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  • Mom’s rehab

    Long-time readers of this blog should find something better to read, but you might remember that I’ve written a few times about my mother making me mental. Moms can do that, and nobody’s Mom did it better than my mom, but old age mellowed her, and we’ve gotten closer.

    A month or so ago, doctors said that a valve in Mom’s heart was wobbly, and ought to be replaced, so my sister Katrina — who lives with Mom, and is her best friend and caretaker — checked Mom into the hospital for surgery. It’ll be quick and easy, they said, using newfangled up-the-artery techniques, and Mom would spend the night after surgery in the hospital, then go home.

    The surgery went smoothly, but the after-effects were anything but. For a day and a half, Mom didn’t know who she was, where she was, or even that she was in a hospital. Since then she’s figured out who she is, but she’s still cloudy, often needs the basics re-explained.

    “Why am I here?”

    “You had surgery, Mom.”

    “I did?”

    After another week in the hospital, in addition to her recurring confusion, Mom’s heart rate was scary low, so the doctors recommended a second surgery, to install a pacemaker. We worried, and reminded the anesthesiologist that Mom’s old. The surgery went fine, same as the first, but again Mom emerged confused.

    For the past two weeks, she’s been in a rehab center, where she gets daily physical therapy because she’s forgotten how to walk, though walking had never been a problem before the surgeries. Mom used to walk to church twice weekly, as it’s only a block from her house, but now she can’t walk without a ‘spotter’, in case she goes down.

    Katrina stays with Mom from breakfast to supper, every day. Me, I visit for 2-3 hours almost daily, giving Katrina a break, and watching Mom’s slow recovery.

    She’s still only about 75% there. I miss the rest of her, and I miss her text messages. She used to text at least daily, sometimes several times, sometimes so often it was mildly annoying. But my last text from Mom was the night before her first surgery. Since then, nada.

    Meanwhile, her recovery continues, but so slowly that some days I wonder. She usually says “Hello Doug!” when I arrive, but some days it’s, “Oh hello, I’m so glad to see you,” because she recognizes me but doesn’t know me. On good days, though, we can talk about old times, and she remembers through the clouds.

    Yesterday, Mom & I had lunch together in the rehab center’s dining room, and she kept forgetting to eat, or perhaps just had no interest in the bland food. She spent an hour and a half eating perhaps a dozen bites of chicken and rice and broccoli (which she now calls borkoli), but she ate all her pudding like a good girl.

    Across the room, I spotted a piano. Mom grew up poor, but a piano was in her parlor and she’d learned to play. Our family never had one, so I’ve only heard Mom tinkle the keys a few times, but I asked if she wanted to play the piano and she lit up and said yes, please, so I wheeled her over.

    “Baldwin,” she said, reading the brand label above the keys. “The piano in our house was a Baldwin.” And then she started playing. It wasn’t Horowitz, but she got 2/3 of the notes right, and I was able to name that tune: Bringing in the Sheaves.

    She played several more hymns, and we sang together, and I didn’t even mind belting out superstitious lyrics I absolutely don’t believe. Then the activities supervisor came by (I suspect someone had asked her to silence the old lady at the piano), and invited Mom to play “Solve the Mystery” in the games room, so I wheeled her there.

    Mom kinda surprised me by knowing the way: “Turn left here,” etc. That’s gotta be a good sign, right? Then I noticed that there’s a sign, literally: “Games room,” with an arrow pointing to the left.

    One afternoon in the games room, I watched Mom and about a dozen people, some in wheelchairs, others in various states of disrepair, batter a beach ball across a table for half an hour — a hand-eye coordination exercise, but also kinda fun and funny to watch. Another day when I’d been there, the activities lady tossed random questions, gently forcing the patients to think and express themselves.

    For “Solve the Mystery,” the activities lady read a kinda complicated Agatha Christie knockoff, a few hundred words about four characters in a drawing room. It was all spoken, with no reading and no pictures, and the mystery was too much for most of the patients to follow, let alone solve. Heck, I had a hard time keeping the characters straight myself, and I was sitting on a couch, not participating. Mom, though, correctly eliminated one of the suspects: “Evelyn couldn’t have done it,” she explained to the facilitator, “because you said she left at 8:30, and the crime didn’t happen until 9:00 at the earliest.” So Mom’s head is starting to work again.

