Thursday, December 2, 2010

On the closing of the Scottsboro Boys (100th Post)

There is naught but a fortnight left till the winds blow hard and high
Till the song the hearts of men beat strong
Till the song of war picks up again
Till the long of the moon shines on the darkest sun cloud sky
Till the brightness of soul fills the heads of men
Till women shriek and the crows in the fields disappear for the sound marching near; beckons to the animals to flee – to flee!
For the war is coming
The war is coming; and there is nothing we can do to stop it

Friday, November 12, 2010

Wolf vs. Vulture

Desperate Times Presents: An Evening Rant

Remember when Facebook used to feel like a safe place; a place where you could rant, bitch, kvetch etc. with abandon, without fear of repercussion or consequence? No, you don't? Then you were born in the 90's. Back in it's infancy, Facebook sublimated my anger and rage - I could rant about the futility of existence without fear of someone emailing me, or "messaging me" about every little unnerving Status Update.

It used to be a fun tool; Facebook. You could (and still can) use this tool to manipulate your fantasy of what you think others will think about your random thoughts; wantings - ravings - ecstasies - wins - losses - Who Cares? I don't know. I guess I care. I have a bunch of "friends" - over 500. I don't see more than a dozen of them in a given week.

Facebook has given losers everywhere at least one friend

The problem with this manipulation (whether conscious or not) is in the execution.

I just had a very invasive Facebook experience involving an inter-loping vulture. I'm no dead meat - but this experience left me feeling chewed and swallowed. Without going in to specifics (for fear of reprisal) This particular Vulture felt the need to insert itself, uninvited in to my Wolfpack (life). The vulture felt the need to critique the Facebook Manipulation of my life that I had created, to the point that this Wolf could bear it no longer. This Wolf never expressed anything (to his knowledge) to the Vulture that the Vulture could ever misconstrue as a close, personal comment, remark or invitation in to the Wolf's existence.

This is no ordinary Vulture. This Vulture is strange, because it doesn't feed off rotting carcasses. This Vulture feeds off the living. In fact, this Vulture is more like a Vampire, or a Valkyrie. Vampire. Vulture.

When is it ever ok for a Vulture to talk to a Wolf anyway? We don't even speak the same animal language. Point being - This Wolf never wanted any contact with the Vulture.

This Wolf had seen this Vulture feed off of other members of his Wolfpack before. Luckily they had extricated themselves from the Vulture's fangs before it was too late.

This Vulture was/is a Facebook Junkie.

I dunno - I blocked the bird.

I felt stalked by this bird... and I'm a Wolf.

The madness has to end somewhere. I think the road out of madness leads out off facebook as well. That being said, the inverse is equally true.

In the end - I let the Vulture have it - I tore the bird to shreds with my vicious Wolf jaws. Blood in the snow - dripping as I walked away. The Vulture lived to fight another day.

The Wolf unfriended and blocked the Vulture and he hopes that his Wolf Pack will not suffer any repercussions.

I am Jack's momentary sense of relief.

Stupid social network.

I'm going back to the woods.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

The Philosopher Pistol

Desperate Times Presents:

The Philosopher Pistol (Part 2)

I wrapped my fingers round the cold hard butt of my revolver. Squeeze, don't pull. Squeeze don't pull. They had drilled this mantra into our heads during training. If you pull the trigger, as opposed to squeezing the trigger, you'll miss high and over their heads. Halfway to Najadima - a little village in the middle of the desert - What it lacked in size, it made up for in villainy. They say only two kinds of men go to Najadima. Men who are fixing to kill, and men who are fixing to die - I headed where the work was. And the work was in Najadima. Evil lurked around these parts. I had been walking through the desert for days - water running low, no natives to speak of, no hope to be found. No, my only prospect was a bounty hunter named Floyd who'd gone off the reservation, started taking out high-ranking military officers. Now Floyd had a bounty on his head so high, he couldn't take a piss without somebody informing on it.

The general let me go. It was either I left, or his brains all over his desk - his choice. I made him sign the form and hightailed it out of Cairo as fast as I could. Three years, and dozens of bounties later, I was on my way to Najadima, with Floyd on my mind.

