Tuesday, August 9, 2022

May 1, 1978 - Journal Entry

None of us at CBGBs were hippies, but some of us liked ice hockey.

Lat night the New York Islanders were knocked out of the Stanley playoffs by the Toronto Maple Leafs. Tomorrow the semi-finals of the Stanley Cup begin with the Bruins versus the Flyers and the fucking Habs against the Maple Leafs.

And I'm a Red Sox fan.

The Bosox are in second place.

Enough for the sporting news.

LATER

This morning Ann lays against my body in symbiotic symmetry. I don't dare move to break the link of flesh to flesh. We are one and I want no one else.

Monogamy?

Is that what my friend Andy found in Therese?

When Ann woke I hid my feelings, but had to say, "I don't want you to leave."

It sounds soapy, but my alienation has cast me far from humanity. Ann comforts my madnesses, although it's impossible to dispel them for more than a few hours. Ann looks at me and says, "I don't have to leave yet. It's Daylight Savings Time. We still have an hour."

"So winter is over?"

"Yes, and the days will get longer."

"Shit." I liked long night as much as I hated long days.

"Shit, yes, but I'm a zombie too."

"But you have aspirations for a better life."

"And so do you." Her hand touched my chest and waited for me to say something, but words stuck in my throat and she said, "Everyone is capable of greatness."

"Even me?"

"Yes, even you."

And by saying that Ann joined my mother, Sister Mary Osmond, my 5th Grade teacher, who awarded me honors, and my high school German instructor, Bruder Karl, who fairly failed me, "Schmidt, you have not prepared for your lesson und du sprechst Deustche wie ein aschloch."

Asshole.

Bruder Karl chain-smoked in class. His Bavarian-accented voice sounded like a train dragged across rocks, but I heard the kindness in his words, despite my classic under-achievement in Hoch Schule.

Others saw my worth.

Chris Jansen, an MIT genius, hired me to work at a chemical plant in Salem.

I think the fat woman wanted to sleep with me.

Her husband gave the green light.

But I preferred to risk it all with Theresse's 15 year-old sister, Hilde.

The kids I taught at South Boston High School loved me.

I hated the racism of the Selma of the North.

Diana Graham saw something in me.

I think they are all blind.

I used all of them to subsist without working.

Survival.

But not an enemy. I only want to do good one day, even if that day is like Andy says, "You'll make it after you're dead, like Van Gogh."

More a curse than a blessing.

How I lead my life doesn't permit any retreat.

Anti-star.

Failure is easier to achieve than fame, but Ann asked, "You should become a movie star."

"How?"

"By being you. Your friend Willem will be one. Is he better looking than you?"

"Maybe."

"Don't you want to be famous?"

"No, I don't want life sucked from me to become a big person on a silver screen."

"I had a dream about you on the Johnny Carson Show, but he was washed up."

"Johnny washed up?"

"It happens to everyone."

"I don't want fame. I want immortality."

"Everyone dies."

"Not me."

LATER

Ann and I left for work.

At the St. Mark's Theater I watched a movie about Caryl Chessman, the accused Red Light Bandit of LA. He sat on Old Sparky in 1960. I was eight, but I realized that his life had come to a point of departure governed by certainty of death.

And death always scares an immortal.

LATER

Most young people say that they are not concerned with age.

I know different.

Death is more welcome to anyone seeking eternal life over the aging of our flesh, especially as the life distances from our birth ever closer to death. I am frightened by new people. I can feel life slipping from them. Second by second. Grain of sand by sand. I avoid them. I avoid their death. I avoid their loss of youth. I never think of mine.

Art has no power over the speed of light tearing apart our flesh like vultures of time.

A couple of night I asked a Rockefeller heir at CBGBs, "Where does power lie?"

"Power is money."

His family controlled coal mines, oil fields, banks, countries, but they are merely exploiters of power. marx wrote that an economy was based on the balance between labor and capital. Now the rich only think about money, whose value is not real, but implied by the belief in money. It means nothing to nature other than Man rapes the world to get wealth. Pockets are not part of the human body, unless we count the asshole as a pocket to store our riches.

