Saturday, January 23, 2010

Fiends From Suburbia





“I want to bite your neck.”  I always thought that statement was funny and kind of endearing.  With his cape raised in his outstretched arms, in imitation of a bat, Bela Lugosi was intent on bloody fulfillment.  He was resigned to his nature, but when he wasn’t actually sucking blood, he appeared a little embarrassed by his condition. 


Things have come a long way since then.  Once a quaint addition to literature and Hollywood, this idea of sucking your blood seems to have become pervasive and a staple of modern life.  You can’t turn around, without someone wanting to bite you.  Teenagers are especially dangerous.  It appears that vampirism is part of that whole mess called, adolescence, and is unavoidable, if you want to graduate from high school. 


In the last quarter of the twentieth-century – I love to say that – the author, Ann Rice, revived vampire mania with her books.  It was exciting.  The Interview was maybe the only book I actually stayed up all night to finish.  (Unemployment makes for cultural possibility.)  But after two or three volumes, the obsession with blood became too much.  It was all these characters thought about.  All of us were potential donors.


I was relieved to leave them in the wake of Gravity’s Rainbow or George and Martha Go to the Zoo.  I thought of it, as just a phase in both my own development and our advancing culture.  Boy, was I naïve.


Things were pretty quiet, for a while, until Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt had to make their fangs known to all.  You can still see them on cable.  Hollywood B movies, once forgotten, were raised from the dead and are now all over the Web.  Everywhere, the Living Dead, vampires of various descriptions, and Zombies from Denmark, seem to have taken on a life of their own, so to speak.  Books, movies, apps.  The paranormal is now much more normal than you think.


Some of our children are possessed.  They wander the streets, Goth-garbed, in search of pale, low-energy, but deadly sensation.  I am, once more, afraid of the dark and suspicious of anyone with a certain glint in their eye.  It’s possible they’re not really my friends.  They might want to recruit me to their ranks. The ranks of the living dead - those who must live by night, complicating their lives with an endless search for an almost orgasmic kind of bloody sustenance.  Kind of creepy.


But that was okay by me; everyone has a right to pursue their dreams.  Sure, it was obsessive.  And, gross.  Not to mention, anti-social, which is probably the point, but you have to draw the line somewhere.  Despite the incredible boost to literacy that all this has provided, I knew I had to speak out when I encountered the book, Abraham Lincoln – Vampire Hunter.  That is going a little too far.


My memories of Abe have been informed by history, or somewhat factual anecdote, as it’s often called.  Of course, we don’t know everything he did, but I’m sure he had his hands full with the Civil War and his own domestic challenges.  The poor guy can’t defend against this kind of historical revisionism.  And, though it’s more complimentary than, Abraham Lincoln – Incompetent Chef, I can’t help but think this is just plain wrong.  What’s next?  George Washington – Wife Beater?


I’m a fan of imagination, but imagining weird stuff, just because it’s weird, seems weird to me.  If you actually have an imagination, wouldn’t it be more imaginative to think up something that moves the world (and us with it) forward to an ongoing, imaginative fulfillment of true love, cosmic exploration, and spiritual enlightenment?


Don’t get me wrong, I’m no Pollyanna.  I still howl, when the moon is full.  But, even Frankenstein wanted to be friends with that little girl and, by extension, the rest of us.


I’ve had it with blood.  And, guts.  And, scary stuff.  Discovery, possibility, and redemption seem to be much more in line with the spirit of everything that life’s about, rather than fear, possession, and darkness.


I’m all for donating blood, but not to these guys.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Fit To Love Part II







At this point, the sweat was pouring off me. I thought, I’m probably looking my best. I turned to a sweet-looking girl to my left. I smiled.
Right away, I could tell she was nervous, too. She felt my presence and barked, “What are you looking at?” I, silently, checked my pulse.
I hadn’t expected this reaction. Maybe, I wasn’t the prime specimen of manhood I thought I was. I returned to the mirror. Was, too!
The heck with that, I thought. I puffed up my chest, held my head high and strode to the water fountain. Love was all around me. Somewhere.

My next visit to the club was better. Or, so I thought at first. I was dressed to kill. Too violent? Let’s say, I was barely clothed.
Or, provocatively clothed. A wolf in sheep’s workout attire? A macho man in a sleeveless T? A dreamboat stripped for action?
A fiend, masked as a… Enough! I was ready for whatever came my way. I knew I was Born to be Wild. I had heard that on the way over.

I pretended to look at the clock, but I was surveying the battlefield. Violent? Again. War of the Sexes? Where was this imagery coming from?
What I really wanted was love. Does that sound sappy? I don’t care. It’s true. I hoped there was someone who agreed.
I was hearing music, sweet music, in my head, and trying to squeeze between the leg lift and the bicep machine, when I saw her.

