tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-71287072024-03-07T16:36:45.898-05:00Hi, My Name Is Steve, and I Was a Sex AddictI'm back, and I'm still perverted.Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.comBlogger462125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-41435354060542827612021-05-20T10:32:00.001-04:002021-05-20T10:32:03.496-04:00Holy shit, I found my password<p> Never thought I'd be back on here again.</p><p>To anyone who read this, please drop a comment! Thanks!</p>Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-74555125141243639872013-02-07T14:21:00.001-05:002013-02-07T14:21:18.324-05:00Hi, my name is Steve, and I forgot how to blogIt's been far too long since I've blogged, as evidenced by the fact that I have ZERO idea how to get around here anymore! Jesus!<br />
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I'm really going to try to get back into this thing again, since a lot of you have been emailing me to see what I've been up to. I warn you though, I haven't fucked a single skank in over two years, so that aspect of my life is past.<br />
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If there are any Haloscan / Echo experts out there, I could use some help restoring my old comments. Supposedly there is an Echo plugin for Blogger, but I can't find it.<br />
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I am planning on being snowbound with Marissa this weekend, so I should have time to post again...<br />
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Until next time...Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-91871152565334501872011-05-02T18:04:00.004-04:002011-05-03T08:49:30.597-04:00Match Game '11I am about to shatter the image you have of me.<br /><br />But, as Eminem says, "hold your nose, 'cause here goes the cold water".<br /><br />I met my current girlfriend on match.com.<br /><br />What? Huh? Holy shit!<br /><br />You can't believe that a guy like me, who never had much of a problem getting girls, or at least getting sex, would ever try online dating. But there it is, just as clear as Ashley Tisdale's nosejob.<br /><br />I'd totally do her, btw, with or without the big schnoz. Or the crossbite. She really should have seen an orthodontist instead of a plastic surgeon. But I digress.<br /><br />Life is very different for me now. My daughter Ivie is with me all the time, except when she's at daycare. Her mom comes around every once in a while, but it's usually to eat and borrow money. It's almost like having another child.<br /><br />"Mommy, wanna play Barbies?" Ivie will ask, in her sweet little girl voice.<br /><br />"Not now baby," Tim will reply, laying on the couch, her eyes already half closed.<br /><br />I don't have the freedom I used to. I'm totally fine with that. I wasted a lot of time when I was younger, meeting up with friends, buying $12 drinks, making sure everyone smelled my cologne and saw my new suit. I did have some fun, but things are less hectic for me nowadays.<br /><br />Every once in a while, I meet someone out. Ivie is really helpful with that. She's a beautiful girl, with big blue eyes and porcelain skin, and she's always giggling about something. Wherever I go, every hot chick in the place runs up to say, "Oh how cute!" and sometimes I can strike up a conversation--but let's face it, she didn't walk up to see me, so that usually doesn't work.<br /><br />During the "sex years", I mostly met women at the office, through mutual friends, or while out doing errands. I almost never met anyone at clubs or bars. <br /><br />My company has been bought out, and most of my coworkers were laid off. I work remotely from home most days, and even if I go to the office, I have exactly zero eligible female coworkers. Most of my social friends have married off and have children of their own. On the rare occasions when they go out, they constantly check their watches and calculate out loud how much they owe the babysitter so far. The torch has been passed to a younger generation of partiers, a tattooed, pierced group of kids, yes, <span style="font-style: italic;">kids</span>, with whom I've nothing in common.<br /><br />And as far as errands are concerned, I'm not dilly-dallying at the laundromat anymore. I'm in there to get my drycleaning and get the hell out--even if there is some curvalicious bombshell in line behind me. I'll smile at her on the way out, but that's about it.<br /><br />To put it simply, I have a lot fewer dating prospects than I used to. So yeah, I signed up on Match.<br /><br />Writing my profile was fun. I worked hard on it and made sure it wasn't loaded with all the cliches that others were, such as, "Well, here goes", "I'm not comfortable talking about myself", etc. <br /><br />I really liked browsing the profiles too. I could put in the exact criteria I was looking for, and "meet" more women in a day than I would meet in six months on my own. Local women, women my age who liked the same things I did.<br /><br />Next time: The online dating begins...!Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-55494581764630940752011-05-01T21:27:00.003-04:002011-05-01T21:52:04.271-04:00What the eff was I thinking?I just went back and read a bunch of my posts from 2004. Who the fuck <span style="font-style: italic;">was </span>that guy?<br /><br />The word "juvenile" keeps coming to mind. I am a man, so my dick is programmed to give me great pleasure whenever I stick it anywhere, and it will always work that way. There are plenty of men out there seeking that thrill. But the guys who are obsessed with it, like I was, have something else going on psychologically. And yes, I was <span style="font-style: italic;">definitely </span>obsessed. I was a fucking madman. <br /><br />I played it off very nicely, thank you, both on here and individually with all of you who were IMing and emailing me, but I had issues. I was definitely preoccupied. I was screwing a lot, and yet still masturbating like a 15-year-old boy.<br /><br />And another thing: Anyone can fuck a road whore. I dated some attractive girls--Lila was really hot, and Kelly, and Tim of course, but a lot of them were kinda average, and I did them pretty much because they were willing. When I came across a good one, I turned on the charm, loaded on the cologne, and prayed. Sometimes the girl would be interested, sometimes not. Be careful of the dudes who brag about getting a lot of sex. Most of them are either lying outright, or screwing some girl who's had 10,000 guys before him.<br /><br />In my posts, I seemed to imply I got laid whenever I wanted, and that is not the case. If I was lucky enough to get some girl to fuck me, it was a good day.Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-82119720346891229032011-04-30T01:24:00.002-04:002011-04-30T01:49:51.963-04:00Cue the cricketsI've started and stopped this post five times so far.<br /><br />Dad dying, while tragic, and a great source of sorrow for me, was not a total surprise. I attended to all the usual details and went back to work a week later, with only a trace of the malaise that comes with great tragedies. But the post about him shuffling off to the great beyond seemed a good way to end things here, so I never posted again.<br /><br />Frankly, I was tired of blogging anyway, and had been for a while. I have no idea if I'm back or not; First and foremost, I want to find out if any of you are actually reading this, because there's nothing more pathetic than performing for a non-existent audience.<br /><br />My daughter is a little over two now, old enough to scold me ("I mad. I <span style="font-style: italic;">mad </span>at Daddy.") and to work a remote control with amazing skill. My marriage hasn't gone nearly as well.<br /><br />I don't know exactly what happened. Tim barely comes home anymore. I don't know where she goes or what she does when she gets there. I have asked her 100 times if she's using again, and all she does is scream at me. We haven't had sex in a year.<br /><br />I filed for divorce in October and I'm pushing to get things resolved as fast as I can. I have a life to live and I intend to live it.<br /><br />I have a new girlfriend now, and I'm very happy. I've lost all my desire to fuck around; all I want now is a girlfriend.<br /><br />That's it for now. Drop a comment please, so I know you read this!<br /><br />StevoSteve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-86960661528728247052009-06-11T13:24:00.001-04:002009-06-17T20:53:22.099-04:00A breeze from the southFriday, May 22, 2009, 9:03am<br />Steve's house<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Chris calling</span>, my cell phone says.<br /><br />This is bad. Chris never calls my cell, especially in the morning. Something is wrong. And if something is wrong, it's probably about dad.<br /><br />I've been meaning to call my father for a while. It's been a week or so since I've spoken with him, and I've been worried since Greg told me dad was complaining of shortness of breath a few days ago. And of course, Dad has been getting dialysis three times a week for three and a half years, and he had heart surgery, and he takes 100 different kinds of pills...<br /><br />I hit SEND on my phone. "Hello. Hello?" No one's there.<br /><br />I'll call dad. That's what I'll do. I'll call him, and he'll pick up, with his usual "<span style="font-style:italic;">HEEE</span>-llo", and I'll laugh a little, and realize I was worrying over nothing. I'll call him, and we'll have a nice chat.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Chris calling</span>, says the phone again.<br /><br />"Steve, it's Chris. I've got some bad news. About dad."<br /><br />Please don't let him be dead. Please just let him be in the hospital again. I'll go visit him with Tim and the baby, and we'll nurse him back to health. He'll beat the odds, surprise the doctors and walk out of there on his own in a few weeks, just like he did last time.<br /><br />Just please, please, don't let him be dead.<br /><br />**********<br /><br />Gardenview Estates Senior Living Community, late afternoon<br /><br />Dad and I sit on a farmer's porch in wicker lawn chairs. The sun burns from a flawless sky, as blue as a Navy man's jacket. Each time the heat gets uncomfortable, a gentle breeze blows in, as if God has installed a giant thermostat just for us.<br /><br />I turn to face dad and he's already looking at me, his eyebrows lifted a little, his mouth closed tightly.<br /><br />"So... I guess this is it, kid," he says, finally.<br /><br />"It can't be, Dad. It can't be. I don't know what I would do without you."<br /><br />"Yeahh, ya do," he says, turning his head away from me. "You're a grown person. You don't need me as a father anymore. You need me as a friend. People lose friends all the time."<br /><br />"You make it sound so trivial. You're my father!"<br /><br />"Are you really gonna miss our bi-monthly phone conversations that much?" He grins.<br /><br />"Come on. I have a new baby, you know. And a wife. And a job. I get busy."<br /><br />His mouth spreads into a wide smile, a contented smile, as if I were Frank Sinatra singing a beautiful tune.<br /><br />"See? See?? You're busy living your life," he says. "All fathers go eventually. That's the way it's supposed to be."<br /><br />"But there are so many things I should have said. And I should have spent more time with you. I feel horrible."<br /><br />He listens patiently, his eyes locked on me. "What do you want to say, Steve? That you love me? That you appreciate everything I did for you? That you'll never forget me?"<br /><br />"Yeah. Something like that."<br /><br />"And you didn't think I knew all that already?"<br /><br />"It wouldn't have hurt to say it."<br /><br />"Maybe not. But that's not how it was with us. It was assumed," he shrugs. <br /><br />We both stare at the Tigerlillies in the flower beds near our feet. "That mulch is fresh. Can you smell it? I used to love that smell," he says.<br /><br />"Dad, what happened?"<br /><br />"To me?"<br /><br />"No. To Al Pacino. Of course to you!"<br /><br />"Well, first my parents had sex," he says, gesturing with his hand. "Then, about nine months later, I came down the birth canal..."<br /><br />"Dad."<br /><br />His smile fades. "It was quick, Steve. Don't worry about the details."<br /><br />"I need to know, dad."<br /><br />"Why?" he asks, squinting at me.<br /><br />"So my imagination won't run away with me."<br /><br />He breathes deeply, running his thumb and forefinger across the collar of his white undershirt. It occurs to me that this is hard for him, despite everything.<br /><br />"I got up, got dressed, and went out to the car to go to dialysis. I was due there at 6am. I felt funny. Lightheaded, like.<br /><br />"I got in the car, closed the door, and when I went to put the key in the ignition..."<br /><br />"That was it?"<br /><br />"Everything went white. Not black. It was white everywhere I could see."<br /><br />He pauses again, staring into the sky. "I took a deep breath. I had to force it. My whole body was shutting off. For a second I could see again. I was parked facing the building and I could see the window to an office. It was Carole's office, the one who does the marketing. Carole wasn't there, of course. It was early..."<br /><br />"And then what?"<br /><br />"And den, nuttin'!" He says summarily. "Everything really <span style="font-style:italic;">did</span> go black after that."<br /><br />"Did it hurt?"<br /><br />He shrugs. "Just for a second. It was very fast."<br /><br />It's easier for me to breathe now that I know the details. I'll never get over it, but now I don't have to wonder what it was like for him.<br /><br />"Did you see the tunnel and the light?"<br /><br />"Yeah," he laughs. "Your mother was there. And my mother and father. Your mother had a drink in her hand."<br /><br />"What?!"<br /><br />He throws his head back and laughs, a little too hard for the joke. Gradually, silence descends again.<br /><br />"Don't be mad at your mother, Steve."<br /><br />"I'm not."<br /><br />I turn to look at him. "I hadn't seen you in a couple of months. I feel very bad about that," I say, finally.<br /><br />"You know that CD stand in my apartment? The wooden one?"<br /><br />"Yeah. What about it?"<br /><br />"I had all my CDs and DVDs on there. I used it every day. Before that, I had them piled up on the... on the windowsill next to my chair."<br /><br />"I know, Dad. I built that stand for you."<br /><br />"Of course you did! That's my point! You did something that made me happy every day. And you fixed my computer, you set up my Facebook profile picture, you married Tim..."<br /><br />The laugh again. This time I join him.<br /><br />"She's my favorite daughter-in-law. Don't tell the other two. I love her just as if she was my own daughter."<br /><br />"She loves you too, Dad." God dammit. How am I going to tell her?<br /><br />"Yeah, that's not gonna be easy," he says. Holy shit. Did he read my mind?<br /><br />"I didn't say that out loud, did I, Dad?"<br /><br />"Nope. I know things now. I hear things."