Saturday, June 25, 2005

Looks like Oinky set the curve again!

There has been a change of plans, and instead of flying home today I'm driving to Alabama for a wedding reception. There will be more on this later, but I have done a lot of awesome stuff this week:
- went to a Sox-Cubs game at Comiskey
- went to Taste of Chicago, which is pretty much what it sounds like, except take the number of fat people you're imagining and triple it. This is the world capital for cankles.
- spent the night in Champaign at the U of I, went to Kam's and Legends for dollar bottle night, and ate at IHOP at 3 AM (where I am fairly sure we got our food spit in but were too drunk to notice).

Also, this will be my first trip to the South, so I'm planning on going barefoot 24 hours a day and wearing overalls and a floppy straw hat everywhere. Including to the reception. I'll be home on July 5th.

Sunday, June 19, 2005

Da Bears... Polish sausage... Ditka... sausage...

I will be in Chicago until Saturday the 25th, so you jackals can comfort yourselves with the thought that I am busy enjoying myself at Weiner Circle. And I mean that in the most heterosexual way possible.

Saturday, June 18, 2005

Dear McDonald's

Dear McDonald's:

We've been through a lot together. You were my first fast-food love. All I had to do was walk down to the corner, and you were there to provide me with Quarter Pounders and Mr. Pibb. My first sweet taste of ordering food by myself occurred in your welcoming confines, and I didn't hold it against you that your shake machine was out of order.

Then you started to change. More accurately, I grew old enough to notice that your meat had the appealing color and texture of freshly-poured highway slurry. Your fries, too, began to look more and more like they had been left out in the rain for a week. Come to think of it, I don't remember your shake machine EVER being in order.

Then you eliminated Grimace, Mayor McCheese, and, most grievously, the Hamburglar from your ad campaigns as if they had never even existed. I didn't need to see Ronald McDonald's Pennywise-from-"It"-lookalike big-shoed ass smeared all over your products, but I soldiered on. Really, it was the McNuggets that kept me coming back - until you started charging for extra dipping sauce. Strangely, I never realized it before, but compressed and bleached chicken colons, eyes, gizzards, and anuses just don't taste the same when the last couple have to be eaten without their customary sheen of mesquite BBQ sauce.

You claim to be more "adult" now. More "grown-up." More "health-conscious." You pimp your Fruit & Walnut Salad like it was better for me than a six-mile run and a high colonic. All the while, you appeal to my witty, urbane sensibilities with advertising catchphrases like "i'm lovin' it." It's true, I am lovin' "it" - "it," of course, being my ability to do the following:
-Walk into one of your fine establishments in the middle of the night.
-Drag the illiterate counterperson's attention from the contents of his inner ear.
-Negotiate an order via hand signals to the counterperson, who doubtless only has that job because he was just released either from a special education program or Mexico.
-Take two bites of a cheeseburger and then realize that it fails to meet even the most basic requirements for food: soaking up alcohol and not causing me to vomit.

I won't get started on the fat people, because it's their prerogative to eat there, God bless 'em. Maybe a round of midnight street golf with their friends of every possible racial permutation will help them run off that burger-induced spare tire. Still, as for me, you could be serving a Value Meal of beluga caviar and Grey Goose for 99 cents, and I would still go to Taco Bell instead. Let me make this abundantly clear, in case it's not already: Like myself, NOBODY I have EVER met will eat at a McDonald's given any other food option. If a starving man stumbled forth from a Soviet gulag into one of your restaurants, within a week he would be begging for the maggot-infested bread and melted snow they were feeding him in Siberia.

Don't do it for me; I'm already gone. But for your own good, clean up your act, before even rural Arkansas and Louisiana towns forsake you.

P.S. As I write this letter, I am full of burgers from In-N-Out. How does that make you feel?

Thursday, June 16, 2005

So Sayeth the Lord

BE NOT DRUNK WITH WINE, BUT BE FILLED WITH THE SPIRIT (EPHESIANS 5:18)
Supposedly being a true sports fan is supporting your team no matter what happens. But aren't we supposed to turn a critical eye on those we love every once in a while? What has to happen for you to get to that point where you say "Fuck it, these guys are dicks." Sure, every once in a while a player from your favorite team will do something douchey, but you'll write it off and keep on buying tickets. I know this because I'm a Giants fan, and even the most black-and-orange person alive will admit that yes, Barry Bonds is a pompous ass. Still, no matter what Barry does, there will still be enough Will Clarks and Robby Thompsons and Matt Williamses and Yorvit Torrealbas to outweigh him and keep me listening to Kruk and Kuip. But there has to be a line where you start to question your allegiance to the organization as a whole. What if one team actually does stand for evil? What if a rivalry actually IS pitting the good against the bad (or the bad against the worse)? What if it's not just a series of individual screwups, but actually a deeply ingrained tradition of ignorance and lawlessness?

Rooting for a collegiate sports team is pretty easy, especially since you don't have to worry about continuity. When you're, say, an Oakland A's fan, you have to go immediately from loving Jason Giambi to loathing him. Since transfers aren't nearly as common as trades, and you get a new cycle of guys every four years, the understanding that you're rooting for the institution, rather than just the individual players, is deeper. This means it shouldn't bother you as much when one of your guys stabs someone/solicits a hooker/gets caught with enough blow to fuel a 1988 Mets house party. Soon he'll be someone else's problem. Still, a guy known as a head case will always have the lingering tie to his alma mater. Everyone remembers Randy Moss went to Marshall. Try and say that about Jerry Rice (Mississippi Valley State).

So it's still possible for a collegiate football program pick up a bit of a bad reputation. Miami had a nice string back in the early '90s, and Colorado has had its share of problems. But one school stands above the rest like the king of a bare-knuckle prison brawl, ready to subdue and cornhole its vanquished opponents: Florida State.

