Sunday, 24 November 2024

Connectivity Issues













“HI, MOM,” I ALMOST SAY out loud, but I stop myself because I don’t wanna look crazy to the other mourners around me. 

Mourner, singular actually. There’s only one, and it’s the same guy I see here every time. He sits in a lawn chair with a sun umbrella over him, playing soft rock from a stereo and staring at the headstone of who I assume to be his former wife. 

I look at Mom’s headstone. There are about twenty adjectives on it because everyone in the family had adjective pitches and nobody was willing to forsake theirs

“We’ve gotta include ‘playful,’ ” Grandpa insisted. 

“Why does nobody like ‘brave’? 

Brave’ is a good word!” Grandma wailed. So we just crammed all the words on there. Even Mom’s place of death is cluttered. 

This is my first time visiting Mom’s grave since her birthday, last July. My visits have become less frequent through the years, even though I promised Mom, per her request, that I would visit her grave every day. In the beginning, I visited once a week and felt guilty about it, like it wasn’t enough. But with time and with reality, the visits have become less and less, and so has the guilt. 

I sit cross-legged in front of her grave. I take a longer look at the words on her headstone. 

Brave, kind, loyal, sweet, loving, graceful, strong, thoughtful, funny, genuine, hopeful, playful, insightful, and on and on… 

Was she, though? Was she any of those things? The words make me angry. I can’t look at them any longer. 

Why do we romanticise The Dead? Why can’t we be honest about them? Especially moms. They’re the most romanticised of anyone

Moms are saints. Angels by merely existing. NO ONE could possibly understand what it’s like to be a mom. Men will never understand. Women with no children will never understand. No one but moms know the hardship of motherhood, and we non-moms must heap nothing but praise upon moms because we lowly, pitiful non-moms are mere peasants compared to the goddesses we call mothers

Maybe I feel this way now because I viewed my mom that way for so long. I had her up on a pedestal, and I know how detrimental that pedestal was to my well-being and life. That pedestal kept me stuck, emotionally stunted, living in fear, dependent, in a near constant state of emotional pain and without the tools to even identify that pain let alone deal with it. 

My mom didn’t deserve her pedestal. She was a narcissist. She refused to admit she had any problems, despite how destructive those problems were to our entire family. My mom emotionally, mentally, and physically abused me in ways that will forever impact me. 

She gave me breast and vaginal exams until I was seventeen years old. These “exams” made my body stiff with discomfort. I felt violated, yet I had no voice, no ability to express that. I was conditioned to believe any boundary I wanted was a betrayal of her, so I stayed silent. Cooperative

When I was six years old, she pushed me into a career I didn’t want. I’m grateful for the financial stability that career has provided me, but not much else. I was not equipped to handle the entertainment industry and all of its competitiveness, rejection, stakes, harsh realities, fame. I needed that time, those years, to develop as a child. To form my identity. To grow. I can never get those years back. 

She taught me an eating disorder when I was eleven years old — an eating disorder that robbed me of my joy and any amount of free-spiritedness that I had. 

She never told me my father was not my father. 

Her death left me with more questions than answers, more pain than healing, and many layers of grief — the initial grief from her passing, then the grief of accepting her abuse and exploitation of me, and finally, the grief that surfaces now when I miss her and start to cry — because I do still miss her and start to cry. 

I miss her pep talks. Mom had a knack for finding just the right thing in a person to get them to light up and believe in themselves. I miss her childlike spirit. Mom had an energy that could at times be so endearing. Even captivating. 

And I miss when she was happy. It didn’t happen as often as I would’ve liked, it didn’t happen as often as I tried to force it to happen, but when she was happy it was infectious. 

Sometimes when I miss her I start to fantasise about what life would be like if she were still alive and I imagine that maybe she’d have apologised, and we’d have wept in each other’s arms and promised each other we’d start fresh. 

