Skip to main content

Hey Whore!

You would think that this is the start of an angry blog. One where I chastise someone who has jilted me. Someone who has torn my heart right from my chest, smashed it to the floor and stomped every ounce of blood from it. Well, unfortunately this is a happy tale. This is one about friendship. A true friendship. The subject line is how I greet her almost every time I see her. Like I said, true friendship!

When I moved to Eastchester in 1985, I started making friends with a group of guys who loved to play sports as much as I did. Every day after school, we'd join at Anne Hutchinson for basketball games. On the weekends, we'd play football or softball depending on the weather. We probably played 500 games during the course of 1985-1988. On most of those occasions, we had two spectators. My friends Billy's sister and our friend Linda. Usually their spectating involved snide remarks about us, mocking our poor performances and in my case, playing on the obvious infatuation I had with Linda.

Linda was everything I liked in a girl when I was fifteen. She was pretty, smart and she had great tits. Call me shallow, but at fifteen, I cared about two things. Sports and Breasts. Sadly, I think it was in that order. Linda and I became good friends and we'd spend many hours together and many more on the phone. We never ran out of things to talk about and as the time went on, my infatuation grew. I would spend hours at her house with her and her very attractive and nicely endowed sisters. They would flirt with me and joke about how I was always there. The problem was, I was shy. I could never muster the courage to ask the simple question. Would you go out with me? The years went by and high school became one of those things I abhorred, but throughout it all, I had Linda as a friend. It was the one thing I could count on. She was older than me, but we spoke almost every day. I don't know when it was, but one day or night I mustered the courage to ask her the vital question. I think I got through the second word, when she yelled out "NO." My hopes and dreams were crushed. I was beside myself. The strange thing was that it was almost a relief. We joked about the incident later and I even gave her a cartoon about the moment. It was weird. We were weird.

She and I were a strange duo. We'd laugh at movies like Platoon and the end of Seven. We'd take great pleasure in seeing others pain....not serious mental anguish, but funny stuff, like people falling, nut shots, etc. She and I got each other. We always did and always will. There may have been a time when I was dating someone and she was raising her kids that she and I lost touch, but there was nothing that ever really broke our connection. There was something about the fact that we understood each others humor that always brought us back to each other. People to this day look in horror when overhearing some of the things we say to each other. They question if we're really that mean to each other all the time, but we don't see it as being mean. It's our plutonic foreplay. Back in the day, I'd probably tackle her after a joke, all the while just trying to cop a feel (and don't judge me, she knew damn well what I was doing and still persisted in her verbal abuse). We hang out more now than in the recent past. We have mutual friends who have sort of gotten used to it, although I do wonder if some of her close friends don't think I overdo it at times.

I've known her for twenty-five years. I'm still attracted to her, but in a different way than before. I used to think about her all the time and it was always in a lewd setting, dim lights and probably a ball gag was involved, because I knew if there ever did come a time when anything happened, she would inevitably ruin it with jokes. She's the kind of person who no matter how long we go without talking, we are never at a loss for words. I've met lots of people over the past twenty-five years ago and my close friends I think of as family. Sometimes when I'm with a person romantically I question my feelings. Maybe it's not a romantic feeling, but I know I love her with all my heart. She's a special person. A good mother. She's everything I want in a woman still to this day. She's funny, she's intelligent and most of all, she's got a great rack. Honestly, when it comes down to it, what else is there. Oh and did I mention the best part. She's a whore (just not with me).

Comments

  1. Oh. My. God. I've been relegated to "My friend Billy's sister". Jesus.

    ReplyDelete
  2. sweet baby jesus. i read this blog title and i thought he wrote about me that A=hole!! hahahahah love yoU!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

White Privilege

This was a post I wrote on Facebook after surprisingly not seeing any moaning about the Documentary by Jose Antonio Vargas, titled White People Dayyum! I just scrolled my timeline and not a single white person got their feelings hurt by White People. I unfortunately haven't seen it, but the number of fake accounts that popped up on twitter, tells me it was a damn good show. Here's the thing. If someone of color aka non-white says "White Privilege," are you offended? If you said yes, then you are exhibiting white privilege. It has nothing to do with how hard you work or study, how you stayed out of trouble, because here's the thing, that is entirely the point. Somewhere out there, there are 100 Black, Spanish, Native American, Arab, Asian, who worked and studied as hard as you and never got in trouble, but they don't have what you "earned" or achieved. Stop looking at the one person you know who isn't white that achieved as your benchmark. Loo

11 Rules of Life - Bill Gates?

I read this on Facebook this morning.  A friend had posted it and said that every child should have to receive this. I of course read it and started to think.  I immediately wondered who really wrote this, as I rarely see things like this attributed to the proper person.  I immediately found it was written by Conservative Charles J. Sykes when he wrote a book about how America is dumbing down our youth.  I read it twice and started to wonder how true it was.  Below is a link to the actual picture I saw. So let's look at each of the rules and analyze them. Rule 1: Life is not fair — get used to it! - Life is not fair in that we are not all afforded the same opportunities based on race, creed, color, socio-economic background, but in general, those who are afforded the same opportunities to succeed are very often rewarded for their individual efforts.  Sure there may be underlying circumstances, but hard work is proven to pay more often than not and those who strive for succ

Quickie Review - Finding Vivian Maier

While I thoroughly enjoyed the film, especially the first 15-20 minutes, I was a little bothered by the way the film played out. The interviews with the clearly disturbed brother, sister and the mother, who obviously, was in for a cut, didn't need to be in the film. Then the woman who suggested abuse, yet seemed to have her life defined by Maier, as she tried to muster every ounce of emotion and fake guilt. Her friend, more than happy to be party of the charade. People who talk about abuse for the first time, usually don't do so on camera. The fact these scenes were so prominent, shows that they felt wronged that they were not rewarded. Maloof on the other hand, seems to disappear from the documentary during this part, almost hiding away from the fact, he went from complete praise, to even making money off of her, to destroying her personal legacy. He almost mentions the family of boys taking care of her rent, as an afterthought. Her burial spot, never shown, yet a video of her