Category Archives: Writing

Things That I Am Good At

I have now published two things on Amazon, which should make me ecstatic, but has so far only reinforced the voices in my head which while away the days constantly berating me for every single stupid hope and dream upon which I dare to cling. None of this is working out remotely like I would have hoped, and now I feel like I am in the same untenable position which I have been in, but without the confidence that everything will work out for the best. I guess I should have learned by now that… well, hell. If I’d learned it by now, then I guess I’d know what exactly it was that I was supposed to have learned. Probably something about looking before I leap, or not jumping out of a perfectly serviceable airplane.

If only I wasn’t a man of extremes. When I I’m up, I tend to do fairly well for myself, but when I’m down, I tend to stay that way for quite awhile. I just wish that I could have learned to be happy making money, as opposed to hoping to make money by doing something which made me happy. I don’t know that I’m cut out for all of this. Not the writing part: aside from a sprained ego, I seem to be doing alright. I just mean trying to keep everything in air as I flail my hands to and fro as I teach myself to juggle. I have to make this work somehow.

I know that it can be done. Flor says to have faith. I guess we’ll see.

Walking On Sunshine

So I am a published author, kind of. Maybe it’s not the way in which I ever thought that I would make my first money as a writer, but everyone needs to start somewhere. I was hoping to have sold more than the two copies which I have currently managed, so that I could talk about raking in the tens of dollars, but as it stands now, I basically have enough to repay my wife for that pack of smokes and energy drink she bought me yesterday, so I can’t really complain. And, if I am to be completely honest, I wasn’t really counting on a collection of things which I have shared with everyone for free for months to be a money maker. Sure, it’s convenient, and it’s only $5, but it’s nothing new for those of you who have been with me since the beginning. Terracrats is a step in the right direction, being fiction and all, but it’s only a short story. I’m not going to get down on myself, though. This is more than I have ever done in the twenty-eight years in which I have known that I wanted to be a writer, and I’ve waited so long for this to become a reality that maybe a little longer won’t be the end of me.

I just wish that I didn’t feel so damned… chipper. I mean, since yesterday evening, I’ve been wandering around with a bemused grin, uncertain exactly what’s going on, but somehow pleased, nonetheless. It’s positively infuriating. I just want to slap the smug joy off of myself while sternly reminding… me… that it’s all well and good, but unless I somehow manage to connect with a lot more people, I’m still basically in the same position I was yesterday, but with some pocket change in a month and a half. Wow. It’s sobering to equate my writing sales to date as a ten dollar bill which I’ll find in the pocket of a jacket that I haven’t used in months (and yet don’t remember having misplaced any money the last time I used the jacket). But as jarring as I find all of this optimism oozing from my everywhere, I have to force myself to remember that it’s better than feeling miserable all day, no matter how much I love to remain curled into the fetal position. I guess there’s just no pleasing me.

So what lies in store for me in this slightly happier world,where things appear to be just a little bit more positive, and I might stand a tiny chance to be able to do something I want to for the rest of my life? I don’t even want to imagine a world like that! Where things happen as they are meant to, and I don’t feel like finding clever new ways to just end it all, playing them over and over again in my mind. I’m not prepared in the slightest to face a lifetime of contentedness. My whole “thing” up until now has been to be a mopey type of individual, railing against injustices and complaining that those damned kids need to get the hell off of my lawn. I haven’t the slightest clue of how I am supposed to function in a reality where I am not facing constant disappointment. I mean, it hurts to smile. Years of scowling at the world and its inhabitants have carved my face into a grotesque mockery of me, and now that I am feeling rather chuffed, my whole head has begun to ache, though the stabbing pains behind my eyes might be the key to my salvation.

I suppose that there are plenty of things for me to still get bummed out about, like the fact that, for the most part, the novel which I have begun exists only in my head, or that I still have bills and rent to pay, and pocket change just isn’t going to cut it. Ah, there it is: the sweet agony of self-doubt. Oh, how I’ve missed you these past several hours. It’s nice to see you once again. What say you and I find somewhere kind of chilly and overcast, and spend tonight cuddled up beneath that bridge I found when I was wandering?

See? It’s no use! I’m finding amusement in almost everything, including my misery. Is this what it means to finally grow up, because, if so, I want no part of it! I would much rather sit in shadows and write about how sad I am than risk a moment of pure joy. Okay, that’s not technically true, but it’s still hitting a little to close to home for me to feel entirely comfortable writing it. Perhaps it’s because the future is infinite, at least as far as it applies to my own life until the moment that I finally expire, and full of uncertainty and variables which I may not have taken into account. The past, on the other hand, has already happened, and it is infinitely more soothing to my savage brain. I can pick away at my mistakes at whichever pace I choose to set, and take the time to really examine all the ways in which I managed to screw up. Also, everything seemed better back then. Of course, that could be because there is no impending stress left in the past, whereas the present is chock full of it, and the future is nothing but decisions which I will probably fail to settle to my satisfaction.

Ughhh… this is beginning to unsettle me. I guess that it’s time to get thinking about shiny puppies and the whatnot.

Anyway, overall, I guess that I am doing better than I was the week before. Or the week before that. I suppose that I will have to discover how to survive the pitfalls of success, with all of the brand-name cigarettes and microbrews which it is purported to afford its victim. Now it looks like it is time to get back to work, so cross your fingers to grant me the courage to sit through an electronic editing session of Terracrats with my Kindle Fire. Just turn the sunshine down a little, will you?

Volume One Is Done!

Finally!

From The Vaults of Uncle Walt, Volume One is live on Amazon! My very first book! I’m way more excited than I should be! Exclamation points!

I know it’s not the novel I wanted to start with (or a novel at all), but I needed to get started somewhere, and this was how. Thank you to everyone who has been reading along these past several months. You have all inspired me to keep going. I am in the final proofing stages of Terracrats, which I hope to have finished tonight, so that I can put it up for sale tomorrow (just in time for your weekend reading binges). And then there’s the actual novel which I have already begun working on. I’m hoping that this will be my year.