<br /><br />He sighs a little. "I would have liked you to be here more. But you were two hours away. We talked on the phone sometimes, and that was nice. It's not like I was totally bored around here. And you just had a baby...That baby of yours," he smiles, his voice trailing off.<br /><br />"She comes here on April first, you leave six weeks later. That wasn't a coincidence, was it?"<br /><br />"No. I had something to live for. Someone I wanted to see. I was ready after that."<br /><br />"But you were so healthy!"<br /><br />He raises his eyebrows. "Oh really?" he says, sarcastically. "Take a look at all the meds I was taking sometime, Steve.<br /><br />"I could've died three years ago, the first time I got sick. It wasn't my time. Now it is."<br /><br />"But what if you collapsed 90 seconds earlier? What if you were in the main lobby instead of your car? Maybe someone would have seen you! They could have called someone--"<br /><br />"Steve," he interrupts. "What if your brother was an hour later coming to my house three years ago? I was saved that day because I got lucky. And I got lucky during rehab, when I got a bad infection and almost died. How much luck can one guy have?"<br /><br />"I wanted another five years. Or more," I say.<br /><br />"Five years? Yeah, sure," he says, with a dismissive wave of the hand. "Five more years on dialysis? Do you have any idea how hard dialysis is on the body?"<br /><br />"Not exactly."<br /><br />He shakes his head. "My body was getting tired. I could feel it. I knew it."<br /><br />"I'm sorry, Dad."<br /><br />"About what? I got three and a half years. Three and a half years!!" he shouts. "I visited family, I went to the casinos, I even found some fun things to do with the old geezers around here! I played Bingo and Pinochle, I sang in the choir--remember?!"<br /><br />"Yes. I hope you handed out cotton balls."<br /><br />"No, I stood in the back," he smiles. The comeback was quick, so quick that he was obviously anticipating my wisecrack. <br /><br />"I had fun," he says. "I was very lucky."<br /><br />"It just feels weird," I say. "It feels... wrong. What if they put men on Mars someday? You won't see that!"<br /><br />"I've seen wars, I've seen peace, I've seen good presidents and bad presidents. I saw 9/11, I saw Pearl Harbor. I saw men on the moon. But best of all, I was in the room when each one of you kids were born and I was there to watch you grow up. You boys all turned out very well. You I wasn't sure about for a while," he says, and though he smiles wickedly, his eyes are very sad.<br /><br />"I know I didn't always make it easy. I'm sorry--"<br /><br />"Ah, Jesus. What is this, Ghost Whisperer now?" he smiles. "Seriously, I'm so proud of you, the beautiful girl you married, and your little daughter. You take care of that little girl. Treasure her every single day. Treasure both of them!" he says, his face going steely.<br /><br />"I will. I do. I promise, Dad."<br /><br />"Good."<br /><br />The sun has set a little. A breeze kicks up, and suddenly I smell Lilacs. I had forgotten they grow them here.<br /><br />"I feel like there's a million things to say, but I can't even think of one. Dad, do you... have any..."<br /><br />He looks at me. "Do I have any what?"<br /><br />"Any, I don't know, words of wisdom?"<br /><br />He rolls his eyes. "Holy Christ! What am I, a fortune cookie?"<br /><br />"Well, you know, any advice? Anything?"<br /><br />"Don't act like you're trying to solve a mystery. I already told you everything you need to know. You already know it. It's your wife and daughter. That's it. Everything else is secondary."<br /><br />"I know."<br /><br />"Then why do you work so much?"<br /><br />"Uh, I..."<br /><br />"Stumped by an apparition. That's pretty weak, Steve," he says, shaking his head. "Do me a favor. Don't tell me you know. Just do what you're supposed to do. When things get hard someday, and they will get hard, and you and Tim are fighting, and you are feeling like you want to give up, <span style="font-style:italic;">that</span> is when you have to remember it. When you have problems, work on them. Don't walk away. Stay there, even when it's hard. You got it?" he says, his eyes locked on mine.<br /><br />"I will."<br /><br />"Promise me."<br /><br />"I promise, Dad." I say, my throat tightening, my voice sinking to a whisper.<br /><br />The breeze gets stronger. A tuft of dad's wispy hair stands straight up for a moment before flopping back down.<br /><br />"A breeze from the south," he says. "It always blows from the south in the afternoon. I'm gonna miss that. I'm gonna miss a lot of things," he says, and his eyes have gone misty too. He turns quickly away from me.<br /><br />The breeze subsides and the porch goes almost completely silent. A bird sings, but it's far, far away and I can barely hear it.<br /><br />Dad stands up, his wicker chair creaking slightly. "Gotta go inside. It's dinner time. These old fogies eat pretty early."<br /><br />"Can I come, Dad?"<br /><br />He shakes his head.<br /><br />"Please?"<br /><br />He takes a step towards me and rubs the back of my head with his big right hand. He used to do that years ago, when I would come home and complain of a lousy day at school.<br /><br />"You wouldn't like the food anyway," he laughs, and turns toward the entrance. He takes a few steps and then turns back to me. "I want you to know I love you very much," he says, and I can barely see him through my tears.<br /><br />"I love you too, Dad."<br /><br />"See? We can say it after all!" he smiles, and as he walks toward the door, he seems younger somehow, his back straighter, his step lighter.<br /><br />"Dad? Dad! Don't go yet!"<br /><br />The bird sings again, closer now. I turn to look at him. <br /><br />He sits on a branch, the upper part of his body a brilliant yellow, the rest a deep black. <span style="font-style:italic;">Chirrrp chirp chirp</span>, he says, just three short syllables.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Chirrrp, chirp chirp.<br /></span><br /><br />This is all happening too quickly. I need to see my dad one more time, need to cast my eyes on him once more, even if it's just to watch him walk away.<br /><br />I turn quickly to see him, but I'm all alone.Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-70971928202690427172009-04-17T00:52:00.002-04:002009-04-17T00:54:45.913-04:00It's a GirlIvie Felicia Caruso<br />4/1/2009 3 lbs, 9 oz<br />20 inches long<br /><br />She's very very tiny, but she's hanging in there. <br /><br />I am so happy.Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-44816157707301596722009-04-01T09:02:00.004-04:002009-04-01T09:06:11.547-04:00What Mom Left BehindI submitted this a while back to fieldreport.com... check it out...<br />-Stevo<br /><br />=========================================================<br /><br />It's fascinating to read a love letter long after a breakup, or to hold the boutonniere from my prom tuxedo in my hand 15 years after I wore it. I stash mementos like these in a shoebox on the top shelf of my closet and look at them sometimes; they make my history seem more real.<br /><br />Buried in the box, under an old deck of playing cards and my first camera, is a black silk scarf that my mother used to wear in her hair. It's a relic of the 70's, full of trippy, swirling designs; I remember staring at it, mesmerized, when I was four. <br /><br />Silk was new to me. Whenever mom wore the scarf, I would climb on the couch and reach for it, delighting in its smoothness as I rolled it back and forth between my fingers. "Steve!" she would giggle.<br /><br />But my mother was hardly the Carol Brady you are probably imagining. When I was ten or so, she began a long battle with alcoholism, and though some part of her still cared about her family, her true love was the nasty stuff in those fancy bottles. <br /><br />Mom loved Southern Comfort. She was obsessed with it. Like a clingy girlfriend, she constantly kept a bottle close by her side, and stacked cases of it in our storage room as if our house were a prohibition-era speakeasy. SoCo was her lover, her priest, her therapist; it preoccupied her enough to forget my birthdays and to mortify me by staggering into the middle of the street in her ratty bathrobe, puffing on a clove cigarette, shrieking at me to come home for dinner.<br /><br />The liquor made her unpredictable. Sometimes I would break a glass or a dinner plate, and she'd just smile warmly as she swept up the mess; other times, I'd drop a fork on the floor during dinner and she'd rip out a clump of my hair. Dad stuck up for me when he was home, but he worked 12-hour shifts at a factory, and most nights he came home after I had gone to bed.<br /><br />She got worse. By the time I was 11, I dreaded holidays and family get-togethers. For some unfortunate reason, my seat at the table was right next to mom's, and it was guaranteed that, at some point during dinner, she would find a reason to crack me across the mouth in front of my aunts and uncles.<br /><br />She beat me, and my two brothers. She called us every name on the bathroom wall, smacked us with wooden spoons, clawed us with her fingernails, and then kicked us when we covered our faces and dropped to the floor in the fetal position.<br /><br />One day, when I was 12, mom told us that she was leaving for a while. We pleaded tearfully for her not to go, but she didn't listen. She had to be alone for a while, she said. Yeah, I cried too, but I remember how quiet the house got after the door closed behind her. A week later, I was thrilled to be rid of her.<br /><br />She came home from time to time, usually to borrow money from dad. If he could spare it, he would surreptitiously hand her a folded-up wad of bills and make her swear that she wouldn't spend it on booze, a promise they both knew she wasn't going to keep.<br /><br />To his credit, dad never complained. He never decried the injustice of his wife simply erasing herself from our lives, leaving him with all the responsibility. He never complained about money, though in retrospect I have no idea how he kept us fed and clothed on the salary he was making. My brothers and I never wanted for anything; we had bikes and videogames, just like the other kids. Dad could have used that money to go on dates, or for guys' nights out. But he sacrificed those things so my brothers and I could be happy, and I love him for that.<br /><br />Dad never divorced mom. Though she had been out of the house for years, he left her on his health insurance, and always referred to her as his "wife", graciously making excuses when people asked where she was.<br /><br />I'm supposed to say that I outgrew my mother's influence as I became a man, but I didn't. I grew up fearing for my personal safety, largely keeping quiet in case some random word sent mom over the edge. The best way for me to get by was to silently observe my surroundings, cautiously avoiding trouble, trusting no one but myself. For a long time, that's how I lived my life.<br /><br />My grandmother used to say, "You can't make good cookies with a bad cookie cutter." I built relationships with women the only way I knew how, trusting them inch by inch, suspicious of every promise, doubtful of their affections.<br /><br />Getting a girl to date me was a thrill. Getting her to have sex with me was a bigger thrill. But what satisfied me most of all was walking away from her. I got what I wanted, and left. And why not? She was going to do it to me if I stuck around, right?<br /><br />It was something of a rite of passage the first time my mother asked me for money. My heart swelled with pride; now I held the power, and could deny it to her if I wished.<br /><br />I had dreamed of this moment for a long time, the confrontation in which I would dump a truckload of my suffering back on her. In my fantasies, I screamed in her face like an angry baseball manager, barraging her with accusations for which she could manage no reply. Of course, I would not attack her physically, but if she dared take a swing at me, I would catch her scrawny little arm and snap it like a toothpick.<br /><br />In the end, I only told her no, that we both knew what the money was for, and that I refused to contribute to the destruction of her body. "It's already destroyed," she replied.<br /><br />She would come by my college apartment every few weeks to wash my dishes and do my laundry, and once I was good and buttered up, she'd ask for cash again, "so I can buy something to eat". <br /><br />Despite how it sounds, mom wasn't homeless, and she wasn't starving. She bounced from one friend or relative's couch to another, sponging off them for as long as they would let her. <br /><br />I wanted to help her, but instead of giving her cash to drink away, I took her shopping. Smart, right? <br /><br />I thought so too, until a neighbor saw mom at the grocery store, returning a big pile of food. She left with a nice wad of cash, I am sure, and it's no mystery what she did with it.<br /><br />I screamed at mom for that, swore at her, completely lost my temper, like she did to me. And she shriveled in terror, curling into a little ball, just like I used to. Was that what I used to look like?<br /><br />It felt good to unload on mom, but only briefly. Despite the history between us, revenge seemed wrong. I wanted to be happy, and normal. I didn't want to be filled with the horrible hate that she was.<br /><br />After I graduated from college and got my MBA, mom didn't come around much. She came to see me one Christmas, drunk at 10am, and empty-handed because she was "in between jobs". I had a gift for her, though—a framed picture of her three sons. Even mom wouldn't be able to get cash for that!<br /><br />On September 23, 2004, mom suffered a severe stroke and never regained consciousness. She died with her three sons, two daughters-in-law, and husband standing around her hospital bed. She was 56 years old.<br /><br />It was sad to see mom in her coffin, but in a way it helped me. She was finally free of her addiction, and she looked at peace, far from the monster she had become.<br /><br />I have a great job now, and I married a beautiful girl named Tim last fall. Later this year, we're going to try for a baby. It's been a long road for me, but I've finally forgiven mom. I can't tell you exactly how I did it, because it was really just a million little steps, with plenty of wrong ones thrown in. If you're in the situation I was, the worst and only mistake you can make is giving up.<br /><br />When I think of mom now, I don't think of the sad, hopeless drunk that she turned into; I think back to when I was a little boy, when mom would ask me what I did in Kindergarten that day, then pick me up so she could look in my eyes as I answered.<br /><br />But I didn't want to talk about Kindergarten. I didn't want to go to school at all. I just wanted to stay with mom forever, playing with her black silk scarf.Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-48432456321261087062009-03-08T12:23:00.002-04:002009-03-26T22:44:38.729-04:00Tricks and Treats<em>Dear readers: Here is a little something I wrote recently. No, it didn't actually happen, and yes, I know it's not Halloween. Enjoy anyway.