Borrowing some paper from the desk I left
|
|
a note, the night clerk not being the same ejector who
|
|
had removed me before. I called from a payphone on a
|
|
desperate whim, but an answering machine came on with a
|
|
voice that wasn't hers, saying hell-o leave a message and
|
|
i will be seeing you, and i left in my best choked voice
|
|
an explanation, but halfway through realized what i'd
|
|
seen in her eyes and just hung up, with an oh shit from
|
|
the desperation of lips abandoned hanging on the tape
|
|
before the crash.
|
|
She probably knew it was an excusable thing, and she
|
|
probably wanted it to continue, but it was the same
|
|
inexcusable fear that I had felt in the bar, in her
|
|
apartment, on my own; what made me leave a note and not
|
|
spend the night, what made me forget her number and have
|
|
to look again at the wrinkled paper in my wallet with her
|
|
slender script streaming across it. Whatever the case, I
|
|
could almost feel her pulling out of me like a knife out
|
|
of a wound, although she had been the balm, and the wound
|
|
was only now created.
|
|
I went back to Spike's and the party was winding
|
|
down, people abandoning cups and beers and going to sofas
|
|
and talking and smoke pouring out windows and given a
|
|
chance I took another hit and Spike smiled and patted me
|
|
on the back going by like a movie screen image, not
|
|
something to smile at but just to observe. Out on the
|
|
porch I stared into the sky, an unusually bright night,
|
|
and unusually cold. Breezes of the coming winter mutedly
|
|
flickered through leaves, and below me the horns of the
|
|
cars and the traffic noise were tugged into the faraway.
|
|
All I could see was the clarity of stars, observers of
|
|
millennia I couldn't even count aloud in my lifetime, and
|
|
I realized this was abandonment, being left to the
|
|
realization that the night is your soul, and that out
|
|
there in the soul sometimes it is so lonely and cold and
|
|
yet so beautiful that you figure the misery is part of
|
|
the beauty, and maybe thus is art, and the last sad joke
|
|
of the evening "maybe I should make a film about this"
|
|
hangs in the air. I sat. Staring into the unfathomable
|
|
night once again, I realized she was out there somewhere
|
|
under it, running, never to get the explanation, demons
|
|
from the past following her with the horrible ringback
|
|
echo of their clicking nails on concrete (throwing up
|
|
sparks) singing her ears in terror. And somewhere
|
|
tomorrow she would be all run out, and would return back
|
|
into a life under a dawn with shadows rising in the
|
|
brutal raw pinkness of soulsides exposed. Left on the
|
|
balcony I realized the perfection of it all, and
|
|
unleashed my mouth into a tourniquet burst, sending the
|
|
scream of the denied echoing up to the dispassionate
|
|
moon. In the silence only one thought fell: "How
|
|
beautiful this night like any other night is, and how it
|
|
wells up with freedom. How beautiful this night is, and
|
|
how free..."
|
|
She of course left the apartment shortly before
|
|
midnight to spend the night with a girlfriend, who told
|
|
her all about men and the horrors of them, and the next
|
|
day she rented a cheap motel at the beach and wrote a
|
|
brief outline for a screenplay, made a few calls and
|
|
talked of the flu, promised more detail and began jotting
|
|
down notes before the phone was cold. There was no
|
|
movement, so she rented a car and drove even farther
|
|
away, rented a cheaper hotel, and wrote more on her
|
|
typewriter, that astounding beast. Halfway through her
|
|
last day there she found it completed, and to celebrate
|
|
her ecstatic state of accomplishment bought a chilled
|
|
bottle of champagne, and without thinking once she was in
|
|
the door put in the refrigerator and forgot about it.
|
|
Two days later she was apartment shopping.
|
|
Being intelligent and sensible, she wrote many good
|
|
screenplays, and soon had an LA house, and children and
|
|
many contracts. Somewhere in the eastern part of a
|
|
forgotten city, a merry-go-round swung with its handholds
|
|
removed, part of a demolition crew's best efforts before
|
|
the new week's construction.
