lostcauser

lostcauser
Location
Memphis, Tennessee, USA
Birthday
January 07
Title
Happiest Girl In the Whole USA
Company
No, I'd rather be alone.
Bio
After prematurely retiring at the age of 44, I've hunkered down on the mean streets of Memphis, TN, where I'm carving out my memoirs with an empty Bic pen on the walls of an abandoned abattoir. What ? MY FAVORITE MOVIES: Taxi Driver, A Clockwork Orange, Full Metal Jacket, Duck Soup, Horsefeathers, A Day At the Races, The Last Temptation of Christ, Carnival of Souls, Freaks, Goodfellas, Double Indemnity, Mildred Pierce, Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, Eraserhead, Blue Velvet, Last House On The Left, Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Life of Brian, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, all Herschel Gordon Lewis, educational shorts MY FAVORITE MUSIC: Sex Pistols, Frank Zappa, (early)Alice Cooper, Schubert, Leadbelly, (early)Rolling Stones, Nirvana, Irving Berlin, Violent Femmes, all Sun Records, The Cramps, The Dead Kennedys, Box Tops, Billy Lee Riley, Beethoven MY FAVORITE BOOKS: Thus Spoke Zarathustra, Beyond Good and Evil, Physician's Desk Reference, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual IV, Crime and Punishment, Notes From Underground Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas Psychopathis Sexual STUFF I FIND INTERESTING: According to a new Pentagon study, 35% of Iraq veterans received mental health care during their first year home; twelve percent of the more than 222,000 returning Army soldiers and Marines in the study were diagnosed with a mental problem. As of early 2008, Human Rights Watch reports that roughly half of all prison and state inmates are mentally ill. 76% of all sexual offenses are committed by someone related to or acquainted with the victim.

MY RECENT POSTS

APRIL 10, 2010 12:48PM

The Grass Could Turn Blue, the Sky Could Turn Green

Rate: 1 Flag

The sky was just as blue back then, the grass was just as green, my dad had the same bad temper he's always had. So he bit his tongue, or grit his teeth, and tried to listen when my uncle said people followed him in the street or in their cars; we took my uncle everywhere after the doctor said it really wasn't safe for him to drive. Sometimes when I looked at him and he looked back, he looked as if he'd woken up from a dream or from a coma; sometimes it looked for all the world like he was about to say, I haven't seen you since you were about this high, and looking back, sometimes I thought I might be like my uncle--and thought that I might need to be, at other times.

The sky was just as blue, the grass was just as green, and when my uncle called that morning we just assumed it was something about someone who followed him somewhere. My dad and I were supposed to pick him up that afternoon and whatever my uncle said, my dad couldn't bite his teeth or grit his tongue, and he slammed the phone down hard; we never asked him why my uncle called, like it didn't really matter. The sky would still be just as blue, the grass still just as green, and still, no one talks about that day.

We still went to pick him up that afternoon, and we took the yellow Dodge Charger, the same as we always did; we drove to my uncle's house the same way we always did, past all the same sidewalks and billboards, taking every turn the same. And with the same blue sky above and the same green grass below, there was only one of us that day who knew the ground can open up so you fall and just keep falling; only one of us knew then, hell can be as simple as a middle with no beginning without end.

We found my uncle in the bedroom off the hall, and it wasn't like you see it in a movie or on TV, where the music swells and stops, and off-camera there's a scream; in a movie or on TV a slow pan shows only the aftermath, only blood is misted on the walls, and in the movies and TV, you are only spared the sight of what you wouldn't be the same if you had seen.

But if the sky's still blue, the grass is still green, your dad has the same bad temper and the earth still turns the same, then you still have to put the pieces all together. And there's pieces that don't fit, there's colors you can't name; the movie didn't smell like the time you left the iron on too long. You think in ratios, equations, is there more blood or tissue on the wall, you think if you do this it costs you that--but music doesn't swell and you don’t scream, the dust of discharged metal just tumbles in the sun.

With the same blue sky above and the same green grass below, now the services are over and the relatives are gone; now everything’s the same as it always was. You still have to do your homework every night, your mother still makes you eat the brussel sprouts she knows you give the dog—if you insist on screaming now, you just keep everyone awake.

Now that's the kind of selfishness that keeps you from reaching your potential: you understand of course it's your future that's at stake. You won't get into a good school, or get a good job, or land a good catch--a nice boy wants a girl who knows when and where to scream.

So you try to hold it in or keep it down; you mix it in a drink, or keep it wrapped and eat a piece a day. But the scream stays in your mouth and gets into your hair. It makes you bite your lip and comb your hair against the grain.

You take a step and fall and just keep falling; now everything is middle without end. The grass could turn blue and the sky could turn green--but you will still be followed, on the street or in your car, by a man who put a bullet in his brain.


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