There are many arguments that fanfiction is bad.  The problem with them is they don’t actually hold up if you know anything about logic. I tall basically boils down to this: ‘I hate it because I’ve sampled very little.’

It’s fine to have an opinion.  Not everyone likes chocolate ice cream.  But why is the reason ‘I don’t like it’ a reason to turn others away from it, especially when our argument becomes ‘Ice cream is bad!’

Not only is there an obvious difference in having an opinion and hating an entire kind of food, but it’s a logical fallacy you’ve been taught since elementary school, if not kindergarten.  Your opinion does not mean right or wrong, reason does—and it applies to you as well.  If you can tell someone that one type of writing is bad and that is how the universe works, it means they have the same right otherwise your argument dissolves into a selfish tantrum.

There is no objective reason to hate all fanfiction; those who do not use their imagination or the rules they learned about writing will write poorly whether they write something original or a fan story.  Publishing and being popular cannot be the end-all-be-all to writing hobbies and careers, as that would mean Twilight and Eragon are the epitomes of good writing.

Again, taste is subjective and perfectly fine to have, but to say that yours determines the rules of an entire art medium does not only show that you do not understand logic, but ethics as well.  There is no reason to read fanfiction you are not interested in, even if that includes all of it. No one will force you b gunpoint to read fanfiction, just as no one will threaten to kill your lover to eat ice cream.

What About Emilio?

With his brother, Charlie (Carlos Irwin Estevez), receiving more press than the 5th largest earthquake on record, I can’t help but wonder: what’s up with Emilio Estevez? Why did two careers which started on such similar paths end up so desparate? And, more poignantly, are we focusing on the wrong Sheen (Estevez)? The answer to the last question is two-fold: of course and why not. America likes turbulence, pyrotechnics.The brothers both essentially started as extras in the classic Francis Ford Copula film, Apocalypse Now, which starred their father, Martin Sheen. Three years older, Emilio found fame a bit sooner than Charlie with The Brat Pack in two quintessential 80’s films: The Breakfast Club and St. Elmo’s Fire. Before that he played “Two-Bit” in The Outsiders beside big-time Los Angeles luminaries Tom Cruise, Matt Dillon, Rob Lowe, and the late Patrick Swayze.Charlie didn’t garner much attention until Ferris Bueller’s sister got hot for him in the police station scene. He played a drugged out teen. Portentous? Was Abe Lincoln honest? Sheen gained critical acclaim and commercial recognition later that year as one of the leads in Oliver Stone’s gripping Vietnam drama, Platoon. His next big success came the year after with Wallstreet, alongside a delightfully greedy Gordon Gekko (Micheal Douglas).The brothers entered the 90’s at roughly the same level of fame and popularity. Emilio was fresh off a successful role as Billy the Kid in Young Guns, and Charlie had fared well as a wild pitcher in Major League. Their personal lives, however, began to diverge.
In 1990, the two joined forces in the hapless film, Men at Work. That year, Charlie accidentally shot Kelley Preston in the arm. They were engaged at the time. Not surprisingly they never married. Emilio already had two children with model Carey Salley, whom he never shot, accidentally or otherwise.Sheen began dating adult film actresses. Estevez was briefly engaged to Demi Moore; the two remain friends. Sheen was implicated in the Heidi Fleiss scandal, while Estevez married ostensible good-girl, Paula Abdul (they divorced two years later). Emilio made a kids’ film: The Mighty Ducks; Charlie made a spoof: Hot Shots!The rest of the decade saw the brothers’ fame dwindle with banal sequels: D2: The Mighty Ducks for Emilio, and Hot Shots! Part Deux for Charlie. But while Emilio tended to his garden and vineyard, Charlie was hospitalized for cocaine use and ended up in rehab.Since 2000, Charlie has no doubt become the more popular brother. His short stint on the TV series, Spin City, and of course, his massive success with Two and a Half Men, has made him the Lebron James of television—a pseudo-villain everyone wants to watch. Meanwhile, Emilio quietly wrote, directed, and starred in one of the best films of 2006, Bobby, a fictionalized account of the events leading to the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy. The movie’s incredible cast included Laurence Fishburne, Heather Graham, Anthony Hopkins, Helen Hunt, William H. Macy, Christian Slater, Sharon Stone, and Elijah Wood.I will spare you the run-through of recent controversies and outrageous quotes coming from Charlie. Tune in to E! for the latest. I will mention Charlie has been accused of violence by two of his former wives, pleading guilty to one count of misdemeanor assault. Emilio seems clean as a whistle.So why do I get 506,000,000 hits when I Google Charlie Sheen, but when I do the same for Emilio Estevez I get 406,000? Well…one would obviously rather have Emilio watch the kids, but it depends on one’s disposition with which brother you’d rather have a drink and shoot the breeze. My choice? If it’s wine, I’ll take Emilio, but if you’re talking scotch and a cigar…it’s Carlos every time.

by Jason Raymond
Play

The Genocide of Arcades

Seriously, what is the world coming to? Roasted tomatoes on my WHITE pizza, shoppers getting pepper-sprayed over a fucking video game, that video from Heart2Heart, and countless other atrocities seen daily. None of that compares to what I was witness to this Sunday here in snowy Denver, CO.

My lady-friend and I decided it was a wonderful day to go out and be active – you know, find an arcade I mean. There’s a nifty little bar out here called “1 UP”. It’s a bar with loads of classic cabinets; cabinets I can appreciate as an old fart. There is, however, one glaring issue with this place – it’s a bar. It basically just feels like any other bar, only there’s a smorgasbord of games to feast yourself on. This means you have to fight your way through a crowd of oversexed sorority girls and the horde of frothing-at-the-mouth bros looking not to kick your ass at Street Fighter III: Third Strike, but kick your ass literally. This is a problem for me. I’m a nerd through and through and it shows. I’m like a fucking filet oscar cooked to perfection on the dollar menu for these guys. So yeah, I wanted to go somewhere else.

Enter Dave and Buster’s. If you’re unfamiliar, it’s basically a sports bar and grill with burgers and beers. Yet there is a twist! It also houses a fucking arcade! Only the food and atmosphere suck and usually their arcades do as well. No matter, I thought ignorantly, we’ll just find some classics we’re comfortable with and avoid the crowd. The place is filled with arcade cabinets bigger than your mom, warranting enough room to house a mech per game. Most of these games either suck my balls or aren’t up my alley. I mean, fuck, there’s giant-sized Fruit Ninja. There are like five giant sized touch-screen games available for iOS and Android devices. The last thing I want to do at an arcade is play little time-wasters that I play on my phone whilst taking a poo. So we get cozy at House of the Dead II and Time Crisis 4 for a while until I want something a bit more…fulfilling.

