Story

 
Tough as snails.

Tough as snails.

I’m tough.  Yeah, you heard me!  I’m tough as bullet-proof bricks.  I’m so tough that when I bend, I break…your nose.  If I were a piece of lumber, I’d be a sixteen-foot long steel I-beam.  I get most of my toughness from my parents.  My father was tough.  The skin on his face was sixty-eight percent rhinoceros hide and thirty-four percent barbed wire.  Before my mother met my father, she bare-knuckle boxed grizzly bears at the circus freak show.  She wasn’t even apart of the act, the bears just had a bad attitude.  I was conceived during a gun fight in which everyone died, including my parents.  My heart beat was so strong, I revived my mother and kept her alive for eleven months before deciding it was time to be born.  I drank whiskey instead of breast milk.  My first toy was machete that I used to shave.  My bones are titanium just like the frames on my glasses.  I eat light bulbs and piss blood.  I’m so tough that I made a woman cry just by whispering my name.  I once bit through a rattle snake using its own fangs.  I don’t wear shoes in the snow and I don’t wipe my feet.  I don’t need oxygen to live because I breathe souls.  I Karate chop trees for fun.  I’m so tough that when I die, I’ll have to be buried alive.  You couldn’t even cremate me because my bones are flame resistant.  Yeah, I’m tough alright…definitely tougher than you.

Go hear this audio at The Boy’s Club for Men.

 

Tippie NuNu was the neighbor’s cat.  Tippie NuNu was an outdoor cat and was often seen retreating to the shade provided by my neighbor’s broke down, four-door jallopy.  My neighbor was an idiot who lived with his mother.  It was to my amazement that she let him keep that car in the drive for so long.  Either way, Tippie NuNu would lie so that his hind quarters were hidden behind the back tire of the car.  Tippie NuNu’s signature look was a thousand yard stare into oblivion.  I never figured out what Tippie NuNu was gazing at, but I got the sense that there was no where else he’d rather be.  I could tell because under Tippie’s squinting eyes was a smile that stretched from ear to ear as he radiated peace.  Seeing that happy cat every day temporarily took the stress out of my life.  Every once and a while I would see other cats come by to see Tippie NuNu.  What’s strange is that usually cats don’t get along very well.  They’re defensive and often fight for their territory.  Not Tippie.  He just sat there and grinned as the other cats would often join him in the shade.

After several unsuccessful attempts to fix his rust bucket of a car, my neighbor sold it to an Irishman.  Tippie NuNu had nowhere to rest and suddenly days didn’t seem so great.  Tippie NuNu would pace aimlessly for hours looking for the shade that my neighbor’s car often afforded him.

One day Tippie gave up and took refuge in the summer sun where the car used to be.  Eventually, a strange cat wandered by and came to rest next to Tippie NuNu.  As I watched Tippie NuNu and his feline friend, I noticed that the grin returned to Tippie’s face.  I was suddenly startled to see that his friend was licking Tippie’s junk with such veracity that it caused Tippie NuNu to grin even wider and squint even harder.  Using his sand paper tongue, the young, feline friend was attacking Tippie’s boy parts as violently as a cat would attack a scratching post or new furniture.

Just as I noticed Tippie’s kitty junk bleeding from over stimulation from his friend, my neighbor ran from out of his house waving a broom screaming back, “Mom, another one of them cats is back and he’s milking Tippie again!  He’s milking the cat, mom!”   It was a dark day for us all.  Things never seemed as pleasant for Tippie as they did before my neighbor sold the jalopy.  I guess you just do whatever creams your Twinkie.  That was Tippie NuNu’s philosophy, anyway.

 
Tell me how to get inner peace or Ill mop the floor with you
Big deal Wolfy.  Marge is my soul mate. Now show me some inner peace or I’ll mop the floor with ya’.