Shit.

A place to live.

Food.

Education.

Matter

Shit does not, unless it's to grow food, although dogs sometimes eat shit by mistake and sometimes because shit tastes better than nothing. Money is slavery, chaining everyone to surrender.

I know nothing.

We humans have not abandoned prejudice, hatred, greed, or any of the Deadly Sins, despite America's forefathers writing in the Declaration of Independence, "All men are created equal..."

Cultures, classed, castes, languages, religions separate our holy union destined to go to the stars.

LATER

South of Matzatlan A traveler stands on a highway. He stands on the hot asphalt. His bag at his feet. Parched by the sun-burnt Sonoran desert with Mexico a drug soothing his Gringo soul But he wants more

Culiacan heroin

If he was a child he would be lost, but the road only goes north or south. Matzatlan was north. San Blas was south. Black glass cars speed by Buses roll by. Faces stare out the windows. In the desert only fools stand in the sun

The sun rose higher. It was still winter in El Norte. Here it was hot. Where he is is where he is. Two college girls from Arizona stop for him. He gets in the Torino. They are going to San Blas for the surf. The AC felt good. Being out of the sun felt better with San Blas only three hours away and America more distant with ewvery passing every second.

May 9, 1978 - Journal Entry

After the execs leave, Antonio and I look out the windows of the Ebasco executive dining room. A thick fog obscures Lower Manhattan, as the last gasps of the Arctic is strangled by a spring breeze from the south. We have finished with lunch and wipe the silverware clean. The Spanish waiter surprises me with a small ball of black tar.

"Opium?"

"You ever try it?"

"Never."

Lots of punks used heroin. I hadn't tried that too.

"It's not a killer like smack."

"I don't know."

I had first smoked weed with Tommy Jordan and John Gilmor, driving back from Nantasket Beach. It did nothing for me, but two weeks later with Thomas Welby some Acapulco Gold blew my mind. Basically it was the last time I got high, since every time after that I was chasing an unattainable high.

"Thanks for the opium."

I wrapped the small ball in paper.

If I was doing it, I was doing it with one person.

Ann."

LATER

On the Staten Island ferry.

The fog follows its wake.

This is the first time I've left Manhattan since returning from Boston.

I can't see anything of that island.

Only fog swallowing our wake.

The harbor air is fresh, smelling of the sea beyond the Verranzano Bridge.

The grey water is darker than the grey air.

The world a maze of opaque sameness.

The ferry approaches St. George.

We disembark and get on the same ferry to Manhattan.

A horn sounds our departure.

The wooden dock is enveloped by grey.

Fifteen seconds later we are lost in it.

After reaching Battery Park I called Ann, "Are you going to me for dinner?"

"Are you alright?" Se didn't want to make a scene in front of her father.

"Yes. Are you mad at me?"

"I was last night. Not now."

I attempted to explain last night, but it was futile over the phone and we agreed to meet at 7:30.

At dinner before her father arrives, she says that she isn't really interested in my writing, "Everything is in that journal. Secrets. Not for anyone to read. None of it is finished."

The way she said that sounds like she has read it, but she is right.

My journals have no purpose.

"I'm sorry if I'm jealous." We both were, but most of all to

MAY 8, 1978 - Journal Entry

Blondie closed out the Johnny Blitz Benefit at CBGBs with a cover of a Donna Summer hit. The benefit packed the house each night, despite rumors of funds being siphoned off for a continuous party. At least their drummer survived the attack and will be back with the Dead Boys soon.

New York remains our city.

The hippies were forced into the country by the rising tide of crime and police brutality. The hinterlands were beautiful, but real farms are run with machines and chemical fertilizers and poisonous pesticides.

Punks have come back to the skeleton cities to recolonize Harlem, the East Village, Detroit, and LA.

Capitalism seems ripe for a fall, as the Kremlin plots take-overs in Afghanistan, Angola, Mozambique, and Ethiopia, but the Soviet people don't have frisbees, GTOs, skateboards, Malibu blondes, or punk. They live on vodka. They will never beat us on the drag strips or baseball fields. On the hockey ice they Red Army machine is triumphant, but winter doesn't last forever. Not even in Siberia.