This leads us past the four player battle air hockey (yeah, it looked pretty awesome) and the pinball machines. I spot a Donkey Kong Junior cabinet. Then a Galaga cabinet! I start thinking I’m on to something as my mouth does something funny that it rarely ever does – the muscles move upward, forcing my mouth slightly open; almost as if to convey happiness or something of the sort. Then…well…that’s it. Nothing else. I make my way back ’round the main area of the arcade. More shooters. Through the bar to the other side where noone else is and I’m pretty sure I just saw a tumbleweed blow by. This is it? Not only are they missing some real essential stuff, but…I seriously haven’t seen where they’re hiding the Street Fighter cabinet. I mean any fucking Street Fighter cabinet. Christ, not even a Mortal Kombat game in sight. I figure this means they must be hiding it in a secret room where I need a password for entry and there are a bunch of dudes standing around a cabinet with money in their hands, placing bets and cheering wildly. So I approach some guy wearing a referee shirt (jersey?) for some reason and figure it means he works there. I’m in luck, he does! “Excuse me…sir? Where’s your Street Fighter cabinet?” “Street Fighter? We don’t have that. I think we have a Mortal Kombat game over there somewhere, but it’s really old.” Yeah, thanks. A Mortal Kombat that’s really old? Oh, sweet merciful ancestors of Mt. Olympus! Why have you forsaken me!? You know what, man? Fuck you. I know you just work here and all, but dude. What kind of fucking arcade doesn’t have ANY Street Fighter? This is ridiculous. After my lady-friend and I exchange some incredibly shocked and disgusted glances followed by series of grunts, we collect ourselves in search of the dreaded old Mortal Kombat. Once again, nowhere to be found. I spot another dude in another referee jersey (still confused by this) and ask him where ANY fighting game would be held. Pondering my incredibly challenging inquiry, he repeats the question to himself and then points in a certain direction. I follow his finger to find he’s pointing to a giant-sized Infinity Blade where some buffoon is moving his arms around wildly on the massive touch-screen. Now I’m pissed and frustrated. “Dude, that’s not a fighting game, that’s Infinity Blade. Do you guys even know what I’m talking about? Where’s the Mortal Kombat?” He then tells me there is no Mortal Kombat.

My lady and I waste what’s left of the stupid ass “Power Card” that we had to pay a fee to obtain, followed by paying for the token amount attached to it. Furthermore, there’s designated place to obtain these. You have to find a server and ask them for one. That was a pain in itself. After some more House of the Dead II (since it was all they had that we could stomach), we left grumpy and dissatisfied.

Just thought I’d share my story of a modern day trip to the arcade with you all. Remember when arcades were fucking awesome? There was a real comradery between all of the kids. Even though you may be rivals over a few quarters of your time, you both loved the same things and respected each other for it. I miss the fuck out of arcades. Real arcades, not arcades that have good cabinets, but are nothing more than meat markets with some distraction. Not arcades that are really restaurants with some bland entertainment on the side.

By the by, I posted this on a new blog I started where I’ll occasionally write other stuff about video games. It’s pretty much exactly what you’re thinking. You can check it out at http://whippingforporkchops.wordpress.com

Play

Amazing Ann

I was inspired by an amazing woman that I just had to write about. She lives alone in her trailer in a trailer park for 6 months, from April to October for the full season.

In 2010, my Husband and I decided to buy a trailer in this park. We happened to buy it the last week before the park’s closing date, Oct. 15.  We did get to meet some people that were still in the park who hadn’t closed up for the season yet. We were told an amazing story about an elderly woman in the park, which we found incredible.

We only had one beautiful day at that time of year, so my Husband and I thought we’d sit out on our deck at our trailer to enjoy the nice weather.  An elderly woman came over to welcome us to the park.  She was carrying a strawberry cheese cake which she made especially for us.  We thought that was so sweet of her, and this was the best strawberry cheese cake we’ve ever tasted. We got introduced, and her name was Ann.  She told us she’s been in this trailer park for quite a long time, and loved it along with the people there.  The park closed after one short week of purchasing our trailer.

After a long 6 month wait, the park opened in April of 2011.  That same woman came over to us and asked if we liked her strawberry cheese cake, which she remembered giving us before the park closed last season.  She also asked us if we had a good winter, and welcomed us back.  We eventually found out that this was the woman people told us about, being Ann.  She has had her trailer in this park since 2003, and was a pensioner.  Every year before the park closed in Oct., people had to pay a deposit fee of $500.00 to hold their spot over the winter.  This amazing 80 year old woman did the most incredible thing I’ve ever heard about to make money for her deposit fee.  She collected empty liquor, wine, or beer bottles from everyone in the park that she could, and people would even drop their empty bottles into her two bungle buggies that she left outside in the back of her trailer.  She even went to the parks recycling bins to try and find more, which we’ve both seen her do as our trailer was near the recycling bins.  In Canada, we pay a deposit for the bottles that the liquor, wine, or beer is put into, and the empty bottles can be returned to the liquor or beer store for a refund of the deposit at the time of purchase.  That’s if you want to do that, and be refunded your deposit of 10 or 20 cents per returnable bottle depending on the size.  But the amazing other passion about Ann was that she would also walk approximately 7 kms with one of her empty bungle buggies to a different trailer park, and would go into their recycling bins and collect recyclable bottles that weren’t returned for a refund.   She would then walk back to our trailer park with her bungle buggy full of these bottles to take a break from this long walk being the age she was, 80.  After a little break, she would then walk over a causeway, which divided a huge lake nearby, with her full bungle buggy of empty bottles, from both parks, to the liquor store in town to cash them in for a refund.  The distance from our trailer park to the liquor store was 2 kms each way, and she would continue back over the causeway to our trailer park with her empty bungle buggy.  I have tried to walk over that causeway which has no sidewalks; just a very small unpaved shoulder.  I’ve never seen anyone walking over the causeway since we’ve driven on it several times.  With the busy traffic moving in both directions, I got scared and just couldn’t do that walk, not even one way!  I asked Ann how she did that walk, both ways, over the causeway being the way it was.  She replied, “I don’t look at the traffic, you will go nuts”.  This woman did this almost every day since she arrived in our trailer park since 2003.  By doing this adventure, it paid for her deposit fee of $500.00 before the park closed so her spot would be held over the winter months.  She told me that she not only did this for the park’s deposit fee, but did it for extra money that she can earn for the cost of baking a lot of delicious pies, butter tarts, cookies or whatever she wants to bake to give to people in the trailer park for whatever reason.

