If truth be told, I write – albeit unpublishable atrocities not suitable for your garden variety traveler or overt homosexual - nonetheless it is what it is. And this wayward literary existence has seized a horrendous foothold on the old mental state. I attain few contacts with the world nowadays. The expats here – drunken, misplaced, long-winded – voice opinions on what I should do. How I should live my life. I smile, I agree while watching the taco vendor strain past with his wobbly, splintered cart of decomposed food that will kill a stray dog two hours later. It being apparent I don’t give a flying fuck what my constituent’s tiresome opinions be.
Who are these people? Who are they? Why
do they consider themselves the fountainheads of virtue and righteousness? They
dwell in shanty adobes hidden in tenuous barrios; row upon row of decrepit concrete dwellings – in a vain attempt to one up one another
with the I Lived Longer In Mexico So I Know More Than You About Mexico routines - and yet, they feel it necessary to judge
me?
Sigh.
So I find myself hunkered down at this café
on a bright, warm February afternoon writing infuriating, dismal prose
regarding my current state in painful detail. It genuinely put me in a funk. In
truth, I should be out with friends drinking and enjoying this fine day. William
S. Burroughs once revealed to his son in a letter that the life of a writer was
a solitary one. Old junkie sure wasn’t talkin’ outta his ass, you dig?
I will never live up to the image I have
nourished of myself - an unkempt man exhausting his days in a dimly lit room,
surrounded by dusty books spotted in roach droppings and empty bottles of
tequila, putting fantastic narratives to paper and drinking black coffee with a
burnt-out cigarette sagging listlessly on his scowling lip. That dream, I
should believe, is dead. All dead. There is nothing left to do but go through
that dream’s pockets and look for loose change.
Still, that’s no reason to stop.
A distinct wave of melancholy wracked my
form. I was drowning in depression and under that fucking shattering
blue sky of Mexico. From my café table in the Plaza, I watched as the boys and locals passed - this was it...nothing beyond. A Dead End
Void. And that menacing void in every casual face.
“Go for a walk.” I mumbled.
I retrieved a twenty peso note out of my
pants pocket and pay the jovencito for my breakfast; strolled out of the Plaza
lighting a cigarette - the way was strewn with used condoms and empty
prescription bottles in the glaring sun. High adobe walls honeycombed by unheated apartment
cubicles and cafés, some a few feet deep, others extending out of sight in a
maze of dirty restaurants and dank corridors splashed with the faded candy
color of dusty trinkets and curios.
An entire block of malignant female
prostitutes lined shoulder to shoulder grabbing and goosing as I walked by.
“Psst. Psst.”
“Wanna fuck, meester?”
“Twenny dallah make you hallah.”
“Watch me fuck my brother?”
“Plo chob?”
Occasionally hassled by intimidating,
tattooed covered cholos asking if I needed to score any heroin or crystal or
guided to that special farmacia that sells whatever I am looking for.
“Doubt it.” I muttered and moved on.
Did a loop-de-loo and found myself
syphoned into Bar Ranchero. Bottom floor empty save for several tired looking
old fags and an overweight transvestite who tottered drunkenly on glittering
cha-cha heels. Sat at the bar, boy-whore in white jeans stood on the other end
of the bar, kept eyeing me and rubbing his semi-engorged moneymaker. I ignored
him and drank my Sol. Struck up a conversation with two guys sitting next to
me. One real ugly and short and the other okay in a plain looking way.
“You visiting, gringo?”
“No.” I husked. “I reside here at the
moment.”
“You running from the law?” Asked the
ugly one with a smile of large, discolored teeth.
I smirked, “No…nothing like that.”
“You running from something.” He gave me
a knowing look. “Why else would un Americano live in TJ?”
“I guess I am simply attempting to find
my time/space location.”
“Time/space location? What are you? An
astronaut?”
They had enough of my esoteric shit and
made their way upstairs leaving me alone under the glassy, meth induced stare
of the boy-whore. Crazy mambo jazz be-bop blared from the rockola. A bottle
half-empty with my third beer is alone at the bar littered with wadded napkins
and beer nut husks.
Sigh.
I paid my tab and ambled in a depressed
funk back to my rented, windowless room. I really wish I hadn’t missed that
flight. This town has become a vapid drag for me…
3 comments:
As you know I love your blog. I love reading of all the things that you do south of the border and It is obvious that you are an expert when it comes to TJ. Silly question,
I noticed that Colibri moved from having a dance floor and go go dancers to having drags do their thing all night long. I will be in TJ this weekend but I am looking for a gay place where I can dance the night away. I know El Ranchero is a place where you can dance the night away but it is always overcrowded and its hard to dance. Do you know of any other places similar to El Ranchero that you can recomend?
Any advise would be greatly appreciate it.
Keep up the good blogging. I have your blog bookmark on my laptop and I click on the link often looking for new stories from you!
I strongly apoligize for the tardiness of my response and hope you understand. Dance clubs? Well, as you would imagine, in Plaza Santa Cecillia there are a plethora of dance clubs: Bar Hawaii, Villa Garcia, El Patio (upstairs), around the corner on Calle Premera and Constitution is El Taurino and a block further is Noa Noa.
Half the fun is hopping from one to another and see which caters to your tastes. Have fun!
Thanks for the reply.
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