    I am cautiously optimistic, but still full of worries. Mom was fine when she checked into the hospital, but now she has a new heart valve and a pacemaker, a head that’s never quite clear, and she can’t hardly walk.

    United Health Care is her insurance — yeah, the same bastards whose CEO was assassinated. They sent a letter that says that Mom’s rehab is covered for 21 days, because they ran the algorithm, and the average person Mom’s age, suffering Mom’s symptoms, is discharged after 21 days in rehab. Coverage for Mom’s rehab ends on April 8, says the letter.

    My wife was in poor health for the last seven years off her life, so I have extensive experience dealing with hospitals, nursing homes, and insurance, and to me the letter is bad news. Katrina’s always had great health, has never cared for a fatally-diagnosed loved one, so she took the letter as good news — yay, Mom’s coming home on April 8. Sure hope Katrina’s optimism wins out over my pessimism, but it’s hard to envision Mom leaving rehab in a week.

    This morning, though, Mom texted me. I thought Katrina must’ve typed the words, but she didn’t. Mom typed it herself. My last text to her had been a week ago: “I am visiting you every day and every day you’re a little bit better than the day before. KEEP DOING THAT PLEASE.”

    Mom’s reply: “I am veree glad to see you every day.”

    4/1/2026

    itsdougholland.com
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  • Trump regime cites white supremacists in bid to end birthright citizenship; 50,000 troops poised for whatever’s next in the Middle East; Trump urges world’s nations to steal oil…

    Jan. 6 rioters accuse police of excessive force in class action lawsuit

    I am uncomfortable supporting the police in any way, but the imagery I’ve seen from 1/6/2021 shows cops giving the insurrectionists almost white-glove treatment (at least by cop standards).

    Trump’s Justice Department dropped 23,000 criminal investigations in shift to immigration

    Supreme Court backs conservatives’ ‘right’ to torture LGBTQ kids

    Utah bans polygraph tests for those reporting sexual assault

    This is progress, and says everything about the Utah and police mindsets, on sexual assault and homosexuality.

    Me, looking grumpy, reading the news

    AND NOW THE NEWS

    #595
    APRIL 1, 2026
    (but no jokes)

    Dem Senators launch investigation into Alligator Alcatraz torture

    Excerpt: “There have been credible allegations that detainees at ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ have been punished with confinement in a small cage-like structure known as ‘the box,’ where they are held in stress positions with hands and feet tightly shackled for hours at a time, in direct sunlight with no access to food or water,” the letter stated.

    San Diego woman abducted at her green card interview, flown out of state, nearly killed multiple times when her diabetes was ignored, and has her credit card info stolen

    Deaths in ICE Custody are growing. ‘They let him rot in there.’

    FOIA docs reveal details about ICE “surge” in Minneapolis

    New data indicates most arrested in Maine ICE surge had no criminal convictions, charges

    Data shows three-quarters of ICE abductees in Minnesota had no criminal record

    ICE agents will be stationed outside graduation events for the nation’s newest Marines to identify whether any of their family members are undocumented, according to the Marine Corps

    Prior to ICE murder of Alex Pretti, White House commandant Stephen Miller told officials that demonstrators “need to be vanquished by any force necessary”

    Trump regime cites white supremacists in bid to end birthright citizenship

    Excerpt: Alexander Porter Morse, a Confederate officer during the Civil War and a Louisiana attorney, argued for legalized segregation in the landmark 1896 Supreme Court case that established the “separate but equal” doctrine and buttressed Jim Crow laws.

    He is again playing a key role in a monumental case to be argued before the justices Wednesday: The Trump administration has tapped Morse as an authority in its push to upend long-settled law that virtually everyone born in the United States is a citizen.

    Over a century ago, Morse was among a trio of thinkers who spearheaded a failed effort – steeped in anti-Black and anti-Chinese racism – to erase birthright citizenship. The Trump administration is reviving their arguments to make its case today, some legal scholars say.

    Trump signs order seeking federal control of mail voting as he promotes false claims

    The President has zero authority to change election rules, so this is one of the biggies in his fetish for fascism. If Trump gets his way on this one, it’s the end.

    But c’mon, you know we’re at the end already.

