After Dark: A Blast From The Past, Part Two

I’m going to start us out today with a post in its entirety. Part of me wants to just ignore it, and include something better, but I feel like it’s somewhat appropriate, considering my recent experiences.

Other People’s Blogs

September 24th, 2006

12:06 p.m.

Maybe I’m just jealous that my total views are still under 400, and comments under 15. And maybe I’m discouraged that aside from ONE person (thank you Eliza), all of my readers are people I have known forever (thank you everybody else). And maybe I’m just being super whiny today, and should just get over it. Perhaps (see what I did there? I’m using the same opening, just mixing it up with synonyms. Boo-yah!) when I’m famous and have to discontinue this blog because of all of the interest, I’ll look back at this time in its history and smile at the simple level of interest and expectation. Of course, I hope to counting a pile of money while I’m lost in my memories. Or maybe I could pay someone else to count it.

On a column note, read Jon Carroll on www.sfgate.com/columnists/carroll/  and check out his archived stuff. Or if you live in the Bay Area, just pick up a copy of The Chronicle at a BART station for a quarter and look in the Datebook section M-F. Wow. And I wasn’t even asked for this plug. That’s good news, though. Instead of being a sell-out commercial whore, I am mererly an Attention/Approval Slut.

Do you ever hate when you write something as a joke and like two seconds later, when you think about it, you realize it’s true? Not that that’s applicable right now. Pay no attention to the man behind the… oh hell, I don’t know… stack of cd’s.

Alright, so I’ll make you guys a deal: I’ll post giganto-blocs of Vault material in a more moderated presentation AND make an effort to deliver a quality blog on a semi-regular basis if you can convince some of your peoples to check me out. Cool?

Okay. Oh. Also, I need some ideas for stories. Please feel free to send me suggestions. Thanks.

 

As I said, it’s a little on the nose about things I’d rather not admit I feel, but at the same time comforting, because I’m in a better situation than I was eight and a half years ago (and I’ve got over 400 views in half the time! Suck it, Batmart from the past!). I know that at this point, page views are academic, as there is nothing that I have which I can interest any of you in buying, but I like to know that I’m not just writing into the vast nothingness for no other reason than my ego.

Aha! And You Thought I Wouldn’t Do It!

September 26th, 2006

12:01 a.m.

Tuesdays

Living out the lies in a

winter of my making

suppressing waking cries

until the dawn’s dark breaking

I hear the breathing in the night

and know I should be somewhere else

be someone else, not hurt her

anymore,

but I am comfortable until

the arguments begin… “Do you

love me?” she asks, knowing

that I don’t.

And then she tells me that she

shouldn’t waste her time on

something that’s not real,

and then she tells me that she’s

got a child somewhere,

and by the way, why can’t I

feel the same as her?

And I haven’t an answer to give her,

at least nothing she wants to hear,

and we wrestle back and forth,

wresting truths held by the other,

until she cries, and I hold her, and

we agree that we’ve fixed

not a single thing.

Lay in bed until the sobs are over,

need to get away, I’ll only hurt her more

and she deserves someone who’ll

actually love her.

Just like me.

I hate God’s sense of humour.

I included this because it sort of explains where my wife and I were at just before we found out that my son was imminent. We had only gotten together out of convenience, and it was beginning to show. And actually, based upon something that I included in the original blogs that I’ve left out in these, is that the conception of David William has yet to occur. It will happen soon enough though, as evidenced by the date of his birth.

The emptiness adentro

September 26th, 2006

3:22 p.m.

I hate arguments with the girlfriend. The language barrier doesn’t help, either. And listening to Elliot Smith and Stabbing Westward is not contributing to my sense of well-being. I know, I know, I’ve heard it all before: I revel in depression like others might enjoy the satisfaction of, say, joy. I have a concert poster of the Doors for the Hollywood Bowl show in ’65 just above my monitor. I keep looking into the faded eyes of Mr. Morrison and thinking December 2nd December 2nd December 2nd, although, to be fair, I don’t think I’ll be going to Paris anytime soon. Delusions of Grandeur… sometimes they’re all a girl has. By girl I mean tragically tormented sensitive poet. By which I mean me. Not that all girls are tragically tormented sensitive poets, nor I without singularly identifiable cash and prizes. It just sounded right within the context of the sentence. God, I’m overanalyzing again. Sorry.

This is what happens when I wake up too early, drink some beers ‘cos it’s my day off and I don’t really need to be productive, and kinda want to go back to sleep, but find something on the idiot box to watch while I’m messing around online, and then when I finally get to sleep, someone calls me less than an hour into by beauty sleep and… well, you get the idea.

Do you remember Doogie Howser? Every now and then, when you’re writing your blogs do you flash back to the end of that show? Didn’t think so. You’re probably normal. Or at least medium-well adjusted.

I still have to take a shower, finish a beer, stop by work and get out to The City. I can do all that in four hours, right?

It’s that overwhelming sadness and the knots and twists in your stomach like when you’re falling in love, only this time the butterflies are razorblades and the object of your affection is your nonexistence.

By the way, the show was AWESOME! Also, wow! It’s weird to see just how much of a sullen group I was back then. I wonder if I’ll look back on The Vaults and think the same. Note to self: Write more jokes!

Time for bed…

October 1st, 2006

2:55 a.m.

The fact is that I should be doing this every day. Not just blogging of course; that’s just a hobby. No, I mean writing. I still get some done, from time to time- mostly poems that I can bust out between work and sleep. But I think I’ve got at least a couple books in me, and I want to get them out before I get too old and bitter to do them justice.

Shut up Dave.

You too, Dave.

 

That last bit was just a snippet, but I felt like including it because at least it shows that I knew what I was supposed to be doing, all those years ago. As it turns out, I just need some tragedy and time for inspiration. Sadly (although the writer of those blogs might not agree), my quotient of tragedy would soon be on a downward trend. It’s one of the hardest parts of being a misunderstood genius: finding someone who loves you and genuinely wants nothing but to see you happy. It takes away the authenticity of the suffering, in my humble opinion.

 

Los Beatles- Podemos Solucionarlo

October 2nd, 2006

1:29 a.m.

The winter came early this year, bringing the chill of winds up off the bay, and flurries of leaves in long exodus from the safety of their canopy to the yards and streets below, only to be swept aside and trampled down by man and elements both. As I lay in my bed, pondering the likelihood that I might actually accomplish something today, I stare outside into a sudden storm and feel at home, though I am hundreds of miles away. The trees creak and struggle to sway, having lost flexibility in the hot summer months, now desperately trying to hold their ground against the onset of autumn. I look at my clock again. Only 10 in the morning. Too damn early. I’m going back to bed.

Okay, so it’s not either of the two stories I mentioned earlier, but good start, or crap? It’s hard for me to tell anymore.

Okay, so I promised a story that was actually something, so let me track down RoBG.

Okay. Found it. No making fun, I haven’t proof-read this in like 6 years. [Make it 15, now]

The Risk of Being God

It’s not about depression, or anger, or any of that standard bullshit psychobabble concerning unresolved issues, or one’s inner child, or anything else you care about. It’s a lot simpler, and impossible to explain. But the odds are in my favor, dear sweet innocent simple passerby, that is, should you not believe me before I’ve told my tale, that you will find that we are nowhere nearly as dissimilar as you may choose to hope. Indeed, dear friend, I think you’ll be amazed at how very closely our so disparately world-worn selves truly weigh against each other. But of course you can’t believe me. If it were any other way, I sincerely doubt that we’d have ever even met.

