f0rrest: (kid pix w/ headphones)
Back in 2016, when I was 25 years old, I was living in one of those single-wide mobile homes perilously held up by stacked cement blocks, one of those ones with the cheap vinyl skirts they wrap around the bottom to hide all the duct-taped plumbing and rotted-out wood and raccoon colonies and maybe a dead body or two, because who knows what was actually going on under there. I may have flirted with the dark abyss, but I sure as hell did not want to crawl into it to find out what was inside. My life philosophy at the time a laissez-faire mixture of red wine and nicotine clouds and pixels, so I didn’t even care about much of anything, to tell you the truth. In fact, the rent was so cheap at $650 a month that when the landlord originally showed me the property, I immediately said “Where do I sign?” and moved my wife and three-year-old daughter into the place without even so much as a basic cursory inspection, driven mostly by the fact that I was destitute both philosophically and financially, answering phones for a coffee company for like $14 an hour and binge drinking every night. I just wanted a stable roof over my family’s head, a place that wasn't in an apartment complex, a place with a yard, with some level of privacy, a place where I could play video games, drink wine, and blast super loud music while chain-smoking cigarettes outside without someone filing a noise complaint, and this super cheap rundown trailer from the 80s checked all those hedonistic boxes. 

But as it turns out, skipping the cursory inspection was a big mistake, because, as I would come to find out years later, the place was a deathtrap, and I learned this the hard way, or, well, my daughter did, when the roof in her bedroom collapsed.

It’s hard to believe that almost a decade has passed since I first moved into that shithole, because I remember it as if it were yesterday. My daily routine started in medias res, do something with my daughter after work, pour my first glass of wine around 8 p.m., finish my seventh by 2 a.m., pop a few Benadryl to fall asleep, drive to the call center six hours later, repeat. I would drink so much the night before that I was pretty much still wasted the morning after. My skin was always clammy and pale and my eyes were raccoon eyes. They say men between the age of 20 to 30 are in their prime, able to muster almost supernatural levels of strength, persevere through any hardship by sheer force of will, but I spent whatever supernatural strength I had just getting out of bed in the morning with the worst hangovers known to man and then somehow driving five miles through busy morning traffic all without getting into a single car accident despite the fact that I was nodding off behind the wheel the whole time. Half the time, I wouldn’t even remember driving to work, I’d just appear at my desk in the call center, as if I had somehow teleported there, taking calls in this autopilot-like daze. “Thank you for calling Keurig, my name is Forrest. May I have your first and last name, please? Thank you. And your email address? And your coffee maker’s serial number? Thank you again. And you say your coffee maker is short-cupping? I understand. I know that must be frustrating. We’ll have to do some troubleshooting, so please be aware that the needles inside the machine are very sharp, but could you please gather a paperclip and small measuring cup, then we can get started.”

And this worked for me somehow. I reached a certain level of homeostasis. I made around $1,800 a month, $650 of that went to rent, $300 went to utilities, food was paid for by SNAP, a couple hundred went to things for my daughter, and whatever money left over went to Marlboro Lights and Liberty Creek Cabernet Sauvignon, which was the cheapest supermarket swill wine money could buy at the time, at like $8 per 2-liter bottle, which, at 30 proof, was also the most bang for your buck in terms of getting absolutely shitfaced as quickly as possible, outside of just drinking straight liquor, which I never had the stomach for. Back then, when I was 25, I was still a child, singularly focused on myself, and whatever seemingly grown-up big-boy shit I did do was only done to maintain my comfortable homeostasis. I knew I had a drinking problem, but the negative consequences were not severe enough for me to take it seriously, especially since the euphoria after a few glasses of wine was so strong that it felt like I could not live without the stuff, like life would be just a boring slog without my Cabernet. And there was an identity aspect to it as well, because I thought drinking was super cool, and I even thought that having a drinking problem was kind of cool too, like it added character in some way, a sort of tortured-soul aesthetic. When I drank red wine, I felt like some sort of vampire sophisticate. I loved the whole ritual, the orbed glass, the twist of the wine key, the pop of the cork, the glug-glug of the pour, the exotic aroma, all of it. I would hold that first sip in my mouth for like a whole minute, just swishing it around in there like a mouthful of blood. And after a few sips, I would go outside and sit on the small uncovered wooden steps that functioned as my porch, to smoke cigarettes and listen to super loud music, bringing my orbed glass along with me, because music just hits different and cigarettes just taste better when you’re wasted, and that’s a fact.

