Showing posts with label jerry springer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jerry springer. Show all posts

Friday, August 18, 2017

Teenager in Love (Dion and the Belmonts)

My grandmother was a published poet at age 68. Her author bio read, "I have a large and colorful family. It's filled with chaos, excitement, drama, and rewards. I just write it down."

Nothing is more true in a large family. There are all sorts of characters. The way I explain my family to people in you are either at the top or down on the bottom. There is no middle ground. I take that back. Thanksgiving is the only place where someone who just got into Yale and someone who just got out of jail can eat together at the table of brotherhood. 

When I was in middle school, my cousin flipped out. He was the oldest of my grandma's kid sister's kids. My family is large as I explained, so I would have to have a flow chart to even add clarity and that would probably still confuse you some. Max was going through a problem phase. He was 16, in love, and willing to go the distance for his bae. Max had some revolting nickname for her which escapes my mind, but it was something like Sugar Lips. 

Max's parents wanted him to come home after a long day at the fair. The family had only one car, but Max had just learned to drive and wanted to stay and have fun with Sugar Lips. His parents explained it was near his curfew, but Max wanted to do what Max wanted to do. So as they were going home, Max insisted he and Sugar Lips could not be apart. His parents told him to call her tomorrow. On a long and lonesome dirt road, Max jumped out of the car as it was moving. He flew out, hit his head, and his mother was screaming. Her son was knocked unconscious. 

Max was put on a life flight. They were not sure if he would make it. After 2 days in a coma, Max woke up. It appeared he had no brain damage. His memory was still good, but he lost some of his sense of taste. Either way, his parents were glad to have him alive. 

Max went about his life. He was a hockey star, but seemed more aggressive. Max also excelled in math and science, but was more aggressive in class when he chose to show up. Before the head injury, Max's grades were lackluster at best. But after hitting his head they improved. However, as I explained he made a bad habit of yelling at his teachers. That's when he chose to deck one in the middle of class. As you could imagine, Max got expelled. 

Max and Sugar Lips were stronger than ever. Her parents were not fond of Max as he had just been kicked out of school for punching a teacher. But for as strong as teenage love is, it is about as strong as something that is built on quicksand because as we know the plot line could quickly get a rewrite. Another young stag entered the fray. Yes, one who was currently going to school but grudgingly so. One who went to the same church as Sugar Lips. One who Sugar Lips's dad actually introduced her to. One who called her by her real name, whatever that was, and not Sugar Lips. As quickly as he rode in, Max was written into the pages of history in this young woman's life. 

Well they say breaking up is hard to do. 

Max was blowing up the phone of Sugar Lips. She was not picking up. He showed up at her door. Her father told him never to come around again. Max was not giving up. So being the well adjusted youngster he was with a head filled with amazing decisions, he followed her and her new boyfriend. Her new boyfriend felt this was creepy and broke up with her. Max had his Sugar Lips back.......or so he thought. 

Apparently she was done. And so were her parents. So they got a restraining order against my cousin. But some call it legal action, Max called it playing hard to get. 

In rural Pennsylvania, people own guns. You have to. The cops are far away and if you have a farm you need to protect your animals from predators. This was the case with my cousin's family. Most folks use the guns for those purposes, but not Max. He went to his parent's tool shed, took a rife, and headed over to the house of Sugar Lips. His proposal, they rekindle their love or else it was murder/suicide time.

When he came over, needless to say she freaked out. The gun sent her screaming. Max  held her hostage for several hours as she was not allowed to call the cops. When her parents got home he held them hostage too. The police were finally called in some way. And when they came my cousin surrendered without incident. At that moment, he realized the relationship was over and Sugar Lips was gone forever.

Or so he thought. 

Max went to jail and the toss up was if he was going to be charged as a juvenile or an adult. Of course his head injury was taken into account. Max also got several letters from Sugar Lips in jail wanting to possibly be friends someday. She didnt want to cut him out as she still cared about him. However, her parents were quick to stop this. 

Needless to say my cousin made the news. My friends thought he was hot. Yes, at the end of it guys like my cousin get a babe and decent dudes dont. Max ended up being sentenced as a juvenile which relieved our entire family. Before he went away Max said to my grandmother, "You know, it's not going to be all that bad. I don't have to go to school. It's prison for kids."

Apparently it was going to be more than Max intended. In Pennsylvania, kids go to school 180 days. If you are an incarcerated juvenile, you have to go to school year around. Max was incredulous. Hey, it's prison for kids! 

Max had some hard lessons while he was inside. In Pennsylvania, if you are an incarcerated juvenile, your parents have to pay to have you housed in the system. Max's parents decided to emancipate him. So in addition to sucking at the whole parenting thing, they were cheap. Instead of looking at the choices that got them to this point, his mother told the judge her son was "a bad seed and the product of a criminal gene."

His father insisted that it was "just teen love gone wrong and boys will be boys."

