Authors: U
hallucinations.
Now it’s much more readable.
I’m having a great time.
Went down to the ocean this evening. Looking out over the water
was hard because it was so goddamned beautiful it damn near broke
my heart. The sun went down in a big orange blaze, swallowed up by
the deep blue drink. I stayed long enough on the absolutely deserted
beach to take a leak and then left. It was really gorgeous. The sunset,
I mean.
I think I might like this beach town. Everything seems to be going
good. Have even found a halfway decent laundromat.
* * * *
February 25, 1978
Finished my first week on the job here yesterday. It wasn’t too bad.
I don’t think I’ll have any problems. Definitely the best part about my
job, however, is my desk partner, Megan Bauer.
Oh, my heavens. She’s this tall, shapely blond they hired the same
day as they hired me. Yikes. She is exquisitely beautiful, in my
opinion. Long hair, blue eyes, an absolutely perfect body, slender,
graceful, and smart as a whip.
Friday night after work we drove over to the viewpoint that
overlooks the North Jetty. We got stoned and talked. Megan likes to
talk and loves to laugh. I was just cracking her up. We are going to
get along very well together, I can tell.
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As it happens, Megan’s done this job before, in West Eugene. She
knows the ins and outs of assistance work and shares them all with
me.
She’s extremely funny and reads even more than I do. Very
intellectual for a beautiful blond. Exceptionally unusual. You can’t
fake the kind of literary knowledge Megan has.
Too bad she’s married.
Rain fell all through the night. I skipped dinner after I got stoned
with Megan and went to bed early. Had a long, tiring week. Did not
write hardly at all.
Before retiring, I read some comic books and my Jerry Rubin book
We Are Everywhere. Also verified that Eldridge Cleaver quote I had
been wondering about. He’s the one who coined the slogan "If you’re
not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem." Cleaver’s a
genius, in my opinion.
Soul On Ice I fucking love.
Today I get back to work on my book in earnest.
Woke up this morning about 9:00. Stayed in bed, thinking about
Polly. Wondering why I still want her after all the shit that’s
happened. I’m glad I moved here for a vast number of reasons, not
the least of which is to show how easy it is to pick up and go. When
we are young we can do anything.
If I could, I would forget about Polly and find another woman to
love. But it’s not like I haven’t tried. Checked out numerous
potential replacements while I lived in Portland.
Sorry to say, the scene was incredibly dismal. By and large, the
educated unmarried women in my bracket fall into two categories –
the desperate and the ultra-desperate. Rooming with Chesley was a
gigantic eye-opener. He’s conducting an all out search for the perfect
wife. His usual gung-ho approach. It’s pathetic and I have pointed
this out to him many times. Still, he persists. He says that by
constantly hunting he’s sure to find someone. I am more reticent by
far.
I told him that by going about it the way he is going about it he is
sure to find someone lousy. More than once I said why not just
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concentrate on your career and let the romance thing take care of
itself?
Chesley replied that such a strategy was not "pro-active" enough to
suit him. Apparently, I am the only one who can see that his efforts
are doomed to miserable failure.
Meanwhile, living with him, I was also continually exposed to an
endless parade of marriage-minded, baby-craving women. He
dragged all sorts of them through our house at 3024 SE 25th Street.
Goddamn, what a fucking mob! We hosted two major house parties
and a variety of smaller affairs. Chesley made contacts, answered
personal ads, signed up for dating services, and went on dates (blind
and otherwise) by the score. He joined the Y, the tennis club, and
even started going to temple again. The boy left no stone unturned.
Chesley’s dates invariably had single female friends, best
girlfriends, unattached work friends, and sundry available women of
all stripes lurking around As Chesley’s roommate, I was constantly
sized for my dating and/or marriage potential. The goddamn fucking
phone rang day and night.
Women, women, women! Do they not realize how painfully
obvious they are? Eeoowww! Our place was like the Pendleton
fucking Round Up. If just one of those dames had shown a touch of
class, I might have been intrigued.
Alas, none did.
In truth, I grew very tired of fending off their crude advances.
Seemingly none were interested in books, politics, art, or issues in
general. They only had one thing on their minds: Marriage. After a
while I started derisively calling his dates "Nesters."
Chesley said it was a terrible expression and then started to use it
himself.
"Got me a date with a Nester tonight," Chesley would say. "She
has very big bazooms."
Later: I’ve delved into the new Chapter 23 quite deeply. I really
want to finish it up today so I can keep moving along.
Finally, I have time to write. My service as Chesley’s social
secretary is herewith terminated. I kinda feel bad about leaving him
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in the lurch. Ever since Karen Hall dumped him two years ago, he’s
shown abysmal judgment about women.
I mean horribly bad. He seemed to like having me around to
bounce opinions off of. I’ve gone out of my way not to be critical, but
left to his own devices, I’m afraid Chesley’s likely to commit a huge
blunder. For some unfathomable reason he is mainly attracted to this
sick-minded slattern type of chick who only wants to marry him for
his money.
What Chesley really needs is another Karen Hall but such
extraordinary women are truly rare. What a fool he was to screw that
romance up.
Ah well. I should talk. My blunders are likewise legendary.
