hello

We just turned 3. And in the meantime I’ve apparently turned 20 again.

Older generations look upon ours with scorn. They say we’ve been brought up with the expectation that no matter how little effort we put into life it is our right to become rich and famous by our late 20′s. Which, in my case, is somewhat true.

I’ve never been able to give much thought to my future. When I was a teenager I figured I would die by 25 and so lived life accordingly, giving little or no effort to bettering myself or developing talents and instead indulging my every self-destructive whim. Then when I was in college for film production I couldn’t figure out what on earth I was doing there or what I had in common with any of my peers. I went to some classes, others I skipped entirely. I received a smattering of knowledge in various subjects that I’ve failed to find any applications for in real life thus far.

It wasn’t until I drunkenly slammed my volvo into the back of a parked car ten houses down from my parents’ house in San Jose over winter break that I really started thinking about actions and consequences and the future. After all the minor scrapes with the law I had had in my adolescence I suddenly had an actual criminal record, albeit a rather benign one in the grand scheme of things.

Bicycling to and from school in L.A. at the age of 20 gave me a lot of time to think about what was in store for me next. Most important was the humility I gained from the experience. I no longer lived under the delusion that I was a free-floating rebellious independent thinker who was only in school to buck the system and party. I was in reality a spoiled kid from the suburbs who acted recklessly and without any regard for the people who consistently supported and funded my life. I traded invincibility for introspection, braggadocio for meekness. What was I going to do after graduation? Was I even going to graduate? If I wasn’t the devil-may-care kid I’d thought I’d been then who the fuck was I?

Somehow I pulled it all together and was able to graduate in 4 years plus one summer course. I even received an A on my final film, even in its (still) uncompleted state. The challenge of attending and graduating college that had dominated my life since junior high had been met. Suddenly I needed a job and a car and a place to live. All my wasted hours and unpreparedness that had preceded this moment came rushing in at once and I was totally at a loss of what my purpose was.

Through a friend I took on an office job at a commercial real estate firm where all the employees were young affluent white males that waxed idiotic about their latest gym stats and conquests. I made $10 an hour. I shaved my head and felt like a sellout and a peon. But strangely more like a real person. I started getting in shape and even quit smoking for a while. I was able to afford rent and food and nothing else.

I spent two and a half more years in L.A. working at meaningless office jobs for a pittance, scraping by week after week with no idea how to escape the rut I had dug myself into. That’s when I decided I had to move. As soon as my lease expired in L.A. I packed up a uhaul and moved to San Francisco. I had few friends and no leads on an apartment but I had a job lined up working on photo sets so I had a start. I found a place to move in, and then an even better one. After months and months of long grey days alone in my room I finally made some friends. Then I joined a moped gang. Suddenly I was having a blast. I was making $20 an hour plus tons of overtime, which allowed me to reinvent myself with new styles and furnishings. I was 25 going on 26 and it seemed like the world was opening up to embrace me and I was excited about all the opportunities that lay in store.

Jesus I’m rambling. This is definitely a “skim” article for all of you, I’m sure. I know I personally loathe really long personal diatribes aired on the ‘net. Plus this is supposed to be sad, right? Who cares if I pulled myself miraculously out of aimlessness and despair? Didn’t we all go through the same process after school?

Well, here’s the sad part. I’m 27 now. Years of smoking and drinking under the warm summer sun have started to catch up with me. I’m definitely not a kid anymore. I guess I’m a man, for all that that means. I’m a smoker again. And a drinker. I wake up every day to a body covered in tattoos depicting the highs and lows of my life thus far. There will never be a day when I don’t wake up to these, until I don’t wake up anymore.

Out of pride and anger I resigned from my full-time job with benefits. I was labeled a fool, and rightly so, but the daily misery was taking a toll on me. After years of progress the future once again looks uncertain. But the clock has never stopped ticking, and now I’m finding myself late in the race.

Sad. Sigh. I spend my days trolling the internet, scrounging change for a daily cup of coffee, moving my car three times a day to avoid tickets I can’t afford, smoking through haggard coughs behind the dripping eves of my front porch, and spending what money I do have on frivolous dates and old friend alcohol to keep me sane yet depressed, with company yet alone.

It’s good to be back.

mbw

Crazy Pills Redux

Yeah I know it’s cheating; posting an old myspace blog on sadsigh. But I haven’t posted a dern thing on here since it’s inception so I figure- post something now, get used to the idea, and eventually start posting new sorrowful soughs. (Oh yeah- that opening poem’s not mine but I forgot whose it is. Dickinson I think?) Enjoy.

And Something’s odd – within -

That person that I was –

And this One – do not feel the same –

Could it be Madness – this?

If you’ve ever known someone who has lost their mind, you’ll know that it’s a scary but fascinating thing to witness. I myself have never witnessed it outside of a few friends in drug-induced stupors, but what I’m saying is if you have seen it it must be both scary and fascinating. When you yourself are the one who is going crazy I imagine it is much more the former than the latter. The following is an account of my recent brush with temporary insanity, or whatever it was, told as accurately as I can remember it.