Before we begin, I should like to warn you of the Risks you take, in the event you find that you can hold yourself so far away no longer. Suddenly distracted, letting down your barrier of the empty pretense of a passive reader, you may unexpectedly discover that the more real to you that I become, the more it seems that you have never been. Never been any more than, with any luck (can’t tell yet- good or bad), a figment of my sweetest dream from which you know I’ll soon awaken. Remember: I am solid, true, empirical and infinite. And you, my child? You are merely but my shadow: you do not exist.

The exits are here and here and here.

* * *

For the fourth straight day, I deny the world my contribution in the hopes that God (or one of them, at least) will give me back my love. And for the fourth straight day, the distinctive sound of deitic chortling stumbles out from behind the empty hills, double-dog daring me to shed my pre-shrunk cotton-polyester boxers and black t-shirt reading “Roadkill Cafe- Montana,” to instead don a simple white robe and tie it tight with misery, to become another Job in this world that once again no longer seems to care. And so today, as like yesterday and those preceding, I graciously decline the offer to stake my sentience and mortality on some desert God nearing 60 centuries who has throughout this whole ordeal, shamelessly snickered in my ear, easily reduced (as is, say, a toddler) to reacting uncontrollably with glee to my plethora of “Funny Faces,” yet simultaneously deriving sadistic satisfaction from the witnessing of torture no more complex than the promise of a lifelong dream fulfilled, never to be received (proving beyond all doubt that God, before becoming God, must have either been involved in the S&M Industry, or else – and this I find more likely – spent His days as a High School English Teacher).

Besides, Job had faith. Me? Forget it. No way, no how, not a Snowball’s Chance In Hell. I mean, sure – don’t get me wrong – I believe in God (or, rather, that God (Jehovah) and all the others do indeed exist ). But faith in any of their “Supreme Plans”? Not a single drop… like bleeding a fuckin’ turnip. Unlike poor, trusting (quite possibly drunk) Job, I’m not willing to waste my mortal run this time around in blind service of a “Greater Force.” I’m more than justly convinced that ain’t not a single damned one of ’em that’s playing with a full deck. Then again, I’ve always had credibility issues with Supreme Beings who won’t even mock you to your face (“Ha ha, puny mortal!” and that sort of crap). And then again, of course, there’s always poor old Alan – a, For The Most Part, Very Impressive Being, who sits for all eternity behind his Commodore 64, watching most of us, quite a good deal of the time (the best he can do for being merely Sortanipotent), awaiting word from above (and occasionally the plaintiff wailing from below), to unleash the devastation of the Not Quite Mighty Smite key, reducing the victim to almost nothing, but without the common courtesy of disposing of the rest.

I really only put this in because I haven’t even thought about this story fragment in close to a decade, and it made me smile. If you want a look at the sort of thing that I was working on before the Great Purge, this is it. As I mentioned a little later in the ’06 blog, I never went any further with this, and now that I’ve read several other things that were similar to where I’d wanted this to go, I’ve decided to keep it firmly on the shelves. Still, it’s been fun to share with all of you.

The following, I’m including because it shows just how incomplete the conversions of the blogs were when MySpace packed them away. I have had to leave out a few that would have been hilarious, but were missing a key piece of information, like what I was doing, or how I was feeling. Here’s a good example:

My New Favorite Movie of 2006

October 7th, 2006

1:37 a.m.

So I bought this movie yesterday, and finally got to watch it today. Absolutely amazing! Check it out if you haven’t already. Hell yeah!

Okay. That’s it. Just sharing my love of

And that was it. I literally have not the slightest clue what I felt my favorite movie of 2006 was. And damn it, I am now kind of curious!

Jupitular Musings in the Key of Drunken Sorrow (Part Three)

October 17th, 2006

6:52 p.m.

You get no Chapter Three.

Chapter Three Blows Goats.

I have proof.

Let me edit the shit out of the last half of the chapter,

and maybe I’ll put it up in a little while.

Yeah, the second half is good.

Less awkward pick-up lines and bad Jell-O shot

conversations.

And actually, this is Chapter 2, part 2, really

So…. whatever.

Ugghhnnnn…..

So, for a little while, I’d been putting up various stories and poems. I’d already posted the first couple of chapters of this (a story I’d been working on while drinking beer at Jupiter in downtown Berkeley after work), and apparently was going to post the third chapter, but was a little underwhelmed with what I had written.

Rumors of my death may have been greatly exaggerated

October 23rd, 2006

10:48 p.m.

I feel negligent in my postings, so, just for you guys, I’m gonna write a poem on the spot. I apologize in advance if it blows goats.

Who am I to be unable to decide
when I have countless opinions about
how shit should go? He who has an
answer for everything, and I don’t know
what to say when she says she wants to
have my baby.
Is it that I cannot see myself a Dad,
or is it that I cannot imagine us
together long enough to raise it
right?
Eighteen years seems an awful long
commitment for two people I cannot
envision lasting through next year.
But I don’t want to be that guy who
can just walk out on the life of my
child. never to know him, to love him,
I don’t want to be my dad.

And the smile I doubt I’ll ever see stares
hauntingly up into my eyes,
the grip of tiny fingers ’round my own…
is anyone ever prepared to be
a father?

Did you know my mother almost
died when she was pregnant with
me? It’s true. My father tried to
drown her, drown us… Sometimes
I wish he’d succeeded. At least with me.
I never asked for this, so who am I
to bring a child into this world?

I don’t want to be
my father.

And that week, between the 17th of October and the 23rd, is when I found out that I was going to be a dad. All in all, knowing myself, I think I took it rather well. I had been on the way to being a father before, when I was engaged to La Diabla, but that whole situation ended badly, for prospective fathers and fetuses alike. Still, there was a certain change in the air.

And that’s it for this edition of Blast From The Past. The next edition brings us to 2007, and the rapidly approaching birth of my son. Join me next week, won’t you, for a trip back eight years into the past!

-Tex

Discarding Pretense

This week has kind of turned into a bust, as far as interesting happenings. It’s already Thursday, and we’ll be lucky to have done anything fun or worth writing about by bedtime tomorrow. This is what happens when I try to plan for things, and the reason why I tend to prefer to play things by ear. It’s hard for all your plans to come unraveled if they never existed in the first place. For those of you who were waiting for news of what David and I have been up to, I’ll just say that we’ve been playing video games and trying to relearn how to cover our mouths when we cough. One of those was easier than the other. Soon enough, the Minkey will be back in school, and I will have to drop off more resumes throughout my community in the hopes that I will have somewhere that I can spend my days. For a quick minute, it looked like I might have been able to get into business with my wife and a friend of ours, but it looks like no one wants my management expertise. But have no fear, gentle readers, Tex Batmart will rise once more to while away the waking hours making money for someone else.

