Wednesday, February 25, 2009

and she's from new york

---afternoon

the way anne morriss sees it.

the irony of commitment is that
it's deeply liberating--in work, in
play, in love. the act frees you
from the tyranny of your internal
critic, from the fear that likes to
dress itself up and parade around
as rational hesitation. to commit is
to remove your head as a barrier
to your life.

...and will was shorn

february 21, afternoon

yesterday, last night, i drove back to the apartment after being down in vista for a couple of days, working. after charging up the stairs and directly to the bathroom, i was in immanent danger of suffering a violent rupture of the bladder, i noticed three things: the first, will sitting on the couch; the second, a sea of tulips in small pots on the coffee table, the kitchen table and on the porch; third, will, shorn.
having avoided a serious medical emergency i re-entered the wash of pink and red. will told us, claire was with me, that he had purchased fourteen pots of tulips after wresting them from the clutching grasp of innumerable middle-aged asian women and cheap, distressed husbands of angry wives. the total charge paid for the flowers was twenty-eight cents. he used his credit card.
when he got home with them, however that was achieved, he gave one of them to Pearl, our neighbor underneath, from her noisy neighbors upstairs, as the note said. it was a fantastic gesture, she's not a fan of our nightly carousing and we've had more than one run-in. 
he then informed us that, as if that hadn't been enough to satisfy even the most voracious of lusts for happy surprises, our water-heater had been replaced and that his computer had been repaired and was once again in commission.
signs and wonders, i leave for thirty-six hours and come home to a world transformed. will looks like a very cheery seventeen-year-old as he clicks away at his computer, the flowers smell nice and taking a hot shower again, what joy.



         
---william s. burroughs

Friday, February 20, 2009

the demon in my room.

i am firmly convinced of a malevolent supernatural presence in my old bedroom. a demon, to be sure, and one which we will name baleldil. he (or she, accordingly) has taken to keeping me up until all hours of the morning, while at the same time making me both very hungry and also too lazy to trudge to the house to find something to eat. bastard.


so, this is good. it's almost three in the morning, i feel all at once capable of never sleeping again, fainting for want of food and ridiculous for one, creating a blog (though i'd quietly planned on doing so) and two, creating demons to write about and name in said blog. it makes me want for a nightcap.















"wine is sunlight held together by water"
-galileo galilei