Next (Part 3)

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Glibbery-Blibble-Bleck

I don’t like gooky mess. Does that sound gay? Whatever, maybe that sounds gay. I don’t care – I can deal with a mess – I’m a bit of a mess – but I hate – yech – that gooky feeling of sticking your hand in a pumpkin, removing the guts and seeds and juices and whatnot so the pumpkin doesn’t rot - (Yech) - it’s that awful swirling gloopy bubbling feeling of something alive that shouldn’t be alive squirming around in your hand some Glibbery-Blibble-Bleck trying to suck off your arm – y-know what I mean? Disgusting. Absolutely gross.

I didn’t remove all the guts – that was three days ago - and now my pumpkin is rotting on my kitchen counter… I carved the interlocking NY that the Yankees use on their caps into the pumpkin. It kind of looks more like the interlocking NY that the Mets use on their caps. My stomach turns. I gaze into the pumpkin that should have read “[interlocking NY symbol] 2010 World Series Champions! Suck it Philly!” And my stomach churns. It turned out all wrong – I’m admittedly not half as handy with a knife as I like to boast. But half as handy as I boast is still quite handy indeed. The Pumpkin doesn’t look right. My stomach burns and I run to the bathroom to blast off.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

The Philosopher Pistol

Desperate Times Presents:

The Philosopher Pistol (Part !)

There doesn't see to be any artillery sir?
But there Must be artillery!
How can we fight a Goddamn Bloody War without Goddamn Bloody artillery?!

The general was fuming at this point and i was glad to get out of the room before the winds of politics swept in a foul thunderstorm. I left with my charge, ahead of the supply boy and with my pistol in hand. I thought this quite amusing. I'm not one to carry my pistol in my hand, but my experience in the General's office; being handed my first real assignment on my own, had my heart pumping. Perhaps I pulled my sidearm out of it's holster, who knows how or why these things happen. I promptly re-holstered my weapon and set off on my journey.

I slept for a night on the beach - i took in the smell of the sand, the sound of the water lapping against the earth, like matter smacking against time. I thought about time slowly falling away in to a deep well hole in New England; only to be retrieved by a man who once sold his daughter to a Street Performer for September 1968. Time couldn't be easily caught, or held on to for that matter. And after the Street Performer intercepted time, it quickly got away from him. Never to be caught again.

I walked a desert road for a time. I felt like a man on a mission, but what mission, I did not know. I held my gun up above me as I walked. The reflection of the Sun against my pistol warmed my soul the way the company of another human being never could. I guess it was my manner. My way. I'd never been one for company. Strangers sure. But I'd never kept company well and I wasn't about to start now. That's why i left. To get away from everyone; To find out - after all my awful misdeeds and sins, he trail of tears and broken lives I've left behind me; who I really am.

So I walk along the trodden trail - the only trail a man who's low can know.
I sing my song to no avail, for on my path, if I choose to sing it's for no one
I choose to sing to no one.

Send me a mountain to climb to the top and jump off and explode and then fly in to hell and do battle with satan - and crucify Christ - let them whip me and rape me and burn me and hate me.

Next Time on Desperate times Presents - PART 2

Monday, October 11, 2010

Sitz Probe

Sitz Probe tonight

That is all.

Proof

What do i have to do to prove myself to you? I don't understand the way you hold my hand then fling me away cross the room

Why do I feel, like my soul's not quite real,
If I don't get the job that I'm right for.

What do I do to sabotage myself in your eyes - what can I change? My range?
I'll rearrange my range to my change my rage in to something more manageable/less frightening. I'll sing you a tune and you'll clap, bodies swoon to the sound of my voice in the night.

But cheers grow dim and subways stop and your trapped with your thoughts in a tube with no way out - no way out - trapped with your brain gone insane on the train in the tube no way out -

And i think:

"What did I do to betray you? What did I do to make you lose your confidence in me?"

Why can't I be what you want me to be? I thought you used to like me - I thought you used to like who I am - the number one man to have in your band

Brothers we were - what have we become?

Silent lies abound and what have wrought?