Anyway, I’m sorry that this isn’t something funny or socially engaging, but I felt it was newsworthy, at least to me.

I’ll be back tomorrow with a regular-type column. Have a good night, everyone!

-Tex

I just realized that I only included the link to the US store. If you are living outside of the US, just search for Tex Batmart in your local Amazon.

 

UPDATE

Included are the links to pick up the book in three of the countries in which I am more popular:

Mexico

Canada

The United Kingdom

The End Of All Things

Time is marching ever on, and I am left here to wonder if this is all there is. My son is set to finish with the Second Grade in just about one month, and my granddaughter should be born within the week. I have no choice but to end my sabbatical sometime in the very near future, if just to pay the bills, and the adult kids may or may not be moving out. It’s strange: for a man who is terrified of change down to his very core, I seem to be taking all of this with a surprisingly calm demeanor, as if I am squarely centered in the eye of all this chaos, able to witness it unfold with reckless beauty and untold power, yet protected from it due to my sheer, dumb luck of having nestled myself safely ‘gainst its breast. At the end of it all, I will climb out of the wreckage of my life, brush off the dust, and shield my eyes from the summer sun as I move ever onward.

But for everything that’s set to change, it’s also strange how everything seems to be staying in place. I can feel the weight of waiting weighing down upon me, and I just want to know how I’m going to manage to pull off another miracle. I had a small glimmer of hope the other day when my sister-in-law, Valentina, became the first person to support The Cause through the “Donate” button on my page. It’s not enough to keep the dream going at full speed, but it might be enough to keep the dream alive. When I finish this post, I’ll be going through Terracrats with a fine-tooth comb, looking it over a final time before I get it ready for sale on Amazon. And I also need to finish up the first Quarterly Edition of The Vaults of Uncle Walt (which, as I recall, stalled out somewhere toward the month of February). I know that there will be a waiting period before I’ll see any money from either of those, but at least I will be able to say that I’ve made some money doing something which I love.

I will also be starting work on The Novel, which I had been able to put off for the past couple of years, but which seems ready to begin the process of actually existing outside of my mind. Of course, this is still entirely academic. I need to figure out how to pump some cash into my life while I’m waiting for my words to starting pulling their own weight. But I am going to be the Little Writer That Could. I think I can. I think I can. I think I can. And so on. Every single time in my life when I have had the opportunity to try and make this happen, I have always found a reason to shy away, whether it was a nervous breakdown, or that I was living in the woods behind the local Safeway, or that I simply had to have something to eat that week. I know that I’ve gone about this all wrong, and that I should have been more cautious in my life decisions. Except that when I’m cautious, I never take any chances, which means that I keep shoving the words within me down a little deeper, doing my best to suffocate my hopes and dreams before they break my heart. Almost thirty years I’ve had to get this done, and for all of that time, all of those dreams, I haven’t made it happen. That has got to change.

My greatest obstacle, of course, in none other than myself. Better than any imaginable archenemy, I know exactly how to foil my best laid plans so that they yield only ruination. It’s funny: I was talking to Wildflower as we were walking home (the Minkey and I met her at work and then walked back with her), and she was telling me that sometimes it is hard for her to see that anything is actually wrong inside me. That is, for me, the worst part of mental illness. From the outside, it just looks like someone is lazy, and all they need to get going is a swift kick to the posterior. I mean, if I can still crack a joke or two, and actually get out of bed, then why can’t I bear to face a stranger for a shitty cashier job? Well, let me let you in on a little secret, one which makes me grateful that I am not seeking to impress any members of the opposite sex:

I’m not taking care of myself. Ooh, big surprise, I know. But I’m talking about the basic things: showers, brushing teeth, changing my pair of jeans. Now, it’s not as gross as it might appear, as I do change my underwear, socks, and t-shirts daily. But the background level of apathy is so high, that I just don’t give enough of a crap about myself to actually make any of the most basic bits of care seem worth the time and effort. This isn’t because I am lazy, or that I cannot get out of bed (although that has happened once or twice), it’s just that I do not see the point. It’s difficult to see the sickness which hides behind a carefully constructed façade of jokes and misdirection. I do my best to make people laugh so that they won’t think to judge me for my failings. And I’ve learned to make myself laugh because I know that it’s better than collapsing into a pile of booger-streaming tears. Well, that, and I know that if it’s especially painful, it will make the most amusing anecdote in four or five years, so why not tell it now, and find the humor in it?

I just have to keep reminding myself that I can do this. I just wish that I believed me…

Don’t forget to come back this evening for my long-awaited review of Girlfiend’s E.P., Comrade Isodora Duncan. It will be up at 6 o’clock Pacific.

Terracrats: The Dork Knight

DSC_5850

© 1997, 2015 Tex Batmart

Lyrics to “Compass Rose” © 1998 Dave Feise

First, catch up with Part One…

And now, Terracrats continues…

 

 

It was sometime early in the morning, back in the chill of a January freeze, just after school had started up again. Rick, a friend who I had known for nearly my entire life, had sat beside me on the bench in the visiting team’s dugout, as we looked out over the misty baseball diamond and smoked a cigarette, and he told me about his girlfriend and how his life was falling completely apart.

“I don’t know what to do, Dave.” He said between drags. “It’s like, there’s this stabbing pain that just won’t go away.”

I looked over at him, and saw that he was shivering from more than just the cold. “What’s going on now?” I asked him.

“It just isn’t working anymore. I love her, but I feel like I’m losing her.”

“Have you talked to her about it?”

“What would I say?”

“I don’t know. Shit.” I flicked the ash from my Lucky Strike, and took another drag. “Did she say anything to you?”

“No, but I can tell.”

“You guys still-” I made a gesture with my hands to indicate that I was referring to sexual relations. “You know…”

“Yeah, but she just lays there, you know? Everything will be fine before the clothes come off, but once it’s time for that she turns into a mannequin.”

“Number one: No, I don’t know. Number two: Maybe seeing you naked is the deal breaker?”

Dave punched me in the shoulder, and I stifled the expletive which cried out to be released. I rubbed at my arm and looked away. “It’s not like that,” he said.