    Federal Judge approves Trump order for list of Jews from Penn

    Next, Trump demands their firstborn sons…

    Tennessee librarian fired for refusing to move more than 100 books from children’s to adult section

    President declares Iran must ‘open up the Strait of Trump’ as he groans over not winning the Nobel Peace Prize

    Giggle at Trump’s senility and stupidity, sure, but this war he’s started has the potential to sink the world’s economy, and quite quickly.

    If the strait stays closed, the world will have to significantly reduce its oil and gas consumption — but not before prices spike to a level that forces consumers and businesses to fly, drive and spend much less

    New analysis reveals a US weapon struck a second elementary school in Iran

    US used missiles untested in combat in a deadly attack on Iranian sports hall and school

    There are now over 50,000 American troops in the Mideast

    Spain closes airspace to US aircraft involved in Iran war

    This is something Spaniards should be proud about.

    Italy denies use of Sicily airbase to US planes carrying weapons for Iran war

    White House’s mysterious ‘covfefe moment’ was stupider than we imagined

    Trump to revoke protections for endangered species in Gulf of Mexico, for ‘national security’

    Big shot Texas Republicans calls for 100,000,000 deportations and increased Islamophobia

    Gosh, it’s startling to learn that Republicans are racists.

    JD Vance claims Ilhan Omar ‘definitely committed immigration fraud,’ White House will ‘go after’ her

    Hegseth official told military officer Trump doesn’t ‘want to stand next to a black female officer’ in promotions rift: report

    Confidential database reveals which items NPS thinks may ‘disparage’ America

    White House app found tracking users’ exact location every 4.5 minutes via third-party server

    Arizona Governor vetoes bill to name highway for dead asswipe Charlie Kirk

    Pardoned insurrectionist gets four years for child porn, files included toddlers, bestiality, “gruesome” animal abuse

    Newly appointed political director for College Republicans of America is racist, antisemitic, homophobic, sexist, etc — a Republican, in other words

    Chicago Bulls waive Jaden Ivey following multiple right-wing social media tirades

    It’s not clear what Robert F Kennedy Jr did with a raccoon’s penis

    DeSantis signs bill to rename Florida airport for Trump

    Trump accused of showing classified map to passengers on private flight

    Drunk-driving Republican politician is charged; another lawmaker was carrying handgun during traffic stop

    Being armed and drunk seems like something that shouldn’t be forgiven quite so quickly, but no charges are filed.

    Pete Hegseth’s broker attempted to make defense investments before Iran war

    Hegseth reverses helicopter crew suspension over Kid Rock flyby

    White House IT guy sends out reminder memo about child porn

    Uber is spending millions to make it harder to sue after wrecks

    Scientists solved the mystery of missing ocean plastic — it went invisible and spread everywhere

    Major enshittifier Sysco buys Restaurant Depot for $29B

    Trump tells DHS to pay TSA despite government shutdown after agents miss another paycheck

    This is illegal, of course, like everything Trump does except eating cheeseburgers and shitting.

    US directs embassies to team up against foreign ‘hostility’ – and use X to ‘counter anti-American propaganda’

    Trump urges world’s nations to steal oil

    She spoke out about Gaza. Now she can’t use a credit card.

    American cops are armed and dangerous, barely trained, barely supervised. They can get away with anything, and do.

    Connecticut cop fired after firing 9 shots killing black man in mental health crisis, after other cops tried to de-escalate

    Local cops haven’t investigated ICE killing outside Chicago last year

    Kentucky: All charges dismissed against 2 former police officers who provided false information for search warrant leading to raid and murder of Breonna Taylor

    Michigan: Over traffic violations, police chase driver into wreck killing two people in the other car

    New York cops drag 80-year-old black woman from car and break her teeth after she calls 911 for help, charging her with assault — now she wants payback

    Ohio: Former deputy found guilty of corruption of another with drugs, two counts of intimidation, unlawful transaction in weapons, two counts of theft, and one count of forgery; two counts of abduction and one count of tampering with evidence were dropped

    South Carolina: Over traffic violation, cops chase motorcyclist into fatal wreck

    Texas: It took 5½ years to reach a verdict that arresting a reporter for photographing cops violates the First Amendment

    Texas: Over “disturbance” call, cops chase driver into fatal wreck

    John Oliver, on police stings

    ‘Our assumptions are broken’: how fraudulent church data revealed AI’s threat to polling

    Excerpt: “In general, people who are highly skilled using the internet and concealing their identity skew younger,” said Kennedy. “Bogus cases want to qualify for as many surveys as possible. It is well known in the industry that young adults are hard to reach for surveys. So from this standpoint, it is advantageous to self-present as young because surveys tend to need such respondents.”

