Archive for 2010

Gift From my Boyfriend

November 19, 2010

Guess I won't be getting a sonnet anytime soon?

Goodbye, Mr. Carlo

November 15, 2010

My former boss, a bestselling crime author, passed away a week ago, and I wrote him a eulogy.  It is below.  Don’t know exactly of how much interest those who didn’t know him/me will find it, but people at the ceremony seemed to like it and so I’m posting it here to prove to myself/the Internet that I accomplished something in the past six days:

To open, I’m going to tell Phil’s favorite story about him and me, the story of the first time we worked together.  Now that I have a captive audience, I’ll get to tell it my way.  In Phil’s version of the story, I get flustered.  In mine, I do not.

It was late summer of 2007 and I had only met Phil once a few days earlier when he had offered me the job of assisting him after we had chatted for maybe seven or eight minutes.  At the time I was juggling three jobs and I left one early from one to meet Phil and Laura, who were coming from Phil’s parents house in Long Island, where they were staying while their apartment was being renovated.  They were late so I milled around the Duane Reade perusing the tabloid section as the clock ticked away.  Phil called me intermittently to give me an update –– still stuck in traffic, sheets of rain, be there ASAP.  Perhaps two hours later, we met inside of Georgia’s Bake Shop on the corner of 89th and Broadway and I opened my laptop and he dictated to me for the first of many, many times.  Laura had to run an errand so she dashed out leaving us alone with the work.  The sky was void-black, the rain showed no signs of stopping and the café was packed with typical Upper West Side characters, mostly female duos dressed like former art professors, seeking shelter from the storm.  After a few minutes of working, Phil said he had to go to the bathroom, and I, not yet fully aware of the magnitude of his diagnosis, kind of looked at him like, “Okay, so… go.”

“Can you help me get there?”

So I stood up and Phil, with the aid of his cane and my arm, managed to traverse the crowded bake shop and reach the restroom.  I waited outside for him and after two minutes the door eked open.

“I couldn’t get my pants up,” he said.  “Could you pull them up?”

I did so as he stood with his back to the wall.  His fly was still down but he insisted he could hold the waist of his pants with his elbow until Laura returned and could do the zipper for him.  Two steps out into the café, however, the pants dropped to around his knobby knees and the two of us leaned back a little in an attempt to hide from the clearly bemused, well-coiffed café patrons, who watched intently as a small blond creature tended to the pants of a wobbly-legged man.  After flies had been zipped and buttons buttoned, we returned to our little table by the window and resumed working.  And this is the story Phil told everyone when they expressed interest in his little assistant: the first time I worked with ___ and my pants fell down at Georgia’s.

It took me four days to even begin to write this speech.  I worked with Phil for a quite a while (somewhere between two years and a lifetime) and thus have a bevy of funny anecdotes I could share and a textbook of lessons he taught me.  In an effort to avoid making this too long, though, I’ve decided to stick to the two main ideas that I had two years ago when Phil first asked me to eulogize him.  Both fall under the category of Gifts Phil Gave Me (not material gifts, of which he gave me many, but what they were exactly, you do not want to know, trust me.)

First, and I know how vague and Hallmark Card this sounds, Phil taught me how to live actively and how to enjoy it.  This is not a new observation about this man; so many of us have said over the past few days how inexplicably shocked we were at his passing because he seemed so vibrant, so indefatigable.  He adored the fuck (can I swear in a chapel? I think if Phil were here and I asked him he’d respond, “Fucking A!”) out of life, and having grown up in a rather staid environment with a brain that sometimes forgot there was a body attached to it, the idea of taking deep and serious pleasure from life’s luxuries was downright radical to me.  It was only from watching this man, my surrogate father, eat and drink wine and get massaged and slather his perpetually brown skin with oils and lotions and soak up his beloved sun that I for the first time realized the value of the body.  He loved not only the intellectual work he did but the simple and corporeal pleasures of life, and he insisted I learn to love them as well.  “If you’re not happy, I’m not happy,” he used to say as he booked a massage appointment for me despite my half-hearted protests.