After my daughter went to bed, I would sit myself down at my computer desk with a glass of red and boot up a video game. I would play Final Fantasy XI or The Elder Scrolls Online or some other life-suck type game, just getting totally fucked up and lost in those virtual worlds. Eventually, I started joining a Discord server with my old friends from high school, which only made my drinking worse, as we’d all drink and get fucked up together. A sort of digital drinking culture evolved, to the point that, for a few years there, we would be in that Discord server every night, drinking to the point of blurred vision and slurred speech, playing our preferred game of the week, be it Monster Hunter World, Tekken 7, Risk of Rain, Counter-Strike: Source, Diablo III,  King of Fighters XIII, or whatever, just yelling and laughing and trolling the shit out of each other, sometimes to the point of bitter rivalries, weeks-long feuds, all settled with our preferred choice of alcoholic beverage and controller. There was a real sense of community there, built on old friendships and video games and, most importantly, alcohol, because it was weird when someone wasn’t drinking while everyone else was, like you couldn’t connect on the same existential plane or something if you weren’t basically blackout drunk. It was the same sort of peer pressure you might experience in high school, just carried over unspoken into adulthood.

Between rounds of whatever we were playing at the time, I would step outside and smoke a cigarette or two, making sure to bring my wine glass along with me, because after I got my first taste of blood, I could not stop. The moment I could no longer taste the aftertaste of that bittersweet earthy red, something like anxious dread would creep in, a persistent fear that the night would end, that the euphoria would fade, unless I kept drinking, so I would drink and drink and drink, a crimson tide flowing down my esophagus every minute of the night, even when I was outside smoking. And to make my outside-smoking excursions more entertaining, I would play music from my phone’s speakers, and I would literally dance and sway out there in my front yard, sometimes singing at the top of my lungs. 

This is the night of the expanding man
I take one last drag as I approach the stand
I cried when I wrote this song
Sue me if I play too long
This brother is free
I'll be what I want to be


Back then, my favorite band was Steely Dan. It all started when I heard the song “Peg” on the radio one day. I had heard the song before but never really paid much attention to it until one day, when the stars aligned, when it came on the classic rock station and I happened to be in just the right mood. The song resonated with me. The downtown strut of the electric piano, the intricate bounce of the bassline, the bitter darkness hidden within the joyful melody, that rich baritone background vocal by Michael McDonald, all the crazy guitar shit going on that you don’t even notice without specifically listening for it. It’s just a fantastic song, one of the greatest pop tunes ever written. It got me obsessed with Steely Dan, head over heels for their whole dark-irony-hidden-behind-layers-of-smooth-jazz sound. They had that whole anti-hipster thing going on too, which aligned well with my own anti-hip contrarian attitude. Of course, being an anti-hipster is actually just another flavor of being a hipster, perhaps the worst kind, but that didn’t stop me from going through Steely Dan’s entire discography, repeat listening to each album, falling in love with songs like “Only a Fool Would Say That,” “Bodhisattva,” “Rose Darling,” “Kid Charlemagne,” “Gaucho,” and “Your Gold Teeth II,” which, if you’ve been rolling your eyes at the Steely Dan stuff thus far, is probably the song you should listen to because it’s just straight-up poetic and beautiful, one of their few uplifting songs, musically transcendent almost, so much so that if you don’t like it, then there’s a good chance you just don’t like music, period. But back then, “Your Gold Teeth II” wasn’t my favorite song by them. My favorite song was actually “Deacon Blues,” a song that sounds like the inside of a smoky underworld dive bar, a place where the tragically hip and the perpetually misunderstood come together to drink their lives away.

