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Adam's Debut – March 27 in NYC!

ALTERNATE 29

with 15 comments

and now for something completely different

He lives in San Francisco.  He doesn’t have a car, but he has a bike and a backpack with a worn-out zipper.  He works at a café that sells tea - not coffee - and hosts spoken-word performances and bad acoustic bands.  He writes every night until his fingers hurt, working on poetry and a humorous novel about unconventional lust.  He makes enough money at the café and freelancing to eat and sleep and play.  He reads the Times online every morning, two books a week, one fiction, one nonfiction, and doesn’t subscribe to cable or religion.

He stays in the top level of a three-story house that is shared with a middle-aged lesbian couple on the second floor and a disabled Vietnam veteran on the ground.  The lesbians cook him vegan dinners while the vet gives him cheap beer and tells him the same stories about friends blown apart and exotic prostitutes. The vet is as proud that he served and survived as he is that he only had the clap once. 

Occasionally he goes to the movies alone. He sings in the shower. He pisses in the shower. He dances in crowds.  He gets laid when he wants, because he wants to, how he wants to.  He pulls out most of the time.  He knows he’s stupid. He knows he’s arrogant.  He knows he’s God when he looks in his cracked mirror or his computer screen.

He likes you. He doesn’t love you.

He sits through classes at the community center where he learns sign language and how to grow his own herb garden.   He masturbates.  He goes to a gym but the bike riding and the vegan meals are enough to keep him healthy.  His eyes lock on a blonde woman who crosses paths with him each morning and he wonders if bisexuality exists.  He auditions for public theatre.  He doesn’t get a role, but he’s thanked for his time. He screws the casting director.  He gets a bit part.  He doesn’t show up for the first rehersal because he no longer cares.

He clings to his youth.

He meets a celebrity at a party, smokes weed with him, takes a pill from him, makes out with him, but the next day doesn’t remember who it was.  He teaches his cat how to walk on a leash.  He sleeps naked with his windows open.  He forgets to lock his door. His lesbian neighbors take him to the opera and political rallies, though he’s too apathetic to vote.  He writes lyrics that almost rhyme for a musician, and they go out for drinks when one of the songs gets noticed by a label.  The musician pays. He screws the musician.

Three months later the musician writes a song about the writer who never called him back.

The song becomes a hit. The musician becomes a star.

He tries to learn the guitar himself but fails.  His hands are too sensitive. He has one credit card but owes five thousand dollars on it.  He rearranges his furniture often to make everything seem new.  He smells good.  He tastes good. He doesn’t listen to the radio anymore.

He is happy, but he never admits it, because he knows pain is more interesting.

© Bryan Borland

Written by Bryan Borland

February 16, 2009 at 2:01 pm

15 Responses

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  1. Are you taking up other forms of creative writing now? I like it!

    Tel

    February 16, 2009 at 2:44 pm

  2. A simpler version of this piece has been sitting in my various hard drives/notebooks for years now and today I dusted it off and revised it a bit as I was backing up some old files.

    It’s cool to remember that we can create entire worlds with just a few clicks on a keyboard.

    poeticgrin

    February 16, 2009 at 4:31 pm

  3. I have to say, this is my favorite of most of what I’ve read of yours. Your poetry is great, but this is really good as well. I hope to see more prose from you…

    zxvasdf

    February 16, 2009 at 5:33 pm

  4. That is an entire world, a neighbourhood, a culture, a person moving through it. Wonderful story telling.

    Paul

    February 16, 2009 at 6:26 pm

  5. This one kept me wanting to know more…..

    Chris

    February 16, 2009 at 7:25 pm

  6. I pictured the whole of “his” existence like a heavily abridged movie shown in stills.

    Very good stuff.

    Patrice

    February 16, 2009 at 11:13 pm

  7. Yes, I’d trade pain for happiness any day.

    medicatedlady

    February 17, 2009 at 9:00 am

  8. I’m not sure how to respond without repeating what has already been observed here.

    An entire world, indeed. There is sadness and truth and delusion and reality in this mini, yet complete universe.

    Very, very well done.

    Marcy

    February 17, 2009 at 9:27 am

  9. Thanks everyone. Sharing prose feels a little bit like standing here naked.

    I’ll let my muse be my guide.

    poeticgrin

    February 17, 2009 at 11:37 am

  10. wonderful. i just love it.. from the first line (monty python?) to the last word. shame it is over..

    utopianfragments

    February 18, 2009 at 10:41 am

  11. hey, bryan. i was so drawn into this. pretty amazing how much you can say in so few words – i’m thinking poets learn how to be very precise with their language. your comment made me smile. i can’t imagine feeling more naked than if i posted a poem. (and you know how it is when you’re naked, and someone laughs? yeah… no poems for j.)

    ScribeGirl

    February 18, 2009 at 2:42 pm

  12. Last line…….Yass!

    bindo

    February 19, 2009 at 8:32 am

  13. I’ve read this again, and it’s amazing how it just sucks you into this man’s life. I love how it all gets summed up in that last line, but also answered the question I had throughout: is this guy miserable or not?

    Tel

    February 19, 2009 at 8:33 am

  14. I love this, Bryan. What more can I say?

    Brad

    February 20, 2009 at 5:29 am

  15. Very enjoyable!

    lawchick

    March 15, 2009 at 3:00 pm


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