I'm no Florida fan. I'm impartial when it comes to East Coast schools. Hell, I could care less about the ACC, the SEC, or any of the conferences that dip below the horizon after the Pac-10's nonconference schedule ends. But the sequence of events that has befallen Florida State football players is beyond ludicrous. This is lightning striking the same place seven, eight, nine times. So this week's little incident was, while not altogether surprising, icing on the cake.

Wyatt Sexton. A great athlete's name if there ever was one, so it's not surprising that he owns the starting quarterback job at Florida State. This is probably one of the few dozen most high-profile positions a 20-year-old American kid can be put in. So if you were in his shoes, you'd probably watch your step, right? Because otherwise you might publicly embarrass yourself, right? You know, you wouldn't want to jeopardize the sea of sorority vaginas you would undoubtedly be floating in, or your potential future NFL career and the millions of dollars attached, right?

RIGHT? http://cbs.sportsline.com/collegefootball/story/8563229

"The officer asked Sexton several times to identify himself, and eventually he said he was God." Now, I'm not calling out this kid on his inability to hold his liquor or even his behavior, because we've all been there. I'd even be willing to let the God reference slide, since God has been known to throw back a few from time to time. (God's drink of choice is Patron tequila. If you don't believe me, ask all the Mexican peasants He's appeared to.) Still, Sexton's claim is pretty dubious, because God probably would have accumulated a better TD:INT ratio than 1:1. It is nice, though, to see that Sexton is outstripping His false prophet Chris Rix. Rix (a proud alumnus of Santa Margarita High's baseball program like myself) put together a 24-10 record at FSU, but he is still almost universally known among Nole fans as the Zeus of Suck.

Apparently last year everyone on campus was wearing "Rix Happens" T-shirts with a handicapped parking sign on the back and an injured football player silhoutte sitting in the chair, above the phrase "Ruining the FSU tradition since 2001." This seems a little hard on Chris, though, since if you look at the evidence all he's been doing is carrying on the Criminole legacy. Since 2000, FSU quarterbacks (QBs ALONE!) have accrued this stellar record:
- Dan Kendra was cited for detonating an explosive device outside his apartment complex. (This is, again, pretty hypocritical based on my own track record for stuff like that, so I can't really blame him. But keep reading.)
- Marcus Outzen was twice involved in late-night fights off-campus.
- Jared Jones was dismissed from the team after repeated "undisclosed violations of team rules."
- Adrian McPherson was dismissed from the team for check forgery and suspected gambling involvement.
- Rix was cited for twice parking in handicap parking zones, regained the starting QB role, was suspended from the Sugar Bowl for oversleeping and failing to take a final exam, and then skipped the makeup exam.

Keep in mind, all this happened in five years. And I didn't even MENTION Peter Warrick or Sebastian Janikowski. This is your team, Tallahassee. The garnet and gold fights on. Isn't it about time to back down just a little?

CONGRATULATIONS MALEC
It's not all bad news, though. Congratulations to Chris Malec, my former high school teammate and one of the hardest-working baseball players I ever played with, on beating testicular cancer and getting drafted by the Yankees: http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/columns/story?columnist=crasnick_jerry&id=2084487

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

D-FENS

I am a California boy through and through. I love San Francisco's crazy homeless people; I love San Diego burritos; I love Orange County's cookie-cutter perfection. I love living 20 minutes from the beach and being surrounded by the hottest girls in the world. Nobody can dispute the fact that California is the most badass state in every respect. But there is one universal truth about California that nobody wants to believe:

Los Angeles sucks. God, is it terrible. This is not one of those LAKERS SUX DETRIOT RULEZ!!!!1 things. There is something to be said for city pride, but eventually you have to realize that you just might live in an enormous hellhole. Orange County is nice, but it's like living on the rim of a toilet bowl - you're bound to get some pee splashed on you from time to time, and eventually you're going down the tubes too. I don't really consider myself an Angeleno (I hate that word, too) but I still know the place intimately. I grew up in the metroplex and I spent a LOT of time within city limits, so I feel more than qualified to say that EVERY other major American city I've spent time in outstrips LA in nearly every category. Here are the big winners, though:

1) Traffic. I want to stab myself in the eye with a fork when I hear anyone complain about traffic in other cities. LA's urban planning looks like someone dropped a plate of wet spaghetti on a road map. There is no fully appropriate metaphor to describe the freeway system other than a botched abortion of concrete and steel, because there is zero logic to it. Driving across town? Give yourself an extra hour, because you never know when the 110/10/5/405 will lock up. This completely fucks one of my biggest personal tenets: BE ON TIME. BE SOMEWHERE WHEN YOU SAY YOU WILL BE THERE. LA traffic makes this impossible, because it could take anywhere from 20 minutes to 3 hours to get ANYWHERE. This is true 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, as I can attest from the four-hour delay I hit driving home from the Bay Area last month at 1 A.M. on a Sunday. And of course, every once in a while this is the result of...

2) Televised car chases. These happen with alarming regularity. In 8th grade I remember coming home from school just in time to see a guy stop his truck on the 10, delaying thousands of people for two hours, and then set the vehicle on fire with his dog in it. This was just before he blew off his head with a shotgun. On live television. For about two weeks all the TV stations were contrite about showing a graphic scene of real-life violence to an audience of the hundreds of thousands of kids who were undoubtedly watching. Then like a month later they aired another one that ended in a motorcycle slamming into the back end of a bus. You stay classy, KTVU.

3) Size. The city itself is ENORMOUS even for the number of people who live there, spreading in a more or less uninterrupted stream of low-lying industrial buildings from Thousand Oaks to San Clemente. You can walk across San Francisco in like two hours in any direction. Try that in LA and you’d better bring a week of rations and a bulletproof vest. This means more time spent on those beautiful freeways.

