Read What Matters Most is How Well You Walk Through the Fire Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
they were not quite looking at one
another nor were they trying to look
away.
they sat quietly on the uncomfortable
metal chairs in the small
glass-enclosed waiting room.
there must have been
13 or 14 of them
men and women
they looked neither
comfortable nor uncomfortable
as
I stood there
waiting for one of them
to speak
because
I didn't know which one
was the one in charge.
they were all in civilian clothes
and finally I asked:
“pardon me, but could somebody tell
me which room Betty Winters is in?”
“Betty Winters?” asked a man
dressed completely in matching brown.
I noticed he had a large ring of keys
fastened to his belt.
“yes,” I answered, “I've come to
visit her. these are visiting hours,
aren't they?”
there was no answer.
the man in brown got
out of his chair. he looked at
a chart on the wall.
“Betty Winters is in 303 only she's
not there. she took restricted
leave.”
the man in brown walked
back to his chair and
sat down.
the other people had remained
detached and motionless.
I almost asked, “is she coming
back?” but I already knew what
the man in brown knew:
if she didn't return she was
too insane to know she wasn't
sane enough
and if she did return she was
sane enough to know that she was
insane.
Betty Winters had asked me
to come visit her that day.
like most other afternoons
it was a wasted afternoon
for me.
as I walked back down the hall
a man ran along
in front of me. he jumped
and skipped
as he ran along
slapping at invisible marks on the
wall with his hands. he
never seemed to miss. suddenly he
let out a shout
darted into a side room and
without looking back
slammed the door
behind him.
WINE: at present you are buying about 60 bottles
per month
retailing at $5 a bottle
which comes to a total of $300 a month
(plus tax).
if you can cut this down to 30 bottles a month
(one bottle per night) and buy your wine
by the case at 10% discount you will only spend
$135. the amount saved will be approx. $165 per month
or
$1980 yearly!
DINING OUT: at present you go out to eat about
4 nights a week and it costs about $25 a night, including
drinks, which comes to a total of $400 per month. cut
   your
dining out to 2 nights a week and to about $20 each
   night
(much less if you eat Chinese). this will come to
about $160 a month (plus tips). the amount saved will be
approx. $240 a month, or $2880 a year!
TELEPHONE: at present you have been spending about
   $200 per
month. this one's easy: no more long distance calls! this
will cut your expense in half. the amount saved will be
   $100 a month,
or $1200 per year.
RACETRACK: at present you are spending (losing)
   about
$90 a week. Hank, you've just got to figure out
a new betting system, for this comes to $360 per month!
so my dear, by cutting down on wining, dining, long
   distance
calls and losing at the track
you will save approx. $865 a month, or
get this:
$10,380 per year! REALLY!
get ready,
get set,
GO!
Houdini was caught off guard
by a kid
who punched him in the belly
before he was ready.
he hadn't inflated his air vest
yet.
the same thing happened to me
at a party once:
I told this big guy:
“go ahead, hit me in the belly
as hard as you can! I have abs of
steel!”
just then a young girl with beautiful
legs
crossed them
and I caught a glimpse
of miraculous thigh
just as the big guy
drove his fist straight through my
stomach wall.
the pain was almost tranquil
and I couldn't see
then it got real bad
and I lifted my drink
and had some
and a while later
when I could talk
I told the big guy:
“now it's my turn!”
“yeah, right,” he said and vanished into
the crowd.
the girl with the beautiful legs
left early
with somebody else.
later on that night
I drank a pint of whiskey
straight
without stopping.
there was really nothing else left
for me
to do, and I got a
well-deserved
smattering of
applause.
“look,” I say, “you shouldn't have broken in
here, it's just not done⦔
“why not? we waited out there for 2 hours.”
“you're taking a chance of getting sliced
from gullet to asshole,” I tell him.
“I often lay here in the dark
and don't want to be
bothered⦔
“but I thought we were friends⦔
“you shouldn't think. it's harmful.”
“Hank, I haven't painted a thing this year.
I'm hurting.”
“that's your dirty laundry. you're living with your
   mother.
she'll powder your
bunghole⦔
“you don't like me, do you?”
“you're always talking about Art,”
I tell him. “I don't like Artists, I don't like
you, I don't like most
people, I don't like door-knockers.
I never knock on any man's door;
I expect the same.”
“do you want me to leave?”
“of course.”
“do you have a five?”
“I don't carry fives.”
“do you have a one?”
“I don't carry ones.”
“do you have any small change?”
“never carry it. holes in my pockets.”
after he leaves I go into the kitchen and see where he
and his
girlfriend broke in. she had sat through the whole
conversation
with a 15 cent Mona Lisa smile on her
face.
I need two new hooks on
the screen. then I go and check my hunting
knife. might be better to gut him
the next time he crawls
through
there.
better for him, better for me,
better for his mother,
better for Art.
I have just spent one-hour-and-a-half
handicapping tomorrow's
card.
when am I going to get at the poems?
well, they'll just have to wait,
they'll have to warm their feet in the
anteroom
where they'll sit gossiping about
me.
“this Chinaski, doesn't he realize that
without us he would have long ago
gone mad, been dead?”