 Sometimes I think I’m being really funny.  I’m engaging conversation with strangers and they’re thrilled and captivated; laughing at my every word.  And then it hits me.  Everything I’m saying is a recital of Simpson’s quotes and situations that I’ve stored away in my subconscious.  “Remember the episode when Bart was a baby and Homer wanted Bart to call him ‘daddy’ and after several tries he called Homer, ‘Domer’?”  I know that was a funny episode.  I know that was a funny event.  But in that instance I’m no more than a hack.  Simply put, I’m stealing material from other people in an attempt to prove my funniness.  The problem is that it works.  People love Simpson related stories and quotes.  “Do you remember the episode with the Bear Tax?  Homer and Lisa are standing in the front yard opening mail and Homer gets his pay check.  He’s wondering why his ‘pay is so low’ and Lisa says it’s the Bear Tax that Homer so triumphantly demanded. Then Homer outrageously exclaims something like, ‘I don’t want to pay the bear tax, let the bears pay the bear tax.  I pay the Homer tax.’ And Lisa responds by saying, ‘Dad, it’s the Home owner tax.’”  The Simpsons are so damn funny.  Do you remember how funny that was?  Well, I do.  And now, in some hacked up version of the real story, you’ll remember it, too.  I’m so funny.  You’re welcome.

 

I’ve always wanted to be a stand-up comedian.  Looking back over the years, I’ve gotten a huge response from people just by talking and acting the way that I do.

I read this article that explained making your friends laugh doesn’t actually make you a funny person.  Sure, my friends laugh at me, but they laugh at lots of other stuff, too; real comedians, for example, or the musical stylings of  the Play-him off cat (see below), to name something else.

Fortunately for me and my dream, I have an uncanny ability to make strangers laugh or, at the very least, cringe.  While I believe in my inherent abilities to humor people, my desire to get up on stage is hindered by a small hurdle.  Quite frankly, I am scared to be on stage.  I attribute the fear to a poor performance I gave in the third grade.  I was playing Anonymous Man #2 alongside the wonderfully talented Falon Mahoney in the Westgate Elementary sensation, A Christmas Carol.  I had one line – “I’m just a man whose anonymity should remain intact”.

I bombed in front of the whole school, parents and talent scouts.  I forgot the line.  I stammered on my speech and on my feet.  I tripped into the set and knocked over a backdrop which broke a spot lamp above the stage.  It fell directly on top of our school’s only prodigy and the play’s leading man, Nathan Hale.  He was injured instantly.  After that hack job, I second guessed myself whenever I got in front of an audience bigger than five deaf-mutes.

The underlying problem may be that I have just convinced myself that I’m scared.   I haven’t actually performed on stage since then and it stands to reason that I don’t know what I’m scared of.  I’ve always heard that courage is something you gain after you overcome your fear.

Maybe the best way to achieve my goal is to just go out there and give it a try with my nerves fluttering.  But if I accomplish my goals, what will I have to complain about not achieving?

 
Trust me.  It takes a lot less condoms than this to make a baby.

Trust me. It takes a lot less condoms than this to make a baby.

JDubs dropped a heavy simile on me the other day. She said, “A life of work is like going to school.”  She explained that when you’re first starting off, it’s like kindergarten and you learn and grow.  As time moves on, you advance and you mature and you grow hair in places that you didn’t know you could. She said that one day, each person becomes the Dean of Students in the college of his specific field.

I’m trying to apply her example to my life.  I am currently employed behind the scenes of an abortion mill.  I work in a warehouse where, among other things, I ensure that death centers are well stocked with coat hangers, lubricant and trash bags.  Additionally, there is such a huge collection of condoms that I can take a swim through like Scrooge McDuck used to in his coin vault (Either that or I’ll try them all on).  It’s not as fun as you’d think as I do this ad nauseum and I am very unsatisfied (murdering fetuses is great and all, but…it’s kind of boring).

When I reflect back on JDubs statement, I get a sense that “Work is like school” does not apply to the folks that aren’t in the right school.  I feel that I’m not even enrolled.  I’m like a twelve-year-old in preschool masturbating not-so-covertly in my greenish overalls while everyone else is awkwardly moving away.  In this strange land, I look like one of those ADHD kids that can’t be trusted to roam freely. I’m tied to a tree with a leash and harness that closely resemble a monkeys tail (kind of like this…Philip from SNL).   Not only am I not a growin’ and a learnin’, I’m actually getting dumber and less anxious to go to class. What’s worse is that I tied myself to the tree and only I have the ability to escape.  But I won’t.  My spirit has been diminished.  You might as well ask a Senior to buy me a carton of smokes and leave me to die; unfulfilled, miserable, and retarded.