Learn to work the saxophone
I play just what I feel
Drink Scotch whiskey all night long
And die behind the wheel


Back then, Steely Dan was my band, and “Deacon Blues” was my song. I identified with that song. I wanted to live inside that song. I saw myself as the protagonist of that song, the tragic hero, the misunderstood artist, playing exactly what he feels, drinking all night long, maybe one day dying behind the wheel, because who cares, nothing really matters, the universe is all chaos and jazz, no one even asked to be here, we’re all just specks of stardust, a flash in the cosmic scheme of things.

So call me Deacon Blues.

And alcohol was my one true love, my muse. It got to the point where, if alcohol wasn’t in my bloodstream, I wasn’t really there, in the present. During the daylight hours, when I wouldn’t drink, I would spend time with my daughter, take her to the playground, the indoor kids’ places, even play dolls on the floor of her small 10x10 trailer park bedroom, but I was never really there. I mean, my physical body was there, but my soul was not. It was someplace else entirely. I was pretending. I went through the motions because I felt like I had to, out of some persistent feeling of guilt, but my heart was never really in it. Every moment I spent with her, I was counting down the seconds until my first glass of wine. The daylight hours were just an excruciatingly long prelude to getting wasted, hammered, shitfaced, sloshed, just absolutely ossified. These were my priorities. I was a child pretending to be a father, a shell of a parent. I would constantly tell my daughter that I loved her as a way to sort of compensate for my parental absenteeism, as if cheap words could ever make up for shit parenting. But whenever she would have trouble falling asleep, making me late to my first glass of wine, I would suddenly become a harsh disciplinarian, not because I thought it was an effective way to discipline a child, but because I would become frustrated and short-tempered without wine, sometimes shouting orders at the girl like I was an army drill instructor or something. “THAT WAS THE LAST STORY. GET IN BED. PUT YOUR DAMN TOYS AWAY. CLOSE YOUR EYES. IT’S BEDTIME. DON’T MAKE ME TELL YOU AGAIN.” And this was usually followed by some pathetic apology and cheap I-love-you.

When my wife would confront me about the shouting, I would justify my outbursts by espousing some rigid parenting philosophy that I didn’t actually believe in. “Kids need discipline. There’s a certain level of fear that must be maintained. This is the way of the world, just look at countries, states, governments, they all maintain order through fear. This is just reality. Laws exist for a reason. My shouting functions as a deterrent to bad behavior, in the same way that the threat of jail functions as a deterrent to crime. What do you really think the world would be like without laws? Do you really think it would be a better place? Honestly? Don’t be naive.” And then I would pour the first of many glasses of wine and disappear into my office, feeling guilty for a whole ten seconds before my blood alcohol levels spiked, at which point I would ride the crimson tide, waves of drunken euphoria, without a care in the world. And this is how it went, night after night.

And it was on one of these nights that the roof caved in.

It had been raining all throughout the week, so it was a damp Friday night. I read my daughter a short story, cleaned up her Legos and Bratz dolls and stuffed animals, tucked her into her cheap Minnie Mouse toddler bed, kissed her on the head, told her that I loved her, apologized for shouting, turned off the lights, shut the bedroom door behind me, poured my first glass of red, logged into the Discord server, and started my whole hedonistic routine. I drank and smoked and listened to Steely Dan for hours and hours. And by the time I got ready for bed, which was around three in the morning, I had drunk so much that my head felt like it was being repeatedly hit with a hammer underwater, and my stomach was one of those bubbling lava pits you see in video games. I had lost control, failed to pace myself, as I often did. I was hunched over the toilet at three in the morning, vomiting up a crimson tide. The inside of the bowl looked like the scene of some grisly murder. After about an hour of throwing up, through sheer force of will, I picked myself up, stumbled to bed, and fell face first on the mattress, passing out.