Whence thou travel down the path of misdirection, a stake between two humans you have planted.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Lazy Saturday

It's a lazy Saturday Afternoon. That old lonely feeling sneaked up on me - jumped me when I wasn't looking. Now I'm looking for an angry fix - traversing rooftops in Prospect Heights, looking for a better view, while sitting in my living room; counting down the hours till the Yankees play (6 1/2), pondering the futility of existence.

There is laundry to be done, floors to be cleaned, and my brain could use a good washing. I feel a bit like Fiona Apple in the 'Criminal' video. Does that mean I feel like I'm wearing purple satin underwear? Maybe? Does it mean the dark spots under my eyes aren't going away anytime soon? Probably. Dark circles have taken up permanent residence under my eyes. They have an infinite lease. They're not leaving.

My head tells me to get up, go outside and enjoy the sunshine, but my body is not responding. My mechanism is worn from a night of walking the long lonely road from somewhere-ville to inbetween-land.

My eyes are black and I have left my body. Oy - what a cruel fate we're consigned to. Endless thinking and worry and wait. From outside my body, I recognize the folly of my choices. If only I could go back in time a decade. I would tell myself to go to sleep early... Then perhaps these dark circles would have never come.

And I think, perhaps I am not human. Perhaps I am not dynamite. Perhaps I am not a pair of ragged claws, scuttling across the floors of silent seas. Perhaps I am a corporeal representation of a cosmologically consistent perception of light.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

DESPERATE TIMES PRESENTS:

LIES AND DEATH

a short story

From the desk of Marvin Feltchnik


“If I can’t have all of you, I don’t want any of you.
If I can’t fall in love with you whenever I see you, I don’t want you.
I can’t share you. I don’t want you if I have to share you
It hurts too much to see you in someone else’s arms.”

I’m thinking about thinking about her.

I’m not thinking at all. I’m obsessing myself into a hole… into a whole lot of problems.

I can’t simply be friends with a woman. I need to devote myself to her. An innate need to fuck her senseless and make her mine comes over me and I can’t divorce myself from the idea that if I can’t fuck her, she’s not worth my time. This isn’t just with women either. Not that I want to fuck men, but whenever I get close to anyone, it ends in fear – I’m afraid to get too close. If I get too close there will be consequences, I’ll have to really open myself up, and that is something that I just can not do. So I lie to myself and I hate myself for it – I keep track of the lies I’ve been telling for years – since I was 12 and I was lonely one night – and I got in a fight with myself – I cut myself for selfishness sake – I played on trust and my best friend’s emotions. I suppose my subconscious had been garnering trust all around from people for years… waiting for the moment when I could use that trust to my advantage.

I was thirteen.

She had just gotten back from a bat mitzvah – my ear and neck were sore from holding the phone. My hands were occupied with a more important job; slowly picking away the skin from my fingers. I wondered how much skin I could scoop up. Each pick hurt a little less. Bleeding, I lied through my teeth… it was easier over the phone… didn’t have to look anyone in the eye.

Emily, I hate myself and I want to die. Every day when I get home from school I vomit, cut myself, cry and thrash about in bed. My mind feels stuck and I’m looking for a solution… Will you be my emotional mop?

Of course! I’m so desperate to feel important about myself that I’ll indulge your attention seeking attempts at psychosis.

Acting insane played on my psyche in a bad way. Growing to think these made up emotions were real, I would put myself in the mind set of an adolescent, riddled with troubles and force myself to believe in my fictitious symptoms. My fallacy came off as being the real me. The real me… I don’t know where the real me went.

I told her I was Depressed, which I was, but not to extent that I am now. She snapped in to action and nurse-maided me through life for most of middle-school. I hated myself for letting her take advantage of me. I put my trust in her and I was betrayed.

Years later I put my faith, my trust and all of my eggs in to another friend’s basket. He took my eggs out of the basket and stepped on them. He leaves a trail of my bloody yoke wherever he walks.

I was now seventeen.

Emily wept over the phone. The sound of her crying gave me an even bigger headache. I had never heard something so pathetic, so unfounded as her tears being spilled on my account. She asked me how long I had been cutting myself.

