Everything Is Wrong with Me
A Memoir of an American Childhood Gone, Well, Wrong
Jason Mulgrew
to my parents…
my god, i’m sorry
Contents
Preface
Chapter One
A Break, a Beginning
Chapter Two
Love, Second Street-Style
Chapter Three
Intermezzo: Faith, Baptism, Prison
Chapter Four
Divorce
Chapter Five
Athletics, Sports, and Crap
Chapter Six
On the Relationship Between Genetics and Hustling
Chapter Seven
Uncle Petey
Chapter Eight
Intermezzo: The Top Six Most Influential Songs of My Adolescence
Chapter Nine
My Bird: Inadequacy and Redemption
Chapter Ten
Guns. Fucking Guns.
Chapter Eleven
“Did I Ever Tell You About the Time I Got Arrested for Attempted Murder?”
Epilogue
Hooker Hunting
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher
After creating a formula that combines the amount of alcohol involved, the number of years passed, the character/integrity of the protagonists, and my distaste for fact-checking, I have determined that the following is between 94 and 97 percent true. Thank you for your support.
Preface
Writing a book is a fantastical exercise in manic depression.
The highs, when they come, are magnificent. Throughout my life, I’ve rarely experienced such surges of adrenaline. I don’t really play sports, mostly because they seem like a lot of work. I don’t particularly care about my job, although it allows me to make lots of personal phone calls, because like many people my age I have forsaken inspiration for a steady paycheck. Nor do I do anything that I can be particularly proud of. Volunteering seems like a scam to me. (Work for free? Really?) I am not a member of any organizations, fraternities, or brotherhoods, because all the bonding creeps me out a little bit. And I have no children, or at least none that I care to acknowledge; I’m no Gregor Mendel, but when you mix Irish Catholic and Asian you’re not supposed to get a child that looks like a Chinese Rudy Huxtable, so I’m not going to be the one to pay $450 a month.
Previously, my greatest accomplishment came when touring Europe as a college student several years ago. In one glorious stretch, I consumed so much alcohol, so many barbiturates, and so much skinke* that my reckless behavior resulted in me peeing the bed in six European countries in a span of twenty-six days.** It was difficult, but I was determined. And I have a drinking problem, so that helped. And yes, I was single at the time (and as of this writing, still am).
Not to belittle my accomplishment, which was and will always be extraordinary, but the thrill I got from peeing in all those foreign countries does not compare to the rush of writing a book. I have learned that in the spectrum of adrenaline rushes, creating far surpasses urinating. There are moments in the writing process when all of your research, your outlines, and your preparation come together and you are just doing it. Your fingers work like pistons pummeling the keyboard and the words fly onto the page so quickly that it’s hard to keep up. You zone out everything else and you just see it—the characters, alive; the setting, before your eyes; the story, just as you had experienced it; all the different words you can use for poop, preferential treatment given to the simple and effective poo—and it’s magic. You’ll even run out of beer but be so into the writing that you can’t stop and won’t stop to get another. So you’ll scream at your roommate Brian to bring you one. When he doesn’t, you’ll realize it’s because Brian moved out over two years ago and you no longer have a roommate. So maybe you don’t need another beer. Slow down there, tiger.
When you finally stop typing, you’ll bolt up from your chair, your hands quivering, tears of joy streaming down your face, sporting a decent half erection because, really, it’s a miracle you can even get a halfie going with your high blood pressure.* Then you’ll read over what has just poured out of you and you’ll say, “Yes, I have done it. I have fucking done it. I am a great writer. And I still need a beer.” But because your roommate Brian is being a dick and still hasn’t brought you one, you’ll have to get it yourself. Or again, maybe it’s because he moved out. A long, long time ago. Semantics. Probably should get some water instead.
These are the best times: You’ve written something that you’re proud of and you can be happy, truly happy with yourself. The feeling is not unlike falling in love with someone new, but without all the nervousness and the sex. Actually, there may be sex involved for some writers, but there wasn’t with me. Which sucked.
But sadly, these moments of intense joy are few and far between. They represent probably less than 1 percent of the book-writing experience, since it is hard to sustain such stretches of inspiration, especially when TNT is almost constantly running a Law & Order marathon. And when these fleeting instances of productivity escape, they are replaced by dark, dark times. Seconds of pleasure give way to hours of staring at a blinking cursor on the blank page, wondering where and how to begin. This is one of the most overwhelming and intimidating feelings a person can have, right up there with taking your driver’s license test, or making a marriage proposal, or the first time you go to a gay club, or the first time you realize you like and possibly even love being at a gay club.
Three people who have very little concept of parenting. Two people who drank too much that night and later vomited because of it.