|
|
I took a cigarette on the porch of Spike's sagging
|
|
apartment during the second night of my residence,
|
|
staring out into the inscrutable darkness and watching
|
|
the lights smear by, and then drop from my eyes, only to
|
|
reappear. The city with all of its multitude of cars and
|
|
machines and people hung silent but not stagnant, as if
|
|
just paused, and then the sky broke, and a tremendous
|
|
heaving downpour blasted across the ground, above it
|
|
lightning crossing in dread warnings. I felt my heart
|
|
heave, and reached out a hand past the wrought-iron
|
|
barrier of Spike's balcony to catch some rain. When it
|
|
returned, there was ruby blood in the cupped fingers.
|
|
|
|
emotionutrition:
|
|
|
|
collection of disparate lights
|
|
|
|
Hard is the music loud is the light.
|
|
|
|
I recall with awe that terrifying day. The mountain weak beneath my feat.
|
|
That day, it was too easy, too simple, rising up on human chairs of steel, it
|
|
wasn't right. I would pay. No mountain tolerates such perversity, in
|
|
any form. And so, muscles tense, bones near breaking, I bombed that mountain,
|
|
its slopes unusually gentle, as if to spurn a feeble sense of security not in
|
|
mind but in body where thoughts, in their absense, left pain and discomfort.
|
|
Returning home with such feeling, body spoke to mind: drugs, it said. Release
|
|
this pain. Do not let such a beast, the mountain YOU have conquered, abuse me
|
|
this way. Mind saw no abuse...only thoughtlessness. Yet cowardice prevailed,
|
|
and in came the drugs. Seated in that chair, that vile easy chair, body
|
|
grinned favorably upon mind, as drugs replaced thoughts and suffering
|
|
diminished. Walls spun, tunes throbbed, other bodies jerked about. Mind knew,
|
|
mind knew mind knew. As it raised body and drug to peripheral superficial
|
|
heights mind in an instant saw as body mind and drug plummetted that mountain
|
|
that weak feeble mountain loomed in a flash. And then kerplunk without
|
|
exaggeration. We all hit together and all mind could see was that mountain.
|
|
It occupied thought and space and sound. Waves of thoughtlessness streamed
|
|
through body, painlessly, because of the drug. All rose and withstood
|
|
severity; body, in its increased state of discomfort screamed more, while that
|
|
fucking mountain that horrid distant mountain pummelled over and over and
|
|
over until mind lost thought and gasped drug in despair. Mind body thought
|
|
mergedand produced stomach as all lay to rest, weak beneath its feat.
|
|
|
|
(adam r)
|
|
|
|
regurgitation:
|
|
|
|
the undiscovered brutality
|
|
|
|
Desultory "Into Eternity" - From Sweden comes one more
|
|
release of dynamic and muscular death metal. Long an
|
|
underground favorite, Desultory take the classic, die-hard
|
|
Swedish sound and add some progressive touches as well as
|
|
lyrics surpassing those of some of the leading Swedish
|
|
bands. They lack the distinctive cheese-grater distortion
|
|
made famous by bands such as Dismember or Unleashed, but
|
|
Desultory maintain the complex and fast-forward riffing
|
|
style that gives the Swedes their original battering-ram
|
|
style of attack. Guitar solos dominate their given
|
|
portion of the music with quite a bit of effort put into
|
|
solos, achieving a complex and soulful additional
|
|
dimension missing from many bands using the school-of-
|
|
scales approach, improving on contemporary death metal
|
|
standard. Beneath the potent lead guitar rushes a
|
|
frenzied procession of advanced riffs which support the
|
|
incredible balance of emotion like pillars of snakes.