Max never had a chance in hell of being normal. My grandmother knew this. She also knew his craptacular family had turned their backs on him. So for his birthday and holidays, she sent him cards and presents. Because his family wanted to save money, this meant commissary was out of the question. Knowing Max had no one, she put money on his books. This wasn't about a head injury or a criminal gene or even teen love gone wrong. Max was lonely, heartbroken, and had no half normal adult to talk to. 

He completed his sentence and got out. Max met a girl and got married. No, kidnapping and firearms were not a part of the proposal. 

Now Max is married with a kid. He's a good dad working 2 jobs to support his daughter. Part time as a used car salesman and part time as a lab test subject. Max's dad brags that it's the best job his son's ever had, "So what my boy can't pee on his own and glows in the dark. He's rich!" 

While he is quite the character, Max never forgot my grandmother's generosity. At her funeral he drove all the way from Ohio where he now lives to speak about how when he was incarcerated, my grandmother was the only one who remembered him when his own family wanted nothing to do with him. 

Now I write the story. I have to. Or in the words of my grandmother's author bio, "I have a large and colorful family. It's filled with chaos, excitement, drama, and rewards. I just write it down."














Saturday, March 8, 2014

Big Booty Ho (Kanye West) aka A Bronx Tale

Yesterday I delivered a singing telegram in the Bronx. It was one of those where it was such a disaster it was classic. I embarked on my adventure and Bruce called me cause it was a last minute thing. Anyway, I got to the Bronx and the client had given me the wrong train stop. So I asked a local who barely spoke English and directed me to the correct train stop.I got there and took a cab to third avenue. I thought I would finally be at Applebees. Oh no, I had gotten the wrong address too. Maybe in a haste my boss had copied it down wrong. Or maybe the client had given it wrong. Either way I was in middle Earth, it was getting cold, and my day was sucking supremely.

Well I called Applebees and instead of being 3750 it was 4752, which kind of put me in another area of the Bronx entirely. I kept trying to hail a lime green cab but those assweeds kept passing me. Since it was rush hour, the buses were crowded and there was no way I was getting on, especially since every damn woman in the world had a freaking stroller and kid she probably couldnt afford hanging off of her. I thought fuck me, fuck my life, fuck my bad decisions. It was too late now though. I kept walking and figured this was the end of the eventfulness. The telegram would go well, right?

Oh no. I got to Applebees after a half hour walking. I felt like Moses and the Jews wandering the ancient desert for 40 years. I called the client. This was the correct Applebees. While I was so tired I could have died, I had a show to do. I got there and the manager was quick to help me get changed. The population of this Applebees was mostly black and Spanish. Some of the folks were scared as hell of the pink gorilla, where some waved and got their kids to wave. I was in the Bronx. This was a different planet.

Anyway, I went to sing to the birthday boy. The population at the table was kind of rachet hood, but they were good people and wanted to have fun. I started to do my thing rapping to the birthday boy, and a second later a manger comes over. This is how the first exchange went:

Manager: She can't do that here.

Client: I got clearance from the manager.

Manager: I am the manager. She can't do the telegram in that suit.

Client: I talked to the other manager, the pregnant one. She said it was okay.

So the manager walks off. The client instructs me to continue. I decide as long as Applebees is going to harass me, I am going all out. So I started rapping to "Big Booty Ho" by Kanye. While insulting the birthday boy was turning 21. Our table and the surrounding tables joined in as we sang this rap anthem that is incredibly insulting to women but fun as hell. So as we are having a good time this West Indian security dude comes over and he should have had asshole tattooed on the middle of his forehead. He walks over with his ethnically ambiguous Applebees employee climbing up the ranks. This is how this exchange went

Security Guard: Excuse me, Miss, you have to leave.

Me: Okay.

Client: She is a singing telegram. I have permission to have her here.

Security Guard: What?

Client: Yes. Now continue.

I sang Happy Birthday and decided it was best to get the fuck outta Dodge. While the client was supposed to tip me I also didn't want to end this adventure in handcuffs. So I finished my skit and was on my way out. Just then the client called me back in.

Client: I wanna give you a little something. You did a good job.

The client's family member, who by the way is missing a very important tooth near the front of his mouth hands me a twenty.

Security Guard walks over. This man is not going to lose and he is taking his job way too seriously.

Security Guard: I know you are trying to help her but she has to go. Come on, Miss.

Client: No, I was giving her a little something. She is a singing telegram. I ordered her.

Security Guard: She needs to go.

And what happened next would shock us all. Yes, she even wagged her finger hood style.

Client: LISTEN MUTHERFUCKER, I ORDERED THIS!  Yeah, that;s right. I paid for this! I paid for this with my money, mutherfucker!  And here you were all up in our shit when we had permission from the manager to do this. Oh, and you fucking ruined my video!!!

The Security Guard: I'm sorry.

Client: You better be, mutherfucker. I am so mad I could cut you.

