2010 - Winner Or Loser?

The idea for this blog came to me after a succession of rotten days in November of 2009.
I thought I could reap some decent comedy from my daily humiliations.
It's a popular, well worn path.
I assumed most days would be a "loss" and joking about it would help lighten the load.
But it only magnified my misery.
This silly diary made me confront the fact I had to change my life.

Messengering had become my security blanket.
It had tattered away to nothing, and I was still clinging to it.
I couldn't keep writing about being stuck in a dead end job in a dying industry.
It was funny at first, but then it grew pathetic.
So after ten years, I officially retired.
I'm not sure I would have quit if I hadn't been publicly pouting about it every day.
I probably would have just found more things to drink.

A lot of good things happened this year.
I got engaged to a most beautiful woman.
I toured Europe and recorded with The Bitter Tears.
I formed The Nurse Novels and recorded an album.
I recorded with Tijuana Hercules.
I played drums for The Second City.
I conceived and directed a silly show about a Beatles tribute band.
I did music and taught improv at The Annoyance.

Remember when I was a jogger?
That happened.
What else.

I wrote a lot.
It seems I wanted to make writing work for me.
I considered journalism.
But I think I respected journalism too much to sully it with my drivel.
It's too legitimate.

So I freelanced very, very briefly with The Onion AV Club.
I thought I could write goofy blurbs on city happenings.
I pitched an interview piece about improvisers and bad audience suggestions.
If it got published it would pay $50.
I thought it would be a good foot in the door.
Using Facebook I interviewed a bunch of friends, and got some good quotes.
It took a week to get it all together.
The editor liked the piece and shelved it.
It never ran.
I pitched another idea: A Misanthrope's Guide To The Taste Of Chicago.
The editor didn't like that one as much.
Then he quit being the editor, and I lost interest in sort of working for the possibility of maybe $50.

I also tried writing for Groupon.
Again.
In 2009 I freelanced as a humor writer.
When it was time for full-time hirings, I was in Europe with the Bitter Tears.
Upon my return, they lost interest in me.
My friend who did get hired put it this way.
"You had that job.  But then you went on tour."
This summer, a details writer position had opened.
I sent in my samples.
The guy who hired details writers asked me if I was serious about having a full time job.
I told him yes.
A week later I followed up about my samples in an email.
He didn't respond.
Another week went by.
I applied for customer service.
Customer service said that I was still being considered for the details writer position.
I emailed the details writer guy.
No response.
I no longer wanted to work for Groupon.
A few weeks later, I met my humor writer friend for drinks.
"Yeah, he hired a bunch of young hot girls."
I think I made the right choice in not pursuing that further.

I may not have made any money writing this year, but it didn't stop me from doing it.
I wrote and read original pieces for The Paper Machete and The Ray's Tap Reading Series.
I wrote in moving cars and I wrote while working bars.
I gave out stories as Christmas gifts.
In total, I made $0 writing this year.
But if the glass is half-full, then writing those Christmas stories did save me a little money.
The glass is hall-full, alright.  
Half-full of shit.
Nevertheless, I'm going to keep writing.
I've gotten really good at first drafts.

It's funny.
I still feel as scattered and unfocused now as I was at the beginning of the year.
I know that I want to write.
I want to publish something that will make people laugh and resonate on a deeper level.
I know I've still got a lot of work to do.
I have to figure out the business.
Whatever that means.
I'm pretty sure I can do it if I don't let myself get in the way.
A misanthrope's guide to travel is a good idea.

Here is the final tally:

Wins: 250
Losses: 114
Shit: 1

May was the winningest month with 25 wins.
This can be attributed to being in Europe for most of that month.

December was the losingest month with 14 losses.
This can be attributed to financial burden and Christmas.

The shittiest day was September 15.
The day I emptied RV's of their human excrement.

But that was not the worst day.
I don't know which day was the worst.
It's hard to pick just one.
Probably one of those summer days spent soaking in my own butt sweat losing money and jacking off in the back of the van to induce a temporary suicidal cum coma.
I had several of those.

The best day was October 23.
My engagement to Lauren played out like a goofy, feel-good hour-long sitcom.
I'm looking forward to our nuptials.

It was a tall order.
Writing about every single goddamn day.
821 pages.
177,884 words.
I can't believe I actually finished it.

It seems I am a winner.
At least for this year.

Thank you for reading.

December 31 - Cafe Bong

Today is my mom's birthday.
Lauren and I took her out to eat at one of those Brazilian meat houses.
That is what she wanted.
We ate an endless parade of steak, lamb, pork, chicken.
We ate forever.
The room turned warm.
Our eyes glistened with blood and bacon juice.
We paid the bill in meat.