I have learned from this example that I alone hold the key.  I can register in any school that I want.  I am well qualified to start at the bottom anywhere.  Even idiots get to succeed at work (just look at my boss Mrs. Stransard).   So I know what I am going to do.  I am going to break free.  I’m ambitious and I know more about what I want to do than ever before.  Look out School of Tap Dance For the Blind, Deaf, & Dumb; Here I Come!  I’d better bring some of those condoms;)

 

Tookie is my cat and we live on the third story of a condominium building.  He is extraordinary in every way.  He is cute and fun like a small human.  He bites hard and sleeps well.  Even the way his huge craps stink is immaculate.  Unfortunately for him, he is an outdoor cat trapped inside a indoor cat’s house.  Sometimes, however, he is allowed out when I leave the house and the neighbors are gone.  And this is where one of his best features kicks in.  In order to get back into the condo after I let him outside, he doesn’t just wait at the front door making a scene for no one to hear like all the other idiot cats out there.  No, he’s better than that.  Using pure prowess and power, grace and skill, he scales the back side of our building with his cat-like claws and incredible strength.  He jumps on our back porch and comes in through a dog door I paid for with my mother’s retirement money.  This morning, I let Tookie outside a little earlier than usual so that he could exercise his handsome feline features.  Which he did.

Tookie sometimes reminds me just how close to nature we actually live.  We are a mere 20 yards from open space and, because of this Tookie and I have an agreement:  He may only take memories and leave only footprints.  Today he violated that agreement.  He caught, maimed, killed, carried up the building, sat down on my kitchen floor with, and devoured the head of a baby rabbit (otherwise known as a cutie or a babbit).  It’s pretty incredible what my cat is capable of.  It’s even more incredible how much he can just kill an innocent creature with no remorse only minutes after I fed him.  But I’m not even mad; I’m actually a little proud.  Look what he can do!  Commit murder?  The thing is I just don’t want to clean up his pukes.  Maybe if I leave it, my lover, JDubs, will clean it up with a trash sack and spare me the trouble.

Tookie eats like a man

Tookie eats rabbits like a man juggles; with balls

 

I am as liberal as Adolf Hitler was gay…flamingly.  You want abortions, take two.  You want affordable heath care, have some.  Taxes?  I love taxes.  I’ll pay yours.  That’s how frickin’ left I am.  You might be reading this thinking, “this assh*le is a borscht loving, Stalin sucking, rabbit eating Communist!”  Thank you for thinking that, but no.  It’s simply outrageous!  Truthfully, I’m only borderline Communist.  And actually, I’m moving away from that.  I’m growing up.  I’m becoming a small, bearded man.  You see, my understanding of true communism is that, as a member of the party, each person works as he pleases and is compensated according to his needs.  It’s like skirting through life doing your hobbies.  “Hey kid!  You’re really good at video games and rippin bingers from your bonger.  Here have a boiled goat’s head and a bag of KGB Branded Funyuns.  And kid…keep up the good work!”  Truly amazing.  The thing is, though, it’s not that amazing you crazy dreamer.  You might be saying to yourself, “That would be pretty cool.  But, gee whiz.  Something that awesome couldn’t ever happen in my America.”  Bullsh*t.  That stuff happens everyday in your America.  And that’s why I’m not Communist.  Not only could I sit around playing video games while dabbling in my other “hobbies”, in America, I can get paid to do it.  Paid to do what you love?  America, f*ck yeah!  America is a land of opportunity.  Golden, plentiful, tig ol’ bitty opportunity!  Yeah, you may have to work hard and play politics and beat out competition to reach your pie in the sky, boiled goat’s head dreams.  But you can do it.  And with an understanding of marketing and merchandising, you could be living big just by doing what you love.  Just remember to pay your taxes when you start making your buko bucks  and maybe, just maybe, pick up one of those BOGO abortions for yourself.  After all, you earned it.