When I woke up, my head was pounding something fierce, my chest was burning, and it was still dark outside. My wife was shouting something from the foot of the bed. I didn't want to get up, but it seemed serious, so I used some of that supernatural strength young men supposedly have and rolled myself out of bed. My wife was gesticulating, frantically explaining something that I could not comprehend in the moment, and then she grabbed my wrist and pulled me into the living room. It was dark, and our daughter was sitting there on the couch, hands in her dark hair, sobbing. My wits were slowly coming back, so I walked up to my daughter, put a hand on her shoulder, and tried to comfort her, but she wouldn’t calm down. Then my wife said something like, “It’s her bedroom. The roof. The roof fell through. She was in there for hours.” And I could not believe it. So I rushed to my daughter’s bedroom to see for myself.

It was dark in there, and there was a draft, and there was a heaviness in the air. I started coughing, covering my mouth. Then I turned the light on, saw the pile of rotted wood right by the Minnie Mouse bed, the bed itself covered in a thick layer of gray and brown. There were clouds of dust hovering throughout the room, obscuring the Disney pinups and galaxies of glow-in-the-dark ceiling stars. I looked up, and that’s when I saw it, a huge gaping hole, pieces of ceiling and wood jutting out all around the wound, just dangling there, still in the process of collapse. My wife said something from behind me. “I told you this place was a deathtrap.” So I turned to my wife, asked her when this happened, and she said it must have happened hours ago, according to our daughter, so it must have happened when I was awake in the office. She said our daughter was paralyzed with fear, that she couldn't move, that she had just stayed there in bed, under the covers, for who knows how long, frozen with fear, calling out for help. My wife asked if I had heard anything, if I had heard the crash, if I had heard our daughter calling out. I told her that I hadn't heard a thing. She glared at me with something like disgust in her eyes.

I remember just standing in that broken room, thinking it was a symbol of some kind, of neglect, of carelessness, of dysfunction. I had no words. My eyes were like super moons, and my body had taken on some sort of heinous gravity. I imagined our daughter, under the covers, eyes closed tight, her little body trembling, fearing for her life, believing some monster had crawled out of the ceiling and was about to eat her. I imagined her calling out for mommy, for daddy, for God, for anyone, to come help, how her cries went unanswered solely because I was too drunk to hear them.

My wife said something like, “This place is unlivable. I’m going to file a lawsuit.” And then she pulled out her phone and started fiddling with it. “We’re going to need pictures. Let me take a picture.”

But I stopped her, told her to let me do it, so she gave me her phone. I walked further into the room to get a better look at the hole, but I was too afraid to go directly underneath it, so instead I booted up the phone’s camera app, turned the flash on, stretched my phone-arm, positioning the phone under the hole, and snapped a picture. And that’s when I saw it.

Photograph #1 )

Apparently, there was a hole in the top roof, and a family of raccoons had been living up there in the attic-like space between the ceiling and the roof itself. The hole must have been pretty old, judging by the water damage and amount of mold shown in the picture. So I figured that, due to the accumulated rain water and who-knows-how-many raccoons, the ceiling just couldn’t hold anymore, finally collapsing under the weight of it all. And I figured that the raccoon in the picture must have been the matriarch of the family, who must have gotten out of there before the ceiling fell through. But, eyes wide and mouth agape at possibly the craziest picture I had ever taken in my life, I wondered why the mother raccoon was looking down into the room, like what could she have possibly been looking for?

That’s when my parenting instincts kicked in. The mother raccoon must have been looking for one of her babies, one of her little kits, who must have fallen through the ceiling. So I scoured the bedroom, looking for raccoons. And it only took me about five minutes to find one, a little baby raccoon, hidden underneath a pile of toys in the corner of the room, curled up in a little pink bowl.

Photograph #2 )

The kit’s eyes were closed tight, and she was shivering a little bit. There was a pinkish bulge on one of her legs, like an injury of some sort, maybe from the fall. I knew she couldn't have landed in the bowl itself, as the bowl was on the other side of the room, so I figured that she must have crawled across the room after falling through the ceiling, and when she found a place to hide, she just curled up there and waited for mommy and daddy to come rescue her. But mommy and daddy never came, just me. And, luckily for that little kit, I love raccoons. But when I was holding that pink bowl in my hand, looking down at that injured baby raccoon, seeing it all helpless and afraid, I didn’t really see a raccoon at all, I saw my daughter.

