The chief scientist on board was convinced that it would be a worth while experiment. At times he would think that, aside from
those that come with a risk of exp iration, most any experiment is a worthwhile one. But, sun of a gun, this particular experiment came with
an extinction risk of which he remained until the soggy end unawares. Baloney, as it turns out, blows. Not only in the exploding sense, but in the toxic sense,
in the Biblical sense, and even in that risk of migrating plastics eventually residing within the testicles sense, whether it’s ingested, blown onto, or,
as was the case for those on the ship’s deck, radically blown up. Fortunately for the sake of neighbors and other lucky landlocked acquaintances, of
the family members left on the home front, the chief at least had the sense to perform the experiment asea. He thought his senses were steady, but
clearly he had begun experiencing signs of brain-rot, perhaps brought about by some of his earlier baloney experiments. Most curious about this
experiment was what happened to the men who worked belowdecks. There was a serious misunderstanding of some sort, or else the chief’s dementia
had been virulently contagious. For each of the coal shovelers and the rest of the generic belowdecks seamen, before the baloney blow-up, were
cradling an infant-sized loaf of baloney, rocking it back and forth, with some blowing kisses toward the tips of each of the baloney babies’ imaginary
noses. Some of the men who blew too close found those noses quite tasty, but refused to season them, choosing instead to make baby noises. Before the ship
sunk, each had laid down their baby- length unsliced body of baloney and had pinned a diaper around the baby’s meaty middle, or wherever each man
decided it was where its diaper should be. The assistant to the head of the blown up baloney incident had been going around and taking notes, asking
each man cradling a baby-length baloney belowdecks the sex of its child, despite it being comprised of a few pounds of cheap, non-sentient, unalive, soon to be
sinking meats from various portions of various animals. As the ship swooped about making its way to ward the ocean’s bottom, the men
seemed rather astounded that their babies seemed unaffected by the car eening and the onslaught of incoming sea-water. Until each man drowned,
he was cradling his baby made of baloney as gently as if it had been his firstborn son or daughter. When word made it to the CEO of Science,
the Baloney chief scientist’s boss, that the experiment had been the catalyst of such a horrendous event, he wrote a brief suicide note and jumped from his
office window. Ironically, for lunch that day, he had eaten the most delicious fried baloney sandwich that his wife had sent with him to work as he left that morning.
If I told you where I heard this phrase for the very first time, just two days ago, it might say a bit too much about why I’d until then never heard it. It doesn’t matter
where I heard it. Maybe, at least for the purpose of my current meanderings, it doesn’t even matter what it actually means. It caused a bit of a pang in the vicinity of my heart when
I heard it articulated, as well as, I’m sure, a not-so-subtle eyeroll that was surely noticed by some of the folks around the table at which I was sitting. All I could think at that moment
was, What a tediously cynical world in which, in order not to be deleterious to those around us, we are now each expected to be pessimists!
I couldn’t understand what he was getting at. Was he mentally displaced, or an alien from outer space, or an app arition that only I could see? And what
was I hearing him say? Loin voids? That sounded suggestive in an asexual sort of way. So of course I was intrigued and looked around to see if I was the only
one catching this. It wasn’t a busy time of day, there were a few tourists, since it was a time when most locals would be working in offices in the Financial
District, where we had our encounter. And then I noticed that I had been paying so much attention to this, whatever he or they or it was, I mean,
one doesn’t go around dressed in a polka-dotted suit, with the dots being seemingly every color on the palette— dotted upon white—and NOT get noticed. I
looked down, I wasn’t dressed for work or
anything, I was on one of my elongated non-
working periods, you know, the ones that got
me here typing this story up to you with such
faux urgency? I was wearing sneakers, the most expensive pair of shoes I’d ever worn, to the best of my knowledge, picked them up the weekend previous at
some swank new hipster haven, it was on Fillmore, as I recall? So, expensive sneaks. “Loin voids!” I felt like I was doing research, but then, as I said, I
looked down, somewhere in the direction of my own voided loins, but what my eyes landed on cranked up within me a sort of exasperation, and anger, and who was the
first...thing...upon which I’d take out this
anger? My new friend of hollowed out sex.