Maybe she’d support me having my own identity, my own hopes and dreams and pursuits

But then I realise I’m just romanticising the dead in the same way I wish everyone else wouldn’t

Mom made it very clear she had no interest in changing. If she were still alive, she’d still be trying her best to manipulate me into being who she wants me to be. I’d still be purging or restricting or binging or some combination of the three and she’d still be endorsing it. I’d still be forcing myself to act, miserably going through the motions of performing on shiny sitcoms. How many times can you pratfall over a carpet or sell a line you don’t believe in before your soul dies? There’s a good chance I would’ve had a complete and public mental breakdown by this point. I’d still be deeply unhappy and severely mentally unhealthy. I look at the words again. Brave, kind, loyal, sweet, loving, graceful… 

I shake my head. I don’t cry. The Doobie Brothers’ “What a Fool Believes” starts playing from the sad man’s stereo. I stand up, wipe the dirt off my jeans, and walk away. I know I’m not coming back. 

Acknowledgments Thank you to my editor, Sean Manning, for your impact on this book. For understanding my voice and making it so much stronger

To my manager, Norm Aladjem, your early support and encouragement means so much to me. Thank you for your wisdom, strategy, thoughtfulness, and unshakeable calm. 

To Peter McGuigan, Mahdi Salehi, and Derek Van Pelt — thank you for your talent and humor, and to the wonderful Stephen Fertelmes for helping to make this happen. To Jill Fritzo and everyone at Jill Fritzo PR, thank you for your brilliance and expertise. To Erin Mason and Jamie C. Farquhar — for the transformative guidance and tools you have provided me. And finally, thank you, Ari, for your endless love, support, and encouragement. I love you so much. You’re my best friend. I’m so happy we’re a team. <harmonizing> We are here for uuuussss.

Saturday, 23 November 2024

The Sybokian Heresy



Mrs. Marvel

Once you learn to harness your emotions, the sky's the limit.




Nimbus III
In the Neutral Zone
"The Planet of Galactic Peace"

(out of a dust storm a horseman approaches an alien drilling for water. The horseman dismounts and addresses the alien)

SYBOK
I thought weapons were forbidden on this planet. 
... Besides, I can't believe you'd kill me 
for a field of empty holes.

J'ONN
It's all I have....

SYBOK
Your pain runs deep.

J'ONN
What do you know 
of my pain?

SYBOK
Let us explore it ...together
...Each man hides a secret pain. 

It must be exposed 
and reckoned with. 
It must be dragged from the 
darkness and forced into the light. 

Share your pain. ...Share your pain 
with me and gain strength from it.

J'ONN
Where did you get 
This Power?

SYBOK
The Power was 
within you.

J'ONN
It is as if a weight has been lifted 
from my heart.... How can I 
repay you for this miracle?

SYBOK
Join My Quest.

J'ONN
What is it you seek?

SYBOK
What you seek. What all men have sought 
since time began, ...the ultimate knowledge. 
To find it, we'll need a starship.

J'ONN
A starship? There are no 
starships on Nimbus III.

SYBOK
Perhaps I have a way 
to bring one here.

J'ONN
But how?

SYBOK
Have faith my friend. 
(throws back the hood 
of his desert cloak --)
There are more of us 
than you know.

J'ONN
You'reVulcan...?!??


Mind if we drop in for dinner?

Nimbus III Desert
Paradise City
Nimbus III

[Paradise City saloon backroom]

CAITHLIN: 
Gentlemen, I'm Caithlin Dar.
TALBOT: Ah, yes. Our new Romulan representative. Welcome to Paradise City, my dear, capital of the so-called 'Planet of Galactic Peace.' I'm St. John Talbot, the Federation representative here on Nimbus Three and my charming companion, here, is the Klingon consul Korrd.
KORRD: Ugghhhh!
CAITHLIN: I expect that's Klingon for hello.
TALBOT (OC): Won't you come in, my dear?
(Sybok and his followers approach Paradise City)
CAITHLIN: Twenty years ago, our three governments agreed to develop this planet together. A new age was born.
TALBOT: Our new age died a quick death. And the settlers we conned into coming here, they were the dregs of the galaxy. They immediately took to fighting amongst themselves. We forbad them weapons, but they soon began to fashion their own.
CAITHLIN: Right! Then it appears I've arrived just in time.
(a klaxon sounds and the three of them rush outside as Sybok and his followers storm the city)
[Paradise City saloon backroom]
J'ONN: Get away from that transmitter!
SYBOK: Romulan. ...Terran. ...Klingon. Consider yourselves my prisoners.
TALBOT: Prisoners? We're already prisoners here on this worthless lump of rock. What possible value could we be to you?
SYBOK: Nimbus Three may be a worthless lump of rock, but it does have one unique treasure. It's the only place in the entire galaxy that has the three of you.
CAITHLIN: I don't know who you are or what you want but I can tell you this. Our governments will stop at nothing to ensure our safety.
SYBOK: 
That's exactly what I'm counting on.


