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  • A ringing phone

    Usually I forget my dreams within seconds after waking up, but this one stuck with me a while. The particulars have faded, but I remember the gist of it, because it starred my mother. Nobody else can give me that sinking feeling of being scolded, like Mom can and always does.

    PATHETIC LIFE logo

    From Pathetic Life #24
    Monday, May 6, 1996

    It’s been almost a year since she and I said goodbye at the airport, and she didn’t know it then — neither did I — but I think that was goodbye forever. Mom’s ongoing attempts to convert me, constant retelling of the same stories, and of course her never-ending reminders that I’m a disappointment in this way, and also this way and this way — enough already.

    Thanks for changing my diapers, Mom, when I was newborn. Thanks for taking care of me when I was sick. Thanks for everything, and I’m not being sarcastic, I mean it. You were a good mom, when I was a child.

    Now, though, I’m potty-trained, and no longer need a note to stay home from school, and it’s tiresome and infuriating to have everything about me second-guessed, when the verdict is always that I ought to be better, and different, completely different from what I am.

    Nothing I’ve done since third grade has been the right thing in my mother’s eyes, and she never stops letting me know it — if we’re in contact. So we’re not.

    I love her, appreciate her, and wish her happiness, but I haven’t called in a long, long time. Mother’s Day is coming, but she’s not getting flowers or a phone call or a card from me. She always complains that I don’t write, I don’t call — and I don’t intend to.

    My father is dead, and I’ve starting to think of myself as an orphan.

    ♦ ♦ ♦  

    After my day pushing broom and proofreading at Black Sheets, I came home to the hotel and checked my voice mail from the pay phone on the wall, outside the manager’s office. There were two messages from two men I didn’t know, which is ordinary, because I’m the guy who’ll do anything legal for $5 an hour.

    The first voice mail was almost frantic: “My name’s Gary Linton, and it’s a long shot but I saw your ad, and I need help, tonight — like, right fuckin’ now! Call me quick!” He left his number and an address, and the timestamp said he’d called less than half an hour earlier, so I could’ve called back while it was still sorta ‘quick’.

    But, nah. If it’s an emergency, call 9-1-1. I don’t like talking on the phone, and him giving me an address gave me an excuse not to call — the address was within easy walking distance, so I decided to walk there and introduce myself.

    But first, I listened to the second message. “Hey, I’m John Bennett,” said the voice. “I bought your zine at Epicenter Zone, loved it by the way, and I want to hire you.” He said I’d be typing and vacuuming, and left his number but no address, so I called him back before dealing with the first caller’s ’emergency’.

    Bennett and I talked briefly, and I could tell that I wouldn’t like him, but that’s ordinary, too — most people bug me, either a little or a lot. I told him I had to leave, which was the truth — Gary had an emergency, remember — but I said I’d call again tomorrow, and we could arrange a time and place.

    I hung up, and jotted a few a few details from the conversation into my notepad. Then the pay phone rang as I was still standing next to it, and being in a fairly good mood, I answered it. Thought I’d be taking a message for another resident of the building, and then tacking a note on the wall, but instead it was Bennett.

    “Hey again, Doug,” he said. “I forgot to mention, there’s also some gardening work to be done in the back yard…” and he spoke of weeds and flowers, oblivious to my shock and rage until I interrupted.

    “I didn’t give you this number,” I said. “I don’t take calls here,” and I almost said, “here at the hotel,” but maybe he didn’t know where I was, and I sure wasn’t going to pinpoint myself for this man who’d somehow phoned me.

    “Hey, don’t get your tits in a wringer,” he said. “I’ve got call-return, so I called back.”

    I didn’t know what to say. I’ve heard that phones have that call-back ability if you pay extra, but nobody’d ever used it to finger me. Eventually I pierced the silence with ice, saying, “Some people — me, for instance — think that’s rude.”

    “Well,” he said, “some people are assholes.”

