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Authors: Denis Leary

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BOOK: Why We Suck
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    Seven hundred potatoes
    Six boxes Gorton's Frozen Fish Sticks
    Two large bottles ketchup
    
    Place fish sticks in flat pan in oven. Turn knob up as far as it will go. Place cabbage and potatoes in large pot of already boiling water. Wait twenty minutes. Take fish sticks out while middle seems to still be frozen. Pour ketchup over them until they disappear beneath a sea of red. Wait another hour for flavor to evaporate from cabbage and potatoes and they are soft to the touch. Make sign of the cross. Serve.
    
    We never went hungry. We never were at a loss for drama and the men were absolutely never ever allowed or expected to cook or clean up. Our job was to shovel and bang nails and fix flat tires and kill mice and rats and giant insects. We played football and baseball and hockey right there in the street. No helmets no shin guards no crying. You got hit with a puck or a stick or a bat or a ball you walked it off and kept on playing.
    Everyone had scars and broken bones and some kids even had strange dents in their heads and some kids stuttered and other kids lisped and some had weird walks-everyone had something wrong with them and nobody's parents could either afford to get them fixed or had the time to even do so. You sucked it up and kept moving forward. You couldn't do your homework you flunked out quick and went to work pumping gas.
    It was the natural order of things-the food chain in action-the way God meant things to be. Those who could run faster got ahead quicker and the weaker links in the chain got eaten by the enemy.
    Shit-I was late for work right after school one day so I ran across the street against oncoming traffic and got nailed by a Buick right on my left ass cheek-and if you think I have no ass now just imagine how small it was when I was fourteen years old. It was basically all bone. Anyways-the good news was I bounced right back up and the traffic came to a stop-including my bus-and I not only made it to work on time but I had no desire to sit down for the next two weeks.
    And like I said before-that was when the front ends of automobiles were still made out of steel, not these pussy-assed plastic bumpers they have now.
    I wasn't the only one, by the way-lots of kids got hit by cars and half the time the drivers were drunk. EVERY adult was drunk back then. It wasn't against the law to drink and drive. And there were no cupholders in cars-so if you wanted to drink and drive you had to be able to balance the goddam beer can or whiskey bottle and drive at the same time. Come to think of it-that's how they probably gauged whether or not you were too drunk to drive back then-if you dropped your drink-time to get out and walk.
    And there was no rehab in those days-none at all. If you were Catholic, you had Lent-forty days at the tail end of winter when you could give up anything in service to Our Lord Jesus-who supposedly spent forty days in the desert with the devil whispering sweet little nothings into his holy ear. As a sign of your devotion to His noteworthy struggle, Catholics are meant to conduct a fast from one of their favorite things-food, sex, candy-whatever you might find enjoyable and hard to stay away from. Believe me, most Irish Catholic men spent that month and a half on the wagon. Jesus resists the temptation offered by Satan-the Irish resist Bushmill's and Budweiser. I'd call it just about even.
    My brother Johnny got clipped by a drunk driver while he was delivering papers on his bike. He was in the hospital for a couple of days and then he came home. But for those two days? There was extra potatoes and meat for everyone else. The food chain in action. There were no airbags no seat belts no helmets no Ritalin no Adderall no special ed classes no learning disabilities no tutoring no nothing-you had to be a REAL retard to be considered a retard. Talk therapy in those days consisted of my mother saying "That homework better be done by dinnertime or you are gonna have to deal with your father!" Everybody got hurt and stabbed and shot in the face with BB guns and bitten by dogs and slapped by their parents and fed shitty food-no one was smart or good-looking or gifted or unique. The toys alone would kill or maim you.
    One time I was cutting through the alley between Tommy Mullaney's building and ours when I heard my brother shout "Hey faggot!"-his usual way of saying hello. I looked up to see Johnny and his best friend Cliffey DeCoursey down at the other end of the alley with a brand-new toy in tow-a bow and arrow. Not a TOY bow and arrow, an actual, real live bow-and-arrow set you would use to go hunting for venison. Now, Cliffey DeCoursey's parents deciding to give him a real bow and arrow as a birthday present would-in this day and age-be either the foundation for a record-setting lawsuit by my parents or the beginning of a foster child investigation or both. But in those days it just made Cliffey and every other kid in the neighborhood think they were cool. Anyways, one millisecond of a nanosecond after I heard the word "faggot" and stopped and glanced up-which probably says something about my own self-esteem-my brother let the arrow go and I am telling you THUNK! that's how quick the arrow stuck itself in my skull. Two inches above my right eye-I still have the scar. Cliffey went one way and Johnny the other and I was left standing there like some kind of horrifying William Tell Overture.