Most of the trailers are run by propane. I asked her how she managed to get her huge tanks filled at a gas station.  She said that there is always someone to help her in the park and she awards them with one of her home baked sweet goodies.  She said next season in 2012, she will start luncheons in the park by making different kinds of soups, and home baked goodies.   She will charge a very small amount for people joining in for lunch.  She said the money will also help to go towards park functions.  We have a park committee who organizes functions for people such as dances, BBQ’s, special dinners, golfing, etc., whereby people pay a very small fee to the park committee.  She said this will also be her way of helping the park committee if they should run short of money, to continue functions in the park.

In the spring of 2011 she had to take a couple of weeks away from the trailer park as one of her many grandsons, and one of her many granddaughters were each planning their weddings.  Each of them had about 200 guests at their weddings which were close to the same date.  Ann baked all the desserts for each of their weddings.  She would never take any hand outs from anyone.  If anyone offers to help her with something, or anything in the park, she would always pay back with her wonderful baking, and wouldn’t take no for an answer.

She also told me she doesn’t know how to relax as it would drive her crazy not doing anything.  She stays in this park for the full six months and during the winter months, she stays in a retirement home for seniors, and has her own apartment.  She even does certain things in the retirement home for the seniors such as baking and helping others.  She told me that she sometimes looks after a woman who is 107 years old just to give her family a break, and will do this for a period of one week at a time whenever needed.

Ann also suffered a stroke the early part of 201I.  It was a miracle after having this stroke as her doctor told her that she may never walk again.  But she was quite the trooper after recovering, and did her long walks again every day which took her longer, and by the way, she did all the baking for those two weddings after her stroke.  Eventually, it came to a point that she had to have someone drive her to her destinations of gathering recyclable bottles and returning them to the liquor store for refunds.  She became too exhausted to do these long walks.  She was so determined to earn her deposits for every year being in the trailer park so she wouldn’t lose her spot for the next season to open.  I didn’t ask Ann how she managed to pay for her park fees for the entire season.

Ann is very sad that our trailer park will be closing soon for the season.  My Husband and I are also sad for the season to come to an end as that was our first full season being there, and meeting this wonderful woman.  I’m so looking forward to seeing her next year when the park opens for another season.   She did give me her phone number and address so we will be able keep in touch with this amazing woman that I have ever met.  Amazing Ann, she truly is!

© COPYRIGHT – BY JEANNETTE GARDNER       (SEPTEMBER, 2011)

Nice Guys Probably Still Finish Somewhere Ahead of This Guy

This article will be quite personal and
I’m probably going to say a lot things I regret. I’m apologizing for that in advance as I
don’t want to put any unwanted stress on our relationship.

So if any of you actually read what I write, you may remember an article I wrote about a
year and some change ago about becoming recently single. Not much has changed.

Don’t get me wrong, I haven’t been a lonely hermit, confined to his gaming chair, drinking
Red Bull and playing Final Fantasy VI over and over ad infinitum covered in Cheeto dust.
I’ve been out there mingling, meeting, dating and screwing things up. Which brings me to
this:
If I had one superpower, it would be the ability to break up with someone painlessly.
You see, I’m fucking terrible at ending relationships, no matter how insignificant they
may be. I currently possess the uncanny ability to transform women into rage-filled
demons, complete with toothed vaginas, razors for nails and cobras for hair. Like
a cross between Pumpkinhead and Vega from Street Fighter, but with an angry vagina.
I’m not precisely sure of what causes this phenomena, but I’ll fill you in on some
details to offer an intriguing mystery for the more perceptive of readers out there.

Most recently I dated a nice girl with strong family values and a clean mouth. She was
often intrigued by the stories I had to tell of my life experiences. I kind of felt like
a badass telling her stories about how I’d been arrested for rolling down a concrete hill
naked at 3 am, covered in dried Goldschlager (I also had to explain the reason behind
the strange scar on my penis). I could tell that the music I listened to and played
intimidated her and would probably force her parents to shit golden baby Jesuses.
She was the type that accepted everything as it were; never questioned a thing. Her opinions
were flimsy at best, and she didn’t really have strong feelings on any particular subject.
I told her that I was going to buy a tattoo gun and tattoo my own thigh. I told her it would
give me something to do while I was pooping. I continued on about how the tattoo was going
to be of Robocop in a bikini having a water balloon fight with a troll. She believed me.
Then she asked me what a robocop was. That was the moment I knew I had had enough and needed
to break things off. I mean, she never wanted to challenge me in Street Fighter, didn’t
really care for or dislike Hellraiser, and now she’s asking me what a Robocop is?! I mean,
get fucking real. It’s like she lives in some fantasy world where these things don’t matter.
Well, I decided that something had to be done.

So what did I do? Well, I went out on a date with this other girl I thought was pretty hot
with these hot boobs that I thought were sexy. After a pleasant date with hot boobs, I
decided that a.) I wanted to continue to see hot boobs and b.) that meant I had to tell
‘doesn’t know what a robocop is’ that we couldn’t see eachother anymore. Holy shit, the
anxiety and anticipation of telling a girl that you can’t go out anymore is fucking awful.
I paced and paced and ignored a few of her angry phone calls wondering where I was until
I finally found what was left of my manhood and dialed her number. I told her some lies
to soften the blow. I told her that I wasn’t really in a great place to date anyone right
now and that it wouldn’t be fair to her if we continued dating just for her to get hurt
further down the road. Well, she cried a bit, which sucked because I’m horrible with crying
women. After a few days, she sent me a polite message on facebook that expressed her
interest in remaining friends. To be honest, I have no interest in being friends with
someone that doesn’t know who Robocop is, so I didn’t write back immediately. Apparently
that was a bad move as the next day, my inbox was pleasantly greeted by another message
from her. This time, I can actually sum up what was said fairly accurately to you:

Dear cockjockey,
I fucking hate you. You’re a piece of shit, please die in an icestorm.
Regards,
Still Doesn’t Know What a Robocop Is

Well, at least I was able to finally bring her to a strong opinion about something. That
message still gives me hair boners. Oh, for fuck’s sake, she was confused by that too. I had
to explain that hair boners were what simple folk commonly refer to as “goosebumps”.

So now I find myself dating hot boobs and watching my interest level dive into a pool of
warm regret. Not regret that I broke up with that one idiot that was nice and doesn’t play
Street Fighter, but a much deeper regret. Regret that I can’t seem to find someone that
lines up with me very well. Someone witty that understands sarcasm. Someone that will talk
shit and can take it when I hurl it back at them. Someone that not only wants to play Contra
with me, but that won’t start stealing my lives by the waterfall stage. Someone
that not only knows who Robocop is, but understands his importance in culture. Someone
with hot boobs. Someone who will watch horror movies with me and has strong opinions on
everything. Someone who thinks everything is either the best thing in the world or the
worst thing in the world. A girl that appreciates the term “hair boners”.

