domingo, 26 de junio de 2011

Left Behind: I Wish I (Was) Were - Chapter 2


- “Ha! Yes! Who’s got two thumbs and is fuckin’ awesome? This guy! I finally managed to make egg-in-a-basket.  And I only went through half an egg carton and half a loaf of bread. Take that you fucking toast”

 “Wow. That was a crazy-ass dream. It was so vivid. Swear I was there. Oh well, whatever. I’ll tell John all about it later.”

 “Sure. Me. In Heaven. That was pretty ludicrous, even for my standard of crazy dreaming. Well, all that’s over now. No point in getting disturbed about it. All that is over. I’ll just enjoy my breakfast and some fresh orange juice. Phew. I’m even talking to myself. Must be losing it.”

“This is pretty delicious. I remember the first time I had…”

- “Hey! Wake up!”

- “What the hell is that?”

- “We’re here. Get up.”

- “Get up? Who’s talking to me? Is that voice coming from my breakfast? Bleep. 

  “Oh s-bleep. 

  “S-bleep?

  “No. No. No no no no no no. Noooooo. This can’t be really happening. ”

- “Am I gonna have to smack you to get up?”

And as the voice spoke a hand came through his half-eaten toast - it wasn’t that good anyway – and slapped him right in the face. As our main character - whose name I’ve really got to get to at some point in the story – woke he realized he was well s-bleep out of luck.

 You thought he was dreaming, right? Heaven and all? Some snow globe effect like the retarded ending of the otherwise pretty good St. Elsewhere? Well, no. For f-bleep-all really.  He’s really here, and you – as well as him – better get used to it.

- “So I’m seriously here, aren’t I?”

- “Yup.  Stop fighting it. We’re even more ‘here’ than ever, if that makes any sense. Look. We’re officially at the Gates of Heaven.”

As he composed himself he realized his surroundings, and his familiarity to the place.  He accepted he was here, for good. But the Gates were not what he expected them to be.

Yawn. “This really looks like a toll booth.”

It was actually Security Checkpoint #3.

- “Don’t be so rude.”

- “I’m not being rude. It just really looks like a freaking toll booth.”

- “OK. Yeah. Sorry. It does. OK. Happy now? I was just trying to flaunt around with the locations, me being the tour guide and all. It’s…yeah…well. You see…uhmm…well…St. Peter quit. About a few hundred years back, and he was the only one that knew how to operate the “Pearly Gates.” Look, you can see the gates from here.”

They crossed Security Checkpoint #3, where a pretty disgruntled angel OK’d them through. He was one of the original, way more awesome cherubs, with the animal faces to the sides and the back, and the human face to the front, but our man couldn't see him as such. He could only see a fat security guard. When belief of cherubs as chubby, little, cute bastards gained strength and they came to be, cherubs of the olden kind like my man Bob here were demoted to security. Little did they know as they passed him that he would be the first angel to commit suicide. If they had known they would’ve been a bit nicer.

They parked on the side of the road. There was still some time to go to get to the city, but Sal wanted to have a chance to show the original majesty of the Gates.

The Gates stood proudly over in the distance. White marble pillars held the golden gates in place. A light shone from nowhere and everywhere at the same time. The same glorious wonder surrounded them, as you’d expect. Some young devils had tarnished the image as they apparently taken upon them the sacred task of writing “Jesus Loves Seamen.” It was a pretty good pun. I snickered.

- “Did I tell you your car is full of useless s-bleep?”

- “No.”

- “Yeah, well, it is. There’s like enough garbage in there to rebuild Lady Gaga from scratch.

- “That’s pretty mean. See, I believe everything’s there for a reason.”

- “Right. You’re insane. Did you know that? You’re like those people that read The Secret.”

- “Gasp. Isn’t Rhonda Byrne fabulous?”

- “Are you s-bleep-ing me? Eternity must do a number on your neurons. Just…I’ll let it pass. OK. The Gates. I see them. They’re incredibly shiny.  Now why would St. Peter quit?”

- “Yeah, they might not be functional but we still clean them for ceremonies and the occasional beauty pageant. About Peter, long story short, he was bored.”

- “I think I got enough time for the long story. And you have beauty pageants here?”

- “Yeah, but they’re political here too.”

 “I think we could take a few minutes to explain; there’s no rush. See, St. Peter was supposed to be God’s buddy.”

- “Yeah. I knew that much from Dan Brown.”