I can feel the proximity of my dream, but I have felt that way before. Every time I try to make things happen sooner than they should, I wind up frustrated at the wait. In a non-religious way, I’ve come to find that everything happens for a reason, and if I’d made things happen according to my schedule, as opposed to being forced to bide my time, I would never have come to know many people who helped add meaning to my life, including the wonderful woman who became my wife. I am not a patient man, nor am I easygoing. I am easily irritated by stupidity, and I tend to ask much from those foolish enough to call themselves my friends. And my worst sin of all is that I am prone to digressive ramblings so convoluted that I frequently forget the point of my diatribe long before I have finished it. I don’t know, maybe I need another whirl working for someone else so that I can try to nail down patience in the face of unrelenting idiocy. It’s time like this when I miss the couple of good people who were kindly enough to employ me.

It’s been a longstanding dream of mine to go out in a blaze of glory on my last day of work; to just completely go off on the worst type of customer and let the remaining management pick up the P.R. pieces. But no matter how many times that I have wished it, I’ve never made it happen. There are times when I wish that I wasn’t such a professional. Even at my last job (the one I left almost three months ago, my wife would like to point out), where I was upset, and feeling undervalued, and a freakout on a rude and deserving customer wouldn’t be entirely out of line, I still held it all together, and continued doing the job I was paid for, up until the moment I clocked out. Heck, I’ve even had people from that company call to ask me a question or two (wrapped deep, of course, in small talk and checking up on how I’m doing), and while I could have easily told them what to do and with which tuberous vegetable, I still made it a point to help them as best I could. I’m not out to get a good reference from them, I simply want to leave the company in better shape than when I got there. And considering what was dragging it down, I don’t know how realistic a goal that has been.

I apologize for such a late column, but I was taking care of some family business, and the day sort of got away from me. I was tempted to put this column off, and just work on my Throwback Thursday post for Batmart After Dark this evening, but I need to keep on at this or I will never polish off all the rust which has ground me to a halt. Despite having gone off at some length about the insidious nature of planning out my future, I’m hoping to get fully back into the swing of things tomorrow with a rant about some minor injustice or another. I think I’ve been pretty good about trying to keep it light over the past week and a half or so, and that I’ve earned myself some grumbling. Don’t worry, though: I will attempt to call out the nouns which have done me wrong in some form or another in an irreverent sort of manner.

On a small side note, I plucked a hair from my upper lip, and as I glanced downward in the direction I had tossed it, I saw a tiny moth hovering just below my face. It may be that the time has come for me to divest myself of facial hair and stare down the world with the face of a tween again. And without the beard and moustache, I will be forced to let my wife trim what little hair remains on the backside of my head, so as to avoid appearing to be a particularly unattractive lady. Not that there is anything wrong with being a lady, unattractive or not. I simply find myself self-conscious of the man-boobs which I have grown through decades of neglect. My eyes are up here, thank you very much!

So, sit back, relax, eat some dinner, or whatever it is that you, my dear compatriot, are wont to do in the early evening. I’ll be starting to go through my old MySpace blogs again just as soon as we say goodbye, and I’ll see you all a little later this evening with some of the best of Tex Batmart in the year 2006!

-Tex

Presidents’ Week- Day Two

When I planned out this Presidents’ Week Extravaganza, I had thought that my son and I would be engaging all manner of crazy shenanigans, things too awesome to have been done in time to write my post for that very day (and I didn’t want to get into the habit of posting well past bedtime), so we were going to go and suck the marrow from life, and then I would tell you all about our exploits the next morning. It turns out, however, that David is very similar to me in that when faced when any free time, his body decides to succumb to some pernicious bug and sideline him for at least a couple of days. Maybe it’s because he knows we’re broke, and anywhere truly awesome we might go will cost money we don’t have. Nah, that doesn’t really sound like him. He probably just inherited my luck and sense of timing. Looks like I won’t have to worry about being a grandpa (well, from him) until he’s in his late twenties. Small miracles, I suppose.

Yesterday, it seemed that he was on the mend, but this morning he is all smoky voice and stuffed and runny nose. Luckily he has doctor’s appointment this afternoon for another prescription of his chill pills. I’m hoping that his doctor just says it’s some tiny virus that is going to clear up on its own, but if it’s something we can drown in antibiotics, I’ll be happy enough to oblige. I don’t like it when David isn’t feeling well, I mean, aside from the pleasant decrease in energy and volume. He just looks so pathetic, and I really just cannot bear to see my little man in pain. Not since the day he was born, and spend his first night (well, first week, actually) outside the womb in the NICU, connected by the belly button stump to an array of machines which helped him to not die. Most dads have said that they first felt like a father when their child grabbed on to a finger, but when David grabbed me, he was still kind of gooey, and I was in shock from having seen a twelve pound baby born in the natural fashion. But when I followed the team of nurses racing him down to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, and saw him laying there looking like Progeny of Borg, helpless and suffering, I knew that I would have given almost anything to free him from his pain and make him whole again. Of course, then I got to know him…

No, I’m just playing around. He and I butt heads over just about everything, but I catch rare moments of brilliance where it looks like he finally gets it, and I know that spending my time teaching him how to argue his case before me is paying off. He’s a wonderful boy frustrated by the apparent iniquities of youth, and if he had even an ounce of common sense, he would probably have better luck in trying to convince me. I know that he’s just a few months away from turning eight (and where have all those years gone?), and that I’m holding him to an impossibly high standard, but I’ve seen that he’s got the skills he needs to rule the world with an iron fist, so I’m trying to encourage that. Well, not despotism, but I’d like him to do well in life, at any rate.

I’m hoping that tomorrow we can go and do something somewhere outside of the apartment. We’re both feeling a little cooped up, and the fresh air and exercise will do us both some good. And I think my wife is off tomorrow, so maybe we can make a family outing out of it. It’s a shame that we don’t own a picnic basket, or we could make a day of it: pack up a lunch and head somewhere where there are no video games and spend some quality time with one another. Of course, all of this could be academic, as it’s been overcast for the past couple of days, and a chill has infused the air. Maybe we can just head on over to Berkeley, and grab lunch at Jupiter. I haven’t been there for quite some time, and I think by noon tomorrow that I will be in sore need of a quality beer and artisan pizza.

Actually, that sounds wonderful. If Flor wasn’t working today, and if David didn’t have his appointment, I’d suggest that we just go this afternoon. We need to get out and do more as a family (and my wife and I also need to get into a routine of having a date night once a week), and we all love pizza (and I love beer), so I think that this plan of mine has a shot of happening. My wife also wants to check out that 50 Shades of Grey movie, but I think we’ll save that for another day, one spent without our impressionable son. I don’t think that I want to expose him to that kind of garbage. I mean, from what I’ve read, the writing is abominable, and that’s not something you force upon someone that you love (I’m less concerned about my wife, as English isn’t her primary language, and writing so clunky that one could trip over it might actually make it easier for her to understand); also, I don’t think graphic presentations of that nature are something he is ready for. I mean, even the French think that children should be twelve years of age before being allowed in to watch it.

You may have noticed that I seem a little off. I apologize. My son is playing LEGO The Hobbit right next to me, and it’s just the slightest bit distracting. It does look pretty cool, though. I may have to kick him off at some point so that I can play. It’s nice that he’s getting finally getting into Tolkien, and he’s expressed some interest in checking out the book!

Anyway, so goes my life. I’ll see you all again tomorrow!

