Bringing back the Oral Traditions

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Bluelighter
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Get yer damned mind out of the gutter, I'm not talking about that kind of oral!
I mean the Oral tradition of mankind, telling stories! This used to be the only way people learned, the only way we could be entertained... by telling stories about our lives and the lives of others. This is what the great myths of the world were based on, this is what some of the greatest writing in all of literature were created from.
Share a story about yourself or someone you have known in your lifetime here (or a story of someone that came before you) , let's see if bluelighters can kind of rekindle the Oral Tradition in some small way. As long as this forum exists, I will make it one of my extra duties to always keep a thread like this on the first page.
Thanks to Maui2k for sparking this idea in my head when I replied to one of his threads. I will post a story of my own soon enough, but I want to hear yours first.
[ 31 December 2001: Message edited by: Web ]
 
Ok so maybe this isn't quite the oral tradition ut it is about someone in my life(was originally a newspaper article written by me..its more along the lines of story 2 me though.do what ya want w/ it i just feel like sharing this w/ some people....ok but now this one is another "iffy" post once again I'AM unsure of where it most properly belongs..well here goes nothing "REMEMBERING MEGHAN MEANS REMEBERING TO SMILE" The last time I saw you is the only way I can remeber you.If only everyone could of seen you and your smile that night, if they knew how much fun you had then their wouldn't have been a single tear at your service.I thought you should know that some people are really taking this badly. Some try to comfort others telling them all things happen for a reason, and all people have a time. But it's hard.People can only think of the sadness, instead of the hapiness of knowing you.If they only knew that you left behind the best part of yourself-your smile.Everyone is sayin how your almost-untouched face was still smiling when your father came to indentify you.But even if your face had been badly brusied, he would have recognized that smile.It was one we were all to familiar with.Whether someone kneew you or not, they knew that smile.When news spread, and pictures circultaed through the school, those who had only passing encounters recognized you by it.If someone had seen you, you were wearing that smile.You must have shown it a hundred times than night.You greetedus with it and said goodbye with it as u and your b/f drifted into the crowd of dancers.Throughout the night I spotted the two of you dancing, and you were still smiling. We left the hotel and danced under the starlight sky atop the parking garage. You watched as your b/f danced like a fool..AS he looks at your for approval you just smile and nod your head in agreement.After denny's and boomers we decided to head back home before we all got tired.our humor was growing weaker but yet u still smiled!You laughed as I had to be woken up narly four times as we missed four different turns to my house.I had nearly closed the door when i looked abck and sadi "Y'all be safe, alright?"You smiled and said good night.That night your hair was still as beautifull and your makeup as when u left your house.You spent the night laughing, dancin, cuddling w/ evry1 but nonetheless smiling!Your last night had to be one of the most fun nights of your life.Through your smile you helped make it one of mine as well! You didnt live or die crying or mourning.In both you were smiling.So perhaps when dealing w/ the loss of anyone..meghan.. dont wear depressing black clothing, white ribbons, etc.the best thing we can do in memory of you, meghan, is just smile!
~*Her voice rose softly as she sang of the forest twilght,the music of the rain, the caress of the wind.She thanked God for those things and for the Great circle in wich there is no final loss, only a temporary farewell in oneness without beginng or end.*~
 
Here's a funny story about what happenned to my aunt. It was about 5 years ago and we were spending the summer at this beach house my family use to have. Well, there were actually 2 houses side by side, but the other house was occupied by my uncles dad. Well, his name was Bud and he hated my aunt because she married his son, but they got divorced, yet he still didnt like her. So the old guy dies the year before we get to the beach house and my aunt and my grandma AND my mom where walking through his house since he didnt live there anymore. As they were walking down the stairs my aunt said, "Bud always had bad taste."
After saying that a light bulb from the ceiling short of 'flew' at my aunt. It came from an angle, but we dont really know how it happenned...or do we? ;)
 
When I was living in Las Vegas, I worked as a sub-contractor for AT&T Wireless. One night I was working on a cellular sight that was on top of The Flamingo Hotel & Casino's parking garage. At one point I had to stop working and wait for a call from an associate to help me from another sight, so I kicked back to relax a bit since I couldn't do anything until he called. I carried a paperback book with me for times like these that happened all to often. So there I was, sitting on the roof of this parking garage, reading a book, talking on the phone to another technician who'd called me for advice on something... I happen to look up, and I'm surrounded by 6 security guards. Seems that some drunk ass-hole that had lost all his money on the black-jack tables and had nothing else better to do, decided to look out his window & see me and call hotel security and tell them there was someone on top of the parking garage and was going to jump. So dig it, I have 6 security guards standing around me, wanting to know if I'm going to jump off the roof. I laughed and told them who I was and why I was there... I was working and waiting for a call. They said that was all well and good, but I couldn't wait anymore on the roof, I was "disturbing the guests". So I left that roof, never to return (because that stupidity just really pissed me off). The next day at the shop I earned the nick name "The Jumper"... it never wore off the entire time I lived there.
Guess you had to be there.
 
For two years my fiance lived in VA and I lived in FL. We'd find places in between to meet for weekends when we could, this would share the driving and allow us to see things we wouldn't normally visit.
We chose Florence, SC one weekend, as the miles were almost exactly even for each of us. We are enjoying the weekend and I see a flyer for a beauty trail advertised by a local campground. Now she and I enjoy nature, and we could use a nice hike through the woods, so what the hell. I find the campground and go into the main office to ask about the beauty trail (odd name for a hiking path, but hell, crackolackians are odd). I go in and ask the manager and have the following conversation:
Me: Excuse me. Could you tell me where the beauty trail is? (points to his flyer).
Him: (Note - I am not against gays, but this guy was flaming to the roof and I was in there by myself. He spoke with a lisp, and a lot of touching). Well, itth really very nice. You'd like it a lot.
Me: Well, thanks. But where is it?
Him: Go back on the main road, turn right on thith thtreet and go about half a mile. You'll thee a hair thalon on the right. That's where Thteve works, he doeth great hair. He could point you right to it, it'th right acroth the thtreet from him. You'd like him. You want me to call him and let him know you are coming? He may be getting ready for hith lunch break, he could probably join you if you like.
Me: Um...thanks for the info, but you don't need to call Steve. Half mile down, on the left, across from the hair salon - got it.
Him: You really should thtop in and thee Thteve. He'th really nice.
Me: Yeah. Okay, thanks. Bye.
So we drive down to the area, and turn left into a neighborhood that has a sign pointing in saying 'Beauty Trail' with an arrow. No, we didn't stop to see Steve. So we are in a neighborhood, and I follow the sign. We drive to the first road and turn right following the Beauty Trail (BT) signs. Go to the end of the road, turn left, turn left on next road, end up a block from where we came in...I can see where we came in...why did they make us go around the block? Up and down about 6 more streets and I'm getting aggravated.
A few more minutes of this and we see a park. I figured it was odd to have a hiking trail in a neighborhood, but the park has some woods, maybe the trail is there. Follow BT signs to the park, and BT says keep driving. Okay, maybe it's somewhere near the park? We have all day, so I'll have some more patience and keep looking for this beauty trail.
Up and down the streets, up and down, follow the BT signs. Finally, we reach a major road. What? WTF did we go thru the neighborhood for? Follow BT signs and eventually enter another neighborhood. Up and down, up and down...wtf, again?
After 45 minutes of this, we pull over with a realization. We start laughing at ourselves because the streets were the beauty trail. We were supposed to be looking at the houses as we drove and that was the whole point of the beauty trail. A) the houses weren't that nice, and B) we never had a clue, and C) don't ever go to Florence unless you have to, the beauty trail was the highlight.
 
