Showing posts with label big mouth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label big mouth. Show all posts

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Twice-Told Tales

CHIP OF WISDOM:

Proverbs 13, Verse 3

"Self-control means controlling the tongue!
A quick retort can ruin everything."

---

CHIPPED WISDOM:

I think I'm beginning to feel a certain amount of empathy for my math teachers, even my earliest and possibly most enigmatic math teacher; my father.  I'm feeling their pain.  I'm getting where they were coming from.  

I am, in short, a very poor student.  

And I always was, it was always that way.  I just wore glasses and tucked my shirt in and this threw teachers.  They didn't know what to make of it.  Single digit scores on math tests, and yet looks like Paul Pfieffer.  

Does.  Not.  Compute.  

And so I spent a significant portion of my academic life not computing.  In all senses of that word.  I slid, skated, glided, sailed and slunk by without accomplishing much of, well, anything really in school.  Sure, I wrote a lot of stories and won some public speaking contests.  I got a story called "When Yellow Geese Eat Chairs" published in a national magazine when I was in middle school and got five dollars out of it.  But my homework was done on the bus on the way to school, if at all, and I once convinced a teacher that I didn't do a Spanish project because my grandmother had died.  

She, at that point, hadn't.

Not only was I apathetic about school work and, occasionally, brutally dishonest, I also learned at a painfully slow speed.  Not to say that I was "slow", but it took me a while to figure things out.  Like that fucking Major Molineux story.  Who knew "Toby" and "Kunta" were the same person?

Actually, looking back on it, maybe I've just gotten slower-- maybe I really was fine in school (besides math, obviously) and my synapses and my pistons and my o-rings are just now starting to falter.  Maybe fatherhood has made me stupider.  It certainly isn't making me any brighter.  

So my learning curve is getting broader, or wider, or more concave.  I don't know.  Obtuse.  At any rate, it takes me longer to figure things out, to make connections, to get the main idea.  Would you repeat that?  What do you mean by that?  Every anecdote, I find, must be a twice-told tale which, for people who don't mind talking, isn't very bothersome, I guess.  I find that I'm in meetings furiously scribbling down everything the dumb fuck in front of me is saying for fear that I won't be able to tease out what's really important, and, convinced that I know absolutely nothing, I must assimilate everything.  
And so I learn nothing.  Or, if I do, it just takes a painfully long time.

One thing I am learning, very very slowly, is to watch my mouth.  Especially when I'm angry and/or passionate, because what I say and how I say it is often unfiltered and unappreciated.  And I get it, I understand.  And part of me agrees-- I wouldn't appreciate it if someone talked to me the way I talk to people sometimes, but sometimes I just don't see any other way to make people care.

Which, of course, you can't do.  

You can't make somebody care about their job or their Spanish homework or their yard if they don't, even though you'd really like it if they did.  And that's something I'm learning very, very slowly.  I expended so much energy when I was younger taking pen to paper with vitriol leaking out of my inkwell, insisting with every ounce of fury my vocabulary could muster, that people care about what I care about.  

But it doesn't work.  It didn't, and it doesn't.  

No one ever gave me a satisfactory reason as to why I should care about math, so I didn't.  If they had a crystal ball and said, "Gee, you know, in 2013 you're going to be writing grants with complicated budgets and you're going to have to understand audited financials and P&L statements and 990s and maybe it would be good if you fucking knew how to add and subtract" I might have taken some notice.

But probably not.  

Because, maybe underneath it all, I am a shrewd youth, and may rise in the world, with or without the help of my kinsman, Major Molineux.  

Thursday, April 11, 2013

When I'm New

CHIP OF WISDOM:

Proverbs 21, Verse 23

"Keep your mouth closed and you'll stay out of trouble."

---

CHIPPED WISDOM:

Once, I wrote an email to a professor that almost got me thrown out of college.

Once, I wrote story that got me fired from a job.

Once, I wrote editorials in the Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News that got me death threats.

Once, I wrote an anonymous blog and I got tired of it, so I started another one that wasn't.

And I realized I couldn't.