-Tex

Presidents’ Week- Day One

I remember years ago that any time that I didn’t have to be at school was the best time of the year. I could set my own agenda and lounge about or play as I desired, free from the stress that a structured environment would provide. Of course, it always seemed that my mom got a little out of sorts during these vacations, which I never understood until a couple of years ago. Don’t get me wrong: I love my son, and we have had a lot of fun together over the years, but I’ve come to appreciate the time we spend apart, and I’m not sure if we’ll still be on speaking terms when the week is through. We are able to stand one another in small doses separated by his mandated attendance in a place of learning. Any more than that, and we find reasons to start arguing, and within moments, one of us is crying. And there is nothing more saddening than a fat, bald man brought to tears by a little boy.

As fortune would have it, we were granted a brief reprieve from having to find some sort of entertainment. Sunday night, the Minkey came down with a cough, a fever, and a case of good behavior; in other words, he got sick, and hard. Poor little guy looked absolutely pathetic, and just completely drained of the overpowering spirit which is normally a trial to man and beast alike. I picked him up off the couch and carried him into bed, tucking him in beneath the covers and pouring a dose of cough medicine down his gullet. It was only five o’clock in the evening, but when I suggested that he might want to try and get some sleep, he didn’t scream, he didn’t argue, he just rolled over onto his side and closed his eyes. Of course, it was evening on a Sunday, so a quick run to the clinic was out of the question (not that a cough and slight fever is reason to go running right away), and we would have to make it through the night.

David may have closed his eyes for a bit, but he didn’t actually sleep, and shortly after I’d settled in beside him, he said that he’d like to watch something on the television. I scrolled through several choices on my Netlfix account until he found something that he was interested in watching. So we wound up checking out the Green Lantern animated series which I had noticed before, but never really given a second thought. I have to say, I’m kind of glad that my son is a DC fan, because no matter how hard I try, I just can’t seem to give a crap about the Marvel Universe. Don’t get me wrong: I’ve enjoyed the movies that they’ve put out, but I never got into the comics (even during the ubiquity of X-Men in the 90’s), and the animated series that I’ve seen haven’t really won me over. Even the LEGO Marvel video game, while interesting, to be sure, didn’t capture me in a nerdy state of rapture in the way that the LEGO Batman games are able.

My grandson, on the other hand, is Marvel fanboy to the core. He’s always glued to the screen while Avengers Assemble and Superhero Squad are cycling through on a seemingly endless loop of half-rate superheroism. This is a kid who will run around the apartment with a hanger held out like a bow, shouting “Hot Guy”. He will also grab one of his many toy shields and randomly bang into things, grunting “‘Merica!” The best he can do for my guys is lower his voice, get a constipated look on his face, and say “I’m Bat.” I’ve tried several times to correct him, and coax him into adding “man” but he doesn’t seem to find it all that important, and I don’t get much help from his parents, as my daughter couldn’t give less than a crap about spandex-laden tomfoolery, and my son-in-law is Captain Marvel through and through (and yes, I know what I just did there, my nerd brethren).

But despite the blood feud about imaginary role models between the older generations, my son and his nephew don’t seem have it in for one another. Actually, they are almost inseparable, and will roughhouse for hours, with only a few breaks in between to break down in booger-streaming tears and run to their respective corners. I think that my son’s illness has been harder on my grandson than it has been on my son. We’ve had to keep them separated, with my son under quarantine to protect our toddler grandson and pregnant daughter.

Yesterday, it seemed, David started to make a small recovery, as he had just the right amount of gumption to demand to be allowed to play on the Xbox, and it was everything that his mother and I could do get him to stay on the bed, and try and get some rest. There’s always that moment of shameful joy that a parent experiences when their child is sick. On the one hand, every strand of DNA is crying out for you to fix your child so that his genes may be passed along at some point down the line. On the other, for the first time in what feels like forever, your bouncing baby boy is finally refraining from the bouncing, and the house is at least twenty decibels quieter.

So we’ll get through today, as my son is on the mend, and try to think of something that we can do tomorrow. I guess that means that I’ll have to think of something fun to do tomorrow. Of course, it could rain, and we’d have no other alternative but to bundle up in front of the T.V. and play the Xbox until the batteries run out (which, judging by what the controller is flashing on the screen, could be sooner than tomorrow).

-Tex

A Little Quality Time

Let me go on the record as saying just how excited I am that David is out of school for this entire upcoming week. Seven days of quality time just the Minkey and myself every morning until my wife gets home. Whereas my natural inclination when faced with extra time upon my hands in to give serious consideration to the dying art of napping, my son, like sons since the dawn of time, has chosen to rebel against the things his father loves, and instead of trying to catch up on all the sleep he had ever been deprived of, prefers to run around the house like the bastard offspring of a hurricane and banshee. It’s not that I don’t enjoy spending time with the fruit of my loins, but he is a rather high-strung individual, and his boundless energy seems to be tapped straight from my reserves. I can’t really fault him for this, however, as I have it on good authority that this mutant power is hereditary. I suppose it’s only fair, but it’s not terribly convenient. I like to think that waiting until my late twenties to become a father allowed me to have a better perspective on life, and gave me a chance to mellow slightly. The downside, however, is that the inspiration of youth seemed to stave off the necessity of naptime, and my mellowing, while philosophically sound, has left me in my offspring’s dust.

So that means that when we wake up at the crack of dawn (because David has no issue waking up on days he doesn’t have to be somewhere at a certain time), I have to be ready to be coherent, instead of trusting on my autopilot to simply get him clothed, fed, groomed, and out the door to school in time for him to get there and start forgetting everything he’s learned. At least that’s what I imagine happens to him after the first bell has rung, based upon what he tells me everyday when I pick him up from school. Again, this is something I’ve probably passed along, as I can’t remember actually learning anything on any given day at school, and yet somehow I was ready every time there was a test. I think I may have learned through the process of osmosis, and I don’t think that I can judge him if he is able to do the same. It is irritating, though. I may be forced to proffer an apology to my mother for the seventeen years I spent telling her everything that she was doing wrong. I’m not saying that she wasn’t, just that living with me seems to take its toll on folks, and maybe she wasn’t all to blame.

So, besides laying prone before a Hi-Def screen and mashing buttons on a video game controller, what is it exactly that the kids of today are into? Maybe we’ll have some sort of competition where he reads a book while I run laps. I don’t know. Maybe I’ll take us somewhere fun and quasi-educational, like a zoo, or maybe we’ll just wander the streets of Not Quite Richmond, CA, and complain about how horribly clement the weather is. Used to be that a vacation meant that the odds of me having to put on pants were low enough I couldn’t limbo under them, but even if it was okay to stroll the streets in boxer briefs, I think my legs would blind oncoming traffic. So I’m going to have to put on pants and face the irritatingly perfect climate of the San Francisco Bay Area during winter. That, and try to find somewhere that wants to pay me for my willingness to spend a third of my day pretending that I wouldn’t rather be at home watching Netflix and avoiding people who I never wanted to have met. But I’m getting a little off topic here. The real quandary is how I can keep my son entertained without running myself ragged.

I need the exercise for my body and David needs to exercise his mind (I think he’s burning enough calories doing laps around the apartment). I suppose I could try to explain the rules of baseball to him, but we’d need several other people to make a decent demonstration of it, and that would mean subjecting myself to the presence of other children that I don’t feel a biological imperative to protect. In case anyone thinks that I am just hashing this out to pad the word count and try to knock off early, I mean, sure, that is a part of it, but I seriously am drawing a blank as to what interests that my son and I may have in common. I have no doubt that at some point in the distant past, some prior version of me would have loved hanging out with David, and they would have had the most amazing time running around like madmen and getting into trouble. The problem is that I don’t run so much anymore (to the point where I’d rather wait a half an hour for the next bus to come along than to hurt my knees trying to sprint less than thirty yards to reach the bus stop), and the only trouble I get into anymore is of a more financial nature. I’m trying to put my finger on the moment when my son and I began to drift so far apart, but I don’t know how close we were to begin with.