- “Dan, remind me to tell you a few things about him. As I was saying, he thinks that when he’s dead he’s got it all set up here. Big house, a beachfront, health club membership, the works. But when he kicks it, he turns into a glorified doorman and no paid vacations. He went along with it for a few decades, mind you. He tried to make it fun, but when he realized no one really supervised him he started going crazy with it. He made his own version of “Simon Says” with the arriving souls. He called it “Simon Cephas Says.” Imagine that, where “Simon Says” is already tricky enough. And if you lost you got a few months in Purgatory. Not too far down thankfully – St. Peter and Virgil had struck a deal – but still down enough for it to be scary.”

- “Jesu-“

As he was about to speak those words Sal covered his mouth in a hurry, and told him to be quiet. It was a normal gesture for telling someone to “hush” but if you coincidentally managed to get a glimpse of them at the moment it might’ve looked kind of gay.

- “Don’t say his name.”

Sal let him go, trusting him to be quiet.

- “Why the hell not? Why can’t I say J-“

Sal covered his mouth again. It looked a bit gayer this time.

- “Are you a moron? Just. Don’t.”

Sal removed his hand, ever so slightly. If he‘d winked at him it would’ve been brought to the attention of the Gay Angel Police (which is a pretty gay name for starters, especially for an angelic poli…nah, not really. It’s pretty appropriate.). Oh. Right. SPOILER ALERT.

- “Just don’t say his name. Please.”

- “If you tell me why I can’t then I promise.”

- “I will, but not here. I’ll tell you all about it later.”

- “Well. Whatever. You were saying about St. Peter…”

- “Yeah. Well. Ever read The Divine Comedy?

- “Nop. Heard about it. Skimmed through Inferno a bit so I’ve got some clu…wait. You’re not gonna say that’s real, are you?

- “No. Not all of it at least. Some is just blatant exaggeration. I mean, everybody knows Hell’s got 14 circles. Some is just out of date. We’ve had elevators since the Renaissance; it would’ve been easier for Dante to just catch a lift out of Purgatory instead of taking that disturbingly long flight of stairs.”

- “I’m starting to lose you. Get to the point.”

The giant moon shone brightly, with an unknowable beauty from the surface of the Earth. Tall towers and buildings could be seen in the distance, proclaiming the ground the city holds. They still stood at the edge of the road, discussing the life history of the saint-no-more. They haven’t moved, and this whole paragraph is indeed pretty pointless. A bit redeemed by the adequate description of the setting, but not much after that. I was dozing off as I was starting to feel left out so I decided to include myself in this here paragraph. Our story continues. Cue music.

- “Dante’s the one that told on St. Peter. He’s the one that denounced him. Instead of facing an investigation he decided to quit. Just upped and moved to Los Angeles. He opened a small but well-doing bar calledPetros. Boys up here were really out of it. Just goes to show that you can’t really trust those kind of people.”

- “Those kind of people? What the hell do you mean by that?

- “You know what I mean.”

- “No. I don’t. Seriously, don’t…Italians?”

- “What? No. Wow. Man, that’s pretty racist. I meant poets.”

- “No. That’s not what I meant.  Argh. Just forget it. So you can just quit working for Heaven?”

-“Yeah, but you can pretty much kiss your pension plan goodbye when you do though. St. Peter pulled some favors with management. He’d let a few mistresses - some madonnas, so to speak -  in for some very important members of the Host. In short, they owed him. That let him get set up in L.A.”

- “Great. St. Peter’s a blackmailing barkeep and the Pearly Gates are out of order.”

- “We still use them for events, as I said. Miss Elysium was our last one. Pretty, the whole lot, but dumb as a box of rocks.

- “That really surprised me. Beauty pageants in Heaven. Who’d ‘a thunk it?”

- “Well…yeah…eternity’s a pretty long time. We try to entertain ourselves as best as we can.”

- “I’m just surprised. Heaven’s pretty different from how I expected to be.”

- "That's odd. Heaven's supposed to be what you expect it to be. That's how it works."

- "Well, I'm an atheist. Funny how I hadn't told you. I think that might keep me out of the gears or system or whatever the hell runs this place."

- "Oh, you're one of those. Hmm. I haven't seen God in a few millennia so I might see where your point of view comes from. You're lucky I'm one of the more open-minded angels. Nate would've burnt your ass to the ground."

- "Nate? He sounds like a prick."

He pulls out a notepad he'd taken from Sal's truck and writes down “prick” in the list titled “Swears OK’d by God." He looks at the list with some mischievous satisfaction.

- "Nathaniel's his full name, but it sounds pretty snobbish. He's not that bad really, unless you don’t proclaim your undying love for Jahveh. Then you’re screwed.”