I’m 29 now and I realize that at this point I should be a grown-up with a career and
a house that I own with some children that I own. Yet I am a free spirit that loves Double
Dragon, Hellraiser, metal and hair boners. Roam free, insensitive geeky one, roam free.

Something Terrible Doll

I was crying when I met you.

So, don’t make me wait, honey…..

I’m so hollow baby. I’m so hollow.

It hurts when the wind blows through me.

It’s rare when I sit down and pen, or in this case, type a real story. No vampires or magic. No wizards or time portals. Just, reality. And, it’s probably because that reality is a scarier thing than anything I could ever write. The limitless amount of things that could happen just by walking out my front door. The terror that is us as a whole, the human race. And worst of all of it, the worst thing of it all, the heartache that just seems to be the dessert to love. Damn.

I guess, after one hell of an opening like that, I should probably explain why I am writing this anyways, something out of my ordinary. And well, like any good love story, it does start with a girl. But, I am going to wait to tell you about her, instead, I’ll tell about last night.

With my boys. My brothers, partners in crime. My two best friends, they are in fact actual brothers, just bestowing upon me the honored title of the third brother from another mother. It had been too long since all of us had actually spent a night just doing our thing. And last night, a little alcohol, and some video games. Rock Band to be precise. Tom on the guitar, Steve on drums, and yours truly killing it on the vocals.

We had our playlist, our laughs and stupid comments, goofing with each other as we made our way through each song. And then, Aerosmith.

There was a time….

…When I was so broken hearted.

And no, love was no friend of mine. Her name is Leah Marie. She’s such a beautiful lass. Dark brown hair, glasses, a smile that could melt the heart of Jack Frost. Tattoo’s, piercings, and a voice that even now makes me tear up from missing it. She was my best friends girl at one time. And at that one time, we shared a kiss.

And that Aerosmith song got me good, yes it did. Every song before I had been just goofing off, singing, growling, making noises, making the brothers laugh as they tried to not mess up playing the electronic instruments. But Cryin’, that song did it for me.

I sang it better than any other. And why, it made me think of Leah Marie. A sinking feeling in my gut hit, I couldn’t feel my heart beating anymore, but somehow, I found a way to put my heart into singing that song. I hit every note, the words just seem to come to me. And with every single time the chorus slipped out past my lips, I had to fight, choke back a tear.

At the end of that song, I had almost gotten it perfectly, something I had never done before. Tom and Steven were impressed, and with an act that I had perfected over so long, I just pretended like my whole soul wasn’t killing to talk to Leah.

…All I want, Is someone I can’t resist…

It had been almost two years since I had spoken to her. Two years, and to this day, she is in my every thought, and the iron butterflies begin an assault on my gut with every mental image of that lass.

She was Joshua’s girl when I met her. A fellow airman, I can honestly say that Josh had saved my life, a life that I had try to take with my own hands. In an attempted suicide, Josh had saved my life, brought help when I thought there was no way to help me. I had been hanging there, and that man had found a way to cut me down, and bring me back to life.

And then I met his girl. They had a chemistry, I’ll tell you. But, right off the bat, us two, Leah and this poor lad that is I, we had something else. Receiving an honorable discharge from the service, everything that had accumulated on my shoulders because of an inoperable brain tumor, I was on my way home, back to Ohio. And great thing was, Leah only lived a few hours away in the same state.

We talked just as much, if not more so that her and Joshua did. We laughed on the phone, blew each other kisses on the webcam like kids in a modern day John Hughes flick. She was Molly Ringwald and I was Christian Slater. And then one day, she told me she loved me. She loved Joshua, I knew it, she knew it, and he knew it. But, we loved each other.

….Don’t hesitate now honey…

After hanging with the boys, I tried finding her last night. Through facebook, internet, myspace, cell phone number, none of it led me back to Leah. I was lost. I wanted to talk her, no, needed to talk to her, but I didn’t know where her life had taken her. In frustration, I wanted to quit and say move on, but in a last vain attempt, a message was sent to her sister, just asking for a way to reach Leah.

And last night, I got no response. So to bed I went disappointed, just looking over the pictures I dug out of the girl, pictures I had stuffed away in a shoe box to forget about, only to dig for and find, smiling at her still frame smile.

Everytime I lose my way….

…You find me here.

She drove the two hours to come see me. I was in a bad place, struggling after getting out of the service. And there she was, standing there with me, in front of me, in a worn out Misfits tee, saying she was there to be a friend.

The next day, she was destined to catch a flight back to South Carolina, the state that I and Joshua had been stationed, and where he still was. She was going to go see him, kiss him. Sleep with him. But she was his girl…

And the night before, she was with me. We walked around my town, the city I grew up. It was late, but walked, talked, for the first time seeing each other in person, not over webcam. I hear her voice actually come out of her mouth, watched the words formed on her lips, heard their melody in my ears, in person, not over the phone.

She joked around, told stories of our pasts that we hadn’t shared through our technology conversations. We both kept finding things to share, just getting to know the other, and with each tid bit, more and more we found a many similar interests, and more often than as the hours wore on, we found ourselves in moments of silence looking into the other’s eyes, just walking on.

…Find me here…

I told her I was jealous, with a simple grin.

She asked of what? Returning that grin, but her’s was better.

I told her of Joshua. He was going to get to cuddle with her. Kiss her. Hold her. The words spilled out, and realizing I was going on, I tried to make it seem like I wasn’t crazy for her, so to make it make sense, I just said I had nobody and told her I was jealous of the two of them. Just jealous of the two of them.

And just like that, she called me a liar and kissed me. Oh how she kissed me. I had butterflies, and never before, and not since then unless I’ve thought about her, have I gotten the butterflies. It lasted so long. And when it was done, we kissed again, even more passionate than before, the two of us holding nothing back.

I poured my soul into it, and she gave a tear. When the second kiss had ceased, a single, lonesome tear rolled down her cheek, one I never asked about, and she never shared why. I just remember the moonlight glistening off her cheek on the watery pearl.

…You have been the one.

You have been the one for me…

She left, went back home, and went to Joshua the next day. We spoke a few days afterwards, her confusion making her sick to her stomach, understanding that what we had was impossible to forget, but every ounce of her not wanting to hurt the man who saved my life.

Last I had heard, they broke up. It’s been two years, and last night, I tried my hardest to talk to Leah Marie again.

Goodbye my lover, you have been the one.

You have been the one for me.