    I hung up and, still rattled, stood there and stared at the phone. Almost instantly, it rang again, but I was done talking to that ass, so I lifted the receiver an inch, only to hang it up again. Then I walked halfway up the stairs, and stopped at the landing to think.

    Call-return. It’s useful, I suppose, if you get a crank call, or if someone hangs up before you get to the phone. You push a few buttons, and the machinery rings back the person who’d last called. But I didn’t want that person to be me, and then — ring ring.

    He was calling me back, again. And I sure as shit ain’t doing John Bennett’s typing, or vacuuming, or weeding his garden. Ring, ring.

    There’s a reason I don’t have a phone. I kinda hate phones, and don’t want one ringing while I’m asleep or writing or relaxing. I abhor the interruptions, so I would never give anyone the number for the hotel’s pay phone — I don’t even know the number.

    And yet it was ringing, and it was for me. I was standing on the landing, which seemed unwise and exposed, so I walked the rest of the way up the stairs to the second floor. From there, I couldn’t see the pay phone, but I could still hear it ringing. Ring, ring.

    I was panicked and felt cornered and unsure what to do. I could’ve gone back downstairs, answered it, and told John Bennett I would kill him if he ever called again. It would’ve been the truth, too, but I was frozen solid, paralyzed, and I didn’t do that, didn’t do anything.

    How long the phone had been ringing I don’t know, but Mr Patel came out of his office and answered, “Hotel McMillan,” so now this psychopath on the phone knows where I live. “Doug Howard?” the landlord asked. “Olland?” Pause. “Holland?” Another pause. “What room is that?” Pause again. “2386?” he said, astonished. “This is a four-story hotel.”

    I relaxed enough to slightly smile. 2386 is not a hotel room, it’s the box number at my maildrop, and the maildrop has nothing to do with the hotel.
    “Just a moment,” Mr Patel sighed into the phone, and I heard footsteps as he walked back to his office. After a lot of silence, maybe the rustling of pages in the hotel’s registration book or maybe I imagined that, he came back to the phone and said, “No, nobody named ‘Holland’ here,” and I smiled again. Holland is my pen name, not a name I’d rent a room under.

    After another pause, I heard Mr Patel’s patience evaporate. “You want this hotel’s address? Absolutely not. Nobody named Holland lives here, and you sound like someone trying to make trouble. I do not tolerate trouble,” and then came the resounding smash of the receiver coming down with enthusiasm.

    I waited a few more minutes at the top of the stairs, but the phone didn’t ring again.

    Maybe, just maybe, I’d been a bit rude when Bennett used call-return to ring the pay phone, the first time. Ordinary people use call-return, and ordinary people don’t mind getting phone calls, so you could’ve convinced me that I was the one who was out of line — but not after his second call. And not after listening to him pester the landlord, trying to reach me again after I’d hung up, twice.

    Mr Patel will never know it, but he may have saved a man’s life tonight. Not mine. John Bennett’s.

    I’m not sure I’ve ever seriously, literally thought about choking the life out of someone before, but it wasn’t a joke or hyperbole when I wrote on the previous page, “I would kill him if he ever called again.” And the invitation still stands.

    This hotel is where I sew up the rips in my sanity every night, and I am not particularly good at that kind of seam work. Things are a little tattered, OK?Try intruding on me here, shattering the only solitude I have in the world, and you’re pushing me into a dangerous place. I don’t know whether I’m capable of violence, but if you come after me on my home turf we’ll find out.

    ♦ ♦ ♦

    Up in my room I seethed for a while, before remembering the first voice-mail’s ’emergency’. As much to calm myself as to find a gig, I walked to the address that Gary had left on my voice mail. I was expecting a house or an apartment, but the address was a tavern.

    I was still on edge from the phone intimidation, but like a bad joke, “a fat guy walks into a bar…”. It was mostly empty inside, with half a dozen men scattered at stools and at tables, watching a baseball game on TV and drinking beer.

    To the bartender, I said, “I’m Doug.”