    I climbed the alley fence and ran up the three wooden flights on the back of my building-the arrow still in place-and ran into the kitchen where my Uncle Jerry put down his beer and yanked the thing out of my head-at which point I started to howl and he said "It's out goddammit yer fine so shut up!" My dad said I didn't need stitches but my mom went into a what if he's brain damaged now and he's not that bright to begin with monologue so he and Uncle Jerry drove me to the hospital where they did the usual here's a piece of candy because this is gonna hurt like hell routine and they sewed me up and then we drove home fast because it was close to dinnertime and my father got really pissed because no one could find my brother or Cliffey and my dad and Mr. DeCoursey had to go house to house and building to building looking for the two escapees until they finally found them an hour or so later hiding in the basement of Tommy Spencer's building which led to a very entertaining and rare double ass-kicking up the entire block, which I watched with relish from our third-floor window.
    And after dinner that night, in the living room while we were watching TV, my father sat down in his favorite chair while I sat on the floor and we both watched the Red Sox game on the TV. He handed me a bowl of ice cream and he had his own, and after a couple of spoonfuls he very calmly and evenly taught me the moral of the story by saying this:
    Hey Dinzo.
    Yeah, Dad?
    The next time your brother-or anyone else for that matter-calls you a faggot?
    Yeah.
    And you look up to see that your brother-or anyone else for that matter-is shooting an arrow at your precious, pink little Irish face?
    Yeah.
    You know what I want you to do?
    What?
    Duck, goddammit-duck!
    It was always your own fault-you were supposed to learn how to survive no matter what the situation was. Boys will be boys will be boys-we were expected to shoot arrows and throw rocks and God help us if we ever got our hands on REAL guns because every stick or twig or baseball bat we could get our mitts on became a PRETEND gun in very short order.
    My son Jack had a friend in grade school-nice kid. His parents were very politically correct and had made up their minds not to preordain any kind of stereotypes onto their daughter or son by buying her dolls or him trucks-you get the idea. So one Christmas-which wasn't really Christmas in their house, it was Christmas and Kwanzaa and Hanukkah and some other bullshit holiday all combined into a two-week celebration that might as well have been based on Seinfeld's fictional Festivus-Jack's buddy asked for one of those giant air-pumped water guns that looks like a plastic AK-47 on steroids. Instead, they sat him down and had a long discussion about nonviolence and the life's work of Gandhi and Martin Luther King and blah blah blah and on Xmas/Kwanzaa/ Festivus morning the poor kid woke up to find an incredibly expensive and intricate balsa wood creative design workshop his parents had imported from Denmark. When I dropped Jack off with HIS air-pumped AK-47 plastic water gun on steroids, both kids looked extremely disappointed. But to their credit-they had a great time that afternoon. Because the first thing Jack's friend made with his Danish balsa wood design center was the biggest, badass balsa wood AK-47 you have ever laid your eyes on. They pretend-shot at each other and the kid's environmentally overconcerned, tiny carbon footprint-pushing, organically soaped-up and shampooed parents all day long.
    These half-wit parents today think they can legislate every single tiny dangerous detail out of the protected lives of their dainty little children. What they can't manage to keep away from the kids on their own they will beseech the rest of society to outlaw, banish and reform.
    Bad language on TV shows, Janet Jackson's left nipple during the Super Bowl-bullies, mean girls, brawlers and all the other badasses need to disappear.
    Personally-seeing Janet Jackson's left nipple on TV wasn't anywhere near as offensive to me as the four million ads for Viagra and Cialis and all the other "how to get a hard-on" pills that rolled out every other minute during the same game OR Janet's co-star Justin Timberlake and his next-day "I didn't know nothing" protect-his-own-skinny-ass-and-leave-the-girl-hanging defense. Chivalry? He not only never heard of it-I doubt he even knows how to spell the word.
    One brown tit sent everyone running for moral cover while the phrase "an erection lasting longer than four hours" was pummeled into the formative brains of our tiny, little children.
    I love tits. Real tits. Big tits, small tits, perky tits, floppy tits-I don't think it's possible for American kids to see ENOUGH tits. And what are we afraid will happen if they do? One of the first things our kids ever saw-after the birth canal and the face of the doctor who delivered them-were two juicy, chock full of mother's milk tits. Tits that brought them nothing more than comfort and pleasure and nourishment and fun. As far as kids are concerned-tits are the best. Tits and candy. As a matter of fact-before they discover cupcakes and other sources of man-made sugar-tits ARE candy. Never mind all the cartoon violence and cutesy, idiotic Teletubbies-there should be a channel on TV that is all tits all the time-TIT TV. In France, Africa-half of the goddam planet, for God's sake-women sunbathe topless and no one even thinks twice about it, but here in America-during a full three-hour broadcast of organized violence between grown men hopped up on illegal drugs and human growth hormone-we are desperately afraid that our sons and daughters might see a fleeting ever-so-quick GLIMPSE of a pop star's teat.
    We suck. We suck really really bad.
    By the way-if the tits don't kill our kids, the bullies will.
    Let me tell you something about bullies-we need them. They teach your kid how to survive. How to plan a trip to school that includes every available navigational option so he doesn't have to run into the kid who wants to kick his ass.
    Mean girls teach your daughter what it will be like in any workplace full of women she ends up dealing with later in life-the jealousy and envy and catfighting and backbiting. It is an early education. Why? Because that's the way girls are.
    Boys? Boys will beat the living crap out of each other for one reason and one reason only-because they are awake.
    