McCOY: Ah, this must be the hostage tape.
CAITHLIN (on viewscreen): A short time ago we surrendered ourselves to the forces of the Galactic Army of Light. At this moment, we are in their protective custody. Their leader assures us that we will be treated humanely as long as we co-operate with his demands. I believe his sincerity. He requests that you send a Federation starship to parlay for our release at once. Be assured we are in good health and would appreciate your immediate response.
SYBOK (on viewscreen): I deeply regret this desperate act but these are desperate times. I have no desire to harm these innocents but do not put me to the test. I implore you... I implore you to respond, ...immediately.
KIRK: What is it? You look like you've just seen a ghost.
SPOCK: Perhaps I have, Captain.
[Enterprise-A forward observation room]
KIRK: Spock, what is it? Do you know this Vulcan?
SPOCK: I cannot be sure.
KIRK: But he does seem familiar.

SPOCK: 
He reminds me of someone 
I knew in my youth.

McCOY: 
Why, Spock, I didn't 
know you had one.

SPOCK: 
I do not often think of the past.

KIRK: 
Who is it he reminds you of?

SPOCK: 
There was a young student, ...exceptionally gifted
...possessing ...great intelligence. It was assumed 
that one day he would take his place amongst 
the great scholars of Vulcan. 

But he was a revolutionary.

KIRK: 
What do you mean?

SPOCK: 
The knowledge and experience he sought 
were forbidden by Vulcan belief.

KIRK: 
Forbidden?

SPOCK: 
He rejected his logical upbringing. 
He embraced the animal passions 
of our ancestors.

KIRK: 
Why?

SPOCK: 
He believed that the 
key to self-knowledge 
was emotion, ...not logic.

McCOY: 
Imagine that. 
A passionate Vulcan.

SPOCK: 
When he encouraged 
others to follow him, 
he was banished 
from Vulcan, 
never to return.

KIRK: Fascinating.

I Set it Aside


After this sequence, I did some Thinking
Orders made without notice to 
the affected party SCARE Me — 
almost as much as barking dogs.

Miss Gulch-extended underscoring



Miss Almira Gulch, goes to Auntie Em and 
Uncle Henry’s house to take Dorothy’s dog Toto 
to The Sheriff to have him destroyed. 
Apparently, Toto bit Gulch on the leg, 
resulting in her going to The Sheriff 
and getting an order to put him 
to sleep (Toto, not The Sheriff).

Dorothy is beside herself, and she exclaims, 
Uncle Henry, you won’t let her, will you?”

Uncle Henry replies confidently, “Of course we won’t.”

Then Gulch suddenly whips out the “sheriff’s order,” authorizing her to confiscate Toto.

An argument ensues when, predictably, Dorothy refuses to hand over The Prisoner. 
Gulch admonishes The Family that they had better hand over Toto 
forthwith, “unless you want to go against The Law.”

Uncle Henry scans 'The Order' for about two seconds, 
and he nods stoically. He reluctantly hands Toto to Gulch, 
who carts him away in a basket fastened to her bicycle.

Santino

The Godfather - Deleted Scene - Fifty Good Men


"I cannot believe you just said that -- 
What kind of A World is this..? 
Are you an animal

Do you know what Macbeth 
is about? I'll tell you -- 

It's A Play about the numbing 
of The MORAL sense ...!!
I tell Ryan that we have nothing 
to go on in this case;
You know what 
he says to me...? 

"Win some, Lose some." 

You're a racist, Ryan. 
Did you know that?"