</em><br /><br />~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@<br /><br />I hate parties.<br /><br />It annoys me to stand in a cramped, hot, loud apartment or house for hours, listening to some tool brag about his car or repeat what he heard Rush Limbaugh say that day. <br /><br />It's painful to watch a drunk guy hit on a girl awkwardly and strike out, only to brag the next day that he fucked her. <br /><br />I never had much luck with women at parties. Every single guy is trying to get laid, and unless you're the tallest, loudest, or richest, there's a chance you'll walk out alone, no matter how good your game is.<br /><br />The sorority down the street hosts a Halloween party every year, and Marissa really wants to go. I'm dreading it. I begged her not to go, told her that we'd go to whatever restaurant she wanted for dinner instead, but she refused. I resisted until she called me "strange".<br /><br />I should have stood my ground and boycotted the party. That would have been the manly thing to do. And I really meant to, but then I pictured her at the party, alone, strutting around in some sexy costume (catwoman? naughty nurse? French maid?), with six dozen muscled fraternity guys wearing Eddie Bauer polos and deep tans, tripping over each other to throw some stupidass pickup line at her. Yeah, those guys are idiots. But the joke is on me, because when a guy looks like that, girls are so busy staring that they don't even hear them.<br /><br />I pace around my apartment for an extra half hour, intentionally making myself late. Yes, I'm only going to this party out of insecurity, but Marissa doesn't need to know that.<br /><br />"Steeeve!" She squeals, rushing up to hug me. She's wearing a baggy set of blue hospital scrubs--a medical professional, yes, but far from the sexy costume I was afraid of. Maybe this party won't be so bad after all.<br /><br />"There's another Jason here," she laughs. "Good thing I recognized your shoes".<br /><br />My costume was easy. I merely slapped on a flannel shirt, jeans, hiking boots, and a goalie mask, and <span style="font-style: italic;">voila!</span>--instant big-screen mass murderer.<br /><br />The room fills gradually, until there's barely space to walk. It's dark, except for orange lights and flickering strobes. Music blares deafeningly from two huge speakers at the front of the room, and vampires, pirates, and dead presidents dance as if they were on fire.<br /><br />I can actually feel the bass thumping in my throat, like a second heartbeat. I would love to step outside and get some air. <br /><br />"Hey, Marissa, how would you feel about--"<br /><br />She doesn't hear me. She's too busy twirling her black hair and talking to some dude with an axe buried in his head.<br /><br />The axe doesn't hide his beefy shoulders or his lumberjack jaw. I can't hear what he's saying, but from his cocky smile and Marissa's giggle, he just made a joke.<br /><br />Oh, how impressive! Studly boy made a funny! Probably some crack about how he put his weight belt on backwards.<br /><br />"Steve, this is my friend Lorne. We used to go out."<br /><br />I extend my hand and he pretends not to see it. "I'm gonna borrow your girlfriend. Don't worry, I'll have her back by morning." She chuckles again as he pulls her out to the dance floor.<br /><br />This sucks. What the hell am I supposed to do now?<br /><br />John F. Kennedy taps my shoulder. "Hey, Steve!"<br /><br />"Who's that?"<br /><br />"It's me, Greg. From Lit class!"<br /><br />"Nice mask, bro."<br /><br />Greg looks out on the dance floor. "Who's the dude dancing with your girlfriend?"<br /><br />"Her <span style="font-style:italic;">friend</span>."<br /><br />"I hate that!"<br /><br />I don't like it, either, but I can't keep her locked down. These are the dating years, the years where we do all the wild shit that we won't have the time or energy for when we're 30. All the good stories start out with, "This one time, in college..." not, "Last night, after I put the kids to bed..." <br /><br />I guess Marissa is living out her story right now. Lorne is just a bit out of her reach, just as she was out of mine. She loves his attention, sucks it down like fancy champagne, but no matter how much she drinks, her insecurity is never satisfied. It doesn't matter that I am here, that I care for her, that we've been together for over two months; I don't look like a J. Crew model, and I'll never be featured in somebody's beefcake calendar. I don't come from a rich family. I'm not a "catch". Lorne is all those things, and he's probably never had to work for any of it. She wants his affection, needs it deeply, and I am nothing more than an obstacle in her way.<br /><br />"Hey. Hey! Are you listening to me? She's looking at you," Greg says.<br /><br />"Who?"<br /><br />"You have nice eyes," a female voice says from behind me.<br /><br />I turn around, and the first thing I notice is the crushed velvet of her bodice, so smooth that it might have been pulled from a jeweler's case. Her puffy sleeves are covered in multi-colored squares, and her silk skirt ends somewhere around mid-thigh--where her gartered black stockings take over.<br /><br />As sexy as she is, I can't stop looking at her face--or at least the part I can see. I marvel at her taut, angular jaw, her thick lips covered in red "fuck me" lipstick, her long neck--but the rest of her face is hidden, covered by a black mask.<br /><br />I lean in closer to see her eyes, squinting to make them out in the flickering light: Deep blue, just like denim, though her pupils are so huge I can barely tell. They're too big, even for such a dark room.<br /><br />"Are you staring at me?"<br /><br />"Are you smoking tonight?" I like to answer a question with a question. Yep, I'm sure she's high.<br /><br />"Mm-hmm. I wouldn't mind having some more, though. Whaddya got?"<br /><br />"Nothing. Sorry."<br /><br />"I'm Ashley."<br /><br />I smile and nod. I've been shit on enough by girls tonight. This one is all mine. I don't care how hot she is; I'm going to make her work for everything she gets. I'll even make her beg me to tell her my name.<br /><br />She pulls me out to the dance floor. She turns her back to me, her shoulder blades against my chest, grabbing two handfuls of her blonde hair as her black-skirted ass sways in perfect time with the beat. Every pair of male eyes within 10 feet turns to gawk.<br /><br />Her skirt flips up, and I break a piece of ice between my teeth as I glimpse a flash of naked white thigh above her garter.<br /><br />The dance floor is hotter than the rest of the room. I dance until my legs ache and sweat beads up on the inside of my mask, but as long as there's no sign of Marissa, I'm staying right here.<br /><br />But there is a sign of her. She's still dancing with Lorne. His axe is askew, slipping down his sweaty forehead; a dark stain covers most of his chest. He's got his hand on the small of her back. He probably let it slip there nonchalantly, as if he wasn't even thinking about it, but I'm sure it's a carefully choreographed first step. Dude thinks he's going to screw my girlfriend! <br /><br />He doesn't care that she's got a boyfriend. To him, I am just some loser, an unworthy opponent for him to humiliate. And Marissa is so googly-eyed over him that she'll overlook every single reason why she shouldn't be doing this. She'll forget every five-hour conversation we've ever had, every time I've comforted her, every time I've put her happiness ahead of my own. She'll throw all that away to satisfy Lorne's ego, and all I can do is stand by and watch.<br /><br />Marissa stops dancing and grabs my shoulder. "Who the hell are you dancing with?" she shouts, and I can tell she's yelling despite the music.<br /><br />I want to lash out at her, to tell her I'm pulling the exact same shit she is, that I can give as good as I get. But as soon as I start in on her I won't be able to stop; the floodgates will open and I'll dump out every ounce of frustration I've been accumulating, right here on the dance floor. I'll embarrass her, or frustrate her, or look like a pussy--all of which would help Lorne's odds of getting what he wants.<br /><br />"That's my friend Ashley," I say, careful to use the same words she did. "We used to go out."<br /><br />Of course, we never went out. But it was too tempting to pass up.<br /><br />Marissa stares at me for what seems like an hour, searching my mask as if it contains an explanation of what just happened. She wasn't expecting this from me, didn't know I could be a worthy adversary. She underestimated me, and, in the space of an hour, I've intrigued her more than a thousand stuffed animals ever could.<br /><br />Lorne pulls her away and she turns her back to me, dancing again.<br /><br />"Who was that?" Ashley coos into my ear. I smell the alcohol on her breath, peach schnapps I think, and it occurs to me that I wouldn't have a turd's chance with this chick if she were sober.<br /><br />"Some girl who's less hot than you," I hear myself say, and I feel my mouth slide into the same wry smile that I saw on Lorne earlier.<br /><br />She throws her head back and laughs entirely too loud for the joke, then leans back in to me, her hands on my shoulders, her waist bumping mine.<br /><br />"Let's go for a walk," she says, and pulls me away by the hand before I can answer.<br /><br />She pushes open a narrow side door, and we instinctively shade our eyes against the harsh light of the hallway. "Ruth is out tonight. Because of the party."<br /><br />"Who?"<br /><br />"Ruth. The house mom. I'm the sergeant-at-arms here, so I have a key to her room."<br /><br />My cock goes stiff. She wants to have sex! Why else would she be sneaking me off to some secluded room in the house? I was hoping for a walk and a little makeout session; looks like I was aiming low.<br /><br />Ruth's bedroom is filled with old-lady knicknacks and pictures of what must be grandkids. The comforter on her bed is pulled tight, with two fluffed pillows sitting perfectly parallel to one another in front of the headboard.<br /><br />She flips the light off, and I strain to see her as she reaches behind her back and unhooks her skirt.<br /><br />It falls to the floor and I see her naked thighs, just like I did before, but more of them this time, much more, slowly coming into focus as my eyes adjust to the dark.<br /><br />Her bustier has not even hit the floor yet and she is unhooking her bra and I listen to my own heavy breath as I frantically unbutton my shirt.<br /><br />This is all happening way too fast for me to think about the consequences, or to worry about the guilt that is surely going to consume me as soon as I leave here.<br /><br />I am going to do this. For once, I am not going to be the victim. I will not be humiliated, will not be shown up by a girl who is supposed to be mine and some arrogant prick who thinks he's bulletproof. Today I am going to win.<br /><br />My heart pounds. I can barely breathe, what with this mask on and all...<br /><br />The mask! It's still on!<br /><br />I reach for it. "Let's leave the masks on!" she says.<br /><br />She strips off her bra and it falls silently from her hand. Her tits are bigger than they looked in her black bustier, full and ripe, and my hands go to them instinctively, squeezing and kneading them, feeling their heft, pinching her nipples.<br /><br />She slips her panties off and we fall onto Ruth's bed. Her legs open and I am in between them and we are fucking, mingling our naked bodies together, finally, finally, unleashing the lust we've been building up all night.<br /><br />She's moaning, softly at first, then louder. She likes this. She wants it. And I want it too, more than I thought I would. I like being on top of her, inside of her, pounding my hips against hers with all my strength, making her moan, making her big tits bounce, controlling her totally.<br /><br />I can feel it building inside me, the orgasm, and I know I should pull out, that cumming inside some girl I don't know is a horrible idea, but I tell myself that it's already too late, that we aren't using protection anyway, that this doesn't make it any worse. Part of me knows that's a lie, but somehow I just don't care.<br /><br />I close my eyes. The shudders consume me and I am filling her with wave upon wave of cum, my breath hot against the inside of the mask.<br /><br />I'm barely off the bed and Ashley is already dressed. "Lift up your mask. Just halfway," she says. I do it.<br /><br />She presses her lips to mine, moaning as her tongue slips wetly into my mouth. By the time I pull the mask back down, she's at the door.<br /><br />"Wait a couple of minutes before you go back out to the party," she says.<br /><br />"Ashley. Wait!"<br /><br />She looks at me.<br /><br />"How did you know I had nice eyes? You hadn't even seen me yet."<br /><br />"Why do you care?" she asks, and before I can answer, she is gone.Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-80125212730085479322009-02-27T20:00:00.000-05:002009-02-27T20:41:06.129-05:00Tuesday, September 9, 2008, 7:30 AM<br />Steve and Tim's house<br /><br />"What were you doing in the shower so long, mister?"<br /><br />"I always take long showers."<br /><br />"You better not have been cumming in there!"<br /><br />It's only been 48 hours or so, but I'm already dying. I couldn't be more spoiled if my last name were Hilton. I wake up most days with my wife on top of me, squeezing my already-hard dick between her muscled thighs. Sometimes we do it twice before I even put a foot on the floor in the morning, and if I get home early enough from work, the chances are pretty good that cuddling will lead to kissing, kissing will lead to touching, and before long, she'll be bent over the cushioned armrest, her tight ass pointed up at me, waiting for me to take her again.<br /><br />On the rare days when we don't do it, I'm either not horny enough to do anything about it (yes, it happens) or I jerk off. Of course, Tim has no problem with this. <br /><br />Except today.<br /><br />We've been planning this forever. She's been off the pill for 6 weeks, and it's finally time to try to get pregnant. No cumming for three days, that was the rule. <br /><br />"Why would you think I was cumming when today is the day?"<br /><br />"The day for what?" she says, tipping her eyes up at me.<br /><br />"You know," I smile.<br /><br />"Say it," she whispers, touching her palm to my cheek and pressing up against me, with nothing more than her night shirt between us, her stiff nipples poking my chest.<br /><br />I go as stiff as a 15-year-old having his first slow dance. Tim loves dirty talk almost as much as I do. It turns me on that she likes it.<br /><br />"It's the day we can try making a baby."<br /><br />"How are we gonna make the baby?" she coos, flicking her tongue against my earlobe.<br /><br />The bottom drops out of my stomach. I didn't need any help getting turned on today, and she's making it ten times worse. I mean better.