 Good ray, New York


 Justify your existence


 Gates


 Thinking outside

Now and the future
I'll be doing a short set at the lovely and inimitable Baron Vaughn's Comedy is for Humans this Wednesday: Mundial 8 p.m. 505 E. 12 Street at Avenue A I'll be doing a set at the lovely and inimitable Nicole and Carolyn's Chicks and Giggles July 18: Mo Pitkin's 8 p.m. 34 Avenue A Comedy is for Chicks and Giggles. See how I did that.

 Jerry and Pat Stadtmiller, 1972

Eyes
I wrote this story five years ago. ** As a little girl, I don't remember ever wishing my dad could be normal. I don't remember ever wishing his face looked like other dads. It's just always how I've known it, and I liked it, I was proud of it. I took up the role of his defender and advocate early in life. When people would stare, I would glare them down so bad. I was proud of how different he was, and I wanted to show him off. But I remember, when my sister was really young, she just wanted him to have a face that she could understand, that looked like everyone else. She would touch his face, and ask, Why? It didn't embarrass her, she just had trouble understanding how someone could get hurt like that. He explained it once to a five-year-old boy in our church. The little boy had come over to my father very solemnly and asked, What happened? My dad explained it so gently, I'll never forget. "My eye was broken," he said. How? My dad said that he'd been in a war, and he'd been shot. He pointed to the corner of his right eye and the corner of the right side of his mouth. As he explained this, he could tell that the boy was feeling really pretty bad for him so my dad put his hand on the boy's shoulder and said, "Don't be sad. I'm not in pain anymore." The boy looked up at my dad and in a grave voice said, "Yeah. Being shot's a tough thing." ** In 1968 when my dad joined the marines, he thought he was unstoppable. The two words he remembers thinking were escape and freedom. So he dropped out from life as a philosophy major at Santa Clara University in California where he was in great shape from being an oarsman on the crew team. Between his freshman and sophomore years, he had gone through Officer Candidate School for the Marine Corps. He was big, strong, intelligent, and attractive. Dazzlingly attractive, with an unforgettably handsome smile. He wanted to join the marines to find his identity. To be a hero. And to prove himself a man to his father and to everyone else. His parents didn't want him to go. And his girlfriend didn't want him to go. Two days before he left, my dad's mom died, a fact which he has always thought was her way of saying, I can't handle this. And while boot camp had been easy for my dad, and his idealism really prevented him from being scared, when he finally arrived in Vietnam, he was terrified. He was serving a unit where he didn't know anyone, there was absolute anonymity. Watching soldiers die and watching them get wounded was a constant. And the terrible thing was, my dad soon realized, that this enemy they were killing was nothing more than a mirrored image of themselves. ** I think I was always kind of proud of how unusual my dad was. I would grab his hand and yank him outside to go exploring, to do errands, just to be together. We walked everywhere through San Diego. Despite being 95 percent blind, he had the entire city memorized right down to a jagged decline at the end of a street corner on my paper route where his white cane might betray him, catching the drop too late. San Diego was beautiful when I was young, with a cool warmth that made you always want to be outside. Our neighborhood smelled of honeysuckle and tiny lawns, with strip malls gingerly popping up on the streets selling frozen yogurt and beauty supplies. When we walked down the streets together, strangers would gawk, and I would stand a little taller, swing my hand a little prouder. But there were many, who had met him maybe just once, who delighted at his presence. Inside the different stores, sometimes managers would approach my dad, lay a hand on his shoulder and say, "Jerry! How you doing?" My dad would grin and recognize the person warmly by voice and touch. Soon they'd be swapping jokes and catching up. He was known around town. I wanted to make my dad known to everyone. As soon as I was old enough to be studying Vietnam, I tried to get him to come in as a guest speaker. I thought everyone should see him and hear him and know that there are some forms of history that you continue to live with the rest of your life. When I was in the 8th grade, he came into my history class. One of the kids raised his hand. What do you think of Rambo?, he asked. My father using his dramatic flair for pause, stared straight at the kid, and said, "I think it's pure shit." ** The day that my father was shot, four days