Jingles of Love: Colour-Coded (& Separated by Spam Haiku)
"im a selfish little ball of haikus" -e
I had a professor who told me to avoid sentimentalism at all costs. That sentimentalism was the opposite of truth. "Well fuck you," I informed her "what if the truth is that I am feeling sentimental" and then I stormed out of there. She didn't know anything about truth! Truth was subjective. So she gave me the failing grade that I deserved (true enough) and I moved to California and laid in fresh cut grass in a park in San Francisco and went to movies alone and drank vodka because I loathed myself and taunted the ocean in the dark and then I met you, online, and believed that our souls were brimming over or burning out to meet each others bodies, (or at least I hoped as much) so I bought a ticket to Richmond and we saw a movie where lots of men got shot and I thought it was very good and you commented that it moved me more than it did you and I was reminded of my professor's comments about sentimentalism and so I got out your iPad (from the plastic see-thru sock drawer where you keep it) and read you my blogs and you put your head on my shoulder while I read them aloud to you (the best way to read them is out loud) and I felt a real flush of kinship with my younger self for saying "fuck you" to that professor and standing up for sentimentalism. Some say write what you know, but I say fuck that: write what you're desperately unable to understand, (Somebody else said that first, I can't remember who it was.)
Using ContCom West
Vietnam never looked so
compulsory alt.
I met this super cute girl down the hall from me in my new apartment and I fell for her because she was super cute with thick curly dark hair and thick-rimmed librarian half-glasses that she'd sometimes wear and I'd always say "Hi" when she'd go down to check her mail and she would smile and say "hey" back but I think she had no idea who I was or that we lived in the same building. For a while I camped out in the vacant room by the stairs where someone had set a musty armchair waiting for her to come up in the afternoon after her classes but that felt ridiculous and stalkery so I stopped. Plus I discovered she had posted all of this stuff online where she talked about her favorite video games and movies and books and plays and paintings and painters and her pet theories about life etc and so I fell for her hard and I thought it was karma that she was in my building and I went out of my way to always run into her, telling all my friends to call me whenever they saw her and then memorizing those places and times and writing out a schedule so I would run into her at all these (to her) various times on campus and she was always so sweet to me and never blew me off but I never tried to say more than "Hi" to her and I'm pretty sure she still didn't know who I was and just thought I was this incredibly shy randomly occurring campus person who should say more to her than "Hi" but never did
To say I was in love would be an understatement. She was super cute and it was a safe way of investing in a person without any of the unpleasantries of actually getting intimately attached. To see her glistening skin after her 9 AM sessions at West Gym was the sole reason I would get out of bed, some days. And during second semester she straitened her hair which at first really bothered me but I really started to like it after a couple of weeks when, one night, I was just lounging alone in the student commons across the street from our building (where I had discerned that on Tuesday's and Thursdays she sometimes passed through on her way back from Chem lab) drawing little spritey comics to avoid doing my Geo homework but totally not expecting her at all when I heard her voice behind me. I spun around and there she was, my heart racing, she was talking with her best friend Kristine and the two of them sat down at the table directly behind me! She was showing Kristine (who was blond and friendly, but distant) some pictures that I decided just had to see! I got up, walked past them casually to the back of the commons, like I was going to get a drink, and then, unable to think of what to do next, I got a drink. Then I came back and as I passed I saw two pictures as she flipped through them: Two pictures that looked like self-pics, dark and blurry, her face bright, arm extended to the camera, wearing a blazing red dress, and pressing her head against two different very scruffy looking guys. I sat back down and gathered up my stuff to go home. They both headed out at the same time. I held the door open for them. "Hi," I said.
Look atsle items
abercrombie & fitch caps
dissimilar Mmm.
Later when you had gone to work at the radio station and I slept in on your bed I looked through all your drawers. I don't know why. Something about the thrill of being alone in someone else's room, one wants to see if others hide their secrets in the same places youdo. Too-small sweaters, ink-stained pants, squeaky tennis shoes, lip balm and dollar store perfume. I found the CDs I'd made you and one you were planning to give to me, and a journal where a 16-year-old you confided your consternations regarding the single-minded drive of the male sex. I put the journal away without reading more entries and played through the CDs until you returned.
So we went.
My gripes were ripe and plentiful. You don't get to choose who you want to talk to (I didn't want to talk to anyone) and I hadn't been told that the Girls get to stay put all night (err, it feels like all night, actually the whole thing only lasts an hour) while it's the Guys job to move around every 3 minutes and tell their stupid story. The whole endeavor is nothing but a bad middle school dance for grown ups where the rules are you have to dance with everyone, and all the while you harbor a progressively battened down & diminishing hope that as you work your heartbroken butt around the room someone somewhere among the melee is perfect, someone hoping likewise to run into you.