Ann's father is in town tonight and we will meet at Act 1.

Tomorrow night my parents are visiting setting up a meeting between our parents.

LATER

Marilyn was the epitome of American beauty in the early 60s. She was sex. Blonde and soft. She seemed sad. I don't think anyone made her happy. Both RFK and JFK are rumored to have had affairs with her. She died in 1962. Supposedly of a drug overdose. Norma Jean should be with us.

In 1978.

LATER

After dinner Ann was sick. She wanted to be alone and handed me money.

"For a taxi."

It felt like she was buying and I returned home to seep listening to the radio.

A pillow to hold instead of her.

May 4, 1978 - Journal entry

Last night I got drunk at Ann's cast party.

She'll be leaving New York for Ohio to graduate from her college.

In the taxi to my SRO hotel, she asked, "Where will I go? New York is more a home to be than Charleston and I don't want to leave you."

"Me neither," I answer, although it's probably better if she leaves me. I'm no good for no one.

Her hours at the theater ate up our time together during the rehearsal's for the Molierie play. She has ambition. I have none. Maybe it's not a good connection. Maybe it's the best. After all opposites attract, but she asked about if I would wait for her.

"Who's my competition? Marc?" She meant Marc 10 and a half inch Stevens.

"Forget that. I can't get a hard-on for another man."

"I thought they sucked cock good."

"That a myth, besides I don't really like blow-jobs and I only want to fuck you." It was a weird admission of sexuality.

"I don't believe you."

"No, I walk the city seeking women to fuck. Yesterday from Rector Street to West 11th street I counted three. Ann touched her hair. She is worried about her beauty and I said, "You look great in that green leather jacket and black jeans. Like a 1965 GTO girl."

"I don't like the way I look."

"I do." I promised to buy her some clothes. "When I get some money."

She laughed.

"I won't hold my breath, besides my mother said she liked you and that I didn't have to dress nice for you."

"That's true. I like you naked. And think about me. I'll be 26 in less than a month. I'm no longer young."

"I don't care how you dress either."

"Jeans and a leather jacket."

"Classic rock for a poet."

"But no beret."

"Never."

back at the room in the SRO she checks her body.

"I'm getting fat."

"No, you're not." She's lost weight since the pregnancy scare.

"Look. I have stretch marks." She counted two under her ass.

"I couldn't see them

"I'm getting old. I'm falling apart."

"Yeah, you're right. Old at 22."

Her face showed the hurt from my comment.

"You don't want to kiss me anymore."

"I haven't had a chance." I pulled her close and she fought me away. Not for long.

LATER

This morning I woke without the alarm like a dead man rising from a grave.

I was still exhausted from getting drunk and making love to Ann and a nightmare.

"You were talking in your sleep last night," Ann said sleepily.

"I had a dream about swimming in the ocean with you. A giant fin was following you. A shark."

"How big?"

"Its fin was huge. I couldn't see the body."

"Probably had it, because JAWS 2 is coming out next month."

"You come from West Virginia. The rivers have no sharks."

Just varmints and critters and they're scary too."

LATER

At CBGBs Davin Getin said, "I think that girl has got under your skin. I don't know if that's right for you."

"I'm in love."

David laughed, "What a stupid claim. Your head goes to the movies like the movies were real. I don't know what to make of your fantasies.""

"Fuck you."

I went to the bar and got drinks from Allison.

"Don't listen to David. He's gay. He only wants to get in your pants. Ann is a good girl. Have a bourbon on me."

Ann showed up late. I was drunk. She said, "I went over to Tony's to discuss the play."

The director was good-looking and I said, "I bet."

"Bet what?" She was surprised by my jealousy, but I had also waited for her a Dojo's for dinner. She never showed up.

"Nothing." I regretted saying that. Ann is a great comic writer, although she's getting a lot of flak for plagarizing Molieire.

I steal nothing.

LATER

I see the future. Ann will become a friend. We might have sex, but nothing more. I'm sad, because I don't know what will happen to me without her.