- “Fantastic. Just keep me out of his way.”

- “I’ve got to. Can’t let an atheist roam around on his own around here. Let’s go to my place. We’ll figure out what to do with you there.”

They got in Sal’s truck and headed further into the city, leaving the view of the gates behind. They reached a part of the city that was not unlike the s-bleep-y side of the Bronx; not the grandness you’d assume of Heaven. It was definitely prettier and polished but as they say, polish a turd…

Left Behind: I Wish I (Was) Were - Chapter 1


I’m bored. I’ve got little to do for the summer except learn, and crazy shit (crazier than usual, that is) has been happening all around us. Most of my beliefs are pretty out there, so fuck it. I’m gonna write a periodic story: Left Behind: I Wish I Was (Were).

It’s is the story about a man who is basically the antithesis for Kirk Cameron. A stout believer until irrationality jumped ship and became a non-militant atheist. Just a young man, minding his own business, living everyday life. Happy, sad, human. Not of a necessarily enviable intellect but not without his merits.  Knows he hasn’t figured out the world and still laughs at the fact that the first thing he said when he got a blowjob was “oh my God.”

He lived in our world. Going to work everyday. Exercising on occasion. Enjoying the pleasures of sex and Nutella – separately. And when 6:00 P.M. hit on May 21st of this year, 2011, he disappeared. He has some friends, and they all thought he was pulling a prank, but now they’re pretty worried and his face is plastered all over Twitter.

This is his story.

By the way, sound effects are in bold letters. THESE ARE BOLD LETTERS. Writing looks retarded when you add asterisks every two words.

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Our hero(?) wakes up, in a beautiful garden, with the worst feeling of a hangover this side of watching any M. Night Shyalaman Movie. (Except The Sixth Sense. I liked that one.)

“Oh bleep.”

“Wait. What the f-bleep?”

“F-bleep!”

“F-bleepBleep. Mother-bleep.  C-bleep-s-bleep.”

Bleep-faceF-bleepbleepbleep-bagbleep-headbleep-smokerbleepbleepbleepASS!”

“Oh bleep! I can say ass! Sweet.”

His sense of realization lasted only seconds, much like Dustin Diamond’s career, when he saw where he was, and his unfamiliarity with the place.

“Where am I? Why do bad words keep getting bleeped out? Why in the world do I have a voice over?”

Oh bleep. Bleep it! Me too? Sorry about that dude. That wasn’t supposed to happen. I can’t really figure out this damn headset. Wait. I got-

“Wait! Wait! Before you leave, can you tell me where the hell I – awesome! I can say Hell. Sorry. The bleeping’s getting to me. Where am I? Please.”

Do you know that I am the narrator? My function is solely to narrate. So you go do stuff and I’ll just talk about what you’re doing. It’s like Twitter, but more awesome, and I have a microphone.

“Please. I’m going crazy here. There’s nothing around for miles other than pretty little flowers, so my allergies are starting up.”

Ok ok. Firstly, here’s some Claritin. Weather here gets crazy since we’re closer to the Ozone Layer. Secondly, since I’m the narrator I can’t give you straight answers. Most I could do is talk in riddles or something. Here goes. The name of the wondrous place you are in starts with an H, and rhymes with one of Kevin Spacey’s best movies. There. Simple. Be seeing ya.

“H? H...Hax? Hoon? Hurns? Hurns! OK. Where the hell is Hurns?”

HURNS? What the Hell are you talking ab – oh, seriously? You actually LIKED Superman Returns? Are you retarded? Even my grandson hated that movie, and he’s got ADD so he didn’t even watch the whole thing. You’re in HEAVEN, you nitwit, as in SEVEN?

“Oh. I haven’t seen that one. Heard it’s ok.

OK? Just OK?

“Yeah. Never really got around to it ‘cuz it didn’t seem like much.”

Sigh. Hell’s a better place for you.

“Hey! I heard that!”

Bet you did.

“What’s got his panties in a bunch? / I think he figured out his headset. I can’t hear the hum of his amp anymore. / So yes, that makes it definite. I’m dreaming. I’m supposed to be in Heaven and an invisible narrator just gave me some allergy medicine. Right.”

The young man, also known as the retard-that-hasn’t-seen-Seven-because-he’s-too-cool-for-it, doubted the reality that befell him. So, in an unsurprising demeanor, he spent half an hour pinching and pricking his body, to see if he woke. He didn’t. He wasn’t asleep to begin with. When he started drawing blood he decided that the voice he heard might not be his own, and actually spoke true when it said that he was now in Heaven. Finally. If the voice had actually been in his own head it couldn’t have said that Kevin Spacey wins in the end. JA! Suck on that! I didn’t even get bleeped! Loser!

