AVAILABLE NOW!!!!!


Sunday, December 30, 2007

The Last True Love Story

I really like this piece. Its actually one of my favorites that I've posted on this blog. I think what i fancy the most is the dual layers it works in. There is a few different lens' you can read this through, most of it depending on where you fall on the spiritual spectrum. I would like to say -as always- this is a work of fiction, and although those of you who know me well, will see a lot of truth to this story in certain aspects, it is by and large purely fictional. I don't want to get too detailed about the spiritual aspect of the story because if i reveal too much about it, i fear it will potentially alter your reading. There are certain techniques at play that i try and cater too, all of which depend greatly on the readers perception of the world (i attempted to write a story that could be read on either side of this spectrum). A few things to think about as you read: the title is meant to be much more then what it merely suggests, almost everything important in this piece is dual layered, finally please respond and just give me what you 'think' the story is about and what it is trying to portray. Alas, here it is, i hope you enjoy.

The Last True Love Story
By J.L. Hickey

Tears stained her red cheeks with rivers of salt. We stood together for the last time outside of my parent’s house in front of her heavily rusted grey le saber Buick. It was late; a fresh layer of snow covered the road. Her watery eyes glistened with the glare of the street lights. These cold city streets never looked as beautiful as they did within the reflection of her eyes. That night marked the last night I was to ever truly feel alive. She kissed me there for the last time. Her lip quivered as we touched. She spoke to me with her soft broken voice.

“This is the hardest thing I have ever had to do. But I have to do it.”

That’s what she said, that’s it… she had to do it. I’m sure the pain I felt that night could be felt across the world. My stomach knotted, my knees were weak. I felt as if I was dying, literally.

The soft snow fell onto my shoulders as I watched her turn off my road for the last time. I thought this may have been an attempt of God to console one of his lost children. His way of holding me when I needed it the most. When I walked back alone to the side door of my house I remember looking back and seeing my lonely footprints behind me. I thought of the poem that was read at my parents funereal, about how in our darkest times there’s only one set of footprints. How that man looks at God and asks him why he was not their walking beside him during his time of need. God replies that he was there, that those were his footprints carrying him. I wanted to smile, but then I remembered, I don’t believe in God.

If you measure life by moments of happiness, then that was the night I died. Those were the lasts breaths I would ever breathe worth the effort inhaling and exhaling. I had felt too much pain already in my young life. If you think God has a plan for us all, and that this heartache only makes you stronger, then you have lived a sheltered life, because that’s bullshit.

That snow on my shoulder melted as quickly as my faith did so many years ago.

When I die, and if I am proved wrong about this God character, and I get the chance to stare God in the face during my so called judgment, I’m going to let my fists do the talking for me. I’ll easily go to hell for the chance to kick his elitist ass.

Years later I am nothing. I work a shit end job. I pay my bills and my taxes. I spend my nights alone drinking. I spend the day alone working. It’s snowing out on this particular night that I stumble into my old church. It’s been a long time since I’ve stepped foot into this or any church. I don’t even know its Christmas Eve when I take a seat in the backroom. No one notices me sitting there, or the grudge that I hold tightly in my clenched fist.

I see her.

Twenty some years later, and it feels like yesterday. She’s only two pews in front of me. She is beautiful, angelic even. A small child is sitting on her lap staring at me. He’s resting his young chubby face on her shoulder. She is with her husband, who I dare not look at. The child has her eyes; I notice this and cry silently. The boy looks up at me and with his rosy red cheeks he faintly smiles. Across his neck is a cross and chain that lays over his navy blue tie. He is happy, she is happy, they are happy, I am lost.

I walk out soon after. I cry harder as I walk away in the snowy night sky. I leave behind the loneliest set of footprints any man has ever walked. I prayed to God to carry me home that night. Then I remembered, I don’t believe in God.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Familial Dysautonomia

This comes from an experiment and playful writing. I'm trying a few new techniques where i take a concept, idea, place, thing, whatever it is, and i try to form a story around it. I spend a lot of time on wikipedia just browsing and learning useless shit. I remembered this disease i saw on an oprah special or a news broadcast and i looked it up and researched it. I thought it might be a good vessel to explore the human condition. I'm not sure how much i like this one, and i'm not sure how well it works they way i was attempting to form it. Ideas? Let me know. And reply please! No one has left anything on my last two posts, even if its not a critique and just a pat on the back, it would be much appreciated. I have no way to gauge what kind of traffic i get on this so just leave me a lil something. Thanks as always! Hopefully you will enjoy.