The second thing that Phil gave me was the most effusive and genuine encouragement of my own literary ambitions that I have perhaps ever received.  When I was in college, before I met Phil, I worked part-time for another well-known New York City writer.  This man has been something of a literary scion for decades and has had a string of female assistants over the years, and yet whenever he asked anyone what her professional goals were and she said writing (inevitably, because why would you work as a writer’s assistant if you didn’t want to be a writer?) he would always respond with something condescending and dismissive such as, “Oh, I wouldn’t wish it upon anyone” or “But why?  There’s no money in it.”  And this was a blind man who lived in an Upper East Side classic six entirely furnished by Sotheby’s.  As this is a sharp crowd, I doubt I need to dissect this metaphor.

But Phil never once bemoaned the state of publishing or suggest I consider accounting.  From day one, he wanted me to develop relationships with everyone and anyone he knew in the business of writing books.  He knew he was giving me a wealth of material by insisting I tag along to interviews with DEA agents, editorial meetings at big publishing houses and pizza dates with men in the Witness Protection Program.  Phil’s idea of the writer was a somewhat antiquated and romantic one; he liked to believe in the writer as wanderer, as artist, as renegade.  He himself lived that example, and he encouraged me to embrace my own unconventional, peripatetic nature.  He made concessions for me so I could go after stories I found compelling.  This past winter in Miami, when I wanted to write a piece about python hunting in the Everglades, he gave me the day off and requested simply that I try not to get eaten by a twenty-foot long snake.  It didn’t take much for him to admit that it would be pretty funny to have to interview new assistants and explain that the position was empty because his former assistant had passed away.

“Oh no, how did she die?” the little interviewees would ask.  “Car accident?  Plague?”

“No,” Phil would say in response, “she was eaten by a python.”

Another thing we shared was a somewhat sick sense of humor.

Phil knew that the most valuable gifts you can give a fledgling writer are experience and support, and he gave me bucket loads of both.  He asked me numerous times over the course of our working together if I would write a book about him after he had passed.  The only way I can respond to that request now is by saying that after everything we went through together, how could I not?  Don’t worry, Phil.  The process has already begun.

The writer in me that Phil so valued, she wants to end this speech on the most poignant note any New York Times book reviewer could fathom.  She wants to be able to give everyone, including Phil and herself, a sense of closure, of comfort, of finality.  She wants to whine to Phil that eulogies can never be anything but trite and cheesy and she’s never written one before, she doesn’t know how.  If Phil were here, he would tell her to read A Moveable Feast and follow Papa Hemingway’s example by sticking to simple, declarative sentences.  He would tell her to look at the horizon and be inspired by it.  He would tell her not to worry, because no matter what, she’ll do a great job.

_______________________________

PS I have it on good account that my eulogy was the best of six, and do you know what that means?  I deliver a better eulogy than Tony Danza.  Say WHAT!

If I Were a Dyke…

November 14, 2010

Is that word still offensive?  Probably, but it wouldn’t be if a lezzie said it.  OMG how hot is Georgia May Jagger?

So I guess if I were a lesbian my type would be Big Blond Hair and Big Teeth with a Big Gap

 

I NEED ADVICE

November 10, 2010

Project!

I replied to this ad:

new york craigslistmanhattangigswriting gigs

Pop Culture Teacher Needed!! (Financial District)


Date: 2010-11-09, 3:45PM EST
Reply to: gigs-vdnjf-2051288870@craigslist.org [Errors when replying to ads?]

 


 

Sincerely looking for one dynamic individual to teach American pop culture. The student is a foreign-born native English speaker who knows very little about American popular references. Teaching experience highly preferred. Must be social, patient, responsible, funny, and ideally have/had been working as a writer/columnist for a medium size newspaper/magazine. Must be able to meet in Midtown or Downtown Manhattan. Please send qualifications (whatever they are) and pay requirement asap. Serious and relevant inquiry only. Immediate start. 

