Confused and a Handful of Pubes

CONFUSED AND A HAND-FULL OF PUBES
 
 

 
 
subtitle : A WOMAN IS AT HER BEST WHEN SHE IS YOUNG AND HASN’T HAD A MAN, A MAN IS AT HIS BEST AFTER HE HAS HAD NUMEROUS WOMEN

 
 
Seeing as she took social media as a chance to abuse me, like other women, I thought this would be another chance to expose mankind and I mean man kind

 

 
We haven’t talked in days although it feels like months. It feels like, have we ever talked at all? She’s in one of her moods. I can’t even remember what it was about. It was probably something I’ve done, then again who knows; it could have been something I’d forgotten to do? Normally all I have to do is fuck her when she’s mad but she is too angry for that. Every time we pass in the hallway the bad-energy she is giving off makes the hair on my arms stand up. She walks past me with a tone of haughty indignation and sleeps on the far-left side of the bed. If only humanity could harness the power of a woman’s rage, it would make coal and petroleum obsolete. What would derision smell like if it had a scent? It would smell somewhere between burnt hair and a stale fart.

Work, work, work, is that all you do? She told me I should join the art class down the road to improve my painting so I did. She tells me that I always talk about being disabled. She once asked if I thought that it made my life, being in a wheelchair, much different to hers? I picked a course turned up and asked a lady standing in the hallway where I had to go. An old man was walking towards me with his canvas under his arm, he pointed up two flights of grand oak staircase and said, good luck. I looked back at the woman and saw her nodding. It was a white heritage property with lots of rooms. A man with a badge came walking down the corridor towards me. He shook my hand and apologised for the lack of accessibility. That’s all right I’m used to it, I replied, as he led me to his room down on the ground level. This is the only class that you could get into, he said.

I tried to concentrate on what I was doing but I couldn’t. The Controller (icare) had sent me on another wild goose chase. The teacher asked me what kind of painting I liked? I told him that I liked Picasso and Jean Michelle Basquiat. He asked, wasn’t he the junky that overdosed? I nodded and said, he also painted {boom for real}. He looked at me like I was a simpleton then led me around the room. He introduced me to each of the students and showed me what they were doing. I felt embarrassed looking on their work. They were all far more talented than I will ever be. One of the students looked right at me when I entered the room and I saw her pupils dilate as she smiled sexily. She was old beautiful and looked regal. She had long silver hair and big saggy breasts, and I mean BIG saggy breasts. She was wearing a tight thin pale-yellow see-through dress and did not wear a bra, it looked like she was carrying two watermelons. I saw her nipples erect when she saw me. I had to pass her as the teacher lead me around the room to see the other students work. She opened her mouth and made a small, rrrrrrrrr, sound as I neared her. I poked out my tongue then looked down and saw she was wearing sandals and that her calves were hairy. I’d bet good money that she hadn’t trimmed her pubes in years.

She wants me to apologise but I won’t. I am nothing but nice to her. I’ve noticed that her moods are triggered by what she experiences when she is not around me. That’s why I won’t. Small, trivial matters become a reason for her to hate me. Her rage comes from what she experiences during her day and cannot control. I am the easy target. If she is ever mad at me when we are on the streets she will purposely flirt and try to grab men’s attention. I only ever paid her back once when a cute blonde started flirting with me as my woman had stopped talking with a strange man. They stopped and talked as we went up the street together. I l felt it (felt her), so looked back and saw her face changed when she saw me doing the same thing as her. She stopped flirting and ran up behind the blonde wordlessly shouldering her in the back. The woman I had been flirting with hit the ground, hard. I turned and saw the man my woman had been chatting up was just as surprised as me. She was shaking slightly. Look, she screamed and pointed at me, see look what you just made me do. I bent down and picked the blonde off the ground as she came up behind me and started beating me with the bottom of her closed fists. She is not big but quick so I cowered and winced as she rained blows on me. The blonde mouthed, I’m sorry, at me as she wearily stood and backed away from us. I mouthed back, I’m sorry too.

