Recorded live at the Middle East Corner in Boston on April 26, 2017. The Reverend Kevin P. O’Brien, The Droimlins, Duncan Wilder Johnson and Jim Healey were also on the bill.
Recorded live at the Middle East Corner in Boston on April 26, 2017. The Reverend Kevin P. O’Brien, The Droimlins, Duncan Wilder Johnson and Jim Healey were also on the bill.
Recorded live at Brewerytown Beats in Philadelphia on October 25, 2017. Bevan McShea and Charlie O’Hay were also featured.
There is no reality except the one contained within us. That is why so many people live such an unreal life. They take the images outside of them for reality and never allow the world within to assert itself.
-Herman Hesse, Steppenwolf
Up until 30 minutes ago you had no idea what I did for a living and now you know more than me? Great. I should just quit and write poetry.
-theoriginal_jem on Instagram this week
The trouble with these people is that their cities have never been bombed and their mothers have never been told to shut up.
-Charles Bukowski
Sometimes I write just to keep from falling. It’s been the luckiest goddamn thing, the writing. The other, well, we all have our row to hoe, don’t we Sister? Some of us toe the line, we fit in to their scheme nicely, or we want to and our days are orderly, it all makes sense or it will someday. The rest of us run slipshod, in turns raw with fear and bold with alacrity, pioneers of lost and lonely kingdoms, we answer to none and don’t tell anyone. As treacherous as it gets it’s still safer than living in their world. I don’t know what kind of voodoo’s been run down on me but–I burn out now on crazy, faster than ever before. The IG quote above is from an unfortunate interaction on social media this week. I spoke on corporate culture, which I gladly know nothing of, and should’ve just kept my mouth shut. On the other hand I wouldn’t have known this person to be so self-identified with it–square life. I can’t speak to it. I can’t recommend the road I took. I’m not proud of it, it still confuses me–but I’ll never suffer anyone’s shame of it. Out of necessity, really. Believe me, I’m plenty enough ashamed on my own, that I couldn’t make it, do the thing and participate. I just happen to be more ashamed of them and their life–the squares. Which obviously, and again out of necessity, is a perfect intro for this week’s post.
I’m terrified. I struck out again, left my gig of 5 years. Couldn’t hang there anymore. It was the longest job I ever had–which isn’t to say I’m irresponsible. I could never stick around long enough to let time get on me, which is what happens. Familiarity can be a pecking away, unless it’s from people who you love but even then sometimes you’ve got to get away. I never met a more concentrated group of horrible people than I did at my last gig and living where I did, but I never stayed anywhere longer than a couple years either. The problem is the Fear. I’m suffering good Reader. My karma’s wearing me down. I can’t do it, out here, without some soulsucking handjive day paying jerkaround. Know what I’m saying? It’s fucked and I feel fucked. Terrible depths of despair until I take to the outdoors and the sun and the trees of Hyde Park take me like a familiar but distant planet. I can let go a little, on my walkabouts here, and forget for a spell that the future looks as fucked to me as the past and I don’t know how I’ll ever get this rig unwound.
I got some side hustles. Little time sucks for gas and food money. I’m not starving to death. I’m booking ’em, too. December’s shaping up and 15 $100 gigs still seems doable, on paper anyway. I’m interviewing for another caregiving position tomorrow, I got irons in the fire for everything from moving furniture to hauling trash. Everything’s fine and I’m terrified. I regret my decision and pretty much every other one I’ve had to make since I first stepped foot to this savage road over twenty years ago. I don’t think I’ll make it most days. The wisdom, I guess, is I never thought I would but yet here I am. It’s been heavy, man, and harrowing. Second to second sometimes. It does add up, though, I’ve got a body of work. Three books in and my stuff is getting better and better. Storytelling is second nature to me now. It only takes a draft or 2 before I can take it to the boards and tell it under the hot lights. Writing is still one of the only failsafe things that will save me. Refuge. Most days feel like falling until I’m beat by night’s billyclub, and then pulled off to dream silly dreams in some thick veldt between lust and madness. I think I’ll make it, after all, even if it never feels like it. She wouldn’t last a day.
See you in the territory motherfucker.