“I don’t know, you wrestled other sweaty dudes in front of her. Hell, you wrestled other sweaty dudes in front of us. I know that I don’t see you in the same way anymore.”

“Shut up,” he snarled, “just shut the fuck up.”

“Sorry, dude.” I mumbled, feeling suddenly embarrassed and ashamed. “You know that I’m just giving you shit, right?”

He didn’t say anything for a couple of minutes, and we sat in silence, finishing our cigarettes and waiting for the sunrise. When I looked over at him, I saw that he was crying. Not the kind that makes someone’s face bloated and swollen with mucous, but like when someone litters in front of an Indian. “I-” I started, “I’m sorry.” I reached my arm around him and pulled him into a brotherly embrace. I could feel the silent sobbing shaking his entire frame.

“She was supposed to be the first, the last, the only. And now it’s over.”

I wanted to tell him that I thought that it was almost inevitable that it would never last, being as how “their” song had been better suited for an angsty breakup than the throes of passionate love, but he was bigger than me, and I honestly believed that he might snap.

He looked down at his watch, and then out across the baseball diamond. “I gotta go.” He brushed the ashes off his pants, stood, and silently walked out of the dugout.

“See ya.” I said.

I still had a while yet before I had to head inside, so I sat and smoked another cigarette, and sank into the nic buzz.

“That was his last girlfriend, right? Elena?”

“Yeah. And she treated him better than that redhead is treating him now.”

“He seems happy enough…”

“I don’t know. She’s his rebound. I think he’s just happy not to be alone.”

“Weren’t you?”

“Yeah, and look how much good that did me. I swear I’m about to give up entirely.”

“What about that Cassie chick?”

“She’s cute, but I don’t know… I just feel like I’m going to be a virgin forever.”

“There’s more to it than that, you know.”

“I know. But that’s easy for you to say. I mean, don’t get me wrong: there’s no one who likes falling in love more than me. And there’s nothing wrong with making out. I just… I just wonder what it is about me that makes the girls say no.”

“You’re trying too hard.”

“I guess. What about you? How are things with my ex?”

“I wish you wouldn’t keep calling her that.” Bill snarled, and kicked me in the shin.

“Okay, okay. Sorry.” I held my hands up in the darkness to signal my surrender. “But how are things with Helene? You guys seem… happy.” I began to rub my shin where he had kicked me.

“Yeah, I guess. I don’t know.” He paused for a moment, and I could hear him taking another sip of the Chambord. “Let’s just shut up about girlfriends and get back to drinking.”

“Fine with me.” I said, and rubbed my shin again.

We sat in silence after that, drinking from our bottles, and looking out across the Puget Sound. I was staring down the barrel of a state-imposed curfew which I would be missing, my best friend was suffering from emotional issues we had yet to broach, and on top of all of that, his girlfriend (my ex)’s old house was two doors down from where we sat, with only the memorial to lives and deaths of our high school biology teacher, his wife, and their two children between us. Just when it seemed that the laughter might never come, I began to giggle at the absurdity of it all. Less than two months before, this entire area had been full of life and unfettered dreams, and now the only thing which it was suited for was the temporary housing of a couple of drunken kids who’d broken in. It was then that Bill broke into song.

Once I had a life, and it knew feelings, but no longer.

I used to love, but that you have replaced

with a barren emptiness which tears at me like hunger.

My tears of nothing well up in empty eyes

from thinking of the you that I once had

and the demoness who now has me.

Hope like all things mine shall be destroyed,

burned like heretics on the stake of your heart,

a heart with which mine I tried to warm,

but had better luck fighting the Northern Winds.

And here was crushed

beneath a crumbling, melted avalanche

called love…

Once I had a life, and it knew feelings,

but no longer.

I used to love, but that you have replaced

With a barren emptiness that tears at me like hunger.

My silver weakness cascade through space like liquid worlds

crashing on the shores of anguish

like an ocean of pathetic hope.”

I sat stunned throughout, having never actually heard him sing before. He had kept his eyes shut the entire time that he’d been singing, and it was only now, when he reopened them, that I could see the tears glistening in his eyes, reflecting the moonlight streaming in through the window. “What’s going on?” I asked him, “Are you okay?”

“Yeah, I’m fine. Whatever.” He looked around the room, appearing to have found the solution to a problem which I hadn’t even known was plaguing him. “Let’s go exploring.”

“Carpe Nocturne,” I agreed. “Lords of this world.”

We stumbled down the stairs with as much stealth as we could manage, the alcohol having spun both our emotions and the room. The house was still and dark, and of those traits, we shared only the latter. We had seen flashlights on our way up, and only now thought that they might have been of some use. Considering how drunk we were, and that they were less than a meter from us the whole time we were frantically searching for them, I’m amazed that we beat the sunrise in finding them. Bill snagged another bottle from the mini-fridge, this time the vodka, and with a dim, solitary beam to guide our way, we descended down the second staircase and strolled out of the front door.

The cool scent of the saltwater returned some measure of sobriety. The row of empty houses on either side of us sat like a deeper blackness sunk into the shadows of the night. Our moonlight had all but faded, the clouds racing in above us to blot out the sky in a blanket of purple dimly lit by the reflection of Seattle’s light across the waves. We locked up the front door behind us, having left the sliding glass door upstairs unlocked, and made our way across the mud which had been once been home to a family of four. I felt a knot of dread within my stomach as we marched through Darren White’s graveyard.

A rush of breeze came up from behind the both of us, propelling us forward when we might have faltered, and uncovering the moon for just a moment. Sea-stained toys jumped out at us, flickering and rusted in the brief and scattered moonlight. Makeshift memorials whirled and swayed into our paths, crossing us like nightmares and black cats. Here, in the empty space between two houses, a home had stood which was swept into the sea. The darkness rose up and wrapped us snugly deep within, carrying us from reality, through dream, to memory:

A week before the slide, Henry, their dog, after nearly two years of unremitting hostility and uncompromising hostility, had suddenly befriended me and begun following me home. Whereas I hadn’t been able to walk along the beach without seeing him run up to me as if to drive me out to see, it seemed that there was nothing which I could do to get him to go home. It was if that dog could see glimpses of the future, and had been trying to tell me something before it was too late. Each day I would walk him back along the way I’d come, taking him back to where I thought that he belonged. And every day I’d have to say hello to someone I would have preferred to never see again. A week before that slide, I’d still despised that son of a bitch, as only a high school student could despise one of his teachers.