    “Happy to hear it,” he said. “What are you drinking?”

    “I’m not drinking. Maybe I’m working. Are you Gary?”

    “Fuck yeah, I’m Gary. You’re the guy who does anything?”

    “Legal,” I said, “for five bucks an hour.”

    “Fuck I am glad to see ya,” he said and was. “My regular guy fuckin’ quit on me, and my weekend guy doesn’t have a phone, so I’m like totally fucked.” He motioned me toward the back room, where an elderly woman was washing beer glasses. “This is my mother,” he said, “and she fuckin’ does not want to be here. You’ll be the dishwasher and mopman and whatever else comes along, and fuck, I hope you can start right now.”

    “Well, fuck,” I said, quickly learning the lingo, “why the fuck not?” To his mother I said, “Guess you’re free to go,” and she handed me the washrag.

    No Hobart here, which Dishwasher Pete says is the best industrial dishwashing machine. There was no machine at all, except me, and I washed a lot of dishes, mostly glasses, until 2:30, half an hour after the bar had closed. I also mopped up some spills and plungered the toilet.

    There hadn’t been many people when my surprise shift started at 4:30 or so, and it was Monday night so I would’ve guessed a small crowd, but I would’ve guessed wrong. Whenever I came out of the back room, there were more and more and still more people sitting and standing around the bar, getting loose and liquored and some of them getting drunk. At the peak, there were about 70 people crowded into what’s really a rather small tavern.

    “Fuck,” Gary announced at 2:05, after the last customer had left and the doors had been locked, “you did pretty good. I sure as fuck hope you’ll be back tomorrow.”

    “Fuckin’ A,” I said. “Gotta work for someone else during the day, but I’m yours in the evening.”

    I’d worked 9½ hours without a break, and it had eased most of my anger over that bastard Bennett. Gary owed me $47.50 and paid me $60 in green cash, so damned right I’ll be back tomorrow.

    ♦ ♦ ♦  

    I have never used the call-return feature, but I read an article about it when it was first introduced. The software remembers the last call received, and it can return that call, but it doesn’t reveal the number, and it forgets the number when the next incoming call is received.

    So before leaving, I asked Gary if I could use the bar’s fuckin’ phone, and he said fuck yeah, and at about 2:40 AM I dialed that bastard Bennett’s number. It rang a while, and when someone sleepy answered, I hung up. And with that, the hotel’s number has been wiped off Bennett’s phone.

    I said good night to Gary, and walked alone through eight blocks of slums. Turned my key in the door at the hotel, stepped inside and stopped to stare at the pay phone. In the future, I’ll check my messages at the corner, where there’s a phone booth that can’t call back where I live.

    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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  • And now the news: 5/6/2026

    Trump Administration aims to penalize disabled adults who live with their families

    Excerpt: The administration is working on a rule change that would deduct the value of a disabled adult’s bedroom from their SSI allotment, even if the family members they live with are poor enough to qualify for food stamps. This would mean slashing the benefits of some of the most low-income SSI recipients by up to a third — about $330 a month in Burton’s case — or ending their support altogether.

    The effort to cut SSI for families who also rely on food stamps, also known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, was initiated by top White House and Department of Government Efficiency officials last year, multiple Social Security officials said. It marks a second attempt by the Trump administration to quietly but dramatically downsize disability benefit programs overseen by the Social Security Administration, despite those programs’ strict eligibility standards and minimal instances of fraud.

    “A grim march toward death”: What HUD’s new homeless policy looks like on the ground

    Me, looking grumpy, reading the news

    AND NOW THE NEWS #603
    Wednesday,
    May 6, 2026

    8 things you should know about Trump’s effort to “take over” the midterm elections

    Trump regime demands names of 2020 election workers in Georgia

    In many states, election-denying candidates are running to control voting

    President Trump’s judicial nominees seem incapable of stating that President Trump is ineligible to run for a third term

    Bert Callais, lead plaintiff in case that gutted Voting Rights Act, is an election conspiracist who was at Jan. 6 protest

    Blanche: “Every time you walk into a restaurant or a club, you have to show your ID, how about you have to show your ID to vote? That’s not – that’s not anything that’s crazy.”

