A Vast Wasteland: 15 Years of Facebook Messenger


Regretful, nostalgic, curious, melancholy, I recently opened my 15 years of Facebook Messenger to look at old messages, sent and received. 

2007-2022.

Who were these people? What did I want with them? What was I hoping for? 

I found a vast wasteland of forgotten names, broken connections and lost memories.

On August 9, 2012, I sent Christian L. a photo from a party. On November 3, 2016, he opened it. That was the end of our conversation. Who was Christian? What photo did I send? I’ll never know.

15 years ago, like 15 minutes ago, I was looking for work. Or thinking of sex. Or trying to connect to someone for some reason involving either reason. 

Zokai was a muscular black trainer from the gym. He was a potential protagonist in my short story, “Decline Press.” I thought I would photograph him. Have him read dialogue from the story. I sent him a message on August 14, 2016. What became of that? Nothing. Maybe I was to blame for spelling his name as “Zaikai.”

I unearthed a buried trail of dead ends, leads that lead nowhere, communications dreamt up out of my hopes, longings and imagination.

I was always thanking someone. 

On June 14, 2012, I thanked Samson whom I talked to at the Raymer Street Bridge. I have no recollection of the man or the conversation, but I do have a good friend with that last name who lives near Raymer Street. 

But he is not that Samson.

Then there was Satoshi, the hermetic, buzz cut Japanese model who brought me to a chanting worship service at his Buddhist temple in North Hollywood. I spent two hours gasping for breath as I repeated the same indecipherable chant over and over again. 

I tried to contact him after the service, but he never returned my messages. Angered, I sent him one of my petulant texts, and then attempted to apologize. I felt bad for him because his mother died. And then I met a man whose mother also died, me.

I was forever striking out and asking for forgiveness. 

I was always trying to fix what I fucked up.

I often attempted to go back in time before I offended, to find my way back to paradise before my fall.

Does everyone have a life like mine? Is it mere honesty or self-flagellation which propels me to air out long forgotten messages that don’t mean anything?

Should I even air my dirty laundry? Aren’t we all saints in our own mind? FB Messenger begs to differ.

Ambitious, directed, soul cycling, tanned and glistening fashion executive Glynis who I worked with at Ralph Lauren in 1989-90. I owed her an apology before she asked for one. That was 2013. I haven’t spoken to her in ten years, but here I was asking for her forgiveness.

I look again at 15 years of long-gone messages that went out to strangers, friends, acquaintances, co-workers,hotties, cousins, aunts, brothers, lovers, ex-friends and permanent enemies. I review notes of infinitesimal pettiness, penitential pleading, glib emotionality. 

I see myself in the mirror, cracked, crazy and unhinged. Or kind, forgiving, funny, ridiculous, self-effacing. 

My father died in 2009 at age 76. He grew up in Chicago’s Hyde Park neighborhood and his boyhood pals included Norm Jacobs, who took over Baseball Digest in 1969. Jacobs is 89 and a silent partner with Jerry Reinsdorf in the syndicate that owns the Chicago Bulls.

Norm is also a multi-millionaire publisher and owner of a sports team. His pal, my dad, spent his life going from mediocre job to job in publishing and advertising, battling epilepsy, raising a retarded kid. Norm never hired my dad, never looked after his well-being, really never knew a thing about my father’s life after 1950.

After my father died Norm was annoyed was me. I had let his teammates down.

During the pandemic death was all around. Carol had died. She was a girl, then a woman, who moved with her family from Wilmette, IL to Woodcliff Lake, NJ the same year we did. Our families were friends. I lost touch with her. Now she was dead.

I sent a condolence message to her surviving partner Katherine in Chicago who never answered.

Did it matter I cared enough to send a kind note to a grieving person I had never met, 40 years after I last spoke to their dearly departed?

Yet my condolence note on March 19, 2018, to Patrick, concerning the death of our mutual friend Trout, mattered.

I found a long-forgotten request to Councilwoman Nury Martinez to clean up a trash heap.  When the distinguished history of Van Nuys in the early 21st Century is written who will memorialize my contributions and my plaintive emails and texts to correct the filth that befouls our district?

Was the trash cleaned up? Did the trash come back? Or did it persist, like my messages, under a smoldering heap?

There are many messages to people that fell out of friendship. Chris was offended when I said his kitchen wall was hollow. Jacque, friend of 40 years, crucified me for not stopping off to say good-bye when I left Chicago after a two-day visit. “You were always selfish!” she said.

And Kristy McNichol. I sent her a FB message when I finished writing my novel about two families in 1980s Pasadena, “Exiles Under the Bridge.” Surely, she would be interested in it, having starred in a late seventies TV show, Family, which was set in that town.

How the imagination works, and tortures, and devises improbabilities, spun out of fantasy, to keep us alive and hopeful. 