|
|
Imagine the standard riff style of Unleashed crossed with
|
|
the complexity and depth of Immolation's riffing mixed
|
|
into a progressive yet straightforward matrix of death
|
|
metal prowess. Vocals seethe disembodied across the
|
|
fortress of sound Desultory produce, creating the
|
|
impression of being fully integrated with the music yet
|
|
detached enough to comprehensibly express thought rather
|
|
than emotion. Above average lyrics back the vocals,
|
|
focusing purely on the darker sides of life with grim
|
|
relish. This is one of the better Swedish releases I've
|
|
heard.
|
|
|
|
Fleshcrawl "Descending Into the Absurd" - Straight from
|
|
the depths of Teutonic society, Fleshcrawl bring a unique
|
|
interpretation of heaviness to the death metal sound.
|
|
Like others, Fleshcrawl have begun with the supposition
|
|
that weightier music can be achieved through the variation
|
|
of fast and slow tempos, and alternating speedy
|
|
fleshripping power riffs and sludgy, slab-of-chords doom
|
|
riffs. They never leave you stuck in the same riff for
|
|
too long, which is a change from too many doom bands who
|
|
don't know when repetition has ceased to have any more
|
|
effect than drumming the listener back into his chair.
|
|
Heavy distortion and convoluted stream of chord riffing
|
|
dominate the faster parts of Fleshcrawl's music while
|
|
contorted downward chord-slinging creates the doom effect.
|
|
Guitar leads are fairly infrequent and not all that
|
|
distinctive, but often pack some unique musical effects
|
|
into a sprawling song. The greatest gap in this music
|
|
could be the spread out nature of the music, which seems
|
|
to lose its compact detonation feel when it breaks tempo
|
|
into slower parts or bridges, leaving us with long songs
|
|
that tend to ramble, and often trail off without
|
|
direction. Vocals are heavy, low-hung growls like clouds
|
|
of smog over an industrial graveyard. There is quite a
|
|
bit of value in this album, but sometimes it requires
|
|
infusions of patience to get to it.
|
|
|
|
Amorphis "The Karelian Isthmus" - Fantasy metal returns
|
|
with a historical edge, this time coming from modern
|
|
Finland, where Amorphis craft their progressive and
|
|
intriguing brand of death. I would hesitate to call this
|
|
a death metal album, even though musically it's very
|
|
clearly death, because the emphasis seems to be on the
|
|
fantastic and the unbelievable from the past, enhanced by
|
|
an overactive imagination. Lyrics are well-crafted and
|
|
interesting; the music varies from experimental musical
|
|
passages to straight-on death metal layered with a bit of
|
|
complexity. Bass and drumming fall into the Swedish
|
|
standard of power excellence, but are less brash than many
|
|
conemporary bands. Serpentine growling fits neatly on top of
|
|
the music, communicating without unnecessarily detracting
|
|
from the guitar power that is the core of this album.
|
|
Parts of this album seem to lag but are necessary for the
|
|
spirit of this music, which is not that far from death but
|
|
not all that close, either.
|
|
|
|
Afflicted "Prodigal Sun" - Progressive and odd death metal
|
|
from Sweden, from the opening sitar to the often-ecclectic
|
|
lyrics. Bass and drums show the influence of the newer
|
|
generations of technical death metal bands, and guitar
|
|
reflects both Swedish heritage and adherance to more
|
|
recent standards of technicality. However, Afflicted
|
|
avoid becoming musical knowledge hangups and still
|
|
demonstrate devotion to the art of crafting soulful metal.
|
|
Vocals are flat, dry and serrated testaments to the darker
|
|
emotions, singing lyrics of unusual depth and breadth.
|
|
Harmonic aspects pepper the music of Afflicted, which
|
|
crowns itself with carefully constructed and contorted
|
|
solos. Still, there is no fear of the full-ahead-go
|
|
spirit of Swedish death metal; some dead serious high-
|
|
speed-grind tracks fill out this album. Afflicted have
|
|
found a solid middle ground between technical and
|
|
spirited, between genres and styles.