Right now, I am finishing this story, and all of it is true. One hundred percent true. And like the story of last night, and my history with Leah, another true fact is this. I got her number from her sister this morning. I have it typed in my phone right now. The butterflies are going, my breathing is difficult, and with the last keystroke of my keyboard, I will press talk, and pray she answers, cause, Leah Marie, I’ve missed you something terrible.

Just missed you something Terrible, My Demolition Lover…

 

When the Piano Player Dies

When the Piano Player Dies

By Brenda Starr

 

It was too warm of a day for a job interview. My comfortable-fit slacks weren’t living up to their name and my long blond, loosely curled hair lost all of its blow dried fluff during the drive.

The medical profession was new to me. I had no training or college degrees in even a semi-related field. I just needed a job like yesterday.

I gave my face one last check in the rearview mirror before getting out of the car. “God, it was just too damn hot out!”

Like a squirrel harboring the only nut in the forest I scurried up the front steps of the care facility before the heat sent my lip gloss down my chin. However, an elderly woman in a wheelchair was trying to get out of the door as I was going in. Forgetting about my nut and the status of my lip gloss I stood patiently holding the door open for her until she was completely out.

“Thank you, Honey” she said with a wavering voice. Looking deep into her tender eyes for only a second it turned out that my heart was the only thing melting.

“Mom is picking me up on her motorcycle and I don’t want to miss her. You didn’t see her in the parking lot did you?”

Quickly I transitioned from melting heart status to confused cranium and as I entered the building I heard someone call my name.

“Dana Ryder?”

 

The interview went pretty smooth. No stranger ever embraced me like Activity Director JuliAnne Marx did. She was a tiny woman, maybe in her 70’s and so petite I thought she must do steroids to hug me with the grip she did. But her happy head of gray short curls smelled like pears…a trusting sign I thought. I may not be the sharpest needle in the knitting bag but I am quite observant. I do notice and believe in signs, underlying messages we may otherwise be blind to that sometimes are big as billboards, loud as brass bands and rowdy as bulls at a clown jamboree.

Yes, from the get go Ms. JuliAnne Marx was a precious California pear, ripe with as much anxiety to hire someone as I was to smell a paycheck with my name on it.

As Ms.Marx explained, she had witnessed me holding the door open for the woman in the wheelchair and had decided at that moment I was hired. My lack of experience as an Activity Director’s Assistant didn’t seem to matter much. But respect for elderly people and a caring heart did. And it helped that I was artistic, as it was a job requirement to offer creative mind stimulation for the elderly, the sick and the dying on a daily basis.

Two days later I found myself driving to the facility again to start my first day, again, as one of the working class. At 37 years of age with two kids, a mortgage and a much younger husband who cared only about sex and tuning his guitar, I had to make my new gig work.

 

 

 

I had chosen to wear a sleeveless cotton, strawberry/banana print dress with a conservative v-neck. My accessories consisted of a thin white fabric textured belt and white loop wire earrings to match.  I was about 5 ft. 7 inches tall last time I checked and the dress went to just above my knees adequately covering  my slightly tan, 145 lb. physique quite comfortably. I topped off the outfit with low heel, simply designed red strap sandals so trendy for the mid 90’s.

This time during the drive it wasn’t the summer heat or my strawberry flavored lip gloss application that concerned me.  It was that question in my mind repeatedly bouncing back and forth like a love-love tennis match: Could I handle elderly people every day, most of which didn’t have much time left?

As I had shared with Ms. Marx during the interview, I was close enough to my grandparents. In fact they were my stability growing up. But would a thriving relationship with close relatives that had developed over a period of many decades compare to being thrown into daily close encounters with these mature kind? Could I care for them like old friends, creatively stimulate their challenged minds or harder yet, could I grow to love them and then watch them die?

I opened all the windows in the car suddenly aching for a breeze. At least the facility was located pretty close to the beach. Maybe I could grab some fast food and head to the ocean at lunch time. How I loved living on the central coast. I had been a local beach resident for over 12 years. The sound of a few passing seagulls overhead calmed and welcomed me as I pulled into the parking lot.

I didn’t see much of Ms. Marx when I first arrived at my new place of employment. She shoved a basket of hot cocoa mix at me, pointed to the coffeemaker and said, “ Give them their morning hot cocoa and suggest something creative to do for about an hour and a half.”

As I watched her small body swiftly move away from me down a long corridor I heard her add, “And we don’t wear sandals here.”

Then she was gone…In my strawberry/banana dress and inappropriate shoes I stood there for an awkwardly long time clinging to the smell of pears. Other aromas had slyly begun to invade my sense of smell and they were not all that pleasant.

Finally, I took the cocoa basket and the coffeemaker into a large multi-purpose type room where I was directed to go. About 50 to 60 people occupied this space, some in wheelchairs near the front of the room, some seated at short tables sporadically placed and some were lying on gurneys against the walls, in a totally catatonic state. Some were drooling heavily.

I also noticed there were more women than men. On the walls were several sheets of colored paper, mostly copies of the daily food menus for the month, some semi-festive photographs of the patients, but no art.

A half an hour went by. After fumbling but finally getting cocoa served to those who would accept it I moved to the front of the room and began to panic inside. Anguish started to crawl inside me like a greedy vine when I looked at the majority of aging and lonely faces in the room. I took a deep breath, silently asked God to help me and then I opened my mouth.

“Who wants to have a spelling bee!?” I shouted with slow inflating enthusiasm.

A towering, thin, unshaven man slowly stood to his feet from his wheel chair. Hope embraced me. He was about 6 ft. 4 inches tall and he struggled some to steady himself until he found his balance. He was in desperate need of a haircut, his blue plaid flannel shirt was too many X’s large for him and it showed. A pair of stretched out gray sweat pants hung loosely from his narrow hips.

With anticipation I focused on his facial expression. He winced and I assumed this wise old soul was thinking of a word to spell or perhaps he would recite a profound quotation.

I felt my expectation climb! He winced harder and my focus on his face grew more intent, so intent that I failed to notice that he was actually trying to expose his penis. Success! It was out there now and so was the urine he shared with us all, a genuinely steady stream of nearly neon yellow pee splattered onto the linoleum floor as if from a firehouse hose. Good to the last lingering drop… I finally said,

“Ok, who can spell trouble shooter?”

 

 

 

 

 

That night at home I tried to share the emotional roller coaster I experienced my first day on the new job with my husband, Tyler.

“Couldn’t you have gotten work at Denny’s or something? How can you work at an old folk’s home?”

Close to midnight I knew I had stressed far too long over preparing what to wear to work the next day, but the sandals were out and the white tennies were in.

