Category: hmmm

  • No, I’ve never woken up with a leg in my mouth.

    Are markets jealous of supermarkets?

    Why does forehead size vary so much?

    Why do some places think I need a lady in the bathroom to hand me a towel? I’ve managed to get my own towels for years.

    When do ‘grown ups’ become ‘adults’?

    Remember virginity?

    How many times have I digested a waiter’s spit?

    Do we really eat ten spiders a year? I don’t believe it anymore. Wouldn’t we at least wake up with a leg or something in our mouths sometimes?

    Why do people think it’s cute to put their kids on the phone? It’s a tad awkward. Me and your kids don’t have much in common.

    Why does everyone praise Mother Theresa? It’s not like it’s HARD to help someone who is really poor and hungry.

    What is it about that one shirt that makes my boobs look big?

    Why do they continue to make porn with plots?

    Why do they still sell newspapers in that little box vending machine thing? Who carries around six quarters for the occasional paper?

    Why didn’t I get born as Natalie Portman?

    What is cottage cheese and why does it look like a popcorn ceiling?

    Do women who shave off their eyebrows and pencil them in again think they’re fooling anyone?

    Does my breath smell like cat food? Does it? Does it? You’d tell me, right?

    Why do they even make pans that are not non-stick?

    Qaddafi, Kaddafi? Gaddafi? Come on! Which is it? How does HE spell it? Why hasn’t anyone asked HIM? What does his Facebook say? How can we bomb someone who is not even our Facebook friend?

    Why don’t you read more questions here?

  • Happy Friday, Uncle Jesse

    Yesterday was St. Patricks Day, my least favorite holiday because I don’t care if you’re Irish and I don’t like when drunk people pee in my bushes. That is not a euphemism. It has happened before. I yelled at this drunk gangbanger for peeing on my apartment door, and his friends just mocked me like I was some old substitute teacher they could treat like shit because they figured she wouldn’t know how to give them detentions. Remember when getting in trouble was cool? I had crushes on all the boys who got detentions. I think that says something about my relationship pattern, but let’s not go into that today. Today is Friday! Hoo. Ray. TGIF. Remember when Fridays were about watching dumb TV shows? Remember when the Beach Boys were on Full House? That Friday used to be the standard to which I held any other Friday. Then Fridays started to mean fake IDs and alcohol. Once I tried to get drunk off Vermouth. Don’t try that. It’s a waste of money even though Vermouth is the cheapest alcohol on the shelf. I love a good alcohol bargain. Actually, I don’t love alcohol; I just love bargains. Actually, I just love love. Love! I tried to tell lots of people I loved them this week. And lots of people told me they loved me this week. My friend, Rahul, even wrote a blog about his love for me. What?!! I feel so special. Sometimes I think we use the word ‘love’ too freely when we say, “Oh my God. I love your shirt.” But I think it’s great to use it freely with people. Because that’s what humans do. We love. Why not? So, I’ve been crying good tears this week, not many more tears about death because I’m so over death. It comes and goes just like fashion. What’s with runway shows? Do those models know they look ridiculous? I don’t have one pair of jeans that is not of the skinny variety. I thought I would never wear skinny jeans, but I actually love the fact that women are now showing off their shapely curves or non curves. Let’s celebrate our bodies, whatever they may look like! Let’s love them even if they’re weird and get dry in the winter and grow random hairs in weird places. Not that I have a body that grows weird hairs. Well, I did. But then I got this at-home laser hair removal device that is supposed to get rid of every hair, but I can’t help but think that shooting a laser beam into your skin over and over and over again could possibly cause some cancer.  There I go being morbid again. Ugh. I’m going to think about a rainbow or a starfish or a baby next time instead. Starfish seem so relaxed. Babies, not so much. They’re fussy. And weird when they just come out. They’re much cuter when they’re cleaned off and free of womb juice. Womb juice! That’s a good name for a perfume, right? A perfume for hippies. I’m on it. So many good ideas lately. I better quit while I’m ahead. Not that I’m really a head. I’ve got a whole body too. Get it? Get it? LOVE YOU!

