Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Business Casualty

One reason that I prefer job interviews in person:

Dec 23, 2024, 10:58 A

Hi Jonathan,

I hope this message finds you well! As the holiday season is upon us, I wanted to take a moment to check in with you and wish you a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! 🎄

It’s been a pleasure working with you, and I hope this time of year brings you joy, relaxation, and some well-deserved rest. If you're actively considering new opportunities or would like to update me on your job search, I’d love to hear from you.

Looking forward to connecting with you in the new year. Enjoy the holidays, and stay safe and warm!

All the best,
 
Brendan ***** 
Recruiting Manager
KBW Financial Staffing & Recruiting
[...]


Dec 30, 2024, 3:06 PM

Mr. *****,

     Thank you for the form letter. Obviously, you still have my contact info in your address book from a Zoom interview in September 2022 which was memorable only because you had your camera oddly angled so that you were only visible from the chin up. Your pleasure of working with me never occurred beyond the day of that interview which is the last time you contacted me prior to this correspondence.

Happy Kwanzaa. 
 
Jonathan

Saturday, December 28, 2024

What do monks eat?

Banana phones
on peanut butter ears
Lips are the sandwich
through which fluff and jelly squeeze

Some monks hung themselves
years ago
I don't know the reason
I arrived too late
The television waits for no one

What do monks eat?
Peanut butter and Dalai?

Maybe I could be a monk
I'm selling so many possessions
for bills and simplicity
I already shave my head
on a regular basis

But then again,
as I am reminded,
I could never ask a boy
to suck my tongue

Ginsberg was a Buddhist

What do monks eat?
Pedo butter and Dalai
Nambla Buddhaya


©2024 JMS

Thursday, December 26, 2024

Quintet for Vulgarian and Office Drone, Throwing Out Love Notes

Quintet for Vulgarian and Office Drone








Throwing Out Love Notes
Yesterday marked 11 years of Sobriety, Phase II so I celebrated by publishing two new eBooks of short stories and prose.

QUINTET FOR VULGARIAN AND OFFICE DRONE
     A crude quintet of arbitrarily humorous urban scenarios involving offices and orifices. Four fictional snatches of city life and a final farce dedicated to anyone who ever compromised their integrity for job security.

Available at Apple Books and Barnes & Noble. Coming soon to Kindle. More retailers at https://books2read.com/u/31avdD


THROWING OUT LOVE NOTES (rambling and rhyme 1991-2024)
     A selection of past blog posts, lyrics and unpublished verse that covers the spectrum from fact to fiction. Some of it is tongue in cheek, some in character, some is me as I really am. I will leave it to the reader to discern the truth from the bullshit.

Available at Apple Books. Coming soon to Kindle and Barnes & Noble. More retailers at https://books2read.com/u/3yJYGZ

Thursday, December 19, 2024

Kidney Diddler

Having my usual breakfast of coffee and milk without food. The king arrives home from dialysis and immediately burns himself an omelette the size of six eggs.

   I hear him in his room choking on his food as he eats in front of the television. The burnt stench lingers downstairs and would curb my appetite if my stomach wasn't already full with coffee.

   An hour later, he is talking to himself in the kitchen as he microwaves a large plate of raw fish sticks. I wonder how truthful he is about his diet to the dialysis staff. His remaining kidney should shrug.

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Animal Fam






















 

This is what it's like to live
with a compulsive eater
who doesn't get the hint
and views his kidney dialysis
as a "Get out of jail free" card.

Guess which side
of the refrigerator
is King Anthony.






He switched
one of his shelves with mine
and didn't think I would notice.

In the time
it took him to do that,
he could have walked
five steps to the sink
and rinsed the shelf.


Anthony is the epitome of laziness and gluttony.
He never paid a grocery bill out of his own pocket until my father's dying day.
Even now, he lives off money that my father left behind.

He is now legally a senior citizen and eats like a child
collecting empty ice cream cartons under his bed.

Watching his collection of 1000 DVDs
on the old kitchen TV
that he unplugged as I was watching it
and took to his room to replace the one
that he burned out watching his shows,
his new imaginary friends
because my father was the only one
who could bear a conversation with him.

A prep school dropout who drinks my milk and adds water
as though I won't notice the difference in taste.
He claims he doesn't drink milk
then buys a jug if I give it up for two weeks.

I started pre-mixing my milk with iced coffee.
He talks to himself louder and longer now.
I wonder if caffeine is good for the kidneys.
I hope not.

Popcorn at 3 am
waking up the neighbors.

I keep my popcorn locked in my room
after I forgot about a jar I hardly ate
and found it almost empty a month later.

I buy a roll of paper towels.
It disappears in three days.
He claims he doesn't use paper towels.

I hide the roll and it lasts a month.
He wipes his mouth with toilet paper.
How appropriate.




Guitar Hoard

Letting go of the ego and the byproduct of hoarding. I need the money anyway. I'm reserving my time and energy for my classical in the event of opportunity.


•Fender DG-60 acoustic 6-string (2010) with gig bag, original owner. $275

   This guitar was used on Fingers In The Forest (all tracks), Apocalyptic Sunset At Harvard ("Santa's Last Buzz"), Every Man And Every Woman Is A Star Market ("RIP F'in Covid Breeder"), and the single "Curcuma Morta".