<br /><br />"By fucking each other's brains out," I finally manage, and the night shirt is already off.<br /><br />**********<br /><br />Saturday, October 25<br /><br />She's well over a month late. But we couldn't have gotten it on the very first try, could we? But then again, we tried a lot more than once...<br /><br />She resisted taking the test for weeks. She didn't want to be disappointed if it was negative, so we waited. But if it is true, she needs to be seeing a doctor regularly.<br /><br />She sits in my lap on the bed, and the minutes pass like centuries.<br /><br />The clock changes.<br /><br />"Go look," she says.<br /><br />"Don't you want to?"<br /><br />"No. You."<br /><br />As I watch myself walk to the bathroom, it hits me. I have a wife! I've settled down! I haven't gone out on a Friday night in weeks, and I don't miss it. I'm not <span style="font-style:italic;">living that life</span> anymore.<br /><br />I pick up the pregnancy test and read it. I turn to face Tim. She's staring at me.<br /><br />"Come here and give me a hug, mom," I say.Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-64572219492227450782008-09-21T10:09:00.001-04:002008-09-21T10:46:45.947-04:0045 degrees and fallingTim's mother, Diana, knows everything.<br /><br />She knows how they'll cure cancer someday (high-tech blood transfusions), how to prevent kids from being abducted (by implanting GPS devices under their skin), and how to keep convicts from escaping prison (by building jails in space. Dumb idea, I know, and I'm sure Michael Scofield would find a way to break out anyhow.)<br /><br />But most annoyingly of all, Diana knows how to keep mother Earth beautiful and pristine for all of eternity: By never throwing anything away. Ever.<br /><br />Putting something in the garbage is painful for Diana. Every once in a while, just for laughs, I'll drop a plastic bottle in the trash while she's watching and wait for the scream. "What are you <span style="font-style:italic;">dooooo</span>ing?!" she'll shout. "Recycle it!"<br /><br />As for anything larger than a plastic bottle, you can forget it. If she has no room in the house for it, she'll try to sell it; if she can't sell it, she'll give it away; if she can't give it away, she'll put it on her curb with a "Free" sign on it, and leave it there for weeks until her husband threatens to divorce her.<br /><br />Monday, September 8, 2008, 6:39PM<br />Steve and Tim's house<br /><br />"What's that?" I ask, pointing to a strangely familiar red-cushioned office chair.<br /><br />"It's our new chair!" Tim says, way too enthusiastically, like a kid trying to convince her mother to keep a stray dog.<br /><br />It doesn't look new. And there is only one person sufficiently lacking in common decency to palm off a faded, tattered, and probably malfunctioning piece of crap like that on us.<br /><br />"That's your mother's chair, isn't it?"<br /><br />"It works," she says, unconvincingly. "Plus, we need a second chair, so we can sit together while you're on the computer!"<br /><br />She hates it too. But she only stands up to her mother on very important matters; otherwise, fighting with her would be a full-time job. The chair is not going anywhere, so Tim must make her peace with it. She's forced to smile bravely and pretend to love it, the same way you compliment a friend's ugly baby or smelly dog.<br /><br />"Watch!" she chirps, plopping down onto it. <br /><br />I stare as her breasts bounce heavily. Why didn't I notice that tight T-shirt before?<br /><br />She wriggles cutely into the seat, and the back rest immediately tips away from her and comes to a stop at a 45 degree angle, so that the chair looks more like a poolside lounger than a piece of office furniture. <br /><br />She smiles weakly and reclines against the back rest, spinning a little to face me, her knees slightly apart, hips thrust upward, her tight shirt straining against her boobs.<br /><br />My cock stiffens at her suddenly suggestive posture. I love that she still turns me on so much, even after two years of dating and almost a year of marriage. I imagine myself pulling that frayed shirt over her head and feeling her nipple stiffen as I tighten my lips around it...<br /><br />"Why are you looking at me like that?"<br /><br />"You are so fucking gorgeous, you know that?" I ask in a hoarse whisper.<br /><br />"You're crazy," she grins, rolling her eyes.<br /><br />I grab her shirt and pull it up over her head, just like I imagined. Her naked breasts stare out at me, her nipples already at firm attention. She's been thinking about this, too.<br /><br />Yeah, I've seen her tits a million times, and yet, like a song that never gets old, their smooth skin and gentle, sloping curves still get me hard every time.<br /><br />My heart races. I hear the soft <em>cling</em>-ing of my belt buckle as I pull off my creased office slacks and frantically unbutton my white Oxford shirt. I watch unblinkingly as she slips her jogging shorts over her round ass and turns her big blue eyes up at me with a sexy half-smile.<br /><br />I lower myself in between her legs, my pulse pounding in my ears, and rub my cock against the smooth skin of her pussy.<br /><br />There is nothing like a hairless vagina. I love the pink folds of flesh and the telltale shine of wetness that tells me she's turned on. I love how her clit swells with her arousal and the way it feels between my teeth, hard and bulletlike. Covering all that natural beauty with wiry hair is a sin. Shaving it clean is like cutting down a row of nine-foot tall shrubs and revealing a gorgeous house behind them.<br /><br />I shove it into her all at once, and the pleasure rushes to my head. I watch her, soaking in every detail, her bouncing tits, her half-opened mouth, her curvy thighs pinned against my hips, the way her hair cascades gently down her shoulder, ending halfway down her chest, the graceful peaks and valleys of her nude body, as if designed by an architect.<br /><br />I grab the arms of the chair for leverage and thrust my cock into her harder, so hard that she falls back against the chair with all her weight. <span style="font-style:italic;">This thing is going to break one day</span>, I think.<br /><br />"Oh God," she whispers in my ear, and I look down again, growing harder as I watch her pussy lips alternately turn inside out and disappear inside her again.<br /><br />The seat back protests loudly under our combined weight, an ugly, squeaking groan that under any other circumstances would have made us stop short. <br /><br />But not now.<br /><br />I'm going to cum. I can feel the orgasm rising inside me, like a storm cloud waiting to explode with angry torrents of rain.<br /><br />I fuck her harder, faster, listening to my own heavy breath, feeling her legs tighten around my waist and her hands squeeze my biceps. It's probably my imagination, but it almost seems like the chair is...<br /><br />Crack! Thud!<br /><br />The seat back breaks free of the chair and drops to the floor. Tim falls violently backwards, flailing her arms wildly for balance. The lurching of our bodies tips the chair to one side, and for an endless moment we are at a crazy angle and the room falls eerily silent before we crash to the floor in a heap, as I am bombarded by elbows and knees.<br /><br />"Looks like your mother's getting her chair back," I say.Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-87411595579737151542008-08-07T19:36:00.000-04:002008-08-07T20:11:41.234-04:00Steve's therapy, reduxMonday, July 21, 2008, 7:00pm<br /><br />Dr. Debra Sussman's office<br /><br />After my <a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2004/06/in-case-there-was-any-doubt.html">illustrious attempt at therapy</a> back in the day, I never thought I would be in a shrink's office again, but here I am.<br /><br />"Steve, Felicia, come on in," she smiles, as if we were her long-lost cousins.<br /><br />"Please call me Tim," she says.<br /><br />Debra extends her arms to hug us, but we hesitate, and she ends up patting our shoulders. It's awkward.<br /><br />The room seems made for calm reflection, from the maroon couch to the soft carpet and the nondescript wallpaper; though it manages to relax me, I forget what it looks like five minutes after I leave.<br /><br />"So, what's up?" Debra says, placing her hands in her lap.<br /><br />"We've been fighting," Tim says.<br /><br />"Really?" asks Debra, raising her eyebrows, as if she were some kind of accountant or tax adviser who couldn't possibly help us. "What'cha been fighting about?"<br /><br />"I work late hours at a restaurant in downtown Boston. I barely get to see Steve at all, since he works during the day, and he's really frustrated about it. He never gets to see me, and we're newlyweds, and he feels like we should be spending a lot more time together."<br /><br />"Is this correct, Steve?"<br /><br />"Yeah. But she didn't mention that she has wanted a chef job for a long time. This is her lifelong dream, and it's finally coming true, and she needs me to be more understanding about that. She loves me, and enjoys our time togther, but she also needs to be happy and fulfilled careerwise, and this is the only way she sees to accomplish that right now."<br /><br />Debra looks at me, then at Tim, then back at me. The room fills with silence for what feels like an hour.<br /><br />"Let me tell you something," she says, matter-of-factly. "You just stated each other's points of view perfectly. Know how I know you did it perfectly?"<br /><br />We look at her.<br /><br />"Because you didn't interrupt each other, and you didn't correct each other. Not once. I have couples who have been coming to me for 18 months who still can't do that. You did it the first day!"<br /><br />She smiles.<br /><br />"Can we go now?" I ask, and we all laugh.<br /><br />"Steve, did you know what the hours were when she took the job?"<br /><br />"Well, yeah, but--"<br /><br />"So that's a yes?"<br /><br />I know where she's going. I didn't object when Tim was interviewing for the job, so I have no right to object now. But that's an oversimplification.<br /><br />"And Tim, you spent a lot more time with Steve before you took this job, right?"<br /><br />"Yes! But he knew that--"<br /><br />"So that's a yes also," Debra says.<br /><br />Good! For a minute there, I thought I was being ganged up on.<br /><br />"Steve, do you want her to quit?"<br /><br />"No, I just want more of her time."<br /><br />"How's she supposed to do that? She works late nights!"<br /><br />Umm...<br /><br />"And Tim, do you want Steve to just be happy with the way things are now? Are <em>you</em> happy with the way things are?"<br /><br />I would really love it if Tim said the right thing here. I'm not going to lie to you: It's hard feeling like I've taken a back seat to my wife's career.<br /><br />"I miss him," Tim says, looking sadly at me. "I know you might not believe that, Steve, but I miss you so much."<br /><br />"Me too, Tim."<br /><br />"So you want me to tell you how you can spend lots of time together while you both work full time on different schedules," Debra says, looking at us. <br /><br />"No, I told you we were fighting," Tim says. "The problem is the fighting. We're not communicating."<br /><br />"You're communicating fine," Debra says.<br /><br />"We're communicating fine <em>today</em>," Tim says. "At home we're screaming and swearing, and..."<br /><br />"Fighting is not a bad thing, you know."<br /><br />"It is when it's taking over the marriage," Tim says. <br /><br />Wow. These two aren't playing around. Better just stay out of their way, for now.<br /><br />"Steve, do you agree?" asks Debra.<br /><br />So much for keeping my nose out of it.<br /><br />"Trust me. We wouldn't have gone to all the trouble to come out here unless it was an emergency," I say. "You know, I just wish--"<br /><br />They both look at me. "What?" They say in unison.<br /><br />"No, it's nothing, it was just something stupid."<br /><br />"Say it," says Debra. "There's no judgment allowed in this room. There are no dumb statements."<br /><br />"I was just gonna say, I wish we could both stay up all night and spend that time together instead of sleeping. But, I go to work in the mornings, so I have to sleep."<br /><br />"Wait a minute," Debra says.<br /><br />"No, I can't pull all-nighters. There's no way."<br /><br />"You don't have to," she says. "Steve, what time do you get home from work?"<br /><br />"I dunno. Six-thirty? Seven?"<br /><br />"And what time do you get home, Tim?"<br /><br />I see where she's going with this. I get home, eat something, and sleep for seven hours or so, then Tim gets home and we chill out until I go to work. <br /><br />"You could just sleep when you get home!" Tim says. "Then we can spend time together!"<br /><br />"I know. But that would screw up our body clocks big time, wouldn't it?"<br /><br />"This is not a long-term solution, guys," Debra says. "But it sounds like you're not connecting, and you need more time together. Give this a shot. Stay up together and talk about your situation. Talk about your long-term goals as a family. Are you planning on having children?"<br /><br />"Yes!" Tim says.<br /><br />"You do realize it's going to get harder when you have kids, right?"<br /><br />"We know," Tim says, looking at the floor.<br /><br />"Spend an overnight together and talk about how you're going to fit kids into your schedules. That's your homework," Debra says.Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-50439758273730103762008-07-19T13:01:00.003-04:002008-07-19T17:57:34.366-04:00"...I'm guessing Jay Leno is out of the question..."Marriage was supposed to end my story.<br /><br />The fancy wedding was the final scene, after which I would say, "...and we've been together ever since." I was supposed to put away my bad habits like out-of-style clothes, and lead an uneventful existence until I the day I end up stuffed into a box wearing a fancy suit. But alas, things have happened.<br /><br />Tim worked hard to find her job. She networked tirelessly, chased down endless leads, and tolerated every perverted restaurant owner who refused to even consider her for a chef's position because she happens to have a vagina ("You're cute! Why don't you work for me as a hostess? You'd make good money!")<br /><br />She finally found a sous chef job in downtown Boston. It was far (35 miles), the pay was less than she wanted, and of course the hours were horrible, but she was thrilled.<br /><br />I was thrilled for her, too. There was joy, pure joy, in her face when she told me the news. She was going to get paid to do something she absolutely loved. I was proud that she persevered, and impressed at how ambitious she was about it all. I knew she would have to work many late nights, including lots of weekends, but we'd find a way to spend time together. We were newlyweds, right?<br /><br />As it turned out, "many nights" turned out to be five or six a week, "late" meant 1:00 or 2:00 am, and "lots of weekends" translated to <span style="font-style: italic;">every </span>weekend.