  • Life!


    This blog has been about death for weeks. Come on! Let’s talk about life. Because we’re alive. Life is precious. Life is beautiful. Life is a cereal. Cereal is for breakfast. I love savoring a hot beverage in the morning. The steam wakes me up. Reminds me that I’m alive. Life! Life goes on. Remember that show? That show was Chad Lowe at his best. I wanted to sleep with him even though he had HIV. Maybe this is a pattern. Maybe I should date people with HIV. Or Down’s Syndrome. That show really put Down Syndrome actors on the map, and there needs to be another show soon that does that. Oh, but there really aren’t many TV shows anymore. Just reality shows. And that might be a hard sell. Although I feel like TLC would do it. It would be called Ups and Downs. Do they already have that? Maybe they do. I’m lost without my TV. I just stream The Bachelor when I don’t feel like thinking about anything, which is sometimes a lot of times. I also like to eat olives. Olives are small explosions of flavor, and I can’t live without them. But I didn’t like them until I was 25. I am quite troubled by the fact that I missed out on such salty sliminess for all those years. I refused to try them because they looked ugly. And it took me 25 years to learn. That’s what scares me about having kids. They’re going to say that they don’t want to try something and I’m going to know it’s really great and they’re not going to figure out until 25 years go by and I’ll have to be patient for all that time. Being a parent just seems like a lot of waiting. And a lot of answering questions. I wonder if my kids will ask me what it was like when there were places like Japan or California because those places won’t be around when I finally have kids in 100 years. I also wonder if we as a human race will figure out how to live underwater one day or if we’ll just collectively say, ‘Hey, let’s just not be a species anymore. It’s too hard trying to be like Kevin Kostner.’ Oh shit, now I’m talking about death again. Maybe I’m just morbid. Maybe it’s because I just read that Nate Dogg died. Even though I know every single word to his ‘Regulator’ song, we weren’t close. So, I won’t be writing some sad tribute to him here. Although that song did mean a lot to me in the nineties. Mount up. I mean, it’s sad that he died because he’s just gone suddenly but he did write a song about shooting a bunch of people, so you can’t feel that bad. But he might have changed since the nineties. I did. Thank heaven. For 7-11. Slurpees totally gross me out now. They were for times pre-olive. My palate is ever-changing as I grow older and get closer to death. Life!

  • Fuck you, weather

    In the grand scheme of time, Mike DeStefano and I merely passed through each other’s lives. Still, this man had a profound effect on my life, my life’s purpose, and everything I want to be. I’m not just saying that because that’s what happens when somebody dies– we make the dead guy seem grander than they were. No way. This guy was grand. A whisper from him was so loud. And he whispered that I was somebody and that I can do anything. He believed in me. And coming from a guy who was sharing his story honestly and making a living at it, that meant more than anything. And I never told him.

    Regret. Regret. Regret.

    Hoping that a major part of purgatory and/or dying and/or afterlife is blog reading, I’m saying it here. Everything I’m so grateful to have learned from Mike DeStefano:

    Before his death:
    1. If your first conversation is about the moment you decide to commit suicide and how it actually makes you happy because it’s clarifying and definitive, there’s really no need to ever talk about the weather. It now seems pretty pointless to talk about the weather with anyone. Why not just have meaningful honest communication? So what if it’s just someone you met in the elevator? Tell him about your alcoholic dad. Do it. Fuck weather. Or traffic. Or fart jokes. (Poo jokes an occasional exception).

    2. There is humor in absolutely everything. Even AIDS. Because Humans are Funny. I knew that before, but it’s nice that Mike confirmed it for me.

    3. When my dad killed himself, I thought him a coward. He was faced with a fork in the road, both paths seemingly helpless dead ends. He didn’t feel up to finding the magic key that would reveal another option. He just gave up. I always figured that was a conscious choice he’d made. He could have chosen to live and figure life out. For years I wondered why he didn’t just make a different choice, but part of me thought that was just my idealism speaking. Mike proved to me that it was possible: He had a Comedy Central special. And before that he was a drug counselor. And before that he was a drug addict. And before that, he was twelve (one of his jokes). He said, “Life is brutal at times. But not only can you survive it, you can turn it into something pretty cool.” And he did. And my dad didn’t. But I will.