True Grit was playing at the movies.
The rare film that we all liked without compromise.
How often does that happen?

We bid farewell to my Mom and headed back to the city.
Tomorrow morning Lauren leaves for Louisville.
She will be there for five weeks.
Which means I'll have no one to slap me straight when I start letting myself go during the inevitably unemployed winter of discontent in cold, dark Chicago January.
December's been rough lately.
January's looking even meaner.
Fun needed to happen soon.

We went to Cafe Bong.
It's a dive bar known for its karaoke.
I've always wanted to go there.
It looks horrible.
We walked in and were confronted with a thick stench.
It reeked like a vestibule in a rancid Vietnamese sandwich shop.
Lauren balked and made an offended grandmother face.
To me it smelled like adventure.
"C'mon, let's go!"
Once inside, we were greeted by a happy Korean woman, dressed to the sixes.
She gestured at the buffet of tin foiled Korean fare.
It looked authentic and frightening.

The karaoke was in effect.
Behind the bar, a VCR-esque machine sat hooked up to a tube TV.
The production on the videos was very 80's, meaning cheap 90's.
A bearded kid in a tux commandeered the remote control.
You could manipulate the tempo of the song, and make key changes(!).
He led his pack of pals as they passed the mic around the bar, goofing on all the hits.
After each performance, a crazy Japanese cartoon noise would scream your score at you.
"96!!!"
Everyone was in jolly spirits.

Lauren and I took the two stools at the end of the bar.
A Marilyn Monroe poster sat on top of a cigarette machine, leaned against a neglected wall.
The corner acted as storage for cases and cases of beer.
We perused the playlist, a thick tattered binder.
70% Japanese (I think), 30% English.
Some of the selections were crazy.
They had four songs by Helloween.
You know, the German 80's metal band.

We drank Corona.
Well, I did.
Lauren wasn't feeling that well.
"We'll go after one song," I promised.
It took me a long time to decide on a song.
As it always does.
I ordered another beer.
Lauren got a soft drink.
We made conversation with the woman to our left.
She was there alone.
We talked about acting and work.
I think she was happy to see us.
She handed me a microphone for a duet.
"94!!!"
But that didn't count as a song.
Poor Lauren.

It was my turn.
I had chosen "Night Fever" by The Bee Gees.
I do love that song, and the whole Saturday Night Fever soundtrack.
My falsetto was in fine form.
It danced well above the staff.
For the third chorus I sung in my given register.
Variety!
Then back to the sweet tones of my Corona-courageous obbligato.
I finished the song in tandem with its fade out.
Save for a few smatters, the room laid still as the cartoon made its judgment.
"100!!!"
Whoa!
The room of fifteen exploded.
The bearded kid with the tux high-fived and high-tenned me.
It was the first 100 of the night.
He bought me a drink.
Lauren was happy for me, but happier now that the song was over and it was technically time to go.
While I downed my congratulatory beer, the Korean proprietor sang a traditional song.
I think she did "ギテペミロ".
Either that or "ぎのま".
It got the room's attention.
Everyone applauded respectfully.
Then the bearded kid in the tux appointed me to sing Abba's "Waterloo".
I forgot how the verse went.
"Mmmnnnyyaaa..I bryn ni yaya nya nya..."
I did that thing where you laugh at yourself but no one else is laughing at or with you.
The bearded kid in the tux rescued me with an off-mic guide vocal and goosed it up a few keys to salvage the blunder.
We did not score 100 that time.

Poor Lauren.
I still had more beer to finish.
Midnight was nearing.
I asked her if she wanted to ring in the new year at Cafe Bong.
She made a face that said "I love you.  But fuck you."
I finished my beer while the men gang-sang a Backstreet Boys song.
The "tell me why" one.
Its karaoke video featured lots of topless European women dancing on a sound stage.
It was the most awesome karaoke video.
And it couldn't get any better.
So we headed for the door.
The bearded kid in the tux persuaded us to stay.
The Korean proprietor offered us buffet food.
But even now, I knew it was time to go.
And we bid adieu to Cafe Bong.

The remainder of 2010 was spent in the comfort of our little apartment.
We set our alarms for the early flight tomorrow.
And had our last sleepover of the year.

Verdict: Win

December 30 - How A Tire Store Works

I took the van in to Tire Party again.
They had patched my flat a couple of days ago, but there was still a leak.
I looked at the work order.
They had tried fixing it with armpit farts.
But they didn't take.

