Wednesday, February 25, 2009

“It’s a really nice little forklift."

The Welder texted me last night. Someone gave him a forklift. I told him that was fucked up. His reply?

“It’s a really nice little forklift. What the fuck are you doing?”

Good point.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Yeah, Sorry

Just before I fell asleep last night I was thinking about how I feel as though someone has come along and squeezed all the liquid from me that would normally form writing. It’s like someone pressed it all into a glass then took that glass and smashed it on the edge of a table so that all the writing milk ran onto the floor and a cat came along to lick it up but stepped in a shard and cut its paw and left bloody tracks on its way out the door…

Then I fell asleep thinking about how that metaphor was disgusting.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

They Even Gave Him Sexy Lighting

Sunday, February 15, 2009

SF for the Fucked Up Text Message Win: iqk

Night before…2:22 a.m.

Silver Fox: “To you to I was just in a strange abandoned lot it her scary towards comey iqk”

McBickle: “You ok? Your msg was a little garbled.”

Silver Fox: “Yeah I will fill you in tomorrow unless [REDACTED]”

McBickle: “Ha. In bed reading about Freud.”


Next day…11:40 a.m.

Silver Fox: “Oof I am never drinking in a sauna again.”

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

‘Gambling Is Super Weird’

So Mr. and Mrs. Ladyfriend went to Vegas. Not by choice, per se. (Cue: Guns blazing! Kidnapped and forced to gamble! Massive casino heist!) Mza and I discussed the oddity of Mr. Ladyfriend in the grossglitz of that crazyland, with his ever-serious face and elegant gestures.

She made it all make sense, however, with this proclamation: “He does skew rat-packy,” she said.

And now from Mrs. Ladyfriend:


Mrs. Ladyfriend: He plays poker, and he played in Vegas. Two nights in a row until like, 4:30 a.m.

McBickle: Oh man.

Mrs. Ladyfriend: But he won money, so that's good.

Mrs. Ladyfriend: He came back, and threw hundreds at me and said, "Buy something frivolous!"

McBickle: Noooooo. Nooooooo.

Mrs. Ladyfriend: Right?! So funny.

McBickle: He WON?

Mrs. Ladyfriend: Yep.

McBickle: Nice!

Mrs. Ladyfriend: Yea. He's really good at poker, and poker is more skill-based, less luck.

McBickle: How much did he win?

Mrs. Ladyfriend: Wellll, the first night, he won $200.

McBickle: Wow.

Mrs. Ladyfriend: But then the second night, he lost $100 of that $200. So for the whole weekend, he's up 100. (I got to keep it.)

Mrs. Ladyfriend: Anyway, it was hilarious. He had such a swagger and he smelled like gin and cigarettes and money.

Mrs. Ladyfriend: I was like, you must shower before you get into bed with me. Then the next night it was the exact opposite.

McBickle: This is killing me.

Mrs. Ladyfriend: He lost $100, some guy mocked him for some bet, and he came home sulking, and like, crawled into bed.  

I Worry More About My Other Friends, To Be Honest

Silver Fox: Hmmm…so I’m logged into my Gmail account I’m using for this new part-time gig, and I noticed myself in the chat window and I started texting myself back and forth. Is that a sign of insanity?

Silver Fox: “And how are you today, Silver Fox?”

  “Good, Silver Fox. How are you?”

  “Good! What’s new with you?”

  “Wish I could say! You?”

  “Same!”

  It was upsetting to say the least.


UPDATE:

McBickle: Mrs. Ladyfriend says she too has chatted with herself. What is wrong with you people.

Silver Fox It's perfectly normal, and it won't make you blind.

Sunday, February 08, 2009

Stripping Down on a Sunday Eve

Nothing like the pain of the past. The one you think you left behind as you watched the people grow and live, gain years and wither. I realized today that the 1970s will carry the emotional cues—songs, shorts, TV shows gleaned and weaned in the only early years. And tonight, the M*A*S*H episode where Henry Blake dies in a helicopter over the Asian seas after he was discharged, sent from war to the hearth, the midlands, heartlands, the warmth, the nonwar. I cried for my father, my uncle I will lose. For the pain of warmth and cold, love and goodbye, love and death. I watched aware from the beginning credits that this is the most pain one can provide: childhood, love, death, and connection. I watched it aware. And it hurt.

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