Tuesday, December 18, 2012

BOREDOM... A.K.A. 2 DAYS IN DCP...

There’s something to be said about your own boredom… either you’re bored in marriage, bored in life, bored at home or work (hence this blog) or just bored for the moment. This account is about boredom you can’t do anything about. It is also referred to as “doing time”…

Now, a lot of this has been erased from my memory due to it being a looonng loonng time to be doing nothing. But I was talking to a neighborhood kid about buying pot in the neighborhood and how the neighbors/fellow renters have conversed with me about it to the point that the next step is calling the police. So the business of doing illegal business around my apartment building should be done elsewhere if at all. The problem is I’d be a hypocrite to call because I did the same things in life, just not as young.

But I remember how pot made me feel like I was one of the gang even if I was sittin at home alone. Most times though my cousins and friends took advantage of me, knowing I had been an outsider all my life, and even at one of the last meetings with the fellow ‘heads my one cousin said to my buddy “Don’t take him home yet. We haven’t gotten high and that’s why we hang out with him.” This same slut got herself laid at a Penn State game as we all sort of stood outside the car and watched the action of the car. When she got married years later I debated giving her cash or a gift card. I figured she couldn’t buy weed at target, so she got a gift card.

Personally I don’t care what these neighborhood kids do. When I say kids I mean 15-18 year olds. Unlike my fellow renters, I was that age once. They can smoke all they want and I have been outside while they smoked a blunt anyway. I sparked a clove just to “fit in” yet again…

It’s crazy to think these kids were born when I was in high school. But the business side of things need to be done elsewhere so that the kids don’t end up where I am about to write about. . .

*********

About 12 years ago I decided to drive home after a night of drinking at a place called Wanda’s. A friend had offered to give me a ride, but at the time I liked weed a lot more than freedom. So I decided to roll and smoke a blunt on the way home so mom wouldn’t ask why the whole house smelled like weed. After stopping to pee on a building where we used to get together and play basketball, I got back in my car and rolled up to the red light at the corner of 21st street and Route 15 in Camp Hill. There used to be an Exxon station at the light (now dunkin donuts) and the wendy’s that stood at plaza 21 is still there (where I had my first job in fact.)

I put my car in park due to the notoriously long red light there and laid my head back, periodically looking to see if the light was green…

Next thing I knew it was some time later, and the light was still red, but my car was not just surrounded by police, I was being nudged by 2 of them inside my car.  The blinding light of their flashlights stunned me into sobriety and I was ripped out of my car.

“Why are your pants undone?” one asked. “Any weapons inside the vehicle? What’re you doing here sir”

--“I’m waiting for the red light to change… see? It’s red. I don’t know why my pants are undone (lie)… no weapons in vehicle (truth).”

All the while stumbling and slurring.

“You’re under arrest for a DUI”…

--“But I wasn’t driving…?! I was waiting for the red light! See? It’s still red!”

“How long have you been waiting here sir?”

--“10 minutes now… the bar should still be open right?”

“sir, it’s 4:30am.”

--“…………”

“Sir are there any drugs or alcohol in the car?”

--“no” (lie)

And after them whipping me around and slamming me against my own car while asking me all these questions I stopped them immediately… “HEY! STOP IT WITH THE MANHANDLING OF ME GUYS… I’M NOT GOING ANYWHERE, I’M NOT GOING TO RUN! PLEASE?”

These were your typical marine-type meatheads feeling good to be on a police squad so they could justify their small clits by wielding a gun. So they were happy to manhandle a weakling they used to shove into lockers before they could be “legal” bullies. Yet when I stood up to the harsh behavior, they became a little more human. They took me a little more gently to their car. And if the night couldn’t have ended worse…

“well, there looks to be a half ounce in your center console… why didn’t you tell us you had drugs in your car?”

At this point my mental state was in a steady rate of decline. . . but I still had my wits…

--“who in their right mind or drunk or stoned or a combination of the three would ever tell the police they had drugs on their person, sir?”

“that’s a fine point sir”  he said, then got in the cruiser and transported me to the hospital.

