Fakebook (11 page)

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Authors: Dave Cicirelli

BOOK: Fakebook
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A week after I'd pulled the photo of Amish Kate, I met with Elizabeth at the mega-deli on the corner of Madison Park. Her office was around the corner from mine, so on the rare occasion that we shared a slow day, we always made an effort to grab lunch.

I was still reeling and had spent the week rereading the boring FarmVille posts I'd put up to defuse my Photoshop photo bomb. At least they felt safe. There was no momentum to Fakebook anymore. My thoughts were scattered and my heart wasn't in it. I was scared to make another wrong move, and for the first time since I'd started, I wasn't getting any reaction—there were posts with no likes and no comments.

Fakebook lived on voyeurism, and disinterest was the worst end of this project. As Oscar Wilde once said, “If there is anything more annoying in the world than having people talk about you, it is certainly having no one talk about you.”

Elizabeth grabbed a container of lettuce and handed it to the guy working the salad station, ordering the usual—beets, cranberry-raisins, walnuts, goat cheese, and balsamic.

It was too healthy for me and the funk I was in, so I grabbed a tray and wandered around. Sushi, pizza, Korean barbecue, tacos, wraps…all of it looked pretty good.

“Pretty good” is a low standard in a town where the “very good” version of anything is just a few blocks away, but variety is what made the Manhattan food courts an easy compromise. Besides, the cafeteria setting was appropriate for lunch with a school friend.

The art school bond is a special one. You spend thousands of hours together working on projects, exchanging ideas, helping each other figure them out. You live with each other's frustrations, triumphs, and failures, as you try, as Van Gogh put it, “to break through that iron wall between what I feel and what I express.”

It was over one of these lunches that I'd first told Elizabeth about Fakebook, back when it was still just an idea. She'd loved it and promised to help, and of course she had. Her comments brought a balance to the testosterone-driven ballbusting from Ted and Steve—something I thought would be especially important after the introduction of Amish Kate. If only I'd gotten the chance.

“Dave…” she said, drawing my name out in her endearing, girlish way. “That Photoshop was really bad.”

“I know…” I looked down at the unwieldy piece of barbecue chicken I'd settled on.

“I mean, even the resolutions didn't match. You should always scale things down to the lowest quality image.”

“Yeah, I don't know what I was thinking.” I scooped up a forkful of runny sweet potatoes. They were pretty good. “The really scary thing is I loved it when I made it. I thought it was really funny. It was late—and I think I was just blinded by the joy I get out of doing ridiculous things. I know what you're saying, though. I could have been much more careful. Turns out I can blow it even with a girl I made up.”

Elizabeth was looking back at me with her involuntary compassion.

“Well, maybe the margin of error is over. If you really want to keep doing this, you need to take it seriously. You need to set a shot list and give yourself a library of photos you can use with all sorts of different light settings. Be professional about it.”

“This thing is really…” I tried to get out. “It's sort of a knot of a thing.”

“What do you mean?”

“Well…it's hard to explain. There are all these threads, and each one I feel a different way about. Part of it is funny, part of it is twisted, part of it is mean or interesting or silly. Like…I feel guilty when people take it seriously. I feel excited and thrilled when people really believe it. I feel empowered when I create a new post and someone goes for it—when I've made something that makes their version of the world a little stranger. It's a crazy feeling.

“But then I feel powerless when I can't control their reactions. This version of myself I created as a joke is more important to people than the real me ever was. It's insane to become jealous of yourself. It's this strange feeling of rejection. At the same time, now that people are turning on him, I feel betrayed. It doesn't make any sense.

“And every time I sit down to write a new Fakebook post or make a new image,” I continued, “I just feel crippled. I tug on any one of those threads, and the whole thing becomes more knotted.”

“Maybe,” Elizabeth said, “you just need to not think so much about it. If it's torturing you, I think you need to either stop doing it or stop worrying about the things that are making it difficult.” She paused. “But I think you should keep doing it.”