The door was open to the next house which we entered, the place to where I’d once followed my future ex-girlfriend’s home. She’d followed me off the bus at the stop at the top of the hill, and walked behind me in silence as we descended. As we were nearing the curve down toward the beach, I turned around and confronted her. “Why are you following me?” I demanded. She said nothing, and walked passed me down toward the Walk.

“Hey!” I yelled. “What’s your name?”

“Helene,” she said, and kept on walking.

“You live down on the beach?”

“Why do you want to know?”

“I just haven’t ever seen you around here before. Mind if I walk with you?”

She stopped and looked at me, as if trying to determine whether or not I was a threat. “What’s your name?” she asked.

“Dave.” I pointed at my grandparent’s home, not thirty yards away. “I live there.”

“Neat house.” she said, and resumed walking down the hill.

I watched her go, confused about what was happening. Was I supposed to go with her, or not? Her fire red hair swayed back and forth in a counter rhythm to her stride as she walked away from me. She turned around and asked, “Well, are you coming or not?” I rushed to catch up to her.

She told me that her family had just moved in a short while ago, and that she didn’t really know anyone in the neighborhood. I told her that I’d lived here my entire life, but that I grew up over on the other side of the beach. She was a year younger than me, and had a little sister. I was the fancy high school kid who seemed dark and brooding. She was into cats and witchcraft, and I liked heavy metal. It’s fair to say that I’d fallen in love well before we’d gotten to her house. As she opened the door and invited me inside, I suddenly felt almost completely, but not entirely unwelcome in this place. Her father was inside, and she casually introduced us to one another. To break the ice, I said, “Yeah, so… I followed her home. Can she keep me?” In all the years I’ve lived since then, I’ve never seen a sourer look. It was if a lemon had mated with a rubber band, and their ensuing love child had snuck into the mouth of an unsuspecting cat. He grumbled something, but we were already on our way upstairs so that she could introduce me to her room.

The stairs were narrow, and at a particularly precarious angle. I fell against the wall, as if inebriated and…

Thank you all for your support, and again, if you like what you have read, please consider purchasing the full story when it available for purchase, which, if everything goes well, will be sometime later this coming week.

-Tex

Terracrats: Batmart Begins

wpid-img_20150508_195631.jpg

© 1997, 2015  Tex Batmart

Our next door neighbors were dead. Our house was stolen. The alcohol upon our breath belonged to someone who didn’t even know that we existed. We toasted our dominion of the dead and abandoned over a bottle of Jose Cuervo. The smoke of clove cigarettes and Lucky Strikes lingered in the air, mixing with the stench of grief, and fear, and loss.

Lords of this World.

I glared at the cherry of my lit cigarette, furtively glancing about in the fading daylight of this springtime evening. Anyone happening to look this way would wind up spotting us for sure. I took another drag of my Lucky Strike, and dropped it to the saltwater-soaked ground, grinding it beneath my boot much as my ex-girlfriend had done to my heart not half a year before in lieu of giving me a present for my birthday. Exhaling as inconspicuously as I could manage, I listened for a moment, trying to gauge if anyone within earshot had been made the wiser, and decided to come to see what was going on, but other than the steady rhythm of the waves slamming into concrete just a couple of feet away, the entire beachfront boardwalk was silent. A few moments before, Bill had gone around the back of the vacant house which stood before me to see if could gain us entry without having to resort to the damaging of property, leaving me to stand guard for the attempt. I did my best to appear casual, as if I was only coincidentally pausing in my seaside stroll, taking in the beauty of Seattle which stood like a jewel on the other side of the Puget Sound.

I heard a click, and then the slow creak of disused hinges opening. Startled, I spun around to see the front door opened, and Bill beckoning me inside. I walked into our chosen palace, and saw that the house had been well-kept, that even the emergency crews who had forced out the family who had resided there when that unexpected mudslide tore through the early morning had been unable to prevent the touching, if ultimately futile gesture of the former occupants, who’d wrapped the furniture in plastic for that day sometime in the future, when it might be safe for them to return. But we all knew that day would never come. Their home would be just as they had left it, remaining forever as it was, if only in their memories, though they would never be allowed to set foot in it again. That was how we found everything in our first moments upon entry: perfectly preserved, the final moments of this tragedy recorded in the dust that had settled on sealed chairs and couches, and in the echoes of those chaotic screams of terror when their world came crashing down. A home no longer, this empty house sat silent and unchanging like a mausoleum, witness to the buried lives and loss of hopes and dreams.

It smelled of mud. In retrospect, I’m sure that obvious, but it’s not something we had been expecting. Perhaps we’d been counting on a more domestic scent, the distinctive odor of the family who’d last called this place their home. All we got, however, was the aroma of still-damp earth, pine sap, and that hint of mildew to which even well-attended homes in the Pacific Northwest are mercilessly subjected. We’d wanted the thrill of adventure in the face of opportunity, but all we’d gotten so far was the stink of mud, a pine tree through the downstairs bathroom, decay and ruin. No inherent glory in here for two seventeen year-old rebels hiding from the world, as they walked lightly through a red-tagged house. Instead, we chose to name ourselves Terracrats, and became Lords of this World. This was to be our domain. This was to be our place to live out the fantasy that the world could someday be different. This was poorly conceived and blatantly illegal.

