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I was barely 21 when I ran with this older crowd, (they were between the ages of 30-35,) and I thought it was something cool, something special, I thought I was someone real grown up and mature, I thought age had something to do with sophistication so, I tried to impress them with Bach & Beethoven & Mozart while drinking rotgut whiskey out of cheap tumbler glasses because that’s what I thought grownups were suppose to do but instead they’d say, “this isn’t that kind of party,” and then they’d exercise their drinking prowess by guzzling down a whole bottle of Rumplemintz and chasing it with a case of Icehouse while blasting Screeching Weasel so loud that my neighbors couldn’t exist. my forethoughts of adulthood had been marred by the stench of reality and despite the headaches and hangovers that paired with the morning sun, I continued on anyhow, matching them drink for drink like it didn’t phase me because I had something to prove; I wanted to show them that I was cultivated, that I could hang, that I was tough, that I could run with the big dogs, that I was all that was man, (whatever that means) all I wanted was their approval that I was something after so many years of being told that I was nothing and I wanted it to be known that I had endurance and stamina but those addlepated simpletons were too vapid and clueless to notice the piss-stains in their pants let alone what I was doing. we were an odd pair, different yet the same; we shared the same desirous need for intoxication yet our levels of class were on a parallel universe. but as time went on, the framework of realization took shape and I began to see they were just a gang of losers with no place to go. they used up my living quarters as their party sanctuary: people getting tattooed in my kitchen people snorting coke in my bathroom people ******* in my laundry room people throwing up in my closets people ******* in my living room and it grew tiresome after a while. so, I had to kick them out of not only my house but out of my life for good. decades went on, I reached my 40’s, they reached their 50’s, and most of them are dead but the few still living are more dead than those buried in the ground. they’re out there now, enduring a midlife crisis with bed-wetting regression; peering down from the hills of nostalgia, sprinting towards their social media platforms, losing their minds over things they can not control, smearing opinions around like **** as if you asked for it and gnawing away at the bars of their enclosures for one last taste of the honey, the pleasure, the folly, the glory because they’ve become embittered with world; a world they hadn’t envisioned a world they weren’t ready for a world that’s changed forever and after all the wild and lawless nights and after all the rebellion against authority and after all the broken glass & cigarette holes they’ve became like everybody else: unable to face the inevitable.
0
Dec 19, 2024
Dec 19, 2024 at 10:29 AM UTC
sophistication
I was barely 21 when I ran with this older crowd, (they were between the ages of 30-35,) and I thought it was something cool, something special, I thought I was someone real grown up and mature, I thought age had something to do with sophistication so, I tried to impress them with Bach & Beethoven & Mozart while drinking rotgut whiskey out of cheap tumbler glasses because that’s what I thought grownups were suppose to do but instead they’d say, “this isn’t that kind of party,” and then they’d exercise their drinking prowess by guzzling down a whole bottle of Rumplemintz and chasing it with a case of Icehouse while blasting Screeching Weasel so loud that my neighbors couldn’t exist. my forethoughts of adulthood had been marred by the stench of reality and despite the headaches and hangovers that paired with the morning sun, I continued on anyhow, matching them drink for drink like it didn’t phase me because I had something to prove; I wanted to show them that I was cultivated, that I could hang, that I was tough, that I could run with the big dogs, that I was all that was man, (whatever that means) all I wanted was their approval that I was something after so many years of being told that I was nothing and I wanted it to be known that I had endurance and stamina but those addlepated simpletons were too vapid and clueless to notice the piss-stains in their pants let alone what I was doing. we were an odd pair, different yet the same; we shared the same desirous need for intoxication yet our levels of class were on a parallel universe. but as time went on, the framework of realization took shape and I began to see they were just a gang of losers with no place to go. they used up my living quarters as their party sanctuary: people getting tattooed in my kitchen people snorting coke in my bathroom people ******* in my laundry room people throwing up in my closets people ******* in my living room and it grew tiresome after a while. so, I had to kick them out of not only my house but out of my life for good. decades went on, I reached my 40’s, they reached their 50’s, and most of them are dead but the few still living are more dead than those buried in the ground. they’re out there now, enduring a midlife crisis with bed-wetting regression; peering down from the hills of nostalgia, sprinting towards their social media platforms, losing their minds over things they can not control, smearing opinions around like **** as if you asked for it and gnawing away at the bars of their enclosures for one last taste of the honey, the pleasure, the folly, the glory because they’ve become embittered with world; a world they hadn’t envisioned a world they weren’t ready for a world that’s changed forever and after all the wild and lawless nights and after all the rebellion against authority and after all the broken glass & cigarette holes they’ve became like everybody else: unable to face the inevitable.
rick-3
Written by
41/M/Couch to couch USA
Dec 19, 2024
Dec 19, 2024 at 10:29 AM UTC
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