Archive for awkward pauses

Old Life, New Bank

I guess we all have secret lives – those tiny little crevices in our past that we don’t bring up anymore.  Rumors of the old you that brings a shudder when it comes up in a conversation. For some, it’s an unflattering hairstyle, for others a phase when they wore those giant raver pants, and sometimes it may be a former career or obsession. I’m guilty of having evidence of a past life out there; in fact there are all sorts of bits of it out there on the internet. I bristle when I look back and see photos of me with bad hair or blog posts about shitty bands that I used to be into.  But also there are plenty of pictures of my ex-wife and I.

Before I get too deep into this post, let me just say that I am not trying to be cursing or rude or even disparaging about my ex, she is a nice person and I think we made a mistake. Each of us were not the people that the other person thought we were and it unfortunately caused a lot of pain to happen. We rarely see each other in the sort of social situations that one would see an ex in; like bars, restaurants or parties, but when we do it’s fairly cordial and always awkward.  That’s why doing any sort of banking is stressful for me.

I’ll admit it: I’m lazy. I guess my brain just can’t tolerate the minutia of the tedious things that adult life throws at us – case in point: banking.  I have an account at regional bank. Sure, it’s not a credit union, but I still feel okay about keeping my money in a (semi)-local institution. I’ve had the account for almost eight years now simply because I don’t want to be bothered with changing to a different house of money. I keep feeling like maybe I should, but I don’t. When I lived in Asheville this was especially awkward because if I needed to go to the bank, sitting at a desk inside was my ex-wife.

For a while it was awkward to the point where I didn’t want to even go into the bank while I knew she was there. I waited for the time when she always took her lunch break and I would try to go then. I ran in and ran out. I played dumb going through the drive-up window, saying things like oh drat, I forgot my deposit slip, like I was some silver-haired granny that I knew the tellers bent their ultra-strict rules for. It worked.

Then my relationship with my wife began, and with it came a move out of Asheville. What I gave up in being having my friends and family close by I made up for slightly in having the ability to not have to go to bank at a place where the employees chipped in and bought us five place settings for dishes at our wedding. There wouldn’t be any awkward moments if the new lady came into the bank with me. It was like I was just another customer at the bank.

Then they put my ex’s picture on the bank’s website.

 

(I’ll give you a hint as to which person it is: it’s not the one who just sat on an aardvark.)

Now, when I go to do anything concerning my bank, I’m greeted by my ex. This is not good.  It’s not that I find her hideous or anything like that; it’s just a reminder of an older life, a life that I’ve grown unaccustomed to.  I’m sure that it’s a little bit weird for her if she stumbles across a comment on Facebook by one of our two mutual friends. I bet she looks back at the time we shared with a million regrets, and while I hate that she feel that way, I completely understand.  But still, she’s not seeing my face every time she’s trying to figure out what’s for dinner.

I’m aware that I could do something to fix this uncomfortable situation by changing banks, but that is hardly embarrassing or self-deprecating enough to warrant an entry on The Bugg Blog, now is it?  Instead I thought of the bizarre power plays that customers at the bank pulled with my ex, and how she came home raving about insane customers and how the bank would be over backwards to please them. I remember shaking my head over dinner and thinking man, I’ll never be one of those dick heads. Now was finally my chance to pull a dick move like that.

I walked into the bank this afternoon, filling out a withdrawal slip.  As I came in through the double doors I felt mighty, I felt strong, and I was full of the righteous indignation that I imagine the guys raising the flag on Iwo Jima. I was going to make them change the header image on their website.  I held my head high and thought about what I was going to say, and then I conducted my business.

With forty dollars placed in my hand and a receipt from my teller, a blonde girl named Farrah with the sort of chubby redneck-cute that permeates the rural areas of this area, I was almost ready to go. The teller asked me if I needed anything else.

Actually Farrah I wanted to ask someone about the website, I said.

You’re interested in online banking, she asked.