I guess Harrisburg hospital was a better place for bloodletting than Holy Spirit hospital which was literally less than a block away from where I was picked up. So we went on a joyride all the way up to Route 81 and back down Front Street. In the middle of all this we had to change police cars for whatever reason. What did I know? I was bombed and lit at the time. I felt as though I was on a trip to Florida per the length of time I was in the back seat of the police car.

When we finally got to Harrisburg hospital the arresting officer sat me in a room and said “where do you live?”

-“…with my mother.”

“do you want to call her and mention  to her what happened this morning?”

-“no…………………………………………. can you?”

He seemed to dial the phone with such joy. Asshole… But as mom answered and they conversed, he said to her that I was one of the most respectful and pleasant arrests he’s ever had. I dunno what that means to me even now at 36, I was still arrested. But at the same time I guess it made mom proud of me even in my “free fall to rock bottom” moment.

So I was given ARD which meant drinking classes and loss of license. If all went well, for however long time was, it would be ok… no jail time, etc… and the pot charge was dropped. What did they do with my pot I wonder……………..? I stop my digression…

You’d think this would stop me from doing it again, but less than 6 months later…

Headed to gramma’s after a night of karaoke previous to the family reunion, I decided to stop at 7-11 to get a drink, and as I stepped in to the store, the officer pulled up behind my car, stepped out, and said  “what do you think you’re doing?”

-um, getting a drink then headed to Gramma’s, sir.

“nope, you’re under arrest for a DUI…”

Needless to say I was deflated. I knew jail time was in my future now. 2 in less than 6 months. Can you say time to grow up and learn a lesson?

Now starts the quick clean-up process. They say a judge is lenient more if you have a few things positive growing in your life. So I went to rehab classes. Even though I didn’t really abide by their rules, they really taught me a few things that proved later in life would pan out to be true. Like your drinking/drug friends would leave you when you quit. (truth)

But also I would leave there and get a six pack to drink the blues of the meetings away.

And the good thing was a slice of advice at the rehab meetings from a kid who had been down on his luck in the past and he said “before you go to jail for 2 days, stay up for 2 days so you just sleep through most of it.” Probably the greatest advice a 4’3” grown assed man could tell ya. He was a horse jockey.

The morning of the court date 1/15/03 I was woozy and yawny from being up for more than 48 hours straight. I had followed the advice from the little guy but as I yawned I teared up. That’s how tired I was.

I walked in after smoking my final cigarette and sat down. The first guy got 6 years for killing a child with a stray bullet in a gunfight.

Now it was my turn. Ever have to shit and piss and sneeze at the same time and nothing, not a bathroom or a Kleenex was in sight… that’s how this felt. Meaning either way this pans out, I was fucked.

My lawyer to the left of me, I handed in letters written to me about my character to the judge. They were letters of improvement of self supposedly written by neighbors, friends, etc… in fact I wrote them and went to the people simply for their signatures. I figured why have them do homework for my stupidity…? And they all agreed they were good enough for the judge, each showing a different aspect of my improved character. Meaning I had less to drink the last few weeks leading up to the court date.

The judge perused the letters and asked me if I had anything to add. I apologized for my actions and he sent me to the clink.

The courthouse in dauphin county is perched above the downstairs dungeon that holds its soon to be prisoners before the van ride to the mall, err Dauphin County Prison. As I was lead through the hall and handcuffed, I made a note of the time. 9:35am… (this is an approximation. I don’t remember to the minute exactly, but it comes into play later)…

I sat in a holding cell across from another holding cell with about 8 guys in it and they were seemingly well - adjusted to the view through the bars. All were basically having a party except the one whom I was lead down there with, the 6-year guy was laying flat on his back on a bench, hands on head, presuming contemplating the new normal for the next 6 years.

I continually yawned, and again tired tears flowed, so the pack of hyenas across the way pounced on that for some time.

“he’s crying! Hahahahaha!”

“that bitch ain’t gonna make it”

-          No man I haven’t slept in 48 hours… this’ll be a breeze if I can just get to sleep…

“HEY! QUIET DOWN OVER THERE!” A booming voice said from the check-in desk. “PETE, GET OVER HERE…” I went over to the guy when called and who do I see but an asshole I went to school with. Go figure.

“How’s it goin?” he asked. “Why are we being reunited here?”

-          Hey pete. (his name too) DUI. 2 day stint. Nothing big.