<br /><br />At first, I felt better with a shower of kisses, an "I'm sorry, baby" and a cowgirl-style, middle-of-the-night fuck. But it got old fast.<br /><br />When I wake up for work, she's still sleeping, and when I get back, she's gone, already on her way to the restaurant. I hate coming home to an empty house, with nothing for dinner and everything in darkness. I hate going to bed alone, as if I were a single guy all over again. I got married for companionship, and it feels like I never get any. Call me spoiled, or greedy, or whatever you want, but this sucks.<br /><br />Tim tries to make it up to me. She didn't dare take a weekend day off for the first six months or so, but then she managed to get a Saturday and Sunday off, and took me to a bed and breakfast in the mountains, where we turned off our cell phones and she catered to me like royalty the whole time. She cooked me everything I wanted, paraded around in sexy outfits, and sucked and fucked me as if it were my last two days on Earth. I did feel a lot better after that, but she had to work 12 days <span style="font-style: italic;">straight </span>to make up for all the favors, and nothing truly changed afterwards.<br /><br />The argument goes something like this:<br /><br />"You're never home."<br /><br />"You supported my career choice; now deal with it."<br /><br />"I didn't know it was gonna be this bad!"<br /><br />Add in a few "bitch"s, "asshole"s and "fuck you!"s, and it's more or less a weekly conversation at the Caruso household. It's interesting, in a way, how we can make the exact same points so many times without resolving anything. It occurs to me sometimes that this is how marital problems get started. But that could never happen to Tim and me.<br /><br />Could it?<br /><br />Tim says I need to deal with it while she builds her career, since I spent many a long week building mine, and I remind her that I wasn't married or even dating anyone at the time. Every argument has a counter argument; every jab earns a jab in return. We are both too good at arguing, too good at turning things around on each other to make any progress.<br /><br />Sometimes I wonder what is going to happen if we don't find any common ground on this issue. "If you want me to quit, I'll quit," she always says, but I know she doesn't mean it. If she ever left that job because of me, I'd never hear the end of it. I wonder if we would ever split up because of this.<br /><br />The arguments keep getting louder, and the problem has infected other areas of our lives. On nights when she's actually home, we usually end up going to bed mad. At a party, if one of our friends mentions working late, we glare at each other. How much worse can it get?<br /><br />"Why doesn't she just quit?" my brother Chris says. "Her marriage should be more important."<br /><br />"Says the guy who's fucking around with some young hottie."<br /><br />Yeah, he's still boning her.<br /><br />"Different!"<br /><br />"What about Tim's side? She'll say that it's just her being away from home, and that's not the end of the world either."<br /><br />"You see your wife two days and two nights a week. That's not enough!"<br /><br />Wednesday, July 16, 2008, 5:45pm<br />Steve and Tim's house<br /><br />I've been in Cincinnati for three days on business. I am exhausted, physically and mentally, and glad to finally be back.<br /><br />"Nice of you to come home," Tim sneers as I pull my suitcase through the door.<br /><br />"Wow, three whole days alone, Tim. How did you handle it?"<br /><br />"You mean three days since I had to do your laundry? And a sink full of dishes?"<br /><br />"I left at three AM, Tim! How the hell was I supposed to do chores?"<br /><br />She jumps up from her seat at the kitchen table. She's wearing a powder blue short-sleeve T-shirt that I've always loved on her. It's a little baggier since the breast reduction, but she's still sexy as hell in it. I'm smitten by her, even as she crosses her toned arms across her chest and looks lasers at me.<br /><br />"Why are you traveling so much? I hate when you're not here!"<br /><br />"You do, Tim? Why? It's not like you're ever home anyway."<br /><br />"Don't be sarcastic. Your chores are your responsibility, and if you don't do them, then it's more work for me!"<br /><br />The anger spills over inside me. She's reaching, looking for something to rag me about, probably so I can't rag her first.<br /><br />"So leave the goddamn dishes and laundry then!" I shout. "At least let me get in the door before you start pestering me. Bitch!"<br /><br />"Fuck you! You are such an asshole!" she shrieks, whipping a plastic tumbler at me. It careens off my arm, leaving a mark.<br /><br />I grab the tumbler and throw it back at her as hard as I can, but she's already left the room. It bounces off the wall with a hollow <span style="font-style:italic;">thwok!</span><br /><br />I sit at the kitchen table, waiting for my racing heart to slow down. I open the paper, but I can't concentrate. I might as well be trying to read Klingon.<br /><br />I look up. Tim is standing over me, her beautiful face stony with anger. Or maybe it's disappointment.<br /><br />Is this it? Is she leaving me? Is she going to ask me to leave?<br /><br />"I want us to go talk to someone," she says, finally.Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-82817129541883028572008-05-30T12:32:00.004-04:002008-05-31T00:22:37.291-04:00Lila and meA lot of you who contact me still ask about Lila. People in my non-blog life do the same thing. Hopefully, that means I've done a good job of describing her.<br /><br />Lila and I are still friends, but we don't talk as much as we used to. Part of that is because I'm married, and doing all the things that newlyweds do. For Tim and I, a month without some kind of romantic getaway is an eternity. We're always visiting family, or eating at some new restaurant, or catching up on "our shows", and it doesn't leave much time for anyone else.<br /><br />Sometimes Lila and I will text each other, or send a quick email to say hi. Occasionally, we'll talk late at night, like we used to. Beyond that, we go from one month to the next with little contact.<br /><br />Lila's been with her boyfriend, Nate, for well over a year, and the more I hear about him, the more wary I get. At the beginning, he struck me as a cool, successful, well-adjusted guy and a great match for her. But as she's gotten to know him, he seems terribly insecure and needy.<br /><br />The script was written long ago, and it's been played out more times than Hamlet, MacBeth, and Cats combined. Stop me if you've heard it:<br /><br /><blockquote>Young man grows up and becomes irresistible to women. He beds one after another,<br />satisfying his every wildest erotic fantasy, having his way with any female within smelling distance of him. They simply can't keep away from him, and he's having the time of his life.<br /><br />But there's a serious problem. With the ocean of testosterone flooding his veins, the only possible way he can quiet his voracious sexual hunger is to spray his manly fluids around like a lawn sprinkler, dousing as many women as possible. It's just a matter of biology, really: He simply can't control it!<br /><br />But the women don't understand, you see. He only needs them for an hour or two, and they want more. Having experienced his rugged manliness, they fling themselves at him, clutching at his pant legs like sad children, begging him to remain in their lives, however superficially.<br /><br />He could have these women any way he wanted them, of course. He could simply drop by their houses, unannounced, fuck them mercilessly, and then piss in their toilet bowls and leave without lowering the seats, and they'd be on his voice mail the next day, asking him to do it again.<br /><br />But, alas, this is not how he wants it.<br /><br />It would get complicated. These poor, naive girls, they simply don't understand what it is to be a man like our hero. They don't understand his need to roam the earth, fornicating with wild abandon. They would interpret his repeated conjugal visits as "love", or "commitment", or "lack of nausea", and soon after, the demands would start.<br /><br />They will demand that he be exclusive. That he only date them, to the exclusion of all others, that he holster his babymaking weapon and only draw it for their benefit. Sadly, this is impossible, and our happy horndog rides off, leaving a trail of broken hearts in his wake. </blockquote><br />You ought to know this story, since pretty much every guy between the ages of 17 and 35 has been telling it since the mid-70's. Nate is no exception.<br /><br />At the beginning, Lila used to tell me about this mysterious guy who would give her a little head-nod when he walked past her at the gym. Sometimes he'd say hi. One day they were next to each other on the treadmills and he told her she had "great arms". It sounds corny, I know, but she wore tank tops every day from then on, hoping to impress him. As if she had to try.<br /><br />I gotta be honest. Hearing about some young stallion macking up Lila made me jealous. I know, I know, I'm married, but I get territorial sometimes. I could see she was really intrigued with him, and it made me realize that both of us had moved on.<br /><br />She would call me and wonder aloud if he noticed her, if he thought she was attractive. Was she serious?<br /><br />"But I don't even shower before I go to the gym!" she said.<br /><br />"Get a clue, honey. The guy is drooling over you."<br /><br />She doesn't get it. Lila could go to the gym in a garbage bag, and guys would be tripping over each other to hand her a twistie-tie.<br /><br />By the time he asked her out, she was about ready to rip of his Adidas sweatsuit and ride him cowgirl style on a weight bench. Call me cynical, but I wondered if this guy was a true player, or if he just lacked the balls to hit on her properly.<br /><br />On Friday nights, he either played poker or went out drinking with co-workers, and every time she asked to come along, he'd give her a speech about "taking it slow". Pushing her away like that, giving her a challenge, made her want him ten times more. Guys didn't do that to Lila!<br /><br />"Why won't he take me with him? Is he ashamed of me?" she would ask.<br /><br />"Lila, do you seriously believe that? Really?"<br /><br />"Well, why then?"<br /><br />"He's either trying to play the I-don't-give-a-shit role to make you want him more, or he's afraid of falling for you. Or he's queer."<br /><br />"Maybe he has another girlfriend."<br /><br />"Then who needs him?"<br /><br />The cool-dude routine faded away soon enough. After about a year with Lila, Nate was dropping hints about marriage. She was flattered, but she didn't encourage him, hoping he'd get the hint and slow down.<br /><br />"He just asked me," she said on Thanksgiving night, and I could tell from her tone that she turned him down.<br /><br />I figured he would dump her after that, but he didn't. In fact, he didn't even back off; if anything, he got worse.<br /><br />After months of negotiating (or begging, depending on your point of view), he asked her again on Valentine's Day, and she said yes.<br /><br />"Why can't you be happy for me?" she asked.<br /><br />"Because you don't seem happy."<br /><br />We fought about it, and I was secretly glad that she was unhappy, that Nate did not inhabit her the way I thought he might have. And I think Lila knew it.<br /><br />A month or so later, she was calling me again, just like she used to, and she sounded sadder than ever. As part of Lila's "take it slow" requirements, they haven't set a date yet, and it's a constant source of irritation for him.<br /><br />Now that they're engaged, he smothers her even more than before. He works out with her at the gym, rushing to her side any time a guy so much as says hello. If she's 15 minutes late coming home from work, he wants to know why, and he especially hates her talking to me.<br /><br />She's not forbidden from calling, exactly, but I do get mysteriously cut off sometimes while talking to her. He trash-talks me constantly, asking why she wasted her time with me, and if she says anything remotely resembling a defense of our relationship, he flies off the handle. It's funny in a way: he's 30, ten years older than Lila, and yet she dominates him, like a young girl with her father wrapped around her little finger.<br /><br />Even though I'd be jealous, it would still be nice to see Lila in something resembling a stable relationship.<br /><br />And it would be nice to talk to her like I used to, too.Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-56172593419472358642008-05-28T07:22:00.002-04:002008-05-28T07:35:50.922-04:00Open seasonLiz Trotta, Fox News Channel, 5/25/2008: "And now we have what some are reading as a suggestion that somebody knock off Osama, uh Obama. Well, both, if we could."<br /><br />Mark Madden, ESPN, 5/22/2008: "I'm very disappointed to hear that Senator Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts is near death because of a brain tumor. I always hoped Senator Kennedy would live long enough to be assassinated. I wonder if he got a card from the Kopechnes."<br /><br />Mike Huckabee, 5/16/2008: "That was Barack Obama, he just tripped off a chair, he's getting ready to speak. Somebody aimed a gun at him and he dove for the floor.”<br /><br />Interesting how these "jokes" always involve extreme violence and murder. Makes you think, doesn't it...Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-54731939334181244502008-04-30T23:35:00.003-04:002008-05-01T00:37:02.878-04:00Okay, assholes, update timeFirst off, for everyone who's been IM'ing and emailing, thanks for the good wishes. I've been married for--gulp--six months now, and I am really happy. I have to admit, I really hate that Tim works so many nights and weekends, but she loves her job, and as long as she does, I will support her.<br /><br />After our one-year anniversary this October, Tim and I are going to try for a baby. I can't wait to be a dad. <br /><br />I've decided to put Bismarck on hold. I'm not happy at all with where it's going, and I think I'll have to start over. All I can say is, it feels wrong to me. Many of you noticed the same thing, and of course, seized on the opportunity to rip me a new one for it. Why am I not surprised?<br /><br />More later guys...<br /><br />StevoSteve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-84774336058816673462008-04-27T00:10:00.003-04:002008-04-28T14:20:38.591-04:00Chapter 16: A (bare)Backstabbing<div style="TEXT-ALIGN: center"><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2007/08/chapter-1-revelation.html">Chapter 1 begins here</a><br /></div><p>_____________________________________________________<br /><br /><span style="FONT-STYLE: italic">SugarKookie: he doesnt like using condoms<br /><br />RedFoxx85: you let him bareback you?!?!?<br /><br />SugarKookie: mmhmm<br /><br />RedFoxx85: ur so bad<br /><br />SugarKookie: it was soooooo nice tho<br /><br />SugarKookie: o and his gf doesnt let him cum inside her<br /><br />RedFoxx85: what? why<br /><br />SugarKookie: she says its gross<br /><br />RedFoxx85: dumb bitch<br /><br />RedFoxx85: so u let him cum in you?