The last time I left a job and spent some time trying to find myself, my son and I bonded over Star Trek and Doctor Who. He was a year old, and easy to keep up with, and my knees and back weren’t nearly so shot as they are now. I don’t know. Maybe it’s time that I throw caution to the wind, and let myself go off in search of a little fun. Maybe while I’m trying to cram wisdom into my baby boy’s cabeza, he can teach me a thing or two about going with the moment and not worrying so much about the things that I cannot control. It’s disturbing to think that I may have room to grow and lessons left to learn. It’s a good thing my mom doesn’t read my blog, or I’d never hear the end of this. So maybe the only thing that I have to worry about is getting out of my comfort zone and rounding out my character. And here I was hoping that I could remain curmudgeonly forever, having mastered it at such an early age.

Here’s to a week of unexpected adventures and a gold mine of things for me to gripe about in a humorous fashion for all of you!

-Tex

The Greatest Display of Love

My wife gave me the greatest gift of all this morning: she let me sleep in. I was supposed to walk her to work because there aren’t any buses running at 4:30 in the morning, but as I collapsed last night around 6 o’clock with a brutal stabbing pain throughout my head, Flor decided that I probably needed to get all the rest I could, and called a taxi instead of trying to wake me up. Well, I guess she made a tiny effort to rouse me, whispering in general vicinity like a UPS delivery person with a package I’m expecting, but only so that she could say she tried to wake me up. It’s times like this that I know I really won the spousal lottery, and all I got her was some handmade jewelry from a vendor outside the Powell Street BART station. To be fair, she really likes her earrings, and we’re supporting small businesses with our hard-earned dollars.

I’ve been writing a lot about my wife these past few days, so please bear with me as I write about her just this once more before I start in tomorrow on the things which make me grumpy and my other regularly-scheduled ramblings. I know many of you are married, or in a loving (one hopes) relationship of one kind or another, so you may feel honor-bound to raise your voice when I say that my wife is just the best significant other ever. It’s okay. I don’t blame you. If someone I was reading claimed that their relationship was somehow better than my own (especially if my wife was reading it as well), I would call them any number of unflattering exaggerations just so that my wife could comfortably remain the queen of my own world. Not that that is what is going on with this, mind you. Despite the many links which I have sent her, and adding in a translation functionality, she never reads my blog.

She grew in place where reading was a luxury- something that only the rich people had time to waste upon. Combine that with her eyesight, and it’s easy to explain her friend-zoning of the written word. So I’ve decided to write her a love poem (which I can totally get away with because she won’t be reading this) to tell her just how much she means to me. If you’re daring, and have an understanding better half, feel free to read this to them (and say that it’s from you).

Quantifying Butterflies

I love you like the smoke

which follows beauty

round the bonfire which

burns in the summer evenings

I cherish you like

the final sip of Mountain Dew

that swirls around the bottom of

the nearly empty bottle

I need you like a animal

with cries out for freedom in

the night

And I cannot imagine

life without you

because true nothingness

is incomprehensible.

There, I got my chuckle for the day, and hopefully made all of you feel better about your own romantic gestures. Actually, that poem is fairly representative of my displays of love: It starts out sweet, but a little off-putting, gets fairly strange very shortly thereafter, seems almost a little insulting, and then gets all nerdy romantic. I don’t suppose I have to try real hard to figure out why I’ve been dumped more than once on my own birthday. I guess this kind of love takes a certain kind of woman to appreciate. I frequently go on at some length about the type of luck I’ve had in dealing with the ladies, but I have to come clean: I hit the jackpot when my wife agreed to date me, and for some (inscrutable) reason, she has never run away. In the spirit of true love, and to show that I am not a completely bitter old curmudgeon, I’m going to share with you a poem which I wrote for a friend of mine when she was getting married (one of the benefits of being a writer is that wedding gifts are fairly inexpensive, and yet treasured more than His and Her electric razors.

Crucible Of Love

Sing a sigh of sweet surrender

as you fall into his arms,

held by love and understanding

kept safe from doubt and harm.

 

Treasure daily the simple things

and love her more and more each day,

run wild through fields of butterflies

and leave the chance of happenstance

to take you where it may.

 

Two become one in the

crucible of love as

the daily trials will burn away

all that is impure.

 

And what remains is

love itself:

eternal, passionate, mundane.

 

This is the love

we dream about:

 

                Not fireworks,

                but fireplaces.

                Not grand displays,

                but consideration.

                Not co-dependence,

                but appreciation.

 

                This is the love

                that takes a lifetime

                to enjoy.

 

If you are looking to actually impress someone with romantic wordery, you may want to choose this last one, as it’s less an attempt to show off the twisted humor of Tex Batmart, and more a genuine outpouring of affection. For nearly a decade after the Great Purge of ’00, I was stuck in a sort of poetic hell, where the only way that I could get anything written was to break it up in bite-sized stanzas and make it look all fancy. I think that poetry appealed slightly more to me because there was less of an entire tale and more of a single emotion blown up so large that the beating of my heart could be seen from outer space. Well, that and Dead Poets Society, where I first discovered that language was developed for one endeavor: to woo women.

I was just scanning through my poetry to try and find the perfect piece to play us out tonight, and as it turns out, I don’t have a whole lot of happy love poetry. Some day there may be a market for angry protestations of romance, but today is not that day (maybe tomorrow). Anyway, I hope you enjoy this final poem, and have a wonderful Valentine’s Day:

Do Not Write Between The Lines

Meet my eyes for coffee

in the java-joint within your heart

and sit awhile over steaming

double grande mochas and

perhaps we’ll order belgian waffles.

 

Whipped cream, strawberries, and

a side of bacon – these are things

I love. Well, and maybe moonlight,

but I’m pretty sure that

that’s a given.

 

-Tex

(All poetry courtesy of Tex Batmart)

Romance on the Autobús

It’s a little sad that the trip to the doctor was about the most romantic outing that my wife and I have had in years. Well, not the ride out- that was the sort of pressured drudgery that no one can enjoy. But on the way back, we had the chance to take our time, as we weren’t going make it back in time to pick our son up from his school. It helped that our driver decided to unload everybody halfway through the bus ride back, and I convinced my wife that we could walk the little over half-mile distance to the Powell Street BART station. The deciding factor was the unknown wait on another bus, and not knowing if that bus would be held up by the same accident that our previous driver had described. So, of course, as we crossed the street and had passed the point of no return (to the stop), two buses pulled up, filled up, and continued down the route. “The exercise is good for us!” I said as my wife smacked my arm.

We passed a number of seemingly interesting eateries, but I was curious to see how my old place of employment was holding up. Flor wasn’t completely sold on the idea, but I told her that if we passed anywhere that she really wanted to check out instead, that we could eat wherever she felt like patronizing, and I’d just pop my head in to Blondie’s Pizza on our way down to the BART. Mollified, she took my proffered arm, and we walked down the streets of San Francisco, pointing out how much better Seattle had been. I suppose that she might not have truly felt that way, and was only offering support for my hometown as a gesture of goodwill, but I still prefer to believe that Seattle is superior in almost every way.