Familial Dysautonomia

I’ve been told I look deranged. That hurts. I understand though, half of my upper lip is gone. The fucker got torn off one night as I was hopping a barbwire fence when I was a kid. Didn’t even realize I left my lip dangling on the razor wire until I hopped into my friend’s car. I was bleeding everywhere, a stupid prank gone wrong. That was a fun night though, despite my future deformity.

I’d do it again, no doubt.

I already know what he is thinking the second I stepped foot into his office. They all think the same. I’ve grown used to it over the years. I’m not exactly ‘attractive” to say the least. My face resembles more of a jigsaw puzzle from the scars and scrapes that decorate my flesh. I try and tell myself they build character.

When I walk into the room he immediately begins to stare. It used to bother me, now I feel a sense of manipulation over people like him. They stare, because the site of me causes them discomfort. Anything not of the norm frightens the majority of society. It’s no wonder why I do. Its one of those things you just learn to live with.

He sits comfortably behind his large desk on his leather recliner. His office is large and filled with many thick books, I doubt how any one man could have the time to read through them all. I settle on the notion they are there purely for aesthetic reasons. He is writing notes merely on my physical appearance. We haven’t even spoken a word yet.

Who the fuck is this guy anyway? I doubt my reasoning for seeing him now. Seems like a pompous fuck.

“My name is Anthony Klein. You are here because you suffer depression, or so I’m told. Is that correct?”

He speaks slow and methodic. I’m not sure if this is his usual speech pattern or if he is purposely slowing down his speech as a way to send off a subliminal message that my many scars do not bother him. I know doctors, I know body language, I know people usually better then they know themselves.

He shakes my hand and looks me directly in the eyes.

“Yes, I suppose that is correct.” I take a seat in a dark leather chair that squeaks noisily as I find my way into comfort.

I speak awkwardly, an impairment I have due to the stub of what is left of my tongue. I wasn’t born this way; it goes with my “special” talent. I wasn’t always like this; I used to have a normal tongue. By the time I was six though, I had bitten the majority of it off. It’s to the point now where I can no longer extend it far enough to bite down on it anymore. I have lived with imparity for the majority of my life, I can speak most words with no problem, but I always sound a little weird.

“Before we begin I must tell you I am no Doctor, I am in no way licensed or state approved. You were brought to me through a mutual friend who knows of my work. I don’t believe in prescription medication nor am I licensed to give you any, understood?”

“Yes.” I reply. I’ve already made my mind up, this guy’s an ass.

“I am a little shocked. I was told you have had a share of injuries and that you would have scars, but…”

I only vaguely listen to his words. He has pictures of his family on his desk. A beautiful wife with shoulder length auburn red hair and a young daughter, probably eight or ten, she looks more like his wife then himself. She has her mother’s nose, her smile. I only see her father in her eyes. The three of them actually smile, not one of those fake smiles you see in family portraits, theirs is real -caught in the moment of- not pitiful reenactment of. Its clichéd, but the photo is of them on a beach, probably up north somewhere. I see their smiles and I go numb. Something I have known far too well and for far too long.

“No worries,” I finally reply “I have looked like this the majority of my life. You see this large scar running down my forehead and through my eye? Grade school -fell off the monkey bars and split my face open- straight to the bone. One of my favorites.”

“That must have been quite a traumatizing experience.” He says with no emotion. He hardly looks at me, focusing on his bright yellow legal pad full notes.

“Especially when I stood up like nothing had happened, unknowing my left eye had been basically mutilated. I’m blind in it now.” I continued.

“I’m sorry to hear that. You say you were conscious after the fall?”

“I got right up and walked into the principal’s office. Told them I think I may have hurt myself. I left a trail of blood the whole way. I’m special. At least that’s what the told me when I was a kid. More of a curse I would say.”

I can’t help but to stare at the photo. I stare at it as long and hard as he stares at me. I see him reading me, noting where my eyes lay. I don’t want to stare, I know it’s rude. Despite how often I am on the receiving end of such rudeness, I try not to myself. Yet I keep going back to that photo. I can read his uneasiness with my infatuation with the photo. This tells me this photo is much more then it seems.

“I’m sure the adrenaline masked the pain quite a bit. Even still… judging from your scar it must have been quite serious.” He continued, ignoring my fascination.

