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A mysterious floating creature

One of my minions seems to have been colluding with one John E., editor of Sherri Cherry's Valu-Best Puppet Troupe-Adores.  It seems they have gotten together to "stick it to the man" by illegally reproducing the intellectual property of the intellectually challenged David "Stop Laughing at Me" Hyman.  Now, I'm not one for letting my minions appear to get the jump on me when it comes to nefariousness, so I must make it clear that, as always, it was my idea.  Just to prove it I am going to, days after the fact, do likewise:


Is that apostrophe misplaced, or is it just me?


Ok, so I thought I just lost my mind while spending thirty minutes skipping forwards and backwards in iTunes looking for this one song that I have heard like a hundred times in the last week, but not being able to find it. I was doing my best to eliminate the impossible, focusing on what was left, no matter how improbable. I actually, for a minute, considered the possibility that the album sounded so different through headphones that I was unable to recognize the song. That was totally not right, though. Turns out that I had iTunes set up to sort by artist, the best kind of sort, but since I was looking for one of the several songs on Wikked Lil’ Grrrls to feature a guest artist, in this case former Cibo Matto bassist Sean Lennon, the song didn’t appear with the rest of the tracks from Esthero’s album. Frustrating, frustrating stuff. Comforting, though, to discover I’m not insane, or at least that wasn’t the source of this particular problem.

Another equally frustrating aspect of this guest artist thing is that they tend to suck. I know it sounds like I’m sugar-coating things here, but really, every time I begin to enjoy this album, some dude starts talking, or singing, or something. My whole sense of place in the world is shook to the core when this happens, but Esthero’s silky smooth grooves help me find myself again, right before some other dude starts in. And when it’s not dudes it’s chicks, chicks talking on phones and reading ninety second poems. There is definitely a place in this world for all of these things, maybe even a place on this album for them, but the places where they wound up aren’t the right ones.

While riding around town one night listening to this album, a friend says to me, he says, “I can’t stay mad at this, it keeps pissing me off, but I can’t stay mad.” That’s more of a paraphrase than the quotation marks might imply, but in any case, it brilliantly summarized my feelings on the album after spending only a couple days with it. Above are two of the most egregious examples of the album going out of its way to piss me off.

But it’s not all bad, in fact it’s mostly good. I’m excruciatingly bad at describing why things sound good, so we’ll just eschew that whole portion and accept it as sufficient for me to say that the songs are mostly good. When they are not making me laugh they are making me kind of float away from reality towards a place somewhat more appealing. I consider both of these characteristics to be hallmarks of a good musical experience, although I prefer that experience to not be interrupted every four to seven minutes, but hell, we can’t have it all, can we?

So, at this point, you may be asking yourself, “what was brand X, scrupulous fellow that he is, doing listening to something as sinister sounding as Wikked Lil’ Grrrls? Well, that’s a damn fine question you ask there. You know, someone once told me that the best gauge of ones intelligence is not the breadth of their knowledge but the quality of their questions, and with that one, my friend, you have shown yourself to be truly brilliant. So, why? Well, TroyPowers put me up to it.  It was a little deal we made, strictly on the level, of course, but there is no need to go into details.

Goat Song Nicotiana

Originally serialized at Kristiana's I Can('t) Quit You.

I

Both my parents quit smoking when I was pretty young, but not so young that I can’t remember their brands: dad smoked Camel Straights and mom smoked Benson and Hedges Lights. They had both decided to quit for the sake of their children; they were good people, pillars of their community, really.

It was rough going for my mom. I was sworn to secrecy as she lit up on the ride home from the grocery store where she mistakenly ordered a pack, “just out of habit,” you know. My dad had absolutely no problems quitting, he just decided one day that he was done, then never had another cigarette. Coincidentally, I think it was around the same time that he started chewing Copenhagen, I can’t be sure though, because the two things are definitely not related.


II


So, my father, working-class hero to many, had taken up quarters with the vile and unsavory smokeless tobacco. Sidelong glances and furtive whispers followed us as we strode stoically along the public sidewalks, my father expectorating in mid-stride. Many were the occasions when my dear mother was forced to abashedly explain to company the mysterious contents of the translucent red urn atop the end table.

On one such afternoon, my father, God bless him, stumbled his drowsy, fully nude carcass into the living room. He stood there, dick swinging and clearly wondering why anyone would have the gall to come into his house and be so clearly dismayed by his presence, only to quickly stop caring before moving to the kitchen to prepare a sandwich before returning to bed. As this happened, I could see the relief wash over my mother as one embarrassment was traded for another, one that she ultimately found to be less mortifying.