Wow you guys all have amazingly nicely written stories :) I'm not that great of a writer, but I will you about my first experience with a girl who felt the same way as I felt about her.
It was late last year when some of the guys were at one of our friends work place called "The Silver Cloud Inn" We were all bored so we just sat there talking and one of my friends knew this phone thing where you could call in a meet girls. So we called it and they found this one girl who seemed interesting and decided to give her a page. All of the guys took their turned and talked to her for a few minutes and then it was my turn to talk to her, but I was too shy. So of my friends told her "oh they shy guy is to shy to talk to you!" and that was that.
I later found out that they got her number too and they were suppose to meet up with her for a movie. I was suppose to go that day too and I told them to wait for me until I got off work! They said they would but when I called them up after I got off of work, I found out they already watched the movie (The Cell). I was disappointed because I really wanted to meet her, but a terrible thing happened a few days later. I have diabetes and acid began building up in my blood because I became very ill. I ended up in the hospital for a week and all of the guys came to visit me while I was there! (so happy)
But anyways a few weeks had passed by since we last talked to her on the phone and everyone had met her but me! The day had finally came and we all decided to go to this family fun center to play some minature golf. So we all met up and they told me that she was going to be there too! I was so excited and we picked her up at her house. When she came in to sat into my car, I was breathless. I could speak, nor did I want to because I was afraid I would embarrass myself. It was a good thing I had my shades on so she couldn't see me staring at her through my near view mirror. But we finally got there and everyone began playing arcade games. It wasn't till about 30 mins after we were there that she finally spoke to me. I am not sure if these were her exact words but she said, "so... are these guys all of your friends?" I was sitting at a racing car game and she came up behind me so it startled me a bit. I repied with a simple answer "yup" We began talking a bit there and I started to get to know her a bit more. We played minature golf and I won the game. We later went to my friends house to watch movies and I found out that she really enjoyed watching most of the WB shows, which I thought was really cool.
I saw her a few times after that, but nothing really interesting happened during those times. We didn't talk much just because of my shy nature, but each time I did, I got to know her a little better.
A few weeks after I met her, a friend of mine was throwing a BBQ party at his house and she was also there. I will never ever forget this night because this was when I felt as if I really just "clicked" with her. It was when most of the people there left and we sat there watching movies. I was putting one of my friend's baby to sleep and she asked if she lean her head on my shoulder.
Wait I should call her something instead of "her." Let's name her "Jen."
So I finally put the baby to sleep and Jen was also sound asleep on my shoulder. about half an hour later that baby woke up! I tried to put her back to sleep cuz she was crying, but i couldn't cuz Jen was still asleep on my shoulder! So yeah I ened up waking both of them up :)
There was this one game we also played together, but it was really stupid and will take forever to explain how its played. Lets just say I totally messed up and everyone began laughing at me. Because I really did make a stupid mistake while playing :) I don't know, Jen and I just talked so much that night and I felt as if we had so much in common and that she felt the same way about me. It was about 6am in the morning when we were going to go down to this beach where you could see the city lights of Seattle and where we were going to watch the sun rise, but then I remembered my younger siblings had school that day! I rushed to drop a friend and Jen home and rushed back home. It was to late, my mom was awake and saw me arriving home. I was suppose to be back by 2am, and I didn't so... Oh god I will also never forget the face my mom had that day. I thought I was going to hell and my life had ended right there. I was pretty much grounded for life~! I was so afraid I would never see Jen again so cried on my bed that morning till I cried myself to sleep.
For about the next month, she and I talked on the phone for a while and I found out that she was going out with another one of my friends. I felt felt a little heartbroken because I felt as if I didn't screw up that day, I would still be seeing her and maybe something would have worked out.
Rumors started to go around about her, and everyone stopped contacting her, including myself. I did not stop contacting her because of these rumors because I only heard of one at that time, and i heard that it probably wasn't true. My life at that time was just going down the drain and I barely talked to any of my friends at all. I lost contact with almost all of my friends so it just wasn't Jen.
A little over a half a year had passed, and a friend of mine and I were really bored and wanted to find some people to hang out with. We thought of her and wondered what she had been up to, because no one had heard from her for a long time. It took us a few months until we finally found her again and when I spoke to her and asked her why didn't she call me anymore, she told me that she thought everyone hated her.
Why would everyone hate her? Because of the rumors (well some are facts I think) about her. Like I said before I only knew of one which wasn't a big deal and I can understand why so many people would dislike her because of things people say she did. But we talked a few times on the phone but for very brief momments. There was a party comming up in Seattle (Halloween) and I had 2 extra tickets that I needed to get rid of. I found out that she goes raving too so I asked her if she wanted to buy these two tickets off me and she said she would.
So I met her at China Town and when I saw her... Lets just say it was like the first time all over again. She looked amazing. But I wasn't as shy this time and began talking to her and asked her how she was doing and all. I was was driving around and she was pointing out where she parked at (Jen was in the back seat) but I felt as if she was getting really close to me. I usually don't have girls getting that close to me, so I blushed a little and we just continued talking and I finally sold her the tickets and we departed.
The next time I saw her was at the rave. I had already dropped a pill an hour or so before and was beginning to feel it. During the time I was waiting in line with a friend of mine and when we were inside looking for other friends, we kept calling her but she wouldn't pick up! I was so frustrated because I so wanted to see her and still felt the same way I did about her last year. But while I was starting to feel my E kick in, she showed up all of a sudden out of no where! When I saw her I felt as if I was peaking! I couldn't believe my eyes because I thought she wasnt going to show up and I had given up looking for her. But she sat on my lap and began talking to everyone else and I found out she dropped 2 1/2 pills. I was shocked because for a small girl like her, I didn't think she could handle that much.
But yeah she left us for a while and I know I was really peaking because I felt all good inside and was just dancing and all. When I went back to my friends, I saw Jen and her cousin there and they were heading outside because her cousin wasn't feeling so good. I followed them with a friend of mind and Jen was really rolling hard. She wanted someone to lean on so I sat infront of her and just was just leaning on me. She started shaking really hard and that is when I started to become very scared. I sat behind and held onto her as tight as I could. I'm a pretty strong guy and I still couldn't hold her to stop shaking so violently. We sat out there for about an hour or so, hoping that she would sober up and she did a little. We went back inside where the music was bumping so loud and she just wanted to sit there with me so I agreed. I sat down and then she sat inbetween my legs on the floor and grabbed ahold of both of my arms. It felt so good holding her and I never had held anyone like that before. She would hold onto my hands so tightly as if she was afraid someone was going to get her. From time to time she would look up at me and just smile, and I would smile back at her. Her cousin was such a cool person because she would stop by time to time and ask Jen if she was okay and if she needed anything. I kept Jen hydrated with lots of water and we sat there most of the night and just looked up at the lasers and listened to the music. It was towards the end of the night when she finally wanted to get up and walk around, so I had my arms around her waist and she would still be holding onto my arms ever so tightly. I introduced her to a lot of my friends and then the party ended. I stood out there we with and waited for all of our friends to meet up with us. I drove her to her car which was parked far away and we departed. Well we didn't just departed.. a lot of hugging and cuddling involved :)
While I was driving my friends home, it was so damn hard to keep my eyes open! Especially with the heat blowing in my eyes! But yeah I made it home around 7am, took a nice ass long shower and got dressed to bed. But just before I was about to sleep, I heard the phone ring. I was wondering "who the hell would call at this time of the day!" so I ignored it and went to sleep.
The next day, my mom told me that some girl named... ermm "Jen" called and I was like... WTF! I couldn't believe she called me right when she got home from the rave. That began to really make me think... was she thinking about me that much?! I was... so... whats the word.. flattered. So I called her later that night because I didn't know what time she went to bed. But yeah we talked for a long time and.. lets just say we ended up in a relationship, but she did not want to put a label on it :(
What happened after that was some of the best times of my life and for the past 3 weeks I have been experiencing the worst times of my life. Its only since a couple days ago that I have been feeling better and I am starting to get my life back together. Oh yeah if you don't know already as it seems pretty obvious I guess, we are no longer together, but I think we are still friends. I am just trying to give her room. thanks for reading this long story! I hope I didn't bore you! hehez!
 
I really love this forum and this topic.
Cheers!
When I was a little girl, I was shockingly short, which was written off by my parents as genetics. "All the women in the family are small! Good things come in small packages!"
By age 7, I was displaying symptoms that were pretty shocking; symptoms mimicking puberty.
Puberty on a 7 year old girl?
I was diagnosed with Precocious Puberty. In short, I would soon enter full-blown maturity and would stop growing, as the bones fuse during puberty. If something wasn't done to prevent the full cycle before completion, I would literally be 4'2" for the rest of my life.
In order to properly care for my illness, I was to become part of a clinical study for a pharmaceutical drug that was approved for cancer patients, but had not yet been approved for my condition. The treatment was fairly invasive; constant blood draws to check my hormone levels, different drugs being pumped into my system to see how my body would react to them as well as the Big Medicine, which was the elusive medication that would halt the condition and buy me some time to grow a bit more. I wasn't terribly happy with my parents, but what child likes constant pokes and prods?
After 3 and a half years on the treatment, I had grown to a satisfactory and totally appreciated 5 feet tall. The drug was approved by the FDA for Precocious Puberty and is being administered today for children suffering from it. It isn't very common but I'm eternally grateful that there was research and treatment.
In honor of my delight and in the holiday spirit, I've asked my friends and family to bring stuffed animals and toys to me instead of gifts targeted for me. On Christmas Eve, I plan on hauling the load to the Pediatric floor of the local hospital and distributing everything to the kids. I hope that it brings them as much happiness as possible during a holiday hospital stay.
There's my story.
 
