Payday Yay!!!

Can you tell I'm a writer? Let's test your knowledge of the writer's life.

I come into some money and I Writer Writingimmediately go to:

A) the grocery store, for some much-needed foodstuffs

B) the bank machine, to pay off my bills

or

C) the bookstore for Jared Diamond's Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed, Masterpieces of Murder: The Best True Crime Writing from the Greatest Chroniclers of Murder, and Susanna Clarke's Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell for an aggregate of 2104 pages; thence to the liquor store for a bottle of Jackson-Triggs 2004 Proprietor's Grand Reserve Sauvignon Blanc; and thence to a restaurant, albeit one where they ask if that's for here or to go. I'm feeling flush, so, throwing caution to the winds and carpeing diem for everything I'm worth, I ask for extra hot sauce and a beef, rather than vegetarian burrito.

La vie Boheme ain't what it used to be.

Crack and Cracks and Crackers

Monday, September 16, 2002

So once again I was off to buy food; don’t know what it is, can’t seem to help it. Even took money from the coffee budget and spent it on food. I think I have a problem, but it’s okay, I can handle it, it’s okay.

So there I was, lined up at Sunrise Market with my yellow tomatoes and red cabbage and orange peppers, all the signs of someone deep into a food dependancy. I can’t help it, but it’s okay.

I’ve never been there when they weren’t closing down; I think just as soon as somebody with a dolly hauls a flat of cauliflower in the front door and stacks it against the banana display another, more stealthy-like guy sneaks a box of summer squash back out the side door and around front again, so the packing up process can go on forever. It’s like grocery shopping in the movie Brazil, only they didn’t shop for groceries right there in the movie, so it’s more like their shopping would have been like, had they visibly shopped, but they all looked suspiciously well-nourished, so they probably snuck it in when we weren’t watching. I think they do the closing ritual to encourage everybody to leave, and if you had some of their customers you’d be tempted to do the same. I enjoyed working with the public because it gave me so many opportunities to meet people to whom I was superior, not an opportunity I pass up lightly; ah, the good old days. Anyway, there I was, lining up, and there they were, closing.

Closing has a way of encouraging people to get the hell into the lineup and out of the store, and the lineup was considerable. Kind of like the receipts here, the lineups go Chinese, Chinese, English, Chinese, English, and so on, but usually there’s no Produce in there, except such as belongs to the English and Chinese; it doesn’t just get in the lineup by itself the way it gets in the till receipts. Sometimes there’s produce in the till receipts that isn’t in the shopping, which is awkward and why you have to watch like a hawk when they ring things in. But the lineup: in the case of this particular lineup it went Chinese, Chinese, Native, English, Chinese, Chinese. Native was right in front of me, so guess which I was. He had a face like the surface of the moon, with the craters that come with crack and speed and a nose squashed flat so the nostrils were facing straight out. He looked about twenty, which is to say he looked about fifty without the drugs. He also had a bunch of bright green broccoli in his hand, and a shopping bag in his other hand; I figured he had just forgotten the broccoli and come back in to get it.

I thought so right up until I saw him edging up to the nearby displays and looking around to make sure he wasn’t being watched; he was, and he sidled back into the line. And then back out, over to the stacks of pickled cherries and hot Russian mustard and Horlicks crackers. The CrackersAnd look around again, and sidle back into line. Then he gave one last, desperately nonchalant 360, bent down and pretended to fiddle with his shoe while his right hand grabbed a pack of Horlicks crackers and began to stuff them up his pants leg. His pants, however, were too tight. The crackers wouldn’t fit. He began working them back and forth, crumbling off the edges so he would have a nice pack of crumbs for his trouble, but at this point he was committed. Had to see the job through. Then he got an idea and began stuffing them in his sock, and for a few seconds I’m sure it looked to him like he was going to make it,

But for me.

When he bent over to stuff his pants full of imported malty snack crackers, the unintended sideffect was to thrust his own crack into the air and into my range of vision, courtesy of the lowriders he sported. Lovely. If there’s one thing that completely makes my day it is being treated to a 3-D closeup of unwashed, pasty, sagging and corrugated crackhead ass. Like a day without sunshine, I tell you.

So as he was shoplifting the tastiest treats that had ever seen the inside of his pants, I said, loud enough to be heard through most of the front of the store and all three lineups:

Hey, you moron! Don’t stuff those in your pants, or your sock either. Jesus, don’t do that. Hey, get those out of your pants!

Cracker; the book!He didn’t seem to be paying attention to me, still working away at the poor crackers, so being the shrinking violet I am I reached over and began to tug on his belt loops. The drawbacks of this immediately manifested themselves, as his jeans slipped even lower, but mercifully the impending sartorial apocalypse was averted when he immediately stood up, glaring.

Who you calling a moron? He sounded confused. He looked amazed when he realized how much shorter than him I was. I cleared up his confusion right away.

I’m calling you a moron, moron. You don’t do that right in front of people. Don’t steal. Duh

Wow, the eloquence even now moves me to tears; I’m sure he found it life-changing. At least he threw the poor, brutalized crackers back on the pile, paid for his broccoli in a big hurry and left so quickly he might have slipped through a crack in the floor.