-- Det. Lieutenant William 
F. ('Bill') Kinderman

This is a deleted scene from The Godfather 
sourced from The Godfather Trilogy 1901-1980. 
This scene takes place between Sollozzo's call 
to Sonny and Sollozzo's conversation with Tom. 

In this scene, Sonny goes home to his mother 
to tell her about Vito's situation and 
calls Tessio to get fifty men over to the house. 
He tries to call Luca Brasi, 
but he is already dead 
at the hands of the Tattaglias.



“Assholes : A Theory” is a philosophical / psychological treatise on the definition, characteristics and treatment of the group mentioned in the title. 

James defines assholes as follows:

“In interpersonal or cooperative relations, the asshole :

(1) allows himself to enjoy special advantages 
and does so systematically;

(2) does this out of an entrenched sense of entitlement

and
(3) is immunized by his sense of entitlement against the complaints of other people.”

The Wizards Secret Wife

Mrs. Marvel : 

Once you learn to harness your emotions,

 the sky's the limit.

A Bottom-Bitch is a pimp’s 
Number-one Ho. 

She’s even a bitch 
that helps him keep 
the other bitches 
in Line. 

I will repeat

She’s even the bitch 
that helps him 
keep the other 
bitches in line. 

If The Pimp was McDonald’s
then the Bottom-Bitchis 
his French fries. [laughing

The rest of them bitches like 
fish sandwiches and 
cherry pies and 
shit like that.
[laughing]

Iceberg Slim breaks down 
some of the coldest 
Capitalist Concepts I’ve 
ever heard in My Life

He describes in detail how
 these men breakwomen so that 
they will give them the money 
that they make with 
their own bodies. 

There’s A Story in here so cold
it makes me shudder 
to think about it -- 
Iceberg Slim is trying to Control 
the woman that 
he finds uncontrollable



“ We should Take Care 
of each-other…

Wouldn’t it be nice to be like, 
Remember that time,
They wuz’ gonna Kill Jesus 
but then He got 
all that Money?

[laughing

Real Talk, man. It’s 
notracial thing. 
It’s about Us, making 
Our Society better. 

It’s about like even 
these women that 
are coming forward
and everyone says 
"They’re Brave."and 
many of them are. 

Andfew of them – 
a few of them 
sucked The Dick and 
got buyer’s remorse. 

[laughing]

You know, that’s 
a huge omission 
from This Narrative : —
This wouldn’t have 
gone this far if 
some women weren’t 
willing to DO it. 

You can’t ask 
every woman 
to Hold The Line. 
Some Women 
can carry things 
heavier than others


So, We should fight 
for one another. 

We should forgive 
the ones of us 
that are weaker and 
support the ones of us 
that are stronger

And then we can 
beat The Thing. 
If you guys keep going 
after individuals
The System is going 
to stay intact. 

You have to have 
Men on Your Side. 
And I’m Telling 
You right nowyou’re 
gonna have a lot 
of imperfect allies.

I’ll tell you What Happened
but I can’t say it directly : 

There’s a book to me that encapsulates my entire experience -- before I left The Show. 

And the book is called 'Pimp'
It’s written by a guy 
named Iceberg Slim. 

Yeah, bring it up here —
This is Matthew
Matthew’s from 
France. He’s White

And yet, he has an 
original copy of 
this book 
written by a black 
American who was 
a pimp in the ’40s :
Iceberg Slim. 

His real name was Robert Beck -- 
He got the name 'Iceberg' 
because he was in a bar in Chicago
and there was a shootout in the bar, 
and a bullet went through 
this n i g g a’s hat, and he 
still finished His Drink

Pimps love shit like that

They said, “Man, 
You’re Ice-Cold.” 

And he said, “I Like that.” 
And it stuck.

This book is so heavy in the front 
and has a glossary of pimp terms
because the ideas are so foreign 
to the American ears. 

For instance, do you know 
what the phrase 
“mileage on a ho” means? 

[laughing

Of course you don’t. 

Mileage on a ho is 
a very wild concept. 

It means that, 
Pimps understand there’s 
finite amount of bad shit 
a person can do before 
they lose their fucking mind

And good pimp can 
look at A Woman 
that he’s never seen 
before, and Call it : 
"She’s Good for 500 fucks.