“Yeah you have nothing to worry about man. Did ya stay up all night? Everybody does. Just try not to yawn till you get to your bunk. And don’t mind the hyenas. They’re just happy to be out of the projects.”

-          Why you being nice?

“High school was years ago. ­­Everybody fucks up man. Everybody. Don’t let it happen again, so take care of yourself.”

-          Ummmm, ok.

 

Eventually the judge slung enough punishment to fill the van and we were all handcuffed again and were driven to DCP. It wasn’t the school bus type of ride that is cliché in prison movies. It was the panel van with enough legroom for a Chihuahua.  We were stuffed in, I was seated inches across from the 6 year guy, separated by steel mesh, and I thanked karma that I wasn’t him.

Getting to the prison it was odd to see it from that side. We always drove past it going to the mall but from the other side it is a fortress. Gates, gates, and more gates. Locks. Gates. Locks. Its amazing and a wonder how anyone escapes these things. Desperate times for desperate measures I guess.

They dropped me in a holding cell that looked like a large concrete and cinderblock room. There were 4 of us in there and plenty of room to relax, chat, whatever. It was a cathedral of concrete. I’d say the walls could have been 20-30 feet high. One guy drying out from a DUI the night before, and another in for whatever reason said this was a cleaner prison than the one he was at in another state. Yup… pete and repeat (offender) were in a cell… you finish it.

After seemingly hours, but could have been 10 minutes, I was asked to be booked.

This was good I thought. Sooner done with this, the sooner I could sleep. Yet the one thing true in the movies and known around the planet are the following words: “Strip down, turn around, bend over, spread your cheeks, then turn back around and lift your sack.” I wondered what degree this guy earned as I looked at him upside down, balloon knot squinting in the light, naked as a jaybird…

Donning orange, possibly burlap fabric clothes now (itchy, orange and miserable… hooray!) I was lead into the booking wing. I sat down. The nurse checking me in was an old acquaintance I knew from the graveyard shift at AT&T. small world… This day won’t end.

After about an hour with her I was lead down a long corridor surrounded by screaming and cages and cages of men. Maybe 40 to a cage in bunk beds. And this was about 2 city blocks long. The humanity in a county prison is staggering, and this place is like a small city minus the entertainment. Food toilets sinks and beds. For thousands. It was a machine for the degenerates in society. A sad cold hard life for the mistaken few… Few, who am I kidding? Masses is more like it. Concrete, cinderblocks, and steel. If a mouse had squealed, the acoustics would have allowed it to be heard from block A to block Z, so imagine how long a human scream can be heard. Let alone a choir of screams.

I was un-handcuffed in a room that had a bunch of beds in it. The back wall was lined with cells, and this room of mattresses had about 30 mattresses in it, some bunk beds, but mostly regular beds. And when I say mattress I mean less than an inch of foam on steel.

A few dudes were chatting in the corner of the hexagonal room, and I could see faces from the slits behind the doors along the wall. This was it. I was in…

So I laid down on the one mattress, using the prison guide book they give you to let you know about life in jail as a pillow. Finally. I could sleep. After 20 minutes maybe, the door unlocked again.

“LUNCH”

Lunch was some kind of turkey and gravy thing that makes cardboard more appetizing. Peas, mashed potatoes, and milk. All of a sudden I wasn’t hungry, yet the others said ya better eat it cause dinner is worse. One of the guys in the back wall of cells asked me for my peas and I gladly gave it to him. I had to finish my milk first though so I could fill the carton with my peas.

I knew a few things. Go with the flow and don’t piss people off is about it. So the guy got my peas. Some time later, I could lay down again.

The door unlocked…

“WAMBACH”

I got up. I had to see the mental health guy they called a doctor for some pills I never got to continue my home regimen, then they dropped me off in a new cell, err home for me. It was another block, Q block, and I was in one of those cells along the back wall in a big room again yet without the mattresses like before.

8-A.

That was my address. It was a penthouse apartment on the second floor of this block and my roommate was a guy dealing with heroin withdrawal.

“You got a cigarette?” he asked shakingly…

-          Do the words ‘spread your cheeks and lift your sack’ ring a bell? Sorry man. I got 2 days and a ton of sleep to catch up on so… I’m sorry, no. What’s wrong with you?