When they came to me both the cashier and the bagger were laughing so hard they could hardly see. They didn’t overcharge me this time and they packed my bags very nicely, not too heavy at all, so I feel very special. But they left the crackers on the pile for sale.

Four Footed Friends

Percherons!Date: Monday, November 11, 2002 2:47 AM

A couple of years ago I was sitting in my living room watching Law & Order or somesuch at 2am and I heard clip-clop, clip-clop, a sound which reminded me of racehorses and show jumpers, things you rarely encounter when sitting in your living room watching the telly. It for sure wasn't in the plot [Picture it: Mike gets drunk and drives, crashes, gets his license taken away and must pursue criminals from the back of an elderly cayuse, perhaps the very one from Cat Ballou! And Lenny has to ride shotgun, holding on for dear life].

But seriously, folks.

It wasn't part of the plot, which I think was the erotomania episode that I really like, not that I identify with any of the characters. Not even Claire! Well, maybe a little when Jack gets out the bike…NO! No rice burners for me, nor no slutty DA's neither. I still don't think Claire put out.

But meanwhile, back at the living room, the clip-clop continued. And for sure it wasn't coming from the tv. [Sidebar here, but a virtual sidebar because first of all this stuff you are reading is only photons on a screen, so it cannot really have a "side bar" because there is no physical side to attach it to, and no bar: it's just pictures. Second of all, I don't know how to do a sidebar in HTML, so there you go: nothing. Virtuoso virtuality, meta-metaphosphors. Don't you wish you'd gone to grad school now? Don't you wish I had, so I'd know what I was talking about? But the clip-clop wasn't coming from anything in the living room at all, that's what I wanted to use the sidebar to explain, at least I think that's what I wanted to use the sidebar to explain, but am not sure because I started this o-so-long-ago, somewhat like the Bush family must be feeling right now, but let's get at least one of these things finished, eh?] But if the sound wasn't coming from the tv [oh, wait! Now I remember what the sidebar was for. It was to say that you used to capitalise "TV" and now you don't. "tv." Does that signify a loss of stature on tv's part now that it is running shows like Blind Date or does it signify greater familiarity, to the extent of becoming a regular, rather than proper, noun? Methinks the latter (don't you just hate sentences like "Methinks the latter"? Don't you just want to bitch-slap them a little?) And now, back to our regularly scheduled blog]

So if the sound wasn't coming from my living room and it wasn't coming from my tv (which is in, though not really of my living room) where was it coming from? Not the rest of my house: although well-stocked with four-footed beasts, the place didn't harbour anything with shoes on, nor were any of my mice hefty enough to make such big, beefy clip-clops. There was this rat once…you could feel the floor shake when it gallumphed across the dining room…but he doesn't wear shoes…but anyway, it wasn't me, it wasn't them, it wasn't Jack or Claire or even beefy Mike, so it had to be something Outside.

I dashed to the blinds (I'll bet you thought I'd never get there). I peeked out between them. I saw…

You'll never guess what I saw!

At 2 in the morning!

On Pender Street!

A team of tired, plodding draft horses drawing a wagon, with an old man at the reins.

Apparition? A hundred years ago, even fifty years ago such a sight was common enough on this old pavement, but now? The only draft horses in the city of Vancouver pull wagonsful of tourists, but not around here and certainly not in the haunted hours. It's all way west and way earlier. All good Belgians should have been tucked up in bed long since, yet there was no denying that a couple of tons of horseflesh were wearily clipping and clopping down my street, only slightly after the turn of the millennium. Not that one, this one. Well, they might have been Percherons; it was real dark, okay?

After that I used to see them all the time, or rather only at 2 am, but all the time at 2am though not every time. The clip-clop would ring out through the soggy, foggy air and they would plod past, never looking up or even to one side, just nodding their heads in unison as they headed for their mysterious destination. Where they were going I never found out: it's all city for about thirty miles in the direction they were headed.

One cold, rainy night, long about 2am, I heard the now-familiar clip-clop, clip-clop trundling down the street from west to east, just as usual. Then I heard voices.

If you don't live in Vancouver and haven't spent a lot of rainy winter nights sitting up alone reading Victorian ghost stories it probably wouldn't be your first thought that the horses had learned to talk. I, however, live in Vancouver.

Maybe I wasn't surprised to hear my mid-night-mares talking, but I was surprised to hear them use such language. "Motherfucker" did it for me; I had to peek, if only to give them a sharp look. If they were a serious hallucination they would at least know that I paid them the respect of a proper reaction.

I dashed to the blinds…but we've been over this before. And what to my wondering eyes should appear but a pair of scrawny hookers, arguing about a drug deal.

But still the sounds continued.

Clip
Clop
Clip
Clop

Had my horsies become invisible? But no…wait…there was something about the hookers. They'd stopped. The horses stopped. The hookers moved on. The horses moved on.

Of course, hooker shoes!