^ Wow, really cool story!
We just might have to have some nominations for best story and throw out some awards.
Keep the stories coming, I think I'll bump this thread up once a week if nothing new rolls in.
 
Originally posted by Ashke in Ecstacy Discussion, 09 May 2000, reprinted without permission.
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I remember when I was first swallowed whole by the rave scene. It happened so quickly. One night I was mingling on the tassels of a crowd that intrigued me, and the very next I found myself woven into the very tapestry of it all. My first experience wasn't with the weekend ravers, the middle-class kids who have jobs and classes, a life that has parties on the side. These were the ones who were ravers as a lifestyle.
Most of them minors and parentless, had nothing but the party scene for comfort and acceptance, a family. Their rents were earned through drugs and 'spanging' ("Got any spare change?"). Those street drifters that couldn't keep down homes would migrate between those who could, in exchange for friendships, drug connections, loyalty, physical protection... There is still much you can offer even when you're broke and carry home around in a backpack.
So day two in my dabbling with a group that had vaguely intrigued me, I found myself in the heart of it, among these kids who lived for nothing else. And they were some characters. Beautiful souls on some of these children, and there were times it just poured out of their eyes as they spoke to you. I found myself sitting in this squatter house in the heart of the slums that surround campus, and it was packed with all these people who lived like lost boys.
The furniture fell into two categories; something to sprawl on, or something that looked cool while you were tripping. When I first met Punky, I was perched nervously on one of the former watching her be hypnotized by the latter.
She was beautiful. She was lost in one of those lightning balls, the purple globes that send white fire racing at your fingertips. Her face was pure little girl wonder streaked with ultra-violet shadows. I asked very timidly, "Are you tripping...?" for I never had tripped, but just watching her made me think I might better understand what LSD was like. She took a very long time to nod, and longer still to drag her focus away and look at me.
I murmured, "What do you see...?"
And she just smiled at me with distraction and said, "It isn't visual." That baffled me, because I didn't know there WAS anything to it but visuals. However her attention returned to the globe before I could question it.
She answered me anyway, without speaking another word for the rest of the night. I think the globe was captivating because of the thoughts I saw racing behind the focus her eyes. I wonder if she was lost in the magic concept of white fire rushing to greet her touch, or maybe the thought of being caught inside that glass prison, braving an insane violet storm?
The glimpse I got of her that night was a precious and rare one, and it wouldn't be til later that week that I met the Punky most of the world saw. Yet that side intrigued me too. She was so *strong*! She fiercely protected those close to her, watched with guards up on those in the distance, and refused to take shit from *anyone*.
Punky was every bit as short as me, but it never stopped her from being intimidating to anyone who knew her. She was lovely, but she saw this as an obstacle to overcome in expressing her real self. She did what she could to downplay or harden her looks: her jungle kid gear... her shaved head with bangs kept in long spikes that fell in angles to sharpen the soft curves of her pretty cheeks and round face.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Note to the reader: At this point one might notice slight changes in Ashke's tone, or wordchoice, or whatever... It's because at this point her sweetheart of a boy very suddenly started to trip balls and required the whole of her attention. The story was picked up again the following day at work after absolutely no sleep, entirely too much caffeine, and the mental exhaustion of keeping up with Loupy's acid-wired discussions and leap-frog thought process all night long. Thank u drive thru.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ever felt that you've fallen in love with someone you could never really touch? Punky was like that. Untouchable. She considered me a friend, and I knew she'd always have my back, but I knew I would never be allowed to really know her. I would never learn her secrets, get past her guards. I'd never see her cry.
But I suppose it doesn't matter. I think back to that summer and even now, a full year later, my memories of that girl are still so bright in my mind! She was every bit the stronger woman I had always wanted to be.
I remember the lewd, playful sparkle as she praised a passing college student's, er, feminine assets. She spoke with a crude, bold candor that managed to surprise and impress the all the nearby straight boys chagrined to agree with her.
I remember the night I went to campus and was eagerly told the tale of this magnificent showdown between Punky and a seventeen year old runaway turned dealer by the name of Shawn. He got himself in a financial "situation", and in his desperation tried selling bunk pills to the campus regulars. When a bunch of kids got sick off his shit, Punky hunted him down, thoroughly kicked his scrawny white ass, and made sure he understood that those were HER kids and she wasn't going to put up with shit like that. They say he's still in Ohio somewhere but no one I've talked to has seen him since.
I remember the compassion in the way she held my face this late summer night when I ODed on K. I remember how Punky's face swam in and out of recognition, but in those rare moments of focus it looked so stricken with the knowledge that she'd been the one who'd sold it to me. Her calm soothing words would reach me like some white noise I couldn't logically interpret as words... I could only grasp that I wasn't alone, and that someone had decided I wasn't allowed to drift away tonight. And dying, well, that was just out of the question.
I remember one night at a rave, how surprised I was to see Punky there... and taken further aback when she stumbled up to me with effort. She was rolling SO hard... off ridiculously too many pills, I'm sure. And I might have been concerned but she got up real close to my face and just studied me for a moment. It was clearly hard to focus on my face, but she forced it, and then mumbled something intensely heartfelt. Heartfelt.... and unintelligible. And then someone had snagged her arm from behind and she was dragged off. I've shyly wondered many times what she might have said that night, or if she remembers at all. Honestly, I doubt it. More than anything, I wonder if the truth would be disappointing compared to all the possibilities my over-active imagination conjured up just because of the way she locked that intense, unsteady gaze on my face.
When winter comes, the campus is like a ghost town at night. Between late August and early January I never saw her.
~*~*~*~
There are downsides to making friends with the campus rats. I mean, I don't regret the time I spend among them. As I said, I met some beautiful souls and lived out so many accidental adventures, found myself in the craziest situations and had some wildly fun moments there. The boring, milk-fed suburbia that I sprung from, well it never made me feel anything but restless, bored, sedated. But the price I pay is the understanding that I every day I watch some of these kids I love fiercely embrace their own self-destruction.
I guess I thought Punky would survive it somehow, you know? I admired her strength and her sense of honor and loyalty so much...
As the days got warmer, I found myself visiting campus more frequently. It was so exciting to see old familiar faces crawl out of the woodwork, and soon almost the whole crowd from last summer was accounted for.
She's not the same. I don't know what happened this winter, but she's lost something. I can't put my finger on it exactly, but each time I see her I feel its absense with an increasing sense of loss and gravity.
She's thinner, but it's so much more than that. I don't see the others walk eggshells around her like they used to. I don't see the hearty laugh or the spark of mischief. They say she doesn't sell as much as she used to, and a little investigation revealed that no one trusts her enough to front her anything these days. I heard she didn't party anymore. Though she was always friendly with me, she only seemed concerned these days with getting fucked up, scoring drugs for others, or trying to regain control on whatever insane chemical combo was overwhelming her at the moment. It was all about drugs now.
I remember how it stung me to overhear that the pills she had to offer this week were green clovers and cross-tops. I looked her dead in the eye and murmured numbly, "Clovers are DXM, aren't they? I've researched them..." And god, the way her eyes flared up with shame and defense as she mumbled, "I dunno, maybe, I heard they were smacky or something..." Oh god. I wanted to take her shoulders and shake her. You fucking bitch, you know exactly what fucking robotrip is, you know how much damage that shit does. Can you be the same wrathful angel that chased off that slimy fucker Shawn? Can you be the same girl I wanted so badly to be only a year ago?
It really ate at me why she had changed so much. What did it? I almost wanted to put blame with the kids who still saw her throughout the winter, but the answer I got was the same. "I try to tell her she oughta be good to herself, but you know Punky, she ain't gonna fuckin' listen."
Nobody really wanted to talk about it. I speak of my own sense of loss, but I know they felt her slip away too and that it must have pained them somehow.
These days I realized that the more I learned, the more I realized that deep down I was furious at her. How dare she let me down when I had looked up to her so utterly. I was so angry that I still missed her so much. Most of all I hated that I couldn't hate her. It would have been easier, but I remember when by chance last week I came across her all alone, curled up and disturbingly pale. It took me a moment to realize that she was miserably, violently ill. Coming down? I had no clue. I didn't want to care. She fucking did it to herself.
Right...?
Of course, what else? FUCKING BITCH! Do you know how badly I wanted to know you last summer? Do you know how honored I was that you called me your friend and always said you'd 'have my back'? Me, who was so shy and meek. I wanted to mold my own courage and dignity after your shining example. And now you come to me another skinny little corpse with all the smolder in your bold gaze gone ashen and dead. YOU KILLED THIS BEAUTIFUL PERSON I TREASURED AND FOR WHAT?
Fucking drugs. *laugh* You'd think that at some point I'd just get used to it. I swear to god I'm a junkie magnet. These motherfuckers win my heart and then they give it back and forget me in favor of pining after needles and chemical bliss.
Needles, yeah... She's shooting meth. I'm too daunted to even plot a rescue for this girl I'd loved. It's too plain to see that she's consumed by it. She doesn't seem receptive to help, and quite frankly I'm done risking my sanity trying to bring back the spiritually dead. It's too hard. Too unlikely. So fuck her. FUCK HER.
Right?
But as she huddled there so sick and all alone, I couldn't be angry at all. I crouched down beside her, and it all just slipped away. At that moment I could only brush her long bangs back as she emptied her stomach over the half dead grass she knelt on. I opened my mouth, and could only fill the awful silence between wet choking and gasps with my own murmured comfort. I could only remember that night I'd been so sick and alone... distantly, quietly terrified at the certainty that this mental detachment and numbness I couldn't escape was my own death's approach. And knowing that she held me then, that at the time it was noble and real, quiet acknowledgement that in her own gruff way she cared about me.
It's only a few days now that I've known the whole truth, really. But it still hasn't fully sunk in. It's so strange... In a way it's almost comforting to me. I mean, meth...? My brave friend has been ruined by meth addiction? My old demon? I don't know... It's fierce powerful stuff to be sure, but somehow *I* managed to struggle free. It was this battle that I somehow conquered, and continue to conquer to this day when I must. And Punky, she sells DXM to the very ones she used to defend with her life.
It's no less tragic of course, losing a friend, but it does give me some perspective. Maybe I'm not so lacking in strength after all. Maybe I'm doing alright for myself. And though it doesn't make me miss the girl she used to be any less, I think I should maybe look inside before returning to the false idol of strength I worshiped last summer.
~*~ Ashke ~*~
 