I quit my job of 5 years and worked my last shift Tuesday night. When I got this gig I was scared straight. My Unemployment Compensation had run out and I’d been overpaid. I owed (owe) $1,645 to the state. I was doing promotions work and hospice care. Shit went from blue to black. On the other hand, the months of extended leave from shift work and days of liquid gambol gave my writing some swagger. It was out front and walking around. My poetry, always bold, gained confidence. My prose, too-from weeks of forcing myself to sit here and post, and sending out long and angry letters to the world. What I found, driving drunk and falling through the Night Kitchen, was the vast and rolling fields of my psyche. By devoting to the muse above all she gave me continuous inspiration. She still does and will. All’s I’ve got to give her is time.
There’s been talk of going straight, parlaying the longest work history I’ve ever had into a note, or loan, and get a condo while I can. Luckily I have a friend who told me that ain’t me, and she was right. Riding around town today, down South Congress and Nathan Hamilton came on shuffle…sooner or later, we all hit the wall. I haven’t been in a good mood in way too fucking long. Driving down South Congress Avenue in the warm sun, with the rockabilly skyline giving rise is often what my good mood looks like. I won’t say I fell in love with Austin again, because the Austin I fell in love with is gone (Bro), but I let it all go and just took her for what she is–a cool town in the middle of nowhere. Some of the best roots music is still being written and performed down here. There are still sawdust joints like the Continental Club and the White Horse that remind me why I came. I pulled in on a heartbroke blue morning in May of 2009. That night I played Evangeline Cafe and I been runnin’ and gunnin’ ever since. I got tripped up here, though, at the mansion–I needed a home and gainful employment never existed in my world. It was always cash and carry, flying my jolly roger to the next hitch, room and situation. Not much has changed but everything’s different now.
I got my certification to teach Yoga. I put out 3 collections of poetry and prose (and wrapping work on my 4th). I’m taking to the territory, with only vague leads on employment. I’m not worried, maybe I should be, but what I know beyond a doubt is 2 years ago I realized it was too late for me. Too late to become who I always wanted to be. That I never rose to the occasion and fear got the best of me. I was being kept–by my Boss, this house and my situation. I was 40 and next thing I knew I was 42. I had to get out. There’s a whole lot of other shit I could say, to slag and distance myself from where I worked and where I was at for the last 5 fucking years of my life. I’ve somehow confused my life with the last 5 years, and hanging on by a thread when I look back, thinking–how could I have blown it so bad?
I still get excited about the creation of Art. I’m still writing songs that I must live up to, and can still prophesy and actualize with rock and roll on a Martin DR-S1. Poetry’s as necessary to me as self esteem. If I don’t squeeze one out every week or so, the bolts tighten in my mind and the world starts slanting down and there’s too much confusion and I can’t tell love from the blower man on the landscaping crew, and everybody’s high and no one cares, and everyone thinks we should go to War, and punk rockers die young at the age of 56, which is, I mean–it gets bad and poetry is necessary then. Which is far from ideal. Necessary.
Necessary sounds like those old scrapping days, playing it safe with no love or gamble. Necessary sounds like 50-hour weeks moving safes and pianos for $7.50/hr. Necessary is every job I’ve ever had, all the way back to 1987 when I was a 12-year old dishwasher at Martinichio’s Restaurant and delivered the Philadelphia Inquirer. A lot of things are necessary. I’ve removed most of them from my life. The creation of Art was thee necessary salve and in a lot of ways it still is–but there’s a bottom I won’t go to anymore. It’s very safe and sad. I’m not sure if I’ll need those blues or that abyss. I’m 42. I write poetry and I play music. Performing is one of the only places I feel completely me. Those hot lights are a prism. They burn doubt out of you and send out the good word of love. They let the people know. Survival isn’t celebrated enough. Then again, at almost 3 years sober, I don’t know how to celebrate anything anymore. I’m sure I’ll be floating a broom and glowering over some this is fucked wisdom again before too long, but–maybe not. Good reader maybe not. With no prospects and no real direction I know I’ve got to go this way. Take to the territory. It just feels right, and I’m gonna go with that. Time to GTFO.
See you in the territory motherfucker.
Since I started so late, I owe it to myself to continue.
