antagonistic view of home town, where friends & I would hang out in parking lots |
Carried by the scentless streets of Hutchinson Kansas are the darkest moments of my life--memories of driving red-eyed in the mist, water streaming down the faces of lonely street-lights. The humid chill of Hasting's parking lot where Chapman and I slugged down bummed cans of beer; and inside where I began my quest for Mid-America Satori and the rosy little Mexican cashier who i so pitifully fell in love with. On the gloaming road that connects Hutch to Buhler, secret coyotes mourn their tragedies of love; I've crossed this stretch of wretched asphault in fifty thousand past-lives: dumb, shattered, and swerving. And the local mall where imbeciles go to gain stupid bedazzlement from neon lights, the purchase of ephemeral happiness, and cheap glances at young girls' asses, the mall itself a human hamster wheel. Teenagers having wet dreams over muscle cars (how life can fool itself) and speaking the ignorant scat of arrogance (knowwhatI'msayin?knowwhatI'msayin?knowwhatI'msayin?) There was Chad and I in a rickety camero, sitting on the back and laughing dumbly as the world around us died like slow-burning paper. There was the old man who worked inside, who couldn't count change, who came to this concrete retirement home to work at Food 4 Less and die. There was Jones, Schrag, and I breezing throught the smoky neighborhoods in our own Samadhi of exuberant words and colors--we successfully destroyed the world around us--and when the rapture finally comes I pray I'll be too euphoric to notice; Like the skankiness inhabiting Hutchinson-- the trashcan of Kansas that reeks of oblivious masturbation, a fate from which my beloved poets and heroes finally escaped. Ginsberg wrote this about Hutchinson: "Not even the human imagination satisfies the endless emptiness of the soul," in a book I bought there. |