Security Guard: There will be no need for that m'am

That is when she lifted her hands and I saw the biggest pair of Edward Scissorhands hood nails. The security guard, asshole on a power trip, was now afraid he was going to be sliced to shreds. This table perhaps had a weapon or two on them, but those nails seemed to be the most effective one of all. And who would have thought this would all occur at Applebees. That is when I waved, ran out, and jumped on the Metro North which was right there. Yeah, it ate up a few bucks. But it got me to Grand Central and I figured I had enough adventure for one day.

I say at the end of every shitty adventure there are not tears but punchlines. This was pure comedic gold. Note to self, come back in the next life as a West Indian dude just so I can say nasty shit with a cool accent. Or better note to self, come back as a rachet black lady and that way people will take me seriously when I threaten to cut them.

Either way, I am thinking of putting this one in the sequel.

Love
April
I Came, I Saw, I Sang: Memoirs of a Singing Telegram Delivery Girl
www.aprilbrucker.com

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

The Lab Test Subject


Growing up I had a cousin Polo who was a little maladjusted to say the least. Polo had been named after the shirts because his mother saw them when she was pregnant and said my Uncle Julius looked great in them. Of course my Aunt Jeanette was bossy and said she wanted to name her child Polo. It was either going to be that or Ralph Lauren, whichever got his ass kicked in school less. Either way, it was about dressing up the fact they were white trash intent on sending their kids to prep schools. They thought it made the child sound rich and elite. Meanwhile it set them all up for a dynasty of stupidity.
 Aunt Jeanette had been the last of my great grandmother’s six children. While most of the older kids were good family people, Jeanette was the exception. My great grandmother had her accidentally and later in life, therefore she was tired of parenting. There was a ten year gap between Aunt Jeanette and my grandmother’s child before her. As a result my Aunt Jeanette sort of grew up with my mother because only a few years later my Nunni had her. Forced to be her playmate from time to time during visits to my great grandmother, my mom often grimaced and referred to her as “Spoiled, stupid, and loud.”
Aunt Jeanette had been the whore of their small town and wore short skirts and white lipstick. While this would have never flown with my great grandmother’s other children, she was getting older and most of her children were married. Plus my great grandmother had developed Type II Diabetes and had lost her eye sight. If my Aunt Jeanette wanted to dress like a hooker that was her prerogative. Plus my great grandmother couldn’t see it so she wasn’t going to bother fighting. Not to mention my great grandfather was also very sick. They had their hands full basically.
Anyway my aunt had been seeing a nice guy who really loved her but was cheating with my Uncle Julius, who was basically a moron who was always getting involved in some get rich quick scheme. While during the time I knew him, he looked like a cross eyed mongoloid, apparently Julius Newcastle was quite dashing and handsome back in the day. Maybe my Aunt Jeanette got my great grandmother’s blindness by-proxy. I don’t know. Well this was revealed when my aunt got into a horrible car accident, why she was driving in that snow storm. It was not to go back to nursing school but to see my Uncle Julius….
Well the nice guy dumped her, she ended up marrying my Uncle Julius. They had Polo right away which is why we speculate the wedding was done under Catholic duress. Thank God my great grandmother had been blind otherwise she would have probably lost her ever blessed mind over my aunt’s low cut wedding gown. While the woman was a gentle soul from what I hear and hardly ever swore, this would have been the lone occasion for the once in a lifetime blue streak. My Aunt Jeanette and my Uncle Julius headed out to their honeymoon while my aunt adorned her Go Go boots for the post wedding pics, probably knocked up.
Polo was born and right away the kid had behavior problems. My Aunt and Uncle had two more kids, one entitled and fat and the other who never spoke that moved out of the house as soon as he could and never speaks to any of them. In school, Polo was always getting in trouble. Rather than discipline her kid my aunt simply did nothing. When she was called upon by teachers because Polo would swear or say obnoxious things she would blame it on the television. Then my Uncle Julius, useless as ever would say,“Boys will be boys.”
The kids all attended an elite prep school in Erie, PA. At the school, the Newcastles felt they were established members of the upper crust. Polo was a mediocre student but excelled at hockey and track. Max Factor (named after my aunt’s makeup, Max for short) was a mediocre student who excelled at football and hockey, but was often penalized for fighting and other obnoxious behavior. Perry Ellis (Perry for short, named after my Uncle Julius’s cologne), the youngest, was something of a genius. Placed on the gifted track right away, he had no aptitude in sports but was very bright. We often joked that if he called The Boys Town Hotline wanting to run away, ordinarily they would tell kids that it wasn’t an option. However when he said his name was Perry Ellis Newcastle they would tell him to bilk it. Life would be better on the streets, even if he became a hustler.
The Newcastle’s didn’t believe in punishments at all, only talking out the problems. They wanted to teach their kids to be safe around alcohol, so at dinner the whole family drank beer, despite Perry only being twelve. Rather than sit down and teach their children about sex, Uncle Julius and Aunt Jeanette got each a book of dirty jokes and read them aloud at dinner. This can be put in a leaflet of what not to do when you raise your kid. So what happened next to Polo Newcastle was no surprise to anyone but them.