Well, not really. I mean yes I do a lot of online banking, but I don’t know if I’d call it an interest. I’m interested in World War II, comic books, The Von Erich-Freebird Rivalry and a million other things, but I don’t know if I’d say that online banking is an interest, I said.

Did I mention that this is pretty much how the conversation went verbatim? Yes, I actually say these things.

Oh okay Mr. Bugg, she said and then asked me if I needed help with the website.

No, not at all. I was just wondering if you could change some things on the site, I said.

Well the website was just updated, so you’re going to find that a lot of the things on the site that you are looking for are in all new places, she said.

Oh no, I can find everything rather well, the new design is sleek and it makes everything feel cleaner – not that the site was dirty or anything. Could you imagine that, a dirty bank website, I said. I even laughed for a second. Farrah was nonplussed.

So you want us to change something with the website, but you like the website, she asked.

Exactly, I said while pointing at her.

I’m not following you, Mr. Bugg. What is it that you’d like for me to change, she asked. Her voice seemed a bit more tense.

Well if you go to the site, and look you’ll see a picture of my ex-wife on there, I said.

She smiled and laughed. You’re so silly, she said.

No I’m being serious, go to the site, I said.

She furiously loaded up a browser and went to the bank’s website. There sat the offensive header.

That’s what you have a problem with, she asked.

Yes, that picture right there. It’s my ex-wife, I said.

Farrah smiled. That’s not you’re ex-wife, she said.

It is.

They probably buy these pictures from some other website like they are called – what’s that word? Clip art. This is just clip art, she said.

No, her name is NAME REDACTED and she works at the NAME REDACTED branch, I said.

By this time, another teller walked over and looked over Farrah’s shoulder.

Oh my god that is her, she said laughing.  Teller number two turned around and told the drive-up window operator that the company used photographs of employees as the main image for the website.

You mean I could be a model, drive-up window lady said before busting out laughing.

Wait a minute – you ladies never use the bank’s website, I asked. It seemed weird that these were employees of the bank and this all seemed so new to them.

Oh no, I use NAME REDACTED. My husband and I have been with them for years, teller number two said.

Oh okay, well that’s weird. I said.

Well Mr. Bugg, is there anything else I can do for you this afternoon, Farrah asked. I could tell that she wanted to scoot me out the door so she could go back to doing whatever it is that bank tellers do when they aren’t helping customers.

No I’m serious, can you see about getting her face off of the website, I said.

Was it a bad break-up? Farrah asked.

No, it’s not that. It was a good break-up. I’m happier now, she seems happier also, from what I can tell. I am remarried and I love my wife more than anything and NAME REDACTED is dating a guy who I’m told is really great and looks a lot like Christopher Guest from The Princess Bride, I said.

Oh I love that movie: Assssssssssssssss Yoouuuuuu Wiiiiiish! Farrah said.

I remember that movie, teller number two said.

Well it is a good one, I said.

You are the brute squad, the chubby drive-up window operator yelled out.

Exactly, I said.

Well Mr. Bugg that was really funny. Thank you for coming in today, Farrah said.

No wait, I said. At this point I felt like Ralphie being shot down the slide in A Christmas Story, and this was my defiant moment where I stopped gravity and DEMANDED a Red Rider BB Gun from Santa.

If you don’t get somebody to change the image, I’m going to take my – I wasn’t sure how much I had in the bank. I looked down at my receipt and this is what it said:

I’m going to take my three twenty-three elsewhere, I said.

For a moment, there was silence. The parade of quoting The Princess Bride had ended. Farrah stared me down like she was Jack Palance in Shane.  Then she spoke.

Okay Mr. Bugg, she said. But it wasn’t a positive okay. She raised her shoulders and made her front teeth stick out. She said it in a deep voice. This was her calling me a retard.

I pictured asking for my three dollars and change right then and there from the teller and taking it to another bank, but then I thought about all of the paperwork that I’d have to fill out at both my current bank to close the account and at the new bank to open a new account. I thought about how much time that would take and then I thought about my dogs at home and the betrayed looks upon their faces when I leave and don’t take them with me. It all piled upon me and I decided to leave well enough alone.