<br /><br />SugarKookie: mmmmmm, of course<br /><br />RedFoxx85: lol, u like that dont u<br /><br />SugarKookie: soo much<br /><br />SugarKookie: i think hes breaking up w/her<br /><br />RedFoxx85: seriously??<br /><br />RedFoxx85: how cool would that b 4u<br /><br />SugarKookie: totally</span><br /><br /><div style="TEXT-ALIGN: center">* * *<br /></div><br /><br />I'm not going to lie to you: My first impulse is to do nothing. Nothing, that is, except sit in front of the computer and ask "why me?" until I collapse from grief and exhaustion. I want to sulk, or cry, or put my fist through the bathroom mirror--but I have to force myself to even think of doing something constructive.<br /><br />You probably think I am an idiot for the whole Jeopardy! thing, but it's actually helped me; I can't solve a problem in a second and a half if I'm not thinking about solving it at all. The Bismarck idea has helped me do that.<br /><br />Suddenly, my apartment feels like a tomb. Nothing worthwhile will get accomplished as long as I sit here, overdosing on self-pity, burning hour after hour on the computer, hours that I'll never get back. How can anything change this way?<br /><br />I want to be anywhere but here. I bolt out the door and into my car, dialing Stainer's number as I go.<br /><br />Stainer barely listens as I tell him about the Bismarck revelation. He keeps staring down at his coffee and shaking his head slowly, like a disapproving parent.<br /><br />"When are you gonna wake up, Eric?" he asks, finally looking up at me. "She's fucking this guy. She's <span style="FONT-STYLE: italic">fucking </span>him! She's getting naked for him. She's sucking his dick! She's <em>playing</em> you! You busted her, and instead of doing something about it, you're talking about some damn game show!"<br /><br />"Don't you think that--"<br /><br />"Let me tell you something," he continues, "if my girl ever did that to me, I'd dump her cheating ass. I'd dump her, and then I'd go fuck every one of her friends just to make a point. No one does that to me."<br /><br />"Emily is still having sex with me. It's not like I'm going without. If I break up with her--"<br /><br />"Don't give me that!" he shouts. "You're looking for an excuse to stay with her, because you're afraid of being alone! Stop being afraid, Eric!"<br /><br />I am afraid. But that doesn't mean it's right to let her go. I know Emily still cares for me; she must, or else she would not stay with me. She could leave me if she wanted, and she's not. I must be giving her something she needs.<br /><br />I know it will be hard, but from now on, I'm going to think about this positively, like a problem that needs to be solved. And no, I'm not going to quit. I'm not going to let Doug win. I'm going to fight for the one I love.<br /><br /><div style="TEXT-ALIGN: center">* * *<br /></div><br /><br />The air felt warmer as I walked out to my car the next morning; for the first time this year, I was sure that winter was gone. Brilliant sunlight poured endlessly from a sky so blue that it might have been colored by a kid's crayon, and I decided right then that it was going to be a good day. I'd make it a good day, even if everything went wrong.<br /><br />I sat in the car and stared out the sunroof for a long time, watching a single white cloud float lazily across the sky. I can't remember the last time it's been this perfect out.<br /><br />This weather, this day, is just as much mine as it is Doug's. Or Stainer's, or anyone else's. I deserve it as much as they do. And not just that; I deserve success, and happiness, and money, just as much as they do. If I want something, I can go out and get it, just like they can. If I try to get something I want, and fail, so be it. But from now on, I'm always going to try.<br /><br />After I put together that list a few weeks ago of all the new construction projects downtown, I created a marketing campaign for them. It was expensive--the glossy mailing sheets alone cost us over $1,000--and Todd hesitated a long time before saying yes. And now, almost a month later, we've gotten one phone call.<br /><br />Though we have full-time reps who are fully capable, I usually handle the follow up calls on initiatives like this one. It's going to take me the better part of the day to call them all, but I'm going to do it. I'm going to keep pushing, focus relentlessly until the job is done.<br /><br />"Eric, I was trying to enter a prospect in the database and the computer locked up again," Barbara says, standing in my doorway. "Can you take care of it?"<br /><br />"I--"<br /><br />"I'll be at my desk. Can you just let me know when it's working?"<br /><br />Shit. This is what always happens to me: Just as I get going on a project, someone interrupts me and I get sidetracked. I'm going to spend an hour on the phone with tech support--<br /><br />Wait.<br /><br />"Barbara." She turns around.<br /><br />"You don't need me for that. Just call tech support. The number is in the help menu."<br /><br />"But Eric, I--"<br /><br />"Barbara, you know more about the system than I do at this point. You can handle it."<br /><br />She turns on her heel and huffs loudly as she leaves the office. She's pissed. But it worked! Now, for the follow-up calls.<br /><br />Wait.<br /><br />I have a lot of work to do. Manager work. If I could get an account manager to make the calls, I could have the whole day free.<br /><br />I call Gordy, our best account manager, into my office and explain the project. His eyes get wider as he learns what kind of numbers are involved. "Eric, don't you usually call on these?" he asks.<br /><br />"You want the commissions, right?" I ask.<br /><br />"Depends. Is Todd going to want to pay the commissions?"<br /><br />"Believe me. If you make these deals happen, Todd'll give you a blowjob."<br /><br />"Tell him I'd prefer the commission."<br /><br />Gordy bounces happily from his chair and off to his desk. My office falls silent, and I look slowly from one side of the room to the other, expecting a phone call, a problem, some type of emergency. But nothing happens.<br /><br />So what the hell do I do now?Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-42668410582237129412008-04-12T21:40:00.003-04:002008-04-27T00:51:59.299-04:00Chapter 15: Bismarck, North Dakota<div style="TEXT-ALIGN: center"><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2007/08/chapter-1-revelation.html">Chapter 1 begins here</a><br /></div><p>_____________________________________________________<br /><br />You don't pick your family. And friends are fine for poker night, or for helping you put up a garage door opener. But having someone you love the way I love Emily is all that truly matters. Emily knows that, and she thinks it's a big joke.<br /><br />The seeds were planted years ago, before we even started dating. I showed Emily, in a million small ways, that I loved her too much, that I would tolerate neglect to be with her. That I would, just as Stainer said, rather have been miserable than alone. A small piece of her attention was enough to satisfy me. What's happening now is a direct result.<br /><br />I was convinced that I'd never do better than her. Gradually, she learned that if she needed me, I'd be at her doorstep at a minute's notice no matter what my other priorities were, that she could puke in my car after a long night of drinking without any cleaning to worry about the next morning.<br /><br />She'll never respect me, and I'll ache for her for the rest of my days. The only thing that will make me happy is Emily coming back, being mine and only mine. But she's found excitement now, true excitement, in the pursuit of a wealthy, desirable man who is just a bit out of her reach, the same way Emily is out of mine. She burns for him the way I burn for her; she lies awake at night, rehearsing every conversation, second-and third-guessing every outfit, just as I do, and now that she has tasted what Doug has to offer, I will never, ever get what I want.<br /><br />I'm supposed to quietly shuffle off to my place at the back of the line and accept my fate. I'm supposed to passively absorb abuse until I finally die, get stuffed into a pine box and rot away underneath a couple of yards of dirt for all of eternity.<br /><br />Fuck. That.<br /><br />I can't have Emily. My job is a disaster. But, when I'm 85 years old, frail and desolate, sitting in a puddle of my own piss, it will be nice to know that at least I stood up for myself, that I didn't let some son of a bitch run roughshod over me. Yeah, I'm doing this.<br /><br />I'm never getting away with it, though. I'm not one of these psychotic freaks with icewater running through their veins, who can look at you, stone-faced, and lie about killing someone. This will end badly.<br /><br />I couldn't just kill Doug, then cruise back home and wash the blood off like a faceful of barbecue sauce after a messy picnic. I'm not capable of that.<br /><br />It might be after my 9th green beer some St. Patrick's Day. Or it might be in bed, after Emily has made sweet love to me and told me that I could share anything at all with her. But sooner or later, the secret will jump out of me, and part of me will be glad, because I will need to hear that I was right and Doug was wrong, that he deserved it, that I am not a bad person, that--<br /><br />Dammit. This isn't a fun train of thought. I need to be calm for what I'm about to do, not all sweaty-palmed and scatterbrained. I need a drink.<br /><br /><div align="center"><br />* * *<br /></div><br />The midnight sky is more grey than black, and a cloudy mist rolls across my headlights like smoke from a brush fire. My windbreaker is suddenly not enough for the cold, and with shivering fingers, I turn up the heat in my car as high as it will go.<br /><br />I've driven by Captain's 100 times, but never went inside before now. The closer I get to the entrance, the more I see why.<br /><br />Captain's is a square yellow building which sits in the middle of a cracked patch of asphalt, between a gas station that went out of business two years ago and a check cashing place. It only has two windows, and they are so plastered over with scotch-taped signs that I can't see in.<br /><br />The flimsy screen door slams shut behind me as I enter, and I'm met with the smell of buffalo wings and stale beer. A bare light bulb hangs over a pool table, its glow reflecting dully off the stained walls.<br /><br />The stool creaks so loudly as I sit at the bar that I instinctively jump up, and a horrifyingly ugly woman behind the counter stops wiping the bar long enough to laugh at me. Doesn't ask what I want to drink, though.<br /><br />This episode completes my humiliation. By this time tomorrow, I'll be in a morgue with a tag on my toe, or getting my mug shot taken. Most people in that situation go out gracefully; they find a halfway decent restaurant where they can enjoy a last meal, maybe even gather some loved ones to share it with. Me? I'm in a rickety old dump, alone, and hideous barmaids are laughing at me.<br /><br />"Bar's almost closed," she says, finally, turning to face me directly. There's a huge mole next to the corner of her mouth, an orange knob that distracts me from her otherwise pale skin.<br /><br />"I'll have a Kamikaze," I say, firmly. I've never had one before, but what better drink could there be for me now?<br /><br />"We're all outta lime juice," she says, turning her droopy eyes up at me.<br /><br />"How about a Screwdriver?"<br /><br />She sighs loudly, whirls around, picks up an empty plastic jug and slams it back down. "All outta OJ too. Can't I just get you a beer?" she groans.<br /><br />A Jeopardy! rerun blares from a TV set on a high shelf behind her. <br /><br />Just perfect. A trio of nerds with photographic memories spewing out obscure facts, to remind me that, beyond my romantic failings, I am also intellectually inferior.<br /><br />"This state capital was named for a famous German chancellor," Alex says.<br /><br />A contestant named Greg rings in. "What is Bismarck, North Dakota?" he asks, and before Alex even tells him he is right, he's looking up at the board to make the next selection. I wish I could be that confident about anything.<br /><br />He didn't think about the answer. He knew it, completely and totally, as if it were encoded in his DNA. Pressing the button on his controller and giving the correct question was a subconscious reflex for him, something he could have done while shaving or tying his shoes.<br /><br />It seems to me that I could learn a lot from this dork. If I could have his confidence, maybe I wouldn't get stepped on so much. Confidence impresses people. They remember it. You become <em>that guy</em>, the one they better not try to argue with. And in real life, there is no game show host standing next to you with a stack of index cards to tell you you're wrong. <br /><br />Wouldn't it be great if I could answer every question in the amount of time it took Greg to say, "Bismarck, North Dakota"? Wouldn't it become easy to silence every doubter, to solve every problem that came my way? If I could somehow manage to do that, I would become a completely different person. A guy like that wouldn't have to commit murder just to make a point...<br /><br />...I need to go home and think.<br /><br /><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2008/04/chapter-16-barebackstabbing.html">Next... Chapter 16: A (bare)Backstabbing</a>Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-32272651449933496622008-03-09T10:40:00.004-04:002008-04-12T22:36:05.694-04:00Chapter 14: My fingers do the walking<div style="TEXT-ALIGN: center"><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2007/08/chapter-1-revelation.html">Chapter 1 begins here</a><br /></div><p>_____________________________________________________<br /><br />I swerve onto the Saw Mill Road, pressing harder on the gas pedal even as the rear of my car fishtails wildly.<br /><br />I thought Emily would never leave. She was very cuddly after we did it, pressing tightly up against me in bed, her leg draped over mine. Luckily, she's helping her cousin plan a wedding shower, and has to be across town first thing in the morning.<br /><br />"It's way closer to my house, otherwise I'd stay, baby," she cooed. "I'll be done around noon; can I come visit you then, so we can play some more?" she asked, and I grew hard in spite of myself.<br /><br />I thought a lot about what I would do when I finally saw the hairless patch between her legs. I fantasized about the scene, saw myself wrapping my hands around her throat and squeezing until she turned purple, just like I did in gym class <a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2007/08/chapter-1-revelation.html">that time</a>. Except, instead of letting go, maybe I would just keep squeezing until her body went limp.