When i was 16 my family moved to a small town near saskatoon saskatuen (i have no idea how to spell it!!). It was sooooo cold when we arrived- i think like -25 or something ridiculous like that- being an aussie girl i froze and thought it was the end of the world. No sunshine, no pools, no beaches.
My family there told me that you had to eat big breakfasts of sausages and pancakes each morning as it helped block the cold and if you got stuck in the snow a big meal in your stomach would help fight freezing to death. (in oz i eat like a slice of toast!)
My mother bought me a huge coat and several tight long sleeve tops, a scarf (something i had never owned!!) ear mufffs (oh my god how embarrasing are ear muffs!) and so on.
People told me- always wear a beanie blah blah and never go out of the house with wet hair.
Well, one day we were leaving to walk to a family friends house (about a 7 minute walk)and i was late as usual and not really thinking about what i was doing (as usual)rushing around the house trying to remember the scarf the jacket, the mittens etc.
I has just got out of the shower and everyone was yelling at me to hurry up- so i did the usual girlie late dash (which takes forever). I had partly dried my hair but my stapfather insisted that we were leaving in 2 minutes.
I, being an aussie girl opted to do the make-up thing and not totally dry my hair as it would dry on the way (im so stupid)
Well everything was fine- we left the house, started walking- it was nice the moon was out, the family was together etc etc.
When we got the house we all organised ourselves on the doorstep making sure we looked alright. Mum fixing her coat, hair etc.
I fixed the skirt i was wearing and took off my mittens to check my hair- which i had put up in a bun with my fringe out (fringes were cool then). The back was alright the bun was tight- i went to put my fingers through my fringe (which i had put some hair spray in the hold up (ahhh the 80s). When i felt that it was very stiff- it wouldnt move- it was rock solid. I tried to make it move but the only part that would was at the very side of my head- i moved it back and forth and..... it broke off!!!
My hair spray which i obviously used too much of had coated my fringe then frozen. Me pushing it back and forth had snapped it off!!!
So here i was an innocent sweet girl (i was then)
with a fringe that was standing straight up in the air FROZEN with a small part of it which had broken off in my right hand.
Needless to say I cried and cried and had to have my mother thaw my fringe with a hairdryer...
Moral of the story- if you are coming from a climate that is in direct opposition to another and the people there tell you what to do....
LISTEN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Web's amazing adventure in Cleveland Ohio
Once upon a time, waaaaay back in 1996, I got a call from one of my best buds from my Army time, Billy Rini. He was about to undergo major surgery for a bone marrow transplant as treatment for Juevnile Luekemia. Well, he was on a quest to have all his friends see him before he'd be too sick to do anything... and he wanted to see everyone before he died, not laying in a casket... there was a strong possiblity that the surgery could kill him, or his body might reject the transplant and he'd die soon after that. He offered to pay for the plane ticket to fly to Cleveland and spend a week or so with him while he was still healthy. I of course accepted, and spent the next week coming to terms with this, and preparing to take a little vacation.
Before you stop reading or get in the mindset for a sad story, don't. This is not about Billy dying, it's about what happened while I was in Cleveland.
I get to Cleveland on a crisp morning in April. When I was walking out of the terminal, I walked right past Billy, not even recognizing him. The doctors had him so pumped up on steroids, his face was about two times bigger than it used to be. he seemed in decent health, and in great spirits, so I tried not to worry too much.
We spent some quality time together, just sittin around talking about "the old days", two years prior, when we were in the Army together in Panama South America (We weren't the chummiest buddies while we were there, but we'd hung out quite a bit. The weird thing that brought us together was that we'd "shared" the same chick... he went out with her first, then she hooked up with me for a few weeks... that was strange, building a friendship based on having the same chick suck your cock, I tell you. But as time went on, we got closer, did more things together, and after he was married we did couple's things together). Billy introduced me to Mr. Hanky the Christmas Poo and Southpark that week, I'd never laughed that hard before in my life. Billy was under a kind of quarantine to keep his health up and germs at bay,... he was under some kind of chemo that practically kept his immune system down to nothing, so he had to stay inside most of the time,... but he did take the time to take me down to Canton Ohio to tour the NFL Hall of Fame. That was a nice trip with "just the guys"... me, Billy and his 3 year old son Mateo. I won't even try to explain how awesome this was, you have to be a football fan to understand.
On the next to the last day I was there, Billy had to go to the Cleveland Cancer Clinic to be admitted for the prep of the surgery. Instead of me doing nothing for that last day, he suggested that I go and see the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
So here I go, off to the Rock Hall. I get there, have a look around checking out all the exhibitions and movie shorts they show there... it's a really cool place. I'm sure they change them from time to time, but I'd go back if I ever had the chance, and I suggest any music fan to see it. Well, I'm getting ready to leave, and I see this table with a lot of people signing a sheet, getting a packet of stuff and a little bag, and I get curious. I walked over to the table, which is manned by a lovely young lady and ask her what's it all for? She graciously informs me it's for the Press, they were opening up the latest exhibition a little early for press only... it was called "The Psychadelic Era from 1965 to 1969". Now what comes next has got to be my greatest achievment in the Bullshit Arts. Thinking quickly on my feet, because I'd really like to see this (being the Jimi Hendrix nut I am), I proceed to tell this lovely young lady that I am a photojournalist and freelance writer for the music section of the Ft. Worth Star Telegram (my home town paper at that time), here on vacation. I told her I didn't have my press credentials, since I had come here as a tourist, but I'd really appreciate it if she would admit me,... I could scoop a great story and make some dough. Either I was a complete master of the Bullshit Arts, or she was really naive... but she says "sure, let me sign you up. Here, take this pad of paper, you'll need it for notes." The girl gives me her only pad to write on. So, I get my press packet in this groovy tie-dyed bag, and head down to the meeting area where all the other press people are, where they will give us a little schpiel before cutting us loose in the exhibit. I exchanged a little polite chit-chat with a couple reporters, revealing little, not wanting to get busted after getting so far. Eventually they shut up and let us carry on to the new exhibit... I cannot explain to you just how FUCKING GROOVY this place was. There were two cars in the room, one was John Lennon's, and the other was Janis Joplin's. There were numerous guitars, piano's, keyboards, various musical equipment... and even hand written lyrics on display by people like The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, Jefferson Airplane, The Cream, The Greatful Dead... many others I can't recall at the moment. They had a little room off to the side that was recreated to look like the space that The Greatful Dead practiced in back in the old days. It was filled with authentic musical instruments used by them. They had stage costumes everywhere... a huge display talking about the San Fransisco acid tests (this had a title, can't remember what it was)... everything was larger than life. Being a complete Jimi Hendrix nut (I think I said that already), I was a little dissapointed in what they had on display about him. There was this big pillar in the middle of the room that had something on all four sides, Jimi got one side of it with a shirt he'd worn in concert and one guitar... aside from the one other example of hand written lyrics, this was it. I guess I felt like he had a bigger impact on the 60's than most... but that's just me. Don't forget all this time, I'm wandering around pretending to write shit on this pad of paper the gal had given me, and snapping pics with my disposable camera. :)
After trekking through this place a couple of times, my brain was fried, so I got the hell out of there before someone realized I was full of shit, and booked on back to Billy's house. I left all the slides for Billy to see except the one of the hendrix stuff that he wasn't interested in anyway (Bill was a big fan of Lennon). I went to see him one last time while he was in his hospital room and told him all about it... I left Billy, the Hospital and Cleveland in good spirits, thinking about my scam of a lifetime. Billy couldn't believe that I'd gotten away with it, and neither could I... and to this day I haven't topped it, probably never will.
-the end
 