“Months” I said, and I dug my Mach 3 razor deeper into my skin. Her sobbing intensified.
Emily asked why I hadn’t told her earlier.
There was nothing to tell. She couldn’t take away the pain, she didn’t know how to listen.
“Emily, you’re a terrible listener; a shrewish, naïve, little girl. You wouldn’t have a clue what to do, should you find yourself locked in a room for all eternity with a tube of Vaseline and a quarter inch lead pipe.”

Getting her to climax was like getting Bin Laden out of hiding. You had to stake yourself out for a few weeks, waiting for the optimal moment of insertion. If you went in too soon or too late, you’d miss your window and you’d have to wait another few weeks, to even get near the kill zone.

She’d always been very needy and as she bawled, I went on.

All of a sudden, the windows looked like they needed cleaning. Flatly, I told her that “I never truly cared for you. I never loved you. I’ve been biding my time, waiting for something better to come along.” Her sobbing intensified again.

My head aches something awful, some despicable hateful feeling. My throat feels vengeful and the need to destroy grows with each beat of my heart. I decide to go for the kill. After holding my bloody forearm over the radiator until I could stand it no longer, I resign myself to the fact that if I can’t destroy the whole world, I would at least destroy hers.

“You never understood me.” I had told her on numerous occasions that she was the only woman, the only person who ever really understood me. Through wet sobbing tears, Emily managed to put a sentence together.

“I just, don’t, understand, how can you do something like this to me? Doesn’t our friendship mean anything to you?”

“Not after what you did to me” I scowled with soap-operatic vigor. “Not after your lies and deception, your cheating stares and faraway glances. If you can’t give yourself to me entirely, then I don’t want any part of you at all.”

“What are you talking about!?” Cried Emily, “I’ve been nothing if not completely faithful to you.”

“Don’t lie.” I grimaced as I noticed the callous on my middle finger burned away. This would make tonight’s recording session difficult. I had no problem playing guitar for five or six hours straight, but if my callouses peeled, I would be worthless for the rest of the night. Emily was cry-shouting at me; something about not talking about my feelings or opening up to her, something like that.

“We need to talk about this-“ I interrupted her,
“I can’t talk now Emily. I’m running out of battery. Emily I think my phone’s about to-“ I hung up on her and turned off my phone.


SEVERAL YEARS LATER


I stare down at the computer’s blank screen; waiting, wondering what was going to come out. Thirty-six hours till my self-imposed deadline. What had I spent the last thirty-six hours doing? I stared outside my window to look at the dilapidated front porch. Amber, my ten-year old Golden Retriever had been running around the house all day, in a vain attempt at catching the local mongoose. I named the mongoose Ricky, out of some misplaced sense of childhood sentiment (I consider my wealth of childhood sentiment to be my worst flaw). The mongoose had taken up residence underneath my front porch. Amber, being too large to fit through the crack that the Mongoose used as it’s route, had decided to (instead of waiting the animal out) run an ongoing marathon around the perimeter of the house, apparently hoping to catch the snake-killer out in the open at a weak moment.

This had been going on for months. Amber only came in to eat… and occasionally cuddle. I could tell she was lonely – the way she looked up at me with those big brown eyes. She knew things were different. It seemed like she was beginning to understand the emptiness in this house would now be permanent. For a while, Amber moped around; listless, brooding. Then she took up hunting the neighborhood mongoose and her life seemed to have some purpose again.

When Amber came in, I would curl up next to her, pretending to be an Australian Sheep Dog.

My mind drifted to the lies I had told my family. When I was twelve, I hurled a fastball through the living room bay window, shattering it to pieces. My mother asked me who was responsible. My mouth fumbled around as I searched for a believable lie. Desperate to escape punishment, I blamed the broken window on my younger brother. His television privileges were revoked for a month and I, I felt slightly guilty.

My whole life had been a lie. After trying to fit in with those around me for so long by assuming their personality traits, their isms, I had forgotten who I was. Perhaps I never knew who I was to begin with. The blank stare only went away when I could find some attribute to allow me to fit in with the crowd. Then the real truth dawned on me: I hate the crowd and everyone in it. I have no desire to be like anyone else. I want to be myself, but 25 years of lies have left me vacant, devoid of any feeling but guilt.