Inside the class everybody seemed enthused. I was not interested in painting what they were. The artists were copying from photos they had next to their easels. I want to paint what nobody has ever seen. I excused myself and went onto the street where the sun burned me almost instantly. I heard somebody yell, hey, so looked back inside. The lady with the yellow dress came charging out the door, breasts bobbing and swaying, scanning both ways of the street. She smiled when she saw me. She pulled up the dress and took a soft-packet of cigarettes from her knickers, walked up, lit and started talking. She shook one loose of the packet towards me. I took it and said thanks. I could smell them on you, she said. I smiled, said thanks again, and accepted the lighter as she handed it to me. I lit and the cigarette tasted like a sweaty vagina. Come around the back, she insturcted, it’s less noisy than on the street and we can talk. I followed her as she took a right turn. She kind of half-skipped away from me and took another turn out of my sight. I lit then drew on the cigarette with my left hand and pushed the wheelchair with my right. As I turned the second right behind the building, I saw her against a wall, she had pulled her dress up and her knickers were down. I was right, she hadn’t trimmed her pubes in years. I told her to take off the dress and she did. Her breasts looked exceptional jutting out and her big nipples were perfectly erect. I grabbed them with my hands and the cigarette fell to the ground.

She pulled my pants down with one quick tug. Why aren’t you hard yet, she asked? Because I’m not warmed up, I replied. She asked, what don’t you find me attractive? No, I said, not really. Then why did you follow me here, she questioned. I don’t know, I said, it seemed inevitable. We both studied each other silently. Are we going to fuck or what, she asked? A bus changed gear as it went up the hill behind us and woke me up. I shouldn’t, I said, I’m married with three kids. Don’t you want four, she asked through a smile? I asked, do you still get your monthly’s? She took a long drag on her cigarette then reached down and stubbed it on my right testicle. Oooowww. It hurt so much that my penis started to harden as I brushed off the cinders. Aahhh , she said, I’ve been with men like you before, as she reached out and slapped me across the face. Don’t, I said as my penis stood up. Yeah, she seethed through clenched teeth, I know what your type likes. She reached out and grabbed my right nipple and twisted it. Yeaowh, I screamed, stop, I don’t like it! I know your type, she said as she slapped me across the face with her other hand again. Stop it, I commanded! Stop means go and no means yes, she said as her eyes narrowed.

I ejaculated inside her and said, thanks, then went back inside to the class. I was ready to try and paint what they wanted me to. Back in the classroom I found that the teacher wanted everybody to be friends. He kept showing me everybody’s work and introducing me. They were all happy to meet me but I wondered what it had to do with art? Some of the students were good and some were bad. That is a perfect form for a still life. When I am enrolled, I will try and sit at the back. I have studied once before in an adult education class and I found that the loudest people got the most sway simply because they were the loudest. My nerves shuddered as I imagined having smoko with all these old ladies. I already knew Nipples would be the loudest and in charge. When she came back in to the room she glared at me as she barged past. Her left hand opened on the collision. I looked down and saw a fistful of black and silver pubes on my lap. They all had the little white gland on the end. She had pulled them out by the root.

I left the class early to get away from her. She wanted to fuck me again and it was making her silly. I can tell heat. My head hung as I left the building. I kept asking myself questions that I didn’t know the answer to. I had to find the way back. I got home and opened the door. She was singing when I came in. She was happy. It has become obvious that too much of me is not good for her. She likes it when I go away and come back. I smiled as I went up and cupped her bottom for a kiss. Do you think you’ll go back, she asked as she turned bent down and kissed my lips lightly? She looked at my face and asked if I was hot? Pardon, I asked? Your cheeks are all red. I nodded and said, yes. I didn’t tell her about the old lady I fucked or my confusion and fear or my lust or the fact that this is it. She wouldn’t understand. There is something to be left behind. Art and Sex I don’t know, if I liked it, I replied. I can’t figure out if I enjoyed it or no. It’s only in writing this down that I can now see it for what it is. She would never understand why I could not tell her the truth. Where I was or what I had done did not matter. She only cared that I had left her then came back.

Do you think you will go back again, she asked a second time? Maybe, I said, it depends how I feel in the morning.

 

 

Andrew Stuart Buchanan

(‘s) (she) (them) or – therefore: THE GLASS IS HALF EMPTY

i know that i always write in a negative way. Even if it is always negative it is a talent. the talent is the ability to see the negative in the positive. Nietzsche said that even those who hate themselves respect themselves enough to realise that there is a self to hate. i did not write this for you so i understand if you don’t get it
 
 
(‘s) (she) (them)
 
 
or – therefore: THE GLASS IS HALF EMPTY
 
 

 
 
I’ve just gotten off the phone. I was being told off again for talking about women. It was a woman telling me off; of course it was a woman telling me off. I was being told that I am not allowed to state the differentiation between men and women. She was telling me that men and women should be considered equal. Phhfffff. Even if a woman has an unusually high level of testosterone in her body she does not have balls. The modern day woman is wound too tight and doesn’t have nearly enough orgasms. I’ve listened to Donald Trump’s run. He made a comment about immigration and came across sounding like a dangerous racist. The only thing I’ve heard him say and liked was, political correction is ruining this country. Wake up Donald, I’ll get Goofy to slap you. It is ruining the world. I don’t think anyone can see where this is leading. I can. I’ve seen it in ‘forties sci-fi movies. We all wear the same shiny silver clothes and have the same haircut

