Friday, January 23, 2015

Whitey Sings The Blues

Starting my new job means new routines, and as the king of rituals, I follow them with swiss-precision. I leave the house at 7:20 every morning now, which kind of blows, although I like being done at 4:00 PM and having the rest of my day open. I only live about 6 blocks from the Shop as the crow flies, so the commute is quick. Unfortunately, I'm not a crow so I don’t fly there, meaning it’s a choice of main-drag arteries that are already clogging up with morning traffic, or a shortcut back through the industrial badlands. I think the shortcut is actually geographically farther, but still quicker because I’ve pretty much got the road to myself. I have a tendency to prefer motion to efficiency.

The shop sits on the far side of a blockade of industrial complexes and factories that feed the local bars and strip clubs at quitting time. This warren takes up a considerable chunk of midtown between Main St. and the Freeway, forcing everyone to circumvent. There are these huge cooling ponds for some function of the monstrous pulp mill, outgassing in great plumes so that it kind of stinks over there when the wind blows wrong, which it always does.This back route is a convenient way to jump past the occasionally ill-timed railroad cars that jam up traffic both coming and going to work, but you have to watch out for the pettibones, crummies, and log trucks that have pretty much pulverized the macadam into cracked desert hardpan. One nice thing is that the school bus never runs back there, so once I make it past the first three residential blocks I’m in the clear.

I always make sure to do the speed limit through those blocks, since I live in constant fear of killing a kid with my giant Sprinter Van ever since my Niece Kailee was killed by a drunk driver. All these kids have morning rituals of their own to keep, just loitering about waiting for the bus as they form alliances based on random geography, screaming challenges and insults at each other. It seems wise to spare the horses through that impoverished isthmus of dilapidated duplexes and rentals, with all those cars up on blocks, dogs running wild, and yardsale junk piled up on the sides of their houses. This kind of blight isn’t unusual in a blue collar burg, especially since it abuts such an unsavory tract of the city where there is round the clock toiling and a constant, insectile hum to accompany the sulfurous malodor. The only people who would choose to live adjacent to that are people who don’t have choices.

Once I’ve run the gauntlet of kids, feral cats, and zombified carpoolers honking their invitations to start the morning, I reach one of only two stop signs that separate me from work, at the intersection of 40th and Industrial Avenue (Yeah, it’s actually called that. How imaginative). From thence, I punch it up to Warp velocities,  trying not to spill too much coffee in my lap as I sprint for the shop, because if I’m even a minute late there’s nowhere to park. Before that though, I still have to clear that last residential corner without pegging one of the warring factions of tweens waiting at the end of the line for their ride. At Industrial, I have to make either a left or a right to detour around this impassable demilitarized-industrial complex. Left is the shortest route, so I look that way first every morning, which is when I see him. Whitey.

Whitey is a stocky kid, at least 10 but probably not 12. Fair skinned, blondish hair, with a smattering of freckles across the bridge of his nose and cheeks. Every single day he wears a sports jersey as his shirt for school. Hockey, basketball, football, he doesn’t seem to discriminate, always a different name and number stenciled across his back. I’ve never seen the same jersey twice, and sometimes he wears just the jersey when he really ought to be wearing a jacket or hoodie because it's cold out. Which tells me that he’s glommed onto sports as the identity he’s going to wear as his armor. He’s almost always standing alone on that industrial dead end corner with his big, over-the-ears style headphones, and appears to be mumbling the lyrics as he shuffles his feet and bobs along to the music only he can hear. Some days it calls to mind clear, sweet memories of my own days at the bus stop, listening to Huey Lewis and caterwauling about how I wanted a new drug.

Day after day I see Whitey standing under the inexplicably still-illuminated street light, check out what team he’s rooting for, then make my left and we’re Northwest bound and down. It’s gotten to be such a habit now that I kind of think of him as a little buddy—a landmark of sorts—but I resist the urge to wave since guys who drive giant, windowless vans should make no attempt to connect with a child in any way. It’s just not done. My very existence is a cause for withering stares from every mother, regardless of my harmless intentions. Nothing to be done about it.

Whitey is right on the cusp of either being a stout, athletic type of kid, or a husky one on his way to type-two diabetes and a school career of mockery. You just can’t tell by looking at someone which way they’ll go. His bobbing and singing to the music could be the iconic trait of a leader who doesn’t care what anyone thinks, or it could be the eccentricity of a kid who’s got a long road in front of him. It’s hard to tell from the three second drive-by I get each day. 

