Echoing screams drip into my head like molten lead
dripping into water, sizzling, steaming, then hardening and taking shape,
morphing into distinct sounds and words. The different voices meld into a
harmony straight outta hell. The institutional odor of piss and disinfectant
mixed with the smell of adrenalineloaded, fearinspired sweat hits my nose, then
fills my lungs, and I know that if I open my eyes this particular dream might
not go away. That the chances are this is not going to be a real good day. My
head is all fucked up, swollen like a goddamn balloon, and when the body it's
attached to swings its legs off the bunk and gets its bare feet planted on the
concrete, everything hurts, from my fucking toes to my broken nose. My left eye
will open, barely, the right is swollen all the way shut. The bunk I'm on is
bolted to the floor in the middle of an isolation cell. The screams of
certified madmen are echoing through the block. But here's what's really scary,
see, I know I'm in jail one more time, I know I got my ass beat one more time,
nothing new and no big deal, right? Wrong.
Two facts: The last thing I
remember is trying to kill myself. Took a bottle full of a nasty prescription
sleeping pill called Restoril, another full of Xanax and a third of Dalmane to
insure that the job got done. Chased all the pills with a quart of vodka. [You
see, my dear Watson, you have to ensure that it will succeed.] Lights
out, right? Guess the fuck not, because not only am I still breathing and hurting,
I'm locked down and can feel that my brain is broken. Thoughts won't form. I
got a gift for gab, but trying to describe what it feels like when you know
that your mind has crashed and burned is tough to do. I'm unsure not just of my
name but of my identity, I'm having trouble with object identification, images
are swimming around behind these baby blues that have no frame of reference in
reality, and voices and sounds are twisting through my head like demented
banshees.
I realise I'm wearing a yellow pajamatype uniform.
What ya gotta understand is that inLACountyJail regular inmates wear darkblue
jumpsuits, they got other colouruniforms for trustees, gay guys, etc. The
yellow PJ's are for fucking dings, the lowest rung on the ladder. A ding is a
guy who is so whacked out that mentally he's past Pluto, all the way gone,
Jack. And I'm in yellows. My broken brain is trying to tell me there's gotta be
some mistake. Maybe I caught a case, but I know what's up. I couldn't be a
ding. Could I? The next thing that filters through what's left of my brain is
that I got a weird wristband, not the graywhite band that you normally get, but
a fuckedup offcolour purpleband that means you're on your third strike. I'm
wearing stylish Easteregg colours in an isolationcell with the screams of the mad
echoing from the cells around me. And it hits home, I'm a ding who just struck
out. I'm writing this in my little teeny bachelorpad, where I got my own
kitchen and shower, where I lock the door when I leave. Not my cell, where the
door locks when I enter it.
The word grace is defined as undeserved favour, and
for this minute and day my existence is a state of grace. I'm getting by all
right, a long, long way from high rolling
but also a long, long way from where I was a little over a year ago. I see my
daughter on weekends, we go to the gym and kickbox. I got wheels and a gig at
theWeekly, doing OutlawLAcolumns. A book I wrote back when I was in jail came
out last month, and LarryClark is shooting a movie of it, it's called Another
Day in Paradise. They say write what you know. Undeserved fucking favor.
I come from a long line of people who were all the
way wrong, or in the wrong place at the wrong time. Starting with irish
revolutionaries and scottish cattlerustlers from theLiddellRiverValley, my ancestors
were driven out for making poor political decisions and having sticky fingers. Both
sides of the family migrated to the land of the free and the home of the brave,
where they went on to become heroes of theConfederacy and, in the familytradition,
died fighting forces that outnumbered them by almost4to1. Their homes were
burned to the ground by the goodGeneralGrant, who went on to become President
after applying the torch to everything standing in his way and after his
soldiers gangraped my greatgreatgrandmother and all other available females of
all colours from ages 8 to 80. A few failed entrepreneurs and drunkards later,
and a long line of bad choices, have resulted in yours truly.
I was not what you would call a welladjusted child.