–Charles Bukowski’s letter to John Martin
After fourteen years delivering and sorting the U.S. Mail, and at the age of 50 Henry Charles Bukowski began his first novel. John Martin (Black Sparrow Press) saw something in “Hank”, and offered him $100 a month to quit the Post Office and write full time. Hank started writing at the same exact time every day. It wasn’t an arbitrary time, but when he would’ve had to clock in to the Post Office–every day for over a decade working a job that was killing him. He finished the aptly titled Post Office in a month.
For many tragic and dull reasons, I don’t have any clear signposts in my life. No one took me under their wing and no one showed me the way. My Father wasn’t exactly a company man, which I admired, but he worked all the time, which I didn’t. My relationship with my elders was often toxic–I loathed what they’d become, or they were Christian, and I abhorred my hometown. I’ve no real world examples of how to live. I got some heroes, though, 3 to be exact. Of course Hank is one of them, the holy ghost of the trinity. Bukowski showed me the way.
Life happens to you. It’ll rattle you senseless. I don’t consider myself a great writer, but I’m happy with my work. I’m happy to work, above all, and that simplifies things. All people like me need is rent and a desk. We don’t seek more from life. We whittle our needs down. We need less and less and therefore have to work less and less hours at the job–until we don’t need anything. With a lack of social climb and without the flash of material wealth, the world will leave you be. We work the bare minimum at shit jobs that take the least from us. We’re not paid to think or feel or consider someone else’s dollar anywhere in the simple hierarchy of walls, food and art. It’s that simple, and beautiful, if impossible to explain to virtually anybody else.
What’s the sin in being poor? Chinaski asks in Post Office, when it’s clear all the county can do for his alcoholic girlfriend is let her die. Being poor can be devastating. For years I lived one gas bill or dental procedure from total poverty, but it wasn’t that bad. I probably could’ve called home if it really hit the fan, but–young and dumb and for years, the bar of sustainable catastrophe was constantly raised. I’ve had months in rooms 5×10 wide. I’ve lived without a phone or bathroom. I’ve lived in places that would make family and friends from back home blanch–for $150 a month in an unbeknownst health hazard. I lowered my rent every year for 5 years living in Philly, only ponying up to $500/month for a huge 1br on Buckingham Place because I came in to some money when my Father died–Life Insurance he had promptly paid all those years working. God bless him. After that place I got back to lowering my rent, and did so every year until I finally left Philly (and paying $135 a month for a room at 10th&McKean) for good on New Year’s Eve 07.
My next move is counter to the artist’s imperative to live way below my means. Moving across town, taking a roommate and paying $850ABP/month isn’t the same as being an artist full time. But what the fuck is? The rent’s steep, if Austin affordable, but it’s a sublet and I’m not locked in to the criminal contract you have to sign to get an apartment in Texas. I’m quitting my job of the last 5 years with no parlay, as of today I’ve nothing imminent, other than almost through applying for Uber and Instacart. I’ve some gigs booked, starting tomorrow, which isn’t nothing. My roster might not be robust but a couple to three hundred dollars is nothing to sneeze at while unemployed, even if all that can be sapped with one phone bill and a car insurance payment. It could be worse. It could always be worse. I could be banging 50 signs into the hard ground on the median of William Cannon for $50.
That was one of my first jobs in Austin, before I resigned to be a writer. The search for a day gig became a full time enterprise. I would sometimes work around the clock, get off graveyard and sleep until the afternoon when I’d head out for a promotions or catering gig. Nothing was guaranteed. I had to take everything that came my way because of course the money was shit and none of it was steady. Which was ridiculous, and not what I’d come over 1,600 miles for. It drove me to drink and write.
The shit hit the fan for this country in the financial crisis of 08, and by the time I came down in May of 09, competition was steeper than it should’ve been for the shit jobs I was applying for. It felt like a whole other level, especially considering I hadn’t worked in almost a year living with Laura. Looking back, 2-3 months really isn’t that long to be looking for a job and shit eventually turned. My 7.50/hr job filling book orders at the University COOP parlayed into a full time position at their warehouse on Real&Alexander. From there I got hired on at the Whip In, and when they laid me off I lived off unemployment compensation for a year after that–until I landed this gig. Five fucking years later and I’m heading back out into the America. This morning I started writing this at 8, which is when I’d have to get the old man out of bed. Something in me knows that as much as I hate the grind, I’ve got to love the real work that much more. Sleeping in is bullshit. Perks and the good life. I’m up against it now, the anxiety is dizzying and I’m immobilized with dread. I got up anyway, sat down here and got started like I’ve done thousands of times before, 497 times at Going For The Throat alone. I sat down and got to work. Like Hank. What else?