    5. We also have another conscious choice: Do we make an impact on everyone we meet or do we remain forgettable?

    4. I’m so happy that I have suffered. Suffering makes the rest of life seem beautiful. Suffering takes the pain out of parking tickets and little things. Suffering is what makes us all the same.

    5. Acceptance. Unattachment. It’s all possible, which is great because wanting someone to change for you is much more painful than accepting them. Even if he thought you were a douche hack comic, he wanted you to be better. Even if he saw that you just wanted to talk about weather, he knew you’d figure it out eventually. He was judgmental in his jokes only to make people more aware. When speaking at an NA meeting, he said “There’s nobody in this room that can’t achieve anything they want to achieve– unless you’re thinking of becoming a pro ball player or a stripper. Don’t be retarded about it.”

    6. There’s something very sweet about a guy with a Bronx accent calling you a cunt.

    7. I really don’t hate the word ‘cunt.’ It’s just a four-letter word. Why do we give it so much power? Why does the majority get so offended over so many things? Get over it. Go have an ice cream sandwich.

    What I learned from Mike’s death:

    1. Don’t fucking wait. How many times have we learned this lesson? I didn’t tell him how much he meant to me because I figured I would tell him later. Thanks a lot, later. You really fucked me.

    2. Don’t assume. I just assumed Mike would be in my life. Assumed he would be so proud of Taboo Tales and would want to publish a story in the anthology. Assumed I would see him in NY one day. Assumed he would help me get an agent so that I could travel around to colleges and talk people out of suicide (his idea and I love it). All of those assumptions were wrong. I fucking made an ass out of you and me. Dammit.

    3. Assumptions are what makes death hurt more. Because now I have to re-imagine all those events.

    4. I have a new respect for Facebook. It really helped me grieve when I could see so many others also in pain. Misery loves company? No, misery loves Facebook.

    5. Mike had just put on his one man show, ‘Drugs, Death, and Disease: A Comedy.’ He spent one hour on stage talking about his life and deep meaningful issues, things he learned from suffering. Issues that weren’t fighting with fart jokes to get laughs in comedy clubs. Issues that deserved a stage and an open audience. He said to his producer after the show, “I’ve said everything I’ve ever wanted to say.” He was done. He no longer needed to be on earth. How many of us can say that? How many of us can say that we’ve squeezed every bit of ourselves out? How many of us has squeezed the juice out of all our relationships? How many of us really take advantage and not for granted?

    6. I am so grateful for the community here on this blog. Thank you very much for virtually holding me in your arms.

    7. All comedians die early. Fuck. Was just about to start doing more stand-up. Next up: Zach Galifinakis. I feel it.

    8. You can fall more and more in love with a person even after they die. Watch this short film:


    And if you really want to know even more, this link leads to the entire story.

    “When you give, it’s the only time you can see that you have anything…  Me being alive is a very improbable thing. Of course I give to people. I’m happy to be alive.” -Mike DeStefano

  • I really hope it’s true that when we die we become unicorns because today my friend died.

    You know when someone dies and there’s that weird transitional period where you’re not quite comfortable using the past tense to describe that person? That’s where I am right now.

    Fuck.
    I don’t want to say he WAS an amazing person. That’s what you say about people who weren’t amazing.

    But this guy is. Was. And his surprise death helped me figure out why we fear dying so much. I think it’s because love is real and it’s the best thing we have.  And it fucking hurts when it’s gone. Suddenly. One moment: love. Another moment: half of love.

    That’s why we fear death.
    That’s why I already miss my friend, Mike DeStefano.

    I met him two years ago.
    I was stuffed in some office cubicle at some horrible advertising job. His story came on the Moth podcast. This very one:

    You should make the time to listen to it because his writing is so honest and real and you’ll cry. Big, fat, lovable tears. If you don’t listen to his story, I’ll tell you the scoop: He and his wife did a lot of heroin years ago. So much so that they got HIV. She got sick. And he devoted his life to taking care of her. But she died and then his dad died and then he wanted to die. And, man, I’m not doing his story justice. Just fucking watch it. He was ready to commit suicide when he ran into this Tibetan monk who taught him meditation. And he turned to telling jokes and getting his story out, and he was probably the original Taboo Taler.