The kids along rental row all seem to be at war with each other, shouting things across the streets at their neighboring tribes as they wait for the yellow mayhem machine to take them to the Darwinian Thunderdome of Middle School. A couple of times I’ve seen a tall, skinny kid yelling at Whitey, and for some bizarre reason felt the urge to stop, hop out and throttle the little bastard. But Whitey just seems to ignore him and continually bobs along to whatever secret anthem is coming through his knock-off headphones. I remember with painful clarity the days of placating bullies, and knowing when they were just blustering for their own amusement and could safely be ignored, or when they were sincerely out for blood. That’s a social dynamic that no kid should ever have to master. But it’s a black world, what are you gonna do?

It’s probably obvious that I have no actual idea what Whitey’s real name is. I just call him that because it was the name emblazoned on the back of his jersey the first time I ever saw him, when I was making my way with trepidation to a new job, so it stands out in my memory as a single, vivid moment in time. Since I’m so enamored of routines and every landmark that defines the border of my life, I tend to assign nicknames and identities to total strangers as a way of normalizing the world and making it feel like a place I can understand. So Whitey he is.

So as to not make Whitey feel that the old geezer in the windowless van is some weirdo, I make sure to not have eye contact with him for even a whole second. Some days he looks right at me, other days he pays no attention to me or the tall skinny kid who sometimes comes over to his side of the street to torment him. Off in his own world. Something about Whitey reminds me of a certain variety of kid that I knew in Middle School, which is when we’re pretty much deciding (or having decided for us) the variety of person we’re going to be. Shunted into one category or another; jocks, dorks, nerds, emo, metalhead, popular, unpopular, or maybe just middle management. It took me a few days of three second drive-by’s to figure out who Whitey reminded me of. 

Once I saw it, I wished I hadn’t.

The 1982 version of Whitey was a kid named Darren Matotte. They have the same build, the same kind of absent-minded demeanor, as though they were paying little attention to their surroundings. A vagueness about their eyes that might make you think they were kind of dim. It didn’t even matter if it was true; at that age if it seems true, it is true. You need a label, and you’re going to get one, come hell or high water. God knows, I got mine. Pretty nerdy, maybe a little cuteness, but way too much dork quotient to be allowed out of the friend zone. A lot of nicknames stuck to me back then, none of them especially endearing. Got stuffed into a few lockers, whipcracked with some towels in the locker room, etc. The comic books, the Star Wars quotes, the occasional sound effect of blasters and lightsabers to punctuate whatever I was doing. No good could come of any of that in this world. Oh, the humanity.

Darren Matotte
But before we get to feeling too sorry for me, I should introduce you to Darren Matotte. Darren was in my 6th grade class, and was one of three kids in school that were actually nerdier than me. Darren, James Weber, and Howie Griffith were somehow in a social caste beneath mine; no one was more surprised than me to discover this. One day I was randomly walking  by Darren, and he was mumbling the lyrics to a song by Sha-Na-Na, “Blue Moon," specifically the scat-intro: “Ba-b-ba-ba-da-dang-a-dang-dang…” Which is a great 50’s greaser doo-wop song, one of my favorites. But the absent way he was doing it, like some autistic incantation repeated as a soothing, habituated tick, struck me as strange and in need of mocking. 

I laughed and repeated it back to him in a desperate, mean-spirited way that seemed to surprise him. Partly because he’d been unaware that he was doing it aloud and because, for some reason, the dork in the highwater, bellbottom Toughskins had seen fit to belittle him out of the clear blue. Someone Darren had imagined to be in his same social strata of nerdliness had decided he was above Darren and turned on him like an aberrant pit bull. And like those things always do at that age, it stuck. That little Bowser-Sha-Na-Na scat became the teasing catcall that followed him for a year or more, all around the playground and down the halls of school. Because of me.

James Webber
So even though I spent my Junior High and High School career known as the nice, kind of cute, nerdy guy, and being absently menaced by jocks, copied from in class by dim bullies, and friend-zoned by every secret crush, I knew there were still people below me in the pecking order. And sometimes I let them know it, too. When I think back on those days my sense is that I was an eager-to-please little know-it-all, always ready to show how clever I could be. Words like pencil-necked dork, geek, dweeb etc. come to mind. And they should, they’re true. But that’s not how Darren Matotte would think of me. Or Howie Griffith, or later down the road, Tim Smith. To them, other words would come to mind. Jerk? Asshole? Even, tormentor? Jeez, I hope not. True or not, I hope that last one doesn’t come to mind. Because I remember my tormentors all too well. Andy Velasquez, Boomer Rehfield, Mike Connelly. People who made life miserable and places in school unapproachable, even impassable. I don’t think Darren or Tim would say that about me, but there would be nothing flattering to be heard either.