after his 21st birthday, his morning began with the usual sweltering heat and panic of battle. Only this morning, he had to listen to his friend Mack slowly die in a foxhole nearby. Mack and his buddy had refused to dig their foxhole as deep as it needed to be, and Mack got shot in the chest. My dad listened to him moan until he stopped moaning. The night before, my dad had listened to him read a note from his sister about how excited she was that he was coming home in a month. Later that day, after Mack was gone, when they ate their breakfast, someone asked: Who wants Mack's C-Rats? And my dad was horrified. The food was holy, he thought. How can you just eat a dead man's food? Then of course he remembered, oh yeah, over here nothing like that matters, you're either killed or injured or waiting to be killed or injured. Later in the day, my dad went on a sweep to check out an area to make sure it was safe. It was then that he was shot. The two bullets came from a sniper hiding somewhere in the jungle. And my dad crumpled to the ground. The other four marines he was with were shot dead. And my dad held his face in his hands, praying: Please let me die, let me die, let me die. ** My sister used to keep a black and white picture of my dad from when he was in high school tucked into the corner of her full-length mirror. She would pretend it was an imaginary boyfriend, he was so handsome. As our dad, with his face sewn and clipped and constructed back together through more than 150 surgeries, he was an entirely different person. The bullets had torn away part of his lower face, so that one-third of his tongue had to be removed and all but four of his teeth were gone. Surgeons later sewed up the right socket of his eye, replaced a piece of his skull with a metal plate, and created a new nose from part of his hipbone. For us, we couldn't even imagine what he was like before all this. As a kid, I would call my dad Nice Lion. He used to have a huge thick beard and fuzzy flowing curls. My sister and I would always give him a hard time when it was crazy and curly. We joked with him a lot, and he would pick us up and twirl us around. He would do almost everything like other dads would do. And more. He was our hero. One time when my sister was small, she made her way outside, softly into the shallow end of our pool. The minute my dad stopped hearing her, he jumped in, and saved her life. She had been quietly, passively drowning. In my dad's youth, he was a strong, fearless lifeguard. When he would usher during the summers at Sea World, he carried this brazen attitude with him. Talking to a trainer one day, my dad asked: How can I work with Shamu? The trainer said: Just go for it, and my dad did. He hopped on the killer whale and rode around the enormous pool and held on. The trainer took a picture which my dad keeps in his study today as a memory of this moment of glory. He was always our hero. I would sit on my dad's lap as a very little girl, tapping his knees like a typewriter because I was going to be a writer someday. As I grew older, I would read him what I wrote, and I would take such pride in the fact that when we watched TV or movies or even just took a walk, that he said I described things best of all. Better than mom or my sister or his friends. There's a special art to this: You don't say too much, you give just enough details to help him put the picture together himself. ** After being shot, my father thought his life was over. He prayed his life was over. But his buddy Al found him and was not willing to let him go. So he yelled at him. "You fucking pansy you are NOT going to die!" At six feet two and 210 pounds, my dad was too heavy to carry to the helicopter waiting nearby so Al, a small, wiry man, screamed at my father to move. "You call yourself a fucking marine? You call yourself a man? I want to see you move!" Al was able to insult my dad up the hill where the chopper was waiting, and in one swift lift-off he was flown away to the USS Sanctuary, a medical ship where the injured were taken. The chief surgeon later reported that he'd never seen a man's face who lived so badly damaged. My dad came to the ship without ID tags and there was no way, no time to ask for his name. The surgical nurse had to force a breathing tube in while he was awake so that he wouldn't swallow what was left of his tongue. They had to take the pieces of his shattered jaw and try to keep some of the muscles together for some semblance of a face. In the weeks and months that followed, my father lived in a fog, totally oblivious to the world around him. When he was moved to San Diego to be a patient at Navy Hospital, he still thought he was in a dream. One time, in a moment of consciousness, he wrote a message to his nurse, "My mom just died, I hate my dad, and I know my girlfriend