“No, no adrenaline. Like I said I am special.”

“Well I must tell you; because I am not a doctor I have no charts or files on your history. I know nothing of your family or health, or you’re so called special-ness. I am a spiritual healer and I will cleanse your pain through my own method.”

“Pain? Well that won’t be hard fix.” I laugh under my breath, this goes unnoticed.

He knows nothing of me. I am not sure what our mutual friend has told him, obviously not much. He seems confident of curing me. I know he can’t, I know there is no cure.

“So why are you here exactly? Do you have a problem with the way people look at you with all your scars? Low self esteem? Did you loose a loved one to illness or death?” he asks questions, shooting them off like rounds from a six-shooter. He doesn’t leave room for answers, he doesn’t need them, he is making a statement… that is all.

“These are all things I can help with. I specialize in cleansing your mind, in making peace with these hardships that sicken so many people like yourself.”

He is much older now from the picture. His hair has thinned and the shades of gray have overcome the majority of his brown hair. His face has also thinned out. He looks tired in comparison. I would wager theirs almost a ten year difference between the two.

“No, none of those...” I answer. “Well, actually maybe all of those? I don’t know, that’s my problem.” The tension in my voice begins to change, this he does notes and I can see his posture alter. He sits up in his chair and places the yellow legal pad from his lap down onto his desk. He squares himself with me.

“You can call me whatever you like. So long as you our comfortable with me and our time together. I am here to help you, I want to reinforce that. May I ask what you do for a living?” he finishes with a smile.

“Well for the majority of the time I made my money as a traveling carnival act.” I do not return the smile.

“Excuse me?” His left eyebrow lifts slightly and his head cocks to the right faintly. I can tell I’ve sparked his interest.

“I said I made money traveling with a carnival, I was a sideshow.”

“What did you do?” he continues on with his never-ending notes.

“I was dubbed the “Human Punching Bag”.

“Human Punching Bag?” he looked confused.

“Do you mind?” I pulled a cigarette from my jacket pocket and a matchbook from my jeans.

“No, go right ahead.” He replied.

“Yea, you heard right.” I lit the match and took a long drag from my smoke. “People paid to kick my ass.” I inhale the smoke deep into my lungs. “Anything they wanted to do, obviously the more intense it got, the more I profited.” I exhale slowly allowing the smoke to escape my body.

“Why would you do such a thing? Do you not care about your body?”

“Care?” I asked with a smirk. I take another long hit from my cigarette and lay my arm out on his desk palm up. I knock the ashes off into the tray and slowly put the burning cigarette onto my skin. You can hear the flesh burn, I do not flinch. You can even smell the stench of burnt skin. The site is gruesome, I seen someone do this in a movie with a cigar, you can see similar scars on my arm where I have done it before.

“What are you doing?” his face squints in pain for me. I see that look more on people’s faces then actual smiles. Its apart of the curse.

“Punch me.”

“Excuse me?”

“Go ahead I’ll give you a free one. Right in the face, go for blood.”

“I can’t…” he looked appalled at even the thought of him to do so.

“It’s to prove a point. If you won’t then I guess I will my self.” With the same arm as the burnt scar I clench my fist as hard as possible; squarely I sock myself in the nose. I hear a crack and I see the flow of red pour onto his desk.

“My god!” he screams with wide eyes. From underneath his desk he pulls some napkins and hands them to me.

“How old is the photo?” I nod towards it spewing my blood everywhere as if it were no big deal. Honestly it wasn’t to me. I’ve seen my blood more times then most people have seen movies. It’s a daily occurrence; it goes with my job, with my life.

“Excuse me?” he’s rushing towards his bathroom. He comes back with a roll of towels and begins to clean up the pool of red.

“Sorry I didn’t mean to make a mess. How old?”

He seems visibly shaken. The blood now was spilling over onto his notepad, all his lengthy hand written notes were now mixed with the thick blood, the ink bleeding into it.

“Three years ago.” He muttered as he cleans up the mess in a panic. “Why do you care?”

“No offense, I would have guessed it was like ten years ago. You’ve aged.”

“Why did you do that?” he ignored the statement.

“Why not?” I answer.

“What do you mean why not?” he is baffled, it’s not his fault, he doesn’t understand anything. This act was not socially acceptable, but like I said I don’t exactly fit in with the norms of society. I am their burden, I am their whispers in their ears and their constant stares, I am the freak who moved in next door who’s not allowed to banter with their children.