Back then I was considered a juvenile delinquent, now they call it
antisocialpersonalitydisorder withsociopathictendencies. The real question is
who gives a shit and what difference it makes anyhow. Why I felt the way I did
is a moot point, fear and rage defined me and my actions. Drugs made life
bearable. The first time I got loaded I was 8 or 9, me and some of my little
partners sniffed glue, and for me it was like coming home. For a few moments
the emotional earthquakes and spiritual hurricanes that made up my inner universe
slowed, then stopped. I took to drugs like JohnTheBaptist took to water. I
thought they were my salvation.
I was a kid who refused to learn how to read, write
or do anything except act like an asshole. A kid whose dad taught him how to
read in one night once they discovered I wasn't retarded. Pops threw me on the
ground, bent both my arms behind my back and put a book in front of me. I
learned to read phonetically. When I couldn't sound the word out my arms got
shoved up a little bit higher between my shoulders. When we reached the end of
the book my arms weren't good for much, but I could read. Once I learned how I
read compulsively, starting with L'Amour and Heinlein and working my way
through Sartre and Nietzsche, Freud and Jung, hoping to learn something about
my twisted psyche. I still read whatever I can lay my hands on. [It seems to me
that he never learned how to read or what to search.] But back then reading was
something I kept to myself. I perceived myself as stupid, and was comfortable
with that image. The fact that I liked to read was my deep dark secret.
Moms was the first one who encouraged me to write. In
sixth grade my muse was disturbingly bleak, and what attention it got me in
school was beyond negative, they thought I was sick, mentally ill. An essay I
wrote in sixth grade that extolled the benefits of immediate gratification, a
blend of Nihilism and Hedonism, damn near got me thrown out. I quit writing
when I quit school, seventh grade. Later I picked up the pen for my own
amusement and to try to preserve my sanity. I wrote for 25 years, though,
before I had the courage to let anybody read any of it.
I was 12 years old the first time I got picked up for
a felony. The charge was strongarmrobbery. That was my first experience with
getting locked up, as opposed to picked up by the police and then released to
my parents. That was also my first real experience with heroinwithdrawal. By
the following morning I was introduced to that particular flavour of hell, one
I've tasted over and over through the rest of my life. The
fullon insanity of righteous withdrawal, nerves and brain screaming, flesh
crawling, guts twisted into knots. [Why?] Praying with all my heart just
to get through it and swearing to myself and on everything that's holy that I'd
never use again. And deep, deep inside me knowing that at the first opportunity
I'd be loaded.
Hopped a train and ended up in Boston. Life got
interesting. Making dough hand over fist. Armed robberies, burglaries, shooting
smack 24-7, stopping only when I had pharmaceuticals to slam instead. Dilaudid,
pharmaceutical coke in that brown glassbottle that had a skull and crossbones
on it below the words Cocaine Hydrochloride Flaky Crystals, Pantapon, Neumorphine,
regular morphine, all that good shit. Hit a drugstore and come out with bags
full of dope. Back there and back then the heroin was white with a quinine cut,
way good. Too good. Live hard, die young and leave a goodlooking corpse, right?
Wrong, pal. Whoever the idiot was who came up with that expression didn't see
my friends's corpses.
It was the mid70s, and the punk rock thing was
starting to happen. The rage that consumed me had found a home. I've heard
people describe rock&roll as good time music, but for me it was always
about anger and outrage and sex, Chantilly lace and a pretty face dotdotdot motherfucker.
Us and the disco kids used to roll and tumble on a regular basis. KenmoreSquare
was the scene of multiple Punker vs. DiscoDweeb riots, as were most of the
smaller clubs around town, we'd crash their gigs and they'd do the same. I
loved it. Mohawked down, with steel toe boots and a pistol in my back pocket, I
thought I was BillyTheKid on smack and rock & roll.
One night me and my girl were drinking boilermakers
and taking reds, and a locally famous sometime pro wrestler and all-the-time
asshole came strolling into the joint we were frequenting at the time. A bar
that had generous shots, cheap hot dogs and a good jukebox. One thing led to
another, and both being loaded and so on, the second or third time the young
lady I was with told the maniac to buzz off I felt like I had to get involved,
whether it was a stupid move or not. This guy scared the shit outta me. He was
huge and way aggressive, had a big mean mouth to go with his oversize and mean
everything else, and was rawjawing the whole bar before zeroing in on me and my
girl. All 140 pounds of my poorly groomed leather-jacketed ass got in his face.