doesn't love me. Why am I alive?" With his teeth wired shut and a tracheatomy tube in his throat, he dropped down to 135 pounds in three weeks. People would visit him and not make it, fainting from the shock of what my dad had become. It was two months after being shot, when he really woke up from his haze. He heard a civil defense siren, and he realized, wait a minute, I wouldn't put a civil defense siren in my dream. And that's when he felt a total release into the luxury of knowing that he was never going to be shot at again. He felt free. He felt like no matter how bad this was, he never had to be shot at again. ** When I was away at college, I got a call from my dad one night. It was 1993. He was calling from Washington and his voice was breathless, his tone was peaceful. He had been visiting the Women's Vietnam Memorial and something amazing had happened. My dad was approached by a woman who asked if he had ever been a patient on an army head-injury hospital. He said, yes, that he'd been on the USS Sanctuary in June of '68. She said she had a friend who'd been a nurse at that time, and a half an hour later my dad was introduced to Helen Roth. Even without words, they hugged. When they found a quiet place to talk, my dad asked her if she had known the two primary surgeons who'd worked on him. Helen said, "Yes, Jerry. I know them." When they found somewhere to sit nearby, she put her arm around him, and revealed to my dad what she now realized to be true: "Jerry," she said, "I was your surgical nurse." Helen told my father that she had never been able to forget him or his injury. Three years before this chance encounter, she had written a poem about my dad—it was before she knew his name, before she even knew that he was still alive. The poem addressed the horror of saving someone so torn apart and the hope of someday finding out that his life had been worth living at all. Helen was too emotional to read it aloud to him so they had some friends of my father's read it aloud to them both. And as they listened, they cried out of happiness at the gift of finding each other. This is the poem. It's called "Eyes." My eyes are the only part of my face Which speak to you In the confusion of our surroundings.
You are watching my eyes for some sign to assure you that perhaps the blood you taste And swallow until it chokes you Is not your own.
You seek some assurance that the burning pain of your seared flesh will cease when you awake from what you hope Is some demented joke Or diabolical dream.
There is an immediate bond between us. The lower half of my face is concealed By a surgical mask. The lower part of yours torn away by an act of war.
Your attempt to speak is futile, terror strikes your eyes as you begin to strangle Your hands gesture frantically communicating your fear. As you reach toward your face my hands catch yours. Our own eyes lock. I must decide if the reassurance you seek should be the truth or empty platitudes.
Certainly, it would be easier to say, "Lay quiet, everything will be all right." But my eyes would attest to the lie and I feel you would live to hate me for it.
The truth is, I have never seen a man With the lower half of his face torn Brutally apart.
There is little remaining to identify you, Yet here you lie, awake and staring at me. Wanting an answer to the question: "Please! How bad is it?"
My insides churn. I'd like to turn and run, bury my head in someone's shoulder, scream, then cry.
Instead, I swallow hard, Wipe the blood from your eyes And tell you the truth, pausing momentarily To say we will try our best.
You reach up and take the mask From my face. A smile of encouragement and Tear-filled eyes greet you. I am touched by the humanity we share.
In the 13 hours that follow, We try to reconstruct your face. Are we playing God?
Later, your head a mass of bandages and drainage tubes, Your eyes say it all. "I made it!"
In the hours that follow As sleep eludes me, I wonder.
Will you live to curse us For your life Or will your courage overcome the obstacles ahead?
Years have passed and I am seeing your eyes again. I see the hope and courage I saw then and silently pray that this is true Rather than think Your life became so unbearable, Your emotional pain so intense, You chose an abrupt and brutal end.
I will take my mask off if it will help Again.
But when I start to cry I am afraid I won't be able to stop.
You see I need to know that your wounds healed, That you can smile again And laugh. Then I, too, will be at peace.
When my father finished telling me the story, I was stunned. I had always known what had happened to him in Vietnam, but until then, I don't think I ever really understood. My dad told me that until that point he felt like he had lived two different lives. Now, he said, he knows it's been one life, connected by love.