|
|
|
|
Autopsy "Acts of the Unspeakable" - California gore metal
|
|
band Autopsy returns with a lengthy but predictable
|
|
album. Guitar is a mix of loose grindcore and death
|
|
metal, and remains at a subtle level in the mix, leaving
|
|
the main inflection to be in the vocals, which are of the
|
|
extremely guttural bass-tone mangled vocal chord growl.
|
|
Autopsy play at varying tempos, some ranging from the
|
|
extremely slow and heavy end all the way up to the normal
|
|
speed for wired death metal bands. Autopsy's attempts at
|
|
gore and brutality are the main deficiencies of this album
|
|
- -- guitar, bass and drums are better than average for the
|
|
genre, and guitar leads maintain some sense of
|
|
cohesiveness -- because the lyrics suffer from too much
|
|
television brutality. It's all images of senseless
|
|
violence and death and gore and all of the things we
|
|
consider brutal, but stacked up and juxtaposed in a style
|
|
now so hackneyed as to be thoroughly boring, and the
|
|
actual writing of the lyrics is done on a fifth-grade
|
|
level, complete with forced rhymes. It bores after a
|
|
while, yet Autopsy haul forth some impressive passages.
|
|
Mental Funeral was better.
|
|
|
|
Order From Chaos "Stillbirth Machine" - A churning, sloppy
|
|
and ponderous introduction opens this album, which
|
|
essentially bores the listener with industrial pink noise
|
|
for the first two minutes, but then Order From Chaos tear
|
|
into their music with growls detached from all human range
|
|
of sound. The sound of vocal chords ripping like
|
|
bloodstained silk lends to this music a savage
|
|
authenticity, something that might otherwise be missing
|
|
given the incredibly inarticulate guitar leads and
|
|
something droning riffs. A threesome, Order From Chaos
|
|
rely on a minimalistic death/punk sound which drifts
|
|
toward the slammingly simple at times, to which they add
|
|
filler bass and standard drumming, capping the whole thing
|
|
with the occasional howling "making noise with my fingers"
|
|
solo. The music isn't bad -- in fact, for the operating
|
|
limitations, pretty good -- but there are areas where less
|
|
should have been attemped and areas that are audibly
|
|
deficient, leaving the hope that this album was more
|
|
practice session than complete effort, and that the next
|
|
will utilize the best from this release alongside some
|
|
technical and compositional improvements. Of special
|
|
notice are the later tracks such as the title track, which
|
|
features said demonic screaming and some extensively
|
|
repulsive guitar thrashings.
|
|
|
|
Impetigo "Horror of the Zombies" - Cheeseball horror
|
|
flicks mixing with death metal might sound like a goofy
|
|
musical nightmare, and that seems to be what Impetigo are
|
|
aiming to capture. Each song is preceded by a sampled
|
|
intro with the sound and intellect of a B-grade horror
|
|
flick, which ends up detracting from the listening of this
|
|
album, as each sample ends up being too long to listen to
|
|
without being bored the first time, which bodes ill for
|
|
future listenings. Once the initial noise collage is
|
|
past, however, Impetigo rage into their horror prowess
|
|
with songs that vary from midspeed sludge metal to fast
|
|
death to blood-chugging heaviness. Guitar solos don't
|
|
make an appearance, and there isn't a whole lot of
|
|
variation within these mini horror epics. but the rhythmic
|
|
core of riff and vocal proves worthy of notice. There are
|
|
some tracks, such as Cannibale Ballet, which end up being
|
|
boredom encapsulated, and some stupidities in addition to
|
|
the massive error of putting an expanded sample
|
|
introduction on each song, but overall Impetigo play a
|
|
promising new style of gore metal that promising only to
|
|
get more disgusting as time goes on.