I’d just decided he wasn’t a figment of my imagination but rather one of those Frisco
freaks who walk around at all hours relaying to whomever will listen about something terribly bad was about to happen. And soon. An alien
invasion. The next best earthquake. That Jesus
was here and would soon be floating home with
his flock, and he’d be grinning and winking at
all of those of us who were left behind. Some such tale of twisted baloney. And they were
the only ones here to give us a fair warning.
As I said, while looking down, I glossed over my
sexless middle section and noticed that my precious
new sneakers had sunk into wet concrete, up
to well above the iconography on the canvas
or hide to the level with the laced portion of
my shoelaces. I let out a very feminine
yelp, or it could have been a full-fledged
girlie scream, trying to articulate the pain I was feeling with words that would have meant My Brand New Fucking Shoes!, but me being me it came out more like I, Mandy,
Stuck in Poo! And this of course was directed at the San Francisco freak because I was already blaming him for my somehow not knowing I had passed a “Sidewalk not in
use” sign, as well as a, “Please cross here,” as in to the other side of the small Financial District alleyway the two of us were traversing, or had been only moments before my shoes
got stuck in hardening concrete. And after I yelled whatever indecipherable nonsense I had yelled at mister voided loins he patiently gave me a look of dismay as if I had excusable
personal issues or something and said again what he had already repeated maybe three times at this point: “Hey mister! I said maybe you should pay attention, learn words, can’t
you read? That sidewalk’s been closed all week. He was gone before I could apologize. Or before I had the wherewithal to do so. And I stood there long enough that I had to slip
my feet out of my new sneakers and walk home sock-footed, all the way up the hill, had blisters for weeks, all the while thinking about what a Loin Void might be, if it would
have been something said, if those had actually been the words directed by me by the Frisco Freak who tried to save me and my sneakers from the fresh concrete from across an alley,
as I failed to focus on what he was saying in actuality when we crossed paths. I kept imagining that he’d always said what I thought for sure I heard him say, that weird little pair
of words (he had to be from New York City, surely) that kept me from paying attention to where I was going and upon what my new shoes had stepped upon and into. Which is the story of my
life in a nutshell, I suppose. Always too engaged with my surroundings to pay attention to myself. Always blaming others for my stupid booboos. It’s an expensive and an embarrassing problem, to say
the least, and one I’m sure I’ll take to my grave. I’m
no comedian, but it just goes to show that sometimes
nailing the punch line is a bitch, am I right? But hell, how
would I ever know, having never been much of a comic?
Like clockwork, Zeb conks out. The whole crew proceed to veer their heads over conveyor belts, around electric pallets driven by
speedbots or other indeterminate
nimrods and others squint toward
just beneath the balcony’s leftmost
stack of said pallets, (propping up
the goods, these), and there he is, sure
enough. It’s two minutes to conk-time
for Zeb, our man from Quality Control. “How does everyone know, though?”
asks a very green engineer, who’s just caught wind of Zeb’s condition (without even knowing from which cog in which wheel the old man’s home of imp-ment
spun). “Oh, you catch on real quick with Zeb,” someone was heard responding to a third or fourth question that the engineer has about this zonk-o conk-o
phenomenon. “So guess what? From 10:45 to about 3am, there isn’t a spare tab of quality in this entire warehouse,” he
helped contextualize.” “You mean....”