4) Pollution. Everyone owns at least one car, since the public transportation system is virtually nonexistent. Sports practices are occasionally canceled due to “air hazards.” Nowhere else outside of Mexico City have I heard of this. Furthermore, a good 50% of the beaches are contaminated by some variety of toxins and the ocean has the appealing color and consistency of a can of watery pea soup. Not only that, everyone goes on about the weather like it's not virtually identical to what's found anywhere from Cabo to San Francisco - and you can't get lung cancer just by being outside in other places on the West Coast.

5) Sports franchises. Expect fair-weather Lakers flags every time playoff season rolls around, and expect the seats at any sporting event to be filled with a combination of a) Justin Timberlake, Cameron Diaz, and equally abhorrent celebrities on the lower levels and b) bitter Raiders-tattooed vatos in the upper deck waiting to get drunk and stab someone. In the absence of an NFL franchise, the football fans, too, are like homeless divorcees – blindly wandering around, searching for something new to glom onto, pretending they don’t care about their loss. They’re also all Raider fans – imagine downtown Oakland on game day except without the benefit of an actual football game being played.

6) Violent crime. Parts of East LA make "Falling Down" look like a fairy tale, except with much less English. Feel unsafe in New York? LA's murder rate is TWO AND A HALF TIMES AS HIGH. You have to go to the South or Detroit to find a comparably violent city.

7) Culture. This is a place where Ryan Seacrest can get a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and the home of "Us Weekly." This is a city that has put on the mantle of the American film industry and then used it to give us "Soul Plane," "8 Simple Rules for Dating My Teenage Daughter," and "Cheaper By the Dozen 2." This is the Mecca for faded jeans, metrosexual douchebags and pink drinks. Everything about LA is saturated with an insatiable drive to impress the perceived yokels from Middle America with shiny pretty things. Furthermore, the residents tend to look down on the rest of the country through their Chanel sunglasses like they’re the world’s authority on anything pertaining to style or entertainment. If you need barely-legal fetish porn or a man-purse, welcome to paradise.

Plus, all this trendier-than-thou attitude is thinly spread over a giant proletariat of Mexican immigrants that grows larger by the day. I can't wait for ten years from now when the entire valley becomes a war zone. When the Battle of Dominguez Hills is fought I'll be watching from Boston or someplace and thinking "Shit, I hope my parents are okay. Good thing they laid that minefield in Garden Grove back in '08."

Don't give me this "ole" bullshit!

So I got a chance to get a glimpse of my future 30 years from now - that future being adult-league recreational softball. I play for my dad's team whenever I'm home for vacation. One the one hand, this is nice. It gets me outside during a time when I would happily sleep until two in the afternoon and then spend my evenings watching Simpsons reruns and eating cereal. However, it can also be incredibly depressing, because watching old men play softball is, for me, a better memento mori than any of those morbid Renaissance painters' perfectly detailed skulls. My dad played D-I soccer in college, and now he can barely run out a grounder to shortstop. The knowledge that someday my joints will degenerate into his is, to say the least, sobering.

Adult-league recreational softball is, in some ways, Little League for grown men. By age forty the baselines have shrunk back down to 60 feet, the umpires show up late to games, and you get tossed for wearing metal spikes. Just like at age 12, the big strong guys who can crush the ball and then waddle around the bases are the valuable ones, regardless of actual talent. This is, by anyone's account, some low-quality sports.

My dad's team got demoted to the "D" league over the spring. The "D" league is reserved for guys who have either a) had serious surgery on either their heart or knees at some point, b) played in high school and then didn't pick up a glove for 20 years, or c) used to be good before they gained 70 pounds. These are the guys who are one step above playing in a coed league, which is like signing away your right not to be called a queer at Mulleady's Pub for the rest of your life. What chaps my ass the most, though, is that my dad's team co-opted my intramural softball team's name from school (the Tom Emanski Defensive Drill All-Stars) when they are clearly not worthy of it. The third baseman on his team wore not one, but two of those giant adjustable knee braces that you see NFL O-linemen wearing under their pants, and our right fielder showed up wearing golf spikes and cargo shorts.

The game itself was pretty uneventful except for a couple of blips:
- The umpire grievously missed like five calls, the last coming when a throw went over the first baseman's head and into the dugout and he steadfastly refused to award the runner an extra base, followed by my dad and I both shouting within eighteen inches of his face until he broke down. Never have I felt so close to my father.
- The other team's third baseman looked about a deuce and a half and had the range of a corpse. He literally could not bend over far enough to get his glove to the ground, but he still made like 15 assists, picking up ridiculous hops with his head pulled EVERY TIME. This pissed me off, because I really wanted to yell "Dorn, get in front of the damn ball! Don't give me this "ole" bullshit!" but he never made an error.

We ended up winning like 18-13. After the game we went to Mulleady's, which quickly turned into the Most Depressing Postgame Pizza Ever. Softball is like the one opportunity for these guys to re-create their lost college greatness, so they morph into the frattiest of fraternity brothers when they're all together. They all kick in for three pitchers of Coors Light and then go on about what a collective drag their wives are (with the exception of my dad, of course, who will never ever ever say anything bad about my mom in my presence). Wolfson is the worst, though. He's about 5'5" and built like a bowling pin. Every time I've played with him he asks me "how the Stanford pussy is" with the tone of a researcher planning a future field trip. He also chimes in with perverted sexual comments about the fortysomething drag-ass waitress, who has David Lee Roth's hairstyle and a set of fake boobs that have slid down her chest so that it looks like someone shoved two canteloupe halves under her skin.

I'm sure they do this after every game, but I get the feeling it's worse when I'm around. Since I'm the only person under 35 on the team I'm like a walking reminder of college, and each guy always seem to feel the need to impress me with his exploits to make himself feel younger.