I am the Bates Motel. Guilt has just pulled up. Guilt looks a lot like Janet Leigh. I have to kill my Janet Leigh before she kills me.

Maybe this was me. Maybe I’m just a vengeful demon on the hunt for blood, I can’t placate the world with smiles and laughs.

Amber had been running around outside the house for hours in the rain. She enjoyed it, and who was I to begrudge her some measure of purpose.

“I hope you know you’re staying on the leash in the kitchen untill you dry off!” I think she heard me.

I lit a cigarette and stared out the window.

"Someone should really dust these."

Lithe as a cat; I darted from the kitchen to the living room in four solid leaps. You’ve got to understand the distance from the living room to the kitchen. It’s a good thirty feet. Not only do you have ten feet of Living room to traverse, a five foot entryway and another fifteen feet on a right angle in the dining room just to get to the kitchen entrance; you’ve gotta avoid the low ceilings.

Apparently when they built this monument to colonialism, back in the 1700’s, people were no taller than five foot six.

Case and point; I had to make long; Bernie Williams-like strides in addition to bouncing and pivoting like Baryshnikov to make it to the kitchen in four leaps.

Where would my mother’s phone book be? My mother held on to the same gray eight-inch by six-inch address book since I was born.
The book was nowhere in sight.

I dug through the junk-drawer next to the oven. It was that same God-awful drawer that every kitchen had; you know, the one crammed with too much shit to open without jamming? Not only did you have to jiggle the handle, you had the stick your hand inside the drawer and maneuver the chopsticks around so that the drawer would open more than three inches. You did this at your own peril, fully aware that your little brother’s last act on this planet may have been to carelessly throw your father’s unsheathed machete into the drawer in a potentially finger-slicing position.

Preoccupied, I shoved my hand in the drawer and let out a bloodcurdling scream. I ripped the drawer out of the shelf unit. The contents of the drawer; Reynolds wrap, cling wrap, pens, pencils, batteries, a condom wrapper, a stick of licorice, seven or eight Candy Corns, a toy unicorn and my late mother’s address book went flying. I looked down at the metal shish-kebob skewer, sticking through the skin between my right index and middle finger with bitter malice. Like a fool, I yanked out the skewer and wrapped my hand in a roll of Brawny paper towels. Chinese food was in order.

As I sat down to order my chicken and broccoli from David Chen’s, I remembered whose number I was looking for in the address book. We had a lady who cleaned for us every week. That’s selling her short. Her name was Jackie Koh, and she had looked after my great grandmother for the last twenty some-odd years of her life. Jackie’s demeanor was pleasant, she never raised her voice, she always wore a bright smile on her face; always eager to talk to you and her toilets were clean enough to eat off of.

David Chen's didn't open for another five hours.

Jackie developed her strong work ethic and moral fortitude in her native country of Malaysia. When she came to America, she was the ideal worker – a symbol of the land of opportunity. She’d gone to night school while cleaning houses to earn her nursing degree. After she got her nursing degree, Jackie still kept up my Great-Grandmother’s house, even while still pursuing her Master’s in Political Science. After my Great-Grandmother passed away at the age of one hundred and one, Jackie continued to care for sick elderly women while going back to night school again; this time to earn her Doctorate. I asked Jackie, with all her education and skills, why she never pursued a career outside of nursing.

“It’s good to be educated.” She’d say.

Jackie had attended the funeral and returned to the house before everyone else to make it habitable. I had never met a nicer person. I cherished her thick Malaysian accent. For all her education, Jackie still didn’t speak English a hundred percent. I’ve known Jackie my whole life; and what I’m getting at here is, the woman has never given me cause for distress. She’s quite the stand-up lady.