This is called "Ballet Class" (crowd hush) ;)
I went through a period in high school where I was picking up new hobbies and dropping them just as fast. Everyone else had something interesting and I felt that I was boring.
I wanted to learn piano, 2 months later I didn't anymore ,I wanted a dog, after that I wanted to
take ballet.
Well I was already in high school and to start ballet then was...out of ordinary I guess. So my mom gets me a ballet costume but when I got dressed I looked like a big old girl in a little girls costume. I think I was already 16
My ballet slippers were huge, because I don't exactly have small feet.
My first class I feel like the biggest idiot in my costume. Turns out, the only other people taking beginning ballet where from age 8-11 or something because I was oldest one in there you can say I really stood out. :) and thats being nice
After the 3rd class(learning a dance to "Chim Chiminy chim chiminy chim chim cheroo") we had to trot out in our costumes with a little chiminy stick. I quit after that and whenever I think about me in that dumb ballet costume I die laughing.
 
It was a sunday, like any other.
We were living in the worst neighborhood in Ft. Collins; which isn't really saying much as it's not that dingy of a city, but the fact remains that we weren't that well off. My mother had her sights set on getting out of there eventually... but that's another story.
I had stayed the night at a friend's house, just down the street. They were home schooled, so the only time I had to see them was on the weekends. And every sunday, we'd go to church together.
Yes, this was a while ago.
My father had been diagnosed HIV positive some time before this, and he had finally told me about one year prior to this. I remember that day just as wella s this one. A premonition, really- My father had sat me down to tell me the news, and Ialready knew. I don't know how, but I knew exactly what he was going to say before he had even started. It didn't make dealing with the fact any easier, but I had to go on about my life the same way I always had. Hell, I was eleven.
Anyhow, tangents aside. A rousing sermon by a priest I hardly even remember. And then we were called to the altar to pray.
My friends mother, kneeling next to me, was praying in whispered breath. I couldn't concentrate on what I was thinking, listening to her. The priest would then listen to what she said and use it for hiself for the rest of the room, the plagiarist. The last thing I remember was wishing that he would shut up and use his own voice, then beginning to pray for my father when it hit me.
...He was gone. A premonition, really.
Disturbing to say the least. I remember talking to the priest about my father before leaving, and he had given his best. I took it lightly, and continued home.
Life at home wasn't the best. My mom was seeing this drunk, and he didn't have a feeling ounce in his body... but that's the same story from before. Everything was normal; mom was cooking, El Bastardo was watching T.V.-Probably a hunting program- but there was a tangible tension to the room. I asked my mom how her day went, and she replied that it hadn't been good and that she needed to talk to me later.
The premonition hit again. This only solidified it. I couldn't wait for it, and eventually pressured her into talking to me. She had taken me aside into her bedroom and told me that my father had, indeed, passed away.
That did it.
Looking back on that little premonition, the little whisper inside my head, has stumped me for years. On your knees in church isn't exactly the most comforting place to recieve that kind of inspiration, especially at such a young age. I eventually left christianity behind in search of my own answers, but to this very day I still remember:
I talked to god for three seconds.
 
Originally posted here: http://www.bluelight.ru/cgi/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic&f=45&t=000123&p=
By yours truly... it's not so much a story, but something to pass along never the less.
Topic: Saw something fabulous today,...
Web
Moderator
Life
posted 17 October 2001 06:08
Today, at sunset,... driving east... it's quite overcast and gray, sprinkling a bit... the sun is setting and below the gray clouds at an awesome angle, shining on the fall colored trees like a flood light, so you have the trees with this brilliant light shining, and then this dark gray backdrop... then I notice a faint rainbow coloring in the gray sky... as I keep driving, the rainbow sharpens and widens... the colors are incredible, not just the regular red/yellow/green/blue... there was pink and orange and purple, I swear... then I notice a second rainbow, lighter/faded, arching above the first one... and since I'm driving through a valley, and the sun is setting in just that right angle, it looks like the rainbow is dropping right down into the trees, like you can see the end of the rainbow. And to top it all off, the rainbow doesn't go up, up and into the clouds, you can see the entire arch.
Now, I've never seen anything like this in the world, and I just had to gawk [ed. note: I mean, c'mon, a double rainbow? With "extra" colors? Never seen the likes of that]. I couldn't maintain speed in my vehicle because I was too busy reveling in something that I usually take for granted and don't pay much attention to. This was just one of those things that has made me stop and marvel at nature,... these happenings are few and far between, and I wanted to share it with you.
 
I'm dissapointed people... none of you have stories to pass on?
If this makes it to the end of the page again with no new stories posted, I guess I'll let it die. :(
 
Okay, this one's for Web, just because I know he loves stories, and this one has always meant a lot to me. It's a love story, and if you don't believe in true love, hopefully this will give you pause.
---------------------------------
I am one of those lucky people who had a chance to know his great-grandparents. My great-grandfather was an amazing man in a small town. He was born in 1890, was vice-president of Marathon Oil, fought in World War One, raised children to believe in the better things in life, and by the time I had gotten to know him, had been very settled for over 50 years with his wife. They lived in a small house together, and took care of each other. She had had strokes, and was blind; he would bathe her, put her to bed, read to her, and she was always ready for intelligent conversation and to touch him; to see with her hands that which she loved and couldn't see with her eyes. She hadn't fallen into the habit of many old people: speaking to phantoms who weren't there anymore.
He had a candy dish that was just for him. Him alone. He would call me his "darling heart," and let me sneak candy when no one else was looking. She would open photo albums and share stories of her husband from the big war, stories that he wouldn't tell anyone else, but I knew as he walked past he could hear her telling, and because she was telling their great-grandchildren, I knew he was proud. Proud of his wife for remembering, of himself for the doing of the deeds, and of his great-grandchildren for sitting quietly and LISTENING.
Time passed, as it tends to do, and the health of those over 80 and 90 is frail. My great-grandmother had another stroke, which put her in the hospital. This worried my great-grandfather, and I think he knew this time could be the last. Without pain, and without despair, he began to sink into mortality. He entered the hospital, and didn't understand why everyone was making such a fuss over him.
I visited him in the hospital. I was warned that he may be not like I remembered him. This was unfounded. He smiled, stroked my hair, and called me "darlin' heart" again. He apologized that he didn't have any lemon drops (our favorite). He was very at peace, very happy. He was so proud of how I was growing up, and of his son and grandson who were in that room. Four generations in one room. He knew he had done and seen a great deal in his life. He watched his family grow up, be loved, be respected, and he knew that his job was about done.
He softly died a week later.
My great-grandmother didn't know this. She was in the hospital, and after her stroke was a little bit out of it. We never told her that her husband of over 50 years had passed away. Yet, when my father and my father's father visited her, she was bright, alert. When they asked her how she was doing, she said she was fine, fine. The food was good, she was comfortable, and that George (my great-grandfather) read to her at night. He visited just last night, in fact, and sat in that chair next to where her son was standing.
Of course they passed this off as the medication. Of course he couldn't visit her, he had passed away. But she was certain. She waved at them as they left. They visited a week later, and then again, and she said the same thing as before. George had visited, he read to her, and everything was going to be okay.
She died that night.
However, she had a little smile on her face. She didn't die in any pain. She layed there as if tucked in by loving hands.
To this day, I know that my great-grandfather passed away, but had one last thing to do. He couldn't just leave the woman he loved to the exclusion of all others for more than half a century. She was scared of dying after her first stroke, but this time it was different. She was calm, she was peaceful.
I believe that my great-grandfather did visit her. He read to her, he made her strong, and at the end, he took her hand, and led her with love into that beautiful life beyond. How can anything be terrifying when the one you love and have shared a life with, have leaned upon and have given strength to, have watched children and grandchildren and great-grandchildren grow up with, how can anything frighten you when they take your hand and tell you they love you, and it will be alright?
I loved them both very much, and miss them. I hope that one day, I can find a love that strong, that deep, and that eternal.
 
