, "" -a - . 1 t ggg-’grr"™'—. ■ Cool turkey Advice on kicking drugs from someone who s been there MARK BALDRIDGE i* a senior English major. Stumble on your 12-step pro gram? When you’ve fallen off the wagon so many times you’ve been banned from the hayride, when you’ve had the power to change and the serenity to accept it but you’ve lost the wisdom to know the differ ence (HINT: serenity is easier to do lying down) then it’s time to take the cure and a bit of advice from one who’s been there, or: How I quit doing drugs in 8 easy lessons and so can you: Lesson 1 Last night I sat out waiting for my neighbor to come home. He’d gone off somewhere on his motor scooter, left his door standing open in the hall and I’d sat up for him like a faithful hound dog. Noticing (now what was it I noticed?) as I drank another beer, oh yes, a star, up high and moving quick! I bent my back into a classic Hatha Yoga position, leaning off the balcony of my beautiful 47th floor apartment... (As I write this sentence, the mop I’d braced the door with, the rein forced door at the top of the fire escape where I hunker, a candle burning in a bottle, writing this — the mop, a bit of failed zengineering on my part — falls (company com ing) and the heavy, splintered door swings, banging, shut. If I have for gotten my keys I am locked out and barefoot, a predicament.) ... leaning back, leaning way back, swaying back on the banister (I knew a man who fell that way, once) to catch a glimpse of that star, fol lowing it in its cryptic longitude ... At the Drug Bust Try this experiment: At your next drug deal, when there’s someone else also buying, a party unknown to you, pluck the money from his hand and inspect it before a bright lamp for several seconds while your mark stares at what you’re doing to his money, undecided whether to bolt (you are a cop) or shoot you (you are a chump) and then you hand die money over to the dealer, declaring it cash. “It’s cash,” you’ll say. “Give this man some drugs!” day 100 Write “This morning began at noon and never got any farther” once for each calendar day of which it was true last year (this one’s easy cause you don’t have to get out of bed.) Marijuana never did me any harm I did what I was supposed to do: I talked too much, know what I mean? Lived in a bam (bom in a manger.) It made me laugh, paranoid, to think you’re thinking what I’m think ing. That as you read this (snicker) you’re reading my mind (larf) or that maybe the world is just an atom in some giant’s nose. Change! Move, dead Clod! Hire a grave digger to follow you to parties and laugh like Ed McMahon at your lame-ass jokes, all the while stuffing food, booze and drugs until he stiffens and dies (or pretends to) on the carpet. “What are we goon ta do? The grave digger’s dead!” “You’ll have to prop me in the pantry” he smirks, winking his Xs for-eyes. dare to wear Pour a cellophane sleeve of Planter’s Peanuts into a ‘/4-full Coke bottle. This was said to get you high when you were a kid and maybe it’ll work for you now but to help it along a little, why not add a couple fingers of Smirnov’s? A drink I call a Pebbles and Bam-Bam and which I recommend as a light breakfast to the hangover sufferer or the otherwise nauseated. Chew your drink. Wear your Dare to Keep Kids off Drugs T-shirt tight over the dynamite strapped to your chest and head downtown on a Saturday night. Wear sunglasses. If anyone offers you drugs, set off the dynamite. If anyone looks at you funny, set off the dynamite. Set off the dynamite. And don’t go home until you’ve accomplished something (who says winners don’t use drugs?) or died trying. WARNING: Caffeine and alco hol are drugs. Lesson 7 Another time, while your grand mother was puttering around among the weeds and wild leaves of her yard, you reached into the warm bladder of her big, leather purse and took out a wad of bills smelling of granny, and out you went, going to meet the man. It felt good to have the cash up front, not to be standing at the bar, tossing off another hot check, your puckered poker face no better guar antee than your sullied name. You even had enough for a drink or three and so you sat, from p.m. to a.m. nursing an Old Style, waiting for a connection that never came. And it suddenly occurred to you that the history of the world could be told in terms of one guy waiting in a bar for another guy to show with the stuff. Panic, as it got close to closing time and you still had not scored. But if you left you might miss your man. The clock, fifteen minutes fast, said 1:00 and you felt the tension ris ing behind your teeth like bile ... And Last of all I takes more muscles to frown than to smile. If life gives you lemmings, make lemmingaid. We all face setbacks, when you face yours, look them square in the eye and say, “Looks like I picked the wrong week to give up sniffin’ glue,” and just go to it NEBRASKA REPERTORY THEATRE JlMocfem Comedy about a Marriage... and a Vog mey JuCy 7'30j>.nu j m. i_t— - i neater Tjcx 073 ® 1 1 I Your Most Complete Print Center | Celebrating 10 Years NOW OPEN I 1320 Q Street {next to Nebraska Bookstore) 477-7400 Fax 477-8966 * mfjimijjMM ■•JH hmh him -- ■ ■ '•r --. REGMMES... ...can change your life in an instant Perhaps you would like to consider the possibility of creating an adoption plan for your child. Our case workers can answer your questions confidentially. If you would like to visit with us, please call today. 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