CHAPTER 5 - Bullies R Us
    
    
    Let me tell you a couple of bully stories.
    When I was a kid, there was a bully in our neighborhood named Bobby Burns. He used to walk around in the summertime wearing a denim jacket with no shirt on underneath-like a discount Roger Daltrey. (In those days, everyone thought Roger Daltrey was cool. Tanned, long blond curly locks, no shirts, open denim jackets, sometimes with fringe, lead singer of the Who-who could be cooler? Just to put some perspective on the shelf life of cool, years later-in the nineties my son Jack-age nine-saw a video of Daltrey sporting that look and said "Wow. What a dork." So good luck with the ultra-baggy jeans, giant T-shirts and baseball hats cocked sideways, kids. Take plenty of pictures.)
    Anyways-Bobby Burns was short and muscle-bound and for some reason hated my guts. Probably because I was taller than him. I was taller than most of the kids my age by the time I was fourteen. Also, I could actually put several words together and form a sentence-which Bobby had some trouble with, which led to his grunting and giving the finger a lot, which led to his repeating the fifth grade three times. He wasn't bright, Bobby. He was shaving before he took algebra. He drove himself to eighth grade. He was old enough to join the navy during his freshman year in high school. (Me and my friends came up with a million of these, by the way.)
    Long story short-Bobby kept taunting me whenever he would walk by and my friends and I were playing street hockey or football on my block-grunting and giving me the finger and at least once challenging me to a fight because I was "bigger" than him. Needless to say, I was basically scared shitless of Bobby-as were all the kids in the neighborhood.
    Rumors flew, of course, that Bobby was thirty-seven, that he had been in jail, that he had killed a guy and-the scariest rumor of all-that Bobby knew Kung Fu. Keep in mind that this was in the early seventies, when Kung Fu was considered a secret form of the martial arts that meant you could fly through the air and kill a guy with a karate chop. There was a show on TV about Kung Fu, a special G.I. Joe with a Kung Fu grip and a number one hit song called "Kung Fu Fighting." Kids being kids-reality had been massively displaced by a monster dose of gossip and fear until we all believed Bobby was a vicious, insurmountable superhuman force.
    One day he walked right up to me and my friends and said-to me-"Hey Faggot-tomorrow if I see you on the street-I'm gonna kick your ass."
    And then he swaggered away.
    My friends were quick to back me up.
    You better move, Dave Minor said.
    Canada, Barry Gay said. They got plenty a hockey up there.
    Yeah, John Dourville added, or you could live in the basement in my house-no one ever goes down there.
    We should call the cops, Mark Zambini said. Kung Fu is against the law.
    Andy Zambini cut a huge, smelly fart.
    These were my advisers.
    We spent the rest of the day throwing rocks and discussing why-with a kid actually named Gay on the block-Bobby Burns felt the need to call ME a faggot.
    Barry said it was because beating up a guy named Gay was REALLY gay. Dave said it was because Barry was smaller than Bobby and therefore beating him up proved nothing. Mark Zambini said maybe your brother calls you faggot so much, Bobby just thought faggot was your actual name. John Dourville said his father had gotten his nose broken once and that his dad said it hurt like hell and it bled a lot and your eyes watered and then it hurt for like another five or six weeks or so and then after a while it was okay. Andy Zambini hocked a huge loogie onto the sidewalk. And I mean huge: several ants immediately became suspended in it. We stared at them for a while as they tried to wiggle out of the goo. By a while I mean about an hour and a half. We poked at them with sticks.
    I went home, said nothing to my dad or my brother-who said pass the salt faggot at supper and got whacked across the head with a gravy ladle by my mom-then I went to bed, staring at the low ceiling of the basement and wishing I could just disappear.
    I woke up the next morning and briefly considered pretending to be sick but after a couple of minutes I decided to get up and get it over with. If Bobby Burns was gonna kick my ass I might as well get my ass kicked as quickly as possible and carry on with the rest of my summer. I spent a couple of minutes staring at my nose in the bathroom mirror-imagining what it would look like moved over another inch to the side of my face. Then I went outside to meet the guys.
    So I guess you didn't move, huh? Dave Minor said.
    Or run away, John Dourville added.
    Barry Gay piped in with this headline: my sister said a kid in her grade said that he knows a kid who used to go to school with a kid who knew Bobby Burns's first cousin and the cousin said Bobby killed one of their drunk uncles with a Vulcan Death Grip.
    No one said anything for a second. The Vulcan Death Grip was a move that Spock used to kill people on Star Trek, which of course I never watched because I hated science fiction because it seemed like bullshit. Until now.
    Needless to say, later that morning we were playing street hockey when everyone just froze, right in the middle of a scoring play. They all were suddenly looking over my shoulder and beyond me with fright in their eyes. I turned to see what they had seen: way down at the end of the block-Bobby Burns. Approaching.
    I looked down at my feet for a second-gathering my thoughts-until I realized-my thoughts sounded a helluva lot like breaking bones.
    Looking up, I could see that Bobby Burns was only about twenty yards away, cracking his knuckles, each crick of a finger echoing off the asphalt like a bullet's ricochet:
    Crack.
    Thwang.
    Crack.
    Zwing.
    