  • it’s NOT ok to contact this poster with services or other commercial interests
  • Compensation: tbd

PostingID: 2051288870

and received this:

Dear Kesley,

Thank you for your kind submission.

 

The person I am looking for a tutor for is an intelligent and well-educated young actress. Unfortunately, she was not raised in America and knows nothing about popular references. My sole objective in having these lessons is for her to understand them. I want her to know exactly what is funny and what is not when hearing conversations and reading scripts, so she can intuitively laugh at the right moment, instead of at the “wrong” moment. If this sounds like your expertise, please propose a lesson plan or alike. How would you teach someone who knows nothing about the subject to begin with? How would you teach someone what is funny and what is not and let the person remember?

I look forward to your response. Hopefully we can begin the lesson as early as possible.

Thank you.

Shirley

IDEAS???

A Lovely Story

November 5, 2010

… that I didn’t write.

When I was young and ripe with angst, I was in group therapy with a girl even younger and more full of angst than myself (the latter being debatable.)  She was a Manhattanite born and bred, but not a silver spoon, Brearly-educated Manhattanite, rather the product of an ill-fated marriage (mom became a lesbian) whose friends hung out in the gritty East Village and had impromptu threesomes.  She was a girl who started smoking at fourteen and wore dark eyeliner and had moody photos of pale waifs half-submerged in bathtubs cut out from magazines pasted all over her wall.  She was a chubby, unibrowed child who became this dark, lovely teenager with impossibly tiny wrists and a slow tone that could make you swoon.  And this was her favorite short story:

The Most Beautiful Woman in Town, by Charles Bukowski

Cass was the youngest and most beautiful of 5 sisters. Cass was the most beautiful girl in town. 1/2 Indian with a supple and strange body, a snake-like and fiery body with eyes to go with it. Cass was fluid moving fire. She was like a spirit stuck into a form that would not hold her. Her hair was black and long and silken and whirled about as did her body. Her spirit was either very high or very low. There was no in between for Cass. Some said she was crazy. The dull ones said that. The dull ones would never understand Cass. To the men she was simply a sex machine and they didn’t care whether she was crazy or not. And Cass danced and flirted, kissed the men, but except for an instance or two, when it came time to make it with Cass, Cass had somehow slipped away, eluded the men.

Her sisters accused her of misusing her beauty, of not using her mind enough, but Cass had mind and spirit; she painted, she danced, she sang, she made things of clay, and when people were hurt either in the spirit or the flesh, Cass felt a deep grieving for them. Her mind was simply different; her mind was simply not practical. Her sisters were jealous of her because she attracted their men, and they were angry because they felt she didn’t make the best use of them. She had a habit of being kind to the uglier ones; the so-called handsome men revolted her- “No guts,” she said, “no zap. They are riding on their perfect little earlobes and well- shaped nostrils…all surface and no insides…” She had a temper that came close to insanity, she had a temper that some call insanity. Her father had died of alcohol and her mother had run off leaving the girls alone. The girls went to a relative who placed them in a convent. The convent had been an unhappy place, more for Cass than the sisters. The girls were jealous of Cass and Cass fought most of them. She had razor marks all along her left arm from defending herself in two fights. There was also a permanent scar along the left cheek but the scar rather than lessening her beauty only seemed to highlight it. I met her at the West End Bar several nights after her release from the convent. Being youngest, she was the last of the sisters to be released. She simply came in and sat next to me. I was probably the ugliest man in town and this might have had something to do with it.

“Drink?” I asked.

“Sure, why not?”