Around the time Polo was sixteen the real problems began. Being at a crucial point and with no discipline whatsoever, Polo began rebelling and skipping class to drink in the graveyard with his friends. When asked about his slipping grades Polo became defiant. Once he called his mother a “bitch.” Instead of disciplining him my Uncle Julius said, “Well he is correct Jeanette. Sometimes you can be a bitch.” And he gave Polo forty dollars to go party. However the threat of summer school loomed as well as possible expulsion from the posh prep school after a troubling meeting with the headmaster. My Aunt and Uncle decided that they were going to stand up to Polo and do something they never did, parent.
During a summer excursion Polo wanted to go to a gathering where beer would be present. Trying to make the growing conflict easy, my Uncle Julius pointed out there would be plenty of booze at home. Polo said he was sick of drinking with his family. Aunt Jeanette then put her foot down and said no. Polo, being rather undisciplined from lack of any real guidance began to throw a tantrum. The fighting became louder as swear words flew, and Polo decided he was going to the gathering whether they liked it or not. So all emotion and hormones and no brains, he opened the car door and jumped out. However, he forgot the car was moving and my Uncle Julius is a driver who goes over the speed limit because in his words, “Gas is expensive and you have to get the most bang for your buck every mile.”
So Polo flew out of the car, slammed his head on the concrete, and cracked his skull. My Aunt Jeanette screamed in horror. Polo had made a statement alright and he made it clear he was never drinking with his family again. Uncle Julius stopped the car, loaded him in, and drove him to the hospital. Bleeding all over the back seat his words were barely audible. All these years of bad parenting were staring them in the face. For a moment they showed compassion. Max, typically loud and always eating, sat in silent concern for his brother. Perry, silent and lovely, took Polo’s hand. Maybe they would all learn something.
No such luck. The doctor announced there would be brain damage. Not taking his own parental inventory, my Uncle Julius furiously stormed, “That selfish bastard, I always knew I would be wiping his ass.” The doctor was shocked. Most family members express this thing called concern.
The doctor then, befuddled by this reaction, explained it wasn’t like that. It was more the senses would be compromised and that my cousin might have some anger issues. To which my Aunt replied, “Good. We don’t need a retard in the house.” The doctor was looking for love and concern but saw none.
When Polo got out of the hospital his intelligence was not affected, not that he really had much. His ability to taste and smell was compromised however as the doctor promised it would be. But the most astounding was the anger problem he had developed. Later in my travels and through experience of my own, I know for a fact anger and frustration are the side effect of cranial injuries. Mine had come as a result of an accident when I was fifteen and was short lived. However my cousin’s trauma and damage was much more severe. So severe that he had to be hospitalized briefly in a state mental hospital after slapping his mother.
At the time Polo had a girlfriend named Sandy. My Aunt Jeanette detested Sandy, but Polo loved her. Sandy was very pretty in that trashy kind of way, much like my Aunt Jeanette was as a young woman. During one of their many Jerry Springer-esque fights, Sandy informed my aunt she was a bad mother. My aunt proceeded by calling her names. Perhaps Sandy had a point.
 Anyway, during some teen drama Sandy decided she was through with Polo. In between his anger problems, the fact he needed a whole salt shaker to give his food any taste, and the fact he stopped bathing because in his words, “If I can’t smell myself stinking, why should it matter to the rest of the world?” it became a little much for her. Note, Polo lost his sense of smell in the accident but the rest of the world didn’t.  Oh and when Polo heard ringing in his head he swore the aliens were sending him signals. Not to mention after trying to punch a teacher Polo had been expelled from school. Sandy’s parents put their foot down. Polo was going nowhere and fast.
However Polo was not having this. He got his family’s rifle from their shed, because that is what they have in Pennsylvania, and knocked on his girlfriend’s door to talk. Polo asked Sandy to get back together. When she didn’t he held a gun to her head, promising to kill her and them himself. Of course her parents walked in and Polo promised to kill her family as well. The neighbor, seeing my cousin in plain view with the gun from the window, called the cops.
After a standoff with the police that lasted two hours my cousin surrendered. He of course went to jail. Because he was a juvenile in Pennsylvania, his parents had to pay an incarceration tax for his jail/reform school stay. My Uncle Julius and Aunt Jeanette, wanting to wash their hands of their troubled spawn and save money, emancipated him. During family functions, my Aunt Jeanette and Julius would show up to parties with Max and Perry. As usual they would tell crude jokes, and take all the pies. Max would announce periodically that he farted and would say something racist, despite offending my cousin Martin’s girlfriend at the time Monique who happened to be black. (That is a different story altogether that I will tell later). Perry would say nothing, only looking out the window perhaps hoping to jump. His grades were good in school so he had the most potential for a future. My Aunt Jeannette would brag about him, “He became an Eagle Scout and built an outhouse for his project.”
And then my Uncle Julius would brag about his current get rich scheme and say, “And I make an obscene amount of money. Speaking of obscene, Max over here plays hockey and they call him Mr. Triple Team. Because every time he gets the ice he takes three people down!”
And then Max bragged, “Yeah, I am Mr. Triple Team. Hockey is my sport. It is the only sport where the apes havent come out of the jungle to take over.”