* * *

Before we begin it’s important to know a few things about me. I am currently 24 years old. There is a slight history of mental problems in my family (alzheimers.) I am generally of sound mind and health, although I do have a bit of a penchant for the ol’ alcomahol (more on that to come.) In my salad days I experimented with many different kinds of drugs but I never developed any kind of affinity for them for very long. I quit smoking weed when I was 18, and everything else has tapered from recreational moderation to near total disuse in the past six years. The only constant has been the booze, which seems to take the forefront of most of my weekend endeavors but never even enters the picture on the weekdays (I put the “fun” in “functional alcoholic”.) This weekend-warrior syndrome has been my routine since around age 15, meaning for almost a decade I have been binge drinking to get my kicks.

Strangely enough, when I look around me at any given time or place (except work) I find I am surrounded by like-minded individuals. Almost everyone I hang out with does the exact same thing, meaning either that this is a widespread and acceptable practice or that I have selected my associates over the years based on their function as enablers and drinkin’ buddies.

I think we all know which is the case.

Now don’t get me wrong- I have a great network of friends both in Los Angeles and back in the bay area. We travel together, go on adventures, laugh, fight, cuss, and always drink. I’m not complaining about my friends- I love them. I am merely contemplating the state of my life and wondering why I went insane last Thursday. So here it is:

* * *

I took last Friday off of work because my good friend Nick was coming down from San Luis Obispo on Thursday afternoon for a weekend L.A. visit. I hadn’t seen the dude in a while due to conflicting schedules and I was obviously stoked to see him.

I got off work and met Nick at my apartment at around 3. It had been a stressful week at work (the stress arising from the fact that I went to work all week) and so I relaxed on my back patio with a Coors Lite and a cig. Two beers down we decided it was too early to start getting drunk, so we went out to eat at Baja Cantina and saw no reason not to get 24oz margaritas while we were at it. We got back from dinner a little tipsy. The sky was kinda creeping towards sunset meaning drinking more was totally acceptable. We sank a few more Coor’s Lites before hopping in a cab and going down to Hinano’s by the pier. We had a couple beers each there before deciding that the locals were a little restless so we headed over to the Whaler where we briefly crashed a karaoke birthday party before deciding that no bar could satisfy us. We drank a tall boy each on the beach, I tried to convince Nick to break into the pier with me and failed, and we hailed a cab for home. The beer count at this point, roughly, was 10 apiece.

So I was drunk when I got in the cab. Admittedly. I mean, that was the point. We don’t drink ‘em for the beerguts. But I wasn’t unusually so. As Nick himself pointed out after we got home that night, he had seen me twice as drunk and still coherent numerous times. It was an average night of celebration with an old friend. Nothing spectacular. Kind of boring. Until, about five minutes away from my apartment, I looked over at my good friend Nick sitting next to me and breifly lost my mind.

I have known Nick since I was in 3rd grade. We were inseperable in high school and continued our friendship through college and beyond. I fuckin’ know this kid. But that night in the taxi, I looked over at him suddenly, aghast, and asked

“How the fuck did you get in this cab?”

He stared back at me, speechless. Was I fucking with him? I was staring at him wide-eyed as though I had never seen him before in my life. He actually looked like a stranger to me, and I thought he had randomly jumped in my cab.

“Oh shit! My friend Nick’s back there at the bar! We have to turn around! Dude. My friend’s here from out of town and he has no idea where he is. We have to go back and get him.”

Nick had no idea what to say. It was obvious now that I wasn’t joking. I was looking at him coherently, I was apparently in full control of my faculties, and yet I did not recognize him.

“Dude, I’m Nick.” he said. But I wasn’t paying attention.

“I gotta call him.” I said. Ignoring the stranger next to me I frantically scrolled through the “n” section of my call list and dialed “Nicky B.”

“It’s ringing.”

As I waited for Nick to pick up, the stranger in the seat next to me reached into his pocket and pulled out his phone, which was ringing. He flipped it open so that I could see the source of the call. “Mikey Dub.”

“Dude. I’m Nick.”

And suddenly he was. He had proven it. He literally materialized from stranger to Nick in that instant. I was scared shitless.

“Oh shit dude. That was fuckin’ weird.”

* * *

We both agreed it was the strangest thing that had happened to either of us. Of course Nick asked me if I was on acid or shrooms or some other hallucinogen. He even asked me if it was possible it was an acid flashback. I told him there was no way I’d done enough acid in my youth to trigger a flashback now.

We discussed it all weekend and could come to no rational conclusion. I had slipped from sanity for the first time in my life.

As I explained before, that night was nothing unusual. It wasn’t even a rough night by our standards. Some of you might be reading this thinking “well. that explains his delusions. he was dead drunk.” Not so. One man’s “drunk” is another man’s “pleasure.” Our definition of “drunk” entails whiskey shots with Jager backs all night long until the wee hours of the morn’. It means blurred vision and incoherence and stumbling. And even on the most blacked-out intoxicated shit-housed night, I have never forgotten who I was with or failed to recognize a face.

That Thursday night I had none of the normal symptoms of extreme intoxication. I simply got in a cab and moments later could no longer recognize my childhood friend sitting next to me. So I have to question… could this be the result of prolonged binge drinking changing the neural makeup of my brain? Could it be a remnant of some hallucinogenic drug I took in my teenage years, surfacing after all this time? Is it a foreshadowing of some dark disorder I am fated to inherit?

Or perhaps is it just a momentary lapse in cognizance; a wet slipping of gears that is to be expected from time to time in my otherwise functional mind.

I sure hope so.