Just kidding, I said and then laughed, playing off the whole encounter.  Farrah laughed too, thinking that this was another of my elaborate and unfunny jokes.

I paid the water bill and then stopped at the store on the way home, back to my current life. I thought about the picture on the site and how I got a little bent out of shape over a picture on the lading page of a website. I thought about it a lot, and then the wife came home.

How was your day, she asked.

It was good. Better now, I said.

My old life was behind me. I still see pictures of it, but I don’t look at them as much.

Ownership

 

My latest adventure started off the way that most adventures do: with the death of my freelance writing career. I continue to be at a loss trying to figure out why something that I’m (supposedly) so good at brings me no money. I asked myself if I could do better, and tried to. I asked editors and got barely any response, because that’s what editors do. I asked a writer friend whose work has appeared in tons of magazines and he told me a pretty harsh truth; that music writers like myself line up like airplanes at O’Haire in a snowstorm, and editors pick the ones they like and leave the others freezing in the cold. It was a harsh and scary.  Right about then another friend told me to embrace my blog for a little while. Use it to write about bands, but also stretch it out and show my versatility as a writer – show people that I could write news, show them that I could write about other things besides rock and roll.

It was with that in mind that I decided on a cold day almost two weeks ago that I would review a local restaurant.  The wife was out of town and I was craving Mexican food, so I decided to find a Mexican restaurant in town that I’d never been to and write about the experience. I settled upon Maria’s Mexican Pueblo in Waynesville, NC.

From the outside, Maria’s looks like every “diner-style” Mexican restaurant that I’ve ever been to. Everyone knows the rather banal places that I’m referring to: they all have the same menu, the same numbered combination plates, the Speedy Gonzalez lunch special, and the chips and salsa sitting at your table to fill you up pre-dinner. That’s what I expected from the beer-and-calendar adorned walls of Maria’s. But this wasn’t a typical fajita-slinging joint: this place is a bit of a dining experience.

An older lady greeted me at the door and told me to sit anywhere that I like. I chose a small table a bit away from the other diners in the restaurant. The music was low and there was a noticeable stillness about the place that made me afraid to cough or speak or move.  The older lady approached me and took my order. I chose the special and she told me that it’d be a few minutes.

I watched as she did a little dance: she took my order and the orders of the only other table in the restaurant, made sure our drinks were filled and then headed to the kitchen. There she bustled around and prepared all of our meals single-handedly. It wasn’t as though things were laid out for her cafeteria-style either. She seemed to be cooking and readying our entrees one-by-one.  It was within fifteen minutes that she brought my meal out to me: a steak burrito loaded with jack cheese, smoked black beans, pico de gallo and rice wrapped in a spinach tortilla. The steak was tender and juicy with just enough spices added to it. Everything was superb.  When my waitress/cook arrived back at my table to check on me, I told her that I felt bad that I was ordering so much stuff and she was the only person there to help everyone.

It’s okay, I do it this way during the day. I’m one of those people who can’t stop moving around, she said. She laughed and went to greet another couple who were walking in and then refill the iced tea glasses that sat at a table nearby.  I continued eating my burrito. The thing was large, but every bite was delicious. I wanted to savor every bit and really pretend that I was a food writer, but I was far too hungry and this was far too good. Then something happened that changed everything.

Taking a small break from the burrito, I dipped a chip into some of the salsa. I can’t believe that I haven’t mentioned the salsa. When my server placed a bowl of the stuff down onto my table I wasn’t that enthused. It seemed watery with a few chunks of tomato placed in it. Then upon dipping a chip in, I was welcomed to a fragrant and spicy world where my taste buds were Pilipino citizens and this salsa was General McArthur returning to save the day. It was so good. Sometimes the heat burned my tongue, and other times the sweetness of the tomato balanced it all out. It was a magical salsa experience. I ate the chip and thought about how I’d describe the salsa, because words failed me. I was writing tiny little ideas and adjectives down on a piece of paper I’d produced from my wallet, and yet nothing in my head was really letting me convey to experience of this salsa. I decided, and this is the part that I regret, to sniff the salsa to see if I could get an idea of the ingredients of the stuff.