 Smelling


 Workshop

The divorce diaries
It's a book project with a friend of mine I tentatively started in January. I was going to write her one email a day. This is one I liked: All right, even if it's only short I'm going to try to get in the habit of emailing you every day. For fun! Yes for fun! You can email whatever load you can handle. When you don't have time to read my stuff, just don't read it.
And hey, do me a favor, don't get offended. I lead an offensive life. Thanks.
I had my first glimpse of love today. It was with a doctor. I met him when the fact of my marriage falling apart seemed like a fashionable lark. (What are you doing this April? Mmm. Getting separated maybe? I want to do something different, that's all I know.) I remember smiling a lot when I met the doctor. I tend to smile a lot when I meet men. I want to show them how happy I am.
Sometimes I just keep talking and smiling, talking and smiling. That's how I kept things with the doctor for many months until things were sad and bad and my marriage falling apart became something real. I called him very happy one day, fresh from crying in the bathroom, determined to show him and myself how insanely happy and carefree I still was. At the end of the conversation he said, "Mandy, you seem like someone who is not always honest with how you are feeling." And I wanted to kiss him.
I didn't kiss him when I met him. I did give him a lap dance in a cab on the way to another bar. And then of course, there was the shared lap dance at the Hustler Club but who's counting.
Tonight, though, I had a terrible dinner with a friend who I know is one of those friends who is searching for the little details in your life to feel superior about. And I knew it, and I didn't care. She never cries. She is never sad. She never prays. She is never fazed. She just screws up her face at other people when they experience adversity. She pounces on vulnerabilities. "Do you always stay late at work? Is work something you have to work at? Hmm. Weird." And then she screws up her face. And I was aware of this so I kept stuttering saying, "Uh," and "Ah," until I finally said, "All of my friends are leading their lives to support a big Crate & Barrel brunch having ultimate yuppie lifestyle, and I don't want that. It makes me feel lonely. And it is so much work to maintain this image of beauty for men and then at the end of the day I don't even know that I want most of the guys I am maintaining this image for. I work and work and work to maintain their interest and then a moment of clarity happens and I realize, You're kind of an asshole."
She did not screw up her face. But I still felt alone.
Then I called the doctor. I started smiling and talking, smiling and talking, but I also told him honestly about how confused everything is with me. About using sex, the baiting of your body as power, and the fear that comes with turning things into an actual human encounter because then the humanity can be taken away.
So I told the doctor all this and then a little bit more about men and dating and boys and the many, many complex feelings involved and how my brother in law told me, "Guys don't want to hear girl things but girls are pretty so they will listen" and did the doctor think this was true? And he said, "Mandy, you're in New York. It's okay. You're having fun. Don't worry about that guy. Don't worry." He didn't say that but that's the way that I am going to remember it because oh, it felt so good. Because do you know what happened? A really magical, wonderful thing happened.
I said, "I hope your week was lovely." That's my new thing. I get off the phone before people can get off the phone with me so that I am not needy on my own divorced lonely spinster girl who please keep talking I'm all alone so alone so alone. And that was my transition to the coy hangup.
And he said, "Mandy, do you want to know about my week? Really? I had one of the most stressful weeks I've ever had in my life." Then he told me a story that was perhaps one of the funniest stories I've ever heard about interviewing at a big prestigious medical school for a post-fellowship position (when I met his friends a few weeks back, they inquired, "When did he drop the d-bomb? First five minutes? How long?").
In the story, while he was interviewing for the position, during the cocktail hour someone asked if he had met a certain Dr. Y at the other medical center he interviewed at. It was cocktail hour, so, "Sure," he said, he'd met Dr. Y. Sure. He realized as soon as he said it that in fact he had not met Dr. Y but what was he going to do at that point? The person had moved on, was on to the next phase of the cocktail hour and was he going to say, "Excuse me, I actually did not meet Dr. Y, it's just that this is cocktail hour and I was saying yes because that seemed like the right thing to do and I did in fact hear so much about him so it's almost as if I met Dr. Y."
Well, at the end of the story it turns out that this prestigious medical school is worse than the fucking gestapo and he arrives at the dean's office the next day and the first thing the dean says is, "So, you met Dr. Y, yes?" as if it was a psychological breakdown.
And there was about 20 other things that went wrong like that until he got to the point where as he was making rounds with one of the senior doctors who was pimping him out to all the cancer patients he simply up and said, "I really have to leave and catch my flight" even though his flight was not until the next day and he took a taxi to get away, to get anywhere. And he ended up at a coffee shop and then of course, walking across the street, it's an adminstrator from the prestigious medical school who calls out, "Hey! Hey! I thought that was you. Wait. Didn't you have to catch a flight?"
Oh how we laughed. And we talked about boys, we kept talking about boys and you know the fantasy, the delicious fantasy is as I am counseling him and he is counseling me, the girl part of my brain the really girl part, the Kelly Ripa part, the Martha Stewart part is weaving our story, "Oh kids, it was so funny, how me and your father met at first." Yes that is how low I can be. I can stoop to the "how we met" stories. I can. It's my brain. I wish it was not. But it has several components to it. I even had a dream that the complete prick of an investment banker that I made out with asked me to marry him. Because it would be so easy. So easy to have that checked off. It's also why women have rape fantasies.
So. My love. For the doctor. It sprang from this delicious stream. Oh such a stream. Such a delicious, delicious stream. Because everything we discussed, which included: his odd friend, his crazy friend, and dog fucking, came back to how he should invent a larger than life story for knowing Dr. Y. If challenged by the dean of the prestigious medical school, he would now be indignant that he not only knew and had in fact met Dr. Y but had also gone away to a small cottage in Vermont with Dr. Y and he knew him to be a proven dog fucker. We were rolling. And it was so, so far away from the Crate & Barrel completely yupped out brunches I fear and what's more he was an actual male who I was laughing with. It was love. My first glimpse at love. I'm going to enjoy it even if it's only for tonight.