I checked in on my sleeping 8 yr. old boy, Max and my 13 yr. old daughter, Katie in their separate rooms, well… Katie required frequent goodnights and a triple check to make sure she was off the damn phone. Teenagers are scary entities. I reminded myself not to skip down memory lane of when I was a teenager, especially right before bedtime. From the wars of experience I knew that was a definite pin puller on the hand grenade of a sure fire nightmare.

My mind all too tired then to fear even what the next day would hold for me at “the old folk’s home” I brushed my teeth and headed into the bedroom. It wasn’t the first time I had caught Tyler looking at porn on the internet but the sickness that suddenly entered the pit of my stomach like a sword quickly reminded me how I wished it would be the last time. Searching for comfort only in the blankets that gently caressed me in bed, I knew different.

 

 

Weeks at my new job had turned into a couple of months and surprisingly I had grown quite comfortable in my position as Activities Assistant. Yes, it had been extremely difficult the first few days. But I realized early on I must either come to terms with what was needed of me or turn around and run out of the building screaming and never come back.

 

 

 

Today was special. A man named George Redfox was scheduled to show up after lunch to entertain the patients. He was a multi-talented man ranging from magician, piano player to stand up comedian. No matter what he chose to share with our crowd he was dearly loved and appreciated.

A woman named Betty Tilford especially anticipated George’s visits. He flirted with her shamelessly. Her gentle face still showed evidence of beauty, though now she was wheelchair bound, suffered from dementia and had lost a breast to cancer. However, she managed to remember George Redfox and responded to him as if she were a young healthy girl. This was a woman who definitely loved how the piano man made her feel!

Betty’s voice was still quite good and she sang like a bird when he played the piano. I had helped her to get dressed that morning as per her request. Nothing would do but her moo moo her daughter had sent her from Hawaii with the pink flamingos on it. We even added a touch of flamingo pink lipstick!

George was in rare form. He wore a dark pinstripe suit with a matching dark hat that complimented his savvy good looks. He was in his late 50’s, wasn’t a tall man or that slim, but he wore a suit well.  He made sure he greeted Betty first and foremost with a kiss to the forehead and a smile that caused her to beam and blush a shade of flamingo pink all her own.

“Can you play Unforgettable by Nat King Cole next, Georgie?” Betty asked.

It would be the third song since he had arrived and it was his usual break time when he would mingle with the crowd for a few moments…however, he kept at it and started in with Unforgettable”.

Betty started to sing like the beautiful bird she was, just glowing and I thought I might shed a tear it was so cute. I left the room and stood just outside the closed multi-purpose doors rechecking the schedule of the day on my clipboard, still in listening range of the music until I noticed it all came to an abrupt halt. In fact something had pounded the piano keys with a forceful thud that was definitely not part of the song.

Quite ungracefully I forged through the doors into the room where I heard only gasps and whimpers. George had dived face down onto the keys and was motionless.

 

 

 

 

Nothing I had done or told myself had prepared me for the initial days that followed George’s death. My prepared focus had been on the probable loss of the patients, not the treasured man that entertained them, the relatively young man that was regularly the main source of their joy and happiness. A new question then wrestled with my mind and heart. How was I supposed to help the patients, my dear close friends, deal with the death of their beloved piano man?

 

Betty was a clam. She retreated into silence and acted oblivious to the mention of what had happened to George Redfox. It pulled at me, but I honestly did not know if her behavior was from her sadness or from the dementia.

On a late August afternoon, six days after tragedy had struck the care facility smack in the music section I visited Betty in her private room. While in her wheelchair she had managed to ransack through every drawer she could reach. Her clothes were strewn everywhere, the moo moo with the flamingos on it tossed in a corner like a forgotten rag doll. Betty just stared out the window of a closed sliding glass door that lead to a private patio. I pulled up a chair next to her.

“What happened to your room, Betty?”

With obvious irritation she finally looked me hard in the eyes.

“I can’t find it.”

“You can’t find what?” I asked.

Her stare intensified. She moved her hands to her shoulders and pulled down a thin cotton robe she wore and exposed her one breast and the scarred vacancy of the other one she had lost to cancer some years ago.

“My breast, of course. I can’t for the life of me remember where I put it!”

 

 

 

 

That evening, a quiet Friday I found myself alone at home. The kids were with their father who lived in L.A. and my husband, Tyler was practicing with his band as he usually did.

The phone rang. It was Tyler.

“Hey, Baby.  We’re taking a smoke break. The band loves my new song! What are you up to?”

“Oh, I was just sitting here getting kind of excited about a new art project I came up with for the old folks. I’ve discovered that Art is quite healing for my patients and myself too. I can’t believe how powerful it can be…really rewarding. Sometimes I swear I see a new light in their eyes when they create something cool. That feeling never gets old!” I said giggling.

He cut me off.

“Are you serious?! When are you going to move on to a job less embarrassing, Dana?”

After a sharp silence he cleared his throat and I heard him spit.

“Jesus… Listen, next weekend there’s a big picnic at that park in town and it’s gonna’ rock! I can’t wait!”

Choking back the tears I said, “Oh, cool! The kids and I love that park. It has something for everybody. Is the picnic Sat –“

He cut me off again. “No, it’s only a picnic for me and the guys in the band, Baby.”

I heard him exhale hard as he emptied his lungs of cigarette smoke.

“Look, I gotta’ get back in there with the boys. They’re getting restless. We have to kill the new guy on keyboards. He sucks.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Parallel Paths