And when the moments of clarity are slow to come, self-doubt creeps in. The thoughts come at you in rapid succession: “What the hell am I doing? I’m not qualified to write a book! It took me a month and a half to find the S on the keyboard, so in most of my first draft I used $ instead!” and “Why can’t I figure this out? What the hell is wrong with me? How hard can it possibly be to throw my family under the bus so that I can buy a high-def TV and force them to cut off contact with me for the rest of my life?” and “Holy shit—I just realized that I haven’t showered in four days! Something smells like hot-dog water and I think it’s coming from my pants!” Sadness sinks you. Depression takes over. And the only thing you can do is get drunk, troll the Internet for sex, and hope it turns around.
I was warned that many first-time authors have difficulty with the enormity of the task of writing a book, so I tried to be prepared. I took a leave of absence from my full-time job to write this memoir, so I had plenty of time to record anecdotes from Little League, when I spent my time on the bench learning about sex from the older players (and no, not in that way).* I had months to write down the memories of those first few Christmas mornings when my dad would wince when I made a bigger deal about getting Grease on VHS than now owning “every single [expletive deleted] He-Man guy.” Weeks and weeks to recollect the halcyon days when I was thin, mostly hairless, and handsome, those days that I miss so much when every Saturday night I look at myself in the shower and realize that yes, I, Jason Mulgrew, now a grown-ass man, look like a fucking bear when I’m naked.
No, the first task was to take stock of my life in the more immediate sense. Like a general in wartime, I looked at the situation, immersed myself in thought and cheap vodka, and came up with a battle plan. If I was going to write a good book, I needed to create the proper environment in which to write this book. Once I felt comfortable in the physical sense, the words would flow.
I had to clean my room. My bedroom was where most of the writing would take place, and
to be successful I needed to feel successful, to give the impression of success. I threw out all the empty beer cans and half-eaten mozzarella sticks that had accumulated on my desk over the past few months, as I needed a proper workspace. Then I turned my attention to the closet, which was a nest of such horror and depravity that I dare not speak of it in depth here, as I am just now getting over the night terrors it caused me (lesson: just because after you masturbate into an old pair of boxers you throw it into the depths of your closet, that doesn’t mean that it magically disappears). Then I cried. Then I made the bed. Finally, I was done. And it only took two weeks.
Once my room was in tip-top shape, I turned my attention to the living room, which I decided needed a new furniture arrangement. I would say that this was an attempt to create an apartment more in line with feng shui, but I have no idea what feng shui is.* After several attempts, the discovery of two neatly rolled and nicely preserved joints, and four broken fingers, I settled on theater-type tiered sitting, with my loveseat in front of the larger couch in front of a few folding chairs. This process of trial and error took thirty-three days. Not a bad way to spend a month.
I felt like I was getting closer to the book. I would think about it a lot, often discussing it over drinks with friends or with strangers I met while vacationing in Mexico, Florida, Hawaii, and Mexico again. I was so enamored with Mexico that during one of these trips I decided that as a side project to the memoir, I would write a history of the Oaxaca region. I figured that this side project, which would really be more of a fictional history due to my aversion to research, would help my ideas flow for this book. So I began preparations to begin work on this new endeavor, namely by writing a letter to my editor asking for an advance of at least $46,000 for “purposes of ensconnsing [sic] myself with the people, cultere [sic] and love of the people of Mexico, and their cultere, [sic], and the love, and miscellaneius [sic] expenses related hitherto.” But then I found another bottle of tequila under the floorboards of the little hut in which I was staying and, to be honest, I forget what happened over the next three or four days. I don’t think I got around to that history, though, because I found the unsent letter to my editor when preparing my taxes the following year in the process of tracking down receipts to write off these trips as business-related.
Don’t judge—my brother, Dennis, and I were star students, so we could enjoy a cold one every once in a while. My cousin Lindsay, however…let’s just say that she had her battles with the bottle.
Back in my apartment in New York City, the time for the book still had not yet come. Looking around the apartment, at my clean bedroom and my living room with the theater seating, I realized that my physical environs had been readied. And though I was very tan and healthy-looking in my complexion, I had been feeding on a steady diet of steak and expensive to semi-expensive alcohol since I had received my advance for this memoir. My body now softer than ever before, I followed the old axiom “Sound body, sound mind” and joined a gym. After all, now that I was writing full-time, free to make my own hours and no longer a nine-to-five slave to The Man, I figured I could spare an hour a day to get in shape. Exercising my body would help me exercise my mind, and when I accepted the Pulitzer Prize for this book in a few years, I’d thank my parents, my girlfriend Carmen Electra, and my trainer, Mercurio. Then Carmen and I would go have sex in the shower, and I would actually take off my shirt, no longer ashamed of my pudgy torso or growing quickly tired from both standing and thrusting at the same time. It would be wonderful.
But sadly, the gym did not last. I found the place to be too suffocating. Working out only made me tired and sweaty, and being around all those in-shape people hurt my self-esteem. And the last thing I needed when I was writing the story of my early life was low self-esteem (or rather, lower self-esteem). With nowhere else to turn, I looked outside myself for strength.
In 1989, at the age of ten, I went through a brief lesbian phase. Brief, but intense.