 
 
It is amazing to share so much with the female but to be so completely different. She wouldn’t know about ejaculating. Most men would feel embarrassed to tell a woman how many times they have ejaculated. I’ve ejaculated on the sheets and slept in my sperm. I’d say most men have. Some women squirt but that’s fuck-all. There is nothing in a squirt. Women’s books won’t tell you what men want. The trick of a woman is figuring out if she wants you. It changes as a woman ages and it slows down. Men go on masturbating till the day they die. There is no meaning just desire. We should be cherishing the differences between the sexes but women can’t let go of their envy of the penis. A woman can work now and she can drive a car and rule a country! Yeah but she can’t piss standing up III

(I liked the way that last sentence went. Only a man will laugh at that one so I’ll end it like that) (p.s. I love women, a woman, all women, (‘s) (she) (them) but am by myself. That’s why I can write about it like this. Imagine if I had a woman and she read this. She’d be mad for a week. Through professional eyes I’ll start it up again now. )))))))))))))))))))) )))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
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I left the house with her (‘s) (she) (them) on my mind to have a go at table tennis. I have only played once since becoming disabled. I was beaten by a smart-arse in the hospital that could walk. He kind of grinned every time he aced me. I kept my mouth shut and thought, fool you’re supposed to be helping me but I let him play his best game. I know I always write about the wheelchair but I don’t often talk about the ‘scone’ injury. It took almost a year and a half for the spinning to stop enough to get out of bed. There are no words to describe it but falling and spinning sound close. I spent months in a bed feeling nauseous when I was raised to eat my breakfast. If you smile nobody will ever know. I want to improve my limited peripheral vision and vestibular so I turned up at a hall to have a go. There was one hot girl there and it made me feel lonely to see her. She had devoted her life to table tennis and had probably never tried to fit two (both) balls in her mouth

I had a hit with a Representative on a table. Where was the ball? Every time I tried to focus on it I would get a ‘still’ shot of his shirt and lose it. I used to be good at table tennis. My father always laughs about the fact that I didn’t tell anyone at school that I had won a Canterbury tournament. They read my name out in assembly for it and I turned red as the school faced me. My father recently told me of the day I won the championship. My coach had noticed that the boy who was supposed to win it had trouble playing a shot against players who threw the ball up into the air to serve so that’s how I was taught. I threw it way up in the air. I beat him by aces. My father told me that he did not shake hands with me and he laughs as he tells me that his father and mother stormed out of the stadium with him, they didn’t even stay for the supper. My father tells me that was his favourite sporting memory. Table tennis is not considered a cool sport in New Zealand. I started playing rugby later

The man was impressed with some of my shots but was trying to retune me for my altered dimensions playing in a wheelchair. You have to go higher with the bat, he said, to make more follow through and spin. I get that. Fuck the ball. There doesn’t seem to be anything to stop me spinning. Spinning is not a problem for me. I already take enough medicines and I have adapted to the vertigo if I sit still. When I am in motion or my vision is in motion I just hang on. The ball kept whizzing past me and once or twice my bat sent the ball whizzing up past my field of periphery. I just had to stay in close to the net. The man told me he had seen a guy in a wheelchair hold on to the wheel with his other hand so I did and my rally got better. I told him that my vision and was better on my backhand so we rallied a few

Ok he said, now we will try your forehand side and I kind of protested. I am better on the left hand side. I have more vision. He started serving to my forehand. I missed the first three or four completely and then got one on the table by chance and it felt good and we rallied three times. He knew where I could see too and fed me. Nearly every time the ball went off the table the man scurried after it. I got it a couple of times when it was in reach of the chair. Eventually he asked what had happened to me? I instinctively told him the truth and watched his face turn. He said, fuuuuck! The look on his face changed. His impression of me had changed. I got in closer to the table. He gave me a couple of hard serves and I returned with winners. I smiled as I wondered, why did he have to ask what happened to me?