His first shot took out my front teeth, I don't know if it was the second or
third that broke my nose, and sometime after that he kicked me in the face good
enough to split the skin from my eye to my temple. I remember rolling into a
ball so he couldn't kick my head all the way off. When he tired of putting the
boots to me I was coughing up blood and looking up at him from the beer- and
blood-soaked floor just in time to catch his mouthful of spit in my face. There
was a Budweiser longneck lying on the floor, a and whether I grabbed it or it
teleported into my hand I got no idea, but I do know that one second I was on
the floor and the next I had his shirt bunched in one hand and the bottle in my
other. When it hit him in the forehead the bottle broke off, leaving the neck
and long slivers of razor-sharp glass in my hand. It
felt like something ripped in my brain, like lightning was dancing behind my
eyes, like my whole nervoussystem shorted out. [There must be a reason. How?] I
shoved the broken bottle into his face, and we both started screaming as my
hand and the bottle went to work. The pain and fear and humiliation had
combined to send me all the way over the edge. The guy's face before and after
the amateur plastic surgery still haunts me.
The cops came and ambulanced us both to MassGeneral
for our injuries. I got charged with attempted murder, assault with a deadly
weapon, etc., and cuffed to my hospital bed. After my arraignment I ended up in
BridgewaterStateHospitalForTheCriminallyInsane for observation. It was not a
nice place. I'd spent some time at and finally escaped theIndianaYouthCenter,
one of the last juvenile facilities in this great nation of ours to use
corporal punishment, but Bridgewater was something else. The huge
brick-and-granite wall that surrounded it seemed older than time.
My first day in population, a guy was sitting and rocking
back and forth in the day room, mumbling to himself and struggling to rip off
the football helmet that had been tied to his head. I had my back to the wall,
just watching my fellow nuts. Some were dangerous guys, killers. Some were
alkies and dopefiends. Some of them were just motherfucking crazy, looney
tunes. I was trying to figure out who was who when the guy that was rocking and
mumbling succeeded in getting the football helmet off. Stood up and howled
triumphantly, spiked the helmet into the floor, then lowered his head and ran
full tilt into the brickwall. Boo-ya, just like goddamn HumptyDumpty. Brains
and blood all over the place. Nobody even broke stride, card games continued,
chess pieces were moved, sentences finished. I kept my back to the wall and
watched the body twitch.
The lights of [LosAngeles] were like magic, I fell in
love before the plane landed. It was Oz waiting to fall into the sea, theSunsetStrip,
dope and broads and exotic cars, a land of limitless fucking opportunity. They
said, Go west young man, and I did.
Hitting theWhisky and theRainbow, slipping and sliding,
tripping and gliding, life was a ball and a gas, living in free fall right up
to the crash. Ate it on my Harley, crushed my right leg from the knee down.
Life became a drag. I had no
dough and no way to make any. If you can't spell or count too well it's tough
to get employment other than of the manual type. Sadly, not many people want to
hire a crippled guy to carry shit or dig holes. And if you can't run, stealing
is not a good idea. I was full-on homeless, crashing where I could, shoplifting
when I got so hungry I didn't care if I got busted or not. And lonely like a
motherfucker. For some reason when you're on the bottom people feel no need to
socialize with you. One day I picked up a newspaper. Read the help wanteds to
pass time, not because I thought I'd find anything. Saw an ad. It said:
"If you can talk on the phone you can make big bucks."
Went toSantaFeFreightSalvageCo. Met the
owner, a little old jewish guy I'll never forget, telling me a way to survive.
"Oy, who gives a fuck if ya know from drill presses and hand tools, sell
'em. Sell drill bits and tape, shove it down their throat. Nem di gelt, get the
fucking money, schmuck. If dey answer da phone they're alive, if they're alive
they need whatcha selling. Whatever it is! Close da deal! It's all dat counts,
kid. You starve or they starve. What's it gonna be?" Stupid question.