|
|
|
|
Affliction "The Damnation of Humanization" - A speed/death
|
|
metal mixture with some unexpected harmonic punches,
|
|
Affliction presents choppy speed riffs intermingled with
|
|
death metal arterial-spurt-of-chords tirades, all of which
|
|
lives under the benevolent reign of innovative lead guitar
|
|
and bass with bravado. Speed metal must be considered the
|
|
primary influence for the music, both in terms of the
|
|
instrumental work and the vocals. Riffs and bridges
|
|
generally follow speed metal riff patterns, without fully
|
|
launching into the death style, and lyrics are shouted
|
|
with sparse melody in the tradition of eighties speed
|
|
metal. Drumming doesn't detour into the double bass
|
|
overload common to death metal, and bass borrows from some
|
|
of the better players in this genre, not just following
|
|
the riff but actually building off of it, plus interacting
|
|
expeditiously with the rhythm section during breaks from
|
|
the musical spearhead attack. Sometimes riffs fall too
|
|
much into the midrange speed metal pattern of sounding
|
|
somewhat similar and being far too repetitive, but other
|
|
than that Affliction stand as ballsy players in an all-
|
|
but-dead style who've added their own touches to great
|
|
effect.
|
|
|
|
Bolt Thrower "The IVth Crusade" - Bolt Thrower return with
|
|
their heaviest album to date; in fact, it appears that
|
|
"The IVth Crusade" was written as a study in
|
|
heaviness,attempting to create the weightiest music
|
|
possible. Deathy vocals pervade these songs, strung over
|
|
exceptionally heavy grindcore rhythm guitar and thundering
|
|
death metal double-bass hell drums. Volcanic chords
|
|
tunnel under the roaring vocals, bracketed with a powerful
|
|
rhythm section of precision drums and inventive bass.
|
|
Song lyrics expand beyond the colorful fantasy approach
|
|
Bolt Thrower became famous for and become even more
|
|
cerebral and philosophical in many aspects. Their
|
|
heaviest album to date, and quite possibly the best, this
|
|
latest release from Bolt Thrower modernizes their sound
|
|
and brings them to the forefront of their genre once more.
|
|
|
|
Man Is The Bastard "The Sum of The Men" - A local LA-area
|
|
band, Man Is The Bastard (now Charred Remains) play a
|
|
quirky and virulent brand of grindcore. Varying from the
|
|
full speed charge and adding into the slowness a brand of
|
|
musical weirdness unseen anywhere else, Charred Remains
|
|
create an uncomfortable and troubling musical vision,
|
|
taking the best aspects of death metal emotion into the
|
|
uncertain terror of the modern world.
|
|
|
|
secretion:
|
|
|
|
I love your tongue, probing searching. And your thighs when your crotch leaves
|
|
a damp spot on my leg. And your warm wet lips planted around me, soothing,
|
|
exciting, wet. Your hands all over me leaving electric trails of sense, and my
|
|
hardness. Oh how hard it is, but how smooth the entry is...it feels like
|
|
crawling into a warm, plush, incredibly soft bed with silk sheets...tossing,
|
|
turning, folding, sliding, the friction, the motion, the steam, the heat, the
|
|
rythmn, the rythmn, the rythmn, the rythmn, the rythmn of the heat.....
|
|
constant, primal, gripping, deeper, deeper, faster, harder, very deep, so deep
|
|
its coming from as far back as you can remember, coming forward, coming out,
|
|
coming up, coming here, coming now, coming, coming...........in a pool, a pool
|
|
of water, the temperature the same as the air, the same as your body, our
|
|
bodies, the motion, the touching, the contact barely noticable, sensory
|
|
deprivation, but you can feel it, feel it, sense it, enjoy it, enjoying it,
|
|
becoming of it, becoming in it, coming in it, the waves pass over you like a
|
|
beach, the sand, the friction, the grind, the push, the pushing, pushing you,
|
|
pushing, pushing, higher, higher, there, there, there, spreading, spreading
|
|
through you, spreading around you, spreading out of you, spreading down your
|
|
legs, spreading out your legs, lifting, lifting you off the floor, the mat, the
|
|
bed, the sheets, letting more in, letting me in more, the resistance, the
|
|
friction, the feeling, the feeling of it, the feeling of it coming, coming,
|
|
coming, coming, coming here, coming now, coming, coming yes, coming yes, coming
|
|
oh, coming oh, coming oh so hard, so deep, the storm wells, the storm rages,
|
|
you rage, you ravage, the storm pulses, pulses, like a sun, the pulsing, the
|
|
burning, the heat, of it, of all of it, it is all here, it is all now, coming
|
|
towards you, coming nearer, nearer, here, now, coming, coming, coming,
|
|
come......