Proud and excited to announce this week’s post is featured on Medium! Please go there and show me some applause (icon of hands clapping at the bottom of, or just beside, the piece). Feel free to leave a comment, too, so they know we have arrived.
Thanks motherfucker!
It’s been a while but I am at a loss. The world may have gotten in more than it usually does but I haven’t been without inspiration since the early days at Going For The Throat. Those days the crisis was real. If I didn’t make it as a writer I’d be stuck behind a bar or working hospice for 9 an hour. Dressed like a Hershey’s Kiss on campus or test driving the Golfquick LE in Sugarland. My definition of “making it as a writer” is broad and wild. I can sit down and come up with 600 words out of thin air, and by keeping it simultaneously all too and not personal at all, the thing will find its legs and walk its way into you. The archetypes are free to roam. The fact that I’ve become a character in my own story, coupled with a 10-ton outrage and Black Irish honesty has made Going For the Throat a success. My definition of success, too, is unorthodox-but if anything is true about my 20+ year career trekking down the savage road of New Journalism, it’s that the medium is the message. That means that I’ve got my transmitter, just like in my Radio Days, and I can feel you out there listening. I’m a writer so I write. I still got a day gig, one that’s winding down, and I’m not 100 on what’s in store. I’m booking overtime-I hope to play every night and write every day. That’s been my dream and charge for as long as I can remember. “Writer’s Block” is less than a memory for me, but waking up today, fully clothed, in a dead confederate palace with all the curtains pulled back-is taking me back to when I knew I had to be a writer, and tried to do every day what I now do every week. Back then it was 1,200 and pure agony. I volleyed the imminent avalanche of self-hatred that would fall if I didn’t become a writer with the agony of coming up with 1,200 words every day. There was beer involved. And cigarettes you bet. It worked but it drove me out of my mind.
I’m just as fond of those hardbitten scoop days for what happened away from the desk. Hopping fences, getting shitty. Falling through the Night Kitchen, driving down dark barrio streets with my tongue in Gwendolyn’s teeth. My hangovers were grim back then, nothing compared to what was coming. It was beginning to get old but I saw no other way to assuage both the loneliness of writing and my utter dread of never becoming a writer-as the money ran out. I caught some breaks. I got a good job. I met Rich Okewole and Najla Assaf. I found my community. I was taken in by the good folks at the IPRC in Portland (and taken right back out by Trump’s America but that’s another story for another time). Perhaps my hesitation to pull the trigger this morning is indicative of the end of those Salad Days as a struggling writer. The gravy train has left the station. Of all my myriad blues and woe, movement seems to be the answer. As proud as I am of what I’ve become, I’m terrifed here at the midway. Possibilities that ain’t been realized won’t be and I could die at any time.
It’s got me shook. I quit my gig of 5 years, should be out October 1. I bought a car. I enrolled in this year’s SWRFA and sent 22 booking emails out into the Live Music Capital of the World, even canvassed West 6th. Survivors Wisdom tells me it’s time to grind it out, hit the road and stop being such a pussy. Maybe the truth is that struggle is over. Not this one, but that one. The battle with self can conclude. It’s I and I and a good night’s sleep contending for top place on my list of priorities. I’ve found myself. I am who I am. Cruel time has showed me who I am and branded me with the wisdom that there’s not enough time to change that now.
We both know there would never be enough time but that didn’t stop us before ain’t it though. We rebelled. We clanged against the deathhead, came for the Gods and offered them the head of the King. We bled for it, we had something to prove. It was useless, futile and fatal and the biggest waste of time. We squandered our youth. The youth is gone. It’s time to get off social media and take to the territory. Our lives depend on it. I got witchy women mixing up the medicine for me and an Ayurvedic scholar laying out a diet plan. I got Brother Don on the telephone and Sister Sarah at the other end of a computer screen. I’ve got friends like blood, holding vigil and corroborating and besides all this big love-a fear of death that is all too real. The prime motivator. The best time to hit it was a long time ago. The next best time is now.