Howard Griffith
When that world is finally in your rearview, hopefully you begin to get a perspective on it, and to outgrow the dramas that once defined you. Instead of believing that the microcosmic fishbowl and those times could dictate who you are, there's a chance you realize they were just roles assigned to you, parts you were forced to play. Maybe you even began to revise history a little bit. Read it selectively, and cast yourself in the most favorable light, as the hero of the story. Perhaps as a slightly tragic, misunderstood figure, with a perfectly good explanation for everything you did. Distancing yourself from every insult or teasing remark you hurled, every selfish choice, every hypocritical decision made. Reinterpreting things until you aren’t so bad.

Or maybe that was just me.

Tim Smith
The problem with revisionist history is the witnesses. The Darren Matottes of this world. The people who know what you did. I’ve often wondered what became of Darren. He had the kind of build that would have made for a great left tackle, or champion wrestler. I'd like to think he got away from the people that teased him and corroded his confidence, and found a way to see that he was alright. That some people just need there to be someone below them so that they don’t feel so bad about themselves, so that the shit that rolls downhill doesn’t stop with them. Whatever you do, don't be the guy left holding the bag, you pass that shit on. Maybe he figured out that none of it had anything to do with him at all. God, I hope so.

Because the day came when I looked back over my résumé and really read it, as though for the first time. Eyes open. And even though, at 40, it didn’t read like Pol Pot’s, it wasn’t exactly Gandhi’s either. It read like a guy who was trying to be a decent shit, unless it was too hard or inconvenient. Unless he got his little feelings hurt, or felt insecure or left out. Then it read like a guy who would drop a friend in a minute, cut in on his best friend’s girl, who would string a girl along to preserve his fragile ego, and betray even his callow affectations of morality. And for every person out there who would say that I gave them the shirt off my back, there would be one that said, “I trusted him, until one day…”

It was disheartening at first, coming face to face with myself. Finding that I wasn’t who I thought I was. Not the hero of the story after all. None of those awful things were done out of malice, or with evil intent. They came from places of insecurity, or simply from considering myself first, at the expense of anyone else. But in the end, the result is the same. So once the truth was accepted, it was actually kind of a relief. To not have to maintain the empire of my self-esteem? To stop telling the bullshit story of how I’m really not that bad of a guy? Yeah, an unparalleled relief, actually. It created a kind of equity in life, where I’m not any better or any worse than the next person, and I can just come out and say it, only to find freedom in the very admission of it.

I was talking to a friend on the phone the other day, bouncing ideas off of each other for a script he’s working on, and he said he thought I was better at understanding people and their motivations than anyone else he knows. I told him it was because I’d stopped needing to believe I was one of the good guys. That I could afford to just look at myself and others, see the strengths and flaws we live with, and feel compassion for us all. I said that 40 was the best thing that ever happened to me because—without condemning or condoning anything—I can simply accept us, just as we are. At last. 

I said, “If only I'd known...I’d have been doing this from the beginning."

I wish I could tell Whitey any part of this and have it make sense to him. But it took me four decades to even find the edges of it, so… Instead I blather on about it to those who might get it. I write these rambling, oblique apologies for the way that I was; these huge love letters to friendship and days gone by; thank you notes to the Grace that has planted itself at the corners of my life as a bulwark against my own stupidity. And I hope that somehow he’ll figure it out. I can’t tell by looking at him for three seconds a day whether Whitey will be the jock or the outcast, the bully or the bullied. The truth is, he’ll probably be a bit of both, no matter which way he goes.

Try not to be too big of a dick, Whitey. It’s a helluva vig when it comes due.