the engineer began in a bit of a stutter. “Yep, this place is one helluva blast for around four hours every night.” And both the questioner and answerer let out
Those who don’t know history are doomed. —from the trailer for HBO’s Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Happiness: An Almost History of America (2026)
I see the trailer early this afternoon while I’m frying up some vegetables and have put on a pot of rice for lunch, all goodies from yesterday’s trip to the weekly food pantry. Cooking takes up
a lot of precious time, and I find myself relaying this often. Is it because I don’t like to cook, or simply because I am lazy? No, I think the reason
is I’d rather be doing other things, like checking
off “to do” list items, making important phone calls (why are there so many of these, they seem to propagate exponentially as time goes) (and does it ever go!), reading, writing, posting new pieces
to my 21-year-old online daily project (this one!). Anyway, there’s not much else to say about that
opening line except that it resonates too well. I’m
tired of being didactic, of feeling a need to preach or
teach (it’d mostly be to the converted, anyway, given
the tiny ways I go about such things) (activism— will I ever resign myself to at least acknowledging that it’s a responsibility I do take rather seriously,
and one within which I choose not to explicitly operate, certainly not in any traditional sense, except perhaps,
again, in these lines, which, as noted earlier, is preaching
to the converted, I suppose). Did I quickly type it up just
to remind myself of this, to nudge myself into trying new ways to make a difference? I suppose it is a bit too obvious. In that deceptively profound way. But it must not be obvious to everyone, if I am correct. It is
to the folks in that category I should send such a reminder?
But if I am right, how would I reach any for whom that notion
wouldn’t begin to register? Would convincing be possible? How
the nastiness of political division and—dare I say it?—sheer
and mandated ignorance have made it seem imperative
that even I do something, anything, if a single thing can
even be done about such a dilemma. Surely something can
be done, there are surely many possibilities, but each avenue
I can imagine in which I’d make a difference (like kindly and
gently doing my best to encourage without coming across as if
I’m proselytizing, as if I am preaching or teaching) would require
devoting my life to the cause. And how would I know that my
values are even the right ones? I decided long ago against such a
commitment to be a loudspeaker. And so the values I find imperative
and the history that has me scattering them at times within thesse lines
that are likely to be never seen by any of the multitude of individuals
for whom such notions might assist persists. So I keep doing as I
do, all the while pondering how important it is go further, to find
at least a balance between devotion to a cause or two and my otherwise hedonistic or artistic or financial tendencies. So that
in the end have I taken down this little quote from a cute, perhaps poignant new Larry David comdy coming out this year on television simply to verify that a cynic, a comedic celebrity, is doing more to make
the world a better place than I ever will (even if on HBO), to remind
me of my cowardice? No. It is something I already know. As I also know that I have perhaps made a tiny difference, if indeed my basic ideas of morality and a pretty full lifetime intent upon educating
myself and trying hard to maintain (what I determine in my little head)
how I should be in order that I might make a difference and live a
life I can be happy to have lived, doing my part— if that means
anything. But it will never be enough. It’s never enough. This
afternoon I shall attempt to own that. The hyperbolic corruption
and immorality of this era, this backwards movement away from progress, this nightmarish regress, something I’d never known until recently in my short life of mostly impatiently but sometimes gleefully enjoying living in a land of three steps forward and two
steps back—followed by three solid steps forward—this blessed
repetition has suddenly reversed course, seemingly ten-fold in speed. I am a coward, it is true, and perhaps even moreso by saying it. If you exist, you no doubt already know this. And for that I apologize, knowing
that act is but pouring fuel on the fire that is leading us back to the Dark Ages, and I’m in goose-step with the masses, complicit in our destruction. Nothing I can say could possibly justify it. And yet I say it anyway. Unless, of course, this gives me (or perhaps
an imaginary you) the gumption to help put on the brakes in an attempt to reverse course. About face! I can hardly walk, much
less turn 180 degrees, barely able to breathe. Enough excuses! I’m
old. Perhaps an adventure would help me recapture my motivation,
regain some energy. Who’s up for an adventure? Oh, but it’s time
for a nap. Here in the isolation booth, I decide to sit motionless. Is
that staying the course? Does it alter a destination? To lie in sleep and
dream with satisfaction that to do nothing is a ‘step’ in the right direction.