“I guess what I mean is, Familial Dysautonomia.”
 
“Excuse me?” He tosses a blood soaked paper towels into his small desk’s trashcan. He looks furious, but still his curiosity overcomes his anger. 

“Familial Dysautonomia.” I repeated, this time speaking louder and as clearly as my stubble of a tongue will let me.

“What are you talking about?”

“You ever hear of those Scandinavian triplets? The ones who wore born and all died before they were twelve due to that disease? They had this damned curse too, that wasn’t that long ago actually? What, back in the late eighties maybe, I think there was a special on sixty minutes about them?”

“I’m vaguely familiar with it. They had some strange defect. I can’t really recall much about it.”

“Yea, that defect it what I have. The average lifespan is twelve years young. Somehow I’ve managed to live past twenty.”

“You don’t feel pain at all then?”

“I stand in front of a line of people with blunt objects who want nothing more then to cause the most amount of pain to me they can. They already don’t like me because I look different. They pay top dollar to get a crack at kicking my ass. I’ve been hit with baseball bats, hockey sticks, led pipes, hell -some just want to punch me. I always get the biggest guys wanting to show off in front of their college girls, thinking they can be the one to hurt me. They don’t get it. They punch me, I bleed, I smile to them with blood stained teeth, and take their money. In short, I feel nothing.”

“That’s not healthy. There’s got to be serious long term effects caused by all this damage, blood clots, all that has to be taken into consideration.”

“It doesn’t matter. I’ve already doubled my lifespan. Anyway, have you ever gone through life with in inability to feel anything? It’s not much of a life. I should have been dead a decade ago.”

“It can’t be all bad.” he simply replies.

I look back at his photo with his family. They are happy. They are everything I have never known, everything I have ever wanted.

He notices me staring at his photo again, this time he lays it face down. He grows more uncomfortable, I can tell as he crosses his leg and angles himself differently as he sits back down into his chair. His eye contact becomes lesser; he is also fidgeting with a pen. All signs.

“I’m sorry I don’t mean to be rude. Its just you seem so happy.”

“We should focus on you. Not me.”

“Okay whatever.”

“I want to help you. I just… I’ve never helped anyone such as yourself. I don’t even know where to begin. What is it that you want, where do you hurt emotionally?”

“I would give anything to feel that way, the way you do in that photo, with that smile. That’s all I want. You know how it feels when you love a girl so much that just the mere touch of her skin makes you so happy you could die that very moment and be happy? Not me, no fucking clue. I can’t feel anything; I have no idea what it feels like to feel the women you love in your arms.”

“You should feel blessed. You’ll never know the feeling of loosing that touch forever either. ”

“What do you mean?”

“I’ve known that feeling, the completeness that comes with the warmth from your loved ones touch. It’s enough to make you withstand all the evils in this world. But once you’ve felt that, you have the uneasiness to know that it can be lost very easily. You may never know the warmth for the short amount of time that feeling lasts, but feel lucky you’ll never know the bitter cold that replaces it once you’ve lost it. Trust me, that last much longer.”

Although he doesn’t say how, whether they were killed, or whether she met some younger richer man and left, but it is obvious, he no longer has that warmth either. I don’t ask either, in all honesty I don’t care. I hate him for ever feeling that.

“I would take the bitter cold over pure numbness. I would take anything over nothing. You give me one day to feel that way, and I will take an eternity of that bitterness.”

He shakes his head as if he is ashamed of what I’ve said.

“You only say that because you’ve never known it. Trust me, you have no curse, you are blessed. You are spared from the pain the rest of us have to deal with. You are spared from the turmoil and despair my other entire clients struggle with when they walk through those doors. If all people were like you I wouldn’t have a job. People fall out of love, people cheat on their spouses. If no one felt anything physical then their emotional attachments wouldn’t be hardly as strained. ”

“That’s bullshit, I’ve spent my whole life as an outsider, both physically and emotionally. I feel pain, I feel hurt, when someone looks at me with disgust, I still feel that. When that one person looked at me with love, and when she went to hold me and I could not even feel her, that is a curse. I want to feel that! I feel all the bad, all the evil, all the negativity, but I get nothing else. Nothing.”

“I can’t help you, I’m sorry. None of my techniques will enable you to feel anything, physically or emotionally.”

“Fine.”