|
|
|
|
the storm passes, and there is silence, the sun, the breeze, the breeze of
|
|
collective breath, the gathering of the water, the gathering of the dusk, the
|
|
sun, the flecks of clouds, the angle, the angle of the sun, the angle of your
|
|
love, our love, it is evening and the welcome storm is gone and has come, and
|
|
it is time to rebuild us and gather the evening and see what it is we have
|
|
brought. This is what is, this is what should be, and we are here, we are in
|
|
it, we are of it. It is of us, and the evening falls into the night like lovers
|
|
unto the storm that wells within and so it is again.
|
|
(honseki ki)
|
|
|
|
excretion:
|
|
|
|
a streetcleaneresque dedication
|
|
to the dead & the holy skin
|
|
ha, ha, ha
|
|
|
|
harsh breath over a cigarette
|
|
coffee rimming dawn, singing
|
|
we walk hand in hand behind the dust
|
|
grimy and singly the streets open narrow
|
|
like veins in the arm of a soft suicide.
|
|
|
|
look, this book
|
|
about the space
|
|
like an empty coffin filling slowly
|
|
nebulous face of mine pouring into it
|
|
i am the streetcleaner
|
|
when i am brave
|
|
in there the rubbish littering coffins
|
|
lizards crawling on the opened lids
|
|
iguanas sunning themselves sadly in sunlight
|
|
boring in boredom, too sad to move much
|
|
accepting the patience of the eldest shaman
|
|
geckos bright as the eyes of a corpse
|
|
demons claws all over the back, leaving bloodscars
|
|
spitting life's essence into giant heaps of trash
|
|
the detritus of our busy lives
|
|
searching for more junk to bury
|
|
or burn or pile or stow away
|
|
impregnate the idea of mountains in our veins
|
|
their feet are like needles,
|
|
like demon penis punching flesh,
|
|
the thousand fires crawling down your skin
|
|
too slowly for the dawn to overtake
|
|
no return/ no removal (to a safer
|
|
way)
|
|
j'know
|
|
nemesis in the dark, under the mound of trash
|
|
the blackened demon, fire-hardened and battle-hungry
|
|
tearing flesh poking iwth claws of geckos
|
|
so colorful, so alive, fading fast
|
|
the blood pours from my eyes
|
|
the geckos crawl free, all over
|
|
the trash heap burns brightly, more is piled on
|
|
monday's valuables collapse onto tuesday's pyres
|
|
there goes the future, there goes too much past
|
|
the tears slide in, hissing steam in the demon's face
|
|
his laughter punctuating the night
|
|
like the needle sliding in,
|
|
forever mournful, forever angry,
|
|
fire and demons dance over the raging heap
|
|
my eyes beneath it all to melt and see
|
|
so many more lizards crawling amidst our abundant
|
|
flesh.
|
|
|
|
i am a streetcleaner
|
|
("don't hold me back
|
|
back
|
|
this is
|
|
is
|
|
me
|
|
my own
|
|
hell"
|
|
)
|
|
maybe you can jump through it
|
|
the burning hoop of blackness
|
|
into colors and pain
|
|
then jump more, the final thrust
|
|
lungs bursting like drowning ascending
|
|
into something new
|
|
j'know
|
|
?