<br /><br />There would be a deep sense of satisfaction in that, wouldn't there? It would be the ultimate I-told-you-so, proving to her, and to that cocksucker Doug Barrett that they badly underestimated me. I would make her pay for disrespecting me, pay with her life, and the weight of the guilt would crush Doug forever.<br /><br />But in the end, my affection for Emily won out. She melted me with her sexy eyes, disarmed me easily with a gentle brush of her fingernails across my skin. "I love you Eric, I love you so much," she whispered as I fucked her, and I could barely hear her above the rhythmic thumping of the headboard against the wall.<br /><br />No, I didn't hurt Emily. But I'm going to hurt someone. Doug.<br /><br />I'm sure Emily hasn't shown him my picture. He wouldn't know me if I stood right in front of him and stared him down. I could do this. I could totally do this.<br /><br />I make a frantic U-turn, barely touching the brake pedal, and head for the highway. I have an errand to run.<br /><br />I drive 45 minutes out of the way to a Home Depot in Rhode Island.<br /><br />I don't know how I'm going to do it, so I have no real idea of what I need. I'll just wander the aisles and grab anything that seems useful.<br /><br />My heart pounds as I grab a five-gallon jug of bleach. It's more real now that there is something I can hold in my hand.<br /><br />A reciprocating saw with an eight-inch blade. A 28-ounce steel framing hammer. A pick, a shovel, a giant blue tarp, and two wooden handles.<br /><br />It's strange. As I look at the items in my cart, I see exactly how I'm going to do it. It's almost like I'm watching someone else shop, and trying to figure out what kind of project he's working on.<br /><br />I see myself now, spattered with blood like a butcher, cutting Doug's arms off with the reciprocal saw, twisting and pulling them away from his torso as the last few tendons stubbornly stay attached. I can hear his bones crack and snap--it would almost be like cutting up chicken wings.<br /><br />I can see his dead body beneath me, his blood-stained tie askew, the buttons of his shirt torn away, his hair a filthy, tangled mess, like a homeless man's.<br /><br /><em>Gonna get laid tonight, Doug? Gonna fuck my girlfriend, then brag about it to your buddies at the health club? </em>I'd ask his corpse, grabbing him by the collar and screaming into his dead eyes. <em>Are you--</em><br /><br />"Sir?"<br /><br />"Huh?"<br /><br />"Can I help you find something? You seem--"<br /><br />"I seem what?"<br /><br />"Well, I--"<br /><br />"How do I seem, Toby?" I ask, reading the name on his orange vest. "Tell me."<br /><br />"Y-You just seem frustrated, sir, that's all," he stammers. "I just wanted to ask if I could help you find anything."<br /><br />"Where do you keep the razor wire?"<br /></p><p align="center"><br />* * *<br /></p><br />I'm not stupid enough to look up Doug's address on my PC. I know just how I'll find it.<br /><br />I was at a convention at the local Marriott a year ago, and I remember a bank of pay phones in a little alcove. With a local directory under each one.<br /><br />I walk through the main lobby, trying to look inconspicuous, like a guest. If I do this right, no one will even give me a second thought. I make a right turn into the phone alcove and look underneath the first phone. Pay dirt.<br /><br />Watch this guy be unlisted, I think, as I scan through the B's: Banet. Banks. Barnes. Barnett. Bartlett.<br /><br />Shit. He's not there. I should have known that a well-to-do guy like Doug would never have his name listed in a phone book. I'm an idiot.<br /><br />This whole thing is a joke. It's never going to work. I'll probably get there and find a huge cocktail party going on. It would be just my luck.<br /><br />Wait a minute. I was spelling it with two "R"'s; maybe...<br /><br />I scan a bit further up the page, and my lips curl into a small smile at what I see. The letters might as well be a neon sign, a giant, flashing reminder that I had no idea what I was capable of.<br /><br />BARETT, DOUGLAS P 228 SADDLE HILL, WLLSLY<br /><br /><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2008/04/chapter-15-bismarck-north-dakota.html">Next... Chapter 15: Bismarck, North Dakota</a>Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-54276545854533604162008-02-10T23:08:00.001-05:002008-03-09T11:03:28.533-04:00Chapter 13: Christmas in February<div style="TEXT-ALIGN: center"><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2007/08/chapter-1-revelation.html">Chapter 1 begins here</a><br /></div><p>_____________________________________________________<br /><br />Emily's period always ends on a Tuesday, and since today is Tuesday, she could be sleeping with Doug anytime now.<br /><br />I don't talk to Emily every single day, especially during the week, so it's important that I don't keep checking up on her now that I know what she's up to. But how the hell can I stop myself?<br /><br />I sit at my desk for eons, the phone staring unringingly at me, the hands of my office clock frozen in place. I straighten the adding machine on my credenza, then straighten it again, praying for a huge pile of work to spontaneously appear in my in box and provide a few hours of distraction. But no such luck.<br /><br />It's 10:22am. I can't possibly sit here for another 6 1/2 hours, torturing myself about her. For all I know, they're going to sneak off and fuck each other's brains out in a supply closet at lunchtime. Maybe she wore that short little black skirt and high heels for the occasion, the outfit she used to wear for me, and maybe she's thinking about his cock right now, making herself wet with horny anticipation, and maybe my face will flash in her mind the second he penetrates her, not because she feels guilty, but because she wonders why she ever wasted one moment of her time with me.<br /><br />That's what it's all about, isn't it? The pulse-pounding excitement of being with a guy who's drowning in cash, who's careful never to leave the house in wrinkled pants or to drive a car more than two years old. Women are wired to seek out men like Doug, men who can <em>take care </em>of them. Several million years' worth of evolution is pushing Emily to him, forcing her to think of him constantly, to throw herself at him, to acquiesce to his every demand, and to strike me completely from her mind, to delete me like an unwanted file.<br /><br />"Todd, I'm not feeling well. I'm gonna head home. I'll call you later."<br /><br />"We need placements, Eric!"<br /><br />"We're working on it."<br /><br /></p><p align="center">* * *</p><br /><br />Why did I come home? There's less to do here than there was at work.<br /><br />I shuffle down the hall to the bedroom, then back to the kitchen for a glass of water, and finally back to the bedroom again, where I watch myself sit down at the computer.<br /><br />I can't. Once I click on that link, I'll check back every five minutes until I crash from exhaustion. I need to find something else to do--<br /><br />I turn around and look under the foot of the bed, where the corner of a box sticks out. <em>stmas</em>, it says.<br /><br />I pull the box out and lift the lid. It's my holiday skater set, a scale model frozen pond with magnetic figurines that glide around on the fake ice while Christmas carols plink out as if played on a toy piano.<br /><br />The skaters calm me. No matter what is happening in my life, I've always been able to put my problems on hold over Christmas and New Year's, and although it's February now, I'm able to forget Emily's cheating as long as the music is playing and the skaters are skating.<br /><br />Emily and I had a great time two Christmases ago. Our relationship really clicked. A day was an eternity for us; we couldn't go for more than a few hours without texting or calling. We obsessed over each other's gifts, spending hundreds of dollars we didn't have just to see that look in one another's eyes on Christmas morning as the wrapping paper came off.<br /><br />We had non-stop sex, hungrily ripping each other's clothes off whenever we had a free moment, only to do it all over again a few hours later. And "sleeping" in the same bed was a mere figure of speech.<br /><br />When I look back now, I see that those were the best days of my life. Work was quiet; my relationship was stable; I had everything a man could have wanted. I know I can never bring those days back, but at least I can make the present feel a bit more like the past.<br /><br />I put the Christmas song playlist back on my MP3 player and set it for "repeat all", and as I inhale the sugary smell of my Christmas Cookie jar candle, I can feel the stress leave my body. Most of it, anyway.<br /><br />With "Jingle Bell Rock" and "Frosty the Snowman" wafting in the background, I actually manage to get a few small projects done. For one thing, I made a list of all the new construction projects downtown; with so many new buildings going up, someone is bound to need temporary workers.<br /><br />It's 5:30 now, and I think I'll shut it down for the day. Maybe I'll treat myself to something nice for dinner.<br /><br />The phone rings. It's probably Todd, wondering how much business we've brought in today. Things are very slow, but at least I have the construction project list to tell him about.<br /><br />"I miss you," Emily says. She wants to make plans for this Friday.<br /><br />My heart flutters. She's still thinking about me. I know she's let me down before, but what am I supposed to do, give up? She's pursuing me!<br /><br />It was only a sliver of encouragement, I know, but between that and the Christmas stuff, I'm happier than a kid who just cracked open a pinata. The days fly by, and before I know it, it's Friday night.<br /><br />The night is perfect. We lay on the couch, her nestled against me, the room completely dark except for the flickering TV screen. She provides a running commentary on the movie, cracking me up just like she used to.<br /><br />The credits roll, and my stomach churns with anticipation. It's been a while since we've been together, and my heart pounds like a jackhammer as I picture her naked thighs pressed against mine.<br /><br />I watch intently in the half-light of my bedroom, absorbing every detail as she unhooks her bra and unbuttons her jeans, her breathing just a bit heavier than usual.<br /><br />She lays down next to me, flipping her silky hair out of the way to kiss me, and I run my hand gently down her back, delighting in her supple skin and the soft, round curve of her ass.<br /><br />I slip a finger under the elastic of her panties and slide them slowly down her legs. She rolls onto her back and her eyes flicker up at me at she spreads her knees apart.<br /><br />I stare for a long time before I let myself believe what I see. But yes, it is true: The inevitable has happened, and the horror I feel will never be gone from me.<br /><br />She is completely shaved.<br /><br /><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2008/03/chapter-14-my-fingers-do-walking.html">Next... Chapter 14: My fingers do the walking</a>Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-6622913184421145912008-02-03T22:36:00.000-05:002008-02-03T22:39:27.194-05:0018 and... No.The unthinkable has happened. The NFC won the Super Bowl, and the 2007-8 Pats finally lost a game, and the worst possible game at that.<br /><br />All I can say is congrats to the Giants, for keeping Brady off balance (and on his ass) for most of the game. It doesn't matter who your receivers are, if the QB doesn't have time to throw it to them.<br /><br />To ease my sorrow, I'll be writing more, so keep checking back for more updates, guys...Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-82781008113970422832008-01-19T22:21:00.000-05:002008-02-10T23:43:29.055-05:00Chapter 12: A Little Too Much to Bear<div style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2007/08/chapter-1-revelation.html">Chapter 1 begins here</a><br /></div>_____________________________________________________<br /><br />I surprised myself the other night on Saw Mill Road, but in a good way.<br /><br />I still feel guilty about killing the possum, but deeper inside me, beneath the guilt, there is something far stronger. As I drove away into the dark that night, my heart racing, the adrenaline rocketing through my veins, I promised myself I would never be a victim again. Not to Todd, not to Doug, not even to Emily. It felt good to assert myself. It felt... right.<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;">* * *<br /></div><br />"It's John Doyle from Carrano Construction," the voice on the other end of the phone says.<br /><br />I already know who it is. I know what he wants, too: He wants some more workers, or "associates", as he calls them. The problem is, he owes Todd about $6,000 in invoices, and Todd lacks the balls to demand it. "He's good for it," Todd always says. "What, is he going to Florida with my $6,000?" But what the hell good is the business if we're not getting paid for it?<br /><br />"I can't send you any more laborers until you get your account current, John," I say firmly.<br /><br />Silence.<br /><br />"Eric, I- I-can't pay you if I don't have any money."<br /><br />He's breaking. I can feel it. This is easier than I thought!<br /><br />"Well, we've got a problem then, because I can't send you more workers if you haven't paid for the ones you already had."<br /><br />"Since when?"<br /><br />"Since now," I say, and the confidence floods into me, just like the other night.<br /><br />John agrees to send me a check for half his balance, and to pay the rest next week. Todd is going to be thrilled!<br /><br />Fifteen minutes later, Todd calls me into his office. "I just hung up with John Doyle," he says, looking over his wire-rimmed glasses at me. "He's canceling his contract with us."<br /><br />Shit.<br /><br />"Todd, all I told him was that he had to pay his bills. Is that so wrong?"<br /><br />"Did you know he was our first customer, Eric? Our very first one?"<br /><br />"I--"<br /><br />"And did you know that John lent me money to pay the rent for this office when we first opened up? That's how good he was to us. And now he wants to know why we're spitting in his face, Eric!"<br /><br />"Todd, I didn't know! I didn't know any of that! I'm sorry!"<br /><br />"Go home, Eric."<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;">* * *<br /></div><br /><em>RedFoxx85: did u give him his welcome home present<br /></em><br /><em>SugarKookie: kinda<br /><br /></em><em>RedFoxx85: ?<br /></em><br /><em>SugarKookie: gave him a big kiss </em><br /><br /><em>RedFoxx85: aw how cute<br /></em><br /><em>SugarKookie: below the belt ;-)</em><br /><br /><em>RedFoxx85: you gave him a bj?!<br /></em><br /><em>SugarKookie: o yea<br /><br /></em> <em>SugarKookie: trust me he wasnt disappointed</em><br /><br /><em>RedFoxx85: im sure<br /><br /></em><em>RedFoxx85: what was it like?</em><br /><br /><em>SugarKookie: salty :-D</em><br /><br /><em>RedFoxx85: no what was "it" like<br /></em><br /><em>SugarKookie: mmmmmm</em><br /><br /><em>RedFoxx85: nice huh</em><br /><br /><em>SugarKookie: hes not circumsized<br /><br /></em><em>RedFoxx85: nfs!