    Michigan Senate candidate wants cops to monitor Detroit election workers

    Louisiana Governor signs law blocking ex-prisoner who won election from taking office

    Judge compares jail treatment of press dinner gunman to US Capitol rioters

    Bill to fund State Dept is full of anti-LGBTQ riders

    Analyzing DOJ’s indictment of the Southern Poverty Law Center

    Excerpt: Suppose the U.S. repeatedly paid a member of ISIS to disclose information about upcoming ISIS terrorist plans concerning American people and places. The U.S. obtains such information and uses it to thwart these attacks. Would it be correct to say the U.S. is trying to promote ISIS and its attacks? Of course not.

    But that is the precise theory of the DOJ indictment against the Center: That it did not tell its donors that it was promoting hate groups when it paid money to informants to get data about the groups…

    What happened to the SPLC—and me

    Equal Employment Opportunity Commission investigating anti-white discrimination at The New York Times

    In all the jobs I held from my teens to retirement, I never saw a woman or minority unfairly promoted over a “deserving” white man.

    Children are drawing mustaches on their faces to fool online age checks – and it’s working

    Mississippi family detained by ICE after New Orleans court hearing; attorney arrested

    ICE hires bounty-hunting firm accused of ‘torture’ to track down undocumented children

    Report: Secret Police increasingly using force inside ICE detention centers

    ICE raids have Chicago’s immigrant tenants on ‘brink of eviction,’ report finds

    Medicare portal exposed health providers’ Social Security numbers for weeks before a Washington Post reporter found it

    Without the Trump regime’s incompetence, why, they’d have no competence at all.

    Trump’s border wall expansion just bulldozed an ancient tribal site

    Smog in Phoenix and Salt Lake City? Trump’s EPA is blaming Asia.

    Home on the range no more: Trump wants bison gone

    Cubans struggle to survive on pocket-size government ration books as US continues blockade

    US to withdraw 5,000 troops from Germany, Pentagon says

    The intent is to stick it to Germany, part of Trump’s ten-thousand point retribution program against everyone everywhere who’s ever slighted him. But just this once, maybe it’s a good thing. Bring all the troops home please.

    Trump says US Navy is seizing Iran’s oil “like pirates”

    Jonathan Pollard, once jailed in US for spying, says he will enter Israeli politics

    US revokes visas of board members at Costa Rica’s top watchdog newspaper

    I’m genuinely not sure how we come back from this level of delusion

    Jury convicts Republican ex-Congressman of secretly lobbying for Venezuela

    Bard College’s President will retire to a comfy life & won’t be prosecuted after revelations in Trump-Epstein files

    Former Spokane Mayor sues city for $10m because city leaders denounced her attendance at far-right rally

    DOJ posts Star Wars-themed tweet seeking recruits who misunderstand the whole point of Star Wars

    Gov bows out of Maine Senate race, making Graham Platner a mortal lock for the Dem nomination

    The media won’t say out loud that Republicans embody all the early elements of fascism and always plan to take it further, but they’ll report endlessly that Democrats have a guy who once had a vaguely fascist-tattoo, had it removed, apologized for it, etc.

    Obviously, both parties have a Nazi problem.

    The full manifesto by accused shooter, Cole Tomas Allen, at White House Correspondence Dinner

    Yeah, I posted this in my last news roundup, but maybe you missed it.

    Beekeeper gets six months in jail for releasing swarms on police

    Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool vandalized with ‘86 47’ graffiti amid Trump’s makeover and Comey indictment

    Pope appoints former undocumented immigrant as bishop of West Virginia

    New Banksy statue causes stir in central London

    Rudy Giuliani hospitalized in critical condition

    If I believed in prayer, I’d pray for Giuliani to have died decades ago.