True Story…

I drove down the slushy road. The rolling tires sounded like they were driving through a river. I had all day to do this. It’s hard to get out of the house when you’re unemployed, though. I speed down the left lane, down Niagara Falls Blvd. Some cars had their lights on, other didn’t.
I had my fingers crossed that the Post Office would be open. My letter had to go out today. If I didn’t make it in time I would have to consider it a loss for the day. When you’re unemployed losses tend to stack up. I didn’t want another loss to go down so easily. So, I sped down Niagara Falls Blvd amidst the gray skyline that seemed to overshadow the entire world around me.
As I drove in I noticed the lights were off in the Post Office. The office was most certainly not open. If I had gotten their minutes earlier I could have put the letter into an employee’s hand and it would have arrived the next day. I had failed – another failure. I submitted to the loss and slowly moved my car out of the parking lot and back on the road.
Driving back to my home I saw a mail truck on a side road. I thought for a moment. Was it an opportunity to get my letter in on time? These opportunities approach us everyday. But it was just turning to dusk – a truly magical hour. While the sun was going down, the snow reflected to the sky making the sky light with a tinted glow.
I pulled over behind the mail truck. A balding Asian man with glasses was walking back to the truck. “Hi”, I said. “Hey”, he mumbled. He didn’t even bother to look up. “Hey I was wondering…” He just got into his truck and sped to the next mailbox – not much of a getaway. I ran through the slushy snow on the sidewalk, the loose snow getting into my untied boots. “I was wondering if I could give you this letter”, I said loudly as if the volume would make him listen. But once again the man ignored me. “HEY”, I shouted. I was annoyed at his behavior, but he turned and gave me a look of anger and disgust. I didn’t expect that. Still, my tongue was poised to lash out at him. “Could you just take my damn letter”. “No, go put it into a mailbox”, he said with a more indignant tone than I had ever heard before.
But, I had had it. When you’re unemployed you reach your limit of BS just about everyday. I figured I would at least figure out why this guy was being so abrasive. “Hey man. Are you having a bad day”, I asked. Finally he gave me the courtesy of stopping amid his daily routine. He looked down first, and put his hand in his pocket. Then he looked up at me. “What would you know about ‘bad days’”. “Well I have been unemployed for ten months now”, I replied immediately. The quick response seemed to disarm him. He stopped and allowed his black leather shoes to wade in the small puddle along the sidewalk. “What do you need”, he said to me. I finally got his attention, but I stopped thinking about myself for that moment. He really must have had a bad day. And I knew that a bad day can be as painful as a gunshot wound to the heart. So I said, “you are having a bad day”. I had had a rough several months for myself, so worrying about someone else felt refreshing. The man put his arm on the hood of the mail truck and everything around us seemed to just disappear. “My son died twelve days ago. Juvenile diabetes.” I barely knew this guy, but I felt his pain like we shared the same wound. “I’m so sorry”. “It’s been twelve days, I can’t believe it’s been twelve days…He had just gotten a job at a news station in New York. It was like he was just on his way to big things, you know? And then it all ended, just like that”.
For a few short moments we stood in silence on that nameless road with the gray, glowing sky darkening. The boundless atmosphere seeming to echo an answer to us – an answer to why we were suffering – he, with the loss of his son, me, with the loss of my livelihood. But the answer lay just in front of us in the cold winter air, like an invisible fog you can sense but never see or touch. “So do you need me to send out a resume or something”, he said. “Could you make sure this letter goes out today, the job just opened up”. I handed him the letter. The printed address was written as perfect as could be. He looked it over. He had shared his life with me; he may as well know mine. The mailman read the address and let out a strange sigh/laugh. It was to a TV station in New York. Sometimes our paths cross just right. “I’ll make sure this goes out tonight”.

A Sweet Cry (poem)

A Sweet CryA sweet cry I mourn
 

A cry that I will never hear

My arms feel so empty

For the new arrival will never get here

I’ll never see it take it’s first steps

Or call it by a name

I felt that it was in there

And now I don’t feel the same

I’ll never get to see it smile

Or look into it’s beautiful eyes

I’ll never get to sing it to sleep

Or teach it to be wise

I’ll never get to kiss those ten fingers

Or kiss those ten toes

I’ll never get to hear it’s heart beat

Or see how tall it grows

18 years I regretted nothing

And now I want to turn back time

There is only one thing I’d ever change

And It’s all within this rhyme

I am a mother

Of a child that will never be born

I lost my baby

So that sweet cry I mourn

 

 

 

The Figure

 

It was a night just like any other: cold, dark, and lonely.  The only sound able to be heard was that of the light bulbs burning.  Standing there at the bathroom sink alone, he was aware of this.  Tired, he was, he began to wash up for bed.  He bent over the sink to rinse his face, then turned off the faucet.  However, he continued to hear water running.  When he looked up he saw, in the mirror, the tub faucet running.  He stood puzzled as it slowly turned to droplets, then turned off.  Still, unscathed, he continued getting ready.  He walked from the bathroom, through the halls to his room wearily.  He was still thinking about the faucet.  He crawled into bed and proceeded to shut his eyes and sleep.  That’s when he heard the running water again.  Alarmed, he rose and ran to the bathroom and flipped on the light.  Nothin’.  He ran to the kitchen and hit the light.  The water flowed intensely from the faucet!  He turned it off and went back to bed.  Then it came on again and again he turned it off and went to sleep.  This chilling sequence went on and on, finally causing him to just stay awake the whole entire night.

The next morning he was greeted by the sounds of sizzling on the stove.  Confused, because his family had all left for work and school, he ran to the kitchen.  He all but fainted; he saw no one.  So he turned off the stove and decided to search around.  He searched the house up and down in detail.  Satisfied in finding nothing, yet uneasy for the same reason.  He decided not to let it get to him, so he went about his business.  He drove around town on some errands and to see some old friends.  Pulling back in his driveway, he noticed something odd.  For standing in the top attic window was a figure.  This figure just stared back at him right into his eyes.  Then, it disappeared into thin air!  Startled, but not rattled, he goes inside and once in, he settles down.

Couple of hours pass with nothing happening.  Then the school bus pulls up and his little sister steps off.  She starts to walk up the drive, then freezes!  So he opens a window and yells, “Hey, why did you stop?”  She doesn’t answer but rather points straight ahead.  He peered out the window to see.  Nothin’.  He yells out, “Inside.”  She ran inside, slamming the door behind her!  He sits her down with a drink and once she regained speaking ability, he asks, “What did you see?”  She replies, “I saw a figure in the garden staring back at me.”  He figured it was the same one he saw earlier.

The day turns into night with both parents working late, they head out for pizza.  They arrive home around 8pm with their father following around 9pm.  They tell him about the figure they have seen and he agreed to keep a look out for it and that they would discuss it further the following day after work.  The step-mom says the same after pulling in around 11pm.  He tries to force himself to sleep after the day’s activities, then finally the sun rises and another day begins.  With both parents coming home early, meant more daylight to search in.  Search they did, then finally, in the garden, they discovered; BONES!  They decided that would be enough discovery for one day.  As the sun sets, they all did their best to put the day’s discovery out of their mind.  One by one, they headed off to bed.

Hours turn to days and days turn to weeks without so much as a strange noise being heard.  Until one night, he did hear a strange noise coming from the garden.  He had absolutely no intention of going out there alone at night!  The noise grew louder and stronger until it eventually awoken everyone in the house.  They all converged in the living room and began thinking of what to do.  However, as quickly as it appeared, the noise was gone.  Startled, they all decided to crash right where they were!  As the morning sun came into the windows, none of them could recall a time when it was so bright and welcomed.  They all went off to school and work and once again, he was alone.  All day he tried to catch a glimpse of the figure, but came up empty.