I looked through the glass at the tire mechanics yelling and dropping metal objects and masturbating at calendars.
They saw that my tire was still flat.
They told a bunch of fag jokes to it.
But it was still flat.
A tire scientist was dispatched to see what the problem could be.
He looked like a nerd.
And a fag.
While he found the source of the leak, the mechanics depantsed him and snapped oily rags at his exposed buttocks.
This caused a lot more yelling and clanging of fallen metal.
Then they gagged the scientist and forced him to bend over a Mazda.
A circle formed.
The mechanic with the largest penis inserted it into the scientist's butt.
Some mechanics took disposable pictures of the event.
Over his shoulder, one of the mechanics masturbating to a calendar noticed the scientist being humiliated.
He edged his way into the circle and continued masturbating.
The scientist handed his analysis to the new guy, and began screaming in terror.
To drown out his cries for help, the mechanics who had prematurely ejaculated squealed their air guns.
Everyone else reached their climax to a general Guns 'n' Roses song.
When it was over many of the mechanics used the scientist's body as a facility.

So that's how a tire store works.
Hey, man.
I don't care what they do, as long as they find the leak.

The cashier showed me the tire.
He pointed to the patch on the tread.
"This is the leak we fixed."
He pointed to another hole near the sidewall.
"This is the other leak."
He asked me if I wanted to continue.
I said yes.
I didn't want to know how they fixed a flat, so I sat in the waiting room.
The cashier came in with some paperwork.
"Tony, I just need you to sign off on the new tire.  With labor it will be $285."
"Oh.  I just need you to patch that other hole."
He told that since it was on the sidewall, they couldn't do that.
I told him that I couldn't afford a new tire.
So he raced back into the mechanics dungeon.
They wiped all the fresh blood, excrement and semen from my old tire and begrudgingly put it back on the van.
Wait til next year.

Verdict: Loss

December 29 - Sakura Of America Pigma Micron Pens

Holli and Mike invited me over for the day.
We drew pictures using a wide variety of Pigma Micron pens.
Holli drew a horse.
Mike made a city out of a building.

I drew a hodge podge of American margin doodles.


I needed to get out of the house.
And spend some quality time with friends.
We spent the entire day drawing in the kitchen.
I think Holli wanted to do something active.
Sledding, ice-skating, snowball hijinx.
Mike and I were content to doodle.
Men.

I worked at the bar and it was dead.
Again.

Again.

Again.

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And again.

And again.

And again.


And again.
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Again.Again.


And again.

Verdict: Win

May 21 - España

We were in Spain.







Verdict: Win

December 28 - Haircut Whine

I needed a tremendous haircut.
My greying hair resembled a yarn mop.
So I went to my two-chair barber.
A card table displayed a bottle of purple drink and some dixie cups.
"Have some wine!"
I did.
It was good.
For haircut wine.
The barber said it was homemade.
"You can't get it anywhere else!"
I looked at a big jug of it.
"Jugs are $30," he said.
The guy in the chair spoke.
"It's good wine!"
I tapped a bottle.
It was a thin vodka bottle.
"How much is this?"
"That's 3 dollars."
Sold.
It was 10am on a Tuesday.
I just bought homemade wine from a barber.
Maybe he could pull my wisdom teeth, too.

While waiting for the haircut, I decided to brood some more about that stupid Stuff White People Like book.
I wanted to find out why it affected me so much.

Research suggests that I don't mind being a punchline.
As long as I am the one making the joke.
That's the whole point of this blog.
Look at what a loser I am buying wine from my barber before noon.
Ha ha ha, but I'm not really a loser, right?
Stuff White People Like is telling me that yes in fact, I am actually a real loser.
Look at this loser putting his diary online.
Everyone's a writer, you pinhead.
Been on the internet much?
You're not unique.
You worship The Wire and eat at stupid diners just like every other middle-class Gen X indie rock slouch entitled to remain clueless and directionless at age 35.
You had your chance to do something.
You spent it at bars doing bits.
Now you're old and confused.
Ha ha ha.

I wasn't ready for this sort of confrontation from a novelty book at Borders.
The people that usually made fun of me were mono-chromosomatic Wrigleyville rapists yelling "faggot" at me because I was riding a bike.
Those guys usually didn't have things like insight.
They didn't put out books.
Although I'd like to see that book.
Badly drawn stick figures with captions like "Faggot" and "Fuckin' Faggot".
Bikes are hard to draw.
Uh oh.
I'm being directionless again.
The point is I could write them off.
And now I was the one being written off.

After the haircut I noticed that the tire on the van that had been patched yesterday was sagging again.
Cool.
I went home and uncorked the previously corked bottle of haircut wine.
And went from figurative to actual loser.