"Majesty," Mozart says in the film Amadeus, "I am a vulgar man, but I assure my music is not."

I'm kind of the opposite, I guess.  My writing is base, it is unrefined and obscene, it pulls no punches and accepts no mercy, particularly on its subject.  Is it honest?  I don't know, maybe it's as honest as it can be without destroying me, but it loves to tell stories.  Stories that are shameful, embarrassing, disgusting.  My writing uses metaphors that would make a Des Moines housewife frown-- it's okay, she's not my target audience anyway.

Or, maybe she is.  If I could make my mother frown with my incendiary rhetoric, I knew I was on the right path.  If she just laughed, I wasn't going far enough.

While my writing is vulgar, I'm not entirely convinced that I am, which I guess is a step in the right direction.  Maybe 3 years of therapy is starting to work. I know I am not perfect, I know I am not always kind or smart or just.  I know sometimes I don't do work the way it should be done.  I know sometimes I don't do home the way it should be done.

I know.

Overall, though, when I take in as much of the human experience as I can, I suppose I'm just okay.  Like you.  I like you.  Will you stay here with me for a while?  It's still me, even though I took away my name and my picture.

You know.

One of the reasons I want to leave my job is because I'm so tired of looking over my shoulder.  I guess I don't want to feel like that on this blog either.  I don't want to have to be afraid, of someone saying something, identifying me, linking me to some inane story with the word "fuck" in it and therefore deeming me unfit to walk amongst the rest of humanity.  I'm so tired of being afraid all the time, and in the digital age, there is a lot to be afraid of.

Then, of course, the question becomes, "Why don't you just shut the fuck up?"

Right.  I could do that.  I have done that.  But I don't want to.  There's something in me that wants to come out.  I was going to say "has" to come out, but that's a little theatrical.  It doesn't have to, I won't sizzle and turn to dust if it doesn't.  I don't want you to think that.  I don't need to write and the world doesn't need me to either.

I just want to.  Pretty badly, I think, as things go.

I have a big mouth, and I've always hated it, since I've had it, that is.  I didn't always have a big mouth.  As a boy, I would hide behind my mother, probably for longer than customary.  I wouldn't say anything to anybody, even though, apparently, I was speaking in sentences by nine-and-a-half months.  I didn't start opening my mouth until I got comfortable.

Behind a computer screen.

After I'd been in a job for over a year.

After I'd known someone for a very long time.

I get bold.  Brave.  Sloppy.  Silly.  Acrid.  Asshole.

I get a little asshole.

Suddenly, this meek little gimp has opinions.  Suddenly, he swears.  Suddenly, his brow knits and his bile surfaces and his arms cross in front of his chest and he sours.  Finding your voice is empowering, but it's not always nice.

I like being nice-- moreover, I like being thought of as being nice.  I like to be spoken well of and thought highly of and to be respected.  Maybe that's why I try my damndest to change jobs every year or two, because that's when I'm at my best: when I'm new.  When my mouth is closed.  When I'm bewildered and apologetic and eager to please.  When I'm quiet.

I'm a good boy, when I'm new.

When I wrote that letter to that professor in college, I was half-way through my Junior year.  I mean, I practically owned the place-- you know.  The Head of the Theatre Department shouted at me in his office with the light off and the door closed,

"DON'T YOU UNDERSTAND?!  SHE DOESN'T KNOW YOU!  I KNOW YOU!  I KNOW HOW YOU ARE!"

And I thought that was interesting, because I didn't know what he was talking about.  I guess, looking back, he was talking about how I am when I'm not new anymore.  I guess he was talking about how, when I get angry or sad or indignant, I prefer to bodyslam my demons and my enemies with words, and I like to douse them in propane and light them on fire, just to be sure the audience is paying attention.

And it's cost me.  And I guess it will continue to do so, because I never learn.  I don't want to grow up and write like a big boy.  I'm still stuck in this juvenile cycle of dick jokes and shit-talking ribaldry.  I'm Peter Pan, typing with a captain's hook.

Anyway, staying out of trouble's no fun, is it?