I kept looking to the hot girl but she was almost entirely focused on her game, she only ever shot me sly glances. I see women as a game and I am just as focused. The 2 of the *23 told me that I try too hard but that’s because I have to. If anybody say’s I am being dramatic I tell them to try it. Only one of my friends has ever asked if he could have a go in my wheelchair. I transferred on to the couch and let him. I still don’t know why he wanted to have a go but for me it was a sign that somebody wanted to understand. I don’t understand but I was happy that somebody wanted to see what it’s like. Nobody has asked what it’s like to have landed on the head? I kept thinking about the man asking me what happened as I tried to rally. I got a few good shots and had a couple of good serves so it gave me hope. That is all I have so I keep trying. He asked my story ‘til he eventually told me he had to go. I put my bat down and reached for his hand

When I got home I picked up the phone. I needed to understand. I needed somebody to understand. I dialled and asked why? The * or the *23 said that I should be glad people are interested enough to want to ask me why. Oooh, okay I said. I should feel glad that people are as nosey as to inquire as to why I am in a wheelchair. It is all a matter of perception. I should be glad that people only ask to satiate their knowledge. What does it matter? I get bored having to reiterate the same story of how I got here. I think it’s a rude thing to ask a stranger. How do they know, I could have been born like this? The * of the three *23 told me that was how people are. I told them that that wasn’t right. I often have exchanges with people who have never asked me why I am in a wheelchair. That is a true human being; someone who accepts you how you are. To say that someone asks is to be human is wrong. Someone asks to be nosy. We are all human to begin with 11112222333333

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

Andrew Stuart Buchanan

I KILLED A ZEBRA

I KILLED A ZEBRA

: This story is also known as, NUTTY WOMEN COMING UP TO ME and I’M JUST TRYING TO MAKE MY MISERY FUNNY

At least they’re getting more interesting. At first it was only strange women that were drawn to me. I would see them staggering down the street. I would see them smiling at me with their dumb love. Their love stuck on their faces like headlights. I’m friendly so would entertain them. Most of them were nutters. They were the first I noticed staring and smiling at me. Some would approach and stand in front of me to block my way. One day a blonde European woman walked up and stood in front of my wheelchair. She asked my name and what had happened to me? I asked her what she meant? She said, you know, the chair, how did you end up in a wheelchair? Her t-shirt was three sizes too small and the left hem of her miniskirt was tucked into her knickers. She wore pink knickers. She had a hot body but a face like a jaffle-iron. I smiled at her and told her my name was Nil and I was a cannonball artist with a circus. I couldn’t stop smiling as I told her that they put too much powder in the cannon and I overshot the net. I told her that I killed a zebra and injured an elephant as I landed. She knew that I knew she was mad. I knew she knew I was making it up to fuck with her but it felt better than telling the truth. She looked put out. She turned around and walked off. I watched her pink bum walk away from me. At least you can lie to a mad person

I almost died. Time and medicine kept me alive. I spent over a year in two hospitals staring at the TV at five-something dollars a day. I spent over a year staring at the faces of strangers remembering nothing. My girl left me to the hospital and the system. At first I blamed her but at first I was a child. A child in the infancy of understanding. I woke in a hospital not knowing how I got there. I couldn’t tell you when I understood how I got there but the way I see it that’s a good thing. Over a year with other people’s fingers in my body is nothing I want to remember. It took a long time for me to realise that it was my girl’s mother coming in to see me lying in that bed and not her. It took me giving her the option of leaving me for some of my pain to go away. I do remember the day (but not the year, day or date) I understood why she left me. My mobile conversations with her were getting briefer and I was getting less love. She was in her final year of studying something and said ok when I told her she could end our relationship if that was what she wanted

And then I got out of hospital. It seemed all the doctors involved in my rehabilitation were concerned about my being released into the community. They were concerned because of my brain and spinal injuries and the fact that I had no one in Sydney. They had also been told about my disposition to reckless behaviour. Before the accident I’d moved out of North Bondi where I lived with a friend into my girl’s apartment in Darlinghurst. She’d asked me to move in. She only asked me to move in with her because of the sex I gave her. She no longer loved me because I had an accident. We did not have a healthy relationship apart from sex. I woke up in two different hospitals. I saw a nurse the other day. He had worked on the spinal ward in the second hospital I was in. He told me I looked good and strong. He said it was like I was on another planet during my year there. I woke up. I woke in pain not knowing the cause of my pain. I didn’t remember anything. I woke up broken with no one to love. There was no one to love. She broke my heart so I went back to where I remembered

I’ve lived in Bondi ever since I was discharged from the hospital. I am still not discharged from the pain. Everything has seemed hard and futile in life since I woke up alone and was given this wheelchair. The few pleasures I have are all based on solo efforts while before the accident my few pleasures were in how I made others feel. Not much has changed. It’s only that the pleasure I now give is not sexual but emotional, or something. The women who used to love me loved me for my body. Now the love is something else