Awkward pause. “You okay?” I asked my cousin Martin’s girlfriend at the time Monique who was sitting on the far end of the table with me. Earlier Max had been on his usual run of racist jokes where the n word was used. Like anyone with a brain, Monique couldn’t take this idiot who had probably learned to walk upright the week before. While she wasn’t showing it, she was seconds away from stabbing him with her steak knife.
Monique, who had caramel colored skin and attended Carnegie Mellon as a studio art and engineering double major, who’s mother was working for President Clinton at the time said, “Yes. He’s a moron and probably rides the short bus. I know his IQ is limited so I can’t take it personally.”
“He ate the short bus.” I replied and we both laughed.
Just then my brother Wendell leaned in and said, “Mr. Triple Team. Like he farts and three people fall on the ice?”
Of course my sister Skipper said, “I hope he leaves enough ham for the rest of us. He’s eating enough for a third world country.”
As we ate the subject turned to my cousin Polo. The rest of us sort of bit our tongues. If you have never had one, an incarcerated family member is like an elephant in the middle of the room. You know they exist but you just go around it. Actually at a certain point you acknowledge the elephant and maybe give it some peanuts. The incarcerated family member, just never existed. “I spoke to Polo and he is doing great. He is getting therapy and working on his anger.” My grandmother said.
My Nunni, who despite her wild exploits from acting in local TV commercials to telling inappropriate stories had a soft side. While it was unspoken, it was common knowledge that while the rest of us had decided to erase this family member from the proverbial tree, Nunni had been sending him care packages. My cheap ass Aunt Jeanette and Uncle Julius wanted to save face and save funds, but my Nunni would give any stranger the last dime she had or the shirt off her back. Very Catholic, she was into the spiritual side of her faith and believed in remembering those who were deemed untouchable. While her eccentricities masked his side of her it was why she never had any money. My mom would always say to Nunni, “Mom, you have to stop giving morons money. They spend it and you have none.”
The table went dead silent. Monique looked at Martin. “Polo?” She asked. Martin was as still as a statue. Nunni had delivered a blow like Rubin Carter. It was intentional, it was deliberate. It was awesome.
“You should have been a better mother. None of my kids are in jail.” My Nunni said to my aunt, letting her know where she had failed exactly. “And if they were I would be there.” Minutes before my grandmother had been telling some wild story about some friend she had and some trip she was planning to take. While we dismissed her as whimsical and crazy, she was perhaps putting on a charade.
“Knock it off Pat. It’s Thanksgiving. Save the fighting for the phone like the rest of the family always does.” My grandfather, or Pop Pop, was a sweet little old man. He always had a twinkle in his eye and barely spoke. When he did he was funny, insightful, or on the mark. My Pop Pop had also been speaking to Polo here and there and had become sort of a surrogate father. However he was not in the mood to tolerate any of this right now and just wanted peace. At the time he was getting treatment for prostrate cancer and was not a fan of conflict.
“It’s not my fault. I tried. It’s the criminal gene.” My Aunt Jeanette explained. “We sent them to prep school. One kid is hockey captain team. The other kid is going to be an Eagle Scout.” Then my aunt chirped about her findings and the rest of us went back to eating.
On the way home in the car my dad said, “Criminal gene my ass. More like a fucking asshole for a mother. I put people like this moron in jail every day working for the District Attorney. Behind every criminal in a bad parent.”
“Bill, I was thinking the same thing. You know my aunt. You know she’s a crude human being. That kid never had a chance.” My mom begged. My dad was in one of his moods. Pissed off was an understatement. The Newcastles and their anti-logic could drain the life blood out of anyone. We drove in silence.
“That whole family! I swear to God. Anne, next time they come around don’t bring me. Tell them that I died and wont be coming back.” My dad commanded as we drove down the dark road.
Just then a guy cut my dad off. Already pissed from the encounter with the extended familial relations from hell my dad screamed, “You can’t cut me off you Yum Yum Asshole!” And proceeded to flick the man off. That’s when my dad said, “Kids, as you can see foolishness and stupidity run in your mom’s family and not mine. Avoid falling into the trap.”
To which my mom replied, “Well your family has it’s own set of assholes.” And they proceeded to fight all the way home. When we got home and my dad turned on the television, and my mom got him some saki, he calmed. Aunt Jeanette, Uncle Julius, Max Factor and Perry Ellis could do this to anyone to depend on alcohol as a way to avoid being homicidal.
We received updates on Polo for the next eighteen months. He was released from jail and reunited with his girlfriend Sandy. No one understood how or why they got back together. Sandy had cheated, and Polo tried to kill her and her entire family. That is usually a permanent deal breaker. At least with most people but not them which is a testament to their codependency but I digress. Anyway, during this time they horrified everyone further when they announced Sandy was pregnant. Polo had no job, and Sandy was in college. Employment options were limited because of Polo’s criminal record, and Sandy’s mother told her that it was Polo’s job to support the child. Note, we never said Sandy was normal and her behavior does not indicate that of a normal person. But Polo surprised everyone. According to my Aunt Jeanette and Uncle Julius, Polo was gainfully employed and making an “obscene amount of money.” Perhaps my grandparents were right to believe in him.