Verdict: Loss

December 27 - Stuff Old People Hate

The van needed a new tire.
Every two days I've had to fill it up with air.
I took it to Tire Party or Mostly Tires or one of those tire asshole places.
It stunk of rubber and unwarranted male bravado.
Guys with tan lines where their gang bang wristbands used to be.

They said it would be a few hours.
I had a few gift cards to burn.
So I went to Borders again.
This time I skimmed the latest Stuff White People Like book.
Another blog-turned-book deal.
Biting satire and all that.
I always thought it was a funny website.
Until I realized that I am its target.
Obviously, I'm white.
Even though I'm Cuban.
The author is white.
But this isn't about being white.
It's about being boring.
And useless.

So what's some stuff white people like?
Road Trips - He railed on people who romanticize small highways and eat at places that aren't chains.  His point was that observing townies in their natural environment was as artificial as a quarter pounder.
I like road trips, and I like eating at restaurants that aren't chains.

Improv - He pointed out that only white people will pay money to see something that most likely will fail.  It's true that whites dominate improv for whatever reason.  We've all made fun of this fact for years.
I have performed and taught improv for over ten years.

Ironic Facial Hair - He understandably mocked this.
In 2000, I grew a moustache for curiosity.  I did it again this year, though irony wasn't the goal.  I don't know what the goal was.  But I am guilty of having facial hair while being white, but not qualifying as a Mancow meathead or a union schlub.

The Wire/Mad Men - He made fun of liking these shows.  I forget why.
I have said out loud that, for me, The Wire transcended the concept of a television show.  I like Mad Men.

Considering Journalism - He derided the privilege of being white and the luxury of finding oneself, which often leads toward thinking about getting a journalism degree.
This year I borrowed books from my journalist friend Christy.  I was considering journalism.

Writing Short Stories - He ridiculed short stories as the perfect medium for white people's directionless drivel.
I just gave out short stories as Christmas presents.

It went on.
I went on.

It inspired me to do a new blog.
It's called Everything Is Stupid: You Suck.
I'll just list things and why they are stupid and why you suck.

Here's an excerpt:

Pizza - You have eaten a pizza probably.  This is every idiot's dream.  You suck.  Fuck you.

Then I'll have a picture of someone who thinks they are cool, but in reality they are worthless, eating a pizza.

That's an entry.
Then I'll get a book deal.
Maybe even a shitty sitcom.

Oh no.
I'm old.
I'm bitter.
I'm taking satire personally.
This is my nightmare.
I do suck.
I am an idiot.
Fuck me.

I left Borders empty-handed again.

The macho tire clowns patched up my tire.
It only cost $40 or some shit.
I paid for it with a gift card.

For dinner I rubbed garlic on some toast.
And thought about how much I suck.

I didn't understand.
I liked the website.
It made me laugh.
It's good satire.
What happened?

Defeated by a bathroom book.

Verdict: Loss

December 26 - Almost Home

Football was on TV.
Bears vs. Jets.
We were waiting for my mom.
She had gone out to run a quick errand.
That was over an hour ago.
She wasn't answering her phone.
We were dressed and ready to go.

In the meantime, Lauren was going over lines.
For all of next month and the first week of February she will be in Louisville performing with The Second City.
While trying to memorize the show, my aunt asked Lauren lots of questions about acting.
Surprisingly, Lauren was happy to answer her questions.
Her family doesn't show much interest in her performing endeavors.

My uncle watched the football with me.
He's not the biggest football fan.
But he watched it with me.
He seemed moody.
I think he misses his brother still.
There's no one to speak Spanish with anymore.
No one that knows Cuba.
I miss him, too.
Every day.

My mom finally returned.
She was holding two big sleds.
She bought sleds.
She thought we might want to go sledding.
We just wanted to go home.
We said farewell to my aunt and uncle.
It would be the last time I would see my Uncle Jose.
In February, an uninsured driver would hit him head-on while he waited to make a left turn.
But I didn't know that yet.
I'm glad I got to see him one last time.
Mom was right though.
We could have gone sledding.

Verdict: Win

December 25 - Christmas Cliff Notes

Christmas was nice.
We ate a bunch, drank a tad.
Didn't drive too much.
Now Lauren wants a cat.

Verdict: Win

December 24 - Santa's Ghost Writer III & A Cuban Nochebuena

I got up at 4:30am so I could write a story for my cousin Michelle.
When she was nine or ten, she had a pet goat.
This story is for her.