That’s when I sneezed, loudly.

Usually a sneeze just sort of happens. I’ve probably sneezed a million times in my life, and it’s no big deal. Dry sneezes are just sort of loud and wet sneezes are just sort of loud with a wetness that one needs a napkin or Kleenex or sleeve for. This was a dry sneeze that made my whole body contract and release. It was violent and loud and caused the entire restaurant to notice me breaking its eerie quiet. A Mexican ballad played quietly on the stereo, indifferent to my interruption.  That’s when I felt it: wetness in the back of my pants.

My stomach had rumbled before I went into the restaurant. I didn’t think anything of it because at thirty-four years-old I feel like I know my body rather well. My body, to me is rather banal. I know what upsets it and what soothes it. So a slight tremor in my stomach before I eat a nice lunch wasn’t a big deal. Or so I thought.

Now I was panicking. I had a weird sinking feeling that somewhere immediately after the sneeze – in that split second between the Ah and the Choo – I’d pooped myself.  I got up from the table and walked in that weird clenched-ass walk that one does when they’ve soiled themselves towards the men’s room.  I walked into the bathroom and set about trying to figure out what happened.

Without getting into the details, it was a disaster on par with a pontoon boat sinking instead of the Titanic that it felt like. I immediately locked the little bathroom door and set about cleaning myself up as best I could.  There was one thing for certain – I needed to get rid of my underpants and get out of the restaurant as soon as I could.

The wastebasket that was beside the sink wasn’t a big industrial-sized depository that would be capable of holding and concealing my underpants. Instead it was a smaller wastebasket, not unlike the one that I have in my bathroom at home. There was no way that I could place something in that without having anyone else notice. I didn’t want that dear lady who cooked my food and brought me a nice glass of water when I needed it to have to deal with this.  I was panicking and didn’t know what to do. So I had to tap into my inner MacGyver and fabricate either a wastebasket or crude diaper to get out of this restaurant in.  I had no wood or tape, but the restaurant was stocked with an ample supply of toilet paper. I created a large pad of tissue that when placed between my ass and my underwear would get me out of the place. With this in place, I walked out of the bathroom and back into the restaurant.

I’d like to think that I looked normal emerging from the one-person bathroom but I’m sure that I looked insane. My head glistened with sweat and I still walked with my ass clenched, but now I had a big two-ply ass-pad sticking out. In the mirror across from me I looked like Arsenio Hall – square shoulders and a big ass.  Instead of giving it up for the Dog Pound like Mr. Hall did, I sat awkwardly on the seat – one cheek resting in the chair and the other dangling precariously in the ether between the seat and the ground. It was there that I waited for my check.

My waitress lady was busy, and those minutes felt like decades. I know that some form of that expression gets used a lot, but seriously, try sitting in an increasingly busy restaurant with a dirty load in your pants, wearing a crudely-made Charmin maxi-pad and then have to be patient and tell me how time passes. I’d rather sit in the DMV next to three families than endure what I had to while waiting to pay my bill.

Finally she brought me the check. I waddled up to the register and she asked how everything was. It was good, I said and it was. The meal was wonderful. I’d recommend going to Maria’s Mexican Pueblo again to anyone – it wasn’t the meal that caused this, it was my body acting out-of-the-ordinary and me not listening to it that was to blame.  I paid my bill and just before heading to my car an idea hit me.

I went back into the bathroom and took the bag out of the wastebasket. Underneath it in true restaurant tradition, was a spare trashcan liner. Every restaurant I worked at did this in case of needing a quick change during peak business, I suppose. Now I took advantage of it. I took the empty bag out, placed my TP Diaper in the toilet and then took my soiled underwear and placed them in the trash bag. With a flush and a tucking of the trash bag in my jacket sleeve all of the evidence was destroyed.