I walk away. I slam the door behind me. I can’t help but to think about that photo. I wonder how a man filled with so much pain can comfort others anyway. I wonder about what he said. I wonder how the pain would feel over loosing that feeling. I wonder what kind of man he was when he had it. I wonder what kind of man I would be if I ever had it.

I wonder a lot, but I’ll never know.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

The Aging Artist

The story written in the previos blog (entitled: The Canvas) came from a poem i wrote back in a poetry workshop class i took a few winters ago. Poetry is not my strongest genre, but i was told that this was damn good. Is it? I am not sure, i suppose you can decide that for yourself. I will say that there is/was something to the poem that made me want to go back to it and explore it with a fiction piece. So, for shits and giggles i figured i would post the only decent poem i have written or probably ever will write. I think its fun to read this and compare it to the other piece. Maybe not though, i don't know.

The Artist
By J.L. Hickey

I often found him hunched

over a small white desk

with a very loud yellow lamp

resting above his shoulders

as if it was his own personal

blazing sun, illuminating his creations.

I would sit and watch his dirty fingers

while his brush would magically

create life from nothingness.

A tall sailboat braving the Atlantic waves,

a dirty back end of a pick up truck

including all the fixings of white trash.

Gadgets sprawled all around him

the necessary tools of his trade,

rulers shaped like triangles and

erasers that looked like wrapped caramels

but smelled like the soles

of my childhood shoes.

Now I find him often hunched

on the lazy boy recliner

watching his shows and stories,

his fingers pink and wrinkled

his hair now shaded in

with white and grays

as if his pencil’s have turned against him.

Friday, December 7, 2007

The Canvas

This story came from a well received poem i wrote a few years back. I'm not into poetry but i knew something good was there, so i decided for my second short story post to play around with it. I like this story, it has some heavy imagery and metaphores that i am not sure will be picked up on. Maybe i am giving myself too much credit though. As always i wrote this in about two hours and is a first draft. Comments? Ideas? Possitive Criticism?

The Canvas

He is old now, completely grayed and his face was no longer lined with vibrant colors. Instead, it’s been replaced with dark shades of black. His hair has thinned and his beard grew into perfect harmony with a brilliant mix of white and black. His life is empty now; with nothing left for his old and wrinkled paint stained hands to create. He is slipping rapidly out of health. When I visit him in the sterile white stained room of the hospital, and I look into his once dark brown fleeting eyes, I know deep down, he’s already dead. He has been for a long time.

When he was younger he was always in his studio. I remember when I was a real young kid; he would be in there sometimes for hours. I knew this because my adolescent mind gauged time through the half hour episodes of television programs. I always wanted to watch him turn those oily blobs of paint into massive city landscapes or rusted out Chevy truck beds hauling mounds of dirty trash bags into the desert.

He told me once, that when he stood before his canvas, he felt like God.

“I control what happens here. I turn this white bleak canvas into anything my mind can imagine. No one has any control over what I decide to make with these paints and my hands. Its freedom boy, pure unrestricted freedom, it’s the American dream.”

In real life, it was complete opposite for him; I know this now looking back in retrospect. He had no control over anything, in fact everyone had control of him. The government controlled his income due to debt. Mother controlled where he went and what he did during his little spare time. His job controlled the majority of his time. He was a product of those around him. He was the canvas; all those other parties took turns with the brush creating him.

His creations -as I call them- were gorgeous. I think labeling them as paintings or sketches is too informal. They were much more then that. I remembered when he finished one of my favorites, a magnificent ship with towering sails battling through menacing waves that violently came crashing into its bow. It hangs in my living room above my television this very day.

It’s unfortunate that I am not as talented with writing as my father was with paint. No matter how hard I could try to depict its beauty with words, it would only pale in comparison to the perfection of every stroke of his brush. When I was younger I would sneak into the basement to look at his creations. The ship always gave me goose bumps.

I’m not sure how he did it, but the ocean looked so scary to me. I swear it was as angry as I have ever seen or witnessed the act of anger in my life. Sometimes even in my adult life I dream of being trapped on that boat. I’m there all alone, looking overboard watching as these ten foot waves crash into me. I fight for balance, fight for composure as the violent winds batter my face with the sting of the freezing rain. In my dreams the ship never sinks, but I’m never strong enough to weather the storm. I grab a life vest and I jump into the ocean, fading away into its omnipotent gloom. I wake up sweating with tears in my eyes. I never understood what it meant.