12 comments:

  1. Jerk,Asshole,tormentor? Yes to all Three..A already tough situation going into a new school,starting high school and having your friends ghost you..starting over the summer before school started but launching head on once the first day of school arrived.Being left to fend for oneself..probably laughed at from a distance from those that were friends as you waited for them.Then ultimately resulting into open mocking to ones face..going out of ones way to purposely steer by me during lunch or breaks to mock me.Carving that I was gay onto back of chairs in classrooms and other slurs I am sure.Making Sophomore year of high school being the worst one by far from dealing with losing friends among other things.In the end I found better friends..Probably even did me a favor in a way .Mike Price being a good friend moving away from you all and joining up with me because I was the one that stuck by him during the girl issue between him and phillip the last year at Washington.,he helped me get through rest of that year before he moved away.The remaining years being better..not forgetting what happen but moving on from it..but reminders when passing one of you in the hall,holding onto that bitterness.I have had people I didn't like in life..but I can honestly say I have not held any lasting,I would say hatred but that comes across harsh..but probably closer to truth than I would like.You held the brunt of it..maybe because we had been friends the shorter time..feeling you had a bit of snugness about you that made you come across harsher.Even though I was friends with Phillip longer and he held as much blame as you did in it ,I should have been more upset with him..but no really it was you truthfully.I have been no saint at all in my life..I am equally to blame for mocking others in my life when younger..possibly hurting people I am sure..But i never betrayed a friend like what was done to me that I can say wholeheartedly.I by accident came across your writings off of the facebook poly group page and decided to give them a read going backwards to finding myself part of a subject.Although it isn't a thought that is constant in my mind or nagging at me all the time..it was sorta therapeutic to read somewhat what went on after me.I cannot say I forgive you all ..I should i know..I should be a better man than this..but it just isn't in me if I feel I have been truly wronged.You guys were my friends then you weren't..the high school me didn't and couldn't understand what I did,guessing I wasn't cool enough? I was annoying and instead of being more mature about it and telling me straight out..it came out as it did?..I dunno and at this point I just understand when one is that age this is how that shit goes down sometimes..there isn't always a true reason.I will say your writing is very good..far better than I could ever do and it kept me reading to this point of finding myself part of the narrative.I am not mad, maybe could have done without the photo being posted but whatever.I felt this was an opportunity to voice what I went through by yours and other actions way back when.Am I over it? maybe not totally ..but better than I had been..I have been trying to better myself mentally with how I deal with things and stopping the negativity that fills my mind often..maybe this will be a step? who knows..we shall see.

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    1. Wow. This is unexpected, to say the least. Sorry it took me so long to respond, I only check the blog once or twice a week, so I just read this this morning. Thank you for reaching out like this, it’s very meaningful to me. You won’t get any arguments or even a defense from me over what happened; on the contrary, you’re completely justified in everything that you’ve said. You were a good friend to me when I desperately needed one at Washington, which was a traumatic experience for me after the military schools that I grew up in. For that reason alone, you deserved better than the inexcusable way that I treated you. You are owed a profound apology, so let me start there. I’m so sorry. First, last, and always, that is the message I want to convey. I’ll expand on that with some thoughts and details, but I want to be clear at the outset that I was completely in the wrong, and I regret what I said, what I did, and all the childish, mean-spirited ways that I injured you. The fault was entirely mine.

      Obviously this is a subject near and dear to me, hence the story, and I still feel the sharp pangs of regret and shame over the way you were treated. Most things like that fade over time, but not this one. Since you said that you’ve read some of the other stories and have a sense of how life unfurled in the intervening years, you know that I’m no angel. But even amidst the drug addiction, small-time dealing, and money laundering etc, these events still stand among the worst things I’ve ever done. Even my wife and closest friends know the story of Tim Smith, such is level of remorse that I’ve felt over the years, that it’s become a permanent part of my biography. There were reasons, of course, but they were callow and stupid in the way that only a teenage boy can be. The “reasons” say everything about what a shitty asshole I was, and really nothing at all about you. It was easier to imagine that you were somehow uncool, than to admit that I was a scrawny, sycophantic little know-it-all dork who naturally repelled girls by virtue of my personality.

      Since I turned 40 (cliché as that is), I’ve been on a low-key mission to rebuild friendships and make amends—or at least apologies—for long-term sins, wrongs, and general assholery that I engaged in over the course of my life. It’s taken a lot longer than I thought it would, because people are busy and our lives are complicated, and you can’t just show up on somebody’s doorstep out of nowhere and, apropos of nothing, blurt out how sorry you are for being a jerk. For one thing, I never assume that I was so incredibly important and pivotal in anyone’s life that they were never able to get over me, or what I did, to go on and live a meaningful or satisfying life. Not only would that be insulting to them, I don’t imagine that I’m that central to the operation of the universe. But just because it was a long time ago, doesn’t mean that all’s forgiven as an automatic function of the passage of time. I can’t just dismiss the way that pain and rejection can shape us, especially during those confusing, vulnerable, and difficult years of high school. (Continued...)