I hopped on my trusty crutches to the nearest phone
and started dialing for dollars. Didn't know shit about tools or sales, had
anEastCoastaccent so thick ya could cut it with a knife, talking to rednecks
about floorjacks and bandsaws, lathes and millingmachines, drillbits and tape
by the fucking pallet load, slamming terrible taiwanese trash all over the
country. If Elmer answered the phone, he had tools on the way, period.
They had free bagels at this place. I lived on the
phone and in the parking lot, surviving on bagels and coffee till I got my first
paycheck. This was a []new way of life for me, and I dug it, earning an honest
buck, paying for my $50- to $100-a-day habit without stealing, causing no
damage to anybody but myself. This place had insurance too, and three years
after I broke the leg a doctor at Cedars put it back together. I still limp,
but it works just fine. So I had a new Beemer, a nice pad in westLA., a couple
girls I liked who liked me back, I was walking without crutches and as proud as
a guy can be. Thought I was the american dream in person.
Habits progress all by themselves. One day everything
is fine, you got it under control. Then like lightning the monkey on your back
turns into King Kong, and all the obsession and madness that's been in check
for so long comes back with a vengeance. Now I need $400 to $500 a day just to
get right. I still had veins back then, and if I didn't have a wake-up big
enough to put me on the edge of a coma, just getting out of bed was a
nightmare. The job went fast. Acquiring dope and doing it was my whole life. I
don't care if you're the pope, if you got a decent-size heroin habit you will
do whatever you got to to stay well. The pride I was taking in being my version
of legit was absurd, but when the day came that I ran out of dough it was back
to ripping and running. Had a close call, a dope ripoff that went bad. The
dealer I'd relieved of his product shot a gang of holes in my car as I was
leaving. Realising that maybe I should look for other options before someone
with better aim decided to stop my clock, I thought methadone might be the
answer. Stupid. Now it's 80mg of methadone and a fistful of valium to start the
day, shoot as much smack as I can get, and if I got enough dough add some coke
so that I can experience something besides being a zombie.
When they finally busted me
it was almost a relief. I was tore up from the floor up, dead on my
feet, just too stupid to lie down and quit breathing. I was in County for most
of '82 fighting multiple burglarycharges, finally got a sixyear lid, Statetime.
LACounty is such bogus time I was grateful when they called me to catch the
chain. Got to the pen and kept as low a profile as possible, read, gambled,
lifted weights, got loaded every chance I got, which was damn near everyday,
and decided that I didn't like jail a bit.
I also started writing my first book. Developed a new
habit, burning through pencils and ballpointpens and reams of legalpads,
butcherpaper, coloured stationery, any fucking thing I could get my hands on.
Playing it off like I was writing letters so I wouldn't have to take the chance
of one of my peers wanting to read the stuff I was writing. Nothing, nothing, is as scary as putting your guts on a piece
of paper for any weasel to take cheap shots at. Doing an armedrobbery, fistfighting
a gorilla, whatever. It don't compare to letting other people read your stuff.
Got out and found a new line of endeavor that I feel
no urge to go into detail on for now, because some people have long memories
and no sense of humor. I was rolling so hard that I thought I was bulletproof,
driving a new Porsche, blah blah. Get the picture? Met a gorgeous little cuban
chick, fell in love like ya read about. Managed to keep her and the habit
going, had a lifestyle that I'd a only dreamed about, moved into a penthouseapartment
in MarinaDelRey. Then I discover the stork is on the way. I'm gonna be a dad.
Could have been happily ever after except for one small detail, I was hooked
like a laboratorymonkey. No matter how good the drugs you're taking are,
eventually they stop working the way you want them to. I reached the point
where I was either unconscious or walking around in hell. No amount of
narcotics would shut my brain off, and the brain I got is a real active one. It
put everything it had into killing me. Checked into a rehab, put it all back
together, tore it apart again. Lost my old lady, my daughter, a new Jag, and
somewhere along the way I gave away the rights to the book I'd written, a pile
of handnumbered mismatched sheets of scratchedout overwritten insane prose that
looked like a tower built by a madman. Losing all the goodies was old news by
now, they come and they go. Knowing I threw my little family away rocked me all
the way to the bone.