I walked back to where Bill had managed to squeeze in through the gap torn through the wall by the thundering wave of mud, and an uprooted pine tree. Just a simple smash and grab job, I joked to myself to hold back the deepening shadows in the growing dark, struggling to maintain my youthful sense of invincibility in the face of my own mortality and the sheer force of Mother Nature on a bad day. Not like the quadruple homicide just one door down. Bill tapped me on the shoulder, and suggested that we check out the rest of the place before the night had fully come. He’d climbed beneath the tarp and shimmied along the pine’s trunk through an opening more suited to the thievery of elements than of man, just to let me in through the front door. I would have gone with him, but I was claustrophobic, and I didn’t really bend that way. I followed him up the stairs and into the main living space of our new home for the evening. Behind us, the sun had finally fallen beneath the hidden horizon, and the darkness began closing in around us.

“What the hell is this?” Bill asked, not more than a couple of feet in front of me.

“What?”

“Look at this- a couple of bottles of Monarch Vodka-” he began pulling the bottles out and setting them off to the side.

I snickered, “Sure, the cheap shit.”

“-a fifth of gin,” he squinted at the next bottle, “Looks like… a half a bottle of rum, maybe three-quarters of bottle of Cuervo, and… I think there’s like ten sips in here.” He handed me a rounded glass container, in the shape of something in between a hand grenade and imperial crown.

“What’s this?” I asked him, having never seen this type of booze before.

“Chambord,” he said. “Fancy liqueur. And it’s mine.”

“Fine, fine. Anything else?”

“Some homemade Kahlua, looks like, and a two-liter of Tonic Water. It’s kind of cute they left this mini-fridge plugged in. Hasn’t been power here for almost two months.”

“Don’t forget we’ve got those homebrewed beers out on the deck.”

We each grabbed a bottle and decided to explore, myself with the tequila, and Bill with the Chambord. By the light of our Bic lighters, we climbed the stairs again, in search of something worthy of our teenaged attention. Upstairs we found just a couple of bedrooms and a toilet which would never flush again, the water having been disconnected along with the power lines. But the view out through the window from the master bedroom was more than enough to give us pause, the city of Seattle shining like a firefly against the purple velvet of the night sky over the Puget Sound. We understood then, why these fools had spent the money that they had on a place like this. The Palace of the Lords was starting to look better. We sat down on the bed and began to talk about the things that only teenage boys could find important, like girls and music and how much we disliked the entire school experience. Every other anecdote was punctuated by a sip from the bottles in our hands, and soon the pretense dropped entirely, and our feelings began to show, not that we were really the macho types who held things in to begin with.

“Lords of this World,” we mumbled back and forth that night, as we talked about the present and dreamed about the future.

I told him about the pain of falling out of love, and he countered with how well things seemed to be going with his girlfriend. I told him about how I wanted to change the world with the words that were always spilling over and out of my pen, how I’d seen so many people who I knew would go on to never write again, and how I was already mourning the loss which their discarded gift would bring. We talked about Black Sabbath and Metallica. We spoke about the things which made us feel so viscerally alive that there were times we couldn’t bear to feel it any longer. And then I shared with him a story about our other friend named Rick.

If you liked what you’ve just read, please consider purchasing a copy of Terracrats when it is available for purchase!

-Tex

Surprise

I knew this day would come, but I didn’t expect it to take so long in its arrival. I knew that I wouldn’t really start to get going on what I wanted to write until I had no time left to do it. It’s not really a surprise then that everything seems to be blowing up in my face just as I am on the verge of actually getting something accomplished. Not a full-length novel, mind you, but at least something that isn’t just the blog, something that I might be able to convince people to purchase. I thought the day would come sometime back in January, but it seems the gods of apathy had other things in mind for me. Whatever. I’m still going to finishing working on it, and then I’m going to see what I can do to try to make a little money. It’s taking all my will to keep from falling back down into the depths of despair, and every ounce of ego to tell myself that I should keep working at it. A lesser (or smarter) man might have given up by now, with his entire life snowballing into ruin. But not me. I’ve been putting this off for decades, and I don’t think that I’ll ever muster up the courage to try again if I don’t follow through this time.

I asked my wife before I began this little adventure of mine, if she believed in me, if she thought that I could do it. I know that rough Spanish translations are a poor substitute to showcase my abilities, but it was all I had to work with. Even then, she told me that she believed, and for the first time in what seemed like nearly forever and a day, I almost thought that I could do it. I just wish that I had managed to get back into form a little sooner. And that I had socked away some money back when I was making it. I know that I can pull this out (I have always known it), but I cannot seem to adequately explain it to my wife. We are both stressed out about what the near-future holds, and the best that I can offer her is that I’m pretty sure that everything will be okay. I mean, I have a track record of always landing on my feet, but the cynic inside me says that only means that I am due to finally taste the sweet agony of complete and utter failure.

Maybe it’s just a side effect of my mental illness, this delusion that I should, or could, do this for a living. I mean, who’s to say that this isn’t just a particularly deluded fantasy of mine which might better be relegated to the status of a hobby? Except that I have known down to the deepest part of me since I was just a boy that it was going to be this path or nothing. In school, while I saw everyone around me plagued with doubt about the lives they were desperately trying to decide between, I floated by upon a cloud of certainty that I knew what I was doing. Maybe this is my greatest sin of all: pride. Or self-delusion, whatever you want to call it. I have to be right, and more often than not, I am. But now is not the time for me to learn that I am fallible. Or maybe it’s the best time, philosophically, but I can’t let myself think like that. There will be plenty of time to learn that I am just as capable of committing errors when the stakes aren’t quite so high.

On a happier note, if I was forced to guess my progress with the story I am working on, I’d probably have to say that I am almost halfway done. I shot past the roadblock that had been causing me so many problems, and now it’s just a matter of finishing up the flashback and trying it all together with the ending of the story. The only thing that is giving me problems now is the massive tonal shift in the original. I liked the juxtaposition then, but I’m not sure if I can make it work this time. To be fair, I like telling myself that something is impossible when I’m fairly certain that it’s not so that when I finally pull it off, I can pat myself on the back and feel like a miracle worker. I’m relearning how to write fiction again, and I should have started with that from the very beginning, as the odds that someone would read the random things I write about here on the blog and decide that they wanted to pay me to do it for them were always nonexistent. But at least I’ve gotten faster at transferring thought to page, which has helped me with writing in general.