I look up her name in my mother’s address book. My cell phone says it’s seven twenty AM. I never used to get up this early. I reached for the portable phone on the wall and dialed from my house number. I hadn’t used the house line in a month.
The call went to voicemail after five rings. “Hello, you have reached, Jacki-Koh. Please leave a message with yaw nem, pho-numba and rihson for yaw call. Thank you. (BEEEP)”

“Hi, Jackie,” I violently cleared my throat “this is Marvin jr. I was just wondering if you could perhaps come over this weekend to clean.” I paused for a moment, and dragged on my cigarette like it was the last drag I would ever take. I started to pick at my skin again. “Thanks Jackie, Bye.” Being that overly polite on the phone usually kills me, but the fact of the mater is, I really appreciate the woman. She’s an example of a genuine, hundred percent; kind person. After the funeral, Jackie ran the kitchen and took mourner’s coats at the door. She knew this routine well. Any trip to my Great-Grandmother’s house included Jackie taking your coat at the door. Aside from cleaning and collecting clothing, Jackie was a whiz at dinner parties. The funeral reception presented Jackie with the same tasks as a dinner party. She served her function well, bringing out trays of cheese and crackers, mashed potatoes and meatloaf to the guests. Not one to chitchat with guests, Jackie seldom spoke unless spoken to.

I was bleeding pretty badly now, but it didn’t matter. For a minute, I could feel the pain, then it was gone. I couldn't feel it anymore. I sat around for the next few hours watching the wet blood running down my arm collect into a small pool on the kitchen floor. I never let it dry.

Friday, August 20, 2010

The Apocalypse Sky

Desperate Times Poetry [Continuing] Poetry Series:

The sky looks forbidding tonight
Looking at it’s beauty, I am restricted to my body – no longer can my mind break free of the corporeal nonsense on the ground and soar
I’m stuck in the crimson hue of late summer sky and it reminds me of death.
It reminds me that wistfulness isn’t going to save me from the sickle that lives by my throat.
The sky is red and blue and it’s hard to see fly-balls.
If the apocalypse came tonight, the sky would look appropriate.

8.19.10

Sunday, February 21, 2010

A SHORT Play

(Lights up on Jared playing piano. Mom enters, Jared stops playing.)

MOM

Jared that's beautiful! Did you write that?

JARED

No. Jay-Z and Alicia Keys wrote that.

MOM

Oh... They're black aren't they.

[BLACKOUT]

Friday, February 19, 2010

Desperate Times Presents: Tossed (a short story)

TOSSED

Baseball's a long season. It's always a long season, and once it's over, you're relieved. You're always relieved. But only for a little while, because then, the winter comes, and you realize something. You realize it all at once, like a switch clicking on. You realize that your wife and your kids and the house and this SUV that you're driving through a Biblical ice storm on the way to the Garden City Mall to pick up that last minute Christmas present that you forgot for your son, all feel like a FUCKING PRISON! At this point you wanna break out of that prison. And it's at this point in time, when we're gearing up to start the new season, that I would like to share with you a story from the early part of my career.

I was throwing in the Dust Bowl League for the Toledo Mudskippers; the Big Club's Double-A affiliate. After an impressive year in Single-A with the Portland Green Sox, I was promoted to Toledo with hopes of quickly moving on to Evansville and then (Baseball Gods Willing) to the Show. But as things turned out, that didn't happen. I injured my throwing arm during the two seconds out of the day that I take batting practice. Being a pitcher, I didn't take much batting practice. Oh I took my fair share when all was said and done, but in this instance I have no idea what happened. I swing Lefty and throw Righty, so when I heard something pop in my elbow on my backswing I shit my pants.

You think I'm joking, but I literally shit myself in the batting cage and had to waddle like a bow legged penguin back to the trainer's room. I collapsed on the trainer's floor. Skip, our trainer took one look at me and laughed so much that he almost shat himself too. Now, I took this popping noise in my elbow seriously. But at the same time, I wanna play. I'm young, I'm twenty-two, I'm ready to make an impact, I don't wanna go on the sixty day Disabled List when I'm ready to make some moves! My thoughts raced as a twenty-two year old.

Long story short, I cover up the injury. My arm starts hurting when I pitch and it shows in my work. The trainer's pissed and ownership is pissed. I was a top prospect and they didn't want to lose me to injury. My coach Whitey Forrester is beyond pissed. Whitey finds out I've been hiding an injury for a month and a half and he wants to kill me. Instead he yells at me; reads me the riot act. He says that not only am I letting myself down, but I'm letting my team down and that's no kind of ball player to be.