    Kennedy added: “Bogus respondents tend to respond in the affirmative, no matter what is asked. This is called positivity bias, which inflates the estimate.”

    AI overly affirms users asking for personal advice

    Excerpt: What’s more, the study determined that just one interaction with a flattering chatbot was likely to “distort” a human user’s “judgement” and “erode prosocial motivations,” an outcome that persisted regardless of a person’s demographics and previous grasp on the tech as well as how, stylistically, an individual chatbot delivered its twisted verdict. In short, after engaging with chatbots on a social or moral quandary, people were less likely to admit wrongdoing — and more likely to dig in on the chatbot’s version of events, in which they, the main character, were the one in the right.

    AI systems are enabling mass surveillance in the US, and there is no national law that ‘meaningfully limits’ the use of this data

    Ronny Cheng, on AI

    Climate change is real, and it's happening now. It's going to get worse, and then it's going to get worse than that. It's never going to stop getting worse, so long as capitalism and the quest for money decides everything.

    US has caused $10-trillion worth of climate damage since 1990, research finds

    Kind of obnoxious that the damage needs to be expressed in dollars to reach some people. And the numbers only assess past damages; the future damages are incalculable, but will be exponentially higher.

    Sneezing, runny nose, itchy eyes: Allergy symptoms start earlier with climate change

    No snow. No water. Restrictions grow across West as drought fears rise.

    ‘Something out of the ordinary’: Why are Japan’s oysters dying en masse?

    AI data centers can warm surrounding areas by up to 9.1°C

    Religious followers believe their god protects and guides them. But god never shows up. Every religion is led only by humans, who often turn out to be charlatans, swindlers, or perverts.

    Georgia minister arrested after allegedly molesting woman at McDonald’s

    North Carolina: Former coach at Christ the King Catholic High School is accused of indecent liberties with two 16-year-old students

    Oklahoma City church manager nabbed after nearly $100,000 in tithes & offerings vanishes

    South Carolina: Preacher arrested for molesting a child

    Texas youth pastor sentenced to 40 years for child sexual assault

    Texas: MAGA megachurch pastor released from jail after serving only six months for molesting 12-year-old

    Wisconsin priest faces child porn charges after Clintonville arrest for attempted child enticement

    Shield of the Americas

    Excerpt: The inaugural Shield of the Americas Summit was held at one of Donald Trump’s golf resorts in Florida on 7 March. The US president told the dozen allied heads of state gathered at Trump National Doral Miami that he didn’t have time to learn ‘your damn language’. He scolded them for the reach of organised crime in their countries, as if US drug policies had nothing to do with it. Trump said he’d be happy to use missiles to target traffickers should his partners request it, and that Cuba was ‘at the end of the line’. Pete Hegseth announced that he only spoke ‘American’.

    How Angie Mentink made it back after an offseason stroke

    Angie is a bright spot on the Mariners radio broadcasts (which I can listen to again, because I’ve found a source that automutes the ads). I’d missed her during the spring training broadcasts, and haven’t heard as much from her as usual since. Who knew there was a reason?

    Alas, poor Yorick. I knew him...

    Terry Bell
    “wayward boy” of South Africa

    Dick Foley
    rock’n’roller, The Brothers Four

    “Ross the Boss” Friedman
    rock’n’roller, Manowar

    Nicholas Haysom
    good guy “Fink”

    Sam Kieth
    cartoonist, The Maxx

    Perry Thornley
    forgotten person

    James Tolkan
    actor, Back to the Future

    unidentified, 28
    forgotten person

    Jeff Webb
    cheerleading fascist

    Nothing will meaningfully improve
    until billionaires fear for their lives.

    4/1/2026

    Logo illustration by Jeff Meyer. Tip ‘o the hat to the Anderson Valley Advertiser, Daily Grail, Fat Magic, Jemin Na CPA, Joe My God, Jamie Zawinski, Voenix Rising, What Not’s, and anywhere else I’ve stolen links, illustrations, or inspiration.