My wife wouldn’t let us keep the baby raccoon, even though I wanted to. So, later that day, I put the kit in a box stuffed with towels and put the box outside, at the treeline of the woods near my trailer, hoping that mom would return, take her baby back home, wherever home was for them. But hours passed, and mom never showed up, so I got worried about the little kit, worried that she might starve, that she might succumb to her injuries, so my daughter and I took the baby raccoon to the local animal hospital, but they told us that they couldn’t take wild animals, that they didn’t have the proper permits or something. So we left that animal hospital dejected and confused, having no idea what to do with the little kit. I remember just sitting there in my car, head still pounding from the night before, coming up totally blank on what to do next.

But after about five minutes, a young woman walked up to my car and signaled me to roll down the window. “We’ll take the raccoon, but you’ll need to sneak it into the back. Drive around.”

So I turned the key, revved the engine, and started driving around to the backside of the animal hospital. The car’s stereo connected to my phone automatically via Bluetooth, playing the last song I was listening to the night before, which just happened to be “Deacon Blues.” And when I got to the backside of the animal shelter, I left the car running in park, told my daughter to wait, and carried the box with the baby raccoon in it to the back door, where the same young woman from before smiled at me, took the box from my hands, and said, “Don’t worry, she’ll be fine, we’ll take care of her.” And I was left feeling a little sad, because for some reason I knew that I would never see that baby raccoon again.

“Deacon Blues” was still playing when I got back into the car. It was on the chorus, so before I buckled my seatbelt and put the car in reverse, I paused to savor that dark, jazzy sound.

They got a name for the winners in the world
I want a name when I lose
They call Alabama the Crimson Tide
Call me Deacon Blues


But this was not the song I knew. It was different. It was an entirely new song, with an entirely new meaning. I started thinking to myself, the protagonist of this song, he’s not some tortured-soul romantic, some hip idealist, some sort of tragic hero rebelling against the tides of a dark, unfair world. He’s not any of those things.

He’s just some fucking alcoholic loser.

So call me Deacon Blues.
f0rrest: (business time)
It is a constant internal struggle regulating my own stupid-ass behavior.

My life has been characterized by addiction. Addiction to digital entertainment, chemical substances, irrational thought patterns, and feelings both emotional and physical, typified by the chase of dopamine through harmful repetitive behaviors that I am aware are repetitive and harmful yet continue to justify through immature and potentially deadly rationalization, stuff like, “this will be the last time, for real this time” and “I work hard, so don’t I deserve to have a little fun every now and then?” and “hey, I’m here, so I might as well partake in some stupid shit, when in Rome,” and so forth.

“Alcoholism” is a decent categorization tool, it gets the point across, helps diagnose and potentially correct problematic behavior, but it misses the big picture, that being that certain people are just born fucked, like their brains are strongly inclined toward addiction, and not just to alcohol, but to anything that makes them feel good, anything that releases dopamine or one of the various other feel-good chemicals our brains so enjoy, and unfortunately, due to harsh biological reality, some people are just born this way, born fucked, and because of that, their lives forever mirror Sisyphus pushing a giant rock up a near-vertical incline, but the rocks are not rocks, the rocks are brains, their own brains.

As you might have gathered, I am one of these Sisyphusian brain pushers.

On the final night of the big company conference, a customer-appreciation party was held. I was all dressed up in a nice grey sports jacket, tucked light-blue collared shirt, wrinkleless black slacks, dark slip-on dress shoes, and fancy black socks to round it all off. The party was held in this huge open room, and the lighting was turned to like the lowest possible setting so it was all dark in there, but there were strobes and blinky blue fluorescents going off, which made the whole place feel quite surreal and futuristic, and there was a house band playing 80s power ballads and soft rock classics poorly. There must have been like at least a hundred people there, customers and employees both, many wearing cowboy hats with blinking lights strung into them, some with long feminine wigs of many different colors, as the party’s theme was like “Wild West but in Space” or something like that, which I had apparently missed the internal memo for. Everyone was dancing and screaming their conversations over too-loud music and huddling together in their little corporate cliques, because people don’t really change much after high school, and there was an open bar with free drinks, so everyone had a cocktail glass full of auburn liquid or a damp beer bottle or a glass of dark red wine in hand, everyone except for me, of course, because I don’t drink, since I’m pretty much a low-key alcoholic, although I don’t go to AA or anything like that, instead I just regulate my alcoholism internally by choosing not to drink.