As we began approaching an area which I could vaguely recall, I pointed out the Regency Ballroom, where we had gone and seen Apocalyptica four and half years ago. Now that was a date night to remember. It was one of the few times where we felt like kids again. I don’t remember who the opener was, but they weren’t really all that good. I’d been excited to check out the co-headliner, Dir En Grey, as the reviews I’d read seemed pretty great, but when their set started, I vowed to find their sound guy and forcibly remove his testicles so I could plug my ears somehow. The levels were horrible, like running your entire sound system through a T.V. from the 1970’s, and then feeding that in to receiver and cranking it all the way up until your speakers had blown out. As some point, I noticed blood trickling down from my ears, and was begrudgingly impressed until I realized that I’d simply scratched myself while trying to plug my ears. My wife had been balled up and sobbing with a headache growing larger with every hateful note. It got so bad that one of the Event Staff came over to see if she was overdosing on something.

Somehow we made it through, and I prayed that the band which we were there to see could redeem the evening. Flor looked like the Oxford English Dictionary’s entry for despair. In those moments of sonic aftershock, I could almost hear her questioning her love for me. I assume those were her thoughts, because I couldn’t really hear a thing. And then Apocalyptica took the stage, and from the first hint of bowed sting, I could tell that they were actually professionals. I saw the difference on my wife’s face as well. Maybe it’s because we were getting older, but the first two bands had just been repetitive noise. But the soothing sounds of Finnish Cello Metal reached out to us, and inspired us to dance a headbanging Charleston. I don’t know, maybe it was a Mosh Merengue, but whatever type of moving to the pounding beat you’d like to call it, the both of us were swept away. And I don’t mind mentioning that I felt a little moist as I watched them bowing cellos which they held one-handed in the air.

We had a lot of fun that evening, and decided that we should do something like that again. We never did of course, until our third anniversary, when we went to the Whiskeys of The World Expo and drank our body weights in Scotch. But that is a topic for another column (probably the one I write a month from today). As we walked by the Regency, I asked Flor if she remembered the place, and saw the twinkle in her eyes as she responded that she did, and snuggled in a little closer to me.

The rest of the way home was fairly uneventful, and I still haven’t told you all what happened in the doctor’s office. So I’ll take you back a couple of hours and fill you in the state of healthcare in America:

Her doctor had referred us to this place in to get her checked out for a tonsillectomy. We’d thought that it would be fairly straightforward, but it wound up just another volley in the quest for medicine while being poor. This specialist decided that first we needed to do a sleep study, and try out a CPAP machine, and then, if that didn’t work, he’d be more open to taking out her tonsils. He made some valid points, and based upon the surgical risks which he described, I don’t necessarily disagree with his inclination to play it safe. I just wish it didn’t take a trip out to the boonies of SF to find out that we need to finish up more things at the clinic in Not Quite Richmond. As you can see, there still is nothing to report, so I apologize for making anybody worry.

I myself am going to take a nap, as I am exhausted, and my head feels like I’ve been listening to someone once described as a Japanese nine inch nails.

-Tex

And join us tomorrow,

Same Batmart Time, Same Batmart Channel!

If Armpits Had Noses They’d Be Eagles

Pardon the title, it’s a play on words in Spanish. My wife and I have been able to have a wonderful morning with our son as we’re getting him ready for school, and then heading off to the city to go to her doctor’s appointment. For the first time since our vacation, we’ve both been awake and in the apartment when my son has woken up (normally my wife is at work), and it was almost magical how we were able to share a happy moment with one another. Our son in law is going to drop him off at school, and we’ll be starting our commute shortly.

There won’t be a regular column today, as I’ll be gone for most of the morning and afternoon, but last night I posted The Best of MySpace, and this evening, I’ll have an update on how everything has gone. And don’t worry: from what I understand this is just a preliminary checkup, so no one is going under the knife today.

Have a great Friday, and I’ll see you again this evening (except for our readers in the U,K,, whom I will not see until tomorrow)!

-Tex

After Dark: A Blast From The Past

So I’ve been going through my old MySpace blog this past week, and have managed to put together a little tour of my life beginning nine years ago. Enjoy!

i hate time

March 27th, 2006

2:46 a.m.

I wish I didn’t have to work tomorrow… today… whatever. I hate time. such b.s. I wish I didn’t have to work.I’d just sit at home and drink, write and smoke cigarrettes until I passed out, then start again. maybe I’ll take the banderhoos’ advice and start posting my stuff tomorrow… today… whatever. I remember back when a day used to last seven… or eight…

glad to be rid of those days….

I think I’m happy today…at least not pissed off.

i dunno.

anyway, going to go to bed now.

more tomorrow.

As you can see, my I was a little more freestyle at the time… Sadly the sentiment has remained pretty much intact over the years.

La chupacabra vive!

March 28th, 2006

1:34 a.m.

So my ex-girlfriend’s son just turned 19 on Monday. Jesus… Makes a man feel old. No, he’s not my son… biologically impossible and all…

Hell of a kid… I miss him. Aside from the vast collection of writing spawned from that era, I’d say getting to watch him become a young man was the most rewarding. And like I told him once, if I ever have a son, I hope he is just like Caleb.

On another topic: I hate my job sometimes. Not the job itself, exactly, just some of the morons I work with. I’m not going to name names, but it feels like I might be better of[f] working with goats and monkeys… and then I could train the monkeys to ride the goats.

Attention:

You may have already won a goat!

The bit about goats was inspired by something Fed and I were joking about when we lived together in Open Air Shopping Mall, CA. And my son has actually wound up quite a bit like my ex’s son. There are many worse people to emulate.

Not all my posts were about my life, however.

Charles broke the cycle!

March 29th, 2006

9:51 p.m.

Way to go Charles for breaking the 6 and 1/2 yr. cycle of sexlessness!

And I’m sure he’s thrilled that I’m bringing it back up again. Sorry, Chuck!

Beware the wrath of angry drunkards!

April 12th, 2006

12:52 p.m.

Okay, so El Mateo is hella pissed off. My roommate (well, I have 2, but only the male is an incurable ass) has decided to be a dickfor and try to f**k with me. So I figure he’s gonna have a great time come the 1st when he either has to move the f**k out or pay for the whole damn place himself.

okay, so I feel better now.

Anyway, I’m in the middle of playing a hella addictive RPG, so I gotta run,

mas cuando tengo tiempo.

Okay, a couple of notes with this one. This was the last time that I was living with anyone who wouldn’t someday be my wife. This dude moved his girlfriend in like a month after he moved in, and then they brought their dog, almost getting all of us kicked out. Also, wow! I used to have time to play video games. It was probably something on my PS2… Legend of Dragoon, maybe? Also, nothing was ever really resolved until later that year, but on the upside, I started seeing my future wife socially less than two months later. I mention socially because she was my subordinate at work, and we would have both gotten into trouble had our secret come to light.

Life and its nonlinear implications

April 14th, 2006

11:36 p.m.

So i just heard from this amazing girl I used to know back when  i knew everything (high school). She is still as charming and pretty as she was back when I was an idiot. I am smiling. Maybe life hates me less than I had previously thought….