 
Sage men open wide

Sage men open wide

Sometimes you see something that you’re not expecting and realize how unprepared you are for the unpredictable.  I was flashed by a set of old, wrinkly knockers on the interstate once and I almost ran off the road.  I feel that if the incident had taken place in a bar or a bedroom, I would have been less shocked.  The fact that it was outdoors really threw me for a loop.  More recently, I fell victim to another similar event and found myself mystified at my inability to react appropriately.

I went to the supermarket just a day ago and followed an older man in.  He was short and thin.  His hair was grey.  His broken and bent posture gave me the impression that he had been working his entire life.  As I followed him into the store, my gaze veered downward to see my next step.  As I began to look down, I noticed his brightly colored teal and red plaid shirt under a set of grey suspenders.  The suspenders were supporting his tarnished blue jeans.  My eyes lowered just past his shirt tail and stopped.  At his lower waist line, where a normal person’s shirt might have been tucked into his pants, I saw that this man’s bare ass was completely exposed.  It was as if his suspenders had grown as weak and weary as he had and had completely given up.  His shirt tail ended just below the top half of his butt and his pants hung just below his cheeks.  If he had bent over for some unknown reason I would have been subject to the gory sight of old man balls (sorry Grandma, I don’t know how you do it).

In an attempt to capture this moment in time for all eternity, I reached for my cell phone.  The man grabbed a shopping cart from the corral and I quickly followed.  As he began his shopping trip I trailed him closely all the while fumbling with my smart phone to activate the camera application.  By the time I was able to pull off a good shot from four feet away, the man had realized the breeze between his knees and had begun to correct his situation.  It must have been an interesting scene; me arms extended holding the camera following an old man who’s ass was clearly exposed.  Not the day I was expecting, yet still I was disappointed.  I didn’t get a shot on the camera.  I was only able to capture a mental image of an old, wrinkly, surprisingly hairless and tan, liver-spotted ass that will live with me for all time.  I left the old man and finished my shopping trip.  I gained some valuable knowledge that day: always be ready for the unexpected because that’s all there is.

 
The reason for the lake is so you can drown yourself after you lose all of your money

The reason for the lake is to have a place you can drown yourself after you lose all of your money

I went to Lake Tahoe a few months ago for my buddy, Goldie’s, bachelor party.  In addition to the sick ski resort and water sport activities that can be had at Tahoe, there is also legalized gaming.  I’m not talking Monopoly or Galloping Pigs.  I’m talking about the provocative, self degrading gambling games like keno and craps.  These are the kind of games that you either win some or lose big.  Of course, when I lose, which is always, I get pissed.  “What a waste of money?!” I’ll say.  Every time one of my friends tell me that they’re up for the trip or that they’re breaking even, I tense up.  I’m pretty sure that winning or at least keeping money in a casino is impossible.  Apparently, they’ve all read Mensa’s Guide To Gambling and had great success; something I’m still getting around to.  Anyway, I ended up with my last $100 to piss away in one of six classy casinos and I sat down at a Black Jack table next to my other friend, Teddy. With a $10 minimum on the table, I knew that this would either make or break me.  The dealer was a middle-aged woman and my perception of her was that she seemed friendly enough, that is, until she started taking my money.  Now, usually, I can hang at the Black Jack table (it starts off well, I build a bank roll, then the money fades away, and I leave knowing I played a good long game).  Not this time.  The game gods were not on my side that night.  I feel that if you approach a situation with a good attitude and good things to say, you will enjoy the process and even come out happy at the end.  This was not the case.  Like I said, I was pissed; down to my last hundo.  Within a matter of minutes of sitting down, I played through 9 hands without a single push or win.  $90 just like that.  After some casual banter with the dealer about how poorly the game was going for me, I looked her in the face and with the most sincere disposition told her, “It’s not that I wish you were dead, it’s just that I wish your parents would have died before you were born.”  You take $90, I steal your soul.  The most Jewish act of my life.  She asked me to leave the table.  I wandered around some and played my last ten spot all the while contemplating what had come over me.  Who knows?  Frustration, maybe.  Whatever it was I’m pretty sure I dished out the world’s greatest insult.

 

I learned how to read just like you.  Except not like you at all.  You prick; you think you’re better than me?  When I see the word “big”, I think of bestial anatomy.  When I hear the word “skipper”, I cringe.  Reading is a chore.  A sexy chore of disgusting images and male on male intercourse.

