There is an innocence in the first beer of the night. when the mind is still free to breathe and the legs free to walk and the eyes free to see and the heart beats on its own
As the cap twisted off and my *** got comfortable in the chair that knows all to well how long this hell would last I knew that the innocence would end fast
Time seems to fly by while you sit and do nothing more then observe it
And I crave that dialog that swims from my eyes to my mind, like this secret symphony played only for me
But you see, everyone sees the same things that I see or you see
This symphony has always been that for all of us but some of us listlessly rummage in the darkness that anger breeds
Like seeds tainted with the devils come it penetrates the hardest of shells and births the **** we see in the shadow of societies twisted ties
I’ll never understand why it is that I am so enamored with watching this destruction cross my mind but I am and in the end it will too, end me.
It’s after the second or third beer that you become cognizant of that candle that’s burning in the front of your face
It smells like ginger and reminds you of your grandma’s house for some reason
But everything reminds you of your grandma when you’re into the bottle deep and wishing you’d spent more time listening to the words she tried so hard to give you
You remember the times that she wrote you letters when you lived in a house with no cable television, no phone, no VCR, **** there wasn’t a computer let alone the internet
So forget about Tumblr or Facebook or emails or any other way to avoid the mutiny that mankind has become
Walking the plank was real and no one wanted to be told to take that walk so everyone acted like men and women with respectful fingernails and clean socks that could be seen when pant leg raised when sitting down for dinner with your neighbor
I always wondered what she would have done if she’d been born instead of me with all these tools and resources at her disposal
She was a smart cookie for the time she grew up, writing poetry on a ledger that time has forgot
And here I am just waiting for the garbage man to pick me up because I never had time to drive over to
her house before or after happy hour always told her I tried and that’s not a lie
You see there is a rush hour for drunks like me
The traffic is stand still and bitter and you can see the pain in the way the driver in front of you clenches the steering wheel, hunched over and ready to drive through as many cars as he or she has too
Just for that dollar off a drink he or she is going to drink regardless of the time or deal they make
And it’s about that time that my right foot begins to shake because I remember that I am nervous even when I am three beers into a black out night.
I’m never safe and you aren’t either so says the sigh as I finish number three and order number four
And one more before I hit the door and cross the street to buy the party treats for the rest of this ******* night
Eighteen beers and a pint of Hemingway.
Eighteen beers and a pint of Bukowski.
Eighteen beers and a pint of Celine.
Eighteen beers and a pint of Wallace.
So I settled my tab and I shook the old man’s hand who had sat and told me about all the various things that could break a man
I checked them off one by one in my head like a baseball card checklist that at one time was the way I killed time outside sitting in a summers sun
But now I *** stale cigarettes and used up *** to pass the days as time slowly kills me inside
The indian with the ***** beard has my beer and pint on the counter waiting for me
He sleeps at ease at night knowing that he’s slowly killing every drunk that walks into his seven eleven
Looking for heaven looking for salvation looking for ripe virgins to sacrifice for the betterment of a whiskey night
American terrorists we are when the dark hits the tip of our cigarettes and we’re fine with shutting our minds off to the plight of everyone’s fight because we have enough liquor tonight to
ward off the demons that come out to play when happy hour ends and your back in the thick of rush hour The walk from that seven eleven to home is lonely possibly the loneliest walk you’ll walk because you are left to think about what you’re about to do
See society has tied us up in it’s restraints, painted us a picture of wholesomeness that ends up burning down the white picket fences and ****** the daughters while the son’s fail out of school and end up in a trade shuffling feet on desert land dying at the hands of the real monster the monster with a real face and no trace of giving a **** if the enemy is man or woman sinner or saint just another enemy at the gate trying to take what ain’t his
At the door now you can feel your arm pulse your ears twitch your soul scream you’re about to pour the first drink fire the first shot pretend that tonight one of them won’t be blanks
I’ve retained this habit of keeping the caps of my bottles next to my drinking area or inside my pockets
I’m not sure when I began this habit but it’s ruined a few washers a few dryers and at least one ****
At the end of the night there’s a little graveyard of caps a drunks Arlington where you can morn the passing of one bottle after another senseless, this war you laugh as you keep pulling the necks of these brown ******* drinking their life’s spirit away with little remorse for them or yourself