I better see you on the streets motherfucker.
…it all just seems so sensationalized.
–Aziz Ansari
I know ppl like u think it’s “cool” to theorize about quantum fluctuations, but the heat death of the early universe isn’t something to romanticize.
–Frances Bean Cobain
…I say hey Janet
you are the one, you are the sun
and I’m your dutiful planet…
–Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds
This Guns N’ Roses weekend is over.
-Your Writer on Tour with Ironwhore, July 2005
Waking up with a hardon is the best thing to happen to me in years. Never mind I quit smoking, drinking and the Life, that I’ve published three collections of poetry and prose and survived as a working singer songwriter for the last 5 years, or that we just wrapped 4,484 miles pulling in to Hippie Town at 9pm last night. Waking up erect is good news from the Gods, like we’re gonna win this thing. Know what I mean, good Reader? As we were leaving Austin 19 days ago, it dawned on me that I probably have arthritis, if not in my left middle finger, then certiainly on my right thumb. Anyone reading this blog on the regular knows I haven’t caught my breath in over a year-and there are other, less savory conditions and maladies that’ve fell on me in these paling years, not the least of which being a lack of libido. I let it all slide, rather than jump through the bureaucratic hoops of health insurance that only led nowhere-but decreased interest in sex was, at the time, viewed as an improvement. Sex seemed to always land me in trouble somehow, and, by and large the partners I had were colossal wastes and the biggest drains of my time, on my health and my career as a day worker, writer and performer.
The truth is I’ve let a lot of things go. I’ve insulated myself from the world with this gig. I’ve maintained at minimum, and pushed harder when I needed to, but when I look back at the last 5 years and think about the fact that I’m 42, I’m terrified and disgusted-the former boring through nights pocked and shot through with anxiety, and the latter beating the opposite sex to the punch. I couldn’t fuck and I didn’t want to. It’s called depression, and low self esteem, which can intermingle in a vicious cycle that the worst people will blame you for, but actual compassion for, even if welcomed, can veer too close to commiseration and in any event is a shit substitute for understanding. The silver lining is the coffee’s done, it’s time to wake up, this gig is over in less than 2 months and, like the Buddhists say-the best time to start was last year, the next best time is right now. Lest we forget, I taught myself how to write these last 5 years, and the dream of being a columnist has been realized, thanks in no small part to you and your wonderful Readership. I’ve got a 2009 Monk’s Robe Orange Honda Element and a Tacoma Guild. I live in a post-gentrified Paradise and every dumb ailment and malady I’ve mentioned can be treated by swallowing a pill-ok, I still need to look into why I can’t catch my breath, it’s true, and wish me luck as I enter their world and try to get the help I need.
This blog has always been the balloon to my wet cement blues. I talk myself down from the noose here, and you read me and it’s perfect. Healing myself with my own medicine bag, sitting down to type and hang it on the fucking wall, feeling supported and, most of all, seen by you is terribly important to me-a rudder in the shitswells of a dark and calmitous world, the biggest boon and best thing to happen to me in years besides waking up with a hardon this morning. Oh yeah, that. It seems like the weeks get away from me. I mean, sure, I work full time, and I just spent 18 days on the road with my Boss, but time gets away from me-that is, the time to address the many peccadilloes and tragic breakdown I’ve been skirting since I turned 40. I feel like I should address it, tacitly, get up on it like Ahab, and chronicle the savage journey I’ve undergone since deciding to stop being depressed (I am NOT saying that this decision cured my depression AT ALL). Brother Bean has asked for it, in the past, and I feel like I’d do well to bring it back for you-hip you to the saga of a working class ex-Pat punkrocking rockabilly New journalist with a a whole lot of time on his hands, a new car and a rekindled libido. I’ll still try, good Reader. You bet. But I’ve got to wrap this. I still believe in my dreams and I feel like I’ve got something to live up to, until the next time we meet, so I should get cracking.