I don’t suppose there was anything unusual in our conversation that night, it was simply in the feeling Cass gave. She had chosen me and it was as simple as that. No pressure. She liked her drinks and had a great number of them. She didn’t seem quite of age but they served he anyhow. Perhaps she had forged i.d., I don’t know. Anyhow, each time she came back from the restroom and sat down next to me, I did feel some pride. She was not only the most beautiful woman in town but also one of the most beautiful I had ever seen. I placed my arm about her waist and kissed her once.

“Do you think I’m pretty?” she asked.

“Yes, of course, but there’s something else… there’s more than your looks…”

“People are always accusing me of being pretty. Do you really think I’m pretty?”

“Pretty isn’t the word, it hardly does you fair.”

Cass reached into her handbag. I thought she was reaching for her handkerchief. She came out with a long hatpin. Before I could stop her she had run this long hatpin through her nose, sideways, just above the nostrils. I felt disgust and horror. She looked at me and laughed, “Now do you think me pretty? What do you think now, man?” I pulled the hatpin out and held my handkerchief over the bleeding. Several people, including the bartender, had seen the act. The bartender came down:

“Look,” he said to Cass, “you act up again and you’re out. We don’t need your dramatics here.”

“Oh, fuck you, man!” she said.

“Better keep her straight,” the bartender said to me.

“She’ll be all right,” I said.

“It’s my nose, I can do what I want with my nose.”

“No,” I said, “it hurts me.”

“You mean it hurts you when I stick a pin in my nose?”

“Yes, it does, I mean it.”

“All right, I won’t do it again. Cheer up.”

She kissed me, rather grinning through the kiss and holding the handkerchief to her nose. We left for my place at closing time. I had some beer and we sat there talking. It was then that I got the perception of her as a person full of kindness and caring. She gave herself away without knowing it. At the same time she would leap back into areas of wildness and incoherence. Schitzi. A beautiful and spiritual schitzi. Perhaps some man, something, would ruin her forever. I hoped that it wouldn’t be me. We went to bed and after I turned out the lights Cass asked me,

“When do you want it? Now or in the morning?”

“In the morning,” I said and turned my back.

In the morning I got up and made a couple of coffees, brought her one in bed. She laughed.

“You’re the first man who has turned it down at night.”

“It’s o.k.,” I said, “we needn’t do it at all.”

“No, wait, I want to now. Let me freshen up a bit.”

Cass went into the bathroom. She came out shortly, looking quite wonderful, her long black hair glistening, her eyes and lips glistening, her glistening… She displayed her body calmly, as a good thing. She got under the sheet.

“Come on, lover man.”

I got in. She kissed with abandon but without haste. I let my hands run over her body, through her hair. I mounted. It was hot, and tight. I began to stroke slowly, wanting to make it last. Her eyes looked directly into mine.

“What’s your name?” I asked.

“What the hell difference does it make?” she asked.

I laughed and went on ahead. Afterwards she dressed and I drove her back to the bar but she was difficult to forget. I wasn’t working and I slept until 2 p.m. then got up and read the paper. I was in the bathtub when she came in with a large leaf- an elephant ear.

“I knew you’d be in the bathtub,” she said, “so I brought you something to cover that thing with, nature boy.”

She threw the elephant leaf down on me in the bathtub.

“How did you know I’d be in the tub?”

“I knew.”

Almost every day Cass arrived when I was in the tub. The times were different but she seldom missed, and there was the elephant leaf. And then we’d make love. One or two nights she phoned and I had to bail her out of jail for drunkenness and fighting.

“These sons of bitches,” she said, “just because they buy you a few drinks they think they can get into your pants.”

“Once you accept a drink you create your own trouble.”

“I thought they were interested in me, not just my body.”

“I’m interested in you and your body. I doubt, though, that most men can see beyond your body.”

I left town for 6 months, bummed around, came back. I had never forgotten Cass, but we’d had some type of argument and I felt like moving anyhow, and when I got back i figured she’d be gone, but I had been sitting in the West End Bar about 30 minutes when she walked in and sat down next to me.

“Well, bastard, I see you’ve come back.”