    I could feel the blood leaving my body-apparently not wishing to get spilled.
    As Bobby came closer, I could sense everyone else starting to move away from me-I think I even heard a couple of uh-ohs and maybe even some whispered prayers. One of the guys even moved the street hockey net out of the way. As if they didn't want it covered with my blood and intestines and stuff.
    Within seconds Bobby Burns was right there in front of me. The hair. The open denim jacket. No shirt. His beady eyes looking up-glaring. He smiled his menacing, evil grin.
    
    Then-two things happened:
        1. I didn't shit my pants.
        2. Not shitting my pants made my lower lip-which had begun to tremble-stop trembling.
    
    Then Bobby Burns yanked my street hockey stick right out of my hand and threw it behind him. It clattered across the road. Then-Bobby Burns called me a faggot and slapped me in the face. Hard. Really really hard.
    Then, his left hand slowly began to move upwards-in what looked to me much like what I knew the G.I. Joe With The Kung Fu Grip's hand always looked like-ready to kill or hold a plastic grenade. Or maybe this was what Spock's hand looked like just before he tried to kill Captain Kirk.
    
    Two more things happened, almost simultaneously:
        1. I didn't shit my pants again.
        2. I kicked Bobby Burns in the balls-so fucking hard that my foot almost split him into two separate halves.
    