"You know, I got drafted by the Twins in '77."

"That chick looks good, huh? Man, at your age I would have shown her a thing or two."

"Have another beer, you're still young."

All of them would trade every dollar they have to be 21 again. Mike attends fantasy football camps at USC. Larry wears his hat from college to the games. Inevitably, the conversation turns to the girls at college, and war stories about exaggerated parties and threesomes start coming out. Sometimes I really want to bust out a line like "Jesus, that's nothing. Last weekend I had sex with five sorority girls on top of a pile of cocaine the size of your car." I'm sure that would get a laugh. Except from my dad.

Also, Frank Robinson: giant douche.

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

ACHTUNG

What's up children. For those of you not willing to read starting at the beginning, I am going to try to update this regularly (read: daily or at most every couple of days) with new stuff, mostly sports-related, some not, with the exception of June 19-25, when I'll be in Chicago.

Now I'm going to go sleep for the next 16 hours to recuperate from the 400-mile drive home. Holla.

Ray, Part II

The word “office” might have been a little presumptuous to describe the room, as it contained only a single Formica desk and conference table. On the desk sat an ancient computer, purchased at some point during the Reagan administration, through which the company still ran its shipping system. The table had been decorated with years of epithets from the A-One Packing Supply truck drivers, most notably the phrase “TOM IS GAY,” lovingly carved in half-inch-deep letters into the desk’s surface with a razor blade.

Asbestos leaked out of an enormous gouge in the office wall, where Ray had had a minor forklift accident months ago, most likely while drunk. I had to give Ray credit, though. Coming to work drunk had been something we’d all done, but he pulled it off with style. When I had first given in and tried it, the rest of the day had been a blur of paranoia. I had desperately tried to disguise my breath and speak coherently to Lance, focusing tremendous energy on walking in a perfectly straight line. While the rest of us were struggling mightily to understand what customers were saying to us through the resultant haze from three Coors Light tallboys, Ray was racing the forklift around the warehouse’s perimeter, trying to beat his personal best time.

I wondered how much asbestos a person had to inhale to get cancer. The dozens of carcinogens undoubtedly present in the warehouse weren’t particularly worrisome to most of the employees, each of whom sucked down at least a pack and a half of Marlboro Lights per day. The rest of the warehouse workers, who ran the night shift from 10 P.M. until the drivers left around 6 A.M., had provided me with my first glimpse of the working world. On my first day at A-One, as a sixteen-year-old kid, I had arrived at seven in the morning to discover an ambulance pulling into the loading dock. It was there to pick up one of the truck drivers, who had neglected to inform the company that he was diabetic and had collapsed and fallen into a coma back by the vending machines. He had remained undiscovered for almost two hours, until one of the cleaning women tripped over him while rounding a corner too fast and broke down into hysterics. Constant excitement. Just the kind of job I’m looking for.

Eventually I had come to the realization that Ray was on a first-name basis with one of the EMTs not because they knew each other from somewhere, but because they saw each other so regularly. Injuries at A-One were a predictable outgrowth of the marriage of heavy machinery and convicted felons. This is not to say that the warehouse guys were bad at handling the forklift; it’s just that occasionally there were “accidents” that resulted in someone’s arm being pinned to the wall with a steel fork or someone’s finger getting hot-sealed into a plastic bag at 500 degrees.

A-One Packing Supply was staffed by a crew of men who had either gambled against the law and lost or fried the self-preservation lobe out of their brains with one speedball too many. At best, each guy had an eighty percent chance of showing up to work on Monday morning. I never got to know anyone too well, because I never knew whether they’d be back for more than a week. It was almost an occasion for celebration when someone made it in without laying down his motorcycle on the toll road at four in the morning or spending the previous night in prison. The warehouse was a waystation to nowhere. There was no possibility for advancement, no valuable resume experience – just a Zapruder-like frame of indeterminate time before a guy flicked back into prison or dealing drugs or bartending at Chuckles. Only Ray was there through all of them.

A-One had also been the first place I came into contact with speed. It took me a month to realize that something was a little off with one of the other warehouse guys. He would blink frantically in the middle of his sentences, locking onto my gaze and maintaining constant eye contact long after it became uncomfortable. Sometimes he’d speak so quickly that he’d meld words together: Goddamnshit! and Cockeatinbitch! One morning I found him passed out on the truckers’ office floor, with Ray working nonchalantly at the computer three feet from his body.

“Jesus,” I’d said. “What… What happened?”

“End of a speed run,” Ray had said, as if this happened on a weekly basis (which, I would later discover, it did). “He’d been awake for something like fifty hours straight.”

“Fifty hours?”

“Yeah. Sometimes you can get upwards of sixty, seventy even. Depends on how good the stuff is.” I couldn’t tell if he was blowing smoke up my ass or not. Ray had a propensity both to lie about his experiences and to ingest copious quantities of illegal drugs, so it was a toss-up. “I can hook you up with some if you want.”

“No, I…” I had paused, mid-sentence. This was not an environment where Kelly Kapowski’s struggles with addiction on Saved by the Bell were relevant. I could get a lot of shit done in fifty hours. The realization that I had been wasting eight entire hours per day while asleep had never really dawned on me before. It was like a whole new world was opening up before me, where I would have the ability to do superhuman things like wash my car at four in the morning. Luckily, my mind flashed back to the end of another one of Ray’s oilfield stories at that exact moment. “Guy was on meth 24/7. Finally just keeled over and his heart popped like a zit, brother.”

It was momentarily tempting, but I had decided to stick with alcohol. By my third summer, at least one day a week I would come in with at least a slight buzz on, having long ago overcome the paranoia of having Lance realize that I was drunk on the job. I figured that, even in a worst-case scenario, I could plead that my co-workers were doing things that were way more illegal. I had my excuse all planned out. Come on, Lance. Wetzel stabbed someone! Ultimately, it became a game, where I would see how numb I could get and still pass under the radar.