My story starts when I was a young lad.  My parents abandoned me and left me to die in a pie shop.  They knew I hated pie.  I made an immaculate escape.  It was daring and spectacular and that’s all I’m going to say about that here.  This story is about what happened next.  I was rummaging through a dumpster one night after my escape looking for a cat to eat.  All of a sudden I was rescued by a maiden.  She was tall and her Adam’s apple was poking through her skirt.  Her vibrant voice startled the cat and I got mad.  She asked me what I was doing.  When I told her that I was a lone ranger with no one to love, she grabbed my neck nape and kissed my lips.  The cat came back and we ate.

I knew that I could trust her because she was tall.  She took me to her house.  It was the whoryist house in the whole neighborhood.  There were all sorts of skank-ass hos and their Johns.  There were pizza boxes and pimps; recycled newspapers bins and crab shells; dogs and sweat pants.  The lady who found me told me she would raise me as her own and teach me how to read.  She then kissed me again and punched me in the gut with her fist.  The next day she taught me reading.

She said the only way to learn is to envision the words.  She taught me to think of an image each time I saw a letter so I could remember the sound.  She said that I could break down the words into letters and remember whole words by imagining the words that each letter represented to me.  Normally, this strategy might have worked, but I was in a whore house.  The only words for letters I could think of were the perverse images I witnessed.  Take the word “duck”: D is for the DEA, U is for uterus (I actually had one like as a pet rock), C is for big, gigantic, black c*ck (modifiers were another one of her lessons) and, K was for kiddie porn (I was also a movie star).  When I put it all together it looks like Ving Rhames dressed as a cop ripping the uterus out of an old hag watching me on VHS.  Far from an actual duck.

I am grateful I learned to read.  I despise that it was at the expense of my innocence.  Now where did I put that calico kitten?  I’m about to have me some dinner.  Let me know if you want me to spell out some other words for you.

 
Let the bullsh*t fly!

If you want to live life right, you gotta let the bullsh*t fly!

Recently it was brought to my attention that the periodic reporting I’ve been doing on my life is  highly inconsistent from what is actually happening in my life.  I’m talking about fact checking, folks.  It’s happening.  And I’ve been called out.  In a big way.  I’m not going to lie to you; I’m a liar.  Big time.  I one time took an ice cream sandwich from a little kid because it looked delicious and he looked like a fart smeller.  Did I mention I’m also a jerk?   But, I don’t want to talk about that really.  What I want to address is a life philosophy that I hold high above the rest.  It’s based on consistency.  You know, consistency?  The art of speaking and doing and acting similarly in every occasion of your life because Jesus or God or Elvis told you so?  Guess what?  That sh*t is totally bunk.  Bunked up beyond belief, sucker.

You can have a strict set of guidelines and abide by the rules set in place.  You can play your game of life on a black and white polarized line of yes and no, right or wrong.  You can also poke you own eyeballs out with a big wet wiener.  If that’s what looks good to you, you are absolutely fooling yourself, dude.  Sure, there’s instances in life of complete clarity where in which the outcome of some action is absolutely determinable as good or bad, right or wrong, yes or no, wet or dry.  For example, do you want to go to the movies tomorrow with me?  Obviously yes (HP6 guy or ma lady).  Can I borrow a pair of your panties for a science project..P.S. I need to smell them?  Clearly huh?  You’ll never make fast friends that way.  What you’ve neglected to observe in the past is that the world is not always as easy as black and white.

The world is grey and bleak and red and bleu cheese dressings and ambiguous and confusing.  All at the same time and sometimes, all the time.  Wrap your little mind around that!  If you’re playing the Game of Life and your little car filled with all of your peg headed children fall out before you finish college and become a veterinarian, there is no clear answer for you.  There is no rule for that (actually there is, it’s on the inside of the box lid about halfway down on the right, but pay no mind to that).  You should pick yourself up and dust off your peg kids and finish the game, broken and bent.  Things are not going to be the same for you any more.