SIGOURNEY


            For her birthday, Maggie asked her parents for a goat.  She had wanted a goat because Cheryl Ladd kept a goat on her Hollywood estate.  Star magazine said so.  It sounded glamorous and eccentric.  Always supportive, Maggie’s parents made the effort.  They searched the Yellow Pages.  But there was nothing listed under GOATS.  They tried calling a few farms.  But none of the farms in the area farmed goats.  They went downtown to the pet store.  But the kid at the pet store said goats didn’t make good pets.  Also, they didn’t have any.
            Over dinner, her father suggested the idea of a stuffed goat.  This idea horrified Maggie and she ran into her room and cried.  While her father finished Maggie’s macaroni and cheese, he got an idea.  He called his friend Joe.
            “Hey Joe,” he said with the last remnants of dinner still in his mouth.  “Remember that nativity you did last year?”
            Joe did remember.  He was fond of telling the story.  Last December Joe got a call from his brother Maury out in Sigourney.  Maury was frantic. 
            “I need you to be a shepherd!” he gushed.  “I just fired my shepherd!”
            Joe had no idea what his brother was talking about.
            “For The Nativity!  I’m doing a real life nativity!!”
            It seems the role of shepherd had proven too demanding for Maury’s paperboy.  So Joe drove down to Sigourney.  He brought his brown bathrobe and some rope.  When he pulled into the driveway, Maury went ballistic.
            “PARK BEHIND THE HOUSE!  BEHIND THE HOUSE!!!  THERE WERE NO CARS IN BETHLEHEM!!”  It was going to be a long day.
            Maury played Joseph, who clearly had rented a robe for the occasion of fatherhood.  Kind of like a tux.  His wife Bonnie played Mary, and their four-year-old daughter Kylie played Jesus.  In his brown bathrobe, Joe found himself in charge of an actual living goat.
            “Make sure he doesn’t steal the show,” Maury directed.
            “What’s his name?” Joe asked.
            “He doesn’t have a name.  I just got him yesterday.”
            “Where did you get him?”
            “I DON’T KNOW!” Maury barked, and gestured hysterically at some neighbors who had parked in the driveway.  A handful of locals had gathered to witness Sigourney’s first live nativity scene.  Maury had posted flyers at Casey’s.  The show was free.  It was also quite cold.
            Joe shivered in his bathrobe, and held a potato sack of carrots to keep the goat at bay.  Maury, seemingly impervious to the elements, read all of the lines boldly and loudly over the freezing winds.  Everyone else shimmied and shivered in the scorching, burning cold. 
            During “Away In The Manger”, Joe checked in with the goat.  It was going through the carrots like they were candy.  Suddenly Kylie, who as Jesus had no lines, panicked with stage fright and ran screaming into the house.  Bonnie followed to console her daughter. Maury adlibbed a line about there being “too much frankincense” in the manger.  It would have gotten a laugh if it weren’t so cold.
            The goat had devoured the entire sack of carrots but was still hungry, and began eating the bag.  Joe and the goat had a tug of war with the bag.  Joe won, but goats are sore losers, and this goat charged at Joe.  Maury, ever the thespian, stayed in character.
            “Perhaps the ox detects myrrh.”
            This time he got a laugh.  Especially since Joe was knocked down by the goat.  Maury smiled for the first time that day, until a station wagon full of late comers pulled into the driveway.  He finally broke character.
            “HEY!! NO CARS!! NO CARS!!
            The goat charged at the station wagon, but got distracted by Maury’s rented gown.  This time the goat yanked at it, and thoroughly ripped its cheap design.  Maury let out a string of obscenities that began with “Goddammit”.  It would be the last living nativity hosted by Maury in Sigourney.
            Joe gladly gave Maury’s phone number to Maggie’s dad.


It's Christmas Eve.
Lauren, my mom and I drove to Iowa.
We visited my dad's side of the family.
My Uncle Jose was in good spirits.
He played Cuban records on the turntable.
We ate Cuban food.
I made terrible mojitos.
We exchanged presents.
The stories qualified as gifts.
My family seemed to enjoy them.
We played board games.
We argued and laughed.

Christmas wasn't the asshole I thought it would be this year.
So I guess that makes me the asshole.
Oh well.

Verdict: Win

December 23 - Santa's Ghost Writer II

My cousin Melissa works as a flight attendant.
This story is for her.

