The Churning
21Oct/096

One of those life-changing moments

All right, buckle up kids. This one's going to take a while. It's embarrassing and I've hesitated to get into it. That being said, I can't believe I haven't told this story here yet. It's one of those life-changing moments that I'll never forget. A Flitcraft Episode if you will.

I was a total mess. Senior year of high school. I smoked weed and drank daily. Hell, I used to take swigs of port wine in the morning before school. Weed, whatever. Weed's good for you. But the alcohol was becoming a problem.

Somehow I managed to keep my grades up. I guess school just wasn't all that challenging. I ended up graduating and going to college and whatnot. So this story isn't exactly a cautionary tale.

I was heavily into indie rock and punk. I have blond hair, which I grew out to shoulder length dreadlocks. Real dreadlocks. Knotted up nappy hair in big chunky ropes. I guess I was a stoner. At least I looked like one. I wore ratty jeans with a white t-shirt. I added a flannel in cool weather. This was the 90's after all.

Around this time I became obsessed with Jack Kerouac and the Beat Generation. I had a dog-eared copy of the Dharma Bums that I must have read a dozen times. The lifestyle those guys led fascinated me. Allen Ginsberg and Neal Cassady and William Burroughs. They made alcoholism and drug abuse seem genuinely cool - the kind of shit creative people were into. So I drank and smoked weed and ate over-the-counter uppers. In retrospect I honestly think I was cool.

I'm getting off track. What I'm trying to explain is that I was a drunk. I was no where near the path to happiness and success. I was having fun and doing well in school, but I felt isolated and out of control. This was my mindset the day I hit bottom.

It was a random evening after school. Late spring or early summer. The sun was out and I was surrounded by friends. It seemed like a perfect day to waste some time outside smoking cigarettes and listening to music, so we piled into a couple of cars and headed toward the nearest open field.

We ended up a few miles from my family's house in Tampa. I drove my mom's car with a few other kids riding along. We parked on the edge of a large clearing, where we sat under the shade of a few trees. We were surrounded by a couple acres of undeveloped land. Car stereos blasted Pavement or the Flaming Lips or Mercury Rev as we knocked back a couple of beers, smoked a joint and bullshitted about nothing. Like Lou Reed might suggest - it was a perfect day.

As the sun started fading, we knew it would be time to head home soon - even though none of us really wanted to leave. The main road was all the way on the other side of the clearing, a half a mile away. We all reluctantly piled into our cars to start making our way home - to make the requisite appearance at the dinner table.

The first car took off toward the road, the driver revving his black pickup truck's engine, spinning his wheels in the grass. The second car followed close behind - a yellow Honda Prelude. That driver took it a step further, curving off to the left, then to the right, carving a dirt path in the grass field as he spun out onto the road.

I was in the driver's seat of my mom's white stick-shift Mustang. A friend rode shotgun with another guy in the backseat. I was about to get moving when I looked over at my passengers. We all sort of nodded in unison and agreed we should put on our seat belts. Driving slowly and cautiously toward home was not an option.

We buckled up and I floored it. Grass shot up behind us as the car finally caught some grip. We tore off through the field and I curved left. The car spun out and bounced around on the uneven ground. I swerved back over to the right. The car's rear passenger-side wheel lifted up a little as we spun around nearly in a full u-turn. I turned back toward the main road and started picking up some real speed. Maybe twenty yards from the exit, I pulled the steering wheel once more, trying to spin us around in a full circle. Instead, the driver's-side front wheel dug into the earth.

The car twisted like soft metal as the right rear wheel lifted high off the ground. The front end of the car dug further in under the pressure. It all happened in slow motion. The car slowly upended itself, rolling over. In a split second, the car was completely upside down - chassis hanging out in the open air, windshield smashed into the dirt. A fucking Ford Mustang. 25th anniversary edition.

The glass of the windshield was folded in, just inches from my face as I hung upside down, held in by the shoulder strap of my seatbelt. I looked back at my friends and saw they were in the same situation. Just inches from death, dangling by a nylon strap.

The car's body was crumpled badly enough that we had to kick the doors open to get out. Once outside we did what any logical teenagers might do do rectify the situation, we tried to flip the car over with our bare hands. Three teenage boys. The thing didn't even move. I remember even picking some grass out of the rims, hoping it wouldn't be obvious what had happened.

I soon realized we were completely fucked. We walked maybe a mile to the nearest house so I could call my parents for help. This was way back in ancient history before high school kids had cell phones.