There is a downside, of course, of being cryptic. I have literally no idea who I was referring to. Since going back through all of these, I still have no clue whatsoever. But for that moment in time, a girl that I’d known nine years before (double that now) made the hell out of my day.

what i know to be true

April 21st, 2006

5:20 p.m.

i am the jelly in the doughnut of truth. talk to fed if you want to know. anyway, i’ve decided to give up the search for romance.if it wants to head my way, cool. if it wants to sneak up behind me and smack me on the head, awesome. but i’m not gonna put myself out there to be crucified on the lumber of betrayal… more later…

i need my own computer…now to watch the hockey

Even worse than cryptic social media nods are pseudo-philosophical nuggets of truth. “i am the jelly in the doughnut of truth”? What? Also, apparently this was when I had to do all my MySpacing in the Internet Cafe in downtown Berkeley.

absinthe is fun and educational

June 3rd, 2006

12:38 a.m.

okay. this is pretty neat. when i get my raise, i am so buying some of this for myself.
Today’s Topic: Friends

I’m not drunk enough yet to be telling all of you that I love you, so fucking forget about it, but I will say that run-on sentences are my all time favorite. Bonus Points if you remember the classic “Great American Novel Which Will Get Me Out Of My House Before I Turn 18” (involving lesbian goldfish). Okay, I was reading a lot of Tom Robbins at the time, and it sounded about right.
    I apologize in advance for any spelling errors which may occur- I refuse to edit. I’m on a roll, here.
    Anyway, friends.
    Thank you to those who have stood by me when I doubt that I deserved it, and many debts are owed to those who, regardless, wished me well. My gratititude to those who have inspired me, and {insert synonym for “thank you” here} to the asshole who convinced me to move down here.
    Okay, that’s enough of that.

    SAYING OF THE DAY:
    “Behold, I send you out as geeks among the nerds.”

    MATT WORD OF THE DAY
    futilaerobics- (n) the exercise in futility

    No more of the Days….

    MIZTLE’S:
                WHAT THE FUCK……  
                                           MAN?

    Damn tweeeeekers at it again….

    okay, I’m done.

    NO COMMENT.

    GRRRRRR….. FUCK OFF!

                            RANGER BOB FOR PRESIDENT ’08

Imagine, if you will, a world wherein this was an acceptably written blog entry. This was close to the halfway point of the Desert Years, and it shows. Just reiterations of the greatest hits I replayed over and over again for myself, punchlines to jokes which were only funny to kids strung out on drugs. I stand by the Word of the Day, though.

I’m getting old. Man.

July 7th, 2006

6:01 p.m.

So it takes me almost a whole hour to get out of bed in the morning now. I have my grandfather’s knees, I somehow banged the hell out of my elbow on the wall when I was sleeping, and I have to hold my lower back when I stand up from a long convalesence in any type of chair or sitting apparatus. Well, I can’t be that old, I still can’t get to sleep before dark, no matter how exhausted I am. Old people would be asleep by now. Maybe I’m just midlife. Hmmm, I really kind of want to have a Kick-Ass crisis. The problem is that if I date a woman half my age… well I’m only 26, so that’s just wrong… what’s 2/3 of 26? Is that less creepy? Fuck Math.

So I’m gonna go do this thing next weekend, and it’s a surprise, so I can’t tell you. But it’s gonna be cool. I might even take pictures.

Okay, whatever, I can tell you’re not interested.

So I need to get a new computer and some internet access of my own so I can inflict these on everybody more frequently.

News on the Book:

Did I mention I’m still working on the Book? Right now I’m picking out music for the film adaptation. Kinda want to end it with “Blood and Fire.” Think that would rock. Too bad I’m not famous already, with a rapport with my editor so that I could just summarize the novel and get an advance so that I could quit my job and just fucking write the thing. Of course, if I were a famous writer…

Not your problem!

I hope everyone has had a fun however long it has been since you last sat through my rantings.

((Stole the Sidebar from a friend) Just so we are all on the same page, I have ceased droning on about the Book)

Okay, gonna go read my friend’s blog now. Maybe even get me a subscription. Boo-yah!

Until next time, Drink Hella and Don’t Drunk Dial Me!

Unless you’re cute.

And single.

No boyfriends and/or husbands.

Legally separated is okay.

I’m going now before I get myself into trouble.

The book in question is something that I’ve been specifically not working on since 2001. It’s the story of all the fun adventures that I somehow survived between 1997-2001. Since that was posted I’ve written about two pages of an outline and some character notes. As everyone can see, I’ve felt like an old man for practically forever. I have left in the boo-yah and other embarrassing nonsense as a cautionary tale to myself in 2015. Stop trying to be cool! As for the “this thing”, again I have not the slightest clue… Dear God, I romanticized the hell out of this in my head when I decided to start up my current website.


Poet’s Heaven

July 24th, 2006

10:18 p.m.

So I think I’m going to poet’s heaven when I die. That, or eternal damnation in Boise…
On a side note, I’ve decided that being a chunky monkey isn’t all bad. I mean, I’m rarely cold come the winter months.
Oh.. so that secret mission of mine was to go to Seattle last weekend for my mom’s 50th birthday. Awww…. I know, I’m sweet. She said it was the best birthday present ever, but to be fair, this is the first time in 26 years that I’ve remembered it.
Beers are good food.
Look for Ranger Bob to make a comeback in ’07.
I want to be in love again. Well… reciprocated love, anyway. Hell, I’ll take married love, again…

I’m moving this month. I don’t know where to. Anyone got a couch?
Something more eloquent next time, I promise.
Or the time after that…

I edited out half of this post, as it was nonsensical, at it irritated me. So apparently “this thing” was doing something nice for my mom. Go figure. As I wrote in today’s column about love, it took a while to find my footing with my wife. Part of this was to keep up appearances to the handful of coworkers who were “in my extended network,” and part of me, I’m sure, was genuinely longing for the butterflies.,

Bargaining With Bi-Polar Bears

August 20th, 2006

8:18 p.m.

How is it that the world can seem so cold in the California sun? Feel so empty surrounded by my friends, and so meaningless when I’m working somewhere where I’m doing what love (no pen in company ink jokes) (it would take away from the dry sarcasm)? Okay, so my work is not that which I’d envisioned….. ever…… but I it’s not shoveling shit (literally), so I suppose it can’t be entirely terrible. I can’t wait until my manic swing so I can actually get some shit done- this depression shit is fun for self-abuse (I’m en fucking fuego with the D.E.’s!), but notably inconvenient for accomplishing anything.
I am house/dog sitting this weekend for my best friend while he’s off watching kick ass baseball, and generally not working. Lucky bastard! Although, on the plus side, his dog stopped barking at me sometime this afternoon. That’s a start, right?
I have come to realize that I have no life.
I work 45+ hours a week, often with mixed shifts, and rarely have my days off together. I talk to my two best friends about 4x/wk, my mother about 5x, and see my lady-friend once or twice. God… for the most part, I’ve even stopped drinking. Gotta remedy that shit.
But, to address the title of this epistle, I guess I won’t be bargaining with the BPB’s anytime soon. Last time I did that was Winter ’96, I couldn’t write for a month and a half (of course, that might improve my productivity at this point), and I wound up dating a Whale’s Tail (Not her real name) (Also, not an accurate representation of her physical beauty)(Of course, I am trying to protect my image, so I am unlikely to accurately represent any of the physical properties of my ex-girlfriends)(except for Desert Tiger, she had a booty hotter than a slutty Latina pop star). Wow. This paragraph is really, actually very small.
I’m going to go get food now.
Don’t die. (also, sort of for me)
(well, more TO me).