Still, in order to preserve at least some semblance of care, I stuck to vodka, for its ability to be disguised as water and its lack of a telltale scent. Specifically, I chose Popov vodka. Popov is the Novocaine of alcohol. Where bourbon transforms you into the Incredible Hulk and beer makes every voice around you sound like the teacher from Charlie Brown Christmas specials, vodka makes you suave and sophisticated, so that you can act for a few hours like more than a man who makes eight dollars an hour throwing around bubble wrap. Vodka drowns out the off-putting consciousness that you are a cog in a machine that produces garbage – and not a very important one at that. Your skill set expands from operating a rudimentary shipping program, driving a forklift and lifting heavy things to a vast array of subjects, including discussing politics, seducing women, and generally overpowering others with your crushing intellect and razor-sharp wit. Fuck confidence – Popov courses through your veins like liquid professionalism. No wonder James Bond had all those women.

Vodka also makes it easy to lie – not only to others, but to yourself. With beer you wake up on the floor somewhere with vomit running down your cheek, and usually you can retrace your steps from the hours before by following the swath of stomach acid and broken bottles. Vodka is more subtle, though. The morning (or afternoon) after is usually a mess of blank memories without an identifiable trail, making it simple for you to convince yourself that nothing bad happened and that you probably don’t have a problem.

Ray wandered back into the office, eating Stagg chili directly out of the can. I decided to roll the dice.

“Hey, you left me up on the racks about half an hour ago. Did you think I was just going to fly down?”

Ray eyed me, pausing to swallow a mouthful of beans. “No, but I figured you’d find your own way to the floor.” It was impossible to argue with his logic. Ray ambled across the room and planted himself in the folding chair behind the conference table. The fan droned on.

“How long have you been working here, Ray?”

“Seven years in December.”

“And you never got sick of it?”

“Sick of it? You think I work here because I have a choice?” He stared at me incredulously before slouching back into his chair and continuing. “Nah, it’s not bad though. At least you’re getting some fresh air in you, right?”

“I guess so,” I said.

“Besides, you’re the one who can afford to be sick of it. You’ve got what, another month here?”

“Yeah. Two and a half weeks, actually.”

“What do you think you’re gonna do?”

“College,” I said tersely.

“Oh yeah? Where?” This was the most interest Ray had ever shown in my future, and I wasn’t about to let him know that revealing the prestige of my destination would make the last three summers of work sound like a vacation, like I was that millionaire in New Jersey who spends his free time as a train conductor.

“Bay Area.” I hoped he wouldn’t follow the same line of questioning. He didn’t.

“Cool, man. That’s cool. Get away from the slobs like us.” He slapped me on the shoulder, a little harder than would have been necessary to make his point, before getting up and ambling out of the room.

I realized that for three years I had been testing myself to see if I could survive in the wrong arena. In October I would be leaving for school, where I would again be surrounded by the upwardly mobile crowd whose interest in pinot grigio and “Sex and the City” would force me to harness every ounce of energy to keep myself from punching them in the face. I was desperate to get away from that image, to the point where I had considered attending a state school rather than my first choice, again just because I could. I once read somewhere that the hyper-ambitious man strives for recognition, but the average guy is just trying to escape. A-One Packing Supply was my escape – the fortress of solitude where I could insulate myself from the knowledge that my future involved a career shuffling papers and accruing just enough hours to earn a hefty bonus that I would never have the time to spend.

About two months after I left for Stanford I got a phone call from Lance, who told me that Ray had suffered a serious injury. Having committed a string of seven or eight DUIs in the past, Ray had had his license taken away from him and was reduced to riding his bicycle to work. He made this commute every day at four in the morning, usually immediately after a long night of drinking. Apparently, Lance informed me, Ray had been racing down Santa Margarita Parkway and had flashed across an intersection against the light, getting clipped by a truck and flying thirty feet before landing on his head. This didn’t stop Ray, however. He took a 2-hour nap on the concrete, then woke up, retrieved his mangled bicycle, and carried it the remaining two miles to the warehouse. Everything was running smoothly until Carlos, one of the drivers, showed up and vomited when he saw the two-inch-square patch of skull that was visible just over Ray’s right eyebrow. Fearing for his brother’s safety, the company owner had decided it wise to relocate Ray to a mental hospital in South Carolina, where his needs would be better met.

In December I flew back home and decided to resume my job at A-One for a week before they shut down for the holidays, in a frantic effort to pick up some extra cash for Christmas presents. The new warehouse manager was a young guy, about 25, who insisted on exaggerating his Southern drawl to Foghorn Leghorn proportions. He spoke only sporadically, but he used his words to lash his underlings into line with the terse authority of the warden from Cool Hand Luke, so that instead of spending four hours in the middle of the day looking after Ray’s comatose form, I was hand-lifting hundred-pound pallets and shuttling them onto trucks at a dead run. By the time my shifts were over, I could barely muster the energy to press the accelerator down on the drive home. I had thought it impossible to miss Ray, but at least his absence served as a reminder of why avoiding such a job via a college education was probably a good idea. I began to eye the clock longingly as the afternoon dragged on, willing it forward with whatever mental focus I had left by three o’clock. Working at A-One had finally become, well, work.

