taken 11 months before he died.
“Is that the guy who likes to have sex with dead women?” my boyfriend asks.
“No, I think that’s just a myth.”
“Do you want another line?”
“When I’m done. I’m almost done. Maybe. Okay, yes.”
My boyfriend walks away. The party continues around me. This is the ugly kind of party where people have turned into zombies, walking around aimlessly. The kind of party where conversations have turned into blubbering nonsense and cyclical ramblings. The “Mama told me not to come” parties. I’m 17 and this party is at my house. I have a paper due the next day. I’m supposed to analyze a poem. Five pages are due. I've only managed to eke out a page.
I don’t know much about literature. I do know about kegs in the wood, smoking weed, bumming cigarettes, Led Zeppelin and selling Quaaludes for $5 each in the girl's bathroom. I know how to play pinball and PacMan very well. I give a decent blowjob at this point but have big plans on fine-tuning my skill.
I chose Edgar Allan Poe. I don’t know anything about him. I'm 17 and a stoner. But when I first saw the image of him (above), I was wholly transfixed and permanently changed. I had never seen a face like that - cracked, pained and beautiful. It was the face of someone who clearly understood dark places.
At 3 in the morning, with my home trashed and my mom away for the week, I am very aware of dark places. I intend to make them darker as I lean down to the mirror on our littered coffee table and snort another line. The meth feels like burning hot pellets shooting down my throat. A surge of false energy hits me.
"I’m going to finish this fucking paper if it’s the last thing I do!” I shout.
“So it’s not the guy who fucks dead people?”
“No. He is not a necrophiliac.”
“Do you have any more cigarettes?”
“No. No, yes…but not for you…I have to…” and I stumble away. I grab another beer and walk to the dining room table, covered with bottles.
Clearing some space, I look through an anthology of his work for a poem to analyze. Dying women, pretty women, dead women, coughing, blood, birds, cliffs near seas. I try to make sense of the poems but the words melt into a blob of confusion. Analyze a poem? I can’t even touch my forehead. I don’t know my middle name. Wait, I don't have a middle name....do I?
I start to write.
I know what I’m doing. I’m smart. I can do this. Am I writing this or just thinking this? Shit. I'm writing this.
I rip the page out of notebook, throw the paper on the beer-soaked floor and start looking through the book again.
Then I stumble across this:
They who dream by day are cognizant of many things which escape those who dream only by night. In their gray visions they obtain glimpses of eternity, and thrill, in awakening, to find that they have been upon the verge of the great secret.
The party suddenly stops. A peaceful, expansive feeling sweeps over me...and it's not the drugs. Somehow, amidst my self-annihilation, I am touched deeply by a piece of literature. More than touched, I understand completely and wholly.
I've often had those gray visions but no one has ever described them so well. Inexplicable, lush moments where time stands still, where all the pain and worry disappear, where you understand the totality of your existence. It's pure and transcendent magic. And it only lasts a flickering moment. Then you do drugs, hoping to find it again.
Write it all down, quickly - except for the drug part - before it goes away!
A zombie walks by and sees me writing furiously.
“Why are you doing that?” she points her bony finger at my notebook, half-frightened, half-disgusted. "Why is she writing? Why?" she looks around, asking no one in particular. She teeters for a moment, staring at me, then wanders off.
Focus. Poe. Analyze.
Three pages done. More than halfway there.
Wait! Reward yourself with a cigarette! Yes! I smoke! I love smoking! What a great idea!
I run over to the cookie jar, where my secret stash of Marlboro Lights resides. Underneath it are cookies my mom made last week. Looking at them makes me ill...and sad. There's some goodness, hiding in this house. Some goodness in a jar. Those cookies should leave.
I sit back down and my mind goes blank. The book is a blur of words again and my paper looks like chicken scratch.
Damnit. I should've never gone for the fucking cigarette.
My boyfriend comes over to me and tries to make out with me, drug-horny and disgusting. I can’t stand him right now. Get away, get away! His tongue feels like a lifeless snake in my mouth.
Almost 5 am. Try again. Try. Shhh…calm down. Calm down and try.
As the sun begins to rise, I finish my 5 pages, sit back and smoke my last cigarette. Some people have passed out, someone broke the sink in the bathroom and is laughing about it. And someone just finished a paper for school, fried out of her brains, and is pleased with herself.
See? See! It's not just the good kids with their perfect homes and perfect families who can figure this stuff out. A "burnout" just understood a piece of literature. She gets it. She gets it, even high as a goddamn kite. Ha!
Or maybe I don't. Maybe those ivy-covered schools that I secretly and desperately long to attend will always be for those good kids. Maybe my paper sucks and I just think its good because I'm on drugs. Kind of like drunk people who think they can dance.