This is the first mention on any platform that I’ve made about Flor (my lady-friend). I had just recently gotten another promotion at work, and the hours were starting to pile up. I was still on the hunt for somewhere new to live, and had to be out by no later than the second week of September, 2006.

Would you like to ride with Batmart?

September 22nd, 2006

10:30 p.m.

Found out my paternal grandparents are dead. That’s cheery. I also managed to track down my dad’s phone number though as of yet I am still too chicken shit to call. What do you say to a man with whom you’ve never even spoken? “Hey dad, it’s your son. You know, the one you’ve never met because {insert parental bullshit here}? Just saw Grandpa died. Bummer. So anyway, ever thinking of leaving Idaho for awhile and coming to visit? Didn’t think so. Well, good talking to you. Yeah, we’ll keep in touch. Yeah, good talkin’ to you too… Dad. Yeah. Bye.” Click.

And that’s the version in my head that goes well…

I never got to know my dad. He and my mom divorced shortly after I was born. Apparently, he didn’t want kids, and tried to kill my mother while she was pregnant with me. Of course, I’ve heard only one side of the story, but if bi-polar disorder is hereditary, then I guess I can’t deny the possibility. I don’t know. It’s not my job to play apologist for my folks. Nor my son for me. Not that I have one. I almost had one. Once.

Did I ever mention that I hate ex-call girls from Panama? I hate ex-call girls from Panama!

Bi-Polar Disorder. Department of Redundancies Department. Assisted Living. Okay, that one’s a little abstract. Sorry.

And sorry for the meloncholia. Just need to get it out from time to time.

Same Batmart Time Same Batmart Channel

I know this one is a little bit of a downer, but I found the topic wonderfully juxtaposed against the knowledge that around this time, I had the very beginnings of a son. And also, that I never got to speak to my own father. Too many old wounds from before I was even born.

I’m going to leave you all here, as even though my new content is negligible, I’ve still given you quite a bit to read. This collection chronicles my life from the beginning of my MySpace blog to the moment (more or less) when I began to be a dad. I’ll do up the next part (Pregnancy and Other Mental Illnesses) for next week.

Until then, thanks again for reading!

-Tex

Same Batmart Time, Same Batmart Channel

Once Upon A Time

UPDATE: I’ve gone through and fixed a couple things now that my computer isn’t screaming at me about needing to restart.

It’s that time of year when the cloying aroma of love permeates the air, and otherwise happy enough people become obsessed with trying to plan the perfect romantic encounter. Ultimately, everything goes sideways, as someone takes too long getting ready, thereby causing the couple to miss their dinner reservation, or someone else just can’t hide the look of disappointment at the news he’s going dancing. We’re all so worried about getting everything right, that we usually never do. I’ve never been so let down as when I’ve tried to set up the perfect evening, and usually my wife and I need at least a week or two get back on speaking terms. It’s not that we don’t like romance, or going out for a fancy evening on the town, but after a week of all the downsides of the adult world of which no one warned us, the last thing we want to do is take another shower, get all pretty, put on our Sunday best, and spend at least an hour just getting to where we’re going. Speaking for myself, at least, the most romantic thing that my wife could do for me is set our son up on the couch, slip into something more comfortable (like sweatpants and one of my Doctor Who T-Shirts), and snuggle up against as we settle down for a full night of uninterrupted sleep. I’m getting seriously excited just thinking about it.

For most occasions, my wife has let me know that she doesn’t want us wasting money on things for each other that we don’t need. This gift prohibition applies to Christmas, Birthdays and our Anniversary. But the most forbidden holiday of all is Valentine’s. True to her word, I’ve yet to get a present from her on any of these occasions, but I myself am unwilling to take the chance that it’s still just some sort of clever ploy, and spend at least tens of dollars on her. She protests that I shouldn’t have, and that I am wasting what little money that we don’t have, but I always notice when she wears her jewelry, or sprays on her perfume, and on those very special days, when puts on those really sexy boots with the buckles and the zipper. What can I say? I’m still a hopeless romantic poet in the body of a curmudgeon, and despite her protestations, I know that she likes the little quantitative displays of affection. I don’t know that I need a certain moment to tell her that I love her, as that’s not something that I ever feel peer-pressured into telling her. As a matter of fact, I imagine that she’s grown a little tired of me telling her so many times, but I can’t bring myself to tell her any less. Love is what love is and anything that I can do to bring a smile back to her face is more than enough for me.

When we first got together, it seemed like something to help us pass the time. I was somewhat prettier back then (with a tiny bit more hair upon my noggin), and coming out of an unsuccessful attempt at a relationship with someone else, and she was working two jobs and living with her brother and for some reason, interested in me. On our first date, I told her everything that’s wrong with me, trying to take heed of lessons I’d spent a decade trying to ignore, and in return (I found out later), she thought that I was trying out some hitherto unknown form of gringo flirting. We usually got together a couple times a week and drank horchatas and washed my laundry (what can I say? I know how to show the ladies the best of times), while I attempted to show off my burgeoning bilingualism and mad poetry skills. I was aiming for Pablo Neruda, but probably ended up closer to a Spanish Edgar Guest. But something in my mangled words or bitter humor won her over (or at least convinced her that I was the lesser of two evils), and she agreed to split expenses and find a place where we could shack up with one another. It wasn’t the grand romance that either of us sought, but it was better than just looking for a roommate, and it was only supposed to be a temporary thing, as what we had wasn’t really love, just similar enough interests for the time being.

And then someone came into our lives, and we had to take a long, hard look at one another. She told me I could leave, no strings attached, and I countered with how I grew up without a dad. We argued back and forth for three quarters of year, and then time was up, and our decision had been made for us. I’m not saying that our baby boy fixed everything between us, but with the option of a quick escape retired, we came to look for better reasons to stay with one another beyond the obligations of shared parenthood. It was a year after the birth of our son that I came to realize that I might love her. On her birthday that year, she gave me the ultimatum. It wasn’t how I’d imagined that some liberated lady might propose to me, but she made me realize that I’d been dodging the question like there was a war on. And yet once more, she gave me a way out, told me that we’d still be friends, and that I’d have as much time as I’d like to spend with only son. So, in a moment of either pure bravery, or terror in the face of change, I told her yes, and we set a date for sometime around St. Patrick’s Day.

We were married on the thirteenth day of March (a Friday, as I recall) in a civil ceremony at the Oakland courthouse. My best friend and his brother came, as well as my mother and grandmother. Even my step daughter was in attendance, although she had no interest in participating. I was nervous and excited and coming to understand that the butterflies saved themselves for this day and this moment with her. It took until my wedding day to realize that I was head over heels in love with my wife. Every day I find I love her more and more, and am less able to imagine a world in which we are not together. We argue, we push each other’s buttons, and we say things we find quite difficult to walk back. And yet I still melt every time I make her smile, and she hasn’t killed me yet. I  wish that I had several million dollars so that I give her everything that riches can provide, but the only things that I have to offer are my unfaltering love and a rambling way of writing.

-Tex

(Gosh this room sure got dusty all of a sudden)

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