Po
Boy views
By
Phil
LaMancusa
Billy’s
Blues
Or
Lonely
at the Top
It sucks being a giraffe, it’s got to be the worst job on
the planet; worse than a donut fry cook, scrap metal junk collector or a manic
mechanic on cars. I know it is
because I spent a few early morning REMs being a giraffe and I can tell you that
I didn’t like it from the beginning until the time that I woke up.
“First of all, giraffes give birth standing up, so a
newborn calf is literally dropped from a height onto the ground where they’re
pushed to a standing position and told to get the hell moving before they
become some lion’s hors d’oeuvre; father is called a Bull (which he likes fine)
while mother is called a ‘Cow’ (fighting words where I come from). The whole
gang of ‘em is called a ‘Tower’ as in: “hey
Clem, there goes a tower of gy-raffes, must be six or eleben of ‘em!” I’m
telling you, it ain’t easy.
Next, it’s almost impossible to have a dialogue with more
than one giraffe at a time, all that head turning hurts your neck, and brother,
there’s a lot of neck to hurt. Also, it’s hard to get a decent drink from the
water hole without all the other animals making fun of you, you have to eat
what’s at the top of the trees and be satisfied with it and monkeys think that
your appearance is hysterical and throw things at you. Conversely, giraffes are
very good at one on one, giraffe to giraffe, conversation and this sometimes
leads to romance and another calf being dropped from a high place to continue to
cycle of life, to which I say: thanks… for
nothing.
So, there you are or more precisely, I am (giraffe-ly
speaking), one day, minding your/my own business, swapping jokes with the
chimps, and Uncle Ralph says “Okay let’s mosey on”; actually he doesn’t say
anything because giraffes don’t talk (imagine having vocal cords that long?).
Uncle Ralph, who’s the ‘lead’ bull, just gets a bug up his butt and starts
ambling and--what do we know—we can’t see what’s going on, so we follow him;
off goes the ‘tower’ all six or eleven of us.
BAM! There goes a noise and what do you think it is? It’s
some pale, hairless biped who has just shot me with a needle and down I go
unconscious to be ripped from my family and friends, shipped off to a zoo where
there’s not enough room to scratch my assets and I’m put into an ‘enclosure’
with others of my kind and expected to eat dry grass and iceberg lettuce, drink
from a water fountain that’s twelve feet in the air, and make nicey nice for
the gawking dressed up humans that look to us more ridiculous than an
orangutan’s back side. I have nothing in common with any of this.
Sure, there’s a cute little giraffe heifer from Uganda or
some place and she’s giving me the eye; and, I’ll tell you, when a female
giraffe starts batting those eye lashes… boy, howdy! But hey, you’re wandering
around on packed dirt all day and then enclosed in a dark barn all night
(albeit with high ceilings) and face it, how are you going to pitch some woo
with a bunch of long neck geeks snoring and snuffling (giraffes snore loud
enough to rattle window panes) and wanting to get up into your grill because
you accidentally stepped on their hoof or passed gas?
Okay, so the sweetie sweetie preliminaries between Mary
Lou (the heifer) and I are completed in the dark of night and next day she
starts nuzzling up to me—in the ‘enclosure’—on the packed dirt—water fountain
twelve feet in the air and you/I drop all of your/my reserves and composure and
go for it. Suddenly you hear: “Hey Clem,
come quick, them gy-raffes is f*kkin’!”
Talk about a bliss buster, total deflation, and you know that your
performance will be dudsville and you’ll be the laughing stock of the stockade
and you have to live the rest of your days with the shame. And the keepers
wonder why you look depressed. Depressed? You don’t know the half of it; don’t
get me started on the artificial insemination process.”
I start to black out, my head is spinning, there is a
rushing sound in my ears and a banging, banging
and that’s when I wake up; it takes me a minute to get my bearings. I’m in a
strange bed, it’s Tuesday and the garbage men are on the street with their
usual hullabaloo and cacophonic city wake up call.
Back to my life and reality; drillers are drilling,
billers are billing, killers are killing and the swills are out in force, swilling;
if it was a thrill, it would be thrilling…but it’s not. I need to get up, shower, shave and get to
work on time, I need to find water, a clean shirt, and my razor has become dull
over night. I have bed head, bags under my eyes and I realize I just screwed up
a (giraffe’s) wet dream; I am such a loser but… I smell coffee.
And I wake up again, this time for real. The dog’s
licking my face, the mug of coffee is within my reach and her voice is saying
“good morning, how’d you sleep?” For a minute I’m not sure whether I’m a
giraffe having a dream that I’m a human or if I really did have a dream about
being a giraffe; but, I reach up and touch her cheek and decide that I’ll be
satisfied with what I’m seeing, what I’m feeling. I stretch and say “fine
Honey, but you know what? It would really
suck being a giraffe.”
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