    Since Republicans let Obamacare subsidies expire, millions are dropping coverage

    Kennedy starts a push to help Americans quit antidepressants

    This will kill people, of course, but heck, you could say that about anything/everything Republicans do.

    FDA blocked publication of research finding COVID and shingles vaccines were safe

    Trump pressures FDA Commissioner to approve flavored vapes

    Trump targets Illinois schools for teaching LGBTQ “ideology”

    On Polymarket, 67% of profits go to just 0.1% of accounts. That means less than 2,000 accounts netted a total of nearly half a billion dollars.

    Rich fucker says “Tax the rich” is “just as hateful as some disgusting racial slurs and even the phrase, ‘from the river to the sea’”

    The Rothschild dynasty survived wars and crises. Will the Trump-Epstein files tear it apart?

    Of course not. See Betteridge’s law of headlines.

    The Supreme Court delivers another victory for the Jim Crow Southernization of America

    The last moments of Jeju Air Flight 2216

    I usually hate NY Times articles that layer special effects over the text, but just this once, it actually helps.

    Penn and Teller warn the Supreme Court about junk science

    The Ed Sullivan Theater

    AI supersucks.

    Pentagon says US military to be an ‘AI-first’ fighting force

    Outspoken atheist-gone-wingnut Richard Dawkins believes his AI chatbot is conscious and is the ‘next phase of evolution’

    White House considers vetting AI models before they are released

    Any AI software ‘vetted’ by the Trump administration would be more creepy, wasteful, plagiairazing, and deadly dangerous than before the vetting.

    Oscars ban AI From winning acting and writing awards

    John Oliver discusses AI chatbots

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

    Florida cop drives 100mph for no reason, kills kid in wreck

    Secret Service officer charged with indecent exposure at Miami hotel

    Honolulu police officer indicted in alleged on-duty sexual assault

    “Please don’t let his case be forgotten”— families of murder victims say Chicago PD is ghosting them

    TV news politely doesn’t name officer who terrorized woman while off-duty and outside his jurisdiction

    Cook County prosecutor fights to block exonerated people from clearing their names

    Minneapolis police participation with Homeland Security Task Force raises concerns

    New Jersey cop accused of recording nude inmate in holding cell

    Ex-Ohio officer involved in bar fight claims she was fired for being white

    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.

    ‘Point of no return’: New Orleans relocation must start now due to sea level, study finds

    Authoritarianism is supercharging the climate crisis

    More than 150 wind projects stall as Pentagon delays reviews

    After 37 years, the world’s longest-running soil warming experiment uncovers a startling climate secret

    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.

    Paul Pressler helped ordain the marriage between white evangelicals and the Republican Party, all while accusations of sexual abuse piled up

    Trump regime casts host of policies under Biden as anti-Christian

    California pastor gets 120 years to life in prison for sexually abusing child

    North Carolina man behind ‘Thank You Jesus’ signs pleads guilty to sexual exploitation of a minor, sentenced to probation

    Ohio Catholic school coach arrested on child porn charges

    Newlywed DC pastor accused of even more child sex assaults after robe fitting incident

    Alas, poor Yorick. I knew him...

    Stephanie Chernikowski
    punk photographer

    Gerry Conway
    created The Punisher

    Gwen Farrell
    actress, MASH

    Nicole Hollander
    cartoonist, “Sylvia”

    Peter Law
    math

    Craig Venter
    human genome

    Nothing will meaningfully improve
    until billionaires fear for their lives.

    5/6/2026

    Logo illustration by Jeff Meyer. Tip ‘o the hat to the Anderson Valley Advertiser, Daily Grail, Fat Magic, Jemin Na CPA, Slackville, Voenix Rising, Welcome Scum, What Not’s, Jamie Zawinski, 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 the reporter sits, stands, or strolls in front of a camera — that’s show biz, not news.