 Throng

Scenes from a game
I had never seen a real football game before. I mean a real, real football game. And there I was, sports cap, beer, Buckeyes necklace, story. "I didn't go to Ohio State, but my family's from Akron, my granddad played quarterback for Akron U years ago, and I went to Northwestern. You know, Big 10. Go Bucks." The game was exciting. I've never paid such close attention to a scoreboard before in my life. He had money riding on the game, and the bookies had called it extremely close. 56 under. That's what happens when you bet on the under. I clapped hands with everyone every time the Domers fucked up. I nodded at the commentary that Regis would sure have a lot to say. I went to the airport wearing a gigantic red Ohio State sweatshirt with a little Tostitos Fiesta Bowl emblem on the top. And here's what I found. The world has never so lovingly embraced Mandy Stadtmiller. I have a place. They get it. I am the tall girl who is good at or into sports. I kind of liked it. "Your team did all right yesterday," the black woman nodded to me. "They did." I grinned. I walked away proudly. A white old man with creased brown hair smiled at me. "I like your sweatshirt," he said. "Bet you're not looking forward to getting back to the cold." "Well, no," I said. "You're going to party when you get back?" "I live in New York," I said. Then feebly, "My granddad, he played quarterback for Akron U." The conversation was over. On the plane, I started writing. I wrote for three hours. I wanted to catch up with my brain. The plane landed. I was listening to " Two Guitars" by Graham Smith. I'm much happier than I seem to be Life is laugh-out-loud hilarious 24 hours a day And I have stuck to that belief vehemently And that’s no doubt the primary cause Of my uneven grief and malaise So I'm still whispering In case you haven’t noticed I've gone halfway down to dumb And heaven only knows what's best And you are still not listening You're losing your focus The noise develops and envelops You until you're deaf But it's all too easy Another unproductive day I ask you if you'll ever need me You say, no, no So I can't say you never told me so You're breaking the rules You're laying the groundwork for rebellion You're playing with fire You're making a liar out of me And you are playing the fool Enabling the ouster of all your skeletons Take a minute and let it settle in Are you proud to be A runaway amongst a throng of strangers A threat if only to yourself Quench your thirst with some new anger But it's never ever quite enough And the evidence is piling up And the slender ties that bind are stuck I'm out of time and I am FUCKED This absolutely wasn't supposed to happen It was supposed to be a walk in the park But these storm clouds descended And our sojourn ended And now we're making art in the dark And I told them not to say a single word to you This is the last thing I intended to put you through What could I have expected her to do And by some twist of fate the last thing she heard was Two guitars, one manic and one angry That faded like to streaks of light But they sounded like a happy family As they kissed her sunken cheeks goodnight To float away on down the river And never come upstream again Oh I promise that I won't deliver So bury me in Tennessee Far away from Venice Beach And all the enemies I've made here We had such good chemistry I never needed you to censor me Or treat me tenderly But then that plenipotential energy Poured down like rain and rendered me Utterly, unendingly speechless So now by God I hope you see You could have been a better friend to me I'm sure you'll whistle as the threnody plays But as they drop my body Into the brusque, indignant earth I know that you'll feel sorry For whatever it is worth Unfortunately, that's precious little And a few precious uncaptured moments too late It's over, baby, it's official So tell me, was it worth the wait?
I was weeping. I went and bought expensive Italian water and green tea. I was choking on my tears. I could barely talk. It felt good. I called Mike. One of the things that I had written was something that always makes me cry. It's making me cry right now. A card. Gold, I think. I tossed it when I was lightening my load to move to New York. It was from Mike. "To Mandy," it said, "who gave me a life." I reached him. "Where are you?" he said. "O'Hare," I said. "Happy New Year," he said. I was silent, bobbing, bobbing, bobbing, bobbing my green tea and crying. "Are you there?" he said. "Yes," I said. I couldn't speak. My voice came out thick, broken. "Are you okay?" he said. "Yeah," I said, "Just you know how sometimes you think about everything and it's a lot?" "Yeah," he said. I looked at the people walking past the Wolfgang Puck's Express where I sat. "Do you want to know something funny?" I said. "Yeah," he said. "I'm sitting here in this gigantic fucking clownish Ohio State sweatshirt," I said. "Sobbing." I laughed. "And it doesn't make any sense. "Because, like, my team. They played a really good game yesterday." He laughed. "Yeah," he said. "That is funny."