Hooker Shoes

Cicero and Carnegie

My friend Carinthia, who has lived in the neighborhood for twenty-very-odd years, went to the Carnegie Library to get a book. Well, you would go to the library for a book, wouldn't you? She had in mind a particular translation of Cicero, the kind of thing that hasn't topped the best-seller lists in a couple of millennia. The kind of thing you expect to have to order from the West End, or the North Shore, but definitely not the kind of thing you think is readily available here on the Downtown EastSide.

She picked her way past the sixty or so drug dealers surrounding the building like a particularly saturnine ring, passed the needle exchange table, and went up the curving stairs into the round tower. Yes, the Carnegie Library had the translation she was looking for. You may not be surprised, but you haven't seen the Carnegie Centre or the Carnegie Library, a tiny subset of the Centre.

When the cafeteria is getting its food delivery they have to have one extra person to stay in the truck and guard everything or that delivery truck would be stripped to the rims in seconds. When it pulls up a crowd surrounds it immediately; exclusively big, burly guys who can lock onto a case of hotdog buns like a pit bull on a postie. They make no secret that they are there for whatever they can get, and if the guy in the truck is too dainty looking or without a 2×4 there could be real trouble.

The only time I've seen anything like it was in Indonesia, in Ambon, the part where they're killing the white people now. I was there just before they started, and as our ferry pulled up to the dock we saw thirty or forty would-be porters scrambling to get onto the staircase to the ship; it was the kind of stairs-on-wheels thing you see in old shots of the Queen. There were two port officials on those stairs, armed with bats, and every time a hand would grasp the rail over the dotted line they would whack it with the bats. We could hear the smack and clang over the throb of the engines. It's like those scenes on CNN when a truck with food pulls into a refugee camp and they try to rush it.

It's much the same outside the Carnegie Centre, except the delivery guys are quite big and they call out half the kitchen staff to help: they form a line like a bucket brigade, and pass the coleslaw and creamed corn or tofu whip or whatever it might be that day along into the kitchen.

Anyway, the Carnegie Centre. I wouldn't be surprised to hear there is a dressage outreach program in there, bringing German equestrianism to the Downtown EastSide. They have such a variety of amazing things inside this rundown, haunted and hunted building that it's like nothing so much as Mary Poppins' carpetbag. Reach in and pull out anything in the world. An art gallery? Sure. Martial Arts studio? Sure. Live nude drawing classes? Two-dollar meals? Gym? Computer labs? Symposiums? Meditation room? Senior's services? Youth services? Immigrant services? Sure, all that and the ghost of the old cleaner, too. If I needed a white rhino for any reason that's the first place I'd go, because if they didn't have it they would surely be on the White Rhino Network mailing list, and could give me a referral and probably some coupons to boot.

They also have a library, but perhaps I mentioned that. The library is about the size of a large bedroom, with special sections for books on the Downtown EastSide (quite a lot, actually; I guess we're famous) and for new immigrants and gender studies and other marginalized literature; here minorities are the majority, so this represents the majority of books in the library. Marginalization is standard; mainstreamers are outnumbered and so by definition also marginalized.

So the Carnegie had the Cicero, were in fact the only library around that had the Cicero. The Ancients are surely a marginalized group, if ever there was one, so the Cicero was bound to be there, since everyone on the Westside only reads Oprah's books. Only, it wasn't there.

There were six people on the waiting list for the Cicero.

So Carinthia put her name down for number seven and walked back home, past the largest open-air illegal drug market in the world, past the junkies tweeking on the sidewalks, past the hookers working all the angles of all the corners, past the empty park that smells like beer every morning, past the Chinese restaurant where OD's get locked in the bathroom until closing time whereupon the police are called, through her eight-foot high steel security gate and her deadbolted front door, and she made some tea and she sat down and she wondered what she really knew about her neighborhood.

It’s that time of the month

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting Time to give your meat a makeover.

From Vancouver’s favorite street hooker advocate, ex-prostitute, ex-city council council candidate, ex-current-and-future madam, and ex-man, Jamie Lee Hamilton.

MEAT n MIX


Hi All,

Just a reminder that next Friday May 26 is our Meat n
Mix at the Lotus – 455 Abbott Street. As usual from
6-9pm.

Besides our meat draws, we will have Queen for a day.
I have met a wonderful make-up artist named Sam, who
is going to demonstrate to us all his hot make-up tips
for the summer. We will draw a ticket for the lovely
lady who will be Queen for a day as Sam and myself
will do a complete make-up/transformation on stage.
You will be ready to strut the night away after at one
of your fav spots.

Since summer is approaching those new make-up colours
need to be explored. Sam will have on hand his brand
of Mac, Dior and Estee Lauder. I’ve already ordered a
number of his products.

As usual, funds raised for Meat n Mix will go toward
One-Woman NGO. Remember there is no charge to come to
Meat n Mix.

I really hope Colleen shows this time. If anyone has
seen Colleen please tell her all work and no play does
not make for Queen for a Day!

See you on Friday May 26 in the Mix pub for Makeover
Meat n Mix from 6-9pm.

PS all you guys need to attend as well cuz Sam will
offer skin care advice for you. 

Cheers

Jamie Lee