    And there I was in that cubicle trying to write some shitty ads for some shitty bank and instead I just sat there stunned and firing off tears. And so I emailed him. I told him he was inspiring. And that I was happy he didn’t commit suicide because the world needed people like him to tell stories like his. And he emailed me right back.

    And we talked a lot. And he told me I needed to tell my stories too. And he read this blog. And he supported me. And he tried to connect me to all the right people. And he told me that I wasn’t cut out for a cubicle job. And that meant the world to me. And I felt like he could see me. I felt like I had someone in my corner.

    Mike was the only person who could call you a cunty whore without being offensive. He’s the only person who I didn’t make fun of for NEVER using the correct ‘your’ or ‘there.’ Seriously, he could not get that shit right. But I totally fucking accepted him. And he accepted me. And we were just two fucked up people sitting across from each other at dinner and that’s how we liked it. Sometimes there’s nothing better than being with someone else who is just as fucked as you are. I just felt calm with him. I felt safe. He was my lama, and he took all the pain away and made me feel normal and loved. And I asked myself if I could marry someone with HIV. That bastard seriously made me contemplate some deep shit.

    Everyone who ever met Mike probably shed some tears today. He made us all feel like he woke up in the morning just for us. He’s not crying. But here we are eating pizza in bed and feeling sad for ourselves because we won’t get to see him again. Grieving seems so selfish to me sometimes.

    In this case, I think grieving is more than that. So much of me is devastated that his message didn’t get to more people, that more people didn’t have the privilege of learning from him. But I think it got to enough. I think he figured out how to really make his life mean something. He didn’t have to. He could have gotten depressed and overdosed or gone crazy from all the pain he witnessed. But he chose not to. He chose to help people instead.

    If you haven’t already, learn something from his story. Listen to his jokes. Buy his CD from iTunes. Here are some of my favorite DeStefano quotes:

    “I went into a Chinese restaurant. They had a suggestion box so I wrote: FREE TIBET.”

    “I take something that I find interesting. And it’s usually something that’s painful, that people find revolting, that has hurt me personally or I see hurting other people. And I’ll go up [on stage] and I’ll just bring it up. And it’s such a thrill to find the funny in it.”
    See why he was my mentor?

    On National Pride:
    “It’s so stupid the shit we’re proud of. You know how you came to be, sir? Your parents fucked. That’s how it happened. There’s nothing to be proud of. For any of us. Your parents had sex. And your dad wanted a blow job that night. How’s that feel? You’re just a blow job that got out of hand.

    “People think I’m dark. I think you’re too light. That’s the fucking problem. Too much fake fucking optimism. Fake fucking positive thoughts. Positive affirmations. Fuck you. You’re so full of shit, man. I just want people to know that I know. Fuck you.”

    “People who are scared of commitment. They’re good people. That means they know what commitment is.”

    On his censoring on NBC:
    “It’s not NBC’s fault. It’s the American people, all these litigious people… All you people that want to sue all the time because your feelings got hurt. You fucking weak, pathetic, fucks. I’m gonna write a letter. It’s all white people too.”

    “I love people who are aware of how fucked up life is.”

    “I start from suffering and darkness because that’s what needs to be made light of.”

    “If a comic starts off a joke with ‘Isn’t it funny when…,’ they’ve already lost me. If it’s already funny, what the fuck do I need you for?”

    Mikey D… A fucking heart attack? Really? You survived HIV and heroin and that’s how you go? You’re a fucking pussy.
    You know what else, you fucking whore? Thanks for living as long as you did, long enough to touch so many lives with so much of the positivity you pretended not to have. I fucking love you.  And I still do and there’s no way I’m switching to past tense on that one.

    *The F word and all its variations in this post sponsored by Mike DeStefano.