She sat there, collecting her thoughts. “It just feels…”

“Yeah…”

We shared an unspoken understanding. We'd spent hours and hours of studio time together. Fakebook, for all its frustrations and headaches, was unique. We both knew the value of a truly original idea. We both knew how rare those ideas were—and how delicate.

After work, I kicked off my shoes, plugged in my laptop, and sat on my unmade bed.

Dave Cicirelli
Here's another picture of a horse. Hope you like it.

Like · Comment · Share

Joe Moscone
I'm bored by Amish country, perhaps even more than you are. Go somewhere with hot women and share those photos. Horses…carriages…children…enough already.

2 days ago via mobile
· Like

Matt Riggio
I must say, this is truly a far cry from the adventure that I've been expecting. Don't TP anymore, dude.

yesterday via mobile
· Like

Joe Lennon
How much longer before you move on?

yesterday via mobile
· Like

Ted Kaiser
seriously Dave this is just sad. You are their slave! You, Dave Cicirelli, a once proud, principled young man are now a lackey for some bozo Amish people. You're picking up horseshit.

5 hours ago via mobile
· Like

Matt Campbell
Ted, dude, Dave made an agreement as a gentleman. It requires that you be a man of your word or you are not a man at all. A commitment is a contract.

about an hour ago via mobile
· Like

Another true-to-form post. I continued to limp away slowly from anything suspicious. Everything I did on my wall now reeked of caution. I felt like Fakebook was this beautiful but thorny flower I'd discovered but didn't understand. I'd spent the last month trying to protect it by locking it away, but I was just killing it, and I would have kept on killing it if I hadn't clicked onto Matt Riggio's profile.

Matt Riggio
Trivia night at Houlihans!

Like · Comment

Trivia night at Houlihans?

That
guy has the audacity to call
my
posts boring?

I couldn't believe it. He didn't even know I was making this up, but he was giving me feedback. It was crazy.

Fake Dave was clearly on the cusp of—or in the middle of—a complete mental breakdown. Didn't these people have the decency to let him unravel in his own way? Or maybe they just couldn't see it. They were too busy projecting—dumping the weight of their fantasies on Fake Dave's shoulders.

And in that knot, out of all the different threads, the chord that was struck was an angry one. At that moment, there was no difference between Fake Dave and Real Dave. After all, they thought he was me. I felt like Maximus in the Colosseum, bellowing out, “
Are
you
not
entertained?
” Because while they may not have known they were an audience, they sure as hell were acting like one.

I was new to the feeling—unprepared for it. At that moment, I resented their rejection.

And realizing how preposterous a feeling that was…made me want to keep Fakebook alive. Yes, it was a messy, horrible knot. But every single thread surprised me. The fact that some of the surprises were terrible and some of the surprises were thrilling only strengthened my belief that this giant, flawed, morally suspect thing had a point—as elusive as that point seemed. I was scared that I'd never discover what it was.

Desperation and pride kicked in. I wasn't going to act like Fakebook was a failure. I was going to push this forward, sputtering engine and all. If I crashed Fakebook into the ground, at least it would be with my hand on the throttle, not the brakes.

For a moment, I'd found my steel. Ted wanted rebellion; Matt wanted nobility. They both wanted a role model. So I gave my audience what they wanted.

November 8: Back on Track

It's not easy for me to admit this. Ted's right.

Although we've been friends a long time, we haven't always seen eye to eye. His mama's boy attitude always clashed with my DIY punk rock lifestyle. Back in high school, I'd drag race and Dead Man's Bluff and he'd organize a bake sale for the 4-H club. I was always sticking it to the Man, and he'd always water the Man's plants when the Man was out of town.

That's why it's so shocking to have our roles reversed.

Ted, I'm not sure what set of USC pajamas you were wearing when you wrote your last comment…but your words have the unmistakable sting of an unpleasant truth. And there's only one thing to do when you feel that sting.

Take action.

I hit the road seeking freedom and found a prison. Seriously, the only difference is that a prisoner has access to a television and a working toilet.

This is not a fate worthy of my legend.