Kicked again in '90 and thought everything was gonna
be okay. I had given up on living large and was doing manual labor, bouncing,
moving furniture, making deliveries. Whatever it took to feed myself and stay
legal. Finally got to the point where I had an old Chevytruck and a small pad,
a few pair of blue jeans and enough to eat. I was doing volunteer work at WeCare,
a corny name but a great organization. I was making up for lost time with my
daughter. I was living with a girlfriend. And every night I was scribbling
away, attempting to put words on paper that people might want to read. I
actually had a goal. Life was good.
Boo-ya! Wake up, motherfucker. It feels like there's
broken glass inside me and I'm screaming, in as much pain as I've ever felt,
and I'm a guy that's familiar with pain. Kidneystones. I'm in the hospital
puking from the burning in my guts and I tell them I'm an exdopefiend, I can't
take no narcotics. The medical protocol for kidneystones is morphinesulfate and ToradolIV,
they did what they were supposed to, what the fuck did I know, I was only the stupidfuckingpatient.
When the morphine hit it was all over. I knew I was fucked. It was like I'd
never stopped using. About a year later I'm skin and bones, I'm lonely like
a motherfucker, strung to the gills on prescriptionpainkillers and drinking on
top of them. It's august 25, my birthday, I'm 42 and the biggest loser in the
universe, not the good dad I want to be, don't have the balls to show anybody
the stuff I write, too scared to steal and way too fucked up to work. I don't
got what it takes to rebound one more time, I know kicking will kill me, and my
kidneys are shot. I'm in and out of the hospital like a yo-yo. You play the
hand you're dealt, and I knew that. I was just too fucking tired to play
anymore. So I downed the pills, chased them with vodka and lay down to take a
nap of the permanent variety.
They tell me I was like a raving lunatic, got into an
argument with one of my neighbors and the cops were called. When everything was
said and done I was charged with assaulton-a-cop, assaultwith-a-weapon, etc. I was also beaten into a coma. I'm still getting the
lifesupport bills. TheLAPD did such a thorough job of kicking my ass that it
got all my attention, and that's no bullshit. They did a good enough job that
when my PD took photos of my battered mug and started negotiating, the charges
got reduced.
If I hadn't acted like a fool and gone after them I
wouldn't have woken up in the ding tank or started the journey I'm now on. I'd
have never cleaned up or would have died before I found out the book I gave
away was picked up by a publisher. This is where I caught a major break. The
worldfamous northHollywood rehab I'd been through before took one look at me
and knew I had no dough. Ya got cash, ya get all the help ya could ever want.
Otherwise dotdotdot god bless the child who's got his own, know what I mean? So
a friend of mine who works there got on the phone and called all over town till
he found a place that would take me. He told me it was the end of the line, the
bottom of the barrel, where there was nothing but bustout junkies and streetwinos
with a sprinkling of crackaddicts, but they'd let me in quick in a hurryup.
PeopleInProgress, out there in lovely SunValley, gave me love,
fed me the unbelievably bad food they're famous for and let me heal inside and
out without asking me for a dime. The guy who runs the place used to laugh at
me and my delusions of being a writer, but he let me have the [Windows98 or before]
computer I use and gave me an hour a day to tap away on my second book and
honestly wished me luck. Three months into my stay at PIP a guy named LarryClark
contacted me, said he thought AnotherDayInParadise would make a good flick. Since
then I'm almost done with my second book, SteelToes, and got an outline on the
third. I'm doing interviews and readings. And here's what's really a kick in
the ass: The same guy that hid his writing, that was ashamed of reading and
writing at all, gets a bigger thrill out of reading his stuff to people than he
did from shooting speedballs. When I can see people digging what I'm doing it
makes me high as a motherfucker, and puts me where I always wanted to be, all
the way out of myself.
Amazing grace. For real.
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