It wasn't meant to be. We entered the massive room and parted ways and I found myself over the next hour talking to strangers who were keenly interested in freely sharing with me whatever is on their minds. I keep waiting to hear an epic story, but I seem to be condemned to the gloomy gamut, stories spanning from deceased animals to business complications to debilitating stomach conditions. Don't get me wrong. These stories were well rehearsed, extremely exciting tales, and without fail, after listening to them for a while I can't help but feel like my own life is boringly pale in comparison; so to spice things up I started embellishing the narrative as I circled back around the room. The first woman I decided to do this with I convinced that I was French, and I spoke the entire exchange in a french accent. The second woman heard the french accent so I couldn't very well change it when it came time to speak to her, so I continued, telling her I was a French rapper named Pierre.
"Oh I'd love to hear one of your raps."
"Non, madame, ve call eet ze flow. Not a-- zees zees-- rrrap"
She apologized and told me she would love to hear one of my flows. I checked the clock. A minute and a half left. Shit. I panicked, started reciting the lyrics to the first song I could think of that she wouldn't know, Communist Daughter by Neutral Milk Hotel. In French.
so much November
hyperbole has talked a
lot?consternation?
My best friend (who is a girl but not my girlfriend...) told me about this dating mixer (although we do go out together all the time) she'd heard about downtown where all you do is sit around a table and meet new people for like 3 minutes and then switch partners and for some odd reason she wanted to do this and wanted me to come along too (it's called speed dating) so I agreed to go but when it came to the particular day of the mixer I was feeling absolutely shitty because of work and didn't feel up to it at all.
"Let's stay in and watch TV I don't want to do it" I protested but she refused to hear it.
So we went.
My gripes were ripe and plentiful. You don't get to choose who you want to talk to (I didn't want to talk to anyone) and I hadn't been told that the Girls get to stay put all night (err, it feels like all night, actually the whole thing only lasts an hour) while it's the Guys job to move around every 3 minutes and tell their stupid story. The whole endeavor is nothing but a bad middle school dance for grown ups where the rules are you have to dance with everyone, and all the while you harbor a progressively battened down & diminishing hope that as you work your heartbroken butt around the room someone somewhere among the melee is perfect, someone hoping likewise to run into you.
It wasn't meant to be. We entered the massive room and parted ways and I found myself over the next hour talking to strangers who were keenly interested in freely sharing with me whatever is on their minds. I keep waiting to hear an epic story, but I seem to be condemned to the gloomy gamut, stories spanning from deceased animals to business complications to debilitating stomach conditions. Don't get me wrong. These stories were well rehearsed, extremely exciting tales, and without fail, after listening to them for a while I can't help but feel like my own life is boringly pale in comparison; so to spice things up I started embellishing the narrative as I circled back around the room. The first woman I decided to do this with I convinced that I was French, and I spoke the entire exchange in a french accent. The second woman heard the french accent so I couldn't very well change it when it came time to speak to her, so I continued, telling her I was a French rapper named Pierre.
"Oh I'd love to hear one of your raps."
"Non, madame, ve call eet ze flow. Not a-- zees zees-- rrrap"
She apologized and told me she would love to hear one of my flows. I checked the clock. A minute and a half left. Shit. I panicked, started reciting the lyrics to the first song I could think of that she wouldn't know, Communist Daughter by Neutral Milk Hotel. In French.
She bought it. I got her number.
Later: my best friend was pissed.
"What?" I asked, "It's no big deal!" She scowled at me as we drove home. I continued to defend myself, "It was actually pretty good considering my french is terrible and I couldn't exactly remember all the words!"
She laughed reluctantly "did you just make it up?
"Yeah of course. Stuff that sounds french."
"That's like the most unlikely song you could have picked in the world to be a french rap song. Good thing she doesn't speak french."
"Oh I'm pretty sure she does. I think she just gave me her number because she
took pity on me."
thank you for hosting
this amazing giveaway
here's an Online loan
So my girlfriend used to work at this really posh law firm until her ex-boyfriend broke up with her. Not only did she work with him but she lived with him so when they broke up she moved out right away and got the first new place she could find on short notice, which was actually a room in a house with three other girls, one of whom, Rachel, worked with her at the law firm. She got a new job at my office and that's how we met and started going out soon afterward but I try not to bring up anything related to the law firm (or coincidentally enough Burger King, which was one of their big clients) because her emotions about the whole thing are still right there tight under the surface and even slight provocations tend to blow her up. I only bring it up because I went over there the other day and I hate going over there because the girls she lives with are all geniuses and their conversations just soar over me.
Seriously, they live in this great big brownstone on this privileged hilly street and I'll go over and feel under-dressed and unkempt even before I go in and then I'll be there not two minutes before someone will bring up something like Melville or The Silmarillion or make what sounds like an important point in Russian (two of the girls are Russians) and they manage to hit cruising altitude high above my feeble head.