    Special thanks to Linden Arden, Becky Jo, Joey Jo Jo & John the Basket emeritus, Jeff Meyer, Dave S, Name Withheld, and always extra special thanks to my lovely late Stephanie, who gave me 21 years and proved that the world isn’t always shitty.

    News always and only from reliable sources, and I decide what’s reliable — no right-wing bullshit, no Substack because fuck Nazis, and no RawStory, Newsweek, or other clickbait sites. Written news is preferred; video links will be rare, and damned near never to videos where a reporter or podcaster simply reads a script or does improv — that’s show biz, not news.

    If you can’t access an article linked here, due to a paywall, forced registration for spam, or any website’s anti-reading layout, simply let me know and I’ll reply with the article’s complete text.

    And Now the News

    itsdougholland.com
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  • Room 403 at the Hotel McMillan

    When I came to San Francisco in autumn of 1991, I didn’t know the town, or anyone in it. All I knew was, I wanted a cheap place near a subway station, so getting around would be quick and easy. I’d come in a van, but permanently parked it far away, with no intention of driving it again (and I never did).

    From Pathetic Life #23
    Monday, April 1, 1996

    On BART and MUNI, I briefly peeked at the neighborhoods near several stations. The area that seemed most alive and interesting was the north Mission District, near the 16th @ Mission BART station. Tellingly, the close runner-up was the station at 24th @ Mission. I went with 16th over 24th, because at 16th there’s the Roxie, a theater that shows nothing but old movies.

    Took the first low-rent room I looked at, a roach- and rat-infested cave in a residential hotel on Mission Street almost overlooking the BART station. Lived happily in that hellhole until I found a slightly better rez hotel half a block away.

    Being an idiot, I didn’t know how good I had it in the Mission, so eventually I moved to a rez hotel downtown, near where I was working. Later I moved into a Mission apartment with Pike, a guy I barely knew who turned out to be a perpetually-unemployed drug addict with a live-in moocher girlfriend who drove me nuts.

    Judith read about Pike in the zine, and offered me safe refuge in Berkeley, sharing a flat with her and her husband and their friends, Cy and Joe. And there I was, until the landlord noticed there were too many of us, and Cy and Joe and I were told to go.

    That’s the story so far.

    Giving it all as little thought as possible, I’ve decided that my first choice was the right choice — the Mission is where I ought to be. So after typing the above, I BARTed into the city, to find a cheap room in a rez hotel, somewhere near the 16th @ Mission subway station.

    At the first rez hotel I walked into, an Indian woman in a shawl told me their cheapest room was $125 a week. I said thanks and turned around. That’s far pricier than I’d expected.

    At the next hotel, an Indian woman in a shawl told me I’d have to talk to her husband about renting a room, and he’d be out all day. I said thanks and turned around. There are plenty of other rez hotels in the neighborhood, and I didn’t want to take a number and stand in line.

    At a third place, an Indian woman in a shawl answered a few of my questions, and told me rooms started at $90 a week. That’s reasonable, and I might’ve taken that place, but her gaze fell to the pin on my windbreaker — “He is your God, they are your rules, you burn in Hell” — and suddenly they had no vacancies. I said thanks and turned around, and slipped the pin into my pocket.

    At the next rez hotel, an Indian woman in a shawl showed me a room for $80 a week — tiny room, tiny bed, working but rusted sink. Perfectly adequate. I was ready to move in, but as we walked back to the office to have me sign a book and fork over four twenties, a tattooed hooker in the hall — she looked about 14 — started screaming obscenities at her ‘date’. Ah, no thanks. I’ve lived in a whorehouse before, and the sound of sex coming through the walls can be fun, sure, but there are endless arguments about money, and about what she will and won’t do, and it gets repetitive and it’s always too loud.

    Each of these places had a sign posted on the wall at the entrance — “No visitors after 10:00,” or 9:00, or 8. At the next rez hotel, the rule was even simpler: “No visitors,” period, and I like that. It ought to make the place quieter, with no-one for the lowlife and lunatic residents to argue with except ourselves.

    I’m a shitty host. Don’t have many friends, and wouldn’t subject them to the rez hotel experience, and generally, I prefer solitude anyway. Nothing personal, but you’re not invited.

    The Indian woman in a shawl told me to wait for her husband, and psychically I knew he’d be a Mr Patel. I don’t know if they’re closely related, but every rez hotel in San Francisco is run by an Indian immigrant named Patel.