Well, whatever. As our everyman – if he had seen Seven. Zing! – started on his journey, he knew not which way to go.

“I don’t know where to go.”

Told you.

In a whim he decided to go north. He thought he was going north at least; he was actually heading east. But his stride was determined, to say the least.

“I guess I’ll just have to go along with this. Me. An atheist. In Heaven. Fantastic. There go 20 years of telling off religious wingnuts that they were out of their mind. My mom is gonna have a field day when she hears about this. Especially when I told her Jesus banged Mary Magdalene. Whatever. That was a fun Thanksgiving Dinner.”

As he talked to himself and walked out of the field he saw a street a few yards away. No cars passed as he neared it, and no cars passed as he sat down and waited with the sun in his face. No cars passed as he doodled chalk drawings on the street. After a while he came to a realization.

“Maybe no cars are going to pass.”

Well, that didn't take long. He followed the street for what seemed to be a few miles, but he noticed that it didn’t really seem like progress. The Allergy-Inducing Field still lay to the sides of the road, and no landmark told him otherwise. He followed the Useless Road, as he so called it – he renamed the things and places he saw, as a way to cope with the fact that he was technically dead – for another 15 minutes when a pickup truck appeared in the distance. He signaled it, by waving like a maniac, and the truck stopped next to him.

- “Maybe it’s not such a Useless Road after all.”

  “Seems like a nice man. I’ll ask him for a ride.”

  “Hello. Would you mind giving me a lift?”

- “OF COURSE”

A voice like seven thunders and as awesome as a Dream Theater concert came forth from the man as he spoke. Our protagonist - whose name I forgot to ask – flew a few feet from the pickup. As he hoisted himself from the floor, the man in the truck spoke in a gentler voice.

- “I’m sorry about that. Didn’t recognize that you were human. I could’ve killed you! Are you well? Come on in.”

The ringing in his ears hadn’t stopped, and he couldn’t make anything of what the man had said. He realized nevertheless that he could now face him, even if he spoke, so the voice had dialed down a bit. He thought he was a good lip reader in high school, so he gave it a try. He did understand that the man would offer him a ride, but wondered why he would ask if he was into croquet.

- “Where am I? Someone told me I was in Heaven earlier.”

- “Laugh. That person couldn’t have been more wrong. You think this is Heaven? A highway?”

- “That’s what I thought, but he sounded very convincing due to being a voice over.”

-  “You’re a riot. Hell’s back there, I was making a delivery, and Heaven’s where I’m going now. Hop on.”

- “Oh. See, when you said that I wasn’t in Heaven, I thought you meant I was actually somewhere on EARTH.

- “My bad. Yeah, you’re not. Though if you ever get back, there’s a strip club on 3rd street in NYC. It feels like being home.”

- “Ok. So I’m…crazy. That’s a better answer than being in a supernatural realm.”

- “No. No. You’re here all right. I’m Sariel, but you can call me Sal.”

As he rode with Sal, he finally realized it was true. He was definitely in another realm. He was in shock for around 15 minutes but Sal slapped him out of it when he started to shake.

- “Ok. I’ll roll with it I guess. How did I end up here in the first place?”

- “Don’t know. I’m basically a delivery boy/tour guide for these areas. I like to help people that look lost but I don’t really know where I’m going most of the time, so whatever.”

- “Great. You’re a guiding angel without a clue.”

- “Hey. Us angels have feelings, you know? Hmph. And I know as much as a I need to.”

- “Sorry. It’s that the whole being technically dead that’s getting to me. What were you doing in hell anyway?”

- “I take souls that are lost or wrongly archived back to where they belong. Between us, the public institutions here aren’t all they’re cracked up to be.”

- “So you’re a sort of repo man.”

- “More like a cleanup crew. 99% of repo men go to Hell, so it’s not really much of a compliment. And I’ll let you in on a secret: You wanna listen to good music, you’ll have to visit Hell. Sometimes I just go there because of that. The demons have really good taste in music, and they’re not half-bad when they’re not on duty. They showed me this one guy, Tyler, the Creator. He’s pretty sick. But as soon as I cross the border between Heaven and Hell though, I can’t listen to him anymore. Everything gets bleeped and he curses a lot, so it sounds less like a rap and more like an 8-bit rendition of All Eyes On Me. That and his name’s pretty blasphemous, but between him and J-Hova, I think his music’s better.”