We walked back to the scene of the crime to wait for my parents who said they'd call a tow truck. When we arrived, the car was not alone. A single police cruiser was parked nearby, and the cop was patiently waiting to have a word with me.

He sat me down in his car where he asked a few questions. Luckily there was no property damage aside from the Mustang. And I didn't appear drunk. He took down some information to submit his report as we waited for my parents to arrive.

My mom and dad both showed up. They were followed by a tow truck as promised. The driver flipped the Mustang over and got it ready to cart off to the shop. We all knew there was no saving it. The thing was totally crushed.

My parents were relatively calm through the whole ordeal. I guess there were so many details to deal with, they didn't really have a chance to freak out. A cop, a tow truck driver, a totaled car, and three embarrassed teenagers. They had their hands full.

That night after my friends made their way home and I climbed into bed, I immediately knew life was going to be different. What was I doing? I was acting like a complete asshole. Getting blackout drunk in downtown Tampa and sleeping on a park bench with the homeless, nearly getting arrested in Ybor City for open container violation at age 18, knocking back a handful of ephedrine I bought at a shady truck stop thinking it was the same as Jack Kerouac eating goofballs. Those are all stories for a different day. The point is, I was a wreck.

So as much as I loved my friends and even though I was having insane amounts of fun, I knew I had to make a change. And for some people this might be the weird or shocking part of the story: I didn't decide it was time to quit drinking or doing drugs. Instead, I decided to focus on school without necessarily cutting back on my addictions.

I cut nearly all contact with my friends, electing to spend evenings in my room reading with a joint or a bottle of port wine in hand. I focused on English and science and Buddhist philosophy, with a minor in getting wasted. A couple months later I graduated with Honors and enrolled in college. I didn't even wait until fall. I started right away that summer.

Three years later, I graduated college - again with Honors. There are plenty of stories to tell about those few short years and I may get to more of that eventually. The weirdest thing to me is this: I had such close friends in high school. People I spent hours and hours with every day. People who knew all my secrets. Then one day I crashed a car and suddenly decided it was time to move on. I completely dropped them. It wasn't until maybe 15 years later that I finally came back in contact with some of the old group. And that was mainly due to MySpace and Facebook. Things certainly have changed for all of us since then.

I heard recently that there were some rumors about me back then. I sort of dropped off the face of the earth after that day, so people guessed that maybe I ended up in rehab or even tried to kill myself. In reality, I simply vanished - moved away to college and cut all ties to my old life. It was the first of two Flitcraft moments in my life. The other happened nearly 15 years later. Another story for another day I suppose.

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23Apr/092

Japan vs. America in the war of etiquette

I probably mentioned this at some point or another… I took a couple of years of Japanese in college – plus a few courses on Japanese culture. And I visited Japan for a couple weeks back in the 90’s.

Anyway… In Japan, people seem to think Americans are terribly full of themselves - cocky and pretentious (though they would never say it outright). Among other reasons, it has something to do with the fact Americans accept compliments and thanks with what we perceive to be politeness.

“Thank you for your hard work.”
“You’re welcome!”

“Congratulations on the baby.”
“Thanks!”

“Wow – you’re a great public speaker.”
"Thank you!”

From the Japanese viewpoint, the correct responses would be:

“Thank you for your hard work.”
"It was nothing. I am only as good as the team.”

“Congratulations on the baby.”
“That is not necessary. I am humbled by your words.”

“Wow – you’re a great public speaker.”
“Honestly, I am really not very good. But I am working on it.”

I thought of this cultural difference the past couple weeks as multiple people say congrats about my wife and I having our first baby or tell me my baby is cute/pretty. I can't really take much credit and I'm tempted to give a Japanese inspired response. All I did was ummm... plant the seed. Still I always say “Thanks!” like a true American.

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3Nov/080

A constant reminder of my outcast status

During the first school week in first grade, my teacher gave all the students an assignment: draw a self portrait. She gave us each a sheet of paper and a box of crayons and told us to get started. Even looking back on it now, that's a pretty daunting task for a 6 year old. And to add to the pressure, she told us she was going to hang all of the drawings on the wall. She said she'd place our name under our picture to help the students remember each others' names. That means it should be at least somewhat of a realistic portrayal.

I didn't even know where to start. Should I draw a profile? A full body head-to-toe picture? I looked around the room, trying not to look like I was cheating (not that that's even possible for a self portrait). It seemed like the other kids were sticking to mug shot style drawings. Most of the kids around me had started by drawing a big oval. I followed their lead and pulled out the black crayon.