“Son, what are you doing down here?”

I’d heard him walking down the steep creaky staircase but I was too captivated to really take notice until he spoke.

“Its late, you have school.”

I’m not sure my age; I was young though, probably just of out grade school, within my first two years of middle school. I remember I would sneak down after I thought everyone was in bed. Even at that age, that basement scared the shit out of me. To this day I’m not sure how I ever muster up enough courage to sneak down there at nights to look that them.

“Why are you down here looking at these old things?”

Even back then, before he truly physically defined the concept of “old” he had began the process of giving up on his dream. It had been years since he had created anything at that point.

“Why don’t you paint or draw anymore, dad?”

“Oh, I do. Everyday at G.M. you know I draw the manuals for all the stations and their parts.”

“It’s not the same.”

“It pays the bills. You grow up, and you realize the things you love to do don’t pay the bills. I have your mother, you, and your sister to think about.”

“Don’t you miss it?”

“Of course I do. You’re still young. You’ll learn responsibility soon enough. You’ll start by going to bed.”

He’d pick up his paint brush and his pencils every now and then. It seemed that all his years working and raising us tired him out too much to the point that he was never really able to recapture his inner artist. I know now that he chose his family over his creations.

I sit next to him as he sleeps. It’s because I know he will not be with us much longer that I am there with him by his side. It’s been a long time since we really spoke. It’s funny how fast life goes by when you hold a grudge. Even when mom died, we just kind of did our own things.

I never amounted to the success my parents always bestowed upon me. I was always deemed the one to make something of my life. I chose the road less traveled. My father chose the duties of a father, the hardworking backbreaking ethic of putting your family first before your own dreams. I married young, due to a pregnancy that my girlfriend and I at the time were definitely not ready for. We struggled. I worked a shit job at a restaurant and I spent most of my time dedicated to my own creations.

I wasn’t a painter, I was a writer. At least I called myself a writer. I made money here and there, made publications in this journal and in that journal. I never made much money. I never quit though, not like my father. It got to the point that I was forced to choose, I never wanted to. It was between my family, or the thing I truly loved, creating.

I knew then, first hand what my father was talking about. When I looked at that blank white page staring back up at me, I felt like God just waiting to create anything I deemed. It was a drug to me, a release, it was therapeutic. My parents backed my wife’s side. Even my father, who I thought would understand at least a little how I felt. It didn’t matter. I chose to follow my American dream. I chose freedom. I chose to create.

I think of that day he spoke to me in the basement. Sometimes I wonder how foolish I was. I never remarried or even dated. It wasn’t an act of un-love. I just couldn’t give up my dreams; I wouldn’t let anyone or anything write the words on my canvas like he did.

I was going to leave this story uncompleted on his bed. I was going to walk away from my father who lays deathly ill before my very eyes and say goodbye leaving only this behind. I would have ended it with clichés that form our daily lives. I would have said that I love him dearly. That he was a good hard working father. I was going to apologize for our separation and tell him that I still stand by the choices I made.

Instead he woke up and I never got to write or tell him any of that. Instead you get the following events.

His eyes watered upon seeing me sitting there next to him. I couldn’t speak. I folded this up and handed it to him unfinished. He shook his head simply with a no.

“I had your sister bring something here in case you came.” He spoke slowly, his voice had aged and I hardly recognized it. “It’s in the closet.”

I said nothing; instead I placed this unfinished story into my pocket and opened up the small closet within the hospital room. There underneath a clear plastic bag with my fathers belongings sat a large art folder. I opened it up and pulled out a large painting.

“I painted that a year after you left your wife. It was the last thing I ever created. It is my greatest achievement.”

There in my hands was almost an exact replica of that weather worn ship painting that still hung high in my living room. The waves were still as dark and scary as ever. There was one main difference; in this one the ship was well manned. My father, mother, sister, and even my ex-wife and our son Jacob, all manned their positions. They look worn and tired, yet they fought on.

“I love you father. I am sorry.” I walked away and did not look back. I cried harder that night then I had in years. I understood now. I always thought back to that night my father spoke to me in our old basement as a way to justify my choices. I understood everything as clear as day. There was nothing left for me to do. I went to bed that night and I found myself back on that boat. I was alone, and I did as I always do. I jumped into that violent ocean and faded away into nothingness.

Saturday, December 1, 2007

Dining Room Table Presents: Addiction

This summary is not available. Please click here to view the post.