I walked out of the place, thanking the nice lady as I passed her again and got into my car. Along the way home I stopped at a small park where I saw a trash can and threw my underpants away. It was finally over.

I started not to type this out. I started to pretend that this sad and embarrassing chapter in the life of Jason Bugg never happened, but I figured that someone would get a good laugh out of it. But I also knew that eventually someone like my sister would bring this up and I’d have to explain it to everyone. So there it was; the story about how my body doesn’t listen to me and how I ruined a nice dinner for myself. Feel free to laugh about it now, I’ll understand.  But now instead of being mortified that something like this happened to me, I own it. I control my embarrassment. I think.

Owned by a Chatbot

*

Let’s just start off by saying that this entry will probably be a little uncomfortable for some people to read, but I thought that I should share it with someone, so why not the one thousand people who read The Bugg Blog every month?

I’m at home alone quite a bit. Being alone with the internet is usually good for me because I send out pitches and work on chasing my dream of becoming an honest-to-goodness professional writer. But sometimes when I am alone with the internet, I tend to become bored and give in to some of my more base needs and impulses. Whenever this happens, I have Bree Olson there for me.

Bree Olson is a porn star who is cute, blonde and almost stereotypically Barbie-like. I almost feel bad for finding her attractive. She is what Hitler and Skinhead assholes dream of as their ideal: blonde, stacked and dumb as a fucking bag of hammers.  Bree is also great because she doesn’t seem to be dead inside like Sasha Grey, another porn star who people love.

But here I am alone, at home, with the internet and feeling a particular stirring that I don’t want to go into a ton of detail about. Needless to say a Google search for Bree’s videos began with haste.

Once I’d settled on one that had the required ingredients, I set forth to watch the video until the time was right and I could stop watching.  That’s when it happened.

For those of you who are lying and saying that you never masturbate online allow me to set the scene for what the latest in porn sites look like: imagine a normal blog like this one, with some social media stuff added to it (like “Find sex on Twitter!”). There’s a video embedded but all around it there are plenty of things for idiots or clumsy people to click upon. When you click upon them you are whisked away to a place where your computer stops working and pop up windows never go away.

But the latest thing on these porn sites are little chat windows that pop up. They are almost made to look like the chat box on Facebook. Today, while watching Bree make her parents cry a bit more, one popped up. I guess it either recognized my IP and picked the closest large town or thought that I was scat porn freak Bobby Coggins because it was posing as a single horny girl from Franklin who happened to be hot (we know that these don’t exist). What follows is an exact transcription of the chatbot’s dealings with me:

GenaFranklinNC: lol hi I’m all alone in Franklin, want to chat?

A minute passes

GenaFranklinNC: you there or are yr hands full lol jk?

Another minute

GenaFranklinNC: I just bought this cute nightie, wanna chat cam to cam and see it?

GenaFranklinNC was doing the standard chat robot thing, until this happened:

GenaFranklinNC: Why aren’t you answering me, faggot?

Welcome to my world, where I get made fun of by chatbots.  I’m not sure what to think about this. On one hand, I thought that it was funny that these programs start with the dumb horn line and immediately go to straight to something out of the seduction playbook of my ex-wife.

I wonder if this actually works? If I had answered yes at that point, would the bot continue trying to get me to subscribe to whatever site that they were programmed to do, or would it then get a dude from Franklin to speak to me?  I’ll never know.

Until later, be good

*also, for those of you not in the know, Bree’s leaky hose in the video represents a penis

Cause it’s in the Jeep

Well hello blog, nice to see you.  I’m not so stressed out now. Well, tonight at least.  I’m not cracking up like I was last week, either. I’ve gone to see a shrink once, and have another appointment next week, and it wasn’t nearly as annoying as I thought it would be.