I drew sort of an egg shape on the sheet of paper, then added to circles for eyes and a big semicircle for a smile. Not a bad start really. By this point I was feeling pretty confident. My picture wasn't awful. The border of the egg shape was nice and smooth, and the eye circles were perfectly round. I was moving right along now.

I decided I had to give my picture some characteristics that would let the other kids know it was me - some uniqueness. I have blond hair and blue eyes. Easy. I added some yellow lines for hair and a couple of small blue circles for my eye color. Not bad. But it felt like something was missing. The picture had the bright areas of yellow and blue, but mostly it was black lines on a white background.

Ahh yes! Skin tone. I wanted to fill in the face with some skin color, so I scanned the crayon box for something appropriate. Nothing. No "flesh" or "tan" colors. I was using the classic Crayola 8 pack.

I mulled over the decision for a few minutes then decided to go with the closest color I could find. I pulled out the orange crayon and started filling in one cheek. It looked kinda weird, but maybe that's because I had only filled in a small section. I moved on to the other side of the face, then the nose area, then the chin. Soon, my entire face was filled with bright orange. It looked terrible, but I could only assume that all the other kids had the same problem. In that moment, I remember thinking the black kids in class were lucky that Crayola included "brown" in the 8 pack.

The teacher started wandering around the room, collecting everyone's drawings. As she lifted up each sheet, I started to notice that some of the other kids left their faces white. They didn't bother to color it in. I thought maybe they were lazy or slow. I pitied them.

The teacher finished collecting the papers and then hung them up on the wall one by one. She started on the top left corner of one wall, and put them all in a row from left to right across the top of the entire wall. As she tacked up each picture, I began to realize that it wasn't just a handful of slackers who forgot to fill in their skin color - it was everyone. Even the black kids left their faces white.

She hung up maybe 15 pictures before she got to mine. And as each picture was revealed, my actual face turned redder and redder with my growing embarrassment. By the time she got to mine, it felt like my skin was on fire. I was sweating. Then she got to my picture. It would have been more realistic if I had used red instead of orange.

Of course all the other kids laughed when they saw it. And who could blame them. This is probably the first life event I can remember where I felt truly different. All I wanted in the world was to be like all the other kids. My orange face remained on the wall for weeks, surrounded by all those white faces, a constant reminder of my outcast status.

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12Jun/084

Updates on JJ

I've been intentionally vague lately, sparing you the gory details of my personal life. A few people have asked for some updates and I'm willing to share a couple of highlights.

I'm divorced now. The whole process took several months, but it was not as difficult as it could have been. No children, no squabbles over material possessions, etc. I dealt with the whole thing online and through the mail. No court dates or anything.

I moved out of my last house in August. I moved into an apartment with my girlfriend Lulu (who has since become my fiancee). Then a couple of months ago, I bought a house.

That is what I am willing to say for now. Oh - and I want you all to know that I am happy and healthy.

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1May/083

Blame My Niece

A few years ago... maybe in 2004 or so... my niece Jill told me that she communicated with her friends primarily through instant messaging. She would sit at her computer for hours just typing away to other teenagers out there in internetland somewhere. I thought it seemed weird. Why wouldn't they just talk on the phone like normal people?

Then a couple months later, my pal Ev told me about his blog. He and his friends were posting personal stories and whatnot on some random website every day for complete strangers to read. Super odd. Why would anyone want to share their personal shit with the world? And who cared enough to read about it?

And around that same time in my life, I had one email account that I checked maybe once a week. If someone needed to reach me, it would be more efficient to drive to my house and knock on my door than to email me. They'd get a faster response anyway.

I really don't know what changed, but it happened very quickly. I joined Ev's blog, then another, then started my own. I set up separate email accounts for my various websites. I tested the waters with a few different instant messaging systems. Blah blah blah.

Now I'm fucking addicted. I have a cell phone that buzzes every time I receive an email to any one of my 5 email accounts. I have profiles on who knows how many social networking sites (MySpace is the only one I pay any attention to). I communicate via IM every chance I get. I far prefer it over the phone. In fact, my entire relationship with my fiancee Lulu was forged via IM. And even when I do use my phone, I almost always send a text message instead of calling.

I have a few friends that are like me in this sense. Web addicted. And there are others who still check their email maybe once a week or don't necessarily respond to emails when they read them. Somehow I've lost that ability. If I get an email, I usually respond within minutes.

I really had no idea where I was going with all of this rambling... but I just thought of a good way to wrap this all up: If you are my friend and I don't call you as often as I probably should, maybe try sending me an email or a text. Or look for me on Google chat. Or hit me up on MySpace. Or leave a comment on my blog. I'll respond.

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