Midday came and found him sleeping peacefully in his bed.  Then he was abruptly awaken by the blaring of the television in the living room.  He raced to turn it off, then searched around.  He could feel the figure’s presence in the room with him!  He retreated to his room.  Later that night, he told his tale and the rest of the night, they were on guard.  He had just about forgotten about the figure when, seemingly out of nowhere, it walked in and stopped right at the foot of his bed!  He sprang up immediately!  Suddenly, it spoke, “Hello, I am the spirit you seek.  Enjoy my house!”  Then it vanished instantly.  Stunned, he lay back down thinking about the encounter.

The incident made him that much more inquisitive than ever!  Naturally, he shared his experience with the rest of them.  After careful consideration, he concluded that some things are better left unexplained.  Also, the figure posed no threat to anyone.  After dinner, a game, and some tv, they decided to get some well deserved shut eye.  With everyone off to sleep, he figured he’d do the same.  So, he went to get ready for bed and proceed to go about his life.  For it was a night just like any other: cold, dark, and lonely.  The only sound able to be heard was that of the light bulbs burning.  Standing there, at the bathroom sink alone, he was aware of this.

 

 

J5AHU7Y46ZJA

my past two weeks

 

My, how just a few days can change everything. Just a few days ago I was joking about writing a book about the various flavors of Ramen noodles. I’ve already had 15. However, that was two weeks ago.  Two weeks ago I was a temp worker; a temp worker with a fan-fucking-tastic resume. I had been working in a bakery not quite in, but very near the “ghetto” of Rochester NY. Some degenerate dirtbag mother fucker stole my titanuim frame race bike from the bakery the day of Critical Mass. For those of you that dont know Critical Mass is a group ride for everyone in any major city. Its the last friday of the month. Payday. That was the day I found out my bike was gone. So I walked home from “the hood” as it’s known. Then I found out that that particular day was the last day of my temp assignment. The secretary.

A Lesson Learned

 

I was in my 20′s and living alone in a huge two bedroom apartment above a warehouse in an industrial area, with a view of a highway. Yes, it was lonely there at times. It happened one night when I felt adventurous. My friends were busy so I thought I’d venture out alone in my 69 Austin Mini.

Off I went on the highway downtown to a bar where I’ve been before. Now at the bar, I ordered a drink and listened to the music by the DJ there. It was pretty packed and I just took it all in. A cute guy there had his eyes on me, and yes, it made me smile. He came over and offered me a drink which I accepted. We talked and commented on the music. I finished my drink and I ordered another one while we continued talking. He then bought me another drink, and yes, I accepted not even finishing my other one. He asked me where I lived and I kind of told him the general area. He then asked me for a drive home as he told me he lived in a nearby neighborhood. I agreed to drive him home.

We left the bar and I found it hard to walk, staggering a lot, laughing, and acting silly. Yes I was impaired and finding it hard to walk and I knew I shouldn’t have got into my car, but I did. He got into my car as well. He then pulled out a marijuana cigarette and asked me if it was OK if he smoked it. Not thinking in a straight mind, I said “sure, go ahead”. He started smoking it and offered me some but I said “no”. He was still smoking it while we were driving up the ramp which leads to the highway. To my surprise, I noticed flashing lights behind me that came out of nowhere. Wouldn’t you know it; a police officer’s car was behind me and I knew they were telling me to pull over!

I just kept on driving and driving and driving, and wouldn’t stop as I was really afraid, knowing that they probably knew a marijuana cigarette was being smoked. I told this guy to get rid of it and if he had any more. He said yes, he had quite a bit more! The flashing lights were amazing behind us but I kept on driving and too afraid to stop. He pulled out a bag of it and he tossed it out of the window slowly, bit by bit until it was all gone, then he threw away the empty bag out onto the highway. Eventually, I decided to pull over to stop. I’ve never been so scared to death in all my life! With my car on the side of the road I was freaking, just freaking inside!

The police officer pulled up behind me and he got out of his car to make his way to my car. I made sure the windows were down so the smell would escape out of my car. He asked me why I didn’t stop like I was supposed to. I didn’t answer. He then asked me if I had anything to drink. I said “no”, as I was afraid to say that I did. He also asked what that smell was and I didn’t answer that question either, but he knew what it was. We both had to get out of the car and I had to sit in the back of his police car while they were talking to that guy. Two police cars were behind me and the next thing I knew, other police cars came around with their sirens going and lights flashing everywhere. I began shaking and crying sitting in the back of the cruiser. A police officer came and sat in the front of the car, and asked me if I’d ever had a breathalyzer test. “No” I said, and he noticed that I was chewing gum. I had to spit it out as they had to wait for 20 minutes before the test could be given due to the gum which might have affected the results. I was relieved of that as I thought it would give me more time for the test to be normal. He started asking me questions about this guy, and how long I’ve known him for. I told him that I’d just met him at a bar and offered him a ride home.

Finally it happened; I had to blow into the breathalyzer, but I didn’t blow as hard as he told me, so he said that I had to blow harder which I was afraid of doing. I had an angel on my shoulders as it was a miracle that I didn’t even blow a warning, considering all the drinks I had at the bar and could hardly walk to my car before this all happened. I think my body went into shock from all that I was going through which may be why I didn’t blow over. The officer was also surprised by the look on his face, as I knew he smelled alcohol on me when he pulled me over. Who wouldn’t! He also told me that the guy I picked up was married with children after they checked him out for certain things. I started crying in front of the police officer and was all shaken up. He also told me I was lucky he didn’t have a knife or another weapon on him.

Later, another officer came to my car with the empty bag that they managed to find on the highway. They asked me where the rest of it was and I said I didn’t know. It was his stuff and not mine. The next thing I saw was they were tearing my car apart, seat by seat was taken out of my car along with everything else. It was all put on the shoulder of the highway. It was a nightmare and while they were emptying out my car, more police cars came. I was surrounded by a lot of police cars with their flashing lights. It was amazing and so scary. It was just like you would see in the movies.

As time went on, the police officers put my car back together and told me I was free to go. They told me they would deal with that guy I picked up. I waited patiently in the back seat of the police officers car until it was time for me to leave and I was still crying, shaking and scared to death. The other guy was in another police officer’s car being questioned I assumed. I was asked if I still wanted to drive this guy home if he should be released without charge, and of course I said “no”. I got out of the police officer’s car. I was free to go and the police officer told me to drive home safely. I got into my car and drove away and all I could see in my rear view mirror were amazing police cars everywhere with their flashing lights. I kept on driving and driving until I finally got home. It was 4:00 in the morning. I’ve never been so happy to be home, safe and sound. I thanked God for watching over me with this awful situation that I managed to get myself into!

I did regret what I’d done, but it was a “lesson learned” by me that’s for sure! I’ve never done this kind of thing again. I’m hoping that no one else ever gets themselves into a situation like this as it’s not worth it!

©Copyright Jeannette Gardner Jan.31/10

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