•Alvarez RD2012U acoustic 12-string (2001) with gig bag. $400






•Kimberly electric jazz mandolin (1960s?) with case $400

   Originally sunburst, repainted body and parts, visible surface cracks. Replacement jazz bridge and saddle, otherwise original parts. Original saddle and extra strings included. The nameplate and original bridge were lost by an associate who offered to repaint it black when he had a job painting pianos. I subsequently painted over his paint job years later at the same time that I repainted my Les Paul. 

•Road Runner ABS A-style mandolin case $60

   Original owner, barely used. Outside is solid with some scuffing, interior in excellent condition. I bought this for a beautiful antique Custodio Cardoso Pereira mandolin made in Portugal (see below), one of many personal belongings that have been "mysteriously" damaged by a geriatric child with a history of touching things that don't belong to him (thousands of dollars of damage between my belongings and those of my father as well). I bought the mandolin to keep but wound up reselling it as-is. The buyer didn't want the case so it's been taking up space in the basement for the past decade.

(I came across a reproduction of my eBay ad here
if you want to see more photos.)

Reasonable offers considered. No dealers, please.

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Meet the new blog...

This was meant to be an era of changes for me and so it was though not exactly the ones that I had in mind.

For one thing, I’m starting the second era of this blog on a new page due to an unexplained loss of administrative privileges on the original blog, thus preventing me from updating the design that is no longer relevant. It can be still be viewed for comparative purposes in terms of design and content, some at which I cringe in retrospect but choose to keep in place because some is still relevant. Two of my greatest personal faults are my hesitant honesty and contempt for spin in the form of historical revisionism. Ego is a two-way street.

Skimming the last few entries of the original blog, my last long-form attempt to be the sober equivalent of Hunter S. Thompson cum Howard Stern, prior to my jump off the wagon, was in January 2008.

A lot has changed since then. A lot of loss. I lost my job at the State Lab in Boston. I lost my parents. I lost seventy pounds.

Also a lot of gains. I regained sobriety for myself at the end of 2013 as well as for my father a bit over a year later. His final years were the first time that we got to know each other sober at the same time. I gained minor artistic credibility (minus the implied financial reward) in certain indie circles when I resumed composing music.

At the beginning of 2013, I added a short entry with the line: “Egos are amazing creatures, especially when they lie as required.” I look at some of the entries in the old blog with amusement and aforementioned cringe, portraying myself with an intentionally farcical heterosexual creepiness enacted against fictitious females of various ages.

A major change in my life, neither a loss or gain, occured when I finally came out c. 2009 or so, slightly forced when I filed a formal complaint with GLAD against a Boston cop who liked harassing men in the vicinity of the Fenway Gardens for as little as walking down the street. My reason for being in the neighborhood at all was that I got a gym membership at the Gold’s Gym at Fenway Park on the recommendation of a female coworker. I would later learn that two other State Lab coworkers with a history of antagonism were daughters of police officers. I’ve pondered the coincidence ever since.

Thus began my entrance into the world of gay bars, another story for another post. I marched in Boston Pride in 2011 and lost my job at the State Lab a few days later (I had been on a paid suspension based on anonymous and vague complaints from heterosexual coworkers).

In the midst of MCAD proceedings that ultimately ruled against me for reasons of limitations, my mother died. It didn’t help matters that I was in a toxic roommate situation so I began a nightly ritual at the local Beer Works, where I began wasting my savings on my one meal of the day (I stopped buying groceries after my roommates stole nearly an entire pound of cheese from the frig before I even had a slice).

I eventually moved back in with my father on his offer, intended as a temporary move but I wound up playing caretaker after a number of issues with my eldest brother, another story for another post.

 After my father’s death a few years ago, I gained a refreshed perspective on my relationship with my parents, much of will be the subject of future posts, my mother in particular. As a preview, I offer a glimpse in the form of this old school photo, fourth grade, Horace Mann North.

My final Christmas with my mother, when we pretended to be a family after she expressed mixed emotions about my coming out, had a prescient sense of doom, probably enhanced from the meds.

Oh, did I forget to mention my suicide attempt and subsequent stints in a couple psych wards (the second stint set up by a small-time dealer who works with teens at his day job and implied that I was a “rat”)? Another story for another post.

Anyway, my sense of impending doom inspired me to pull out the family photos “one more time” (stored in piles in ZipLoc bags because my parents never got around to buying albums for some reason). The photo as you see it here is how I found it as well as one of my other brother who was the only other family member to move out from under my mother’s evil eye. My mother didn’t know how the faces on the pictures came to be scratched all over, or so she claimed in a defensive tone. After her death, I found one of her own childhood portraits vandalized in a similar manner. She projected self-image issues and did not like her picture to be taken for years, often wearing sunglasses in public. I have a couple photos and videos that I snuck of her, working in the kitchen five months before her death, the only ones from the last twenty or thirty years of her life other than her driver’s license.

I can’t remember what I got her that final Christmas though I remember giving my father R. Crumb’s illustrated version of The Book of Genesis, still sitting on the bottom shelf of the TV table as I’m typing this. I wonder if he bothered to read it. There are a lot of things I’ll be wondering about from hereon.