5412324
9780767927949
1 I was a bored and hungry mammal. I lived in a small apartment on Perry Street that had a working fireplace, but only if you could find logs the size of cupcakes, as my hearth had the dimensions of an EasyBake Oven. I sat on my fire escape and watched happy couples come and go, finishing the rhyme in my head, "talking of Michelangelo." But they were never really discussing Michelangelo. Marc Jacobs, who had opened a store on the corner, was a more likely subject. I wasn't bitter. I didn't want a girlfriend, not really, at least not right away. But I could have used a functional vagina. It had been a while since I'd had access to one of those, and my penis kept reminding me how accommodating they could be. Sunday was winding down, and the streetlights flickered to life. It was early April and the day had held hope that spring had finally arrived, but as the sun set a cool breeze informed us we weren't quite there yet. I zipped up my sweatshirt and wished once again that I smoked. It just seemed like something that might be nice to do, romantic. I stared at Hunan Pan across the street; soon I would call them as I always did, and they would bring me my supper. It was getting a little embarrassing, though. "Hello, this Hunan Pan." "Hi, can I get an order for delivery?" "You ninetynine Perry, number ThreeA?" "Um, yeah." "Steamed vegetable dumplings and mooshu chicken with extra pancake?" "No, um, the dumplings and mooshu beef." "You sure?" Sigh. "Fine. Give me the chicken." "Okay. Fifteen minute, Mr. Snuka." They may have known my voice, but they'd never know my name. I wasn't Mr. Snuka, aka Jimmy "Superfly" Snuka, the wrestler from the eighties. I was Jason Strider, a Jewish guy with sideburns. Ever since I moved to New York three years ago, I had used pseudonyms when ordering in. Raphael's, my second most frequent takeout, knew me as Sir Peter O'Toole. I slipped back through the window into my apartment and began weighing options for the evening. Common sense held that I should eat my dinner, watchThe Simpsonslike the rest of my demographic, and get a reasonable night of sleep before work the next day. But my penis, my damn penis. He just wouldn't shut up. And I had to admit, his argument wasn't without merit, or logic. His basic premise: "Any girl out tonight might be just as desperate as you." I offered that I had been out a lot this week; the last two nights hadn't ended until way into the morning, and even now a slight hangover hummed behind my eyes. But Lil' Petey, as I called him, was persuasive. The problem with being a boy is the constant struggle between listening to your brain and listening to your dick. The problem with being me was that somehow my dick had acquired the argumentative skills of a debate team captain. Or perhaps I was just weak. I took a quick shower and had just barely gotten a towel around me as the buzzer rang, announcing the arrival of my supper. I opened the door a crack and handed a small Hispanic man a few crumpled bills in exchange for his one crumpled bag. I quickly pulled on jeans and, over a longsleeved Tshirt, a shortsleeved one that read "Henry Rollins Is No Fun." Then I began to eat straight from the cardboard boxes. Yum, the taste of deja vu. Once finished, I went back into the bathroom and fussed with my hair a bit; it was the same shortish, messyish style that I had sported in one iteratioRosen, David is the author of 'I Just Want My Pants Back ', published 2007 under ISBN 9780767927949 and ISBN 076792794X.
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