“Heroin”

-          Ok, well, I am of no help man. Never tried the stuff. Just remember this next time you do and maybe you won’t. I wish I could bring you some help, but this isn’t the place for it.

He took my prison book and placed pages on the light that was a fluorescent glare on the side wall. The light never turned off, even at night. So the shade from the paper was welcomed. Later the C.O. made him remove the sheets.

I hopped on top bunk, and passed out. The guy was cool. He woke me up for dinner and breakfast, and lunch the next day. He sort of watched over me and even lobbied for us to clean the floors. Any time doing something other than staring at the cinderblock wall was a privilege, but unfortunately we weren’t allowed that privilege. We were made to stay in our cell the entire time. We were only let out to get our food trays. And in fact the coffee they served in the morning may as well been made from tree bark. It made me wonder if they gave the shitty experience to the guys who were first offenders to make sure they didn’t reoffend.

But the title comes in big here. Boredom. Holy shit. You couldn’t even masturbate.

The sounds of prison was constant screaming, yelling, and more than one fuck was heard about every half a second. But in my cell, that was the background noise to my celly. He was all about rubbing his hands back and forth together and his feet as well. (think Mr. Muyagi in “The Karate Kid” using his hands to heal Daniel-son… 24 hours a day) I guess it was comforting to withdrawal between the sweats and weeping.

I remember finding a ballpoint pen in my bunk and wrote on one of the painted cinderblock mortar the now patented “III”®… I wanted to let the royal “them” know I had been there.

I also remember when pulling the mattress back on my bunk that someone else wrote the following: “time go slow on Q”… even after sleeping for the better part of my stint, time was indeed slow on Q-block.

The morning of release is probably the slowest that time runs. I said goodbye to my celly and thanked him for his help through the hell that was the weekend.

The door opened and I was again handcuffed and lead down the now happy hallway of caged humanity and sent to another tiny holding cell. This was more of a cage of chain linked fencing. I was there for seemingly an hour watching the prison complex at work. I saw new people coming in looking scared as I was, I saw guys in helmets running through with another guy who was apparently misbehaving in his cell. I saw a friend of mine from the pool room at college but made sure he didn’t see me.

Eventually I was allowed to change into my suit I wore to court 2 days before and was given my shoelaces back. My oh my I had no idea how much I loved shoelaces! I was also given back my tongue ring which was taken out 2 hours before by the doctor at checkout. Needless to say it healed over faster than I could get it back in. Unreal.

Soon I was lead to the door and I was free again. I saw my dad and ran to him, hugged him HARD, and said what I wanted most at this point.

“GO TO RITE AID. I NEED CIGARETTES!”

-          Peter, now’s a great time to quit.

“After the weekend I have had, quitting is not in my immediate future!”

When I got home, I hugged my mother, who was crying happy tears. I immediately showered and changed into sweatpants. We chatted about the weekend, I told her all of the above, along with details I missed at this point, less than a month short of 10 years later. And I checked my phone. Among calls and texts there was one in particular:

 My friend Johnny K had just had his first child Dylan, and his weekend was filled with joy as mine was pure hell. But the one spec hit me funny. Dylan was born 1/15/03, at 9:35am… precisely as I was being handcuffed at the courthouse. I even had to double check with him tonight as I wrote this when Dylan was born, and he was shocked I had forgot.

But at the lowest, most bored you have ever been in your life, do you remember it fondly or do you remember that vacation with family and friends better?

I tend to try to remember the latter.

III

Sunday, December 9, 2012

EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE.........

+++LANGUAGE ALERT+++


COME ON IN…THE TINNITUS IS AMAZING!

So I am watching "it might get loud", a movie about 3 major guitarists talking about their love affair with their instruments. Jimmy paige, the edge, and jack white. I had seen parts of it at my friend’s house in Delaware, but we were reminiscing so much it hadn’t crossed my mind to actually pay attention to it.

I am in awe of musicians. With a stroke of the wrist they can make you dance or cry in one note. The hands and fingers hitting the parts of the wood that make the amplifier howl sends shivers sometimes.

As I watched I remembered meeting mr setzer in NJ and finding myself staring at his crotch area during the time I wasn’t backstage smoking. But it wasn’t his hips that made me drool. His fingers and mastery of the chords and strings hypnotized me. I keep finding myself wanting more from these live acts I have seen and all haven’t come close to his picking wisdom.

