Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Total Bastard Acceptance Movement

I've spent some time in my life, at various different stages in development, trying to actively construct who I was in, more or less, purely aesthetic ways. This ranged from me wanting to change my name to Mike when I was 8, to trying to wear 3 watches at a time when I was 11, and the dress-like-a-fucking-idiot era throughout high school. Most people would admit to doing this to some extent in their shake-your-head-and-grin-I-was-dumb days, but beyond high school graduation, any accusation of doing this is akin to calling them and their mother a total phony.

Any labeling, even accurate labeling, would threaten to destabilize society by sending every barista, bookstore clerk, and graphic designer into a civil war. You know, if they cared about what your fag hipster mouth had to say.

That's a lot of angry for the post-angst generation*.

I'm not here to swim in that kind of hypocrisy. I've got too much more to consider.

There has been a feeling in my belly sometimes when I have an introspective moment after a few months of thoughtless action on my part. It is the strange acknowledgment and acceptance that one is a total jerk, and sees no real need to remedy this. At those moments, I assumed it was just a part of growing into a man. The fading of anxiety and the general worry that has made a whole lot of being and doing so goddamn hard is going away, and being replaced with the kind of self-appeasement that you see in the grins and expensive suits and ties of truly evil men.

So much of me wants to be them. It can still happen.
Examples:
  • One of those sociopaths that lives two lives with two spouses and families on different ends of the same town.
  • A cunning plagiarist.
  • A marketing executive.
But I'm starting to think that may not be a great idea.
More as this develops.

There was a time at work not too long ago, won't say which job, but:
A man who looked like old modern Neil Young came to the counter and bought a bunch of pencils. As he was leaving the store, I turned to a coworker and said "Man, that guy looked just like Neil Young!". My coworker asked me to point out who it was. I pointed to the old man leaving the store, and said "That guy!". Right at that moment, the man threw up heavy-style.

I knew that the man must have been thinking, "If one more person says I look like Neil Young, I am going to fucking throw up." My message across the collective human unconsciousness must have sent him over that edge. If he does that all the time, the man needs a maid. Hey hey, My my.

(*NO SUCH THING)

1 Comments:

Blogger Tom said...

Goddamn, I read those hipster articles a couple days ago and wanted to vomit. Let's dismiss an entire generation as being without creativity or lasting interest in the things we pretend to care about.

August 14, 2008 12:48 PM  

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