Tuesday, October 29, 2019

12,238. RUDIMENTS, pt. 852

RUDIMENTS, PT. 852
(Injun Joe and the drunk)
It's funny, where I live;
there could have been a 
cool, grand history here of 
stuff, the old atmospheres 
of fen and swamp, old clumps
of buildings down in the
swamps, those Indian families,
the American native kinds,
that used to live there. I used
to deliver some papers there,
Star Ledger stuff, way down
into those old, no-place
swampy spots. We called
them, the people that lived 
there  -  and I know I've 
covered this before here, 
in other chapters, but I'm 
tweaking it again  -  we
called them the 'Way Outs,'
and always held their delivery
for last, in case anyone was,
maybe, driving towards
Carteret or the Turnpike
entrance there, thus saving
me another trip 'way out' there
with some stupid newspapers.
They, first off, never had money
on collection days, timidly
sending a kid to the front door
to mumble, 'My Mommy says 
next week. We got no money 
now.' I couldn't have cared less,
that buck and a quarter a week
or whatever it was, but every 
so often the route pick-up 
guy would go freaky on me, 
like when it reached maybe 
8 bucks, and start demanding 
money or making me stop 
going out to them. I always felt, 
Jeepers, the least they deserve
is a paper, you jerk. It was, to
me, just all Blair Road stuff.
And it's all gone now, corporate
crap having been let in instead.
Nobody ever cares about
people, just things. Money 
and profit and deals. That's why
I always felt they were all jerky
a'holes, and still are, and also
that's why I took so well to art
and writing when it all began 
coming my way after all that
cheesy church junk I'd gone 
through. I never needed any
'church' to talk to me about
God. I could, in  fact, tell
them a few things. Miracles
and crap they never even
thought about in their wildest
'Holy Lord I'm impregnated'
moments. Down Blair Road
way, there wasn't any of that
tedium; just weird, fetid air,
old ways and beliefs, a number
of oddball, native families  -  
holes in the swampy woods 
with campfire spots, old wooden
fences, mostly fallen over, a
few dogs maybe, junked cars,
oily puddles in muddy clearings,
a few benches and seats and stuff
made out of logs, here and there
a rope or something hanging from
a tree  -  I always swore them to
be engine hoists, and not the
neck-hanging stuff. There was
a paucity of wild animals, it
being the late 1950's and about 
1960/61. Deer, raccoon, and all
that were pretty much non-existent,
everything having been DDT'd out 
of existence for thirty years or so,
so the geniuses could do things
like lay the Turnpike through,
put up shit-ass truck warehouses,
wire the ground and waters for
all sorts of poisons, call it good,
take a day of rest,  and go back to
their thieving bastard ways.
It's called local politics.
-
I'd go to the Way Outs' houses the
next time, and when the kid came
to the door I'd just say look, I
have to see your Mommy, or
Daddy. I'd finally get someone 
at the door and wheedle three 
or four bucks out of them to
tide me over. I never knew why
they even got the paper, for
what it meant to them. More
trouble than it was worth, I'm
sure. Nothing great about reading
more about the same old crap 
culture that already had beaten 
you to death, stole and then 
ruined your lands, made nasty 
caricatures out of your race, 
took credit for the blames
and blames for the credit,
and now pretends to educate
your kids  -  which kids, by the
way, I for sure never saw in any
school I ever went to around 
those parts. Always confused me.
We had a substitute teacher too,
Mrs. Gaspari, widowed or whatever.
She and her son Paul, who did
go to school with me, lived
right down there, in that same
swampy woods area, but they
weren't Injuns, didn't seem
desperate, and he went to
school and she most often was
in our school substituting for
one or another teacher. It was
pretty cool; and she was a
pushover  -  as most subs were.
They got the paper too, yeah,
but they always paid. Paul
was a loner, kept himself aloof, 
didn't mingle much. I always
figured it was because of where
he lived, but I never delved nor
did I find anything out.
-
That was all, as I said, another,
and I believe, far better world.
two things to make my point
pop right up. First is the snoops
we have around now. I have this
fire guy in his little truck, every
time I turn around it's at my corner.
I may be the burr in all their saddles,
but tough shit. It doesn't qualify
me for intestinal snooping. This
is still America, even if the little
weasels think they own the place.
I don't go to his house and piss 
on his lawn. He ought remove
himself from mine.
-
Another item, is the horseshit mayor.
He writes himself up about how
cool it is that he's going around
tearing things down and getting
the 'eyesores' around town cleaned
up. Everything ends up looking
like bland, tan, siding, bare grass,
and bullshit with his name on it.
Meanwhile he gets a hard-on 
(maybe) over yet another 
Dunkin' Donuts, and a few 
more dead-skunk strip mall
places and calls it progress. I
think the school kids his crowd
purports to teach could learn 
multiplication by using the number
of Dunkin' Donuts he's spread
around times the number of crap
projects, to get a nice, fat, and
probably drunken, even number.
The little councilman guy in his 
fire-wagon, on that Dunkin' 
Donuts issue, fire wagon, he's said,
about it. 'We'll take as many as they 
give us.' I got news for His Flameness  
-  that's  why people here are fat and 
slovenly, because of the corporate 
poisonings of things like Dunkin' 
Donuts. Go ahead, take a look big fella'.
I have so much more to say. Dare
I? Or should I just retreat back
to the fens and swamps of my
own steamy mind?
-
How could anyone in their right
mind call what has happened here
progress? Back in good old Columbia 
Crossroads, a guy nearly got
murdered for starting proceedings
to build a Ski-Do or Arctic cat
snowmobile dealership, a simple
cinder-block, useless looking
building, on a nice bluff along
the nearby paved road. I myself
too was against it, but I felt
powerless, being as I was a
newcomer, had no ties to the
place, and no legacy-voice anyway.
If I'd have spoken up, they'd have 
probably shot me too! I mainly was 
against the lights and illumination 
it would bring, and of course
the damned noise. In Avenel here,
that's all different now. People
can't take a crap without a light
being on; there's lights on
everywhere....and nothing to see!
And 'newcomers' think it's all
great anyway, and they seem to
never be able to shut their mouths.
-
Whew! If that wasn't a swift and
fast run-through of a bunch of
things needing mention, I don't
know whatever is. Hell yeah,
give me a hand for that one.
It's always been said 'By their
works, ye shall know them.' That
was always operative to me, and it's
better than any argument, debate,
or controversy. In about the
same general area of where these
Way Outs used to be, getting
down to their area anyway, they've
now built an ocean of apartments 
and warehouses. In the same
general area they have what they 
call a 'Nature Preserve,' named
after  -  I guess for comic relief  -  
some local Fords drunk from
Planko's. I knew Ernie when he
was alive, from St. George Press
and township dealings. No matter.
I know what I know and no one can
pull any wool over on me. When they
first put this nature thing together, I
sat there one day with a lady from the
Woodbridge River Watch, or Nature
Conservancy, or whoever it was then.
They had, she said, strict adherence
to rules  -  native plants only, original
seeds, natural format, etc. It was
OK, maybe, for a year or two. Since
then the blowhard Mayor and town
have taken it back, or away, and
all of a sudden the 'Natural' habitat,
which they still brag about, is bogus.
Decorated. Bridges. Walkways.
Artificial pond placements, etc.
Butterfly Weeds are all gone, and
alien species now planted everywhere.
Way to go, for sure, and how much
money got drained into that swamp?






1 comment:

dmolark@gmail.com said...

these are pretty cool 'notes'. i will read more.