Monday, May 4, 2009

The Hygiene Exhibitionist

I love exhibitionists for the coveted moments of surprise they provide.

I hate them for the same reason.



Topping my hated list is Handy the Hygiene Exhibitionist (pictured), the shadiest of characters, who haunts the streets, subways, and my nightmares with a set of nail clippers and a liberal use policy to match.

I’m not sure what Handy here was up to before I encountered him, we rode together for just one stop, but my guess is he finished blowing out the hair and did a quick touch-up on the fade just as I arrived if the nail clipping is any indication.

Now one night last year I was standing by the door of a 7 train when an elderly man sitting to my right turned his head and threw up on me three times. I paid dearly for that, my trek home cost me a well-worn pair of Chucks, jeans, and boxers. Then there was the emotional toll, a sleepless night followed by my wife’s ceaseless belief that I’d “crapped my pants.” She’ll tell you all about it, incorporating a pretty solid impression of the whimpering my arrival home was accompanied by into the story as well.

Point is I’m a veteran of subterranean travel. I’ve seen and heard plenty of things down there. That certainly wasn’t the first vomit I’d encountered on the subway, but it was the first inside my sneakers. I’d come across countless people peeing on the train, and one special morning I even interrupted a guy with the angriest look on his face in the middle of a fierce game of pocket pool. But being the victim in this vomit incident had me re-thinking subway travel. Still, the sense-assaulting damage of that night was nothing compared to the impact of Handy the Hygiene Exhibitionist’s incessant clipping and snipping.

In the end, the difference between Handy and the old man is intent, or at least I’m hoping it is. One of these men made a conscious decision about his actions.

The subway is a dangerous place, and while the days of Bernie Goetz have long since passed, there’s no denying that nail clippers are the new switchblades.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Select Visions of a Moribund State


Teen pregnancy. The mindless slaughter of marine mammals. Environmental ruin. Foreign accents. Nuclear Armageddon. Pretty atypical poetry topics, and they’re all covered in Visions of a Moribund State.

I wrote the book as a sophomore in high school, and I know that because that’s when I learned the word “moribund.” It’s also the last time I used it.

It didn’t help that like all treasures, Visions was lost for a while. When rediscovered, it followed the course of all great literature and remained largely overlooked by the publishing industry. Thankfully, that’s about to change.

Someone with the fortitude to publish a book of prose as biting as this has finally stepped forward, and in anticipation of its release I’ve recorded an audio book featuring five excerpts from the full Moribund collection.

Rimbaud, Bukowski, Ginsberg, they’ve got nothing on this stuff. Take a moment, step out of your day, and bear witness to Select Visions of a Moribund State.