People ask me why I stayed at A-One all through high school. Usually they ask with the same incredulous tone with which they inquire about the six-foot-tall pyramid of beer bottles on my balcony or the time I ate fifty marshmallow peeps in one sitting. Like George Mallory climbing Everest, I had to eat them because they were there, and I had to work at A-One because, well, what else was I going to do? Usually my response is something along the lines of “Gotta make money somehow,” or “I wanted a real job.” There really isn’t a polite way to say it. “Well, I loved it, because it was the last time for the next decade that I wouldn’t be surrounded by collar-popping assholes like yourself. More wine?” Going to college is the trade-off that we all make: being forced to grow out of the luxury of being who we are in exchange for an education and a paycheck, or, if you’re an English major, at least the potential thereof. There is no happy medium between Ray and the corporate world. Making a living by doing what you love is by and large the bastion only of professional athletes and rock stars. Unless you comprise part of the small minority of douchebags who can be happy selling your soul as a trial lawyer or investment banker, you’ll just have to suit up and like it.

Now that I’m graduating from college without definable job training, it makes it even more ludicrous that I traded my summers for what amounts to a pitiful blurb on my resume: licensed forklift operator. At least it was something that, for a short time, made me believe that growing up surrounded by wealth was a situation I could isolate myself from, as if riding places in friends’ Jaguars and spending weekends at their beach houses kept me hardcore, as long as I was back behind the forklift on Monday morning. Even as a middle-class kid in a luxury world, working at A-One was worth the knowledge that I could put off being a part of that abhorrent upper crust, at least for a little while longer. And now I know that if I manage to fool the working world into believing that I’m actually worth a salary, I can be just as happy with a gallon of Popov and a bag of skinless chicken breasts as with a sixty thousand dollar car. We’re all drowning it out with something, but at least my fix is cheap.

Ray, Part I

I hate work. That’s not to say that I don’t understand the value inherent in doing something well; I just feel like I have a greater appreciation for free time than most people. Having spent four years at a private Catholic high school with a schedule so precisely regimented it could have been drawn up by a Special Forces strike team, I cherished my summers. I knew every moment of that time frame intimately, from the heady exuberance of mid-June to the suicidally depressing last week of August. So then after my sophomore year, when I was ordered by my dad to find a summer job, to say I was crushed would be an understatement.

Of course, I had no motivation to shop around for employment, so my dad suggested that I work in a shipping supply warehouse run by one of his rec-league softball teammates. Most of my friends considered the mere notion of summer employment on par with indentured servitude, so working in a warehouse, to them, was akin to slavery. They couldn’t understand why I would want to do manual labor, particularly when my PLAN test sophomore year had so clearly indicated that my future profession was “business administration.” It was clear that phrases like “billable hours” were somewhere in my future, and this was most definitely not the way to go about reaching that goal.

Still, I liked being outside, and working at the warehouse would keep my afternoons free to spend at the beach and in my friends’ swimming pools. I was scheduled to show up at six in the morning every weekday and load trucks for five hours before spending the early afternoon moving pallets of cardboard boxes and enormous bags of packing peanuts around with a forklift. That was another perk: the chance to operate heavy machinery.

The best part about working at A-One Packing Supply, though, was that it allowed me to build an understanding of myself as a man apart from the materialistic bullshit of my high school. This was, of course, a personal ethic I arrived at while driving from my parents’ $300K house to work in their car. Believe me, I would have loved to claw my way up from the depths of poverty into success to give myself some kind of dignity. I would have loved to say that I cut my teeth doing manual labor and that it gave me a taste for the value of a dollar and for the undeniable feeling that comes from a day of hard work. Things didn’t quite turn out that way, though.

“You listen to enough of that shaggy nigger music, and you’ll turn into a fucking criminal,” Ray said from his chair on the loading dock.

I reached up to the radio and eased the dial through the Dr. Dre song and back to the classic rock station, where “My Sharona” was beginning its fourth rotation of the afternoon. Ray leaned back, rubbing the back of his head pensively with one hand and pointing his cigarette at me with the other. A pitiful breeze drifted in from the parking lot, barely strong enough to move the scraps of cardboard strewn across the warehouse floor. “That’s all they play on the radio these days.”

I nodded dumbly in assent. It was from him that I had learned many similar maxims, among them that the whores in Midland were far superior to those in Amarillo and that wearing a baseball cap backward was the first step toward homosexuality. Ray, satisfied, began digging in his pocket for a refill of Skoal.

I couldn’t help but stare at him sometimes. It wasn’t just the utter absence of any other sensory stimulation during the day – it was the way he looked. I can’t drag my eyes away from other people’s physical quirks, even when it’s extremely impolite. There was nothing obviously wrong with Ray’s appearance, but the structure of his body was just a little off-kilter, in the way that you notice an artificial leg even if its owner is wearing pants. After a lifetime of observing other human beings, your body of evidence becomes such that even the slightest tweaking of what is “natural” makes you uneasy for reasons you don’t understand.

He wasn’t a bad-looking guy. Certainly, he was no Elephant Man, but his facial features looked like they had been cut from a block of granite. The cheekbones and nose were just broad, flat surfaces with harsh edges, accented by a constant five o’clock shadow and a sheen of grease and sweat. He had the gangly legs of a cross-country runner – all kneecaps and ropy muscle – but they seemed to extend up past his waist, until it was like his shoulders were resting directly on his hip bones. His eyes, too, deep-set and wide open all the time, had an arresting quality to them. It was the sort of vaguely crazy desperation you saw in movie terrorists’ faces just before they said something like “Of course it’s necessary to kill the children too.”

I was condemned to spend four hours a day alone in the A-One Packing Supply warehouse with Ray. Even though it was the easiest portion of my workday in terms of physical exertion, the psychological strain of not knowing what he would do next weighed on me, much in the same way that a mouse tenses up when it’s dropped into a cage with a snake. There wasn’t necessarily any good reason for me to believe that Ray would eventually snap, but I knew something was coming. The best course of action was to buy him an occasional Mountain Dew, hoping that when he burst through the back door spraying hollow-points in every direction he’d remember my kindness.

