Thursday, October 7, 2010

friend of bill


"ok, mike--ease it out like i showed you, reeeeeeal easy."

my first driving lesson. i'm 14, nervously hunched behind the wheel of bill's spotless '68 impala coupe which was [unfortunately] equipped with a three-on-the-tree.

instead of easing it out, i pop the clutch, the car flies backwards outta the driveway and across the street, bounces over the curb and mows down a grove of tender saplings in the neighbor's yard before coming to a stop.  i cringe, await the inevitable.

bill's response:  "hmm...maybe i shoulda backed her out for you."

any wonder i loved the guy?

my mother never remarried, but of the two men she dated seriously after my father's death, bill was the first, and by far my favorite.  a special agent for the IRS [i.e., the gun-carrying kind], bill was suave, smart, easygoing and funny as hell. oh, and he got me.

for our second driving lesson, bill took me out in the country in his old chevy pickup, drove up to a big tree, popped the clutch and slammed into it, turned to me and said, "see? you can't hurt this one."

great as he might've been in my young eyes, bill was a tortured soul. he'd recently left his bible-banging frigid wife after twenty years of misery but he couldn't get past leaving his kids, and it ate at him.

so he drank.

at first it was innocuous.  he'd pull into the driveway in that impala and get out holding a can or a glass--if it was something new, i'd ask for a taste and he'd usually indulge me.  the alcohol didn't seem to affect him much; if anything, it enhanced the dry, sardonic aspect of his personality i loved so much.

problem was, bill's problem, as it usually does, got worse.

one sunday shortly after the driving-lesson fiasco, bill, my mother, siblings and i go walking around downtown after a movie and end up at the local pontiac dealership bill watches in bemusement as we all go apeshit over the grand prix featured on the showroom floor.

the next day, there's a honk in our driveway and we walk out to find the impala's gone and bill's waving out the window of his new car.



any wonder i loved the guy?


of course i probably wouldn't have been nearly as enthusiastic about said new car had i known then that one late night a couple months later he'd use it to attempt to kill my mother and himself by drunkenly and at insanely high speeds running every red light in town when she picked the wrong moment to try and break it off with him.

how did it finally end?  with me taking the phone away from my mother one day after school and telling bill's by-then irredeemably drunken ass, "don't call here again--it's time for you to go away and leave us alone."

to his credit, he did just that:  took early retirement, crawled off to dallas and drank until he died.

i remember the day--we got the call, my mother broke down and i turned to stone.

*     *     *     *     *

there was my uncle huby before him, my uncle don after him, my mother's friend billie and her new husband fred--and, of course, the club.  object lessons all to young mike of the pitfalls of alcohol.

and they stuck for a long time--i got drunk exactly once in high school.  at college parties, i'd have one or two to be sociable.  when in my mid-thirties i finally came out and hit the bars, i'd buy a drink and carry it around all night just to have something in my hand.

why i waited this long to go from basic teetotaler to falling-down-drunk in five short years has already been dealt with in this blog--mostly pseudo-lightheartedly, 'cause god knows i didn't wanna scare my readers.

now that this blog is dead and i no longer have readers,  i can of course write whatever the fuck i want.

*     *     *     *     *

after four years, v and i hit our first rough patch this summer and our relationship folded like the cheap card table it apparently was.

i miss him every day, and can only hope that's what he really wanted.

*     *     *     *     *

invited myself over to kenny's the other night, asked him what was new in his life--it had been awhile.  he didn't disappoint.  eyes shining, he regaled me with tales of his recent trip to central america volunteering for doctors without borders, among all sorts of other gloriously selfless shit.

when he was done, he asked me what's new in my life, and i told him the truth.

he then tells me what i knew he would, which--fuck the sex, i realize later--is why i'm there.

i protest.  i'm not like him--i'm not warm, i don't do groups, i hate people and people hate me, i don't have charisma and i can't hold an audience in the palm of my hand like i've seen him do--i'm not like kenny, i'm not like anybody.

he looks me in the eye, says it again: "90 meetings in 90 days, mike.  you do it, i promise you'll come across someone who's story's just like yours, and when it happens it'll change you just like it did me.  i wouldn't have the life i have now if i hadn't done it, and you can do it, too."

yeah?  i'll have to drink on that one.

_________________
sober update: somebody asked me why my memories of people are always wrapped up with cars.  i dunno, they just are.

5 comments:

Will said...

The you "no longer have readers" part isn't true, at not in this quarter.

I came out of a fucked up family (I know, what family isn't? -- but some guys get to grow up in less fucked up families than others); my mother, her two sisters and their mother were all alcoholics.

When after all but the younger sister were gone and my father had married HER, she became reclusive and succumbed to alcohol after my father's death (he had no addictions but was extremely comfortable with, and manipulative of, those of others). I got her into detox, the half-way house, and the final month in a rural facility. She never drank again. In the final exit interview she revealed that all of her uncles also had drinking problems -- the greatest validation of a genetic disposition I have ever heard.

She didn't get all of her health back but she did get several extra years to enjoy my two adopted daughters whom she dearly loved, and her view of life changed from largely negative to much more positive.

As to the cars, they are the great American symbol of personal freedom, possibilities, and image, no?

Karliiiiita said...

wow! you really got a nice blog here:))
I've read some of your posts, Only the best:)

try to visit my blog too..
much love♥♥

noblesavage said...

Oh, an MKF feeling sorry for himself post.

If you will remember, when we were roomies, I got on this AA kick. It was kind of odd, because I've never been much of an addict -- or compulsive about much of anything.

But, I felt that AA was one of the few places where the people were so real and honest about their lives as they were, versus how they wanted them to be. I found it then a powerful model for anyone in life. I still do.

I'm not saying 12 step programs are as successful in getting addicts clean. But, that's really never been my focus.

I think the model is all about getting myself honest about my true place in this world and the same for everyone else alive honest.

If I may, you know what you are missing in life, you just never appreciate what you have. For all of your anhedonia, you also have the ability to be ruthlessly honest about yourself and others without fantasy, delusion, or sentimentality. This is a gift far more valuable than you have ever valued it.

mkf said...

will: wow--i wish i had genetics to blame, but alcoholism in my family (both sides) is pretty rare.

noblesavage: i was gonna tell you how much i'd missed your comments--and then i started reading this one ;)

judi said...

but you've got a really nice blog, Mikey. I know, 'cause I've read some of your posts - only the best. ;)

:::shrug:::

I adore you, but it's probably because we're both vodka drinkin' whores.

and as a random aside (you know I have to insert all things Austin as often as possible), I finally made it to Zilker Park this weekend (for Austin City Limits). Each time I venture out of Cedar Park and into Austin I fall a little more in love with the city.