LATER

I meet a French girl at CBGBs. Ann's watching the Mumps. She says she came to New York, because of Lance Loud. The French girl has never heard of them and I say, "The problem with foreign girls in New York is that you can't really speak with them. Fucking is the only pure form of communication, but I'm never sure what the message is."

"Sex is only sex."

"Maybe you're right. I once met a girl who only fellated me. She was saving sex for her wedding night. Sometimes she let me fuck her ass. I couldn't cum either way."

"A curse."

"Probably."

She walked away. Ann returned and asked if I've been able to cash the check.

"No, maybe I'll go to Boston. I'll hitchhike up there."

"It's supposed to rain tomorrow."

"And Boston is always colder than here." I think about visiting Andy Kornfeld, Diane, my family, Cheryl. Stephanie is pregnant. It's not mine. Ann knows none of them. She goes to the bathroom and Kim comes up to ask, "Is ann pregnant?"

"No, she had a second negative test."

"She didn't tell me and neither did you."

"I did us now."

LATER

I'm bored with the nightlife. I have no money. Everything is free. Ann doesn't freak out about my destitution and friends say with admiration, "I wish I could be an artist and live on nothing."

They are crazy.

I don't want to be this me.

LATER

Three PM is the best. Dawn hid under the east horizon. The city sleeps and the streets are only alive with wind-blown newspapers. Come the dawn the dark empire disappears with the sun. The workers rise from their bed. They go to the subway. They work all day. They come home to eat and watch TV. By 11 the city is mine again. The sun makes me sad. The nights without you end. I want to be happy too.

Penis wrapped in pussy.

May 3, 1978 - Journal Entry

Shitting is a great release of tension. Antonio at the Ebasco dining room and I share the same schedule.

"Every time I eat here, I gotta take a shit 30 minutes later."

"Right before we serve lunch."

"Like clockwork."

"And then at 2."

Tick-tock."

I had only been constipated once in my life at 14. I didn't shit for two days and the pain in my bowels was excruciating. No one was home at my parents' house and I sat on the toilet for an hour, then I found an enema plunger and followed the directions. Warm water up my ass. Ten minutes later release and relief.

LATER

Today I have not one cent. I jumped the turnstile of the subway, both coming and going to Ebasco on Wall Street. My bag was stuffed with left-overs from the executive dining room. I was prepared for the worst, but arrived at the SRO hotel to find a letter from the IRS.

$308.90.

The last money I'll received for teaching at South Boston High School.

They are still having riots over bussing.

I'm glad to be away from all that hate.

Now all I have to do is find a place to cash my check.

April 16, 1977 - Journal Entry

At this hour before the dawn the sky over New York's empty streets is velvet blue.

It's Sunday and my greatest fear is that the radio will go religious.

I hated Sundays as a child.

For two reasons.

Firstly I was an atheist.

And secondly Sunday were followed by Monday, a school day.

As a teenager I attended Mass with my family.

My mother was a devout Catholic.

I didn't mind too much.

Pretty girls went to the 9:30 Mass, but they were all virgins and in the 1960s virgins were well-informed by the nuns about what awaited them in the presence of a male.

The loss of their purity.

LATER

CBGBs was fun and I could have gone home with several women.

# 1 on the list was a teenaged girl with braces from Queens.

Clare has soft brown eyes and a high school body.

She wasn't much of a talker and I wondered if her braces would cut my tongue.

I never found out.

LATER

It's getting lighter to the East.

The sky looks clean.

It'd be a good day to hit the road.

Austin or Mexico.

But I haven't worked in two months, so I'm trapped here.

In Manhattan Minimal Security Prison.

LATER

I saw Ann on St. Mark's Place and we went looking for a Doors LP, but they were out of stock in the record shops. We strolled through the East Village, while she wondered how to adapt a Moliere play THE GENTLEMEN FROM VERONA.

LATER

Another rejection for work.

These hits are taking their toll.

My writing sucks.

My typing is even worse.