    And indeed, before too long, Ben Kingsley as Gandhi waddled and limped down the hall toward the office. He introduced himself — “I’m Mr Patel” — and told me the rent was $85 a week.

    I shrugged and said, “Sounds good,” and he handed me a key.

    “The room is on the fourth floor,” he said, “third door on the left.” He hadn’t asked my name, I hadn’t given him any money, and he wasn’t going to accompany me up the stairs to show the room.

    “Elevator?” I asked, hopefully, pointing to the old-style lift with a latticed gate, directly across from the office door.

    “Sorry,” he said like I knew he would, “it’s out of order.”

    “Does it ever work?” I asked, but Mr Patel’s English or earpiece wasn’t very good, or he pretended not to hear.

    I climbed the stairs, sixteen per floor, then turned the key. As in every rez hotel room, there’s a sink, a rickety chair, a wobbling table, and a bed with sheets and blankets. The bedspread was clean but dotted with cigarette burns, and I used it to wipe the sweat off my forehead, from climbing sixty-four steps.

    Tried the window, and it opened, with an extremely non-postcard view of the littered fire escapes, trash cans, and back doors of two other rez hotels.

    Took a pee in the john, which of course is down the hall, shared with everyone else who lives on the fourth floor. It was as clean as any average public restroom.

    I’d brought a few necessities in my backpack, so returning to what was almost my room by then, I took out a plastic cup and filled it with water from the sink. Took a sip, and it tasted like water, and I noticed that the sink is just the right height for peeing into. I’m not gonna get dressed and walk down the hall every time I gotta pee.

    Then I stood and listened, and heard no arguments or screaming. That might’ve been only the luck of the moment, but I’d made the decision: It’ll do, so I walked down four flights of stairs and paid the first week’s rent.

    This hotel has peeling paint, lots of colorful muck smudges on the walls, and the two fellow residents I’ve passed in the hall seemed sane. The hallway carpet is somewhat green, with garish orange blotches of an origin I’d rather not know.

    In my room is a large cupboard that won’t open, and a very small closet that does. There was even a small black-and-white TV atop the flimsy dresser, but I unplugged it and stashed it in the closet. As for the dresser, one of the drawers is missing. There’s roachshit around the floorboards, but I haven’t seen a roach yet.

    The only decor is a calendar on the wall, with a picture of Christ above the month of Marzo, and an advertisement in Spanish for a taqueria on Valencia Street — the implication being, Jesus Himself eats at SuperTaco.

    It’s your basic wino hotel, but there’s a grocery store across the street, a used bookstore at the next corner, and plenty of movie theaters — the Roxie is a few blocks one way, the Tower a few blocks the other, and the #33 bus goes directly to the Castro and Red Victorian.

    The building, while old, seems sturdy enough to stand through an earthquake, and the fire escapes at both ends of the hallway are not locked.From the nearest fire escape, there’s a nice view of the street, the traffic, and the bums drunks and derelicts below. I’m calling that the veranda, and anticipate making sandwiches in my room but eating them on the fire escape/veranda.

    Something smells fishy, though. There’s a seafood store on the hotel’s first floor, selling live and dead salmon and cod and clams.

    Having rented a room, I walked to the offices of Black Sheets, and worked my normal Monday shift with Bill and Steve, and some pretty young woman they’ve hired.

    It’s a porn publisher, so they get incoming smut of every persuasion in the mail. Bill gave me a stack of leftover nudie and fuck magazines, so after work I came back to the hotel and christened the sheets, thinking of my new co-worker.

    Then I BARTed to the old place in Berkeley, and came back with my typewriter, and some pants and towels and ramen (the essentials). Wrote up the day, christened the sheets again, and now I’m trying to sleep while the guy in the next room watches a soap opera in Spanish.

    His room originally adjoined mine, and even though the connecting door has been boarded over, when he sneezes I want to say “Bless you” and when I fart I’m sure he can smell it.

    This is my home, sweet home: Room 403 at the Hotel McMillan. I think I’ll like it here.

    This is an entry retyped from an on-paper zine I wrote many years ago, called Pathetic Life. The opinions stated were my opinions then, but might not be my opinions now. Also, I said and did some disgusting things, so parental guidance is advised.

    Pathetic Life
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