 Traffic

Sharing and caring
I had a weird experience. I talked to a guy who I don't know that well who reads this a lot, and it was weird. You know how things are weird? Yeah, they're weird. Web sites are weird. He called, and at one point he interrupted me, and I was like, please, let me finish because I was talking about my health, and at another point he made a joke about shut up, bitch, or something and I thought, huh, what impression do I give, on this thing, this thing, this thing. It's a problem I have. I enjoy more than anything else, really, talking to genuinely funny people. There's nothing more. I enjoy. Nothing. When I can't do that, or when I can't hear a sensibility that is akin, that cuts through, that I get, that is true, I sometimes feel as if I'm choking, I feel this weird terror, this kind of incapacitating slowly encroaching oppressive terror. A comic made a joke about how are we ever going to have a president? Everyone is going to be haunted by their MySpace profiles. And I wonder about being haunted by this, but no, I think it is, yes, I do. I do. So with that, I present to you, "That's not comedy!" Terrible title. Excellent sentiment, terrible title. That's not what it's called, actually, but here's one thing I do know, every time the walls seem to be closing in, if I can write or say or interact with one person where they understand some of the same joy and some of the same terribleness and some of the same joy that can be derived from the terribleness, then that is what I find. I was told that this can be dark, but no, I don't know about that. I think life is dark, and I think that life for me is finding joy and lightness and connection and sensibility in the dark. I do. So that's that. I performed this twice. Once to rousing sassy gay applause. I'll perform it again sometime. I love saying perform. I feel like the not very talented girl with the dyed purple hair in the Second City fantasy camp acting class with the nose that was just not quite right and the inability to do the monologue to save her fucking life and she said, I just love performing. I just love it! And you hang your head in embarrassment for her. Because that is you. Oh. And I think it's really the truth, the inability to share the truth at times that can kill me, because I interact with you and her and me and she and write things and you get about 1 percent of it because it doesn't fit an overall larger strategy. I wrote something to someone, and I said that the most difficult thing was trying to convey the truth in the paradigms the conventions of things. And rules are good. They are, and structure is excellent, but there's something emboldening when you see something that actually owns the more difficult things. So yeah, so there's this. There's this. I wrote this in Florida. So the sad realization is that men are only nice to women because they want to get laid. They want to kiss them. They want to touch their breasts. They want to stick their penises in their vaginas. And they want to kiss them. And that's okay. But it's something where it's kind of like, it's important to always go to a Denny's on your own so that you are within the earshot of a crowd of businessguys who are talking honestly about the previous night. Because they're like yeah I was talking this chick up. Women will never be like men. But they like to pretend that they are. They like to pretend. Like right now I'm kind of pretending by telling you honestly about my weekend. The thing is that women are about as far away from men as you can possibly get. As far, as completely far away. There is nothing more different on the planet. There are women, and then there are men. There are partners in crime. There are, there is loneliness. There is a big cloud of loneliness encompassing the planet, and that is what I like to look at. So I booked a trip to Florida this weekend, and it was one of those things where I had to do it. I just, I have no plans anymore, I have no strategy. I had a really big strategy, but then it got blown to hell. That was my marriage. And I don't want to be one of those bitter women who have some story that they have to tell you but at the same time it's probably important for me to tell my story and do it in an honest way because I've realized that the most strong things in life come from honesty. Honesty is what triumphs but then here's the thing. Honesty has a lot of different sides. Like I can go to a party and I can meet someone who you know they have some influence in some world that I want to be a part of or am already a part of but then they turn out to be a total tool and I will still be nice to them. But it's hard when you are nice to someone and you are also looking at them at the same time like god I want to fucking murder you I hate you you pretentious unfunny arrogant fuck. Because there's nothing worse than those people. And they're everywhere. They are everywhere. And I meet new people like every week, every day because it's just like what I do, it's what I've always done, I've always met 8,000 new people a day and that's just kind of my thing. I will go out right now and there's something in my eyes that either says I like to meet interesting people or I like to fuck or both and that somehow invariably leads to conversation. And the worst part with guys is waiting for them to make a move. Because you kind of want them to make a move but then you are also completely repulsed. You can't handle it, you want more than anything for them to not make a move because they are going to ruin everything. And I'm no big prize. I have a handout of all the things wrong with me. I get that. My life has been spent tilting on one side of my foot to try to be more like the rest of the girls. And then when I finally figured out how to fit in, and I finally fit in and I started dating this guy who had a yacht and a lot of money and my parents started calling me a lot more and said yeah? Yeah? How's the guy with the yacht going, is he still calling you because there is one truth in life, and I will tell you what that one truth is with more certainty than anything else: If you date a guy with a yacht, people are going to ask you about that guy for the rest of your life. Because everyone wants to know with a morbid kind of curiosity, can you keep a guy with a yacht, can you keep his interest up? And it's all your girlfriends especially the ones that you hate. So Mandy what's going on? Is what's that guy's name again is he calling you still? Are you guys still hanging out? Is that happening? Oh yeah, well that's great. That's really. Uh-huh. I think that's great. And here's the thing, he was actually into me but then I just reached a point where I couldn’t handle it. I mean probably it was mutual. It was a mutual parting of the ways besides the fact that I moved to New York and he lived in Chicago but there was a point where I was lying next to him and my voice was kind of gruff from sleeping in and I said you know I just I have serious doubts about the casual misogyny of our society and he looked at me with this big grin, this big placid doe eyed grin and I said