|
|
or it just could be
|
|
dark and light and red
|
|
breathing earthily
|
|
endurance.
|
|
|
|
"it's very small
|
|
it doesn't matter
|
|
it was just wanted
|
|
" (nemesis in darkness crawls like the lizard,
|
|
moutning your leg, mounting your soul,
|
|
thrusting, thrusting, inward like a spear,
|
|
needles converging, brning, all is scattered,
|
|
millions of cigarette butts cast to the streets)
|
|
"i didn't mean to upset you"
|
|
|
|
(...)
|
|
|
|
"i'm sorry, just don't call"
|
|
|
|
(srp)
|
|
|
|
biographic evisceration:
|
|
|
|
fern (phurn) - a pomona college student, wanderer, goofball. about five
|
|
feet or so.
|
|
|
|
wfrancis (dubba yew phrancis) - a student of life. no location known.
|
|
generally supposed to be aware.
|
|
|
|
honseki ki (whonsekkie key) - You know me. You know many of me. I have been
|
|
here a long time, I will be here a long time. I am Honseki Ki, and I will be
|
|
your host, yet you will host me. What you want, I can not give you, but you
|
|
may take whatever you need. Just please leave the rest, and enjoy it all.
|
|
|
|
the editors:
|
|
|
|
s.r. prozak - percussion, synthesis, vitreous decomposition
|
|
l.b. noire - dryskull vocal emesis, horns, slice.of.life sampling
|
|
|
|
icantation:
|
|
|
|
thus endeth issue four. visit our ftp sites at
|
|
|
|
- - redspread.css.itd.umich.edu
|
|
/u/ftp/zines/Undiscovered.Country
|
|
|
|
- - pomona.claremont.edu
|
|
po_1995:[cblanc.tuc]
|
|
|
|
any submissions to: cblanc@pomona.claremont.edu.
|
|
|
|
we thank you for your readership, and implore you to distribute
|
|
this incorrigible netzine as far and wide as possible. enjoy!
|
|
|
|
- -s.r.p.
|
|
l.b.n.
|
|
|
|
trailer:
|
|
|
|
From: IN%"lisap@NeoSoft.Com" 7-JAN-1993 12:37:22.35
|
|
To: IN%"cblanc@POMONA.CLAREMONT.EDU"
|
|
CC:
|
|
Subj: boy howdy
|
|
|
|
Return-path: <sugar!lisap@uu.psi.com>
|
|
Received: from uu.psi.com by POMONA.CLAREMONT.EDU (PMDF #2438 ) id
|
|
<01GT8K7THVFK8WVZ4R@POMONA.CLAREMONT.EDU>; Thu, 7 Jan 1993 12:37:08 PST
|
|
Received: from sugar.UUCP by uu.psi.com (5.65b/4.1.031792-PSI/PSINet) id
|
|
AA21557; Thu, 7 Jan 93 14:04:41 -0500
|
|
Received: by NeoSoft.Com (smail2.5) id AA06753; 7 Jan 93 13:27:24 CST (Thu)
|
|
Date: 07 Jan 1993 13:27:24 -0600 (Thu)
|
|
From: lisap@NeoSoft.Com (Lisa Pittman)
|
|
Subject: boy howdy
|
|
To: cblanc@POMONA.CLAREMONT.EDU
|
|
Message-id: <9301071327.AA06753@NeoSoft.Com>
|
|
X-Envelope-to: cblanc
|
|
Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT
|
|
|
|
sure is a lot of fun,
|
|
bereft, history, empty
|
|
sharkfull of lies
|
|
bless you new york
|
|
and your skyscrapers
|
|
like needles touching skin
|
|
bullets touching brain
|
|
flooding out the mantras
|
|
of our bravest best refrain
|
|
two must live as one
|
|
only cast in stone
|
|
cuz here in there perimeter
|
|
the needle touches one.
|
|
|
|
[EOF]
|
|
|