[Philadelphia, 6/4/13]
On 2/5/22, a reader, Troy, left a comment:
I’ve been living alone in a subsidized apartment on a subsidized pension due to a severe tick born illness. This happened to coincide with COVID, so it’s been weird to say the least. I’ve never experienced this much isolation before and have always considered myself a loner. At times, this is flat out neurological torture and I can feel the lack of personal interaction to my core. I’m blessed to recognize this. I don’t have a t.v. and have recovered enough to walk again in order to relax and think better. I’d rather be back in a shelter with other men than alone in this apartment. The isolation is killing me and I know it.
JustPlainBill responded:
I, too, always considered myself a bit of a loner, and at work I interacted with people all day long for most of my career. But then I retired, a couple of years before COVID began, and although I had some time to get used to having far fewer people around, the difference now is stark. I used to laugh at people who went back to meaningless jobs just because they couldn’t stand being at home, and couldn’t wait to get away from the workaday world. But although I’ve never been even a little bit tempted to go back to work, I now I understand a lot better why some might feel that way.
I’d say most Americans know all too well that predicament. They are among the loneliest people on earth.
When I moved to Philadelphia in 1982, just shy of my 19th birthday, I noticed personal ads for the first time. Like any young prick still vain enough to think he’ll never sink that low, I thought they were amusing, but listen, dumbshit, there’s always another subbasement with your name stenciled on a dark, corner bunk with a stone hard pillow, so go ahead and laugh!
In the City Paper and Welcomat, nearly all the lonely hearts were above 40. Gradually, though, the ages dipped, and the ads became much more numerous, so that, by 2005 or so, there were 21-year-old men and women advertising for companionship, and these weren’t tinder type sex ads. Sick of doing everything alone, the untouched and unlooked at sufferers just wanted anyone to adore and laugh with, if only for a season.
In Philly, I had an apartment in a rather grim rowhouse. Thousands were cheaply built in the early decades of the 20th century, to absorb immigrants from Europe. My two windows looked into a small concrete courtyard that had a BMW belonging to the owner’s son, Elio, who lived in the next building.
Unlike his younger brother, Elio didn’t have a job. Tall, good looking and with a thick enough wallet, he had a girlfriend but no social life to speak of. I never saw Elio on the sidewalks or inside any neighborhood bar, Ray’s Happy Birthday, The Dive or Friendly, etc.
What’s most telling, though, is that Elio’s BMW was nearly always there. Instead of driving it around, he merely washed his baby, a loving ritual which killed hours at a time. All those hard gleaming curves demanded endless foreplay. Hearing water, I’d look out to see Elio with his hose and rag at, say, 2PM, and by 6PM, he was still there, I kid you not, to dreamily buff his BMW.
Otherwise, Elio was lost in his room, to stare at a screen, we can assume, for what else was there to do? Porn and combat games likely drained his days. I seriously doubt Elio read. He just seemed too vapid. With hardly any life experience, Elio was basically a boy, so to mask this, he always deepened his voice to utter his trivia. “I don’t think the Eagles will go very far this year” or “The Sixers need a new center.” Each time his girlfriend, Gina, returned from a shopping trip, Elio couldn’t even bother to help her carry all those bags to the second floor.
Voluntarily, he had screened himself out of life. With so much genital variety online, his lovely girlfriend became a ghost, and an annoying one at that, for she often interrupted his pixelated lovemaking. Sharing them with millions of other oglers, he’s virtually dating a Thai, Ukrainian, Colombian and Congolese, most likely. Tipping them mere coins, he activated their lovesense knobs.
In the same courtyard, there was another man driven insane by loneliness. Appearing usually at night, he was dressed like Tarzan, with a homemade loincloth. Around thirty years old, he had a crew cut, five o’clock shadow and was in pretty good shape, so no beer belly or any flab. With three three-story buildings looming over him, there were at least a dozen windows staring down, and that was the thrill. Lit by amber lights, he could be seen clearly enough. Nervously looking up, especially at bright windows, he would lift his loincloth just enough to show bits of pubic hair or, turning around, his buttocks, which he seemed particularly fond or proud of, for he would torque his body to admire them himself.
Responding to Troy’s comment, I said, “It’s heartbreaking to read about Troy’s isolation, but even before Covid, Americans were lonely enough. James Howard Kunstler talks about how badly laid out American cities and towns are, with almost no spaces for casual interactions or just loitering, so one can watch others without having to buy anything. In many parts of New Jersey, the parking lot of the local Wawa convenience store has become a de facto town square. A woman told me she wouldn’t even think of moving anywhere without a Wawa nearby! There are walking clubs that meet in shopping malls, but you have to drive there, then walk across a vast parking lot just to enter a charmless space filled with chain stores.”
