Before I’d even left the state of
Instead of awaiting the prompt succor of death, I began to hold animated conversations with a four-inch Chinese-made plastic figurine of Triton from The Little Mermaid, who holds perpetual court in Orhan’s dank interior.
Me: So, Triton, Lord of the Unsleeping,
Triton: Feck yeah. Hey: how’s about some Corn Nuts?
Triton: BQ! *
As I navigated Orhan through most of what remains of the lands of charm and cruelty that are the Rust Belt states and into the pine-pitch and brine-incensed perfection that is the State of Maine, I amused myself by envisioning several people who had antagonized me in high school perishing in comical, if not gruesome, events that only occasionally involved being surgically impregnated with several live, distempered mustelids.
Ha! I’m just kidding about this. **
Through a miracle of technology, my new cellphone*** has a voice recorder function that allowed me to carefully document a controlled, yet rapid descent into stark madness. I’ll replicate each of these messages below as I, nearly a month later, am only really beginning to understand just how close I’d come to becoming the Heir Apparent to the city of Ungluedopolis.
- “I just don’t understand Wilfred Brimley.”
As I mutely beheld a massive heap of a woman who – God love her! – was cramming a cream-filled cruller the size of an infant into her slavering maw while her taloned hands were aclutch a 250 oz. Mountain Dew all the while waiting in line to purchase twelve carefully selected Little Debbie cakes, the gravelly, rotted voice of Wilfred Brimley whispered dankly into my ear.
“Die-uh-bee-tus”, it said. Then: “Go fetch me a soft-serve cone, son, an’ I won’t hafta whup ya.”
I feel rather badly for the wretched advertising folks who, after trying to drum up an afflicted celebrity who would be well-known enough to extol the virtues of a diabetic testing supply venture, could only find Wilfred. Now, I am sure that he’s a lovely, lovely man. God in heaven, all I have to do is THINK about Cocoon and I begin to fall to pieces. But really.
- “I wonder what it takes to become hardcore.”
I’d stopped at the
At this point, I had to pretend like I was looking for a new CD in my case so that I could continue to watch what I was sure was going to be the best show, like, ever.
She turned off the car, got out, STUBBED THE CIGAR OUT ON HER HEEL, and marched purposefully into the Angola Service Station. I am forced by sheer logic to assume that someone who was to be found in that establishment had an interesting afternoon, courtesy of the most hardcore woman I’ve ever seen.
- “Who finds rock graffiti to be hot?”
As one moves across Upstate New York and into the
And because humankind is, at best, insensate and guttery, someone had taken a large amount of (what I have to presume is high-quality) spraypaint to the stones to declare undying love for “
“
You know, I can tell tender stories, too.
- “The Back-of-the-Head-Explosion woman’s haircut needs to stop.”
I will be the first to admit this: I am not, I repeat, NOT, on the forefront of fashion. Many are the days when I look at my wardrobe, which consists of several colors of the same short-sleeved “dress” shirt, dozens of khaki pants, and shoes so dull that they might as well be hospital clogs, and think: feck it. Feck it all. I don’t live in
This having been said, a startling and – if I may be frank – hideous trend has been rapidly on the upswing as concerns women’s hair. Ordinarily, I don’t even really NOTICE women’s hair unless the “do” is a) incredibly unwashed to the point of reminding one of the grave or b) it defies basic laws of physics. The hairdo I speak of falls within the second category.
Imagine, if you will, taking a stop-motion movie of someone getting brutally executed with small-caliber weaponry. The bullet enters the forehead and exits, along with considerable amounts of gick, out the back of the skull. Now, freeze the picture right there and turn the melting brain and skull fragments into hair that has become brittle with the application of thirty cans of AquaNet.
Now that you think about it, you have ALL seen this haircut.
At first, this haircut was popular with twentysomething girls who were, perhaps, living on the periphery of coolness. You know the kind: maybe they live close enough to a largish city or town to paint their nails and know where the nearest Buffalo Wild Wings is, but they will still choose bubblegum pink for their bridesmaid dresses. Anyway, after about a year, I saw the B.O.T.H.E. haircut on older and older women. Women who could have, perhaps, spent less on the expensive haircut and more on Polident.
When I entered the gas station in
[
looked back. She’d bent down to pick something up off the Slushy-tack floor and, Jesus Mary and Joseph, the top of her skull was clearly visible. I’d heard that this happens; one adopts a constrictive and unmanageable hairstyle and the shit just begins to fall right the feck out in clumps. That’s how awesome she’d wanted to look.
This needs to stop or I’ll just grow one of those stinking vermin-filled ZZ Top beards that nobody thinks is sexy**** and then…yeah. You’ll see then. Oh yes.
- “Sometimes places are past their prime.”
Coming from a town (Bangor, you wanks) whose heyday was the rough-and-tumble 1800s and early 1900s and whose title of Lumber Capital of the World evokes the heady sensation of, after a grueling day on the mighty Penobscot, getting plowed and planting your flag on a buxom barmaid in a barely darkened corner of some seedy tavern in the Devil’s Half Acre, I know what it’s like to be from a place where the past completely overshadows the present. Unlike “museum cities” in other parts of the world, like
Not that I have given this any thought at all.