I guess the only stress in my life is from everything being out of my control. I’m sort of a control freak and I can’t stand the idea that not much in this world is up to me. Sometimes when I think about that on some grand scale, it overwhelms me, but I’m not going to do that right now. Instead, I’m going to just relax and let things happen as they may.

Right now I’m sort of in limbo about my job (which I really love, for the record). I’ve been handed a set of rules and conditions about my job and I’m doing my best to live up to them, but I fear that I may be moving on from it soon.  I’m not worried; I’m just sort of preoccupied with the uncertainty of knowing if I’m going to be staying there or not. I really want to, but I’m not going to freak out if I don’t.

Sometimes my head moves so fast that I don’t know what to think. I’m curious about Athens, and I really miss writing for Flagpole and dreaming of going there to live and work.

I remember walking around in the city with Jessie one night before a show at the 40 Watt Club and thinking that living there would be fun.  Either way, I’m going to the town tomorrow to hobnob with the people who work at that paper. I want to dazzle them with my theories about how an alt-weekly and new media can work together, but I worry that I’m going to sound like an idiot.

As much as I love my job now, I’d leave here for Georgia and being a professional writer in a heartbeat. Does that make me a bad person?  I hate putting such a premium on money, but if it were better, I’d be freelancing more right now.

I feel like I’m an asset to whomever I work for, but (despite what my output on this blog shows) I’m a writer at heart. I write. I create. I’m a pig with adjectives. I know how to use a semi colon. I know when to switch from short sentences to longer sentences. I’m painfully cruel and aware.

I don’t know what it is, but I’m not too worried about this blog tonight. Instead, I’m just free writing and then throwing it on the internet. If people like it that’s awesome, and if they don’t it’s their problem. I’ll be writing something else by then.

I’m listening to my iTunes library on shuffle and feeling free because of it. The sound is schizophrenic and there’s no flow. The songs just come in and out chaotically.

Random story:

Today I’m talking with a guy and he tells me that his birthday is next week. I ask him what he’s getting. He says “the same thing I get every year – a blow job in my Jeep.”  I really didn’t know what to say, and he kept going.

“You know how that’s different than normal?” he said.

“I don’t know, how?” I replied.

“’Cause it’s in my Jeep,” he said and smiled.

That’s so fucking awesome.

What’s up with me being so down?

By now we know about the bad joke that my moods and emotions are. Hell, I even joke about it most of the time. But over the past few weeks, it’s gotten a lot worse. I’ve been feeling very down and I can’t seem to get any of the bad thoughts that I have in my head to go away.  This has caused me to feel weird and to not really want to go out. I stay at home with my wife and my dogs and just kind of exist. I don’t really live. I just sit there and stare vacantly at a computer screen. Sometimes I read. Other times I don’t.

This all came to a head for me a few days ago (Monday, to be precise). I was having a particularly bad day both at work and in my own head when on the way to Franklin everything came crashing down around me.

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Election day shenanigans.


I’ve done my part today. I volunteered. I ended up using another volunteer for the campaign’s car and a handful of hastily printed out Google Map pages to drive 4 people to the polls. It was kind of nice.

I took a single mother and her three year old son to the polls. The child’s name was Dylan. I didn’t hate him, even though I have reason to believe he was named after a certain overrated singer/songwriter. She was voting for Obama because she wanted a better future for her children. She wanted someone who thought about the future, the one that little Dylan was going to inherit.

I took an elderly lady named Doris to the polls next. She was a sweetheart and had never voted before. Her husband died in 2006 and she never thought politics were “any business of a woman” until after he died. She said that she was moved by Obama’s speeches and her disdain for McCain’s negative campaign. I asked her if she was nervous about Obama being inexperienced and she told me that “things really couldn’t get worse than they are now”.

I then picked up a guy named Roger. Roger has a DUI and can’t drive when his wife isn’t at home, but he wanted to vote. I suspect that Roger was an alcoholic because Roger asked me to stop by the Shell station and he bought a twelve pack and a little bag of powdered donuts. He did give me a donut. Roger was good people.