To tie everything back in together, I guess what I’ve been trying to spit out is that I know that the majority of the work that I do when I am writing is nearly indistinguishable from just lounging about. But I am always mulling over what my next move is, or distracting myself from focusing directly on the problem so that the answer comes to me more organically. When I’m reading, I’m actually taking classes in advanced creative writing. When I’m watching television, I’m soaking the interplay of characters and themes. When I’m listening to music, I’m… well I’m usually just grooving to the music, but putting myself in the mood is also important. But none of this is making me a dime, at least not yet. I have nothing to show for my efforts aside from a crumbling relationship and the looming threat of a nervous breakdown. I need to knuckle down and become the little writer who could. I’m pretty sure that I can do it. I mean, what’s the worst that could happen if I’m wrong?

Thought Experiment

It’s way too late at night, and I cannot get to sleep. I don’t mind going ’round the bend if I’m creatively insane, but this wandering around in apathetic madness is for the birds. It just feels so blah. So I’ve decided to perform a little experiment to measure the effects of sadness on the insomniac psyche. I would much rather be fine-tuning my short story, but unless something changes in my head before I go to sleep, the best I can do is pound out some abstract nonsense and say that it was done on purpose. It used to be a matter of just altering perception, but I’m a father and grandfather now, so how would that kind of narcissistic, hedonistic behavior look? I miss going on adventures, both in time and space and within my mind. I miss staying awake until the wee hours and making candles dance, chasing off the Beasties with a magick word or two. I guess what I’m trying to get across is that the world just seems so two-dimensional now that I’ve grown older, the colors are all muted, and vibrancy is something which I barely can remember. It’s too bad they changed the formula for NyQuil, or I could relive my glory days once more while stumbling through the streets of Not Quite Richmond, California.

I guess what I really miss is feeling like I am tapping into something larger than myself. I remember wandering around the Island late at night with Fed beneath the purple skies of clouds sailing o’er the Witching Hour. We used to walk miles, with no thought of aching muscles, or tired feet, and just talk for hours until we finally passed out. We drank shitty beer in graveyards with my girlfriend, and wrote songs which I was convinced would be my ticket out of obscurity, but which don’t even exist outside my mind anymore. We gave a demo tape to one of our friends, but she lost it soon after. Not that we would have made it as a live band. Fed was good, but I could barely find a steady rhythm, let alone keep it, and the two and a half chords which I could play still required thought before I could change between them. I did love recording with him, though. I remember when we were working on one of his songs, Compass Rose, and he made me take a walk outside because he felt self-conscious about his voice. I never recorded with Bad Leon, though we’ve talked about instrumental backing to my angry love poetry.

What am I doing here? I’ve managed to accomplish exactly nothing in my time since I left work, at least nothing which will make me any money. It wasn’t so bad being destitute when I was living on my own, but as I said just a few days ago, that’s not really going to cut it with my wife and son. I just hate the dichotomy of being me. I shut off this artistic part of me for so long that I don’t know if he is ever coming back. I suppose that until November of last year, I could have described my artistic self as Schrödinger’s Wordsmith: both extant and extinct. But now Pandora’s Box is open, and I’ve had the misfortune to peek inside. What terrifies me most is the thought that it’s not just institutionalized apathy; that it’s simply a matter of me not having what it takes to do this for a living. That my lifelong dream is never destined to be more than just a hobby. I think of all the stories which are running around inside my head, and I am screaming silently at myself for not doing a damned thing about them. Every time I try to write, I go in with the notion that I’ll only screw everything up, and then manage to stay true to my word.

I can feel the fires burning just beneath my eyes, and the anxiety throbbing beneath my skin. And yet it’s all held down snugly beneath a blanket of exhaustion. I want to touch the energy of youth once more, even if it’s only for a day. To have the knowledge that the world is mine, and there’s nothing that can stop me. I used to know that I would change the world, but somewhere in my twenties, I managed to lose sight of that. And now, because I cannot even encourage myself to do what I love most because I lack the discipline required to work for myself, I’m going to have to shove myself back into that tiny box without even the reassurance that I’ll unpack myself again. This was my shot. This was the last batch of courage I could muster, and I couldn’t get it done. I was so excited when it dawned on me to rewrite that bloody story. I thought that if it was good enough, if was good enough, I could use the momentum I had built and hop tracks to something of a slightly longer format. If I cannot even get excited about the crap that I am writing, what makes me think that someone will pay money for it?

Welcome to the Pity Party. If I ran for office, I would have to run with them. We’re not much to look at, but we’re sort of attached… to us. Is it like this for everyone? Do other writers get halfway into something which they’re pouring themselves into (enjoying it along the way), and then just throw their notebook down, and scream, “Bullshit!” at the walls? Not that it really matters. Reality, it seems, has finally caught up with me. Who thought that this could last forever? What is it going to take for me to get this figured out? I wish there was a desert I could visit, or rolling hills which I could roam at night while screaming at the wind, and howling at the moon or clouded sky. More than anything, I want to have a little garden where I can grow tomatoes and chili peppers. I want to find excuses not to write so that I can just hang out in the garden and dig my fingers into soil and pretend that I’m alive. Which, to be honest, is a little weird, because I’m not that into vegetables. I guess I just like to see things grow.

I’m looking at the word count and realizing that if I could have just gotten in the flow while I was working on that stupid story, I might almost be close to done by now. I don’t know what the holdup is, to be completely honest. I know the story, almost like I was actually there. Almost. And even if it wasn’t burned into my brain, I have the story which I wrote half my life ago, which kind of lays the whole thing out for me. I even managed to solve the roadblock in the text which had been bothering me since I started to rewrite it. It was an elegant solution, altering the exposition slightly to turn it into dialogue. Maybe what’s killing it is that I’m trying to do too much. I remembered that I’d also written a story called Nic Buzz around the same time, though not a single copy of the original remains, and that since that revelation, I’ve been trying to figure out how to squeeze it into what I’m already trying to do. I would just jump right back into where I’ve left off, setting aside that notion for a little while, but every time I try to get myself back into it, I find that story which I have no idea how it went has left a giant hole just beyond the words which I have written. Like always, my cardinal sin appears to be overthinking everything.