Inside the shack her mouth opened for my penis. Only a few months ago she had said, "I never sucked cock before." But her tongue on my cock told the truth. Her eyes were closed and her dress open to whiter than white skin, My clothes are on, only my zipper is down. She likes it fine And would do anything to make me stay. Snow falls through the bare trees I cum in her mouth. I zip up my fly and leave the shack. She stays on her knees. I drip down her chin We never see each other again. Not that day.

May 5, 1978 - Journal Entry

Kim, her sister Kyle, and I walked from their apartment on Bleecker Street in a heavy evening rain. the gutters swiftly swelled with the run-off. At broadway Kim announced that she is having her first period after her abortion. The cramps are killing her, but she says, I'll feel better after a drink."

We were carrying a pint bottle of vodka to avoid paying for drinks at CBGBs.

"It might him." I see a young man on the sidewalk. He's soaked to the bone and I recognized Kim's admirer, Barry Miller, an actor from SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE. He's hopelessly in love with Kim, who ignores him, until he says, "You should kidnap me, the MGM will pay the ransom."

"Only if I get to beat you up. It has to look real." I'm annoyed at his joining us and Kyle says, "Yeah, maybe we could get $20,000 for you."

"I'm worth more than that."

You're no John Travolta. " Kim loved the star of the disco movie. "Plus kidnappers always get caught."

"How much money you have on you, Barry?"

"A couple of hundred."

"Perfect, then you can finance the kidnapping."

Kim, Kyle, and I discussed leaving cryptic notes telling the studio how we were torturing their 'star'.

"We can cut off an ear lobe."

"I'm not paying you to cut off my ear."

"It's just an left lobe. It's not like you wear earrings."

"You're all crazy." He flagged down a taxi. He was off to the Plaza.

"We reached CBGBs and sat against the wall. Kim poured drinks underneath the table. The Ramones came on last. They were great. I got a little drunk and we decided to not kidnap Barry.

"Not a chance," protested Kim. "I could stand more than a few minutes."

"So it's off."

"Maybe."

All of us like maybes.

Especially at CBGBs. LATER

Ann told me about a date.

"You went out with someone else?"

"you said you didn't want to go to the David Bowie Concert and someone invited me."

"Who?"

"That guy we were walking with the other night."

I recalled a roundish young man with a hooked nose, who had defended Bowie.

No competition, but she broke off the conversation to be at a function for a goodbye to her senior year away from Ohio.

LATER

Walking etiquette.

I hate people with umbrellas. They're always trying to poke out your eyes, as they blindly strolled down the sidewalk. It's a common habit and I know the umbrellas out of the way, if they come too close.

In feudal days the right of way was determined by might. Everyone got out of the path of a King. The Aztec monarch Montezuma's servants cleared the ground of any stones whenever he alit from his litter. I explained to Bruce, "Cortez was impressed by this."

"So impressed that he destroyed the Aztec empire. Back then people respected their betters and did so until the revolution of the last few centuries. Now everyone thinks they're just as good as anyone else. There are no rules. It's a democratic free-for-all of the masses. The only time they stand aside is if your big or mean."

"I step aside for cripples and women, but sometimes for men too and I curse myself for that and the next time a man tries to get into my space I become an unmovable object."

"Yes, Mr. Nice Guy."

LATER

The letters to Libby have returned without any forwarding address. The blonde has vanished into New York or elsewhere. We only fucked twice in Boston. Neither of us knew the other.

LATER

I have a sharp pain in my side. So bad it doubles me over.

LATER

Ann feels nice to sleep with. I will miss her and told her that with tears in my eyes. Ann said, "I feel so helpless when you cry."

I said nothing about my ability to fake emotions, but she sometimes feels as if she's being tested and unfairly by me. Maybe it's better to let her go into the theater world to a future she doesn't see coming, but why would I want to leave someone I love.

Because I'm fucked up.

FOR FREEDOM The Rolling Stones are almost 40 Russia is stagnant America repressed The Beatles are dead So is Hitler But I am alive Running for shelter is useless Nuclear bombs destroy everything And death comes so fast. A flash. Before you hear Before you see Before you feel Ending the Atomic Age And I couldn't care less, Because all I want is a white-on-white Cadillac before I go.