The child was born, a girl, who’s name was Destiny. While they were hopeful, it is a name that curses your kid to get a starring role on Sixteen and Pregnant and then when that fame fades it’s the pole that becomes her final home. Everything was fine except for one thing. When Destiny was born she was missing her right foot. While I have never met the unfortunate child of sorts, my grandmother only gave me the story in bits and pieces. I take it the foot never formed. But these people are white trash. Maybe they ran out of food and like a pack of hungry dogs ate the only food source they could find and figured, “She never has to walk.” But a child with a missing limb requires further medical care and Polo stepped up his game and got a better job.
Despite being a good provider and such, he couldn’t always make it work with Sandy. During one of his breakups he moved back in with his parents. Sandy and Polo shared Destiny, and started seeing other people. At this point Sandy met a man at AA, a recipe for disaster and not much of a step up from Polo. And Polo was dating some cashier at the local Sheets who’s husband had apparently been taken out of their trailer park by Jesus or aliens. Either way, one night they had been watching The 700 Club when he just up and disappeared. Despite their new loves Sandy and Polo wanted to work it out. It was all very complicated.
One Thanksgiving, Aunt Jeanette, Uncle Julius, Polo, Max Factor, and Perry Ellis all showed up. Max Factor announced he was studying to become a teacher. We all found this terribly ironic since he had probably only learned to walk upright the week before and checked his knuckles to see if they were bleeding. My mom, trying to be helpful suggested he take some classes in teaching Special Education to expand his employment. She had student taught at the school for the blind and found it rewarding. Then again, my mother is a good person. Max is a selfish prick. He proved this by replying, “Hell no. Don’t want to work with those retards.”
Perry Ellis said nothing, but Aunt Jeanette announced he was accepted to MIT. Apparently he had written a ground breaking essay, probably on the genetic mutations he called his family. She also announced he was going ROTC, probably as a stunt never to see his family again. Who could blame him?
Just then Uncle Julius announced, “I have a great joy to share. Polo is home and he is making an obscene amount of money.”
“What are you doing?” My father asked, suspicious of this claim. Also to see if he was legal because as he told my mother in the car, “If that moron gets arrested I am not representing him. He’s on his own.” Translated, my dad had to get any and all idiots related to us out of legal jams because he was a lawyer. Sometimes I suspected that is why they fought the law so often, because while the law always won they had a lawyer in their back pocket and knew their rights.
Polo, who had gained at least fifty more pounds stood up and held his bottle of beer. His hair, once brown and curly, was now shaved, and there was a suspicious scar, probably from where he jumped out of the car and cracked his head open. “Well I am selling used cars.”
“Good.” My dad said trying to hide his distain and confusion at this whole thing.
“You must be a great car salesman.” My mom said trying to intercept my dad’s contempt. Plus the whole room had become awkward and she was just trying to play peacemaker.
“Only the best.” My Aunt Flo said. While her weakness were men who were unemployed and mooched off of her and she usually turned a blind eye, at this point my Godmother was suspicious as well.
“Oh, and that is only part time. My other job really pays good money. It’s where I get most of my dough and I only have to work one weekend a month.” Polo shared.
“That is like no job I have ever heard of.” My cousin Meara said. She bounced in with her auburn curls and dance leo. She had recently come from the local ballet school where she took class and now taught. While she knew Polo had his troubles she didn’t want to humiliate him. Even so, she too had questions.
“Well I work as a professional lab test subject. They pay me four hundred dollars an hour. They shaved my head and put the electrodes on my scalp. I got kind of sick afterwards because they kept shocking me and gave me a shot of something weird. And my limbs got kind of numb but now I am doing fine. Destiny wants a scooter and a dad has to do what a dad has to do, right Uncle Bill?” My cousin Polo said looking at my dad.
There was a silence as if everyone was unsure of how to respond. My Aunt Flo who’s suitors were typically unemployed with legal troubles could not compute. Meara didn’t understand. My other aunts and uncles sat there trying to process this very alternative occupation. They were dentists, hygenists, teachers, and all other things. Finally my dad said, “Well Polo, that is very good. I am glad you are growing up. You are absolutely right. A dad has to do what a dad has to do.” Everyone breathed a sigh of relief. Sure my cousin was flying lopsided but they had connected on that universal level. The rest of my uncles nodded and the chatter resumed.
Looking back, my cousin never had a prayer with the parents he had. My Uncle Julius and Aunt Jeanette only thought of themselves and their children were afterthoughts. While they dismissed my cousin as a genetic mistake rather than blame bad parenting, he got it right in areas that they never did. Parenthood isn’t about what prep school your kids go to, how many hockey games they win, or what college they go to. It is about showing up for your children, and doing what you have to do no matter how humiliating to support them. That is where my cousin Polo, despite his mistakes, got it right where his parents kept failing that question on the Universal Test called Life.
When my grandmother died, my cousin Polo came to her funeral and spoke about how my Nunni was the only one who believed in him when the rest of his family turned their backs on him. In her letters, my Nunni always told him, “I know you will do the right thing.”
Sure, it was eccentric. Sure, it was weird. Sure, it was something none of us were prepared for. But unlike his parents, my cousin Polo did the right thing by his kid. In the end it can be safe to say the brain damaged ex-con with the anger management problem rose above them all. While he probably can’t pee on his own and glows in the dark, perhaps he taught us what life is truly about. 