So what’s a boy to do? I’m beating back exhaustion with silken bat wings thrumming in the dark of night, and only my tenacity is driving these words from within the whispers in my head through my fingers, and onto the screen before me. I want to just curl up into a little ball of safety, and sleep until the necessity of the real world has expired. There has never been a problem too large, in my opinion, that it cannot be slept away. But I know that this time I cannot simply ignore the demands of my responsibilities. This time I have got to make it work somehow. Both Bad Leon and my wife think that the answer is in brain-dead work, like a cashiering job or line cook, which I can leave at the door when my shift is over, and then come home with enough energy to write. But I have been in management too long to think that that’s an option anymore. If I’m going to work for someone who isn’t me, then I need to be in control of at least some of the variables in my working life. I despise working for people less qualified than me, and if I’m going to climb the ladder, I’d prefer to start somewhere closer to the top. It’s not that I haven’t worked my way up before, just that there’s a limit to just how much crap that I can deal with while I’m trying to get ahead.

Maybe I’ll stop writing this, and work on something more productive, like a love letter to Death. Courting the Grim Reaper has always been my secret ambition. Well, I don’t know if it’s still a secret if you tell everyone you meet, but I haven’t, until now, broadcasted my desire to the entire world. Some thought experiment that this turned out to be. More like a convoluted pep talk for someone who isn’t listening. But at least that I know that words are flowing once again, and though it’s true that the narrative voice between the story and the blog are slightly different, tonally, it’s still me who’s rambling on, and that should count for something. Maybe I could pop in the part about Applesauce and Abby, or that time when Crys and I almost died because she was way too drunk to drive. Or how her daughter stole those beers from us, which we had stolen first (or so the story goes, if I’m to retain plausible deniability), just so that she could share them with her stupid friends that weren’t us. Of course, if I get in too deep, I’ll just have to go ahead and write the book that I know that I’m not ready to tackle yet. I should probably get started before too long, before all my memories have dissipated, but there’s something which I want to do stylistically, which I know that I’m not quite good enough to actually pull off. At least, not yet.

I can’t believe I’ve written almost two thousand words in just an hour and a half. Turns out that when I’m typing at almost the speed of thought, I can get something accomplished. And now the thought has bubbled up which I want nothing more than to ignore, which is that I should really sit down and read this for the podcast version. Except that the calm and collected voice which is narrating this between my ears won’t sound nearly as impressive if it has to pass my vocal cords. I guess the audio version of this will just have to wait until I get around to it, which, knowing me, is probably somewhere close to never. And here I thought that I would wind up arguing the point with a little bit more passion. I suppose that the time has come for me to get back to work on that thing which I really wanted to be doing. Now if only I could manage saying that with even a modicum of sincerity, I’d be set. Just one more thing before I go: In the comments for this post (or on Facebook or Twitter), please let me know which of these photos you prefer for the cover image.

17298941736_3747acfde2_k
This one, which is both primal AND artistic…
or this one, which holds a slightly different perspective.
or this one, which holds a slightly different perspective.

 

Practical Ennui

The other night, I finally sat down to start working on the story which I promised you all last week. And you want to know something? It was kind of fun. I’ve been doing these columns almost daily for the past six months, and, though I like writing with such frequency, it’s not quite the same as focusing all my energy on a piece of fiction. With this blog, I can ramble on about whatever strikes my fancy, with no regard to what I wrote even the day before. But coming back to the same story day after day, worrying about continuity in events and tone, well, I’m more out of practice with all of that than I was with writing back when I reopened the Vaults in December. In truth, I’ve never really had to sit down and try to figure out how to keep a story going. Most everything I wrote before could most generously be defined as “Short Fiction”, apart from that poetry kick I was on for the better part of a decade. In all honesty, the last thing I wrote which was longer than a page or two was the novel I started when I was in the Eighth Grade (which I only did so that I wouldn’t have to be bothered with doing actual schoolwork). I’ve had a couple of friends tell me that my intransigence that year helped inspire an “alternative” track, and that there may somewhere be a copy of the babble which I penned so long ago. I don’t know whether I’d rather read it for nostalgia, or have it expunged from the physical world.

Then again, I still peruse the book my class made in the Third Grade, so I’d probably want to see it at least once more before I die. It was horrible, to be sure. I’d finished rereading the Dragonlance Chronicles, and thought that I was good enough to try my hand at fantasy. I drew some maps, and came up with a backstory which was, charitably, an homage of every tired and recycled trope of fantastic fiction that had ever come before. I was fairly proud of myself. But it’s hard to write with any sort of authority when you’ve only read about the things your characters are doing, and have not the slightest clue why coffee follows a night of drinking, or what drinking is even like, not to mention a complete lack of understanding of what hangovers are. I mean, I didn’t even start sneaking sips of my grandparents’ booze until my Freshman year of High School, and I didn’t get my first hangover until the first time that I drank Gin, nearly two and a half years later. I hadn’t gone out camping, or even built a fire. Hell, I wasn’t even allowed to play with knives, so the sum total of my experience with the swords which I was describing came from repeated viewings of Highlander. But I kept working on that book. Even after the school year ended, I kept plugging away at that story. My Grandfather took me on a trip that summer (mainly, I believe, to get me the hell out of the house, and give my Mom a vacation from me), and I packed my notebooks with me, and was writing every day.

I don’t remember when I stopped working on it, but I think it was at least a week or two before the school year started up again. By then, I was worried about taking Honors English, and hoping that maybe I’d have the chance (finally) to stop worrying about assholes and get down to learning. I should have known that High School would be just like Middle School, except all the jerks were far more practiced. And there was the distraction of the girls. By the time January had arrived, I’d all but given up. I was disillusioned with the entire experience of education, and my bi-polar disorder (still undiagnosed) was just beginning to come into its own. Don’t get me wrong: I’m thrilled that I never actually tried to get that piece of garbage published, but I’m still a little saddened by how easily I managed to give it all up. Looks like that’s not really a new development in the life of Mr. Batmart. Hell, the name Tex Batmart didn’t even come into existence until I had turned eighteen.