Then came Carrie. Carrie was 36 and had never voted before. I drove her to the polls and she told me about how much she wanted to vote for Obama because she hated Palin. I guess that’s as good a reason as any to vote.

Carrie looked a little rough around the edges, like she hadn’t slept in a while. I asked her what she did for a living and she told me she was between jobs. It began to dawn on me that Carrie was a meth addict. At first, I didn’t want to believe it. There were too many questions I had in my head, like could a meth addict be socially responsible enough to vote? What if she got all twitchy while voting and accidentally voted for McCain? Can she find me some magic mushrooms? Would it look bad if I asked her about magic mushrooms? I pushed all of these things aside and just drove on, keeping an eye on the rosaries hanging from the rear view mirror and the three CDs (Jack Johnson- Sing-a-longs and Lullabies for the Film Curious George , Ani Difranco- Dilate and The Grateful Dead- American Beauty) on the console of the car. Normally I’d throw these CDs out the window, but I’m in a giving mood today.

I took Carrie to the polls and on the way home she asked me to drive her somewhere else. I said sure and she directed me to a rather sketchy little house. We pulled up and she asked me to wait five minutes for her and then to give her a ride home. I wanted to tell her to get lost, but the rascally child in my head told me to stay, that this could get wacky. I told her okay, but I couldn’t wait for too long because this wasn’t my car. She said she’d be quick, and I sat in the car and listened to the local AM station. It wasn’t bad. They played “Hold on to the Night” by Richard Marx followed by “I’m on Fire” by Bruce Springsteen, a live ad for Pizza Hut and then they had a call in contest for a free lunch buffet. I could have called in, but Pizza Hut gives me horrible gas and I didn’t have my cell phone.

Carrie came out of the house and got into the car, and she was acting different. Relaxed. Not as manic of twitchy. I asked her if she was carrying. She told me no and acted rather incredulous. I told her that she wasn’t going to get in trouble. I told her about my dad being a crack addict and that I’m cool with stuff, but I wanted to know what I was getting into. She still told me she wasn’t carrying. At this point, Carrie was getting a little angry at me, and I told her that I was cool with whatever she was doing. I even told her about me being new in this town and not knowing how to ask people if they knew where I could score some pot or magic mushrooms. She laughed at me, and Carrie and I were friends again. So I asked her again if she was carrying. I told her she owed it to me. I didn’t care, but I was driving someone else’s car. I didn’t want to get them in trouble or to make the campaign look bad. She said that she wasn’t, but she did use inside of the house.

What do you say to that? I just looked at her and said “right on”, and then I drove her home.

God I love Jackson County.

I then got home and received this email from Jessica:

I can’t wait to get home and tell you what’s happened already here. They are having a mock presidential election across the entire school (no teachers- just kids) and you wouldn’t believe the stuff these kids are saying. “If Obama gets elected he’s going to take away all the casinos and kill all the Indians. I saw it on the news!” And the kid would not believe me that it wasn’t true.

That’s absolutely insane. Something tells me that the poor kid heard that. In case you didn’t know, Jessica teaches at a school on an Indian Reservation.

By the way, this story is 90% true. I embellished a few facts (such as the number of CDs in the car) and changed the names of the people. But the events are true. Please don’t use this post to think poorly of the Obama campaign or the amazing people volunteering for the cause. If you do that, then you are an asshole. Also, I do not smoke grass. I am looking for a hookup on some magic mushrooms however, but I will not accept solicitations over the internet.

All of this has gotten me in the mood for some brotherhood music. Here’s a tune from Bobby Charles that is strangely relevant to what went down today. So Carrie, if you haven’t pawned your computer yet. Feel free to download this, get reeeeeeeeeeeaaallll fucking high, and listen to this tune.

Bobby Charles- Small Town Talk

Until later, do your part and vote. Remember to be good also.

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