But as you know, it is a constant internal struggle regulating my own stupid-ass behavior.

So of course I’m standing there, in the middle of all these happy luminescent people, shrouded in waves of darkness, feeling totally out of place and alone, and I’m hyperfocusing internally on the fact that I’m standing there feeling totally out of place and alone, which makes me loop on the idea that other people see me as being totally out of place and alone, which makes it almost impossible for me to strike up a normal conversation with anyone, since I’m stuck in this I’m-a-weird-awkward-loser type thought loop. So at some point I sulk off to a corner, lean back against the wall, and look at my phone, browsing both my company and personal emails, trying to distract myself from the thought that I’m being a totally weird awkward loser, and that’s when the thought occurs to me that like if I just have a small drink then I’ll loosen up and be able to mingle with all these people and then maybe I’ll have a good time, but I hadn’t had a drink in over a year and was sort of proud of myself for having abstained for so long, so I continue scrolling and swiping through my phone, hoping this nagging just-have-a-drink bullshit goes away, but it doesn’t, instead it just evolves into a myriad of stupid justifications, as if there’s a devil on my shoulder whispering into my ear, like “one beer isn’t going to hurt” and “everyone else here drinks because they’re just as awkward and antisocial as you are, so it’s not like you’re doing anything wrong” and “maybe having a few drinks will facilitate some sort of exciting life experience like a steamy one-night stand with that redhead you keep looking at” and “when in Rome” and “this is a one-time special occasion, you deserve this, go for it” and “why do you have to be so uptight all the time, loosen up, Jesus Christ.” All while the angel on my other shoulder is like, “just go back to your hotel room and read your book” and “you don’t need to fit in or prove yourself to anyone” and “drinking as a social lubricant is a crutch, you shouldn’t need alcohol to socialize with people” and “if you did have that one-night stand, you’d literally never forgive yourself and you’d spiral into an existential crisis and possibly kill yourself” and “what would your wife think?” and “don’t listen to that red guy with the horns and the pitchfork, he has gotten you into trouble before.”

So I take the angel’s advice and leave the futuristic ballroom party place, but I can’t bring myself to take the elevator back up to the fourth floor and return to my room. I just can’t. So I kind of just pace around outside the ballroom, at which point one of my party-going peers, who is wearing this long blue wig, comes up to me and starts saying stuff like, “what are you doing out here by yourself?” and “how about I grab you a drink?” and “are you going out to the bars later tonight?” and “a few customers were asking about you,” and then they take off their wig and hand it to me and say, “wear this, this’ll make you feel better,” so I put on the blue wig, do a funny little pose with a peace sign near my face, and they snap a picture of me with their phone, and it’s around this time that the little devil on my shoulder rips the head off of the sweet little angel on my other shoulder and shits down their neck, and then there I go, back into the dark strobing party room with all the people and the too-loud music, wearing this ridiculous blue wig, and suddenly I’m at the bar saying to myself “just one beer won’t hurt,” and then, before you know it, I’ve got a Corona in hand, and then I’m taking sips of bitter pale liquid, which is just as fucking nasty as I remember it being, and I’m pretty much immediately feeling loose and uninhibited, and so then I start to confidently mingle.

But of course, one Corona turns into two, turns into three, turns into four, and so on, until I’m all warm and toasty and fucked up, having not felt this way in a long time, and, for an hour or two there, I was really enjoying myself. I even talked to that one red-headed woman I was always looking at, and she turned out to be pretty repulsive, personality-wise, because she was pretty wasted and only wanted to talk about all her different semi-automatic rifles, going on and on about the different specs of each gun, so when I jovially told her that I had never held a gun in my life because one, I never needed to, and two, it seems like simply carrying a gun increases the likelihood of being shot by a gun, she started looking at me like I was a huge pussy and eventually wandered off to talk to somebody else, but that was OK with me, because I was feeling happily fuzzy at that point and just found someone else to talk to myself.