That’s her ‘mileage’ —
Anything over that, 
that bitch is gonna spill

They Do it to You -- 
Why the fuck you think 
most of us work 
from nine until five

‘Cause nine to six 
might kill a bitch. 

[laughing]

Iceberg Slim was the one 
that broke down what 
A Bottom-Bitch was. 
Does anyone know what a
Bottom-Bitch is? Anyone? 

What’s a Bottom-Bitch, sir? 

"It’s your, uh– 
it’s your prostitute 
that’s the best out 
of all of ’em
that bring in the 
most money."

That’s rightThat’s 
exactly right. 
Are you Black? 

[laughing] 

That’s right
A Bottom-Bitch is a pimp’s 
Number-one Ho. 

She’s even a bitch 
that helps him keep 
the other bitches 
in Line. 

I will repeat

She’s even the bitch 
that helps him 
keep the other 
bitches in line. 


If The Pimp was McDonald’s
then the Bottom-Bitch is 
his French fries. [laughing

The rest of them bitches like 
fish sandwiches and 
cherry pies and 
shit like that. [laughing]

Iceberg Slim breaks down 
some of the coldest 
Capitalist Concepts I’ve 
ever heard in My Life

He describes in detail how
 these men break women so that 
they will give them the money 
that they make with 
their own bodies. 

There’s A Story in here so cold
it makes me shudder 
to think about it -- 
Iceberg Slim is trying to Control 
the woman that 
he finds uncontrollable

So he asks an older pimp how 
he can rein her in. 
And the older pimp says, 
“Oh, that’s easy, Iceberg -- 
All you have to do
is beat that bitch with 
coat-hanger -- and then 
run her a bath -- and 
give her some pills.... 

She’ll be so grateful 
that You Fixed her
that she’ll forget You 
were The Motherfucker 
that beat her in 
the first place.” 

That’s, 
some 
COLD 
SHIT.

Now. At the end of this book, 
Iceberg Slim tells A Story. 
It’s kind of the crescendo 
of the book. 

And in The Story, 
Iceberg Slim’s bottom bitch 
is at the end of her mileage -- 
If she was good for 500 fucks
she was at for 498

[laughing] 

She was bubbling
you could see it.
 She was going crazy. 

She started saying 
all kinds of shit. 
I always wanted to 
be in The Circus.” 

"Circus..!? This bitch 
is losing it.

[laughing

“I can juggle
too, you know?” 

Juggle? 

[laughing] 

He had to let her go. 

It was hard to let a bottom bitch go, 
and he wasn’t ready to let her go, 
because his organisation 
couldn’t handle losing her. 

But she didn’t 
know that. 

She didn’t know how 
important she was. 

So what he did was, he called 
her to ignite her -- 
He said, “Look, bitch, you 
and I got to part ways.” 

She said, 
Fine, motherfucker, I don’t need you anyway, 
because I know somebody at Ringling Brothers.” 

He was like, 
All right, whatever.

[laughing

"I got one last trick for you. 
It’s a big money trick. 
You do this for me, 
You get paid, I get paid, and 
we go our separate ways.” 

She said, 
Fine, motherfucker, what do 
you want me to do?” 

He said, 
“Okay, there’s a guy in that hotel across the street --
He’s waiting for you in room number seven : 
I want you to go over there and fuck him....

But before you do, I need you to 
put some of this stuff in his drink. 
And then he’s gonna fall asleep

When he does
his briefcase on his bed, 
bring the briefcase to me

That’s The Trick, bitch. 
Can you handle it?” 

She said, 
“Fuck yeah, I can. I can’t 
wait to get rid of you.” 

And then she ran outside, 
jumped on a unicycle and 
peddled across the street. 

[laughing

And Iceberg watched her. He’s like, 
“Man, she’s pretty good.” 

[laughing

“If I never jerked off in her face
maybe she would’ve been 
in The Circus, now.” 

[laughing] [laughs]

And she runs up the motel steps and 
disappears in Room number 7. 


She’s gone for a real 
long time. Real long time. 

So long, in fact, that Iceberg got a little worried. 

But then, suddenly, she came back. 

[gasps] 

He says, 
“Where’s the briefcase?” 