FLYING OVER IOWA

            She enjoyed the turbulence.  To her closed eyes it felt like a much needed massage.  Baltimore.  Most of the odd ones would probably deboard there.  This leg was packed with oddballs. 
            She pried an eye open to ensure her massage did not become a nap.  A dreadlocked guy in a vintage Gumby T-shirt was staring at her.  He knew he had been caught but continued to stare anyway, like a game of chicken.  She did not avert her eyes either. 
            A large lump of turbulence declared the staring contest a draw.  The sound of snoring suddenly removed itself from the airplane’s blaring mix of white noise.  For a moment she glanced out the window and focused her attention on the perfectly round crop circles below.
            Her attention returned to the passengers.  The dreadlocked guy calmly munched on some ice chips from a plastic cup.  She noticed the ice in his cup was red.  Red?  The airline had discontinued Hawaiian Punch years ago.  So it wasn’t Hawaiian Punch.  He caught her staring at him and gave her a toothy and bloody smile.
            It was her job to assist the dreadlocked man with the bloody mouth.  With a sigh she approached him with routine caution.
            “Sir, is everything all right?”
            “Yeah,” he chuckled with bloody lips, “I’m fine.”
            “Are you sure?  Your mouth is bleeding.”
            He laughed again.  “Don’t worry.  I’m a glass eater.”
            A glass eater.  This was new.  His serene reassurance misled her, and a game curiosity quickly reverted to professional, distanced concern.  She spoke in a stage whisper.
            “For safety reasons, we can’t have broken glass on the plane.”
            He assured her that he did not have any broken glass.  Just hard plastic.  Pen caps and bottle caps.  He was chewing them to reinforce the strength of his gums and his threshold for pain.
            “I perform with a midnight circus,” he explained.
            “Sir,” she persisted, “we still cannot have you bleeding aboard a United States aircraft.”
            A bald, in fact completely hairless, man chimed in.
            “C’mon, Gums.  It’s not like I can practice eating fire during a flight.”
            She gave the bald, hairless man a sideways glance.  He added.
            “I’m a fire eater.”
            She scanned the plane.  The over abundance of oddballs now made more sense.  The facial tattoos.  The vertically challenged twins.  All the scarred and branded hands handing her their trash.  She was traveling with a traveling circus.
            The fire eater continued.
            “We’ve got shows all this week.”
            “In Baltimore?” she guessed.
            “No.  New York.”  The beast man next to him let out a horrid, sour burp.  “But we’re all from Baltimore.”
            “I tell you what,” said the glass eater.  “If you have any more of those dinners back there, that’ll clean up my mouth good.”
            She rolled her eyes and went to get him one of the many dinners declined earlier by the other circus people.  It’s funny, she thought, they’ll eat fire and glass but won’t touch Chicken Parmesan.  She grabbed a warm tin and a set of silverware and headed back down the aisle.
            Suddenly, a thick patch of turbulence sent the plane jarringly downward.  She braced herself on the overhead compartments, but in doing so sent the silverware flying from her grip.  It soared awkwardly until landing squarely on the nose of the glass eater.  A few of the non-circus people gasped.
            “Oh my God!  Are you okay?” she stammered.
            “It’s okay,” he smiled.  “I’m also a sword swallower.”

My aunt and uncle on my father's side introduced me to wanderlust.
Between ages 12-14, they brought me along on their road trips.
My closest cousin Michelle and I would get into all sorts of boneheaded mischief.
We did things on the cheap, and always on the fun.
This story is for them.

NEW LIBERTY

            The van broke down again.  This time at night.  Almost home.  But not quite.

            The vacation had been fun.  The kids got along well.  They counted VW bugs the whole time.  In Pennsylvania, George decided to venture up the steep, densely wooded hill behind the motel.  His path was choked by pine trees, and he used them like levers until it got too thick.  Audrey followed but got stuck.  George tried to guide her down but she skinned her legs on the sharp rocks.  That hill wasn’t meant for climbing really.
            DC was neat.  They escaped the sun’s oppressive breath inside the museums, spritzing their day with history and education.  The next day Philadelphia would offer more of the same, but the van didn’t want to go.  At least the carburetor didn’t.  George and Audrey didn’t seem to mind.  For two days they hung out at the motel across the street.  It had a swimming pool and miniature golf.  George and Audrey were having fun.
            They watched Philadelphia from the expressway.  It looked grey and mean.  Like a nasty dog.  They decided to skip past it.  Atlantic City promised the enchanting possibility of recouping their losses.  They strolled around the boardwalk, and saw a roulette wheel made out of jellybeans.  The kids bought gag souvenirs.  Liquid-filled shot glasses.  Somehow they amused themselves for hours with those things.
            George and Audrey played at the motel pool while Mom and Dad hit the casinos.  They stuck to slots mostly, but ventured out for the occasional hand of black jack, mostly breaking even.  Then a couple of shiny guys in spacey disco suits hit the jackpot on the slots behind them.  They whooped and danced and swore and gave each other high fives.  The sound of endlessly plinking coins grew tiresome.  Those guys didn’t need that jackpot.  Mom and Dad glanced one last time at the disco jerks and left the casino.  They were down by a few hundred dollars.
            George and Audrey had been jumping on the beds.  Doing flips.  Rough housing.  A particularly graceless somersault by George ended in Mom’s purse getting knocked from the nightstand onto the floor.  Its contents spilled all over the green and yellow shag carpet.  Audrey scurried to scoop up the dollars and coins and put them back in the purse.  George helped.  As the kids hurriedly shoved fistfuls of small bills back into the purse, the door opened.  It was Mom and Dad.  George and Audrey froze, the guiltiest looks of real fear stitched on their faces.  They started to explain that they weren’t doing what it looked like they were doing.  But their folks just burst into laughter.