Given the circumstances life hands you, you’d better figure it out and quick.  No ones waiting for you.  If you want to make it as a decent human being, you have to put all of that Bible thumping, Good vs. Evil, hogwash to bed.  Think about this…Terrorist tucks her son into bed.  Hmmm?  Why is she a terrorist?  Easy.  Love.  So she kills and maims and rapes.  Her son is safe…for now: Look out! It’s gonna blow!  KABLOOEY!  But that’s her life.  That should be your life, too.  Pure instinct and devotion.  Inconsistent at best.

Let your emotions get the best of you and set your self free.  Don’t be a wiener.  Be a man.  Be an emotional person.  Not a dirty Christian.  The people that run an inconsistent operation are liberated from facts and their incessant checkability.  It’s that easy.  I can lie and steal.  I can love and help.  Let the bullsh*t fly.  I’m accountable for me and you’re accountable for you.  Now, let’s blow this place and go to the movies.

 

Yeah, I shard.  So what?  If you ask me, it smells like most everyone else does, too.  Have you ever been on a bus?  This isn’t about that.  This is a story.  And it begins now….The last time I really crapped my pants, I was about 5 years old.  It was just after lunch on a sunny summer afternoon.  I finished a bowl of grape nuts and an apple.  At that point, I had just recently become a graduate of Pull-Ups for Young Adults Diapers.  I was proud then.  It wasn’t much before that day that I had become mature enough to don a freshly minted pair of Mighty Mouse underoos.  They were equipped with a fancy flap that, given the right circumstances of jarring and bouncing, could expose my dinger to a slew of people.  I thought I was becoming a man, a feeling that I wouldn’t realize again until late into my twenties.

My neighborhood was filled with all sorts of kids around my age.  During the summer we would play baseball in the defunkity cul-de-sac in front of my house.  There were usually enough kids on the block to get a full field of fielders and a batter or two.  We never needed outfielders.  Not only were all the kids too weak and gay to power the ball into any kind of outer field, but where the outfield existed, stood a house.  Like I said, it was a defunkity sac.  We played a version of homerun derby that may have been cooked up in a South American guerilla camp.  There was a lot of running and yelling and kidnapping, but never any fun.  Actually, it was a lot of fun.  Later on in my youth, I would become an incredible slugger; able to rock a tennis ball with a rake handle across the sac and over the neighbor’s house on any day of the week.

At the bright eyed age of five, filled with fiber and milk, I stumbled out of my house to find a gathering of minors and their colleagues.  They had organized a game that we all knew well.  We got on to playing.  As the game started, I began to notice some of the early warning signs inside my body of a poop trying to make its escape out of my anus.  I had a terrible case of the bubble guts and mud butt.  Upset stomach paired with a sweaty ass.  It was coming on slow but steady.  I knew that I would soon need to make use of the latrine nearly 50 yards away.

So, like most people do, I weighed my options.  I either had to stop having fun and sit inside for 10 minutes while I made good on the toilet or I’d continue to have fun and not worry about the consequences.  Well the grumbling continued and I felt terrible until I was called up to bat.  It’s like you can kick a kid in the face and insult him until he cries but the minute you give him a piece of candy, everything is all right.  For the moment, everything seemed to be gravy.  I said to myself, “just one quick swing of the bat and a trot around the bases and I would be on my way.  After all, the bathroom was just beyond home plate.”

I got up to bat ready to crush the perfect pitch.  So, I sat on a pitch.  And another.  And another.  And as I waited for which pitch I wanted to rock into tomorrow, I began to realize that I was not going to make it that far.  The pitch came and I took a cut.  It was at that point my procrastination caught up with me.  Working in perfect unison, my gut and butt squeezed and pushed.  The bat went flying and I ran towards the house only to feel a bread size loaf fill my pants.  As I jogged, holding my ass, I felt what seemed to be a warm, freshly baked muffin trickle out of my shorts and down my leg onto the concrete.  I did it.  I crapped my pants.  And the driveway, too, apparently.

 

Guess what, friends.  You’re hired!  Not really, though.  I want to tell you a little about my life.  It all started at the beginning when I was born.  I was a twin then and still am today.  My wombmate, Milhouse, as he is referred to by no one is one of the largest men that an ant has ever seen.  During my youth I grew up.  I marked all of my belongings with urine and shared everything I had including bath water.  My mother was an earth science teacher on the moon and my father was half lemur and three-quarters poet.  We climbed great heights together.  I went to school in reverse order and Milhouse attended in normal sequence.  We met once in 6th grade.  Elementary school was a breeze.  That’s the time when we lived on an island.