In what was probably the least responsible workplace decision since the advent of child labor laws, Ray had been promoted to warehouse manager by his brother, who owned the company. Given any other environment, Ray would have been out of a job on the basis of his volcanic temper, virulent racism, negligence toward even the most basic safety regulations, and barely-functional alcoholism. He didn’t quite fit the hostile loner archetype, but you could still pick up a sense that he saw every personal interaction as a potential threat. Occasionally Lance, the operations manager, would catch him drunkenly sleeping in his chair in the sun and let him continue undisturbed for fear that he would wake up and start waving around his switchblade, as he had done once before. It was during these naps that I was instructed to direct any customers to the front desk and to be as quiet as possible.

After about thirty seconds of silence, Ray rotated himself toward me and spoke. “What’s a kid like you still doing working here, anyway?” The cigarette dangled limply from his lower lip, pointing almost straight down.

“Builds character, I guess,” I said.

“Sure as shit it does.” He grinned. I could tell this was the answer he wanted to hear. “Kids these days wouldn’t know a real job if it came up and bit them in the ass.” I laughed weakly, but he wasn’t finished.

“I saw a kid coming out of the Santa Margarita High parking lot in a Z3 this morning,” he continued. “Kid couldn’t have been more than seventeen. How the fuck do you like that? I didn’t get a car until I was 22, and that was because I stole it.” He laughed, a short, raspy cough. My high school was a favorite target of Ray’s class-conscious outrage. I had been careful to avoid letting him know I went there. I doubt he would have let up even if he’d known.

He took a long drag from the cigarette and continued. “Man, I tell you what, you give a kid anything he wants like that, he’ll never succeed. You want to raise a kid right, you gotta make him work for it.” Parenting. Another of Ray’s areas of expertise, along with race relations and women. He leaned back again, this time forcing the chair almost parallel to the ground with his body weight.

Ray, childless, had been blessed with me – a captive audience to whom he could impart the boundless wisdom of his thirty-six years. Most of this information took the form of lavishly detailed anecdotes ending in some kind of dismemberment. Ray had spent two years on a salmon-fishing boat in the Gulf of Alaska and three as an oilfield worker in West Texas, and he loved launching into stories about the dangers of his previous jobs. Most of them were punctuated with details like “Poor guy didn’t even see the girder coming. Split him open like a Hefty bag full of vegetable soup, brother.” He also concluded every sentence with “brother,” sometimes adding an accusatory stab in the chest with his forefinger. It was like Hulk Hogan was narrating the story of his life, if Hulk had been a manual laborer with an IQ of 85. The only acceptable response, too, was “Fucking awesome.” I and the other workers who made up Ray’s audiences had to say “Fucking badass” or something of that nature to pacify him, in the same way I said “Fucking awesome” at parties when some tool finished telling me about his new Land Rover.

On the plus side, Ray was the only person who knew exactly where everything in the warehouse was at all times, as if he was some sort of low-level savant. He also knew the fire marshal well, and was consistently able to talk him out of citing A-One Packing Supply for free-stacking unstable pallets seven and eight high directly in front of a desk where four illegal Guatemalan women worked, oblivious to the fact that a well-timed car backfire would bring down fifty thousand pounds of paper pulp on top of them. The warehouse was teeming with health and safety code violations that would make any respectable OSHA inspector curl up in a corner and start shaking, but that wasn’t going to stop Ray from making an honest living and, in the process, preserving one for the rest of us.

Ray did, however, possess the simplicity that most people lack. I shouldn’t have liked him. There was something compelling, though, about seeing all the alternatives that weren’t part of the career path my test scores had indicated for me. I could see myself at Ray’s age, slowly strangling myself in a series of Brioni power ties, one for each day of the week. The lies that surround the corporate world were conspicuously absent in Ray. In the office we tell ourselves that our jobs mean something, that we are part of Something Larger Than Ourselves. Pushing around cardboard boxes for a living hammers home the point that a job is just a means to the end of the rest of your life, and that looking for personal revelation in what you do with your weekday mornings is a fool’s errand.

Some people live for the weekend, and others, God bless them, can get some kind of obscure gratification out of the actual workday. Ray just lived, though – up at four in the morning, home by four in the afternoon, spend the evening with a Costco steak and a beer, and then early to bed. He transcended his job in that where some people complain that their jobs suffocate their private lives, he didn’t have a private life. There was nothing else there to choke out. Ray’s weekends weren’t an opportunity to produce some kind of meaning that his job failed to provide; they were just a 48-hour lunch break. He could occasionally be found asleep on the job, but he’d never complain. I think it came from knowing what a real shitty job was. Granted, you might deal with a couple of crazies at A-One, but the chances of getting your leg torn off or being swept overboard by a 50-foot wave were minimal. While working in a corporate office eats your soul in more ways than one, there is more than a little dignity in being a drone of the labor variety. There is something concrete that comes from producing a tangible service, rather than profiting from other people’s greed or litigiousness. Ray and his kind, unpalatable though they might be, were the bedrock upon which the fattened superstructure of society rested – the cockroaches that would survive a nuclear holocaust. I liked that kind of resilience, and so I kept showing up long after I should have left. Really, I kept coming just to see if I could – to see if I could make it through one more day without bailing and going to the beach.

Ray finally hoisted himself from his chair and spoke. “Time to get back to work. I don’t want your lazy ass getting all the credit around here.”

That afternoon’s job was fairly simple. We had been instructed to count and catalogue two thousand enormous foam pads, each seven feet square and two inches thick. The pads had been wrapped in bundles of twenty and stacked haphazardly on the top rack at the back of the warehouse, thirty feet from the concrete floor. It was impossible to estimate how long they had occupied that space – it could have been years. A large portion of the inventory in the warehouse was made up of leftovers from long-forgotten orders that did nothing other than collect dust. I trudged to the pads’ location, and Ray brought the forklift around to the base of the racks. “Hop on.”