I take a few weeks off and I'm back. My elbow feels better and I have an odd string of starts. Starts where I'm limiting the opposition's offense. But I'm just not getting those wins. My offense can't score and it's driving me crazy. If I let up a run, the other guy pitches a shutout. If I let up three, we score two, If I lay a six run dinosaur egg in the first inning and dominate the next five innings, it doesn't matter cause my team can only score five.

One day I say to myself, "Ok, You can't rely on anyone out there but yourself. So you're gonna take this game in to your own hands throw up a fucking zero. So that's what I did, I threw up a zero; through eight and a third innings. Then they took me out and of course our closer blew it in the ninth, but I felt good about what I did.

It takes me a few more starts before I really get that good feeling back in my arm. Then, I feel good. I top ninety-nine on the radar with my Fastball. My Slider steals across the plate with what I consider "Mariano-Esque" movement. My Change-up freezes the best hitters in the league. I'm winning games now. I started the season one and seven. Now I've got six wins in a row under my belt. I cut my E.R.A. in half and I'm going six innings a game consistently.

Here's where the story starts.

We're in Bedford Falls. There are literally twelve people in the stands. No one comes to minor league games. We have a 1:05 start time and the sun is unmerciful. However, I'm on the mound and my arm feels God like. I can go nine innings if necessary. The first inning goes smoothly; I strike out two and get a grounder to short. The second inning comes and I run the count full on the first batter. He fouls off a few. I rear back and throw him a fastball. Bam! I nail one on the outside corner for a strike.

"Ball!" Shouts the umpire. I curse the Ump under my breathe. That was a strike. He knows it was a strike. I'm thinking about that pitch and all of a sudden I find myself in a bases loaded, no out jam. I was feeling good about this game, now I'm wondering if I'm gonna get outta the second. I get Stankiewiezc to pop out to the catcher. One out. I strike out Gomez on three pitches.

"I'm almost outta this."

Fernandez hits a first pitch screamer to short. The throw looks late, he's safe.

"Out!" Screams the first base umpire. The River Rats' manager explodes out of the dugout and races towards first to tear the Umpire's head off. Fernandez was safe by a mile. I know it, Fernandez knows it and you sure as hell bet the first base umpire is gonna know it by the time the River Rats Skipper was done with him.

I've got to explain something about Dust Bowl Minor League baseball. Sometimes we only had three umpires a game. This was one of those games. Without one umpire dedicated to every base, umpires are often out of position on critical calls. It just hurts the game.

Fast forward to the sixth inning. I haven't let up any runs to this point and we've got the lead thanks to Sanchez's clutch two-run homer. My arm's feeling good. I can go as long as I have to. The first batter grounds one to third. Easy throw, he's out by a mile.

"Safe!" says the first base ump. Are you kidding me?

"What a fucking make-up call" I half mumble, half shout.

"What did you say?" Inquires the umpire.

"I said," loudly "that was a fucking make-up call."

"Watch it buddy!" Shouted back the ump.

"Yeah, yeah." I said.

Now I'm really pissed. Our third baseman makes a quality play; the kinda play that any ump who doesn't read braille on a regular basis gets right, and this schlub trying to amend his earlier screw up decides to call him safe. Well, guess who that affects. That affects ME.

The next batter lines one into short right field. The runner on first rounds second and heads for third. We've got him, he's gonna be out by a mile. Here's the throw - it's on line and ahead of the runner - third baseman grabs the ball, applies the tab in plenty of time and I pump my fist in the air and scream "Yeah!!" Cause that felt good.

"Safe!" Says the second base umpire. What! Are you kidding me?! Again with this? He was blatantly out.

"That's two make up calls mother fucker" I fume. the left side of the infield umpire runs up to me.

"What was that?!" He shouts.

"I said," and I shouted this loud enough so that all twelve people in the stands could hear, "That's TWO - MAKE - UP - CALLS - MOTHER - FU-CKER!"

"YOU ARE OUTTA HERE! GET OFF MY DIAMOND!"