III

A few years after my father found himself in the icy cold grip of smokeless tobacco, my adored brother, nine years my senior, was sucked in by its siren call. I know not the details of how exactly he was lured; presumably he was beguiled by exotic women with tales of adventures on the high seas. All I know for sure is that all of his friends were doing it too, and as they stood around the kitchen shucking crawdads, cracking jokes, and periodically angling their chins towards the sink before letting fly with a stream of brown saliva, they cut a pretty striking figure. These were young men, after all, in top physical form, athletes every one, coming of age right before my very eyes.

I dare say I wasn’t the only one who noticed. My parents, of course, feigned disapproval, but couldn’t hide their pleasure over what a fine example of “one of the guys” their boy was turning out to be. Before long my dad even “stopped noticing” when a can of Copenhagen disappeared from his stockpile. Boys will be boys, as they say, and there just ain’t a damn thing anybody is going to do about it.


IV

I was nine, maybe ten years old when I took my first dip of the Copenhagen. I was taking a rest on the back of a trailer with a friend after we had peeled off a load of hay when my dad walked over, took a chew and held out the can to us. He asked us if we wanted to try it, something he had asked me several times before and I had always declined. My friend, however, was much bolder than I and he jumped at the chance, which meant that I had to do likewise.

We each took little tiny pinches of the vile concoction and shoved them into our bottom lips; we knew better than that “cheek and gum” jazz passed off on the television. We sat there for several minutes, spitting to excess, before I turned to my friend and said, as if I had chestnuts in my cheeks, “This is kind of burning my lip.” My friend emphatically agreed and we both rushed to rid ourselves of the terrible burden, fighting over who would be the first to take the hose, fresh from the horse trough, and shove it in their mouth. Afterwards, my dad tells us that we now know what chewing is all about, and that it ain’t no good, so we don’t need to bother ever doing it again.


V

The day after my father taught us a lesson we won’t soons be forgetting, my friend and I found ourselves digging through the garbage. We had hatched a nefarious plot that involved us collecting the leftovers from all the discarded cans and placing them into one can where our grubby little fingers would be able to pull out large enough amount to satisfy our burgeoning jones.

This became the first of many times I plumbed the depths of treachery to satisfy the addiction that would ultimately take my life. Most of the time all it took was a nervously delivered assurance to the clerk that the tobacco I was purchasing was for my father, certainly not myself, as I was much too young to be encumbered with such a miserable habit. Sometimes, however, I found myself lacking either a sympathetic clerk or currency. In these times I would have no choice but to find a store that foolishly left the tobacco in an accessible location, usually a grocery store, grab a can or pouch of whatever was least conspicuous, shove it down my pants and walk out of the store.

It is only because so much time has passed, because I can now look back and write off my past misdeeds as youthful indiscretions, it is for this reason alone that I can relay the tales of a wayward child without buckling under the shame of my transgressions. However, I sunk even lower in my depravity; I stole from my father.

I thought myself clever, at the time, for discovering that I could use a steak knife to separate the label of the Copenhagen can from the lid without breaking the label. This allowed me to remove the top from all of my dad’s cans, take out a dip, put the lid back on and put the can back into storage without him being any the wiser. He never did figure out my little trick, or if he did he never let on, but things came to a head one morning after I had accidentally replaced one of his cans with one of mine and he noticed the different date stamps. After that, I only used the steak knife trick when I was completely out of my own chew.


VI

On my eighteenth birthday I started working at the paper mill with my dad. I started on the graveyard shift working on the machine with my dad, so the afternoon before our first night together he hands me thirty bucks and say, “why don’t you pick us up some Copenhagen on your way into work.” From that point on I always had unrestricted access to my dad’s stockpile of Copenhagen. Occasionally I would foot the bill to replenish the horde, but mostly he paid for it, and most importantly, I no longer had to fear his disapproval for chewing.

The amount of chew I used increased gradually through middle school and high school to the point that I was going through a can every two or three days by the time I graduated. Once I turned eighteen and had both my father and the law on my side, I rapidly increased my intake, plateauing at just over one can per day. I chewed whenever possible, only stopping when I was eating, sleeping, or making time with a sweet, sweet young lady. Eventually even these activities began to be pushed aside in favor of Copenhagen.

It started with skipping breakfast every once in a while. I didn’t think much of it, I mean, everybody misses a meal here and there, we’re busy, important people, right? Next thing you know I was waking up in the middle of the night with moist brown stains on my pillow and grains of Copenhagen embedded in my lips as I had “forgotten” to spit out my chew before falling asleep. Once again, it seemed innocent enough, I had fallen asleep wearing shoes before, it didn’t mean I had a shoe problem, right?

It wasn’t until I started getting slapped in the face because I had forgotten to spit out my chew before laying a big sloppy wet one on some pretty young thing that I realized that maybe there was a problem. I was young and idealistic though, I wasn’t going to conform, society was just going to have to learn “how to deal.”