</em><br /><br /> <em>SugarKookie: ive never seen an uncircumsized one before. i kept playing with his, um<br /><br /></em><em>RedFoxx85: foreskin?</em><br /><br /> <em>SugarKookie: i guess so ya, sliding it back and forth over the head<br /><br /></em><em>RedFoxx85: with your mouth?</em><br /><em><br /></em> <em>SugarKookie: mm-hmm</em><br /><em><br /></em><em>RedFoxx85: nice!</em><br /><br /> <em>SugarKookie: loved me playing with his foreskin - kept telling me to do it more<br /><br /></em> <em>SugarKookie: and shoving my head down on him<br /><br /></em> <em>SugarKookie: hes very bossy in bed :-)</em><br /><em><br /></em><em>RedFoxx85: so im guessing you two did the deed<br /><br /></em><em>RedFoxx85: </em><em>after you warmed him up<br /><br /></em><em>SugarKookie: the red tide was in :-(<br /><br /></em><em>RedFoxx85: so??<br /><br /></em><em>SugarKookie: ew, not the first time!<br /><br /></em><em>SugarKookie: he did want to tho<br /><br /></em><em>RedFoxx85: i bet<br /><br /></em><em>SugarKookie: so i swallowed for him ;-)<br /></em><br /><br /><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2008/02/chapter-13-christmas-in-february.html">Next... Chapter 13: Christmas in February</a>Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-49893387164805774302008-01-06T21:52:00.000-05:002008-01-22T00:33:35.283-05:00Chapter 11: The Saw Mill Road<div style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2007/08/chapter-1-revelation.html">Chapter 1 begins here</a><br /></div>_____________________________________________________<br /><br />I slam Emily's door behind me and stomp angrily to my car. I start the engine and hurtle from the parking lot, tires squealing.<br /><br />Saw Mill Road is a 15 mile stretch of highway which cuts a narrow path through an endless ocean of trees. There are three farms that I have counted, set so far back from the road that you can barely see the lights as you pass by.<br /><br />At the beginning of the road, the street lights are about 300 yards apart, and by mile three, they stop altogether.<br /><br />I call Saw Mill Road a "shortcut" between Emily's house and mine, but it actually takes longer to go that way. Mostly, I do it because I love a peaceful car ride.<br /><br />My dress shirt is ruined, soaked with blood. I wrap an old t-shirt around my wrist to slow the bleeding, but it continues to ooze from my hand and onto my slacks; it feels like I spilled a half-hour old cup of coffee into my lap. <br /><br />The cut hurts so much that I can barely touch the steering wheel. Hot jolts of pain shoot from deep inside the wound, coursing up my arm like electricity. I try to focus on the road, on the sound of the engine, on the thought of Emily--but the agony is too intense. It's as if someone drove an ice pick into my hand with a sledge hammer.<br /><br />Pulling over would be a waste of time. There's nothing more I can do until I get home, so I push harder on the gas pedal and stare at the road as I pass under the last streetlamp and into the dark.<br /><br />Fifty miles an hour. Sixty. Seventy. The whine of the engine grows insistently louder, like a 747, and somehow I can barely hear it above the screaming pain.<br /><br />My headlights cut neatly into the darkness; if I look anywhere but straight ahead, all I see is pure black. I am focused on the rear view mirror when something jumps in front of the car.<br /><br />It's a possum, I think, and it is as surprised as I am. It freezes in place, staring at me. I slam on the brakes, but I know it's too late.<br /><br />The car hits the possum with a heavy <em>thunk</em>. I can feel its body bounce underneath the floorboard; the sounds are clunky and hard, as if I am running over a pile of firewood.<br /><br />The shriek of the tires eventually stops, and I sit for a long time, wondering what to do. I've never hit anything with my car before. Do I just... leave?<br /><br />I feel weird. I killed something. It was nothing more than a rodent, but it woke up today alive, and now...<br /><br />I want to see it.<br /><br />I turn the car around and flip on my high beams. The possum lays lifeless in the middle of the road, its body horizontal across the double yellow line. I watch myself get out of the car and close the door.<br /><br />It's bigger than I thought, maybe the size of a poodle. With its gray fur and spiny tail, it looks like a giant rat.<br /><br />Its neck is broken. The top of its head has been pushed back so far that it's almost separated, leaving the mouth wide open, like a snake with an unhinged jaw. I shiver at the sight of its pointed teeth and thick, pink tongue, and though I want to turn away, I can't.<br /><br />This just proves what I learned earlier tonight: I have the power to change things. You might think I used that power unwisely just now, but I had it just the same, didn't I? Just like I had it with the vase--<br /><br />The pain again, sharper now, burning my hand like battery acid.<br /><br />I really should get home.<br /><br /><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2008/01/chapter-12-little-too-much-to-bear.html">Next... Chapter 12: A Little Too Much to Bear</a>Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-80893569121493788642007-12-26T21:20:00.000-05:002008-01-13T18:11:29.495-05:00Chapter 10: What Would Stainer Do?<div style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2007/08/chapter-1-revelation.html">Chapter 1 begins here</a><br /></div>_____________________________________________________<br /><br />I have been looking forward to my date with Emily for days. The week seemed to last a month, but it's finally Friday.<br /><br />Stainer keeps telling me to stop spying on Emily. He says it's "creepy". He says I worry too much about what Emily, and everybody else, thinks. He says I live my life based on what others want, because I'm afraid I'll disappoint them and they'll leave me. He says I am a big baby.<br /><br />You probably think I'm a coward for letting Stainer talk to me that way. Well, you're wrong if you think that. I don't need Stainer for friendship. I need to learn from him, and as long as he keeps trying to teach me, I'll keep listening.<br /><br />I was happy to hear that Emily didn't like Stainer's cologne technique. It reminded me that he doesn't know everything after all.<br /><br />He told me to be late picking up Emily, so I said I'd be there at 6:00, then deliberately did not show up until 6:30. It will be close, but we should make it to the restaurant on time.<br /><br />I knock, and all the air rushes from my body as Emily answers the door.<br /><br />She's in dingy sweats, with her hair twisted into a sloppy bun and held in place by a pencil. "What are you doing here?" she asks, glancing at my tie.<br /><br />"I'm picking you up for our date, Emily! Why aren't you ready?"<br /><br />"I have a huge project to finish! I left you a message at work!"<br /><br />"Why didn't you call my cell phone?!"<br /><br />"It was during office hours! I don't have time to call a thousand different numbers, Eric!"<br /><br />My phone had been ringing all day. I stopped answering around 3:30, because I wanted to get my work done and leave. So I could get ready for my date.<br /><br />She's going to see him tonight. She never intended to see me at all. Or maybe she did, but changed her plans as soon as he decided he wanted to see her. The outfit, the story about work, they're all part of an elaborate plan to trick me, a plan she will probably be laughing about with Doug later.<br /><br />"You could've--"<br /><br />"Could've what?" she hisses. "I called you at work! You always check your messages! Why didn't you check them before you left? It's common sense!"<br /><br />I'd be a bit less humiliated if she apologized. Why won't she do it? Why is she so determined to choke every last bit of life out of me? How can she be so hateful?<br /><br />The anger starts in my stomach, a fiery ball that grows, eating everything in its path until it consumes me. <br /><br />I walk through the door. My eyes turn to the glass-topped table against the far wall. A chipped, dusty green vase filled with artificial flowers sits upon it.<br /><br />"Eric, I have a lot of work to do--"<br /><br />The bouquet was a gift from an ex-boyfriend, Chad, whom she "almost married", according to her. He moved away and left her years ago, but she still smiles wistfully when talking about him. And of course, she refuses to part with that hideous bouquet. It's almost as if she keeps the flowers just to mock me, to remind me that I am nowhere near the kind of man she truly wants.<br /><br />Maybe Stainer was right when he called her a bitch.<br /><br />"You don't appreciate me!" I say, finally.<br /><br />"Eric, you're not listening to me. I told you I had to work! What am I supposed to do--"<br /><br />I walk forcefully back toward the door, my heavy footsteps shaking the glass on the dining room table. My hand clenches into a fist, and I watch in slow motion as it smashes violently into Chad's vase.<br /><br />The vase explodes into tiny pieces, and water runs down my hand. But why would she put artificial flowers in water? And why is the water... <span style="font-style:italic;">red</span>?<br /><br />"Eric! You're bleeding!"<br /><br />Blood throbs from an open flap of skin between my thumb and index finger. I watch as it coats my palm, dripping from my hand and forming little red dots on the beige carpet.<br /><br />Suddenly, it becomes clear: I don't have to just sit back and accept it when someone disrespects me. I have the power to do something about it. The vase angered me, and I destroyed it. My mind ticks off a long list of things--and people--who deserve the same, and, though I didn't think it was possible, my rage grows bigger and stronger than before.<br /><br />No. I couldn't hurt Emily. Could I?<br /><br />"Eric, you're bleeding all over my carpet!"<br /><br />I lunge at her, and I am outside my body again, watching myself as I scream at her nose to nose. "You did this, Emily! You see this?" I yell, holding my bloody hand up to her face. "This is your fault! It's your fault!" I barely recognize the sound of my own voice.<br /><br />"I'm sorry! Eric, I am so sorry!" she sobs, as I turn and storm out the door.<br /><br />Guess I got my apology after all.<br /><br /><a href="http://certifiedsexwhacko.blogspot.com/2008/01/saw-mill-road.html">Next... Chapter 11: The Saw Mill Road</a>Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7128707.post-91717133993688652582007-12-20T20:49:00.000-05:002007-12-20T21:41:03.265-05:00Coco the HoSunday, October 29, 2007, 1:00pm<br />Shadowfax Stables<br /><br />Eating is an adventure without a gall bladder. In fact, it's less like actual eating and more like borrowing the food for a few hours before it shoots out of your ass as if blasted from a whale's blowhole.<br /><br />Yeah, I can't eat like I used to. The doctor says I'll be back to normal soon, but until then, I'm staying far away from anything remotely unhealthy.<br /><br />The post-surgery pain isn't bad at all. I have four incisions on my abdomen, the largest of which is the size of the memory chip slot on my cell phone. Most of the time, I don't even know they are there.<br /><br />Last night, Tim decided I had recovered enough to resume my evolutionary duties, so she leaned over in bed and whispered softly in my ear until I was ready to go.<br /><br />What she actually said is irrelevant. It's the sound of her voice, her closeness, the heat of her breath, that gets me off. She could have been reading a weather forecast; as long as she threw in a few <span style="font-style:italic;">cock</span>s and <span style="font-style:italic;">pussy</span>s, I'd be hard enough to smash a plate-glass window with my johnson by the time she was done.<br /><br />And hard I was--but mounting her and pounding away like a Rottweiler was a bad idea. As soon as the cumshot--and the flood of endorphins--subsided, talons of pain clawed at my intestines until I rolled off the bed and onto the floor in agony.<br /><br />"No seconds for you!" Tim giggled.<br /><br />So yeah, my return to, um, <span style="font-style:italic;">normal activity</span> didn't go so well. But that was, like, 12 hours ago! I should be fine now.<br /><br />Tim and I, along with four other couples, sit in a lazy circle and introduce ourselves before our horseback riding trip. "We're Adam and Kristen," a guy says. "We're from Boston."<br /><br />I approach him as the horses are being saddled. "So you're from Boston, eh?" I ask.<br /><br />"Well, Worcester, actually," he says.<br /><br />Those of you from the area are cracking up right now. Massachusetts is small, and it's all relative, but a Worcester guy saying he's from Boston is kinda like going to Coney Island and saying you're in the Bahamas. It's like going to a carnival in a church parking lot and claiming you're at Disney World.<br /><br />"It's easier to say 'Boston' than 'Massachusetts'", he says, noticing my grin.<br /><br />It seems that Coco, my horse, is in just as much gastro-intestinal distress as I am. After walking less than 50 feet, she stops dead in her tracks and lets out a fart that could have peeled wallpaper--a rancid, rotten, barf-inducing cloud of stink that sticks to the back of my throat like Chloraseptic spray.<br /><br />One hundred yards later, Coco has taken an unhealthy interest in the asshole of the horse in front of her, sniffing desperately at it like a cokehead trying to get the last few specs off a mirror.<br /><br />"Pull back on the reins," Ana, the group leader, yells. "Show her who's boss!"<br /><br />I pull back, and Coco dips her head angrily. We're definitely off on the wrong foot.<br /><br />She stops again and drops another stink bomb, followed immediately by a series of wet plopping sounds. "She's using the bathroom," Ana says.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">She shoulda gone before we left!</span><br /><br />Coco has fallen behind now, and trots to catch up, zeroing in on her buddy's asshole like a heat-seeking missile. She nuzzles it, apparently too aggressively, and the other horse rears up on his hind legs, his rider clinging, terrified, to the reins.<br /><br />The horse takes off like a shot and Coco springs into a gallop after him.<br /><br />"Pull back! Pull back on the reins!" Ana shouts, but her voice is fading so fast I can barely hear her.<br /><br />Coco's gallop bounces me violently against the saddle, my incisions screaming in agony as I strain to hold on. I'm not going to last much longer.<br /><br />I'll hold on. I have to. People don't get thrown off horses!<br /><br />Do they?<br /><br />Coco sprints past the other horse and around a sharp bend in the trail. There's no way I can hold on. <br /><br />The reins slip from my hands and the Earth turns upside down in slow motion. I hear a dull thud, and wonder for a second what it was before I realize it was me hitting the ground.<br /><br />Ana rides up behind me. "You didn't show her who's boss!" she scolds.Steve the Mildly Unwell Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01736453460476077687noreply@blogger.com0