May your crown be a halo. See you next Thursday motherfucker.
Greetings from the wasteland and hello from the high rooms. I’m writing this from the War Room, a kitchen in an apartment of the last Confederate Governor of the U.S.’ old place, in sweltering downtown Austin. I’m writing it on a Monday so I can get the world off my neck. The afternoons are best for poetry but I blew it out yesterday with a poem so bitter I won’t be able to share it with anyone, except maybe the Devil himself. Although, when it comes to offending folks, the creation of Art usually wins out. As it does over: sentimentality, decency and even privacy-yep, all of these and especially privacy are rolled over in favor of getting product out. Be it a poem, blog post, Youtube clip or article-content trumps everything. Which isn’t to say I wanted to hurt you. That’s not true. There are some of you I was trying to hurt. At least I’m not trying to offend. Whoops. That’s not true either. What do you want from me? I’m a digital garbage man so stick out your can. If I don’t put out at least 600 words a week, black detritus piles up in my mind and I start weighing heavier and less savory options, if you know what I mean.
I started this blog 7 years ago, emulating Dr. Thompson and all but killing for his place on the pulse, his connectivity and prescience, his wit and high drama and even his gloomy war drum tone. His predictions always came home to roost, leading Frank Mankiewicz to dub him the “least factual but most accurate” reporter on the Campaign Trail in ’72-and we all know what’s happened since then. Trust me on this, Brother, if it got too weird for Hunter Thompson then you know we are in for one hell of a ride. Nutter’s Rule. I’ve written on it before. A future on the order of raining frogs and swarming clouds of locusts is all but imminent-because that is the power of dreaming and it’s all those Nutter’s could hope for. The music they play in mass alone should hip you to the sad imagination of folks who don’t have premarital sex and are afraid to die. In their defense, we’re all afraid to die-it’s just that some of us have the sense to understand the Wisdom that living their way is just like dying, so we may as well get on with it, which is probably what Dr. Thompson was thinking on that black day in Febuary 2005.
That’s what is wrong with my generation but don’t get me started on my generation. Or, do. It’s only Monday. My next 600 ain’t due up until sometime Thursday, and that’s plenty of time for me to examine my place in this culture and where I fit in to my Generation-because I certainly didn’t know it or fit in at the time. Shaving your head and donning braces and boots wasn’t popular where I come from. Neither was skateboarding, or doing anyting except getting your 12 year old girlfriend pregnant and drinking a case of Bush big boys at the trestle on a Friday night. Playing in a band wasn’t either, believe it or no, at least not the type of music we were playing-but we did it anyway. Of course I’d want to go back there, like the song says, but if I can’t then I’ll settle for the attitude we had back then. Because goddamnit, the Buddhists were right, attitude is everything. We did shit back then, that no one else was doing. Because we were bored and our parents didn’t care. We smoked and drank post-Nevermind, and we wrote. Those journals are gone, or burned, or on a shelf in a cold garage in Middletown, Delaware at my father’s house. It’s a shame what happened to those journals and the young idea is gone. We’re all alone in the New Century but connected somehow in the hall of mirrors of social media.
It’s all fucked and I guess it always was. The real kick in the balls is that never stopped me before. I haven’t been breathing right for the last year and a half. It’s been a long time that I should be far from here. I got a Monk’s Robe Orange 2009 Honda Element with 53,000 miles and some hail damage on it that bothers me way more than it should. I’ve got 64 copies of All in the wind’s pressing of 150 left, and orders are still coming in. I’ve got clips of me reading and telling stories that I shouldn’t post if I cared about certain poets in my commnuity’s feelings, which I don’t, so I will. In 23 minutes I’ll have to report back to my boss, smoke him out and make a dinner run. 5 years ago I walked out of the food service industry for good. I threw out my serving blacks and began the search for meaningful work. I’ll let you fill in the blanks as per if I’ve ever found it, and offer that the only meaningful work there is is for yourself. You can be a slave in the service of another but you’re still a slave. You can draw your own conclusions, of course, but I should’ve been gone 2 years ago, when I looked back at my life in horror and knew that if I stayed any longer I’d only be dying.
See you coming out the grave, motherfucker.