Monday, October 8, 2012

Echoes from Some Dead Universe

It's late now. The cold has crept in and the lights are off and the television glows in my otherwise dark bedroom.

Re-runs again. I haven't seen this one though. I have the volume off so I will have to watch it again sometime. I watch for the visual tone. the silver-plate black and white and tight and uncomfortable sets and shots. All sewn together in some masterful way as to impose a vast, terrifying, nearly lovecraftian sense of hoplessness and divine malevolence onto the viewer. When I sleep my dreams are paranoid and uncomfortable and scare me. While I can't sleep, my body, for whatever reason, craves something similar. So I watch The Twilight Zone with the sound off and write in the flickering light of cursed lives and bleak endings and existences spiraling into the void.

I nearly killed us a few weeks back.

We drank and enjoyed the day and Marie passed out in the car and I drove home and it was late and raining and I don't remember much of the drive except for hitting maybe three cars and at least one telephone pole. Somehow the car got us home. I got Marie to bed and then I drove to the bar and in the parking lot I noticed how badly the car was damaged. Outside of the bar I drank the last of the wine I had with me and also inside the bar a handful of beers and I met friends and people whom I know who might be friends and maybe not. I spilled drinks on the floor. I was loud as the band played. I drank and then went outside and drank and when I couldn't stand anymore I mumbled goodbye to whoever was there and I drove home. I don't remember that drive either. I sat on my bed and I couldn't untie my boots so I left them on and fell asleep.

When I woke up Marie was already up. "Did you see the fucking car?" She was frantic.

"Yes." I was instantly awake.

"What the fuck happened? Did you hit something?"

"I don't know. I must have."

"Jesus fucking Christ! We could be dead right now! How fucking drunk were you?!"

"How fucking drunk were you? Christ."

"Don't 'Christ' me," she said. "You could have fucking killed us. Do you realize that? We could be fucking dead right now, all because you think you're some kind of fucking tough guy who can fucking drink and drive and everything will be fine! Well how the hell are we going to get that fixed? How're we going to pay for that? Huh?!"

"I don't know."

"You don't know. Well that's just fucking great. Well you just fucking lay there and fucking sleep and I'll goddamned figure it out!" She left the room and slammed the door. My head was pounding.

I didn't feel right about any of this, but I didn't feel completely in the wrong either.I didn't feel as though I were completely to blame. My feet were suffocating in my boots and I looked down at them and remembered that the rain had all but cemented the laces in place. I was too hungover and dizzy to fix them but it was all I could think about.

I had to work but there was no question that I was going to call off as soon as I had the motivation to find my phone if I hadn't left it somewhere.

A wave of guilt and shame rushed over me and I could have killed us. I remember pulling two U-turns on the interstate when I thought I had gotten lost and decided to start from the beginning. I remember stumbling in the rain back to the car for an hour as Marie stumbled next to me and I remember not knowing where I was. I remembered being on the interstate. I remembered hitting the first car plainly, and only vaguely the next two and the telephone pole. I did not remember how I found the interstate. We could have died and I was surrounded in the guilt of it. 

Marie came in and she was crying silently. Now I was only glad to see her. I stood up and maybe in some other life we did die. Or she died. Or I died and we weren't here now. We weren't okay. We weren't together anymore. I pulled her to me.

"I love you," I said and held her tight against my chest.

"The car, honey," she said under inaudible tears. "What are we going to do?"

"I love you. I'm sorry I did this. I know it doesn't fix anything, but, I'm so glad you're okay."

She rested her head on my shoulder. "We're lucky."

"We are."

She wrapped her arms around my back.

I sat in shame for weeks. My mood was crashing and dragging along behind me as it was and I think now that the total abandon of that night was the culmination of my deepening senses of emptiness and futility (the "twenty-something blues", as I like to call them). I stopped drinking. I almost stopped driving. It kept me awake. In some other universe, I had killed us.

I sit awake and watch the silent flicker of my television. I want to write but I can't scribble anything worth a goddamn. I always felt like my flame came from alcohol and my brain knows that isn't true but my fingertips don't and my heart doesn't and I can't write a single decent fucking word.

I sit awake in the night and I am heartbroken for the James without Marie, and for the Marie without James and for the world without either. I am haunted by those echoes from some dead universe. I am disgraced by my inexcusable leap into sheer and unadulterated chaos and somewhere, in some pleading and child-like corner of my mind wonder how I found the interstate that night and how I got home.

Mostly though, I am thankful.


4 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. Hey Asa,

    I picked up Great American July, probably while it was free in the Kindle Store. I have to say... I love and hate the book.

    I love that the story is so ... raw, and easy to relate to. At least, the first section. The second section was just a bit all over the place, but it was an easy read.

    However, the third section is where I began to hate it. Not because it was bad writing, not because it wasn't a good read... but because it hit a little too close to home. It seemed like every single thing you wrote about in the "Other" section of Great American July was a reflection of all the anxiety, sadness, and frustration that I've felt over the past couple of weeks.

    I won't go into the details, but I'm essentially in a state of "career paralysis" where I am trying to make something of myself with my creative endeavours but will invariably have to take a job to pay the bills. Not that it's terrible - I enjoy what roles I find for my day jobs, save for the last nightmare.

    Every single section (even the one on love) fired some bullets in the direction of my brain, and it was oddly uplifting. I hated that it made me feel so vulnerable, so fragile... and yet it felt great that I wasn't alone in having these sort of thoughts.

    I don't even care if all of it was a work of fiction, and I don't even know if you'll read this, but... thanks.

    I decided today that I'm going to smack the shit out of my frustration and down-in-the-dumps mentality, and I'm going to become better. In every sense of the word.

    It's going to be slow. It's going to be tough. But goddamnit, I'll get there.

    Once again: thanks.

    I am compelled to share Great American Summer with everyone else around me who is currently feeling lost and trying to make it in the world. So I will.

    Have a good one sir, cheers.

    (Sorry for posting twice. I derped on something on the original.)

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  3. Hello Jon,

    First I would like to say thank you for taking the time to download and read the book. With any luck, you picked it up after I fixed all of the typos I found in the first version. However, if you didn't then I thank you more for pushing through them.

    Keep at your shit. I work awful job after awful job and suffocate through them all so at night, I have a place to sit and drink and write and maybe someday, yeah, maybe someday.

    To me though, the important thing isn't to succeed, it's to know I've left some piece of myself behind. Sure it'd be nice to pay my bills with my creativity, but it isn't likely. Really, it's all about this. Writing for years and maybe someone will leave a wonderful comment on something one night.

    I had to read your comment a few times. I recieve many rejection letters (as writers do), and your comment, knowing someone connected with my own human condition made all of those rejections nearly meaningless. I want to thank you sir, and please keep reading, and hopefully enjoying, my shit.

    Have a good night.

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  4. Asa,

    I may have downloaded the version with a handful of typos, but it's not difficult to pick out the context and figure out what word you meant. I've had much worse, so this was a breeze in comparison.

    You've made a fan out of me, so you can be absolutely sure that I'll be there reading what you write. I'm sure that one day you'll get to a place where you won't have to suffer through awful jobs and still have a place to sit and drink and write.

    Keep fighting the good fight, Asa.

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