I'M DAVID RALPH CICIRELLI. MY ONLY NATURAL WEAKNESS IS AT THE FREE THROW LINE. I gladly take it on the chin from the powerful, and wear my battle scars as a badge of honor. I'll uproot my life if my life feels wrong, because I believe in righteous confrontation!

A rut is not something you can leave behind, it's something you need to fill in. Otherwise you'll find yourself at the bottom again.

Matt Campbell defended me from Ted's criticism. As much as I appreciate his unwavering support, I have to disagree with his assessment. There is nothing gentlemanly about tricking a man into shoveling horse shit.

We didn't strike an agreement as gentlemen. I was dictated to.

If the Dave of just five years ago met the Dave of today, I'd kick my own ass. It would be an act of charity. The old Dave…the Dave I'm attempting to rediscover, wouldn't stand for this.

I know to some, Ted's assault seems out of place. Who is he to cast such judgment on me? The real question is, “who am I?” Ted's emotional response came from a place of pain…because I am his hero.

Ted, you've reminded me that you and others live vicariously through me, admiring the many ways in which I do what you're all incapable of. Thank you for reminding me of this responsibility.

I've let you down. I reminded you that sometimes heroes have feet of clay. But you've reminded me that I have a backbone of iron. Rest assured, I will fail you no longer. Your admiration is a responsibility I will no longer take lightly.

Tomorrow is my last day in Amish country (gotta pack my shit, dawg).

Steve Cuchinello
“A nation that prefers disgrace to danger will find itself with a master, and deserve one.” Alexander Hamilton as quoted by David Ralph Cicirelli.

Glad you have found your way.

yesterday
· Like

Joe Lennon
Congrats! Which way are you headed next?

yesterday via mobile
· Like

Dave Cicirelli
Not sure. Going to hitch a ride and see.

BTW, everything worked out for Hamilton, right?

yesterday via mobile
· Like

Matt Campbell
You're right. I forgot all about my anger about the threat of hate crime laws. I became complacent. How are you planning your escape?

yesterday via mobile
· Like

Ted Kaiser
I am glad you found your way Dave. So glad in fact, that I will let pass the subtle digs and your attempts at idolatry. You've been through enough lately. You should come back to NJ though.

yesterday
· Like

Dave Cicirelli
Ted, there's no shame in admitting I'm your hero.

yesterday via mobile
· Like

November 10: Life Is Strange…

“It's often said that life is strange. But compared to what?”
—Steve Forbert

Here's the piece of the story I've been hesitant to talk about.

Ok…yesterday, it went DOWN.

If you read my last note, I basically verbalized it. “You strong-armed me, I'm not going to be intimidated by you, I'm Ted's hero…” blah blah blah.

Jonathon made it into this big ugly thing about the world outside of the Amish community, etc. He accused me of not being a man of my word…it got ugly. It basically ended when I dared him to stop me.

Storming out of a place filled with conscientious objectors isn't really that challenging.

It was unpleasant, but it's behind me.

…except it's not.

***

When I set up camp last night, Kate showed up.

Katie Fisher, the Amish girl I'd been flirting with…followed me out of Amish country. Jonathon's daughter chased after me like a lovesick teenager.

I mean, all right. She was my only friend out there. We made out one time, which was pretty cool. But…

…I was in Amish Country man!!!! It's like a hook-up in Cancun, except the exact opposite!

I didn't plan on leading her on, but I DEFINITELY didn't plan on taking her with me. This was all about independence.

Plus, I really don't know what kind of consequences my fleeing will bring about, I just know that having her with me will make matters more complicated.

But most important, I'm not sure what her expectations are. Does she think I'm going to marry her? Support her? I live in a tent.

The bottom line is I now have this woman with me who grew up in this strange place and is now relying on me to give her everything she imagined the rest of the world to offer.

I'm freaking out.

***

So now what?

We took a local bus to Harrisburg. From here, I figure we can take a bus to just about anywhere. We're in a cheap hotel. I couldn't exactly let her sleep in a tent. We went shopping at the Harrisburg Mall, I bought her some regular clothes. We'll probably hang out here a day or two then move on.

My cash supply is getting low.

She could have at least robbed her father before she fled.

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