            It had been a long day of driving.  Probably close to twelve hours.  Almost midnight.  Almost home.  But broke and broke down on the side of the road.  Mom and Dad were worried.  George and Audrey didn’t seem worried.  They just sat in the van and waited.
            A car slowed down.  A white sedan.  It pulled over and stopped in front of them.  A guy got out.  He was a young man, with dirty blond hair and a dirty blond beard.  His button down shirt seemed permanently wrinkled.  It looked fresh from the trunk.  He offered to take them home, just forty miles away.  They cautiously accepted.
            He apologized as he rolled up a tattered wool blanket and brushed several crumpled Budweiser cans from the rear window.  The sedan had become his home of late.  Its windshield housed a generous crack that spidered diagonally.  The upholstery on the ceiling sagged, and the vehicle smelled odd like stew.  But it ran.
            George and Audrey sat in the back with Mom, playing with their shot glasses.  Dad kept the man company up front.  His name was Bobby.  He talked about losing his job at a furniture warehouse.  He talked about trying to get a job at the mattress factory in Coralville.  He started to talk about his family, but Dad made sure things didn’t get too dark.  Dad talked about the casino, and how they had lost most of their vacation money on car repairs.  Every now and then Audrey or George would chuckle from the back, in their own world.  He counted the miles.
            Bobby pulled into their driveway.  The dogs went wild, not recognizing the strange vehicle and its strange but also familiar scent.  George and Audrey hugged the barking, snarling beasts and tiredly lugged their bags into the house.  While Mom and the kids lit up the house, Bobby asked if he could stay the night.  Dad gave him the last twenty dollars.


I prefer writing stories to being a sad sack.

Verdict: Win

December 22 - Santa's Ghost Writer

Undeterred by my recent failure at the Ray's Tap Reading Series, I came up with a solution for the whole gift-giving-without-having-money bit.
I'll write short stories for my family and give those out as gifts.
Stories inspired by the recipient.
I think it will say more than something apathetically selected from Target that I can't even afford.

My cousin Josh was raised on a farm in Iowa.
For the time being, he sells cars in Muscatine.

MUSCATINE


            He could tell they weren’t going to buy anything.  Especially a car.  They already seemed to have one.  A late model Kia.  And they were using it to cut through the dealership lot.
            Where were they going?  And why were they in such a hurry?  Muscatine was a bigger town.  But not big enough to be in that much of a hurry.  The music blaring from within suggested they were in their teens.  Some sort of hip hop.  Not his thing.
            He stood up.  It was what he was supposed to do when a potential customer approached.  Also, he just wanted to stand up.  He had been sitting on his ass all day.  It didn’t feel like work.  But it made him tired nonetheless.
            They weren’t teenagers.  They weren’t even a they.  It was a man in his forties.  Driving a Kia.  A Kia Soul.  Weird.  He smiled and tried to make eye contact with the man, but the man was wearing sunglasses.  They looked expensive.  If you’re into that kind of thing.
            To his surprise, the man slowed to a stop in front of him.  Time to do his job.
            “Hello, how can I help you?”
            The man in the sunglasses wouldn’t turn down the music.
            “Do you guys…”  The rest was inaudible.
            He had to crouch down closer in order to hear the man in the sunglasses.  But it also made the music louder.
            “Sorry?”
            The man used his sunglasses to look around.
            “I thought this was a gas station.”
            “No.  It’s a car dealership.”
            The man in the sunglasses turned the music down a fraction.
            “Do you know where I can get some tacos around here?”
            A purse and its contents were scattered across the interior of the Kia.  Credit cards, lipstick, some jewelry.
            “Well, there’s Taco John’s down on Grandview.”  He noticed a few fresh scratches strewn across the man’s face.  “But if you want to have a good sit down dinner, then go to Mami’s.”  He memorized the man’s features.  “That’s the real deal.”  White guy.  Dark hair, going grey, long on the sides.  “It’s on 2nd Street downtown.”  Moustache, goatee.  “They’ve got killer margaritas, too.”  Masculine nose.  Kind of big lips.  “Do you want directions?”
            He didn’t mean to use the term “killer margaritas”.  The man in the sunglasses turned up the music louder than it was before.
            “No.  Do you have any air fresheners?”
            Medium build.  Black trench coat.
            “Let me check.  I think we do.”
            They didn’t.  He knew they didn’t.  In the lobby, he pretended to futz around for air fresheners.  Red Kia Soul.  Mid to late 40’s.  He scrambled for a pen.  The muffled hip hop pulsed against the lobby windows.  The man in the sunglasses suddenly sped off.  South Dakota plates.
            “6RC..”  But he missed the rest of it.  He called the police.
            “Red Kia Soul.  White.  Mid to late 40’s.  Dark hair.  Moustache.  South Dakota plates.  6RC…”
            It felt good to work.