I balanced myself on the steel forks and began to rise steadily toward the ceiling, then stepped onto the racks as Ray eased backward on the levers below me. I had to drag each bundle, twice as tall as I was and almost as heavy, from the rack to the forks, all while maintaining my balance on two four-inch-wide steel rails. “Hurry the fuck up,” Ray shouted from the floor. “It’s almost lunchtime.”

I worked in silence on top of the racks, picking up each bundle with a supreme effort and holding it aloft just long enough to slide it onto the forks. All the hot air in the warehouse had risen to the top of the building over the course of the afternoon, and it sat there undisturbed like a dusty blanket, choking the air out of my lungs and making my underarms pour out sweat like I was wearing a rubber suit. The fans installed in the ceiling had broken months ago, becoming shelters for a wide variety of spiders. It took me almost an hour to finish removing the pads, and by the time I completed the last stack I looked down to realize that Ray had gone to lunch, leaving me stranded on top of the rack. My body temperature inched upward, and I began the delicate process of climbing down. Still angry at Ray for hanging me out to dry, I walked back to the truckers’ office at the back of the building, adjacent to the loading dock.

I slumped into the desk chair and turned the warehouse’s only working fan to its maximum speed, staring directly into it. Ray would not be back for at least another half-hour, giving me time to turn off my brain until his return.

TO BE CONTINUED

Square One

"There has to be something else," Angelita said. Shit, I thought. She was going to press further. I had nothing.

I was in the middle of watching Pardon the Interruption for the second time when she called. Angelita is the student affairs coordinator at the political science department, a woman with whom I have exchanged hundreds of e-mails and 15 or 20 phone calls without ever having seen in person. She could be 25 or 75, and I would never know. Apparently during the commencement ceremony the dean lists off a few of a student's accomplishments and then his future plans before handing him his diploma. "Haeyon was chair of the International Law Review for three years and is an Arthur K. Gimball Scholarship Award Winner. He will be spending the summer with the Peace Corps before returning to Harvard Law School in the fall." Since the quantifiable portions of my Stanford experience were pretty bleak, Angelita didn't have much to work with.

"Were you in any leadership positions?"

"Uh." The next five seconds passed in awkward silence.

"Well, what about sports? Awards?"

I thought for a second before deciding that the comedic value of hearing Senior Professor Terry Moe solemnly read off "Dan is an intramural dodgeball and softball champion" would be lost on my parents. Furthermore, the fact that there were seven NCAA national champions graduating in the political science department alone made that glowing accolade seem more than a little shabby, like I was breaking down in tears upon being named MVP of my Little League team. Ultimately, I settled on some grossly overblown phrase like "Dan was named Outstanding Sports Columnist of Volume 226 at the Daily." a prize for which I was awarded a $20 gift certificate to the bookstore. I immediately used it to buy a Jurassic 5 CD.

What had I done with the time? I had spent three years at one of the best undergraduate universities in the country and I couldn't come up with two suitable accomplishments for the dean to read at commencement. Even if I hadn't been surrounded by a universe of people who would be working for the Thai embassy or Goldman-Sachs or studying at Wharton, I still would have been a failure on paper. In comparison to my peers', my collegiate career was the equivalent of getting a degree in dockworking or janitorial sciences. I might as well have enrolled in the masters program for Hobo Studies. I can see myself now in four years, wiping someone's windshield with my diploma like Gil from "The Simpsons," offering to recite baseball statistics for spare change.

This state of affairs would be much worse, though, if I had some singular talent that I was wasting. I am not smart in the traditional sense. I have no academic field of expertise. I settled on political science because it was a 70-unit major (as opposed to most of the 120-unit engineering course loads) and because I had accidentally fulfilled the basic requirements my freshman year. Even if you sat me down and told me a $200k/year job depended on it, I could not put together a coherent argument about nation-building in sub-Saharan Africa or the relative merits of a proactive nuclear defense initiative.

When I was getting ready to graduate from high school I had the opposite problem. I had the most impressive resume I could have possibly accumulated without having really done anything. Despite a stratospheric GPA and a community service record that would have impressed Mother Teresa, I had nothing that I could honestly point to as important to me - a purpose that would give my life meaning. I thought seriously about joining the military. I had decided early on that to be a man there were only two acceptable career paths: make as much money as possible, or dodge bullets and blow up ragheads. I'm actually surprised that more middle-class kids don't sign up sometimes. Maybe recruiters just think it's a lost cause to go after guys who could just as easily spend the next four years at Swarthmore instead of Camp Pendleton or Okinawa. I knew there had to be more like me - teenage suburban kids disgusted with the abyss between the trivial shit that other people praised them for and the real currency of manhood. If I hadn't been born with a lung capacity that I found would classify me as 4-F, I would have gladly shipped out. In all honesty, though, I'm not sure I could cut it. For all the complaining about an army built from the ranks of the poor, I would sure as hell want a strike team of West Texas linebackers defending my country over a group of bickering Ivy League students. The singleness of purpose that comes from having nothing left to lose will make you braver than you ever thought you could be.

More than anything else, I'd always wanted that purpose. I hated being a student. I hated not feeling like I had earned anything. I was desperate to believe that somehow, some way, I could escape the quarantined environment of private school where success is all but mailed directly to your house. I fucking hate the army of Christophers and Matthews that clogs America's business schools, the guys who can look back on life at age 70 and point to their vacation to Tuscany that made them realize What Life Is All About. I want to be a man, a provider, a soldier who has something more than the completion of a meaningless liberal arts degree. If anything, I hated graduating, because it gave a legitimate title to the enormous pile of bullshit credibility I have been accumulating over the past seven years. I want to get dropped into a jungle somewhere and find my own way out. If that's what it takes, I'll dump everything and start from the bottom.

Which is essentially what I'm doing right now.