I ordered her a drink. Then I looked at her. She had on a high- necked dress. I had never seen her in one of those. And under each eye, driven in, were 2 pins with glass heads. All you could see were the heads of the pins, but the pins were driven down into her face.

“God damn you, still trying to destroy your beauty, eh?”

“No, it’s the fad, you fool.”

“You’re crazy.”

“I’ve missed you,” she said.

“Is there anybody else?”

“No there isn’t anybody else. Just you. But I’m hustling. It costs ten bucks. But you get it free.”

“Pull those pins out.”

“No, it’s the fad.”

“It’s making me very unhappy.”

“Are you sure?”

“Hell yes, I’m sure.”

Cass slowly pulled the pins out and put them back in her purse.

“Why do you haggle your beauty?” I asked. “Why don’t you just live with it?”

“Because people think it’s all I have. Beauty is nothing, beauty won’t stay. You don’t know how lucky you are to be ugly, because if people like you you know it’s for something else.”

“O.k.,” I said, “I’m lucky.”

“I don’t mean you’re ugly. People just think you’re ugly. You have a fascinating face.”

“Thanks.”

We had another drink.

“What are you doing?” she asked.

“Nothing. I can’t get on to anything. No interest.”

“Me neither. If you were a woman you could hustle.”

“I don’t think I could ever make contact with that many strangers, it’s wearing.”

“You’re right, it’s wearing, everything is wearing.”

We left together. People still stared at Cass on the streets. She was a beautiful woman, perhaps more beautiful than ever. We made it to my place and I opened a bottle of wine and we talked. With Cass and I, it always came easy. She talked a while and I would listen and then i would talk. Our conversation simply went along without strain. We seemed to discover secrets together. When we discovered a good one Cass would laugh that laugh- only the way she could. It was like joy out of fire. Through the talking we kissed and moved closer together. We became quite heated and decided to go to bed. It was then that Cass took off her high -necked dress and I saw it- the ugly jagged scar across her throat. It was large and thick.

“God damn you, woman,” I said from the bed, “god damn you, what have you done?

“I tried it with a broken bottle one night. Don’t you like me any more? Am I still beautiful?”

I pulled her down on the bed and kissed her. She pushed away and laughed, “Some men pay me ten and I undress and they don’t want to do it. I keep the ten. It’s very funny.”

“Yes,” I said, “I can’t stop laughing… Cass, bitch, I love you…stop destroying yourself; you’re the most alive woman I’ve ever met.”

We kissed again. Cass was crying without sound. I could feel the tears. The long black hair lay beside me like a flag of death. We enjoined and made slow and somber and wonderful love. In the morning Cass was up making breakfast. She seemed quite calm and happy. She was singing. I stayed in bed and enjoyed her happiness. Finally she came over and shook me,

“Up, bastard! Throw some cold water on your face and pecker and come enjoy the feast!”

I drove her to the beach that day. It was a weekday and not yet summer so things were splendidly deserted. Beach bums in rags slept on the lawns above the sand. Others sat on stone benches sharing a lone bottle. The gulls whirled about, mindless yet distracted. Old ladies in their 70’s and 80’s sat on the benches and discussed selling real estate left behind by husbands long ago killed by the pace and stupidity of survival. For it all, there was peace in the air and we walked about and stretched on the lawns and didn’t say much. It simply felt good being together. I bought a couple of sandwiches, some chips and drinks and we sat on the sand eating. Then I held Cass and we slept together about an hour. It was somehow better than lovemaking. There was flowing together without tension. When we awakened we drove back to my place and I cooked a dinner. After dinner I suggested to Cass that we shack together. She waited a long time, looking at me, then she slowly said, “No.” I drove her back to the bar, bought her a drink and walked out. I found a job as a parker in a factory the next day and the rest of the week went to working. I was too tired to get about much but that Friday night I did get to the West End Bar. I sat and waited for Cass. Hours went by . After I was fairly drunk the bartender said to me, “I’m sorry about your girlfriend.”