As an only child, I played by myself a lot.
Football entailed tackling linebacker pillows.
And making lots of gnawing, beastmaster noises.
Baseball meant tossing a wiffle ball at the batter (my bicycle tire), and throwing the ball to first base (the wall to my left).
All the while announcing the plays in an excited Al Michaels head voice.
Everything was highlight reel worthy.

Adventure also occurred.
The hallway in our apartment became the mausoleum corridor in Dragon's Lair.
The space between the bed and the wall became the junkyard where The Incredible Hulk wasted a punk.

So when we visited my aunt and uncle's farm one blustery winter in the early 80's, I was delighted to find their yard piled high with mountains of well packed snow.  I played GI Joe and Automan all day in blissful solitude, taking dramatic death plummets into the forgiving, white trenches.
Also, my most recent forays into self-absorbed patheticism helped influence this story for my farming aunt and uncle.

CLARE COUNTY


            He had pulled the trampoline out of storage and placed it next to the twenty-foot tall snowdrift.  It was probably more like eleven feet.  But it had become known as the twenty feet of snow.
            From the bedroom she watched him bounce up and down, building momentum.  He had almost retained the confident posture of the athlete she once knew.  But forty new pounds and a tattered pair of pajamas had removed the notion of professionalism.  Nevertheless, it was the happiest she had seen him in months.
            He was getting up there.  Almost as high as the bedroom window.  She hoped he would snap out of his doldrums.  Lately he remained a fixture of the couch, obsessively watching ESPN.  The network had rejected him as a commentator.  They were polite about it.  Said they were going in another direction.  Yet every day on the screen sat a thinner, younger version of him.  Analyzing statistics.  Making observations.  Joking around with the guys.
            He wanted to stop brooding about it, too.  Hence the trampoline.  It reminded him of summers at his aunt’s house.  It was a simpler time.  He was eight.  Football was still a dream waiting to come true.  So was drawing cartoons.  He had almost forgotten that he used to draw.  And was actually quite good at it.  Could have gone on to be a professional if the lure of football hadn’t been so shiny.  While bobbing through the prairie air, he finally smiled.
            Just then a gust of wind shoved across the plains.  He lost balance in mid air, and lost his footing back down on the cold mat.  His once mighty body sprang wayward, and plopped awkwardly atop the twenty feet of snow.
            She rushed to the backyard.
            “Honey!  Are you okay?”
            “I’m fine,” he said calmly while writhing in pain.  He had broken his ankle again.  The same broken ankle that had cut his career short on a Monday night two years ago.  “Go back inside,” he tried.
            “Can you get down?”  Her bare feet danced on the uncompromising cement deck.
            He didn’t want to get down.  He welcomed the pain like an old friend.  He wanted to stay there all day and rehash old war stories.  But he knew this was an impractical tactic.
            “Call an ambulance,” he managed.
            They were new to this rural expanse of Iowa farmland.  They hadn’t gotten to know any of its residents yet, and hadn’t really tried.  So they didn’t know that they shared their gravel road with the head of the volunteer fire department.
            “It’s gonna take forever for an ambulance to get out here!” she protested.
            “Then start building a casket, I suppose.”
            She ran into the house frantically and called the fire department.  She told them her husband fell on twenty feet of snow and couldn’t get down.  “He used to play for the Vikings!” she added, hoping that would speed things up.
            He stared paralyzed at the grey sky as the snow began to soak through his pajamas.  The clouds ran flush against the blankness like hospital sheets.  He drew cartoons on them.  A group of  guys joking around the water cooler about the football player that broke his ankle on a trampoline.  He chuckled to himself between bursts of excruciating pain.  It seemed he would soon be seeing his face on ESPN after all.  Albeit from the hospital.
            A familiar looking pick-up truck pulled into the driveway.  It was the guy who lived down the road.


I worked at the bar tonight.
It was dead enough for me to start on another story for my cousin Melissa.

Verdict: Win