I became very strong playing ball sports under coach Lifton.  I was younger then.  It was then I learned a sad story; my best friend died before I knew him.  He was a quadriplegic.  He had no arms or legs and but he played in the grass.  His name was Russell.  I had a dog with fleas and a hamster with thumbs.  After graduating kindergarten, I joined the Peruvian circus in Brazil.  I was a flutist and I made delicious crepes.  That was a long time ago.  I met people like Biz, the singing ninja.  Almost everyone heard him coming.  He was married to a deaf princess from Albany named Sheila.  I met her too.  We used to take pictures of each other and watch them age.  It took forever.

After the circus I lived on an escalator for a short stint.  At the top I met a girl.  We were wed.  She grew into an ogre and ate all of our house plants.  She had a way with squirrels.  She would eat them, too.  We grew older every day.  We had children.  A boy and his sister.  She died shortly after the kids in a salt water bath I had given them.  I learned that ogres can’t breathe under heavy rocks.  It was her anniversary.  I didn’t celebrate holidays then.

I lived alone after that.  I liked short stories and to pass the time I read a lot of booklets.  I briefly took up smoking and then stopped.  It was one of the hardest things I ever did.  I got older and my breath got worse.  I bought a boat and sailed around a buoy for a year.  It turned out that my anchor was stuck.  I ate a lot of fish then. 

I am sick now.  I’m getting older and my bones are getting shorter.  I’ve grown as much as I have shrunk and I think that I’ve learned more than I’ll ever know.  I’m in a bed and the sheets are wet.  I guess that makes it my bed.  Would you like to join me?  You’re hired.  Not really, though.  I already said that.

 

I was driving home the other night from The Hangover with my lovely wifey pooh when the car I was driving was nearly cut off by some radical dudes with tassels on their rear view.  Now, my initial reaction was that I was going to knife these bitches if they started any sh&t, but that feeling eventually escalated (that’s right, more higher).

The inconsiderate punks flipped a sick bitch (it was a power move) and hauled some serious balls right up next to my ride.  You’ll have to understand here, when I mentioned at the beginning of this story that “I was driving“, what I meant was J Dubs, my lover, was driving.

Not only is she a better driver than me at night (I don’t have glasses), she has a hot rack, and I was drunk, but she didn’t know that.  It made sense she drove.

Anyway, these jerk terds, all jostled and riled because they almost hit me, came screaming up next to my ride.  These dudes were crazied in the faces and loud.  The driver’s all, ”Ah, foo! We’se gonna f*ck you up and take your sense of self worth!  You drive negligently!  I’m gonna get a pistole and choo choo.  Even with our limited knowledge of the world and lack of maturity, we graduated foo (from what, he didn’t say).  See my tassel?!”

At that point, I’m livid.  My buzz was wearing off and the light we were sitting at just turned green.  The little hand was already blinking in the cross walk.  I took off my seat belt and reached out of my car, grabbing for nothing but thin air (these dudes were like 8 feet away).  I started screaming obscenities and snarling.  I talked and spit.  I closed my eyes really tight giving the impression that I wasn’t able to see dog sh()t when it was in it’s mom’s station wagon (ba zing!).

Meaningless dribble and insults followed.  And finally I yelled, “You druggers!”  We drove away.  They drove away to buy drugs.  My lovin and loin muscles were throbbing from anxiety and excitement.  I lip kissed the girl and we went home.

 

What’s up folks?  I am going to rock your faces off with a little fun.  It’s not the little fun you have hanging out with your ugly family.  No, this is the kinky, no-holds-barred kind of fun you get when you acid wash your own jeans.  We’ve all done it.  So what?!  No big deal, really.  It’s the kind of fun you have when you watch youtube reruns of America’s Funniest Home Videos or when you eat a sandwich on chewy bread.  Incremental units of fun is what you’ll have here.  I encourage you to embrace the little fun that you are going to have and suck on it.  Besides, the only way to truly embrace something you love is to put your mouth on it…ladies.  Great then.  I’ll see you inside.

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