  “Sorry. I get carried away when I talk about music. Only thing we got in Heaven is trumpets and some string instruments. We used to have an oboe, but after that American Pie movie came out we had to take it away because some of the younger angels started getting ideas.”

- “Wow. Yeah. Bleep happens.”

- “Tell me about it. You might want to go to sleep. It’s a while ‘til we get to the city, and you’re not used to how time passes up here yet. “

- “Thanks dude.  I’ll try to go to sleep. I could definitely use some.”

- “Good night.”

- “It’s noon, but whatever, good night.”

As he said this the day turned to night in what seemed like a second.

Los Buenos Tiempos Han Ido y Venido (y Tal Vez Nunca Fueron la Gran Cosa)


Hace un tiempo – poco, mucho, Einstein nos jodió con esa – un querido amigo y cofundador de la afamada, aclamada por la crítica, Pilas de Tertulia, Tony Raful escribió una nota interesante. Se titula “Cuida’o con volver.” Es una cruda verdad con ciertos toques de ligereza, como para engañar al lector de que no es un
boche lo que le está dando.

En su nota Tony trata el tema de cómo el tiempo y la distancia cambian aquel lugar de donde uno parte, de su hogar. Y es cierto. No es difícil ver a una persona que hable de la República Dominicana como un país casi perfecto, donde si no fuera porque la luz se va ocasionalmente fuera prácticamente el paraíso en la Tierra.

Y me puso a pensar. Pasa esto sólo con lugares? No pasaría por igual con los tiempos que se han vivido antes, que uno carga consigo no necesariamente aferrados a un lugar, a un espacio? Por eso pensé en los “buenos tiempos.“

Los buenos tiempos, los viejos tiempos, en mi tiempo, cuando yo era chiquito. Todos son nombres para las mismas memorias. Muchas veces vemos a la gente que se queja de cómo “está la cosa” o que “en mi tiempo tabamo’ mejor.” Se acuerdan de las bondades de años pasados, pero ninguna de las dificultades. Borran, como borra un álbum de fotos todos los intervalos de dolor entre cada momento de felicidad inmortalizado.

Por eso me enojo con aquellos que osan decir: “Aquí lo que hace falta es un Trujillo.” Sus memorias son cortas, y aunque hayan o no vivido el tiempo de Trujillo, olvidan que por cada mano amiga que él extendía, apuñalaba y hería a centenares con la otra. Alguna parte de mi desea que pase sólo para que la gente se de cuenta de que muchas veces hablan sin pensar, recordando solo lo que les interesa mantener vivo.

Gilles Lipovetzky trata en su obra “La Sociedad de la Decepción” el engaño que nos enfrentamos como sociedad. Entre ellos uno de sus temas es el como añoramos los tiempos pasados, como vemos siempre mejor el pasado y no con optimismo hacia el futuro. Cada tiempo viene con su mal y su bien, futuro y pasado ambos se comportan de la misma manera.

Uno mira alrededor y dice, por ejemplo, “Si, antes la música era mejor. Led Zeppelin vs Far East Movement, Tupac vs Justin Bieber, John Lennon vs todos.” Y si, definitivamente había mucha música buena en ese tiempo, pero por igual había mala. Muy, increíblemente mala.  Los Beatles no lograron ser lo que fueron desde el principio, y “I wanna hold your hand” yo creo que ni a ellos les tripeaba.  Rick Astley no es de nuestra generación y Wham! nadie lo pudo prevenir, por más que intentaron.

Los tiempos cambian. Reagan vino y se fue, y dejó Reagonomics y otros elementos de destrucción y tortura en su camino así como Pinochet es memoria de una época pasada. Las Cruzadas hacen el paralelo del terrorismo extremista de hoy en día dando evidencia que la religión, hoy y siempre, ha sido una cuna de loqueras. Y si Lady Gaga pudiera ser más como Madonna en sus malos años fuera…bueno…Madonna en sus malos años.

Ya. Eso era todo lo que les quería decir. Yo miro con optimismo al futuro, a sabiendas de que plagas como Justin Bieber y Lady Gaga no morirán y nunca podremos revivir a Jimi Hendrix. Eso lo sé. Pero siempre y cuando mantengamos la mira en alto, y nuestros estándares y nuestras prioridades bien plasmadas, el futuro, aunque incierto, nunca nos dará miedo y el pasado no nos dará poco más que nostalgia.



Los buenos tiempos de hoy son los pensamientos tristes de la mañana.

Bob Marley