Emailing me, Troy confided, “I was staring at a wall, wanting to be anywhere else, at the tail end of an alcoholic stupor in July of 2008 when I thought, ‘Hey there’s a war going on, I bet they’ll take me.’ Of course they did. I was in Ft. Knox, Kentucky within three weeks.”
I responded, “I understand perfectly that feeling of being trapped, with no decent job available, especially one suitable for a man.” Nearly all the factories are gone, and sweaty jobs such as house painting, roofing, plumbing and kitchen work, etc., increasingly go to illegal immigrants, of which there is an endless supply. Even legal immigrants are priced out, for they, too, must maintain a family, and not live five to a room. “Socially, there’s nothing to do but sit in a bar, but it’s expensive, and you can’t even talk much, with the loud music and several TVs on at the same time. For a young man with little money, a crappy job and few experiences beyond his small town or city neighborhood, enlistment to go overseas doesn’t sound too bad.”
Bored to death, Troy signed up to kill or be killed, just to have a life of any kind. In no time, he was a gunner on convoys in Afghanistan, “It was the best summer of my life. I hated it at moments but knew for certain that it would be a ‘peak experience (ugh)’ in comparison to my provincial American reality which can suffocate me if I let it. I never fired a shot in anger and am truly grateful for that. I simply tell people that I was a ‘tourist with a machinegun’ and that it was a beautiful country. Both true.”
In too many countries, American tourists with assault rifles and machineguns have far outnumbered those with just a camera. 775,000 American troops “served” in Afghanistan, and we’re not even counting the private “contractors.” 1.5 million Americans “served” in Iraq. Though Americans gripe often about unwanted or dangerous illegal immigrants, they should remember that their country is, by far, the biggest source of illegally lethal visitors.
What Troy did, thousands of others have just done in Ukraine. On 3/6/22, Kiev announced that +20,000 people from 52 countries have volunteered to fight for Ukraine. Around a thousand were training in Yavoriv on 3/13/22 when 30 Russian missiles struck, killing “up to 180 foreign mercenaries,” according to Moscow, or just 36 Ukrainians and no foreigners, according to Kiev. Adding to the confusion, The Mirror stated three Brits had died, and the Austrian Heute quoted a German who claimed there were no survivors among the +100 foreigners in a blown apart building.
Seeing charred and mangled corpses of so many nationalities so soon after arrival, most surviving legionnaires are trying to flee Ukraine in terror, it is said, but are prevented from doing so, for they ain’t done nothing yet. So far, their war experiences have consisted of some cool selfies, posted on Instagram, then, just like that, a series of pants soiling explosions, so rude, just as dawn was breaking.
Away from bullets and bombs, Troy has returned to his solitary confinement, in a country increasingly isolated from the rest of the world through its serial criminality. Two days ago, Troy sent me a dark photo of a parking lot, with two dumpsters at its edge. Since it’s still winter, most trees are barren, though there are some brown leaves on the scraggly lawn. Behind indigo clouds, a feeble sun sinks.
“May have a chance to plant tomatoes this spring,” Troy explains. “Time under the sky is where it’s at.”
8 comments:
Hi everybody,
For several days, I was very listless. This morning, I felt more together so started this piece around 5:40AM. By 10:27AM, I was done.
After lunch and some rest, I had the vaguest suspicion I had written about Elio and Tarzan man before, so I checked. Sure enough, I had mentioned Elio in two articles, in 2017 and 2019, and Tarzan man in that same 2019 piece. Talk about senility.
Their portraits here are most fleshed out, however, so it's not a total waste of time to be reintroduced to them, should you remember the other pieces.
In those other articles, Elio has an assumed name, and his car is a Porsche instead of a BMW, but all other details are the same. In all these cases, I was trying to get the facts right, but the mind sometimes slips.
In Down and Out in Paris and London, Orwell writes, "Mr Maugham describes a high Chinese official arriving at a wayside inn and blustering and calling everybody names in order to impress upon them that he is a supreme dignitary and they are only worms. Five minutes later, having asserted his dignity in the way he thinks proper, he is eating his dinner in perfect amity with the baggage coolies."
Orwell is clearly recalling the Maugham passage from memory, because several minor details are off. Maugham, "An hour later I went into the yard to stretch my legs for five minutes before going to bed and somewhat to my surprise, I came upon the stout official, a little while ago so pompous and self-important, seated at a table in the front of the inn with the most ragged of my coolies. They were chatting amicably and the official quietly smoked a water-pipe. He had made all that to-do to give himself face, but having achieved his object was satisfied, and feeling the need of conversation had accepted the company of any coolie without a thought of social distinction."