As I watched I remembered writing about my cousin Patrick and his band in the freezing cold one January night and the dementia of my mind to leave whilst this brilliant performance was going on. I remember calling him jimmy paige in the writeup and I realize he is right on my screen. And as brilliant as he is, jimmy paige is no Patrick MacDonald.

I am pissed I have no musical talent. None. I am not the jock or nothing really. There is no purpose for me to be of this world and I contribute nothing to society the way these people do. These folks are of the subatomic-sized group of people that through music and confidence they can change a generation.

Stairway

Sunday bloody Sunday

Seven nation army

Just writing those words and you reading them makes your head bob a bit. Currently I have to now go to youtube to listen to jack sing that goddamn song. I seriously hate the song but for whatever reason I am drawn to it so bear with me…


side note… a nice side note too… never noticed meg’s breasts were so voluptuous… I NOW LOVE THIS VIDEO. Yeah they’re the dime-nickel-quarter type, or ski jump type...but oye!

But the more I think about it I feel like painting…. (inside joke)

No I am not an instrumenteur. MSWord says that’s not a word, but you’re reading this so you should know what it is. Fuck word. Call Webster. And Gates. i made a word that i am not even one of. Who does that? people who are up at 4:20am sunday mornings.
I cannot play any keyboard, I can’t play any strings, I have no rhythm, I can’t drum, what am I good for?

I figured out I am good at eating and shitting and peeing and drinking. I can turn a plate of food into shit in a good 8 hours or so.

So I pick up my instrument now and play it. I hit a few keys and words start to form. The blank sheet turns to black lines if you stood far away, but as you come into focus you see spaces and paragraphs form.

Then there’s a blue line… from far away it means nothing, but close up you can hear music if you click the blue line with your mouse.

As I watched the documentary I saw them play to thousands, millions, trillions. I saw how each of those notes they played and spoke so eloquently about affected the crowd. You hear this song played and you see how singular one man took the time to write and it affects not just the crowd there, but eventually the nation… then the world.

One dude… you, too.


Watch this video and don’t focus on the band for what goes in your ears, listen to the crowd. One dude made the words, the group the melody… and a nation of live aid is singing it actually to the band, not the other way around. It’s as if the performer came to play for the crowd to sing to them.

Can you even fathom the power?

As a guy sitting in his apartment I don’t really want to hear people reading my emails back to me. No blog entries either. But as one guy making something from nothing, you can’t beat being in a band. Maybe a prizefighter walking in to a fight is a good enough representation of the rush of adrenaline a crowd must give you. And this rush… I feel sitting here writing about the rush. I get goosebumps watching the pixels change color in front of my eyes and realize each pixel is a human being holding in pee while feeling every moment of the song. Then again… live aid… wembley…. Just piss your pants.

And finally…


(speaking of breasts)

Sorry… whilst looking for this, that piece of garbage came thru and as much as I appreciate the efforts of miss parton, I have to feel the douche chills from her guitarist forced to try and make stairway his own… I say this and I can also say I heard not one word of her singing the song. I just watched the intro, and of course rewound to see her cleavage again.

[On a side note… Why is rewind still in the vernacular? There’s no other word for it, that’s why. Maybe “back it up” or “it starts at 2:38 so start it there…” nah, just rewind your cd or mp3. “seek backwards”]

And the following, while watching them perform and hearing paige speak of it…


those that know know…. “hey mikey….”

That’s all I thought about or ever think about when hearing this song, and as sad or happy or whatever this song is… I always laugh a little when I hear it. (wasted cousins mutually struggling to think of words and stumbling over verses while it is magically played by a once comatosed other cousin who was brought out of his drool on the table to “not fuck it up”, and he didn’t.)

But it’s time to put this instrument down and go to sleep. I wish it was a long sleep, but I will inevitably wake up tomorrow…

*sigh*

III

Ps… If you have the means, buy on amazon “it might get loud”… I highly recommend picking it up.

PSS… mr. white, as you have met ‘my boys’… pokey Lafarge and the south city three… it send shivers down my spine knowing that I knew of that Son House song as well. You just can’t beat the blues…