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    2. (Continued)
      What I couldn’t have guessed at the outset of my “mission,” was how pivotal these stories would turn out to be in helping me to connect with people. Not only resurrecting old friendships I thought were lost to the sands of time—including Phillip—but for creating opportunities to have conversations like this. I was never much of a writer before joining Facebook, and only wrote my first story to commemorate an event that meant a lot to me, and share it with the friends that were there. The response was so overwhelming that I started telling all the stories that I had in me, which lead to so much I could never have predicted. They really have turned out to be exactly how I described them in this story:

      “I write these rambling, oblique apologies for the way that I was; these huge love letters to friendship and days gone by; thank you notes to the Grace that has planted itself at the corners of my life as a bulwark against my own stupidity.”

      Tim, you are richly owed this long-overdue apology, but I know that no one owes me any forgiveness, least of all you. I was absolutely the villain in our story, and I haven’t ever forgotten it. It still matters to me, and I’d like to think that I learned how to be a better person over the years by reflecting on those sins. But during those intervening years, I’ve also learned from the villains in my own life that holding on to bitterness and resentment, however justified, is far more detrimental to me than it is to them. I think it’s the Buddhists who say that holding on to anger or unforgiveness is like drinking poison and waiting for the other person to die. So if I can play the smug douchebag one more time, I hope you might find it in your heart to release whatever justifiable negativity may remain surrounding this painful chapter in our lives. Not because I deserve forgiveness, but because you deserve to be free of burdens that you never should have had to carry. The fault was mine.

      I’d welcome a chance to continue this conversation, but also understand if this is the right place to put a period. In any event, I’m sincerely glad to have heard from you and wish you all the best in life. If you’d like me to take the picture down, I’d be happy to do that. I included it to put a human face on the past, and the responsibility I take for those events, but you’re entitled to your privacy and I will of course honor your wishes.

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    3. Tim,

      I too would like to emphatically apologize for what transpired between us during that part of our lives. I am not a writer like Brien, and wish I could express my overwhelming regret as well as he does, but it is there. Deeply there. I wronged you just as badly as he did, even more I would say. Betrayal. Plain and simple. You and I were friends longer than we were with Brien and so I have always felt my part in what happened surpassed anyone else’s. I was a coward and I threw away the trust and companionship we had in one another for so many years over childish and petty reasons. I want you to know, I am truly, truly sorry. If its any consolation, I have never forgotten just how much of a dick I was. As Brien said, it’s a piece of us, that we can not forget. I have been up to visit him a couple of times over the years recently and we always come around to talking about what we did all those years ago, and just how profoundly wrong it was. Most mistakes I have done in my life, I have forgiven myself for and moved on from. I honestly cant say that about this one. Even now, as I have tears in my eyes, I try to console myself that we were just fucking stupid kids, doing shitty things, but I know there were lots of other kids, standing up, doing the right thing all along and I was indeed not only a crappy friend, but a shitty person. I regret I took part in all of the things that were done. You were a good person who did not deserve any of it and I am sorry it took so long to hear that from me.

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  2. Thank you both for your responses.To Phillip : we had gone through a lot of things together in those short years of being friends and feeling usurped in my position of friend to by Brien was hurtful at that time..as I said in my post..maybe in the end it was better for me to have moved onto other friends,but it would have been nice it to have happened in a more organic way like most childhood friends happen..where you just drift apart instead of it being a more dramatic slam at a pivotal juncture that is the start of high school.It is funny that the whole reason I found this post was because of someone whom I met through you in our first year at Washington,Gordon Thompson,I have him friended on facebook and he made a post in that Poly group and I just happen over to see what it was about when I came across Brien's links to here.It started off as a curiosity as to what does that guy have to say..like one of those curiosities you get like you do with an ex Gf on mmm wonder how their life is going or went without me.I saw a couple hints along the way i thought could be a reference to me as a read on ..but really didnt think i was much of a blip to you all thought wise all these years later,to really get mentioned till suddenly it was there.As I said i still held/hold resentment..not in a way that it affects my life now..but as a memory from the past and how that kid i was felt then.My nephew just graduated high school literally last week...seeing him lose friendships in this last year it got me thinking or wondering..was he like me in this scenario..or is he being like how Phillip and Brien were to me? Or was it just as I stated a natural evolution one goes through in life of falling out and making new friends along the way.It is weird the timing of how these things go at times.I think of the stupid shit we did as kids..you and I were not saints together on the dumb things we got into ..and as a 46 year old now..I think man what a fucking idiot I was ..the things I did and damaged caused to others.Along the way there are people I know I have hurt,many of stupid things I have done..some of which I am still paying for right now in my life..So am I better than others no.I am just another idiot in life trying to go about his business and try to fix his life at this juncture somehow.I lost a friend last year of 18 years,and that does change ones perspective towards life..losing a peer that close to you,seeing icons like the Bowies and Price and etc that you grew up on pass away..makes you reflect at times.I am someone who unfortunately lives in the past though in my head,so naturally the both of you pop into it at times..some good once in a while..but sadly to say a lot more bad because of how it ended..it is amazing how the bad drives over the good thoughts at times.

