Sunday, February 1, 2015

It Would Spit at Hurricanes


            It’s funny to think what becomes of a job. At first, the backroom looks like a dream you had when you were twelve and only half remember. Give it two months and you’ll dread seeing it because you know it means you’re worth 8 fucking dollars an hour to some shithead who’s driving around a new V8 whatever. Sometimes, the old CPUs get thrown out and you take them shooting with you. On the drive to the desert, you talk to the motherboards to keep them calm. You let them know that their processor children will be just fine, that everyone is going to make it in the end. Happy endings are a perfect pattern.
            All jobs are the same. It’s new, maybe even exciting, if you like learning new information, but eventually, there is nothing new to learn or, if there is, you don’t give a shit to learn it because it’s all under the umbrella of the Platonic computer knowledge. Eventually, you realize that everything is under that umbrella. All knowledge is a collection of trinkets on some overweight, decaying, feces-smelling mother’s shelf. She tells herself she keeps them around as conversation pieces, but who the fuck is ever going to visit her house? Her children don’t visit and she hasn’t had a lover in six years. She may as well not exist and those trinkets may as well be melted down and poured over her head, scalding her gray scalp.
            So, you wake up. Say, “I matter,” into the mirror. You post something on the Internet to be heard because your opinion matters because you are unique. You are the cracked Liberty Bell. You are the bed sheets that have period blood stained into them forever. You can show your scars to the world and they’ll notice. You’ll be revered. But you’re still worth 8 fucking dollars an hour the minute you clock in and this is defeating. Even if you made more than $13,000 in a year, you’d still have the same stress. It would just take on new forms. Instead of rent, you’re worrying about the dog that was turned inside out last night on the reservation. You’re concerned with not being able to shoot free-throws still. You want someone who actually loves you, who will want to listen to your bullshit for the rest of their life.
            The trick to relationships is not having them. Or at least keeping them vague. Hold off on communication for various lengths of time. Don’t just talk about your day, if you have to talk at all. I hear that the mystery is what entrances people. The newness. Be new or don’t be at all. It doesn’t matter to me. It doesn’t matter at all. Keep shoveling the ground where all your rent money will go. Get a better job. Get a kinkier lover. Find someone who doesn’t do anything with their day other than smoke pot so you can discuss ideas instead of people. Give up more frequently. Feel the meaninglessness of your life in the back of your eyes when you wake up hungover after buying some young girl’s drinks in false hopes of being between another person’s thighs. This is the key to life. Unbuckle your seatbelt every time you drive and throw your cell phone out the window the next time you’re driving on the 101.

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