Love

April
I Came, I Saw, I Sang: Memoirs of a Singing Telegram Delivery Girl
Paperback available on Amazon and 877-Buy-Book
E-Book available on Kindle and Nook
Audiobook available on itunes and Audible this Spring
www.youtube.com/aprilthestarr
Portion of proceeds go to RAINN

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Voices Carry (Til Tuesday)


Hello my name is April. Yes I am a great many things, some good, some bad. I have been featured on the Soup twice. Joel McHale still won’t do lunch with me. I also was lambasted back in 2008 on VH1.com’s blog by Michelle Collins who did accept my friend request on myspace back in the day despite what some of my more vocal fans said by calling her fat. Then in 2009 I had plenty of gnarly misadventures, one where a venue and I got in a flame war online. Let’s not forget my debut in Gawker. While Adrian Chen furthered my agenda as did anyone who blasted me then it made me notorious.

But most of all, yes, I have been the other woman.

Married men have always liked me. Despite not being able to get a date for most of high school that all changed when I was about seventeen. The youthful weight melted off of me due in part to hormonal changes as well as a diet and exercise regimen that made me sweat. That’s when it all started on a Friday night as I was bagging groceries, my normal job at the supermarket. During the week I went to school, weekend nights I worked, and Saturdays I went downtown to take my acting classes with either Jill Wadsworth or Mary Schaeffer. In between all that it was ventriloquism or taping at the access station. Oh then lets throw in the voice lessons for musical time as well as those rehearsals. That’s when everything changed.

I was minding my own business doing my job when I was approached by an older good looking fella named Rich. He asked if I was hungry and gave me a banana, insert dirty joke. He would bring me candy and other little things. We would talk, he would tell me how he hated his job and was frustrated with his life. Then Rich would tell me how pretty I was. No guy aside from my dad or a male relative ever did that. After a few weeks of this one of my fellow girls at the front end said, “You know he’s married.” My jaw dropped. We had schedule a coffee date in the hot foods section during one of my breaks! My co-worker had to be lying. But she wasn’t. A week later Rich came trotting in with his wife plus young child and didn’t even look at me. After that, knowing he had been busted he went elsewhere to get his groceries bagged.

The following summer before heading to college I worked as a lifeguard. In the pool swimming laps and social as ever was a guidance counselor from a neighboring district named Bob. We hit it off because his daughter too had been into theatre even though she was now opting for the domestic bliss. That’s when the jokes started to get more dirty on Bob’s end. He began to fake heart attacks to get me to come into the steam room to service him. For as tempting as it was Bob wasn’t paying, plus my mother was my boss. Once Bob said to me, “Maybe you need an old pro so that someday when you get someone you care about you know what you are doing.” Needless to say soon after that classic line I met his wife. She was demure and sweet, unsuspecting that her husband was such a stellar creep. When I went off to college Bob would ask my mother how I was, and say that I “had a spark.” What that means in dirty old married fool I will never know.

While I was hit on by a lot of married men I never dated one until I was about twenty two. I was coming out of a really bad engagement that ended up being a really bad breakup. The relationship had been a nightmare and the break was even worse. That’s when I met Wes. He was good looking, had his hair slicked back, and was married. Wes told me this right out of the gate as we started hanging out. He asked me if that was a turn off. In the back of my mind it was but I was liking the fact he was taking me to dinner and I didn’t have to pay! Then Wes explained that he and his wife had what was known as an open marriage. They could see other people as long as they didn’t fall in love and respected the primary partner. A friend of mine at the time had been polyamorous and quite happy so I figured why not? Oh no. I got an angry phone call from Wes’s wife who happened to have access to his cellphone. Needless to say she didn’t get the memo and for the record it was much more open on his end. After that I decided to end it with Wes. Not that I wasn’t attracted to him, I just didn’t feel like getting shot.

I would like to say this phase of my life ended but it didn’t. A short while later I was performing one night when after the show I met Stu. Still obtaining my number in his cellphone Stu called me and we talked into the night. Stu kept calling me at weird hours and we started hanging out. During our first dinner date Stu told me he was married but he and his wife were on the rocks. I believed him. Stu said they were more like friends than lovers. We chilled casually for a month, after all I didn’t want anything serious plus he still technically lived with the missus. Stu said he couldn’t divorce her because she was suicidal and had been in and out of mental hospitals for years and that sex had been nonexistent for some time. I felt bad for him, he seemed so giving, such a good listener. While I was out and about I saw Stu and his very pregnant wife holding hands. I came to find out she and Stu had been together since their time at Dartmouth. I sent Stu an angry text message telling him that from the looks of his wife his sex life seemed to be working out and to “leave me the fuck alone.”