Excellent story Baron, thanks so VERY much for sharing it with me.
The following is a story that's been posted on bluelight before, and has just recently been re-posted in Social. I've read it before and found it facinating.
---------
Anonymous
Guardian
Saturday July 14, 2001
I am not Thomas de Quincey (or Coleridge, Baudelaire, Cocteau, Huxley, Paul Bowles, Carlos Castenada, William Burroughs, Ken Kesey or Hunter Thompson), and the harm that revealing my identity would inflict, not only upon my professional reputation but upon those whom I love, is not commensurate with the likely benefits. I am fast approaching my 50th year, and most of my adult life has been lived comfortably on the right side of the law, first as a journalist, then as a novelist, prose-poet and essayist. I am at present what I so long ago explicitly aspired to become - a man of letters.
Nothing surpasses the life of the mind. And so, if eating Ecstasy be chiefly a sensual, and so a mindless pleasure, and if I have indulged in it to excess, no less true is that I have struggled to understand my habit, if not yet with the religious zeal required properly to get shed of it. But then, perhaps I do not wish to get shed of it.
I have occasionally been asked how I became a regular Ecstasy-eater. I was aware of its reputation as the "love drug", had heard it described as a "four-hour, full-body orgasm" and I found this intriguing, alluring and worthy of further investigation.
Which is odd, because ordinarily I would not have condescended to pay it the slightest heed. Even at university, the high times of those heady years - in my case 1969 to 1976 - I was not a user, chronic, casual or otherwise. Despite an environment in which smoking grass and dropping acid (if not yet snorting coke or shooting smack) was not only benignly accepted, but benevolently smiled upon, I deliberately chose not to indulge. Everyone - including my friends, and most of my professors - was doing it. Except me. This had nothing to do with feelings of superiority or intolerance. It had to do solely with fear. Not only was I afraid of "fucking with my mind", I was petrified of irreparably fucking it up. I steadfastly refused to buy into the druggie/head trip/ stoner agitprop of the day. Reading The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test or Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas, listening to Hendrix or the Doors, Cream or the Airplane was more than enough for me. Not that I was, despite my midwestern Calvinist upbringing, narrow-minded or uncurious, nor was I unhip. Simply, I was scared. Small wonder, then, how often those select few with knowledge of my current habit have remarked upon my being the "least likely person in the world" to have fallen prey to it.
Well, yes. And likewise, no. For I believe that my coming to Ecstasy goes further than mere thrill-seeking. I believe it goes to the centre of my life at the time. It was a period of personal devastation. It began with my only child, a son - he was then my best friend, from time to time still is - and I did not see it coming and it culminated in Ecstasy, and to that I see no end. He was beautiful and sensitive and extraordinarily talented, talented enough that at 13 his poetry had won the notice of university professors and New York book editors alike. So when he undertook to destroy himself, he took his mother and father with him. That was not, nor is it, his fault.
He was 13 and had neither the capacity nor context to grasp what he was doing. He attempted suicide. He ran away, serially. He purchased a handgun from a schoolfriend. He stole, sometimes from stores, more often from his parents, typically in the middle of the night. He got drunk, and when he got drunk he got violent. He verbally and physically abused his mother. He attempted to set her hair on fire. He dismantled furniture, broke china, smashed crystal and, unprovoked, punched out windows and kicked in walls. He shredded his wardrobe with scissors, every stitch of his clothing, and when he had finished, started in on his mother's. He trashed his bedroom and graffitied what remained with every racial and sexual epithet imaginable. He slept on the floor amid rotting food, curdled milk, the mouse droppings that appeared in their wake and a rubble of plaster, drywall and broken glass.
He refused to bathe. He defecated in the yard and urinated in Coke cans which he deployed about his bedroom in pentagrams. He carved his arms with the filed-down ends of paper clips. He discovered marijuana, then cocaine. Then PCP. Then "Special K" (an animal tranquilliser he called "cat food"). He disappeared for days at a time, often into New York City where he slept in storefronts and abandoned buildings and on park benches. He was consigned first to lockdown in a private psychiatric ward, then to a special school out of state. He was counselled. He was diagnosed with a variety of acronyms: AD, ADD, ODD, ICD, possible BP. He was prescribed medication. He was now dealing as well as using drugs. His lifestyle was redolent of a vampire's, for he lived upside-down, sleeping all day, drugging all night.
Eventually, in the course of one five-day spree, he totalled two automobiles, one his father's, pulverising his ankle so badly in the process that it required 26 staples, 10 screws and two stainless-steel plates to reconstruct. I would not swear to the precise chronology of any of this, but to this I would: he strewed wreckage every where. In the meantime his parents' marriage, all 20 years of it, was collapsing. My wife was and remains a beautiful, caring, generous, gifted woman. I would not hesitate to give my life for her, and though we have not lived together for years, I admire and, on some level, love her still, as I know I always shall. But sometimes that is not enough. The marriage had its long-standing problems, its rifts and fractures, and when it came under siege and then assault, the stress was too much. We lost our way, then ran aground, and then, at last, we broke.
I left. Not straight away - the break was anything but clean; it was tortured - and I never went far. I was back in and back out for years. I was at a loss as to how I could properly leave and unsure if I wished to find out. Eventually I found a place just bleak enough to mirror the way I felt, and I felt dreadful, wretched, unsalvageable. I stopped shaving, bathing, sleeping. In time, I stopped eating. (Over one three-month period I shed 40 lb.) The place was a single, windowless room scarcely larger than a tool shed, a cellar space attached to the back of an abandoned garage, and I wallowed in it, in its cobwebs and filth - alone. I began to disintegrate. I continued to write, frantically, because writing was the only way I knew to stay afloat, though looking back I cannot say whether I was writing myself out of what I sensed was an approaching madness, or writing myself more deeply into it.
The nightmares arrived on cue. Not images of hell and its hounds but waterfalls and rivers of words. No images, no meanings, just words, disconnected, decontextualised, foaming, alone. I was haemorrhaging rhymes and the metre of verbs, and each morning, 4am, 5am, I awoke unbuoyed and drenched to the bone.
Somehow, I completed the 500-page draft of a novel about, of all things, Lizzie Borden, but when I submitted it to my agent he deemed it "one of the most brilliant pieces of insanity" he had ever read, declared it utterly unmarketable, and declined to take it on. We parted company, on the heels of which my editor quit his job at a prominent New York publishing house. My marriage was dead - though I still insisted upon thinking of it as merely semi-comatose - my son still very much alive, I was agentless, editorless, apparently unpublishable, was living like a tramp and a recluse, my income close to nil, and I was going mad.
And then the unthinkable happened, or rather, two things happened. I met someone, a woman, and while I in my recalcitrant fashion followed up on that meeting so that she might eventually save me (as she eventually did), my son was becoming what is called, in the parlance, a "raver". And he seemed for the first time in years - he was 17 by then - happy. Not giddy or euphoric, but content, at peace with himself. I do not mean to invoke images of Zen and Buddha - my son is roughly as Zen-like as Eminem - but the transformation was as striking as it was palpable. It seemed so definitive that I could not help asking him about it, and when I did, he smiled and said simply, "Uh-huh. I am." And when I asked him why, what had happened, he smiled again and said, "Aw, you wouldn't understand. But it's my whole life now. I know why I'm alive."
I remember my response. And perhaps had I responded in some other way or simply not responded at all, what was about to happen would never have happened. What I said was, "Congratulations. I'm happy for you. Really. I wish I did." And so he turned to me and said, "Seriously?" And when I answered not only in the affirmative, but the declarative, he told me a story and made me an offer, and so was hatched yet another aspect of our relationship, an aspect that is as wholly illicit as it is morally unsavoury, and one that continues to this day.
We both know it is wrong, the arrangement, the dilemma it poses, wrong in the most intimate and unholy of ways, as we both know that neither of us cares enough about the fact to do anything about it. It is a shared shame now, and it has become, like the abiding commonness of our blood, a large and integral part of what bonds us. My son supplies me with drugs, with Ecstasy.
And so the first time I ate E - or X, or EX, or XTC, or MDMA (methylenedioxymethamphetamine) - it was having given my son permission to sell it to me. I became his customer, a buyer, a reliable and steady client, the lowest link on the food chain of the multibillion-dollar commerce that proceeds unabated every day, every hour, in every large city and small town in every state in this union, in what is called by those paid to "war" against them "controlled substances".
I find it ironic. Because I cannot think of a single commodity in our country that is less controlled than such substances, nor a single "war" that is as pathetically futile, vaingloriously chimeric and long-ago-lost as is this one. Wrestle as you will, you cannot reform or arrest human appetite. Ecstasy is as illegal as heroin. This is just the sort of run-amok governmental lunacy guaranteed to ensure that those like myself - and more importantly, our children - will write off that same government and those who enforce its drug laws as out of touch, coercive, morally bankrupt and, yes, un-American. Because America is not, or did not used to be, about throwing 16-year-old kids in jail for - all in the spirit of free-market capitalism and entrepreneurial enterprise - home-growing a little cannabis, even as the rest of us chain-smoke our Camels, sip our Absoluts with a twist, and devour our Prozac.
Visit a rehab centre some time. You will learn two things inside that first hour. One, that there are people in this world who are more susceptible to addiction than others; there always have been, always will be, addicts. And two, that the "gateway" argument is as simplistic as it is spurious. We are not losing our kids to drugs. We have lost our kids because we haven't the time, inclination, strength of character or political will to do the right thing in their name: to eliminate the black market that so mercilessly exploits them - and the runaway violence it spawns - by legalising, taxing and regulating the trade.
I pretend to no monopoly of wisdom on the subject. But I know something of Ecstasy. And what I know I know because I have eaten and continue to eat so much of it. I am an experienced eater of E and it is a fact of which I am neither proud nor mortified.
So here, in a word, a most sober, solemn, even a sombre word, is what I know: yum. Ecstasy is delicious. Or, put it another way, Ecstasy is delicious and I recommend highly, loudly and long that everyone whose health does not contraindicate or preclude its ingestion, ought to ingest it. Go out, I admonish you, all of you, hit the streets or collar that neighbourhood kid, drum up a contact, do a deal, repair thyselves home, soften the lights, put on some music - the best stuff - pour yourself a pitcher of ice water, perhaps two, keep a tin of Altoids handy, as well as a tube of Vicks inhalant and a couple of packs of mineral ice, make yourself comfortable, lie back and... swallow. An hour from now, perhaps less, you are going to experience something that shall forever change such time as remains to you on this earth. You are going to experience something that is, every second of it, delicious - deliciously, positively, unprecedentedly w-o-n-d-e-r-f-u-l.
It is your self-anointing, and I envy you that first time. So relish it, savour it, languish it, treasure it, that sacred four hours. You have just swallowed wonder, ambrosia and mead, you have partaken of lustre and grace. Just make certain that before you swallow you know that the pill is authentic, and not some rip-off. Do that, and the rest is a piece of cake, a piece of cake that is like no other you have ever tasted. Think of the best day of your life, or recall the sweetest, purest, most special thing along the way - person, place, moment, experience, accomplishment. Now multiply that tenfold. That does not begin to describe how impossibly delicious E is.
I am not unaware of how redolent this is of Timothy Leary's often loopy proselytising for LSD, and its "quasi-religious" associations, but this has nothing to do with that. Ecstasy is a clarifier. It enables one to see, feel and think, if not more deeply, then certainly more clearly. The high subsides, but the lucidity lingers. In that sense, not to mention in its chemical composition, it is quite the opposite of LSD.
Ecstasy is a clarifier, but it is a personal clarifier. It is not - despite all the peace/love/unity/respect hype surrounding it - a universal one. Its lessons may be universal in their implications, but they are intended to be applied to oneself. Which is not to say that the drug does not have its social dimensions or that one ought not to do E in the company of others. Indeed I would not find it congenial to do, nor have I ever done it, alone. (As close as I ever came was on an unpeopled, night-time sidestreet in London, and it was raining, and it was one of the memorable experiences of my life - neon, glistening, menthol, veneered in layer after thickening layer of thick honey. Lovely streets, London, and lovely, so lovely, its rain.)
But better by far to do it with those one loves, and best of all with one's one-and-only lover. And if what one takes in the broadest sense is all about human connection and empathy - E has proven highly effective in certain kinds of couples therapy - it is all the more about connecting with and feeling empathy for oneself. It is, contrary to its image as the current drug of choice among teenagers and the prevalence of its use at their "raves", the most intimate of drugs.
I did it my first time with the woman who saved me. It was her first time as well. We were, as zero hour approached, visibly apprehensive, an attitude, I think, that is only sane. We had cleared our schedules, switched off the phones, and we were in her home, just the two of us, in our bathrobes, in the living room, on the couch. Van was on the stereo, Astral Weeks, Moondance, Common One, The Best of: Volume One. A fire was roaring in the fireplace. The lamp was turned down low. It was mid-evening, and we had ready, as my son had taken care to instruct us, our pair of tumblers and pitchers of iced-down spring water. E increases body temperature and heart rate and elevates blood pressure, so drinking water - not beer, not liquor - is pro forma as one rolls along. And one wishes to drink, because E causes dehydration - one of its most immediate side-effects is a dry mouth. With much mutually nervous, serio-comic, ceremonial chit-chat, then, we each popped our pill, swallowed, waited, and - nothing.
We locked eyes. We still were alive. I think we were only half-amazed. I know we were relieved. Van was still belting as only Van can. It takes a while for Ecstasy to kick in - and then the world around you billows open like an eye and you are lifted and taken - coronaed, crowned, spangled and lantern-lit, your smiling face flambeaued as by a thousand chandeliers.
One of the most discernible early effects - it happened that first time, though often it does not - is what I have heard described as "fluttery" vision. This phenomenon is as close to an hallucinatory quality as E produces, and it is so mild - and weirdly pleasant - that to label it as such is frankly inaccurate. When it happened to us, we looked at one another, smiled, and virtually in unison commented on it. Cool. Images remain intact, they just move a little, as if jagged were a verb, within the texture of their own lines. These striations are very unthreatening, and very, well, cool. And then suddenly Van was singing waaaaay over there, and then waaaaay inside the very pith of my brain, yet way outside and all around as well. And that also was. Cool.
What happened next was that everything and all at once, while clearly remaining itself, was transfigured, transmogrified, a new self, a simultaneously deeper and higher, older and newer self - smoother and softer and rounder. The world was suddenly guilt- and worry- and wrinkle-free, palpably, beautifully buoyant - visually, texturally, aurally - transcendently right and glorious and divine. Whatever beautiful thing one can imagine, it is that much more beautiful on E. And so we looked at one another and felt one another, with our fingers and our lips and our tongues, indeed with the whole of our new-found faces, this plumbing of the new map of our bodies - new softer hair, new smoother flesh, new pinker, fresher, more fragrant, shimmering, altogether fluffier genitalia - and we smelled and tasted one another - she smelled of burst peaches and tasted as the recent salts of pearls - because sense of smell and taste is no less honed and heightened than the other senses.
We bathed in one another, each of our five senses, 10 in all, because that commingling is what had taken place, its rhapsody, and humanity, and caress. And we looked to one another exactly as we felt and smelled and tasted: rapturous, heavenly, transcendent, numinous, aglow. She a resplendent, bejewelled goddess, I a radiant god. Later, I got up, walked to the bathroom - walking on E is no more difficult than walking on water or floating on air - and looked in the mirror. I wanted to see what I looked like - I am just vain enough that the thought occurred to me even in the midst of the roll - though I already had seen reflected in my lover's eyes that I looked sufficiently, there is no other word, gorgeous. (If I looked half as gorgeous as she did to me I reckoned I was in for a treat.) And the person I saw looking back at me was gorgeous, but gorgeous in a way that floored almost as much as it thrilled me.
Here, now, as I stared grinning in astonishment, I looked 28. And not some 50-year-old version of myself at 28, but me the way I was back then. I moved closer, peered harder. I could scarcely believe it. I had recaptured myself. Dorian Gray. Fountain of Youth. Spontaneous regeneration. Somehow I had been restored, and I felt what I can only describe as an all-consuming nostalgia for the present.
And then, after helping each other off with our bathrobes, our old, nubby, cotton-twill bathrobes - suddenly spun of the finest cashmere and angelica, these clouds of talcum and down - we embraced, and kissed, and she whispered in my ear: "We've found fucking gold."
It distinctly was not an out-of-the-body experience, as it was not a mind-expanding one. It distinctly was a further-into-the-body experience, and a mind- clarifying one. An excavation of the self. An exhumation of the other.
And so we did. For four hours we dug, sinking further into each other, as likewise into ourselves, and eventually, after four hours of mutually synchronised digging, that felt exactly like 40 minutes, we found it. Only it wasn't gold. It was something far better. It was sex, the very EX in sex- and the climb and climax of sex- as revelation. And as soul.
So maybe Ecstasy does have something to do with religion, although the word spirit seems to me a more felicitous fit, because the peace one feels, and the insights one gains - epiphanies may be a better word - are no less than oceanic. You know, that you contain oceans and that those oceans are filled with beauty and grace and light and love and that they are yours to share as it may please and delight you. But there is a cost and that cost is high. It is as expensive as it is extravagant. The simple truth is, when you eat Ecstasy, you are deliberately messing with your mind, or more accurately your brain, or more accurately still your brain chemistry. You are releasing, in a rush, as a deluge - and that rush is unnatural in the sense that had God intended you to experience it, it would not require a flock of white-coated "cookers" in a clandestine laboratory somewhere in Holland or Israel or France to design and customise a pill for you to do so, nor would the delivery and distribution of those pills so lavishly profit the Mob - you are, as I say, triggering a veritable tsunami of serotonin, the human body's pleasure juice, that in turn floods in the most sensory, sentient way your consciousness, which in turn turns everything "gold", or rather, golden.
And in the wake of that rush - not the day after perhaps, when you are still basking, deliciously exhausted in its afterglow but the day after that, or the next, or the next, what I have heard described as "Black Tuesday" - you run the risk not only of emotionally crashing, but of feeling so rawly depleted, that you are tempted to pledge: "I have never felt this awful in my life, as empty, hollowed, flat, so soulless and lost to myself, so amputated, so emotionally exsanguinated, and I shall never, not ever, do this again." And also, "Whatever was I thinking?"
My advice, for what it is worth: wait a minimum of four weeks, the time purportedly required for one's serotonin to refill its reservoir and your thoughts and feelings to sort themselves through and get up and running again, before repeating the performance. Do it more often than that, get too greedy, and the upshot is "E-tardism" - a trimming down, clipping-off and curbing of the drug's effects, not to mention possible long-term damage to the serotonergic nerve grid of the brain, damage of the sort that may leave you so addled, you will find it not only a full-time challenge to control your own drool, but to recall that words are composed of letters and that each represents an actual sound, one intended to be pronounced aloud. So: moderation in all things, even things that are excessively restorative, for on occasion, cures do kill.
But here is the Catch-22 which must inevitably be grappled with. What one thinks - if one stops to think about it - is precisely this: "What is a mind, if not something to be messed with? What is consciousness, if not a state to be altered?" If it helps to substitute for the phrase "messed with" the word "clarified" or "purified" or "alchemised" or "beautified" or "beatified" then perhaps my meaning is taken. A mind is a terrible thing to waste, and there is much being wasted when one deliberately chooses not to explore the ecstasy of its deeper horizons.
Perhaps there are those who feel that they are blessed with a sufficiency of ecstasy in their daily lives. Perhaps there are those who feel that such ecstasy, because it is "unnatural", induced artificially, chemically, "under the influence", cannot possibly be "existentially authentic", and must therefore be false, a fraud. Perhaps there are those who suspect that the disparity is too great, that having experienced such ecstasy, they will find it too daunting to endure the rigours and asperities of a mundane, often overwhelmingly corrupt and ugly world. Perhaps there are those who feel that such ecstasy cannot be reconciled with their religious, political, philosophical or domestic agendas, that it threatens or violates the very essence of that in which they are so wholly invested. Perhaps there are those who are reluctant to risk engaging in what our culture defines as socially unacceptable, even legally trangressive behaviour. Perhaps there are those who are afraid of footing the physical and emotional toll, or of becoming psychologically addicted. And perhaps there are those who simply, unapologetically, are flat-out scared. Scared of beauty. And of bliss.
There are such people, and they have every right to their feelings and beliefs. I know, because I was, for most of my life, one of them.
I am not one of them any more. I am not one of anything. I am, trite as it may sound, simply me, and here lately, that is more than enough. It is plenty. And there is something else, a secret: there are times, once a month, sometimes more or less, when the truth of that makes me, well, ecstatic.
My son? He is 19 now, and in his spare time - having some months ago kicked the Ecstasy habit himself - he spins mixes at raves, and this fall he is entering college, quite a reputable college, as a psychology major. And he is writing poetry again. More brilliant than ever. Minor triumphs, perhaps. Still, it does make one wonder. Would he have made it back intact without E? Would he have arrived at that which all of us deserve and so few manage to find, his chance for happiness? And it makes one wonder, too, about what they say: better living through chemistry.
 