what, what are you smiling about? And he said what does misogyny mean and I said you're fucking kidding me, you don't know what misogyny means and then he lent me his copy of FHM for the plane ride on the way back. And you know he's someone who has this big fat fucking belly and on that trip with the guy with the yacht I was having all these gynecological problems I guess I still am because I haven't had my period in like six months now but they did a million tests and now eventually they've just told me well you know during World War II ladies never had their periods so I guess for me getting divorced is like you know defeating Nazi Germany. Some people defeat Nazi Germany, I file for divorce. And I'm thinking about all of this as I'm sitting on the lap of this crystal meth kid who I hitched a ride from and I'm smoking one of his friends' cigarettes and we're passing by a place that says "U Will Stop Smoking" like a strip mall sign that is just flashing and they're talking about how you know this a chance for them to start a new life in Florida you know being as he has a record in Texas and all and I'm thinking about this and I'm thinking about my doctor asking me if I am suicidal and of course I'm not I just like flirting with the extremes of life but never in any way where I do anything interesting or substantial like develop a heroin habit it's always just shit where it's like a 10 minute flirtation on the lap of a crystal meth addict.
See things are done differently in Florida. Everyone is red faced drunk and stoned. They've just given up. I think I just needed a test of that for this one weekend. I needed a taste of giving up. That's what life is about for me I guess is flirting with that idea of giving up of living purely for pleasure and that's what telling a lot of these stories are for, it's living for pleasure.
It's hard when someone gets over you. I don't think I would mind breaking up or in my case getting divorced if I could just know that the person never got over me. Never. If I could just know that their life was completely destroyed and that their one chance of talking to me was the one bright spot in their lives that day. That's all I want. It's not too much to ask. Just complete misery and then from time to time again I would brighten up their day by calling them and giving a little bit of hope.
I stayed at this motel and I overslept and I missed the breakfast and I called the hotel operator lazily asleep and I said um so is there, you know, is there, breakfast left? And she was prepared for this, this was the highlight of her morning every morning being able to tell people that they had missed the breakfast cut off that it was totally and finally too late.
When I hook up with a boy I remember everything I do. I remember every little single thing and there is something fascinating to me about the constant desire for new knowledge about if other people are dating if something is happening. Because I don't understand why the interest, I think I just because there is the chance for failure in the other person's relationship. I think that is why girls are always checking up on other girls' lives. Because there is just the chance, there is the hope that something will go completely and absolutely wrong.
When I was younger I had a fantasy where all I wanted to do was hang out and sit in the middle of a freeway divider and have a picnic. I hadn't plotted it out too much I just thought that it would work itself out somehow. I thought that it would work itself out and that would be the thing that I would do.
With drugs it's such an interesting question because there are two kinds of people there are the people who can handle drugs and then there are the people who absolutely positively can't. And most people like probably you know 98 percent fall in the category of they can't handle it or if they do handle it they just become wastoid losers or also additionally they do shit like overdose or they tell you that they had a lucid dream when they were on the subway and it felt like they were flying and they're well over 40 years old and then both of you just feel extremely awkward and uncomfortable and you wish that the story had never been shared at all.
I'll tell you in South Florida when you see an old man and a young girl you just pray that that is the daughter. Even when he is inside her while they are watching Bratz on TV you are still hoping it's just an outrageous approach to parenting that's all.
I try to justify everything by telling a story about it. Someday I'm going to lose all my money, go for broke, kill a guy and then I'll say, but there was this one really funny sad poignant moment your honor, I think you'll agree it was well worth it.
I took a cab to my motel in Florida and the cab driver took me all over, to the wrong part of town, he had no idea where anything was, no idea where anything was and he dropped me off in the middle of nowhere and that's where I met these two little crystal meth heads who I got a ride with by hopping on one of their laps. The tattoo artist I think. They were listening to Old D B and I tried to be down and said well at least you have good taste in music but then I had to bring up Big Baby Jesus and then I didn't even know that he was dead so right there I established myself as a striver as a wanter, as someone who wasn't quite in their scene but pretended to be.
Except for right now I somewhat have my looks, I mean it's an interesting question because I like it when normal investment banker guys look me up and down and judge me and in that 10 second decision they are deciding is she hot is she hot no no no no she does not quite look like the chick who I paid $100 to jump on my lap last night. She is close but there is no cigar.
I think that every year we should designate someone like Lindsay Lohan or someone that is just chosen to be the person who is elevated and just given a lot of money a lot of coke a lot of clothes a lot of attitude maybe one good role and then another one starring a talking car and then we can just have one channel devoted completely to that person because I've got to be honest with you I would TiVo that. I would TiVo that except it would be 24 hours so I would watch it all the time. It would be a problem because I would watch it all the time and then eventually my life would be over but I would have come up with the perfect clever quip to say about the designated celebrity. The DC. The DC would, there would be competitions of people all over the land trying to come up with the most clever bon mot about the DC and then eventually the person who might have a really terrible quip they might get their legs or their arms chopped off as punishment just to fill a little bit of network programming on other channels. It would solve a lot of problems at once.
Here's the addendum. And it's kind of comedic! After performing this at Rev. Jen's, I got my period the very next night for the first time in six months. It was awesome. As my friend Maggie said, Congratulations! Did you kiss a sailor? All comes back around. Fleet Week, you see, and that's The Word. Thank you.

