I am being generous (to myself) when thinking that half the people reading this will have at least one of the following responses to this title:
Suggested Reading
1. Wait, what?
2. Why do you even still know what was said to you 30 years ago?
3. Or care enough to still think about a comeback that, unless you invent a time machine, will never happen?
The reality is that itโs probably closer to โno one gives a shitโ than half. But if I only thought and did things in anticipation of other people hopefully caring about them, Iโd just be Cory Booker. Since Iโm not Cory Booker, I canโt be him, and I hope you donโt want me to be him, either.
Anyway, the process of giving intellectual and psychological bandwidth to uncomfortable shit no one else gives a fuck about is a hobby of mine. Now, itโs mostly in regard to writing: Iโll happen across a thing I wrote in 2014 or something, Iโll get mad at myself for a word in it (โFuck! I wrote โuseโ here when it clearly should be โusage!โ), and Iโll spend the next 10 minutes debating whether itโs worth it to go back and edit.
And, well, sometimes it gets absurd. Itโs nothing for me to be sitting in my living room, watching TV and/or eating honey roasted peanuts, and for my moment of mundanity to be interrupted by me screaming โfuck!โ about messing up the steps when trying to heel-toe when Red Ratโs โHeads Highโ came on during an Alpha party on Buffalo State Universityโs campus in 1999. To supplement this ecosystem of awkward, Iโll then think about a) being so focused on the missteps that I knocked myself off rhythm, b) the face (bemused pity?) the girl dancing with me made, c) the โthis was cool at first, but I think weโre done dancing nowโ face she made after the song was over, d) how crucial it was to have an interested dance partner during the reggae set, and e) how I fumbled that relatively easy bag with too much ambition. Of course, maybe my stubbed heel-toe had nothing to do with that. Maybe she was just tired. Maybe I stank and ainโt realize it. Maybe she stank and wanted to bounce before I realized it. Either way, why what happened happened doesnโt matter as much as how I feltโand still obviously feelโabout it. And, again, I do this all the fucking time.
Like yesterday morning, while driving after dropping my daughter off at preschool, and my mind settled on an uncomfortable moment from middle school. It was a back-of-the-bus ripping contest, and someone (โSamโ) had gotten the better of me. (โRippingโ by the way, is a Pittsburgh-area colloquialism for jonesing or clowning or roasting or whatever they call it where youโre from.) I forgot exactly what he said, but it had to do with my sweatshirt being a bit too pinkโwhich was a no-no in 1989. (It was a strange and arbitrarily homophobic time.)
I tried to argue that it was peach instead, but by then my efforts were futile. Pink had entered their collective consciousnesses, and my shirt, from then on, would be nothing but pink. And not just pink but the single pinkest thing. Pinker than Juicy Fruit. Pinker than horse gums. Defeated, I looked at my shirt with disdain, got mad at the entire color pink, and put my headphones back on.ย
Yesterday, however, I finally got my revenge. As I was driving down 5th Avenue, I thought, โBut nigga you got a fish!โ Which, without context, makes absolutely no sense. In fact, Iโm not even going to provide the context for it, because I know it still would make no sense. Just trust when I say that, for that time and that place, that would have been the PERFECT response to Sam. It was so perfect that I literally screamed it aloud in the car. โBUT NIGGA YOU GOT A FISH!!!โ
And now, Iโve been happy since then because I finally found the perfect thing to say to a 10-year-oldโ30 years ago. So happy that I might find him on Facebook today just to say โBUT NIGGA YOU GOT A FISH!!!โ and never, ever respond.
Straight From
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