She said, 
“I didn’t get it, Daddy.” 

“What do you mean you didn’t? What’s wrong with you?” 

She said, 
“I did everything you said, 
but that man don’t look right -- 
Something Wrong, Daddy.” 

“What do you mean? Did you put that stuff in his drink?” 

“I did everything you said, Daddy, 
I put all of it in his drink.” 

He said, 
“Wait a minute, bitch, you put all of it in his drink?” 

Now he had to see for himself. 

So the two of them go to the motel, and they go into room number seven. 

And on the bed laying lifelessly is the white man that she was supposed to fuck. 

Iceberg said, 
“You right, bitch. He don’t look good. What the fuck?” 

So he called a friend of his that was a doctor that was close by. 
And the doctor came in, gave the guy a thorough examination and told them both what was obvious : 
“Slim, this motherfucker is dead.” 

“Oh, God, Daddy. Oh, no. 
Oh, no. We killed him!” 

He said, 
“Calm down, bitch -- We didn’t do anything

[laughing] 

You killed this motherfucker.” 

And then he reached on the bed and he grabbed the briefcase. 
He popped it open. It was filled with money. 

More than any of them had ever seen

Iceberg took a little bit of the money and gave it to the doctor, 
and the doctor left discreetly. 

“All right, bitch, let me think...

[sighs

I can fix this for you. 

know somebody I can call --
But if I call him, 
I’m gonna owe these motherfuckers a big favor.” 

“Oh, God, Daddy, please. I don’t want to go to jail.” 

“Neither do I, bitch, so you shut up.”

He picked up the phone. She heard him mumbling in the phone a little bit. He hung up the phone, and then she was pacing the room, and he was just standing there cool, and they were waiting and waiting, and then suddenly, a van pulled up downstairs. 

Two guys get out with a carpet. 

They walk upstairs, they roll that carpet out on the floor, they throw the body in the carpet. 

They roll that motherfucker up like a burrito, they pick that shit up, and they throw it in the back of the van. 

They come back up 
and Iceberg opens the briefcase again 
and gives them a little money --

He says, 
“I’ll get in touch with you guys later.” 

They say, 
You’re not going to get in touch with us, we’ll find you.” 

He said, 
“Whatever, n i g g a.” 

And they bounced. 

“Oh, God, Daddy. Oh, God.” 

He says, 
“Relax, bitch. Listen

We getting the fuck out of here. 
You go downstairs and you get the car. 
We gotta leave separately.” 

She went, she got the car. 

Iceberg grabbed that briefcase, waited a few minutes, 
looked out the window, and then he went down with her. 
They both got in the car, and they drove off. 

She was a blubbering mess

“Oh! Oh, we did all this shit!” 

He said, 
“I told you bitch -- We didn’t do anything
You killed the motherfucker
and I cleaned him up
and now we got us a secret. Okay

I know I’m not going to tell, bitch, is you?” 

“Oh, no, I ain’t gonna tell.” 

He said, 
“All right, baby, cool. 
I’m gonna need you 
to stay with me for a while 
till this shit cools down.” 

She goes, 
“Okay, okay. Okay.” 

That’s The Game.

That’s how the whole shit works, ladies. You understand

This bitch was at the end of her mileage. 
She was at for 498, 
she ended up tricking for Iceberg 
for another six months

She must have turned another 200 tricks for him. 

Do you understand? 

That’s some cold shit

And the cold shit about it is, that 
the dead guy on the bed wasn’t even dead at all --
This motherfucker was just 
friend of Iceberg’s, acting like he’s asleep. 

The Doctor wasn’t a Doctor -- 
He was a motherfucking 
butcher that happened to 
have a white coat. 

[laughing

And the dudes who came in 
with the moving van clothes 
was dressed like movers 
because they were movers --

Iceberg had gotten 
a new apartment

[laughing

And the bag of money… 
was Iceberg’s money 
in the first place. 

The money he got from 
all those women. 


That’s a cold game. 
That’s the motherfucking 
Capitalist Manifesto, 
and that’s Why I Went 
to South Africa. 

So now we got us 
a little secret, bitch. 

[laughing]