You, he said, are a terribly real thing in a terribly false world,
and that, I believe, is why you are in so much pain.
Emilie Autumn
Unemphatically— I believe in God, it fits in with all of it, Martians, Angels, Mermaids.
Like a bird i fly free and pray to God, who never says a word to me.
It's better to pray at home in bed than too watch TV or play Canasta with friends.
Where can you find truth? On the internet where the news is on 24/7. I believe everything I hear on the news, from the Left or Right.
I'm schizophrenic that's why.
Like most, I'm a sucker for the news, world news mostly. I like world leaders you aren’t supposed to like— Yassar Arafat, Castro, Hugo Chávez, Gaddafi, countries with the balls not to be dictated to by the United States or Europe.
Bad news sells and makes publishers rich and powerful.
Rupert Murdoch is married to Jerry Hall, did she marry him because he was a good lay? Nobody with the name Rupert could be a stud.
Or the Wag the Dog Syndrome— writing stories, lies, to spark a war in a foreign country.
Reporters can’t write freely because they are shackled to the Journalistic Code. Shit like,
We’ll do our best to avoid error and methodological criticism of the law.
There’s no room for bias in our profession.
And How about journalism as fairy tales?
Fairy Tales, and heartfelt news sell.
Mussolini, Hitler, Sadam Husien, and John Paul Getty are big money makers for The Industry.
There is good and band in everything.
There are more than a few journalists who are artists; Hemingway, P J O'Rourke, Tom Wolfe, Norman Mailer, Peter Arnot, or Joseph Heller to name a few.
Last night I dreamt the cosmic egg shattered, something akin to the Second Coming— more fun though.
A recalcitrant God, Bocephus, finds the key and opens the gateway of universal consciousness.
Pervading particles travel to earth on raindrops and a psychic event occurs, equipping the average Joe with Martian powers. Shit like shapeshift, telepathy, invisibility, Martian vision, and super strength.
National boundaries are impossible to maintain, people travel astrally.
Crime and money disappear.
Computers and the World Wide Web become obsolete.
Drugs and alcohol are no longer needed, folks can't get any higher.
People have fun being invisible, they spy on people they hate and spread nasty rumors. Some become peeping toms.
Everything needed to be known is known, so schools close.
Cars, planes, and boats become a thing of the past with the advent of astral travel.
Traditional energy sources, fossil fuels, and electricity are no longer needed.
Animals are thankfully spared, people gorge themselves on Martian insects and truffles.
Overall the cracking of the cosmic egg is a real hoot, a welcome break from the past.
I’m Free Writing these days.
Most writers use Free Writing to loosen their chops, like an athlete warming up, until they feel ready to write.
Free Writing is conceptual for me.
Keith Richards said something like this about playing live in front of thousands of people.
there’s a point in the show when the music takes on a life of its own, we play unconsciously.
When I Free Write, I let the story find its own way.
Sometimes I finish a nine or ten-page story, in four or five hours, sometimes it takes weeks.
On the homefront, I’ve hit bottom— depressed for months.
Catholics believe suicide is a mortal sin, but it’s a way out for those who direly need it.
I don’t have the balls to commit suicide— it’s irrevocable, you might miss out on something down the road.
Psychic pain is cold-blooded, it’s a perfect storm of every form and dimension of bad shit loitering in your mind and body.
When I'm funked primal instincts kick in— I'm paralyzed, lying in bed for days, the black-hearted funk is my low-down roommate.
Writing when you're funked is medicine though, it works instantly, unlike anti-depressants.
Maybe I'll wake up and find the funk was a nightmare.
I see people, people who don’t have money problems, living quasi-normal lives, famous people or friends, and I feel a disconnect.
Looking at them, at a distance, they’re the lucky ones. Then it hits you— there are no lucky ones. The shit is gonna hit them too.
I’m writing on empty— wondering if this business is readable.
I lost a bit I wrote, The Fat Man. It was here, on this page and it vanished. I think there’s a Pack Rat living in my hard drive. Here’s The Fat Man bit.
I was in Jake’s at the bar, the best rib joint in Key West.
A fat man walks in and Jake seats him in a booth, realizing he won't fit on a chair or barstool.
The fat man is the fattest person I have ever seen. He is dressed well and has whopping great hands. The size of a large finger of bananas. As the fat man sips water he looks over the menu intently.
People in Jakes eyeball the fat man, making snide remarks to one another.
The writer in me is curious about the fat man. I go to his table and ask,
may I join you, friend?
Sure fella, my name's Gordo, what's yours?
I'm Henry.
Gordo has a strange way of speaking, breathing heavily when he speaks like his body fat is pushing against his lungs.
When the waiter shows the fat man says without looking up from the menu,
Let’s begin with a Greek Salad, and then a bowl of soup with some extra bread and butter. Two racks of ribs, and a bowl of scalloped potatoes.
I order a Rueben sandwich with Coleslaw.
The fat man says to me,
Believe me, Henry, I don’t eat like this all the time. I say,
I like to see a man that eats and enjoys himself Gordo. Then the fat man says indignantly,
Do you know what it’s like being a fat man, friend?
The waiter places another basket of bread and butter on the table. Then Gordo says,
Fat man is written on people's faces when they look at you. We are freaks, oddities. Our bodies become deformed, our feet turn outwards when we walk, it takes great effort to walk. We have trouble finding clothes and shoes that fit. We sweet in the winter, and summer is hell for us.
We, fat men, live in a world of our own, it's impossible for others to imagine.
As I finish my sandwich, Gordo is chewing on his second rack of ribs, he orders another bowl of scalloped potatoes and asked for the dessert menu. I ask him,
Gordo may I speak frankly?
Yes, Henry, you seem like a good fellow.
Why have you chosen the path of obesity?
We fat men call it fat logic, we see the world as terribly false. So we eat to forget it.