When I bring in my paper that morning, my hands are shaking, my stomach is churning and I wish I were dead. But I feel proud, having made a connection with a good writer. A very good writer. He touched me. We had a breakthrough, even though every goddamn thing about my life should prevent one. Today, I'm representing the lost people.
When my paper is returned a few days later, there is a C- in red. A fucking C-! On top, she writes, “You were supposed to analyze a poem. This is from a short story. Read the assignment!!” As I walk by my teacher's desk at the end of class, I hear: "You better wake up and smell the coffee, missy!"
"I hate coffee and don't call me missy."
I cut the rest of my classes and hang out with my dropout friends at the arcade.
"Does anyone have a cigarette?"
I walk outside and light up in the blustery, bland landscape of New Jersey suburbia and look around at nothing in particular.




Salon.com
Comments
Don't bother smelling the coffee, Missy.
You're doing OK.
R
Poe makes an appearance in my weekly post as well (check it out)
Coincidence or is he trying to tell us something here on OS?
R
I, too, love Edgar Allen Poe, meeting him at an early age, under circumstances more controlled than yours. He touched me deeply, too. Something dark and lovely and knowing about his work. Maybe it was that he wrote the first American detective story (and I love my mysteries). Maybe it was that he knew and understood the power of dark places. He was an early and influential force in my reading, and in my learning about writing. I visited his grave when I was in Baltimore to pay my respects.
----John Lennon
Brilliant. Hilarious and desperately sad all at once.
There is just so much here to savour. I'm going back for another read - much more slowly this time.
Thank you.
Great post!
Nick, I'm not sure how much of this is made up. Not a lot, unfort. But my memory plays tricks on me as well. And creative license, etc.
Cartouche, I thought you might like this. I felt your comment before I read it.
Thanks, Steven. I'm sometimes amazed as well. Honestly, it was experiences like this that pulled me through, I believe. Our elders, our ghosts, our mentors.
Caroline, I will check momentarily...I'm very excited. I didn't know.
Henry R, exactly. Exactly. Maybe as well, big insights like that weren't meant to be shared.
Maria, yes detective story and short story. From what I recall (and I'm sure I'll be corrected if I'm wrong), he is the father of the short story as well.
Fernsy, thank you...and have I told you how much I love your avatar?
Mamoore, I actually think I got a D! I can't really remember. Truthfully, it was pretty rambling. I wish I still had it. I'm sure it makes NO sense...it made sense to me of course!
Angus, the cookie part is my favorite too! Thank you for your kind words.
And alsoknownas, don't know that Lennon quote. Will research as well.
Drinking good coffee this sunny but still cold February morning, 2010.
Great piece. Fine writing. Now about that bj....
R
R
R.
(and as an aside, the teachers who are overconcerend with format and less with content are assholes- dumb assholes at that)
Where to begin? The teen age angst, the reaching, the determination, the brain and heart behind the facade. The goodness, hiding (which should leave). The ache, the rawness. The cover of substances. The epiphinal moment . . . a piece of literature . . . Poe, no less.
You maintain the voice throughout, with searing authenticity.
"Write it all down, quickly - except for the drug part - before it goes away!"
Yeah, chica, screw the teacher - you got it. You still get it. Now look atcha - writing literature.
rated
Teachers should teach. If someone is showing bad grammar, by all means, highlight it in red and teach them how to write so they can reach all people and not sound stupid. If you discount an entire paper and don't bother actually reading it because it's not exactly what you asked for- that is being a control freak asshole- and there are some teachers like that.
Luckily I had an English teacher who I'll write about one day who did all the RIGHT things. I still talk to him and send him my work. He's the toughest critic in my life. He likes me a lot but he is NOT easy on my work. Which feels kinda nice actually.
Tangelina, its so nice to see you around here now.
Owl, your comment had me close to tears. Thank you.
Thanks, JD, CrazeCzar, Trilogy, Buffy, Kathy, Jimmy Mac, Bernadine, John, Ocular, Femme, Lunchlady and others. Kind words, appreciated.
Rated for surviving the dark, and for not hallucinating ravens.
glad you survived the drugs and the stick-up-her-ass teacher, absolutely loved your last line
and i had the same kind of relationship with albert camus. i read him for the first time when i was 17, and i suddenly felt as if i was reading someone who saw the world the way that i did, which made me feel so much less alone.
I've always drawn to people that can understand or even embrace the dark places while still maintaining their own shining light.
Screw the red pen, I say! The most well meaning of teachers can take you down with their sheep like dedication to systematic approaches.
I'm glad you've always been able to color outside the lines, to define your own path and to create your own unique brand of literature.
You rock:)
I never tried to do schoolwork after I'd "inhaled", back when I did such things. Sitting in a vegetative state, passively ingesting whatever stimuli came my way was what I did (and just think of the thousands who do precisely that each day *without* chemical intervention!). I knew one guy who could write computer code like no one's business while chemically-enhanced. People like him are probably the reason we're reading and posting to Open Salon!