    If you’re blocked from reading anything linked above, please send an email, and I’ll reply with the article’s complete text, via my computer’s fine ad-blockers and paywall-vaulters.

    And Now the News

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  • Five women in one day

    From Pathetic Life #24
    Sunday, May 5, 1996

    An unexpected parade woke me early — marching at 9AM is nuts, if you ask me. Cinco de Mayo, I assumed, but I assumed wrong.

    Would’ve looked out the window if mine looked out on the street, but my view is to the back, only the dumpsters, so I didn’t know, but I shook off some of my morning grogginess, put on pants, and made it downstairs and out the door quick enough to join the tail end of the San Francisco Lesbian/Gay Freedom Marching Band.

    Then I walked to the BART station accompanied by their peppy and somehow sapphic rendition of the theme from Star Trek (the original series). Still keeping time with the rhythm, I marched down the stairs and onto a crowded train to Berkeley.

    On Sundays, all the trains are crowded.

    ♦ ♦ ♦ 

    It must be springtime, or maybe the onset of male menopause, but all day, pretty women paid attention to me. That never happens, so it was a pretty terrific day.

    A cute punk dame stepped onto the train at Embarcadero, and sat in the seat in front of me, facing me. She had pink hair, and was wearing cutoffs and a t-shirt but not a bra. Every bump of the train made her jiggle, and dang it I tried not to ogle or drool, but she caught me peeking and smiled.

    She caught me peeking three times, and every time we made eye contact her smile seemed bigger. She was driving me nuts and knew it, I swear, and her smile said I should say something, but I couldn’t find any words that wouldn’t sound stupid or worthy of a slap.

    At 12th Street in Oakland, she gave me one last smile, then stood and jiggled off the train. We’d had a torrid affair, married, spent our lives together and happily never had children, and we hadn’t said a word.

    Then I walked to Jay’s house, got the cart, and rolled it to Telegraph. Almost as soon as I’d set up the table, a drop-dead beautiful woman asked me to watch her dog while she went into a store.

    “Absolutely,” I said, and asked the dog’s name, asked if it would bite me if I tried petting it. Her answers were friendly and she laughed a few times, and again I was planning the nuptials.

    She was inside the shop for fifteen minutes, while I sold fish and made friends with Fido. When she came out with a bag of whatever she’d bought, we talked again for a long time — five minutes, maybe, and there was some impressively-relaxed banter on my part, but it all passed without me finding the gonads to ask her name.

    Then an older, slightly graying and gorgeous woman stopped to look and laugh at the fish, bought two of them, and we spoke of religion for a few minutes. “You have a sexy voice,” she said, 360ing the subject. In point of fact, her voice was sultry, almost hoarse (from a flu, she said) so I returned the compliment. She batted her eyes and blushed and said thanks, smiling as big as Candlestick Park, and then she walked away.

    Later two college girls came up to the fish stand together, and I was particularly drawn to the chubby redhead. (I, uh, like ladies large enough I can at least daydream an embrace without breaking them.) She seemed to like me too, and we chuckled at each other’s jokes about The Lord and the weather and the loud maniac across the street (Jasper). She said she liked the fish, and I said that I liked her fez, and I even remembered to talk to her friend, too. I would’ve almost, almost said that me and the redhead were flirting, until she bought a gay pride fish and left holding the other woman’s hand.

    Late in the afternoon, another pretty woman walked by, and I said, “I have funny fish,” something I say a thousand times every day at the fish stand. “Well, I have tits,” she said, giggling and lifting her shirt, flashing me without breaking stride, and then walking away. She’d been wearing silver nipple rings, something I’d never seen in the flesh before.

    Maybe you’re suave and none of this seems out of the ordinary to you, but I’m pushing 300 pounds, piss-poor and butt-ugly, with bad teeth, a crew-cut, and stale clothes. Having five women in one day give me some brief attention is incredible. Unprecedented. Even the Hindu women were going dotless.

    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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