Sweet Anita. We met through my blog. She lives nearby. We always laughed, she always complimented me, we had dinner at her house, she came to mine for wine and cheese. 

I pulled her off FB when we moved to opposite ends of the political fence. Yet I still miss her, wish I could crawl back into her good graces, for surely, we have done nothing to offend one another, and what happens in the voting booth, should stay in the voting booth.

I grew up when it was unspeakable to desire the same sex. Now it is blasphemous to desire a person from the other political party. 

On May 30, 2019, I waved to Christina. Who is she? I don’t know. 

Keith B. came up to me at Starbucks on August 3, 2017. 

Cary apologized for “getting pretty boisterous” at MacLeod Ale on April 6, 2015, and how things may have gotten a bit out of hand, and damn if I don’t remember anything about it.

MacLeod’s beer and my intoxication, was another instigator of trouble when I made a joke at the brewery about Sam W.’s “$250 sweater.” He didn’t take offense.

In 2015, just like 2022, and 1994, I was wondering who an agent for my writing might be. An obscure life prepping for a recognized life that will never be.

Producer, director, writer, political activist, and Married to a Millionaire Melissa of Nyack, NY let me know my short stories had no money in it.

Brad sent me a message on October 9, 2013, asking if I knew where Matt was? (Matt was a hustler/model I photographed a few years earlier.)

I didn’t know where Matt was. 

I still don’t know where Matt is.

Resurrection of the Beths (Part I)


 


hands across America, originally uploaded by haaaley.

Resurrections of the Beths (Part I)

I always imagine that I’m not one of those people to hold grudges, but I guess that is just in my imagination. Sometimes I hold onto anger for too long.

In my 20’s I was friends with more women than men. One of my favorites was this remarkably cool girl I met in college. She came from LA, stood 5’10 and wore white cotton oxfords, ripped jeans and had a page-boy haircut. She was buddies with more guys than girls, and she was planning to work in television when she got out of school.

She lived in LA after college, in a spacious old floor through apartment on Spaulding just north of Beverly. I came out to visit her when I was still living in NY, and marveled that so much space was available for only $900.

She drove a VW bug convertible, smoked, and seemed to know famous people who didn’t impress her. She became the LA girl in my mind. Her parents lived in a large house in the hills, with a large cow statue on the edge of the driveway. Their house had a tree growing inside the two-story entrance.

No snow, no cold, no ice. Summer year round. When she flew to Paris to study for a semester, her dad mailed her an envelope filled with $600 in cash and a note, “Bon Voyage.”

Years passed, she worked in TV, flying here, taking months off without work, but then getting on the staff of “Saturday Night Live”. Then she dated a clever comedian, and then another one. She was friends with a cartoonist published in the New Yorker. She danced at “Studio 54”. Her mother and she stayed in the top floor suite at the Plaza Hotel reserved for ABC hoi polloi.

I worked for Ralph Lauren, I got her some clothes at discount. We were always talking about clothes, design, décor. I was the gay friend, she was the girl who was neither a girlfriend or a close friend. She talked about herself all the time. I listened. Somehow she was bewitching.

She always found a job, or a cool apartment. She slept on a futon; I bought a futon. She liked white towels; I bought white towels. She had her favorite scented candle; I had to buy the same candle.

She hop-scotched around, living in Hollywood at the Hollywood Tower, then she got tired of LA and moved back to New York and into a spacious 1889 vintage apartment on Columbus across from the Natural History Museum.

Always her clothes were thrown on the floor, she was perpetually on the move, flying anywhere, settling down with no one.

She had a friend in 1985 who lived in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn in a brownstone. We stayed at her apartment and participated in “Hands Across America” On July 4, 1993 we walked from the Upper West Side to the Battery and saw fireworks that night.

Then she decided to move back to LA, to Studio City and rented a house here. I got fired in NYC and we briefly talked on the phone, and she said, “Move out here and we will write a script for “Roseanne”. I moved out and knew nothing about Roseanne since I never watched it. Our pitiful attempt to write together ended in an argument.

I moved into her house, dragging a green duffle bag on a van, after I landed in LA, carrying a rubber check for $500 written by my mother that bounced when I deposited it in my Great Western Account.

I had to find a job, any job, in entertainment. I knew nothing about “the industry” and sat dazzled that anyone could be a production assistant running to Costco to fetch sodas for a PRODUCER!

Then in the summer of 1994, Beth went out of town, leaving me to live in her house, and allowing me to pay her $400 a month. She asked me “to not have anyone come to my house when I’m gone.”

She was gone for three months, and I was alone in LA. So I did have a guest or two over to the house, and they slept there, and I admitted it when she came back.

We had a falling out, and hadn’t spoken to each other for fourteen years.

Until today. I think we may be friends again. I’m burying that mental hatchet that was only cutting me, nobody else.