“What is it?” I asked.

“I’m sorry, didn’t you know?”

“No.”

“Suicide. She was buried yesterday.”

“Buried?” I asked. It seemed as though she would walk through the doorway at any moment. How could she be gone?

“Her sisters buried her.”

“A suicide? Mind telling me how?”

“She cut her throat.”

“I see. Give me another drink.”

I drank until closing time. Cass was the most beautiful of 5 sisters, the most beautiful in town. I managed to drive to my place and I kept thinking, I should have insisted she stay with me instead of accepting that “no.” Everything about her had indicated that she had cared. I simply had been too offhand about it, lazy, too unconcerned. I deserved my death and hers. I was a dog. No, why blame the dogs? I got up and found a bottle of wine and drank from it heavily. Cass the most beautiful girl in town was dead at 20. Outside somebody honked their automobile horn. They were very loud and persistent. I sat the bottle down and screamed out: “GOD DAMN YOU, YOU SON OF A BITCH ,SHUT UP!” The night kept coming and there was nothing I could do.

You Know What I’ve Always Thought Was a Shame?

November 5, 2010

The fact that the title of W. Somerset Maugham’s Of Human Bondage makes the book sound WAY more interesting than it actually is.

Another Neologism

November 4, 2010

A friend who I have not seen in quite a while and I were gchatting and he requested that I email him to make plans to hang out.  When I did, I congratulated myself for following through.  CB’s response:

1) Bonus points on the profriendessionalism (hybrid of “friend” and “professionalism”)

PROFRIENDESSIONALISM!  It’s a mouthful but it works.

The End of Google Buzz!

November 2, 2010

Below is an email I (and likely many of you) received this afternoon regarding an old issue known as Google Buzz.  Note the bold text.

Google rarely contacts Gmail users via email, but we are making an exception to let you know that we’ve reached a settlement in a lawsuit regarding Google Buzz (http://buzz.google.com), a service we launched within Gmail in February of this year.

Shortly after its launch, we heard from a number of people who were concerned about privacy. In addition, we were sued by a group of Buzz users and recently reached a settlement in this case.

The settlement acknowledges that we quickly changed the service to address users’ concerns. In addition, Google has committed $8.5 million to an independent fund, most of which will support organizations promoting privacy education and policy on the web. We will also do more to educate people about privacy controls specific to Buzz. The more people know about privacy online, the better their online experience will be.

Just to be clear, this is not a settlement in which people who use Gmail can file to receive compensation. Everyone in the U.S. who uses Gmail is included in the settlement, unless you personally decide to opt out before December 6, 2010. The Court will consider final approval of the agreement on January 31, 2011. This email is a summary of the settlement, and more detailed information and instructions approved by the court, including instructions about how to opt out, object, or comment, are available at http://www.BuzzClassAction.com.

So… we cannot file to receive compensation, but we are included in the settlement?  I don’t get it.  Am I a moron?  Answer: kinda.

Google Voice

November 1, 2010

My roommate has that fancy Google Voice thing with which your voicemails are converted to text and emailed to you, and apparently this is the message I left her on Saturday morning.  Try to guess what I was actually talking about.  If you can, I’ll pay you seventy-four million dollars:

Hey, it’s off that exciting, but I just looked into the the, bag of from last fall will be in and nursery baby need South America. So what we’re died tonight or whatever you just give need the last pair of need. Docs and then we can just have like a talk about or something. Alright, talk to you later. Bye.

Love Poem

October 29, 2010

Ah, to be loved by the “master of the anxious pause.”  Antonia Fraser was one lucky lady!

It Is Here (for A)

What sound was that?
I turn away, into the shaking room.

What was that sound that came in on the dark? 

What is this maze of light it leaves us in?

What is this stance we take,

to turn away and then turn back?

What did we hear?

It was the breath we took when we first met.

Listen.  It is here.