This is a story I wrote awhile back on September 10th. It was when Billy and I bought his best friend Chris's jeep. Chris passed away in May 2001.
We pulled up to his house. The lights on in the windows welcomed us as we drove into his driveway. His black jeep Cherokee parked out front. My husband and I get out of the car, I thought to myself, I haven't been here in so long. I felt my heart beat grow faster as we walked through the front door. His mother greeted us, she looked the same, the sadness still strong in her eyes.
We were there to by Chris's jeep. Chris is my husband's best friend who passed away in a motor cycle accident May 2001. His mother walked off to get the papers for the jeep. I sat on a wooden chair near the front door. I looked around the neat, exceptionally clean kitchen. I noticed by the door, Chris's work boots placed.....waiting for him to come home. So the three of us went outside to jump start the jeep. I sat and chit-chatted with his mom, while Billy jump started the jeep. There was unspoken sadness that hovered over our polite conversation. While we let the battery charge in the jeep. We went upstairs to Chris's bedroom. Most of the stuff gone, no clothes scattered anymore, covering the floor. His bed neatly made in the corner of the room. A wooden night table next to the bed with phone numbers and names scratched into it....A few boxes lay in the middle of his room, some weights and a stand with a T.V. The room was warm, musty and empty.
The room was so very empty....we said are good byes to his mother and made on our way. I was driving alone in my car folowing behind my husband in the jeep, our jeep......Chris's jeep. I watched the jeep in front of me, tears began to fall from eyes, blurring the tail lights. I knew Chris was there driving shot gun with Billy. I think through my tears I saw the shaddow of there heads.....both of them riding along, listening to some good music and laughing away.....
Since we got home an hour ago, Billy has been outside in the jeep. I don't think he wants to come in....I think for the first time since all this happened that he is finding closure. He finds Chris's planner and brings it inside. Billy stands in the middle of the room reading what little Chris had written in it.
On 4/20/2001 Chris wrote: Got planner @ 1:35......
*Note to self* Confusious says, " Man who walks through the turn styles in airports sideways usually bangs cock"
Also, "He who fishes in another mans well, usually catches crabs"
Billy finished reading, we bothed laughed and as quickly as he had come in, he was gone...... back outside with Chris, in their jeep.
Chris....you have not for a moment been forgotten. You are always with us, you are the reason, we are so in love, you gave us that and with that, in
that, you will forever live on....May 13, 2001
 