However, should Chesley should luck out and find a woman as classy
as Karen again I am pretty sure he won’t treat her like shit this time
around.
* * * *
February 26, 1978
Just finished the new Chapter 23 and Jeeziz Keerist is it ever good!
It’s perfect. Had me in stitches. I’ve read it through twice now and I
really love it. How is that for humility? Writers are so fucking vain, I
gotta admit. Writing amuses me no end.
You should read it, though. It’s so weird. Five high voltage pages
of totally wacky stuff. Not like anything I have ever read before. I
can’t take anything seriously, you know. My method is not to reveal
all, just the worst and stupidest stuff. Solitude is excellent for literary
production.
All I do is work, eat, sleep, and write. I love it.
Ran out of money today. Spent my last pocket change on a pack of
cigarettes. What a stupid fucking habit. This has to be my last pack.
I’m nearly out of marijuana, too. Bummer.
On the hand, not a single shot of booze have I had since last
Thursday. Of course, I know exactly what I need to abstain from
continual self abuse via dope, booze, and cigarettes. The essential
missing element: Feminine companionship.
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At last, I am up to page 65. I am also very tired for some reason.
Perhaps because it is 2:30 in the morning and I have been working for
nineteen hours straight.
I shall dream about my VW bus as my eyelids close in the sweet
repose of sleep. Like hell I will.
* * * *
February 27, 1978
Wrote another note to Polly Ellsworth this evening. More like a
change of address than anything else. I called Chesley and he said I
had no mail except an overdraft notice from the bank.
So she has not written. This missive may catch her off guard. I
wonder if she can read my own desperation between the lines.
Oh, I am a fucking basket case!
Chesley will move from our house on 25th Street tomorrow. He
says he is just going to mail in the key to the landlord. I will do the
same. Mrs. Bonome never did anything except raise the rent and
ignore our requests for repairs. Fuck her. I’m sick and tired of
kissing the ass of landlords.
What I need is a place of my own. Maybe something down here
would be a good idea. A little property at the coast might make a nice
investment.
We will see how things work out.
The job is okay. Megan is dynamite. Have mercy. She wore this
rather tight fitting white blouse today that showed off her upper body
to exceptionally good advantage, I must say. Her husband Mark took
her to lunch this afternoon and I met him for the first time. It was
really strange. He bears an uncanny physical resemblance to Polly’s
old boyfriend Blane.
Short and stocky, with a heavy dark beard.
It was so weird. Mark is practically identical to Blane from what I
can gather, right down to the odd mannerisms and the heavy drinking.
Put them together and you might say they were peas in pod. I think
maybe it’s a type.
I get paid this week. Yippee! I really need the money. My abrupt
departure from Cyanide City cost me a pretty penny.
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From now on though, I should be able to start socking some money
away. I am so sick of being broke.
I feel good. So far, things are going well, as well as can be
expected. Barring some unforeseen disaster, I may be on a roll.
Eventually the ruthless implacable universe will grind me to dust but
for the moment I’m okay.
* * * *
February 28, 1978
Last day of the month. I get paid at work tomorrow and I must
dispatch $100 to Portland immediately. That should cover my debts
there. Nothing is ever easy.
I plan to write some letters tonight. First I will write to Mick. He
is so far away in Africa. Then I may write to ... hmmm.
Actually, there is no one else to write to.
Asked for my original typescript of
The Dark City
back. I want it
soon, so I laid it on thick.
* * * *
March 3, 1978
A long, long week on the welfare line. Megan and me were
incredibly busy all week, with people coming and going. More than
once I really had to hustle my ass. But I think I’ll do fine here, I
really do. Work doesn’t look too strenuous. Maybe I’ll do it for a
year or so before I go on to something else. Mainly what I want is for
my day job not to interfere with my literary aspirations.
Not very long ago I used to listen closely when people put me down
or ridiculed my ideas. Most of the time, I went along with them. I
had no self-confidence and was raised by people who gave their
children next to zero in the way of praise.
I am putting all that behind me. Other people know nothing more
than I do. I am beginning to realize the basic point they all want to
put across is that they are smart and you are stupid. At last I have
discovered that if they have more success than I do, it is usually
because they have more built-in advantages, not more ability. From
now on, I say to hell with the snipers, some of whom pretend to be my
friends.
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There’s this Mark Twain quote that covers it all:
"Avoid people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people
always do that. But the really great make you feel like you too, can
become great."
My co-worker Megan isn’t like that, thank heavens. She’s one
smart cookie, that’s what she is. When Megan found out I was a
writer, she was very encouraging. She is also beautiful as hell and
loves to laugh.
Finished Chap. 26 on the rewrite finally. Sent letters to Mick and
John Thomas. Also sent a letter to Seattle asking for my original copy
back from Annie. I need it for study and historical purposes. There is
stuff in it I don’t have in my current copy.
In three months I have completed nearly 75 pages of fresh
manuscript. I believe the new stuff is a vast improvement over the old
and will only require light revision in the next draft.
I fucking love to write. But I would also love to be an artist like
Charles R. Unfortunately, I could never draw good enough. Polly
Ellsworth was also very gifted with her artwork and could easily have