"YOUR DIAMOND!? YOU DON'T BELONG OUT HERE! YOU WEREN'T EVEN IN POSITION TO MAKE THE CALL!"

"YOU'RE DONE! GET OFF!"

"WHATEVER, THAT WAS A FUCKING MAKE UP CALL - AND YOU KNOW IT!" My manager Whitey Forrester comes running out of the dugout and pulls me off the field.

Whitey argues for a while. He does his best Earl Weaver impression. Whitey gets tossed too.

We lose.

After the game Whitey calls me in to his office. Whitey's a stout round little old guy, maybe seventy-five or eighty, been around the game his whole life.

I walk in to his office. His feet are up on his desk, his pipe is in his hand.

"Sit down kid." Whitey grunts through his smoke cloud.

"You gonna pay the fine?" Whitey asked. I was going to receive a fine for cursing at the umpire and arguing the call. It wouldn't be more than fifty bucks.

"Fuck that" I said, "I'm not paying no goddamn fine." Whitey paused for a moment and took a drag off his pipe.

"Good." he said, "Fuck the fine. That jizz biscuit blew the call. I wouldn't pay it. Now get outta here."

The months passed, the end of the season neared and the deadline for paying the fine came. For all my talk, I had to pay it. You had to pay it or face a hearing, and from what I'd heard up to that point, that didn't sound like any fun. We were in Daytona which happens to be where the Dust Bowl League's commissioner's office is located. Before my start I went up to the Commissioner's office.

In the elevator I took out two twenties and a ten, wadded them in a ball and shoved the thing in my pocket. I got off on the twelfth floor. It was the top floor. The room was ordinary. There was a secretary seated at a table to my right.

"Excuse me" I said to her.

"Can I help you?"

"I'm here to see the commissioner" I told her who I was and why I was there.

"Please have a seat, he'll be with you in a minute." Before I could sit down, she buzzed me in to his office.

The commissioner was a trim man, fit, in his early forties with glasses, a sweaty brow and a 1940's feel about him. A ceiling fan spun quite loudly above our heads and his suspender straps looked like they'd been digging a painful ridge in his shoulders all day.

We exchanged pleasantries and then quite abruptly he said,

"So, you got the money?"

"Yeah," I said. "I got the money... But this is bullshit." I took the fifty bucks out of my pocket, shoved it in his sweaty palm and left.

I threw seven innings that day. We beat Daytona 1-0.

-jw

The Paragraph: Microcosms of Travelling Lives (episode 3)

GROTESQUE

I killed my baby and everything changed. The news media painted me as a baby killer, an inhuman wretch, without an ounce of morality or common decency. After that, these friends I had, they disappeared, slowly, they moved away; physically, emotionally, metaphysically. Metaphorically we were close – theoretically we loved one another. But in all actuality I cannot recall a single instance in which I was overcome with a wealth of indescribable love or feeling for anyone of them. In fact much of the time, I was angry at my friends. It was a contentious existence between one another. I sold them short. I used them for my own instant gratification… just as they used me. We had a mutual understanding that as long as we could go on serving each others' immediate wants, we would go on spending time together. The understanding was an unspoken one.

The Paragraph: Microcosms of Travelling Lives (episode 2)

HOMELESS CONFESSIONAL

I used people to fulfill my self-indulgent, self-abusive wants. My home is a Best Buy Box. I robbed a hot dog cart on 72nd street for lunch. I have no prospects. I betrayed anyone who ever loved me. I took advantage, and now I’m stuck with the feeling that killing myself might just be the most sensible thing to do. Camus claimed that suicide rarely comes from contemplation, but I always believed myself the exception to the rule. I climb the fire escape of a nearby building. I am on the roof. I look out. I fall and suddenly, I feel immense sympathy for the men tasked with cleaning up my entrails.

The Paragraph: Microcosms of Travelling Lives (episode 1)

MEN'S ROOM

I walk through the Men’s room door. I jerk off in to the urinal. A man in one of the stalls hears me. I think he likes it. I know he likes it. I think it gets him off. In fact, I know it gets him off. I hear the rhythmic clicking of flesh on flesh coming from his stall. I smile and turn off the lights as I exit the room.