So it was an hour instead of five minutes, one coolie instead of several and they weren't eating dinner. Still, Orwell is essentially faithful to Maugham, and his point is valid.
Well, let's hope I won't describe these two characters again. Don King the boxing promoter said, "If you can count your money, you ain't got none." Similarly, if you can remember even the titles of everything you've written, you ain't written nuttin'.
Recently, I ran into an Isabelle Pelaud passage analyzing two of my stories, "555" and "Hope and Standard," from my collection, Fake House. I remembered "555," but the other title didn't ring any bell. Once or twice, I was shown a poem I didn't even recognize was mine.
Anyway, my mind should get a much needed recharge soon, for I'll finally go back to Vietnam in early April. The country has just opened its borders to the unvaccinated. Already, I can see myself downing a few Tigers with poets Nguyen Quoc Chanh and Lynh Bacardi in Vung Tau, and no, that's not her real name!
Linh
Glad to hear you’re returning to Vietnam. I hope you have a happy reunion with Suki and with all your compañeros too. To your health and wellbeing!
You've given us a window into the world we 'mericans rarely get to see in our blinkered and poison media, and I am grateful to you for that. Your writing and photography are truly for the ages.
Wishing you unalloyed joy when you return home.
You can go home again.
I thought that American Isolation was excellent. I tried to post a link to it on The Saker, but it came back page could not be found. I'm not very good with poking on a tablet.
Anyway thesaker.is has a moderated comment section and apparently it was accepted but without pursing the postcards from the end... hint, it would not show up.
They have featured Coach Red Pilla couple of times, but you beat them to that link by a week or more. American Isolation should be featured on their home page. "Tourist with a machine gun" hits the nail on the head.
Looking forward to you return to Vietnam.
I did remember you mentioning Tarzan man before. I was nonetheless very glad to read this piece, another wonderful article, Linh. "James Howard Kunstler talks about how badly laid out American cities and towns are, with almost no spaces for casual interactions or just loitering, so one can watch others without having to buy anything" -- Do you know in which book of his he talks about the above?
Thanks!
S.
ain't thought about down and out in paris and london since i read it perhaps forty or more years ago. good book about being a low level kitchen employee among other things as i was in a kitchen at the time. as for repeating your subjects i seem to remember famous french painters that painted the same scene in different ways many times, so it goes. good on you for returning to the scene of your beginnings. have some pho for us.
Hi everybody,
Here's the beginning of chapter 1 of Kunstler's classic, The Geography of Nowhere:
There is a marvelous moment in the hit movie “Who Framed Roger Rabbit?” that sums up our present national predicament very nicely. The story is set in Los Angeles in 1947. The scene is a dreary warehouse, headquarters of the villain, Judge Doom, a cartoon character masquerading as a human being. The hallucinatory plot hinges on Judge Doom’s evil scheme to sell off the city’s streetcar system and to create just such a futuristic car-crazed society as Americans actually live and work in today.
“It’s a construction plan of epic proportions,” he intones. “They’re calling it [portentous pause] a freeway! Eight lanes of shimmering cement running from here to Pasadena! I see a place where people get on and off the freeway, off and on, off and on, all day and all night. . . . I see a street of gas stations, inexpensive motels, restaurants that serve rapidly prepared food, tire salons, automobile dealerships, and wonderful, wonderful billboards as far as the eye can see. My god, it’ll be beautiful!”
In short order, Judge Doom is unmasked for the nonhuman scoundrel he is, dissolved by a blast of caustic chemical, and flushed into the Los Angeles sewer system, while the rest of the cute little cartoon creatures hippity-hop happily into the artificial sunset.
“That lamebrain freeway idea could only be cooked up by a ‘toon,” comments the movie’s gumshoe hero, Eddie Valiant, afterward.
The audience sadly knows better. In the real world, Judge Doom’s vision has prevailed and we are stuck with it. Yet the movie’s central metaphor— that our civilization has been undone by an evil cartoon ethos— could not be more pertinent, for more and more we appear to be a nation of overfed clowns living in a hostile cartoon environment.
Thirty years ago, Lewis Mumford said of post-World II development, “the end product is an encapsulated life, spent more and more either in a motor car or within the cabin of darkness before a television set.” The whole wicked, sprawling, megalopolitan mess, he gloomily predicted, would completely demoralize mankind and lead to nuclear holocaust.
OK, I have to go lie down. I'm just exhausted. I usually get up before dawn, but today, I didn't even eat breakfast until 10:30AM.
Linh
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