“he knows, but he thinks he can keep
us at his beck and call!”
“he's an ingrate!”
“let's give him writer's block!”
“yeah!”
“yeah!”
“yeah!”
the little poems kick up their heels
and laugh.
then the biggest one gets up and
walks toward the door.
“hey, where you going?” he is
asked.
“somewhere where I am
appreciated.”
then, he
and the others
vanish.
I open a beer, sit down at the
machine and nothing
happens.
like now.
I awaken at 11:30 a.m.
get into my chinos and a clean green shirt
open a Miller's,
and nothing in the mailbox but the
Berkeley Tribe
which I don't subscribe to,
and on KUSC there is organ music
something by Bach
and I leave the door open
stand on the porch
walk out front
hot damn
that air is good
and the sun like golden butter on my
body. no race track today, nothing but this
beastly and magic
leisure, rolled cigarette dangling
I scratch my belly in the sun
as Paul Hindemith
rides by on a bicycle,
and down the street a lady in a
very red dress
bends down into a laundry basket
rises
hangs a sheet on a line,
bends again, rises, in all that red,
that red like snake skin
clinging moving flashing
hot damn
I keep looking, and
she sees me
pauses bent over basket
clothespin in mouth
she rises with a pair of pink
panties
smiles around the
clothespin
waves to me.
what's next? rape in the streets?
I wave back,
go in,
sit down at the machine
by the window, and now it's someone's
violin concerto in D,
and a pretty black girl in very tight pants
walking a hound,
they stop outside my window,
look in;
she has on dark shades
and her mouth opens a little, then she and the
   dog
move on.
someone might have bombed cities for this or
sold apples in the
rain.
but whoever is responsible, today I wish to
thank him
all the
way.
she pulls a large silver mirror
from her purse
and starts to pencil her eyebrows.
the left eye is bruised where she
fell several nights ago.
the afternoon sun comes through the
blinds behind her.
she talks and talks as she doctors
her face: “god damn it, I'm always
falling over the strangest thingsâ¦
the radiator at home, my sewing
machine, a wastebasket full of empty
tin cans⦔
she lifts her drink
still gazing into the silver
mirror⦓you're a funny guy, you
know that?â¦you say things that
nobody else would ever think of
sayingâ¦it must feel good to be
verbal that way⦔
she spins the mirror in its frame
and blows cigarette smoke through it
like through a revolving door.
“I'm glad you don't like women who
wear pantyhoseâ¦it de-cunts a woman⦔
the afternoon sun seeps through her
red-brown hair. quickly she crosses
her legs, swings her foot up and
down. she drops the silver mirror
back into her purse, looks up at meâ
her eyes very large and the palest
green that I have ever seen, and
down through Georgia and in New Orleans
and up in Maine
the whole world is caught in her glance
and at last
the universe is
magnificent.
moments of agony and moments of glory
march across my roof.
the cat walks by
seeming to know everything.
my luck has been better, I think,
than the luck of the cut gladiolus,
although I am not sure.
I have been loved by many women,
and for a hunchback of life,
that's lucky.
so many fingers pushing through my hair
so many arms holding me close
so many shoes thrown carelessly on my bedroom
rug.
so many searching hearts
now fixed in my memory that
I'll go to my death,
remembering.
I have been treated better than I should have
beenâ
not by life in general
nor by the machinery of things
but by women.
but there have been other women
who have left me
standing in the bedroom alone
doubled overâ
hands holding the gutâ
thinking
why why why why why why?
women go to men who are pigs
women go to men with dead souls
women go to men who fuck badly
women go to shadows of men
women go
go
because they must go
in the order of
things.
the women know better
but often chose out of
disorder and confusion.
they can heal with their touch
they can kill what they touch and
I am dying
but not dead
yet.
when the phone rings it's usually a man's
voice and it's like most other voices because
it usually says the same thing:
“are you Henry Chinaski, the writer?”
“I'm a sometimes writer.”
“listen, I'm surprised you're listed. well,
I want to come over and talk to you, have a
few beers with you.”
“why?” I ask.
“I just want to talk.”
“you don't understand,” I say, “there's nothing
to talk about. talking brings me down.”
“but I like your writing.”
“you can have that.”
“I just want to come over and talk
awhile.”
“I don't want to talk.”
“then why are you listed?”
“I like to fuck women.”
“is that why you write?”
“I'm like Truman Capote. I write to pay the
rent.”
I hang up.
they phone back.
I hang up.
I don't see what writing has to do with
conversation.
I also don't see what writing has to do with my
getting 3 bad books of poetry a week
in the mail.
I'm not a priest.
I'm not a guru.
I probably have more bad moments and self-
doubt than any of those who
phone me.
but when there's a knock on the door
and a creature of beauty enters
(female)
(after phoning)
hesitant
smiling
with delightful curves and magic movements
I realize
she is more dangerous than
all the armies of all time and
I know I didn't write my poems for that
and then I'm not sure
and then I don't know again
and then I forget about knowing
I get her a drink
then go into the bedroom and
take the phone off the
hook.
that's the best way to get
unlisted.