 Funderful

Please note
I'm writing a pilot about a pilot who is writing a pilot. It's going to be called "Cancelled." Come by the 12-inch Bar, 179 Essex St., on Monday at 7 p.m. I'll be hosting the open mic and might do some jokes employing a dolphin puppet. It's going to be super edgy.

 Asshole glasses, hat that society loves


 Animal planet

Do the math
I flew home to California a few weekends ago and the plane started to get all shaky, which was kind of scary. Like are we going to die? Are we going to die? But then after a few minutes I was like, I hope it happens quick. Because I've seen "Lost." And that shit looks complicated.

 Whale-core

In America
The lovely and talented Lester Nelson is going to be designing my new Web site. Thanks for continuing to believe in friendship and magic, everybody. Let's do this thing. My mother discovered a new comedian last night while on the phone with me. He is from Russia. His last name is Smirnoff. She's cutting out the newspaper clipping right now. "You have to read about this guy," she said. My niece came up with a great joke in San Diego when I visited last weekend. "What are you writing?" she asked me. "Kids are so great," I said. "They're like, entertain me entertain me entertain me you bore me." She looked very sad. So she offered an alternative. "What about," she said, "Sea World is great for friends and family?" She's right. The bit kills. This Saturday I'll be doing a set at the Underground Above Ground Comedy Showcase, where you can see me talk about the quite possibly gay dude I made out with this weekend. As I told him before we started assfucking, "Did you know Sea World is great for friends and family?" Don't worry, mom. That's totally a joke. Sea World is terrible for friends and family. May 27, 8 p.m. Laugh Factory 303 W. 42nd St., Suite 315 Manhattan $5

 "Think of something sad"

FYI
Sent an email to myself this week subject line: joketards. Got approached by a man on the street this week. He said, "Wow! Do you want to have coffee sometime?" and I said, "Sure." He had no business card but check it, he did have a MySpace profile. And I told some girls, "I totally got approached on the street by this guy who was really cute and seemed really great!" And then oh. How the mighty have fallen. A line from his profile: "I am seething with need, rage, venom, envy, lullabies, the lust of many men, longing so vivid it might be nostalgia for something that doesn't exist." Sic. I am a tool magnet. I am a joketard.

 Baby, baby


 New adorability index

You have just blogged your pants

 Taken aback

Housekeeping
I'll be going up at the lovely Sputnik again this Wednesday: 262 Taaffe Place Brooklyn 9-midnight $10 plus two drinks I'm also in the process of eventually relocating to mandystadtmiller.com. I'm getting bids from Web designers so if you do good, reasonably priced work, drop me a line with links to a few of your sites. Finally, long story longer, I've launched into full-scale MySpace whore mode so you can A.D.D. me here. You can also look for videos of me performing on the AforementionedSpace, including, if all goes according to plan, one where I look like a disembodied newsboy cap pacing the stage.

 American dreamz

Conversations and feelings
#1 Elina: Do you know that this is my anniversary of coming to America? Me: Woah. No. Happy anniversary, dude. Elina: Yeah, thanks. Me: Do you want me to tell you that joke in honor of it? Elina: Yes, please. Me: You know who have the worst senses of humor? Elina: Who. Me: Holocaust survivors. In abortion clinics. Elina: Oh, man. Me: Yeah. Elina: I really love that joke. #2 Me: Posting that PayPal link on my blog is the sluttiest thing I've ever done. Elina: Actually. Me: What. Elina: ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- with the dude who said he owned the NBC Tower. Me: Huh. Elina: Yeah. Me: You're probably right. #3 Elina: What are you doing? Me: Eating All-Bran with bananas and prunes. Elina: You are Captain Diarrhea! Me: Ha. Elina: You are the Mayor of Diarrhea-Town! Me: Ha. It's true. Elina: Wait a minute. Me: What. Elina: I want to be the mayor. ...Happy birthday, Elina Gorelik! You make life worth living again and again.

 Pumpkin factor

Celeb-reality calculator
Number of Hits on Google + Number of Mentions in US Weekly X Number of Public Mental Breakdowns - Years Out of Public Spotlight + Number of Bugs You Are Willing to Eat - Number of Times Appeared on Arsenio in the '90s or Guest VJ'ed with Kennedy on MTV + Diameter of Gigantic Gold Clock Hanging From Your Neck = $$$

 Saveur


 The lion, the witch and the no good, very bad day


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