the man i was growing up to be.
he's the kind of guy you want to be around because he's just right.
even when he's wrong.
he's got the whole world ahead of him and all the opportunity in the world.
he's got the ambition to know what he wants and the drive to get there.
but he's also got the integrity to keep finding himself along the way.
i close my eyes and see him sometimes, though not as often as i used to. his absence is unbearable.
it makes me wonder what happens to all those hopes and dreams and ideals we find so easy to hold when we're still new and green.
i close and open my eyes and i'm there.
in a world where "jaded" is a thing of the past, we're all so much "happier."
billy's president. in fact, so is tommy. and mike. and jillian. there are three hundred twenty thousand presidents of the united states. the division of powers would be enough to choke on but the forty eight thousand constitutional lawyers and sixteen thousand executive branch secretaries and coordinators have it all under control.
we don't have to worry about health care because no one ever gets sick anymore. all our best scientists and doctors stopped working on the cures for hair loss and impotence and figured out the real shit. cancer's unheard of, unless you sign the "i'm a fucking idiot waiver" and choose to smoke. then you're fucked. and the baby-booming of the third world countries now not having to deal with disease is providing for a significant increase in a return to physical labor and manufacturing. but green, of course. always.
our schools and jails and welfare programs all realized that to reduce crime they'd have to work together in the same direction. schools have more community outreach for kids and get them more involved than ever before. jails teach inmates new skills and educate them at least through their GED, so they've got workplace skills and prospects. and welfare is limited and conditional. but it's all irrelevant now that there are only twenty two convicts left in the world, and only because they're stupid enough to steal cars in an age where alarms and gps are standard. recidivism is a bitch for those poor grand theft auto kids. crime is so low, in fact, that there's an emerging trend in which all locksmiths and lock manufacturers are getting laid off. it's troubling and something the thirty four thousand labor lawyers currently practicing will have to look into.
wal-mart went out of business two years ago and none of us noticed. with the global push for farmers markets and small business, the big chains are a thing of the past. farmers in nebraska earn as fair a living as lobstermen in maine. it's all subsidized and honest, fair trade.
the world's just so much better.
and we're all so much happier.
but not really.
i close my eyes and i miss the smog of la. it made me appreciate the beauty of this place.
i close my eyes and i miss the disgusting, fat-providing fast food on every street corner. it made me appreciate the independent cafes and creativity and ethics of great, rare restaurants.
i close my eyes and i miss the hilarity of impotence-pill commercials and hair loss creams. it made me appreciate how blessed i am to be young and healthy and virile.
i close my eyes and i miss the politics behind government. it made me appreciate the sometimes awkward, just kind of present balance between both sides of the aisle.
i close my eyes and i miss everything. the freedoms.
the freedom to rise. the freedom to fall.
the freedom to be right and good and true. the freedom to put yourself first and be right and good to and for you and what you want.
if everything's solved, what's left to fight for?
i open my eyes and i'm back in reality. i'm 24 years old. and i've got all the opportunity and promise ahead of me as i did when i was a kid. just a little less time to figure it out.
i'm alive and AWAKE and right. now.
and that's enough for me.