Well, really, I only saw part of her. She was tying her shoes. At least, I thought so. When she straightened up, she held a huge barbell.
She was what Mom would call statuesque. What Dad would call an Amazon. She could have been an East German shot putter of old. Except…
She wasn’t old and she was probably from California. Not only that, she was the strongest woman I had ever seen. Heck, ever imagined.
She glowed with health. The light refracted off her sweat. Each muscle, no matter how small, was enunciating like a speech teacher.

Allow me to be carried away by love - Her teeth were like a dentist’s assistant’s. Her eyes, burning coals. Her arms like Jesse Ventura’s.
Her two, red lips were like a Burma Shave sign, saying, As you go, Along the way, Don’t forget, To stop and play.
She was like the Colossus of Rhodes. Or, she, at least, had long shapely legs about 50 feet high. With Nikes at the end of each.

With her eyes closed, it was safe to take a close look at her. No fantasy, she was real. The barbell above her head kept me at a distance.
I’m no Shakespeare, but I called out… "Juliet?" One eye opened and looked down at me. I knew, right then, that Juliet was not her name.
I gazed up at her, sweetly, but felt she wanted something else. So I smirked, “You gorgeous hunk.” The one eye closed. The moment passed.

Though possibility was everywhere, I was starting to believe that true love or even a good time, was going to be hard to come by.
I decided to settle down and begin my exercise in earnest. I’d become so ripped, I think they call it, that none of them could resist.
I huffed, I puffed, I lifted, I repeated. And, repeated. And, repeated. Would I ever be able to hold a conversation after this?
Maybe it was like manual labor, where your language skills devolved with each effort and, at the end of things, all you could do was swear.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Fit To Love Part I








I have another novel on Twitter that has been going for months.  There’s no end in sight.  It is the tale of a love-starved young man, who thinks there is a close relationship between fitness and romance. 

Just for info’s sake, Twitter is social media that allows postings of up to 140 characters.  That 140 character limit includes not only letters and punctuation, but also spaces.  This imposes a structure on the author that requires different skills and techniques than other sorts of composition.

I’m including the first two or three, in their Twitter format, and, then, I go narrative on you.


Fit To Love

I admit it. I was looking for love. And, if not love, something similar and, possibly, less complicated. I thought I was prepared for this. 8:32 PM Jul 22nd, 2009 from twhirl

I was romantic. At least, I looked it. Eyes - piercing. Eyebrows – devilishly wiggly. Teeth – lasered, a possible interrogation tool. 12:51 PM Jul 23rd, 2009 from twhirl

To some, I was hot. To myself, incandescent. I felt I looked best under effort. It could be working out, rocking out, or in the sack. 8:44 AM Jul 24th, 2009 from twhirl

In the sack. I know that’s kind of crude, but try to picture it.
Okay, don’t. But I joined this health club for a reason. And, it wasn’t to lose weight, improve my circulatory system, or the cheap dues.
That’s right. As I said, it was love. This was where the babes were. My sister told me so, though she called them ‘the cute girls.’
I am not a sexist pig. I’m not a pig, at all. I’m anxious. I talk like this when I’m nervous and who wouldn’t be? This was Babe Central.
They were everywhere. Athletes, models, girlfriends, wives. I just hoped they wanted love as much as I did.
They called it their routine, yet it was anything but routine, to me. I kept blinking and shaking the sweat out of my eyes. I was amazed.

Shortly, I began to get the looks. A girl in blue shorts and a tank top came over and asked if I was having a seizure. I couldn’t speak.
When I only stared, I thought she took it as a sign. But, she turned, muttering, “Creep.” Crushed, I mouthed, “I’ll wait for you.”
I could have waited forever, but I didn’t. I had my own routine. I knew I needed practice. I grabbed a dumbbell and faced the mirror.
I was lop-sided. I grabbed the other dumbbell and brought it to my chin. A bit too enthusiastically. I recovered and wiggled my eyebrows.
My head tilted to one side, I practiced, “Hi, doll.” No. No. Calm down, Eddie, I told myself. “Ma’am, I like you.” Ma’am?

Okay, I was nervous. Here, in a heaven created by the changing ideals of a culture gone whacko, we were all supposed to be beautiful.
I’m not only romantic, I’m a philosopher. My philosophy is: we’re young, we’re in shape, let’s fall in love. Is that too esoteric?
I’m also practical and I knew that I needed to live up to the same standards I was holding other people to. I kept the elliptical churning.