All of this cute, and, I’m sure, terribly informative, but if I can just take the tiniest of breaks from this ennui in which I’m bathing, I’d like to get back to my original point (hold on while I scroll up and try to figure out exactly what it was):

Yeah, I’m not sure that I actually had one. Writing is Hard, maybe? Or, I’m Wasted on Cross-Country? No, that was dwarves. Interesting digression: I think it was my Junior year in High School when the track coach approached me through a friend of my to see if I’d be interested in joining the cross-country team. He’d seen me (literally) running circles around one of his athletes as he’d been making his way around the track. I’d only been doing it because he was dating this girl who my friend was desperately in love with, and it was fun to show off and harass him. I politely declined the offer, as the Athletic Department was a bit more serious about their Anti-Drug Pledge than the Theatre Department or Debate Team, and I wanted to leave my options open. That, and I really didn’t relish the thought of intentional exercise. I rode my bike to school every day, and rode it home again (and due to the geographic peculiarities of the Island, I did indeed ride uphill both ways), not to mention walking almost everywhere else when I didn’t want to take my bike. But running for fun? What was the point in that? Plus, I would have probably had to give up smoking, and I’d only just started doing that for real (ah, back when every cigarette rewarded me with a Nic Buzz (and now I have another idea for a thing. Maybe I really will just go with Batmart Begins (not its real title), and just tie in all my old stories together like they were all on purpose), and I actually enjoyed smoking (not to mention that I looked 30% cooler) with my friends).

Photo by David Banuelos
If it wasn’t for that cigarette, I’d look like a total dork!

The Swirling Mists Of Fortune

Looks like my legs may be getting a workout once again. My wife and I have not won the lottery, so it looks like I’ll get to see just how good I’ve gotten at writing no matter what. I’ve submitted several applications and hope to hear back from at least somebody within a day or two. I may not have done everything by the book in my younger years, but a decade and a half of experience in the same field has made me somewhat of a commodity. Ideally, I’d like to just go into restaurants and tell them how to fix the things that they are doing wrong, but there’s already someone doing that, and he has got a camera crew. I suppose that if I had started this whole process a few months earlier, I might have been able to coast by as a cashier, but since I’ve left it until the last moment, I’ll have to jump right back in where I left off, at least in terms of responsibility (and pay). And I know that once I’ve gotten hired and get used to where I’m working, all of this anxiety will dissipate, as I throw myself completely into the task at hand. In addition, depending on my salary, I may be able to give my wife the same opportunity for joblessness that she has given me.

Well, that’s not entirely accurate. Actually, I suppose that it is. Whereas I have been writing nearly every day that I have been away from Blondie’s Pizza (discounting a reasonable number of days off and time spend on vacation in December), I’m sure that she will launch into an all-out assault on the apartment, and have it organized exactly how she wants it. She’ll have all the time she’s said she’s wanted to devote to her home and to her children. I give her about a month, tops, before she’s ready to get back to work. I am the type who needs to mull things over, chew on thoughts, and then explode in prose while seated before my laptop. Wildflower, on the other hand, just sort of rages at the various tasks before her until they disappear or submit before her mastery. It would be nice to have some money again. That’s what I’d have to say I miss the most since leaving my last job. It’s hard going from having enough to pay the bills and maybe have a little fun (time permitting) to trying to figure out how to make the magic work.

It used to be so much simpler, before I had people who were counting on me. One person bouncing from couch to couch isn’t all that much, but trying drag along your entire family just makes it that much harder. But I’m going to be positive today. I’m going to believe that it’s all going to work out like it should. I’ve been far more productive than I was the last time I renounced a gainful state of employment, and I think that it was necessary to get me writing again. I wish that the cost wouldn’t have been so high, but I’m doing something that I feel that I was meant to do. The last time, I got to spend six months bonding with my son. This time, I’ve been bonding with myself.

In retrospect, I probably could have phrased that better.

But I’ve rebuilt my writing muscles, and the only thing that I need now is a little inspiration. It’s easy to get trapped inside your own feedback of madness, and I may have mined most of what’s been hiding in my head. I’m impressed that it took so long. I figured that I would have run out of nonsense to spout weeks ago. Then again, I have written this same column probably five or six times, so I don’t think that I should be so terribly impressed. Yeah, I need some outside influence on my reality. Fortune favors the bold. That used to mean being the guy who threw away a career to jump toward his destiny, but apparently that now means making enough money so that I can feed my family. And I feel about the same way with the change in definition as I did when “literally” became “figuratively”.

My fingers are crossed.

In other news, yesterday I managed to rack up my 2,000th page view since December 7th. As a gesture of thanks, I reprinted an old tale of mine, and then promised to start working on a version that more closely showcases what I’ve been able to pick up since I first wrote it, which I will debut here in when I hit 2,000 views for 2015. That’s only 83 views away, so I had better get started on it, if I want it to be ready on time.

Great. Now, in addition to finding someone to pay me for doing something, I have to rewrite one of my favorite stories for all of you. It’s only 900 words or so now, and I’d like to make it a little longer. I think it’s time that I learn how to make a meal instead of just a snack-sized story. I guess this means that I will have to put myself back into the mindset of who I was when I wrote the damned thing, and from there, try to remember everything about the story. I guess the biggest thing which worries me right now (about Terracrats, not life in general) is that I don’t know if I’ll be able to maintain that youthful tone, or if I should even try.

It will probably be the victim of a gritty reboot.

Batmart Begins:

I glared down at the cherry of my lit cigarette, furtively glancing about in the fading light of this spring day. Anyone happening to glance this way would wind up seeing us for sure. I dropped the cigarette to the saltwater-soaked concrete and ground it beneath my boot, much as my ex-girlfriend had done to me not months before in lieu of a birthday present.

Damn. I was going for mockery, but I kind of like that.