Rated!
Kasey, I hear you. I never intended to romanticize drug use. I guess the thing is: there are people like me, who were lost and used drugs - maybe not addicts per se, but definitely off our path. Drugs were part of the totality of the experience. Myself (and many other friends) had to climb over that wreckage and find ourselves - and it wasn't easy. In this piece, I desperately wanted to expand my mind via education but so many things were working against me - including me! I needed guidance, I'm sure. I was trying the best with my limited resources. So no, no romance there. Anti-romance is closer to it.
To comments re: teachers, so true. So many were so mean and unyielding. Or said that ONE wrong thing. It's crushing and sad, the implications. How many people, for instance, were told that they sang badly and it was enough to shut them up for life.
Rita, I could see the Walt Whitman connection with you. This image of Poe is compared to the iconic image taken of Whitman. This one I guess? Another famous daguerreotype:
http://cli.gs/V5msQS
What a wildly beautiful image. It's everything you imagine him to be, isn't it?
And yes, talk of honing BJ skills is necessary in any academic discussion of famous authors.
Eden, no doubt we would have been friends. If you lived closer, you'd be over for coffee now!
v.seijo, gosh - can you even imagine that? a poem about me by poe? one's life could stop at that very moment, I would think. that would be transformative magic beyond belief.
Luckily another English teacher really saved the day for me. I'll write about him when I can. A handsome, creative and unique man with a very poetic flair. He thought I was the cat's meow. I was such a mess, missing classes and stuff. But when I'd show up, he'd sit on my desk and read poetry to me and make a big fuss over me.
He and I still talk. Very dear man to me.
Deborah, my mother passed away in 1996. I grew up in a single-parent household (my dad died when I was 6) and was often left to my own devices. No fault of my mother's, per se. She was working near constantly at several horrible secretarial jobs that paid next to nothing so she could raise several kids and keep our house afloat.
I'm not sure where she was that particular week - probably visiting family. At that point, I didn't want to hang out with family, I wanted to party with friends. Not that she knew!
Joe, nice timing!
Ryan, to share a birthday with Poe - that IS special. It's January 20th, right? I still vaguely remember that though I could be wrong.
Emma, I could see you and Poe together. Perfectly. Funny - I have to admit - it's not like I've read tons of his work. I've read a fair share. I was always particularly fascinated with HIM. I wonder what you read.
Rated.
Loved the writing here. Intoxicating.
I identify with the narrator--I was "one of those kids" too.
I'm also now a high school English teacher (I'm going to count this comment for my daily reflection journal entry)
I think many teachers forget that their students are, well, kids. Their higher level reasoning faculties are newly developed; I daily see the awkwardness mingled with the strange new-found power and confidence that teens exude. I swear I can almost hear the explosions of hormones, confusion, and attitude. You ably and forcefully convey that in this piece.
And I hear things. I hear the often complicated lives (home and friends) these kids lead. It a teacher's job to teach, not judge (I see a lot of judging from teachers)--they get enough of that from everybody else. The last thing any kid needs is their corny English teacher giving then shit.
This piece drives home some of my thoughts on teaching and class rapport. I think an effective teacher has to take into account the individual student--whether it is the kid into auto-tech or the creative "burnout." I only ask for an honest effort from my students.
And I wish I could let your former teacher know that poetry can be found anywhere. You certainly found the poetry here.
Sorry for the long, disjointed comment!
I love people who "get" Poe because... I love Poe. "The Cask of Amontillado" in particular is very informative! ; ) I am enthralled by "The Raven", and I completely sympathize with the narrator of "The Tell-Tale Heart", which I first read when I was ten years old. (No way could the narrator be insane, or evil... people act like they never heard strange, unexplained sounds before! What's wrong with THEM?) Poe turned me on to Lovecraft. There was no going back after that.
Love that picture too. "... He had those eyes you very seldom find: The haunting, haunted kind..." (Not Poe's words, btw.)
Eden, you said it: Screw the red pen! MJwycha, what did you think of Frank McCourt's "Teacher Man"?
I know that house. Thank you for representing a piece of me in this beautiful and haunting piece - even in retrospect, is good to know we aren't alone.
MJ, some fine points. I know you see both sides of this story. And my story is just part of the story! I had an English teacher who made a world of difference to me, because he did take the time to look past the burnout facade. We're still friends to this day. And I'm sure your students are SO lucky to have you. I can't even imagine. You must be the perfect combo of cool and informed. You GET them.
Caroline, thank you. That quote does remind me of something almost untouchable. That's why I love it so.
old new lefty, you didn't see the paper! Truth be told, I'm sure it wasn't too coherent. I really wish I had it so I could excerpt a bit from it. It would be a scary riot!