    No sound came out of his mouth as he doubled over in pain and stumbled sideways onto the tiny front lawn of Zambini's house. I thought that any second Bobby would spring up and stab me or shoot me or even worse-chop off my head with some crazy Kung Fu karate chop, fly through the air and scissor-kick my torso, slicing open my rib cage to reveal my beating heart to the entire WHAM! I jumped on him and started beating the living crap out of him. Punching and kicking and elbows and knees and punching and everything became one big blur and the next thing I knew my own dad and Mr. Zambini were pulling me off and telling Bobby Burns to get the hell up and go home.
    Which he did-very very slowly.
    Okay okay, he stuttered, awright.
    He had drool running down his chin and a bunch of cuts on his Roger Daltrey chest and grass stains all over his jacket and jeans but-he was moving away.
    My father had come running from our house and only saw the last part of what had happened-but he knew enough to say-out of the side of his mouth-"Good job. But don't say anything to your mother about this." And off he went. Mr. Zambini told us to get the hell off his goddam lawn. Then he went back inside. It was all over so fast.
    As we watched Bobby Burns make his way down the block-bent and bumbling-Dave Minor summed up what each one of us was thinking:
    What the hell did you do that for?
    I dunno, I said. What just happened?
    Holy shit, Mark Zambini said.
    He's gonna kill you tomorrow, Barry Gay said.
    He's gonna kill all of us, John Dourville added.
    Andy Zambini didn't fart.
    Or hock a loogie.
    Or even belch.
    He just shook his head and followed his father inside the house.
    Wow.
    That night I went to bed thinking my life-as I knew it-was probably over. My dad gave me a knowing look at the dinner table and instead of feeling proud-I was worried sick. The next morning I awoke, once again filled with a let's get it over with quick mentality. I met up with John and Dave and Barry and the Zambini Brothers. Everyone had long faces. We played street hockey, but every time someone thought they saw a figure off in the distance-we'd stop and look up-frozen with fear and a bottomless pit of dread.
    Then someone would say It's okay-it's not him.
    That must have happened ten or fifteen times that morning. But Bobby Burns never showed up. As a matter of fact-he didn't show up anywhere for a couple of days.
    Maybe you killed him, Barry said.
    Maybe he's buying a gun, Dave said.
    Then-on the third day-down the block he came. As soon as we saw him, we all got Deaf Mute Fear. You know the kind? The fear so strong it starts out somewhere inside the marrow of your bones and emanates like a magnetic force out through your blood cells and into your veins and rumbles up and wraps around your arms and legs and neck and chest and leaves you unable to speak or hear anything except the pounding of your own pulse reverberating in your eardrums?
    
    Ba-bump.
    Ba-bump.
    Bobby Burns was walking toward us.
    Ba-bump.
    Ba-bump.
    I wanted to run but my feet refused to move.
    Ba-bump.
    Ba-bump.
    From a distance, he looked angry-defiant. Uh oh.
    Ba-bump.
    Ba-ba-bump.
    My heart was beating faster.
    Ba-ba-bump. Ba-ba-bump.
    Maybe that was Barry's heart.
    Ba-ba-bump.
    Nope-it's mine. Don't shit your pants don't shit your pants whatever you do DO NOT SHIT IN YOUR OWN PANTS.
    Ba-ba-bump.
    He's twenty feet away. Don't piss your pants either.
    Ba-ba-bump.
    As he drew closer I actually shut my eyes, figuring at least I wouldn't have to watch my own dismantling.
    Ba-ba-bump.
    I could smell him now.
    Ba-ba-bump.
    
    I sneaked a peek-to see if Barry and John and Dave and The Zambinis were still there and-much to my surprise-we were all looking at each other. Then we looked up to see Bobby Burns-walking just past us, waving a weak hello and saying "hey guys" and-get this-continuing on his way.
    It took us more than a few seconds to mutter two or three heys back at him.
    And then he was gone.
    Wow.
    We must have stared down at the empty end of the block for at least thirty seconds.
    Later in the day he came back in the opposite direction and gave us a little head nod with a tight little smile.
    We nodded back.
    And that was it.
    No beating, no knife, no gun-not even any Kung Fu.
    Everyone made that jaw-drop, round-mouthed, wide-eyed holy shit can you believe it face. Then we laughed. Then Andy Zambini sneezed and as he sneezed he also cut a giant fart. We laughed. Loud and long.
    Bobby Burns never ever threatened any of us again.
    As a matter of fact, anytime he walked by he would wave that weak hello and say "hey guys" or just give us the head nod with a tight little smile. Turns out he had never been in jail never killed anyone and Kung Fu was just a TV show he watched like the rest of us. The Vulcan Death Grip? Bullshit. It was all hype. My boot to the balls was just what the doctor had ordered. It had shut up the biggest bully on the block and filled me with a new confidence. I couldn't wait for the next asshole who decided he was going to push me around-man, would he get his. The boot to the balls with absolutely no warning was gonna become the signature move I would use to establish my reputation with all bullies everywhere.
    One day later? The opportunity quickly arose. I tried the same exact move on another guy who was bullying and belittling me and calling me a faggot and thought he was going to get away with it and you know what happened? He blocked my foot before it reached his balls and then beat the living daylights out of me. That guy was my brother Johnny.
    That's right-I roomed with a bully. My brother wasn't an official bully-just a bully brother. He could handle himself well and was the kind of guy who would wander the streets putting bullies in their place-but when it came to me-well, brothers will be brothers, especially when they share a room small enough to be a walk-in closet for Mini Me.
BOOK: Why We Suck
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