During this book-writing ordeal (really, there is no other word), I relied heavily on my friends. They helped me through my writer’s block by taking me out, spending time with me, joining me for drinks, and allowing me to pay for all of it with my large and glorious book advance. I’d also pay for any people that came with my friends, especially if said people had nice boobies and/or daddy issues. This cost me thousands of dollars, but it was worth it. I felt good, happy. More important, I was on the way to changing literary history forever. Eventually.
Every week I’d get a call from my editor, who was always “just checking in.” The calls followed a rote formula that went something like:
Editor: “Hey Jason. I’m just calling to check in. How’s it going?”
Me: “Good, but I’m pretty tired. I was up until like five A.M. last night learning how to play the first Clapton solo from “Crossroads”—you know, the live version from Wheels of Fire. I think I have it down pretty good and am going to start on the second one, which is a little harder and longer than the first. Then this afternoon I went to brunch with Nicole, Annie, and Ben for like six hours, so after all the banana French toast and the vodka tonics, I’m pretty wiped out. But in two hours I’m going to pregame at Jeremy’s place before we see Joseph Arthur tonight, so I’m thinking of taking a quick nap.”
Editor: “Um, right. And how is the book coming?”
Jason: “Oh—that’s coming along well. Really well, even. How’s the book coming on your end?”
Editor: “Well, we’re just sort of waiting for a manuscript from you and then we’ll move from there. So…”
Jason: “Totally bro, I understand. I’ll have something for you soon.”
Editor: “Great. I’ll give you a ring next week then.”
Jason: “Perfect. Oh, one more thing—do you have a pot connection? I think my guy’s in jail or dead or something because I can’t get a hold of him.”
Editor: [silence]
[This exchange more or less repeated itself every week for over three months. If I can give any advice to first-time writers, it’s to be prepared to deal with your editors. They can be a major pain in the ass and occasionally entirely unreasonable.]
Eventually, I got up the gumption to ask my editor for those two little words that every writer adores: ex-tension. I had changed my environment, traveled, and (tried to) change myself physically, and through these trials it had become obvious that stress was the biggest obstacle for me. I figured that once the extension was granted, the stress would go away and the book would come easily. My editor sighed, then was silent for a few minutes, then sighed again, then said he’d think about it and get back to me in a few days. Content with myself and knowing that my request would be granted, I went to Cancun to get fucked up for a week.
When I came back four weeks later, I had several messages on my cell phone from both my editor and my agent. Since my editor sounded pretty upset about me “disappearing,” as he called it, I decided instead to call back my agent, who sounded only slightly less upset than my editor did. Apparently, the publisher was pretty pissed off that I left the country and this was in bad faith and I was defaulting on my contract and yada yada yada blah blah blah and my request for an extension was denied. The publisher came back with another two words that were much less pretty than the two I suggested: law-suit. So I decided to get writing.
What you hold in your hands right now is the result of sixteen days of blood, sweat, piss, more sweat, and tears. Sixteen days that were at once the best and worst of my life. Sixteen days that, most important, have passed.
This is my book. I hope you enjoy it, because I worked very hard on it. If not, well, that’s fine, too. I mean, I wrote this thing in two weeks. Jerk.
Chapter One
A Break, a Beginning
It was the summer of 1973, a great time to be young, dumb, and in my father’s case, full of Budweiser, Quaaludes, and reheated pizza. That lost generation—born too late to be hippies, too early to be disco freaks—strutted up and down the
streets of my parents’ South Philadelphia neighborhood, a grid of row-home-filled streets filled with working-class Irish Catholics and some Polish Catholics, bounded on the south by the Walt Whitman Bridge, the sports stadiums, and the Navy Yard; on the east by the mighty Delaware River; on the north by fancy Society Hill and, farther north, Center City; and on the west by the worst border of all: the Italian neighborhood that, thanks to Rocky, South Philly would become famous for in a few years. Sporting impeccable Afros and now-ridiculous but then-cool hair-styles—the men looking like Rod Stewart or Eric Clapton and the women like “Crazy on You”–era Ann or Nancy Wilson, but without all the trappings of fame and talent and good-looks—and in their hip clothes, members of that tween generation joined friends hanging out on the corner, drinking beers, and listening to Bad Company, Derek & the Dominoes, and Mott the Hoople. After getting done with work, there wasn’t much to do aside from getting drunk and listening to music. Which was fine for just about everybody involved.
My dad, Dennis Mulgrew, had just graduated from St. John Neumann High School, on Twenty-sixth and Moore streets. He was tall and lean, slowly beginning to collect tattoos, and was without his trademark mustache that he would wear throughout my lifetime. He wasn’t my dad at the time—he would be “blessed” with his firstborn six years later, one year after marrying my mom—but rather just some guy who liked to drink, chase women, listen to rock ’n’ roll, work on cars, and look good. In short, your typical teenager, fresh out of high school, not quite ready to embark on adulthood, instead occupied with more pressing and immediate matters, all in some capacity relating to narcotics and/or pussy.
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