Anyway I went over the other day and Andrew was there, who is Rachel's boyfriend. Andrew still works at the law firm where Rachel does and my girlfriend used to, which means he knows her ex so I've tried not to ever say too much to the guy. He's stayed there overnight several times, just like I have (and may have even hooked up with one of the Russian girls once or twice while drunk since I found him on the couch a couple times when Rachel was away) and my first impression of him was early one morning coming into the kitchen and seeing him step out of Rachel's room in only a towel. He quickly introduced himself, said that he was on his way to the shower, and vanished down the hall, so not the best first impression, but as we waited for our girlfriends to get ready the other day we sat together in the living room and semi-paid attention to the College basketball games and I realized he's actually a pretty down-to-earth guy. He initiated the conversation which pleasantly surprised me and I found him pretty easy to talk to, which was nice because the normal extent of my conversation when I am over there is just to say, "Um, how interesting" a lot when I'm there because, well, I don't recognize the historical and possibly obscure people that they frequently make mundane reference to, zooming as they do, in flight up above me.
We shared our stories about being abroad in Asia and Ireland and what our majors were (are, in my case) and what classes we're currently taking, (he's in a graduate program now. (That means he's more educated than me, FTW), FYI) and what I may want to do with my degree in the future by the time the girls were ready (and they did take their time, Rachel has a lot of bags and likes to always have the right one). I had no idea I'd have anything in common with this guy and thought I wouldn't like him but I got to know him pretty well in such a short period of time and told my girlfriend about it as we drove out to the pier.
She didn't say anything back though and we drove for a while before she made some comment about how he isn't really Rachel's type. I said I wasn't so sure. "They always seem to get along pretty well, at least when I've seen them together, both matching each others' crazy eccentricities on a fairly-even and understated keel."
She said nothing and I let it drop. My girlfriend can be judgmental, I learned.
We made it to the pier and parked in silence. Across the parking lot was a Burger King I had forgotten about when I picked the pier to come out to that day and I glanced over and caught the recognition of it in the corner fragment of her eye. Neither of us said anything about it, but I knew then that she would never stop missing him.
We walked out into the pier, the water choppy, gulls swooping down out of the clouds.
simple confession,
strong feeling, social habits,
never recovered
Making dinner at the counter you kissed me with wet lips and I took two steps back, overcome with a memory of my father, how he loved time in the kitchen when I was a kid, I'd sit outside on the rockstep and listen to him cooking up his latest "gourmet" dinner, or he'd prance back and forth between the barbeque grill outside by the garage and the stove inside where the corn cobs would be boiling, a sweat-splotch seeping through under his arms, or shirtless and he'd sing along out loud with the radio blaring loudly - usually Garrison Keillor -- and slam the cupboards, bang the countertops, clap his hands, stamp his feet to the beat and laugh, chasing me with a roar out of his way, I'd hear bottles smashing, cutlery clinking and smell steak cooking in sauce and smoke and onions, and beer– he'd pour a little beer in everything saying it "brings out the flavor," and then dinner would nearly be ready and we'd scramble to the sink to wash the black dirt from our hands knowing that it was going to be a good meal and it was. It always was.
You asked if I was alright and I realized how much I love you. The lines on your face when you scrunch it up, reminding me of that fact, I love you, and reminding me of when I used to work at the restaurant at that fancy resort hotel by the lake, a server in the dining room, which meant that I was de facto fill-in for any kitchen related job that needed doing any given night and there were always about 100 things that needed doing. Even though there were 8 or 9 of us per night in the dining room, (plus two Buffet attendants & 3 cocktail waitresses) the boys in the kitchen always asked for me to do their odd jobs because whenever they had a spare second they were snuck out behind the dumpsters smoking pot and they knew that I wouldn't snitch on 'em to the boss (or the owner). I was always there when they needed me but sometimes something would happen out on the floor and I'd come back into the kitchen crying that I needed this or that and the boys wouldn't be anywhere in sight, then they'd stumble back in, ten, sometimes 15 minutes later, and I'd feel like I was high just by standing near them, talking to them, trying to figure out whatever it was they were saying which was invariably, "calm down. Calm down man."
So now we are here, in our house in the city, and it is warm and I am making you dinner. Today was not a bad day but I'm glad I am here. I feel more relaxed. Its funny what 20 miles will do to us. I think that maybe, after we eat I will ask if you want to go for a ride. Together alone. The fact is we need to talk. I need to know why it is we hate each other.
He is face to face
second one, as soon as he
cash Hugo Chavez
Labels: 20 miles, apartments, burger king, communist daughter, French Girl, french rap, in defense of sentimentalism, kitchens, Law and order, silmarillion, the flow
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