But it was around the time of my fifth beer, when the customer-appreciation party ended, that I started to feel a little weird, because the party was ending and I was starting to think stuff like “what the hell am I doing to myself here?” so I was starting to come to terms with the fact that I had failed at internally regulating my own stupid-ass behavior, but I still wanted to drink because I figured the more drinks I had the less I would care about my failure to regulate that stupid-ass behavior. So when I was leaving the ballroom, still wearing the ridiculous blue wig, and one of my team members came up to me and asked if I wanted to continue the party at the local dive bar, I smiled real wide and said “when in Rome” and off I went, out those big hotel double doors, with like six other people, into the concrete jungle of downtown Dallas, where massive obelisks pulsing with technicolor rainbow light pierce the heavens and the pretty faces of huge women on billboards look down on you and corporate brands try their very best to invade your mind. It was all very surreal, being drunk in the middle of a midnight metropolis, having no idea where I was going, chain-smoking cigarettes, following the leader, just hoping for the best.

We must have walked at least half a mile, passing a number of mentally ill homeless people wearing all sorts of dirty ripped-up clothing, some of whom with backpacks nearly bursting on their backs, others with shopping carts full of heavy-duty trash bags and miscellaneous junk all of which seemed entirely useless but surely had some sort of imaginary use to them, the mentally ill homeless people, one of whom was a barely clothed skeletal woman lying supine on the concrete in a pile of her own filth right outside a sketch-as-fuck alley, and she was holding a sign with incomprehensible scribbles on it and screaming some quite unpleasant things about my father as I passed her by.

The bar was called The One-Eyed Penguin. It was one of those second-story bars in which you have to walk up this long flight of claustrophobic stairs with stickers all over the walls to get to the bar proper. The bar itself was pretty small, but it had a pool table and an outdoor space to smoke. The people I was with got themselves some shots then started playing pool. I ordered myself another Corona, my sixth, and asked the bartender if I could smoke in this place, but he said no, you have to go outside to the porch, so I went outside to the porch, sat down on an uncomfortable stool and lit a cigarette, then I gazed out at the midnight metropolis skyline with something like awe before a couple walked out there with me, and then they started smoking, and then they started making out. The woman was pretty cute. I was watching them, perhaps a bit longer than I should have, but they didn’t notice me. I was thinking about how long it had been since I had felt like that, so in love or limerence or whatever that I would be willing to make out with a woman right there in front of people at the local dive bar, and how, being married, that sort of excitement just sort of fades away after a while, fades away into comfort and complacency, and this thought sort of depressed me a bit, so I lit another cigarette and gazed down at the concrete below me, where I saw a homeless man trying to bum cigarettes off some dude walking by, and I started to think like how do you get to that point, that point where you’re wearing like poop-stained pants and bumming cigarettes off random people at midnight in downtown Dallas, and I started wondering like, perhaps it’s addiction, perhaps addiction is how you get to that point, addiction not only to alcohol, but to anything, addiction to digital entertainment, chemical substances, irrational thought patterns, feelings both emotional and physical, and it was at that point that I started to feel bad for that unhoused individual. I started to feel real bad. So I watched him a little while longer. I watched person after person wave him off, ignore him, keep walking, until eventually I watched him stagger off to a street corner, sit down with his knees up, fetal almost, and just rock back and forth. And that’s when I became overwhelmed.

I became overwhelmed with some sort of radical empathy.

Looking down at that dirty man from my smoky perch, I saw a seriously fucked individual. I saw a Sisyphusian brain pusher, someone who had failed to internally regulate his own stupid-ass behavior, someone who was just born that way. I saw an addict. I saw myself.

So, leaving my half-full Corona behind, I stepped down that long flight of claustrophobic stairs, exited the bar, walked right up to that unhoused man, gave him my half-full pack of cigarettes, then I just walked off, back to my hotel, where I took the elevator up to my room, called my wife, and told her all about my night.

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