VII

It quickly became apparent that society never was truly going to learn how to deal, so I dropped out. The ladies? Piss on ‘em, all they want is my money anyways, and I need that for Copenhagen. There’s no vagina on this earth that could provide the smooth, sweet satisfaction I get from sucking on a big, fat chew. Food? Fuck it, it’s for chumps. I’ll eat a solid meal every few days, liquid diet (coffee, booze) in between. Sleep? Well, I don’t have to stop chewing while I sleep, do I?  No, no I don’t.

Oh how naive I was. For years I lived like this, loveless, skin and bones, never knowing the comfort of a vagina. It got to the point where I could no longer hold down a job. I was living on the streets, begging for spare change from panhandlers. I had resorted to using improvised weapons like poo-sticks to force businessmen to hand over their bloated wallets and chewing on discarded cigarette butts to get a fix. I once woke up covered with my own shit and vomit after having mistaken a pile of discarded coffee grounds for a still moist and steaming pile of half used chewing tobacco.

Dark times, my friend, dark times indeed.

It is here where this story is supposed to make the clichéd one-eighty, where I begin my struggle of triumph in the face of adversity. Sorry. It doesn’t happen friends. I happen upon semi-lucid moments from time to time, particularly those times after a score like the one I made this morning, but its never long before I am back, rambling incoherently in my usual spot in the gutter. Wave the next time you pass me by, won’t you?


Coda:


My dad finally broke free from the dreadful yoke of tobacco addiction three years ago. He now chews Wrigley’s instead, even while he walks. My dear brother gave up the snuff when his son was born five years ago. Inspired by their triumphs of will, I dragged my lowly carcass out of the gutter and ran as fast as I could towards a new life, flinging my poo-stick aside as I fled my past. With the help of my family I got a job, put on weight, and reentered society. I’m still a miserable addict, but now I am a functioning addict. It is an uphill battle, and only time will tell, but I hope to shake this crushing burden before I am thirty years old.

welcome to the world of tomorrow

I got a physical today, you know, a medical type evaluation to make sure I am fit enough to do jobs.  I think it was mostly an excuse for somebody to get their hands on some of my precious bodily fluids, make sure my essence was pure or something like that, fucking perverts.

It was fairly uneventful, as far as physicals go; I took my shirt of several times, put it back on the exact same number of times, took my pants off once, bent in several directions, coughed a couple times and put my pants back on.  Run of the mill, really.  I also had my vision and hearing checked.  My vision, sadly, seems to be deteriorating, at least in my left eye.  I've been noticing this as I have traveled through the last few years of life.  I find it harder to read things from as far away as I used to, but fortunately I have been able to compensate by improving my ability to get closer to things.

The hearing test was a rather odd experience.  I've undergone a few hearing tests in my time, and they mostly tend to be the same, but this one seemed to be the easy version.  They all entail you sitting in a little "soundproof" box with some medical grade headphones on, sometimes requiring you to signal the tester to indicate when and where you hear a sound, or in this case pushing a little jeopardy style buzzer to indicate that you heard some sound somewhere.

So, today the lady crams me into the little box, places the headphones on my head and shows me how to operate the buzzer.  She confirms that I am not claustrophobic before slamming the door shut and turning off the lights.  The little beeps start playing in my left ear and I start jamming on the buzzer as the sounds get fainter and fainter.   Pretty soon I can't hear them anymore, except I can still hear them because their is an unchanging interval between each series of blips, which makes them repeat in my head even when I can't hear them.  Until they are gone for several seconds I can't be certain whether I am hearing them for real or just in my head.

Now, I didn't design the machine, so I can't be sure, but it seems as though the volume keeps getting lower and lower until you stop pushing the buzzer, then continues to drop about four more times, finally working its way back up until you hit the buzzer again, then plays four more tones before changing frequencies.  The thing about that period where it is working back up in volume is that I hear it, but I think to myself that it's really quiet, therefore pretty far away, so there is no need to worry about it.  In reality, though, I am supposed to be pushing the little button to acknowledge that I have in fact heard a sound.

So, I have to keep reminding myself to push the button.  Meanwhile, the woman running the test keeps rolling around in her chair, which shouldn't be a problem seeing as I am in a soundproof booth with noise-canceling headphones on.  Fact is, under these circumstances I shouldn't even know what she was doing except that my soundproof boof seemed to actually amplify the sounds of the chair.  Didn't matter since I was having difficulty remembering to hit the button anyways.

On a whole, the hearing test was my favorite part of the whole thing.  There is something comforting about listening to tones disappear only to come back exactly the same as the were when they left you.  It's the kind of thing that might be pleasant to do recreationally; a lazy Sunday afternoon on the porch swing, sucking down an ice cold beer while the neighborhood kids play tackle football on concrete, drowning out their tearful sobs with computer generated tones as they descend into inaudibility only to, moments later, return triumphantly to an audible level.