“This is going to be a significant moment.
A change!”
Fuck that.
I am standing on the porch smoking a
cigarette behind the crowd of people gathered on the stairway.
Mel is in the street about to
symbolically release an orange birthday balloon into the sky.
Her hand holds the purple string
attached to the bottom of the balloon.
She looks uncomfortable: shoulders
hunched, face frozen in an awkward expression like a cartoon ice cream freezer
pop.
Her roommate lights her up with flash
photography.
“Dude, ____ this is going to be a
real fucking significant. Like a breath of fresh air or something. And I have
documented the event as it occurred.”
“Yeah!” someone says.
“Go ____!” someone else says.
Alone and observing, I remembered
something my third grade teacher said about the ramifications of releasing
balloons into the air. She said they have the potential to pop over the ocean
and kill a whale.
Rubber lodged in the blowhole.
My third grade teacher is dead
because of a brain tumor, and I never really liked my third grade teacher—a full year of lunch detention.
Her roommate turns around and lights
up the crowd kidnapping another moment in time.
“Dude these photos are going to come
out so fucking great! Yo, did I tell you guys that I’m going to be doing a
photo shoot in Philly for _____ Magazine sometime
next month? It’s going to be so fucking rad man. I mean I already did a shoot
with some porn stars, but this could mean the big time.”
I think about what constitutes the
“big time” for her roommate and think about its relevance.
Mel is still standing in the street
holding a balloon and looking uncomfortable.
Real uncomfortable.
The honest kind of uncomfortable
which you see in high school locker room showers.
I think about a car coming around the
corner too fast and hitting her on the hip, her doing a backflip, and landing
on her feet, looking around to see if we all saw what had just happened.
I think about cutting off her
roommate’s tongue, gluing it to his forehead, and calling him a unicorn for the
rest of the night, while someone else took photos to document this moment in
time.
Her hand let’s go and the balloon
hovers upwards following a path of ascension.
Snap.
“WOOOOO!” someone says.
“Yeah!” someone else says.
Flash.
I think about a whale dying.
I think about shooting the balloon
down before it disappears, and ruining the whole moment.
Mel reaches the sidewalk, newly
baptized.
Still uncomfortable.
I think about how I am a piece of
shit, and a horrible person who should drown in a bath tub of chocolate pudding.
So pointless.
(BTW: That magazine that contacted
him was actually a fraud scam based out of Philly.)