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  3. We all know all too well we had those moments now we think back on a bully pestering someone in school and how we should have been a better person and stepped in ..but in reality thinking ..man I am glad it isnt me right now..I cannot even say I am that kind of person now who would step in..I am more so than I was back then for sure..I am far more assertive speaking my mind now.But am i really better? Would I do something now or is the fear still there?It is thinking this and knowing this in myself that makes me know I have more work to do in life on the person I am and the person who I want to be.
    The question remains..can I forgive..I certainly can accept and do accept both your apologise,but do I forgive.. In my brain and In my heart I cannot..at this time at least.It is something as I said I need to work on when it comes to myself.The pain from that kid still lingers,we are not as men now the kids we once were..but sometimes that pain is still there.
    As Brien has written in his posts,he still remembers his tormentors names..and for me it is odd..maybe I recall a face or a moment of someone who did something to me..rarely a full name..but occasionally.But losing friends and how hurtful it was to me..that has stuck.I am sure there had been times when we all were friends,that I was a dick towards one of you in moments,it happens in any friendship.But for it to go down like it did..that was a blow to me..the first real betrayal of friendship in ones life.It is a hard thing to shake.Thankfully I had someone like Mike Price..and Brian Ward ,my pals rest of the way along high school..I literally have not spoken to Mike since the last day of school in our sophomore year of high school,he moved away to Chicago with his aunt all those years ago and havnt heard from him since..but man does he hold a place in my heart for what he did for me and helping me get through that first year.Brian who i lost touch with ..to gain back years later again and lost once more to time..was the pal who got me through those last few years of high school.We didnt do a lot of hanging outside of high school..the occasional movie or what not..I gained other friends away from school that I did more of that with..but inside of those walls where you only want to feel accepted by your peers..he helped me immensely.
    Oddly enough I wasn't bullied during high school like in Jr. high..But sadly I had you two there that first year that didnt make things easier..isnt it funny /sad that my one time friends were the ones that brought me torment in the new place? After that first year..after you two either gave up or moved on from bothering me..it was smoother sailing.I'd still see you..walk by you in the hall on the way from here or there..how we never ended up with a class together along the way again is odd in itself.it still hurt me..Brien being more smug and giving me that smirk of his when seeing him..Phillip usually more casual and just ignoring me.That was my perspective,that was my thoughts in those times..I don't say it to throw it in your face..but as the reality as I saw it in that time.After that first year..I really did lose track on what you two were up to ,I moved on and we didn't run in same circles so it didn't affect me from then on.So as a curiosity it was interesting to see some of what you two had been up to..some surprising some not.

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  4. I moved away from Long Beach in 1992..for better or for worse..that is debatable,same reasons as Brien..parents were moving,I had no way of supporting myself there..so off I went..I still visit from time to time..it is actually someplace that means something to my wife and I ,since in a way it is the first place we met in person.I never ran into either you outside of high school again..who knows what would have happen if we had..more than likely it would have been ignoring each other..although I said for years..I would have had the urge to punch you both in the face if I saw you again,lol (yes the less mature part of me).But here we are...opening up and spilling our thoughts on the past..it does help..it really does..telling you both finally in a mature way what it did to me and made me feel..so is this the road to forgiveness?...maybe so.