- “Why don’t we hear more about the archaeopteryx?”
When paleontologists first discovered the sparrow-sized reptile-birds in deposits in
“Shit”, they’d often be heard to remark, “that lizard could probably, you know, flap its primordial wings and maybe glide for pitifully short distances and junk.”
Evolutionists were clearly tenting up in their lab-pants, as this was – to them – a clarion display of thousands of years of brutal, natural processes producing linkages between two unlike groups of chordates. Creationists wondered aloud why nobody was thinking about why God had chosen to place these fossils there to make us falsely believe in, well, witchcraft. It was a watershed discovery, and in the many years since, it has been overshadowed by the discovery of dinosaur mummies, dinosaur DNA and nearly complete T. rex skeletons. I guess it’s just me, then, left wondering:
What might that little bird have tasted like? *****
- “Two lanes becoming twelve near large cities makes me unnaturally excited.”
When one is developmentally delayed enough to drive from
- “I fear inappropriate sculptures of largish ungulates.”
I get to the Buffalo area around duskish – the sun is definitely on its way to the giant solar stables at this point – and I’m focusing on a) getting a glimpse of the Buffalo skyline and b) trying not to perish in an accident that I am guessing would leave my relatives with about twelve pounds of flesh to bury or cremate. As I’m going under some sort of overpass thing, I notice in my peripheral vision that
uh, a herd of North American bison
was thundering toward me. I gag slightly on the mouthful of LiveWire Mountain Dew long enough to realize that some civic authority in the “All America” city of Buffalo had selected to erect a smallish herd of bronze bison along the edge of the New York Thruway.
Now, I’m all for civic pride.
However, while I am no large mammal expert, I know enough about bison to know that the
When civic leaders decide to erect large, fairly realistic whimsical metal beasts alongside major highways, it gives one pause.
- “What would Ruth Benedict have to say about Massholes?”
As World War II raged throughout several major world theaters, an anthropologist named Ruth Benedict – for reasons that, to this day, remain slightly suspect – begins to work on an ethnography about the Japanese people. Immediately, two issues come to the forefront of any discussion of this work, entitled The Chrysanthemum and the Sword.
- We were, at the time, at war with the people she was studying. Like, cratering their shit up.
- She was interviewing JAPANESE AMERICANS IN INTERNMENT CAMPS IN CALIFORNIA.
Ethical issues aside, Benedict had some…interesting…theories about why the Japanese people were flying themselves into Allied warships and, in general, acting a fool. The “best”, in my opinion, was that Benedict believed that the Japanese were a martial race of folks because, um, they got
potty-trained too early.
She felt that the Japanese desire for cleanliness led children in the Land of the Rising Sun to have to control their sphincters too early, which psychologically bound them to an existence based on a hyper-ritualized need to control things. Like other countries, apparently.
Flash forward to three weeks ago as I crossed the border from the Tri-State Area into venerable, stodgy and cantankerous
“I’d rather hump a gourd than make it with a girl from
“If you don’t have membership in a homophobic, anti-Semitic, klanish yacht club, you might as well not live in Rhodie.” - Spoken in a whisper in a restaurant in
“The only reason to go to
“
“
“The people in
The last statement invites easy questioning. If everyone things something, is it true? And, more pressing a query, should the children born in the Pilgrimlands just shit themselves for a couple more months before moving toward a cleaner, more socially acceptable mode of evacuation?
- “Why do people die in quarries?”
As I passed a quarry that looked as though it would be the portal to the Styx itself in
After this point, the rest of the messages I’d left myself were apparently in a language I’d invented to amuse myself to stay awake and alive, but which I have subsequent memory of at this time.
Somehow, though, I think that these were enough.
Until next time, I remain,
Domonic (Icareaboutthereallyimportantthings) Potorti
* If you don’t know what movie this refers to, please don’t tell me, as I will lose intense amounts of respect for you.
** Not really.
*** Don’t ask how I got it.
**** Except for a very specific subset of gay men. Don’t ask how I know this.
***** My guess is like squab that’s been soaked in gasoline.
3 comments:
Oh, this is Glorious. Captial G, even. I was beginning to fear that the 12 Days of Christmas had crushed your blogging spirit!
Dude, if you want to talk about the archaeopteryx, talk to my friend Kristen. She flat loves her them eensy wonky reptile birds. (But don't start in on the hypothetical taste or she might go all Tithonian on yo' ass. [Wikipedia: Making Megan Sound Smarter Since 2003])
The line about buffaloes and my mother made me snort unattractively. Well done!
Hey this is Calysa. Hows it going? i see that you haven't posted a blog since April was it? But yeah i found this website and started a blog of my own and found you and it was weird how that happened. well i just wanted to say hi and all. i am interested in catching up if you are.
Where... are... you? [tear]
Post a Comment