After that was Bobby, a friend from the neighborhood I had grown close to. Bobby would take me out to dinner, help me when my door was jammed and was the straight listening ear for my guy problems. He worked as a repairman one building over from me so we got to know each other quite well. One night he walked me home and he kissed me. I wanted a boyfriend at the time very badly. Despite what I had been through with guys I still believed in true love and was quite lonely. If I could have a boyfriend I wanted it to be Bobby. I told a girlfriend in the neighborhood and she broke the sad news, Bobby lived in Queens with his wife and son. I told her she must have the wrong guy, but I asked around and she didn’t. And apparently Bobby had a girl in every neighborhood where he did work. Needless to say my opinion of this gent changed and the only relationship I wanted to give him was my foot to the place he really does all of his thinking and feeling.

After that, aside from dating unattached guys here and there, I really was single for the most part. Then I got into a relationship with someone who was available. Although it was a disaster and he still hates me he was available so at least he had that. So what he didn’t have his hair? He also didn’t have a wife and sometimes you have to settle in this world. Then that relationship ended.

Back into the dating world again I found myself floundering. That’s when I began to see Jack. Jack had been recently separated from his wife although they were still living in the same house when she wasn’t residing at the residence of her new paramour. Broken up over the chain of events, Jack had discovered the affair while writing something on the wall of his wife’s facebook. Jack and I started hanging out, and while neither one of us was in the market for something serious we did hit it off pretty good. Over time perhaps we could be. However, Jack’s wife re-emerged and wanted to work it out. That’s when Jack would call me with the updates from their marriage counseling sessions. I couldn’t take it so I stopped taking his calls all together, just too much drama.
Shortly after that I was headlining a comedy festival in my home state of PA when I told one of the bookers of my troubles with my then technically married suitor. Since we got to be close that weekend he sort of gave me some crap. I told him this wasnt the first time I had dated married guys and sort of laughed about my woes in the department of love. He stopped me and asked, "What the fuck are you thinking by dating these married guys? Nothing good can come of it. It has never ended will and never will." If that wasn't a come to Jesus moment I don't know what is.
The following week Jack tried to make a comeback and I went to my gay friends for advice. Putting up a muscular wall around me they said they had all been the other woman and in the end it caused them nothing but pain. They told me they would teach me how to say no to those guys and they did. Now when I find out someone is married the first words out of my mouth are exactly that, "No!"

The thing that prompted me to write this was that a friend name Lola disclosed to me that her husband, who by the way I have always thought was a vile prick, was caught having an affair. Lola called the other girl slutty which she probably was. However, she won’t leave him. Lola thinks she can work it out for the kids. The crazy thing is, Lola and I originally became friends when I told her about a married guy I had dated, Wes to be exact. She said, “Women like you scare the hell out of me because you can steal my husband without a thought.”

While Lola and I are chums in a way I am not the friend she wants to talk to at this moment. But the thing I want to tell her is that while it feels therapeutic to call the other girl a slut it’s not all her fault. Usually it is the guy who snakes around, finds a gullible woman with low self-worth, and moves in with a story about how you are a battleaxe joy kill who hasn’t slept with him in years. I want to tell Lola this is probably not the first time he has cheated, God just wanted her to find out so she could finally get the courage to put him out. Unfortunately Lola won’t. Her husband will have to make up more lies and more devious tales.

Seeing Lola also got me to think about how, despite being young and stupid, my behavior hurt other women, something I have never been about. But being party to the petty bullshit of someone with good lines always makes me the one at fault even though he started it all. Worse yet I get the label as the homewrecker, the other woman always does. Meanwhile it’s the man who had the ball in his hand and knocked down those pins. Still, taking the bait means in the end I hurt someone. Plus I had a fiancĂ© cheat on me and that was miserable. I don’t want anyone to feel that way anymore.

But being the other woman I have gotten to know the phylum of cheating man well. Unfortunately a cheater is a person who is afraid to be alone. That’s why they don’t leave the wife and have the lady on the side, keeping their options open. If one falls through there is another exit waiting in the wings as an escape. It’s quite sad actually, because in their lost desperation to stay above water they drag everyone down causing nothing but pain and sadness with their lies and deceit.

Sure I am still approached by married men up to no good, promising me presents and fancy dinners. While they are tempting I know despite what they say no good can come of it. As a matter of fact I just blocked an insistent married suitor on facebook. But now it’s more than being bad in the end for me with the lies and how they leave scars on my already damaged heart making it even more impossible to trust men. Now I see my friend Lola, her pain, her grief, her anguish as a good woman to hold her family together. To me that is a stab that pains my conscience more than you can ever imagine.

Sure, I have been the other woman. However, that hurts other women. Nothing justifies that. Love April