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    1. There’s a line in the movie The Talented Mr. Ripley where he says that nobody thinks they’re a bad person. And I think that’s true for most of us, most of the time. We know we’re not perfect, but tend to think that we’re not that bad, we’re only human…etc. But the day came when I looked back and saw Tim, saw Phillip, saw Marianne, saw Marjorie. And I realized that there weren’t two sides to those stories, just the one side where I was a shitty person who hurt people that trusted me, treated me well, and didn’t deserve it. And that’s when I gave up the illusion that I was one of the good guys and started trying to just be better than I was yesterday.

      You know, Tim, I don’t know about Phillip, but I can say that there were many times over the years that I think I would have welcomed a punch in the mouth for the way that I behaved. Getting what you deserve can be better than “getting away with it,” and then having to live with shame and guilt. Hell, to be honest, both of you have had reason to punch me in the mouth from the 80’s on up to today, since I burned Phillip in similar shitty fashion a couple of years later. So I’m just glad to have had the opportunity to square up for those things, and at least offer an apology for the things that I so badly wish that I could undo.

      I know there were a lot of forces in play back then, things we couldn’t understand or deal with maturely. I was part of a weird dynamic change when a new friend came into the group the year before I met you guys at Washington. In that situation, I was the one displaced by the arrival of the new guy, and it felt really shitty. I remember coming to tears in frustration over it, so I can empathize with how angry that would make a person. I didn’t realize I’d had that effect on the balance of your relationship with Phillip. I’m not sure I would have known what to do even if I’d understood that. By the time we met out by the athletic field, Mike Connelly had already gotten me in his sights as someone to torment, so I’d walk all the way around the behind the buildings to avoid seeing him by crossing the quad. Long story short, I was desperate for a group to belong to, and you guys were talking about comic books as I walked by so I just horned right in, because by then I felt like I was the only loser nerd who read comics at that whole school.

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    2. Especially in those volatile years, friends come and go. Some because they had to move, like Mike. Some because the common threads that held you together, like a school, a sports team or church connection, change. When I realized Senior year how many of our friendships were based on being held hostage at the same school, I realized that most of the people I called friends wouldn’t be my friends within days or weeks of graduation. I made the mistake of sharing that observation with people, and they all got mad at me and said that I thought we were just fake friends. I didn’t mean that at all, just that our closeness didn’t extend beyond common circumstance, but they all insisted that we’d be friends 4eva. Yearbooks filled with K.I.T. and T.C.I.C (quiz time, who can still remember what these mean?), kind of made me mad because I saw right through it.

      I think most of the friends that I’ve lost over the years were just because we all drifted apart. People get busy, have families, etc. The year I hit that magic 40 button I looked around and realized that the friends that I had, most of them anyway, weren’t anywhere near as good as the ones I used to have. There were two guys from Poly that I was still fairly close to who still live in CA, and one guy from my 20’s, but everyone else it was more like we were playing musical chairs and these were just the people I sat next to when the music stopped. That was a pretty bad feeling, and I decided to see if I could find, resurrect, or rebuild some old ones. People always say on their deathbeds that their top ten regrets include losing touch with old friends, and I don’t want to be one of those people.

      I can’t believe how lucky I’ve been to have made the headway that I have over the past seven years. Making apologies, building bridges, slow but incremental progress toward redemption. I don’t see all of those people everyday, or even talk all that often, but when we do it’s as friends again. Through these stories I’ve made amends with Marjorie and Marianne, and am at least talking to you for the first time in over 30 years. I don’t know how any of this will turn out, but talking is better than not talking…

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  5. It is wild the time gone..today for first time I told my wife the story,in short form on what happen in high school with you all leading up to the response yesterday.We graduated in 1989 ..so next year is 30 years..but as I told her..I literally havnt said a word in any form to you two since basically 1986-87 till now ..a crazy amount of time really.By the way ..I am still a comic book nerd,lol

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    1. I basically gave up on comics when I moved to the middle of nowhere and the bookstore was a 45 minute drive. And I didn't even have a job for like 4 months, so I couldn't afford shit. I still pick up the occasional trade paperback or whatever Frank Miller or Alan Moore are doing these days. Damn, they have gotten expensive!! I thought I was going broke back in the day buying how many I did, with all the bags and backer boards to go with them. I don't know how a kid could afford to follow more than two or three titles these days.

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  6. Kids don't really buy them anymore for most part..if they do they do it digital if at all..the clientele these days are old farts like us or older .. the prices are crazy now yes..but what isnt.. unfortunately..

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