Me and My Best Friend!
I have never been really close with anyone. I have always been a loner. I have had a few friends, but never to close. But, then in 1995, I met what was to be my Best Friend. We have been friends ever since then. But, this summer has changed both of us. I had just moved into a new apartment complex and met some new people. Some wonderful people that gave me free drugs. It was wonderful. They invited me to go to Zen Fest with them. I had never been to a party and had always wanted to go. I said yes and asked if I could bring my friend. They said yes. So, me and my Best Friend hop in the car with these new people. We make it to Zen Fest alive. Thank God, thats another story...LOL. We snuck our pills in and just walked around looking at all these wierd ass people walking around. I saw a guy dressed like a fairy. We laughed so hard. We took our pills just as George Acostas was hitting the stage. We both got to see some of the best DJ's in the world spin all night long. We walked around all night hugging. We both told each other that we would fight for each other till death. We are brothers. Not by blood, but by Destiny. We danced all night. We would lay on our blanket and watch the lazers. It was funny, at one point we were screaming because we thought the lazers had trapped up...LOL. We watch the sun rise as Micro finished one of the most awe inspiring sets I have ever heard. Since that day, we tell everyone we meet that we are brothers. People give us soom funny looks since he is black, and I am white. I Love him like a brother and he will always be in my heart. That one night changed my life forever and was one of the most memoralble. I will cherish it forever. Jormaine, I know you won't ever read this. But, I Love You Brother and keep it rockin' where ever you go.
 
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