As I said they’re getting better. I saw the most beautiful woman walking on one leg and a pair of crutches at the Icebergs. She gave me a smile inviting me to talk to her. I gathered the courage to approach her on the second day of seeing her. She was eager to tell me of her injury and ask of mine. I asked her if she was with Chic or Vivien’s? She told me she was with Chic. She asked how I knew she was a model? I told her because she was so beautiful. She surprised me by blushing and thanking me. I wanted to fuck her. I talked and listened for twenty minutes until we could both feel the anxiety of our anticipation. I could tell she was waiting for me to ask her out. I was waiting to ask her out. I am a man so can only imagine the anticipation she felt. Our conversation meandered. I felt it. She didn’t like me like I liked her. I lost my nerve. I didn’t ask her out so the mentioning her boyfriend finally quashed my anticipation. I smiled and kept asking questions and seeming interested in her answers until it was comfortable enough for me to tell her I had to be somewhere else. I pushed my wheelchair away from the water and away from her. She had not seen me in a sexual light. She had seen me as something else

I pushed my wheelchair back home. I went out on to the balcony lit a cigarette and smoked it. The cigarette relaxed me. I stubbed it out and pushed my wheelchair up over the ledge back into the lounge. I put the brakes on and transferred onto the couch. I switched the television remote on. I flicked around the channels looking for something. There was nothing on. I found an infomercial for a women’s bra. It was showing how it could transform a woman’s ordinary bust into something extraordinary. It was showing before and after photos. Both busts looked good to me. My eyes narrowed on her cleavage. It looked ample. The woman on the ad looked so pleased with her new figure. Her eyes gleamed. Her eyes were full of self-love. I pulled my pants down and start stroking it. She kept changing from her front to her profile and stroking down the side of her breast. I kept getting bigger looking at her cleavage and the smile stuck to her face. She looked so pleased with herself that my erection eventually started to shrink. It reminded me of a woman I once had. She was so delirious with lust that I could never fuck her. She wanted me so bad. Her hands were all over me so fast that it always killed my desire. I changed the channels until I found another ad for an item of clothing (they were big knickers) that sucked in and hid the fat around the mid-section of another woman. I started to harden until the camera focused on her face. She loved herself more than she normally would now that she was sucked in and hidden. Her body looked big in all the right places. She was looking at herself in front of a tall mirror. Her smile stole it from her big bum and big boobs. Her smile reminded me of fakery and I went down. I went down because I thought about it. I was just looking

I look for love in the eyes of every woman I see. Every woman I meet wants to find things out about me. They talk and flirt while peeling the skin from my flesh. They all want to know the person inside. They see through my exterior and talk. They all seem to like the person inside. I don’t like the person inside. Everybody’s looking for a friend. Everybody wants a friend but me

Andrew Stuart Buchanan

THEY WERE ALMOST SKI JUMPS

THEY WERE ALMOST SKI JUMPS

Have you ever seen the Hudsucker Proxy? I’m just like Norville. I am a grade-A ding-dong. I arrived early for my flight to Christchurch at the airport. I went with my favourite carer up to the desk, gave them my passport and waited for them to process my ticket. The lady checked the book, frowned and said to me, err, your passport has actually expired. What a ding-dong. It’s not even as if it was a day or two out. That might have been okay. My passport had expired four years ago. My face burned crimson. The lady behind the counter asked me, what have you had a brain injury or something? Could, should, I blame it on my acquired brain injury or was it just a result of me being a grade-A ding-dong? If you’ve had a brain injury and no one else knows it it’s like farting alone in the woods. I asked if they could just let it slide. The lady smiled and said she couldn’t. She asked if I had an Australian passport? I said no. She asked, but you do live in Australia? I looked at her, she had a shaved head and her sleeves were cut off. She had a tattoo on her left bicep. The tattoo said I HATE MEN, in bold black letters. She also had a big black tattoo on her right bicep that said I LOVE MUFF. I told her I did live in Australia but that I’d always be a New Zealander. I told her I didn’t see a need for an Australian passport. She told me that Australian passports expire every ten years and New Zealand passports expire every five years. I told her that that didn’t help my situation. She told me it would have if I had an Australian passport. I twisted both of my ears towards her and poked out my tongue. She picked up a phone from her desk. I heard a loud squeal and then her voice calling for security over the intercom. I held both of my hands towards her with my palms out and said, hang on, steady babe. She wrote something down on a piece of paper then looked up and told me that she wasn’t my babe and would be suing me for sexual harassment.

I turned and said, ok, so what now, to my favourite carer? Get a good solicitor, she said. No, I said, not about that muff lover, I don’t care about her or her lawsuit, I mean about getting home to New Zealand? How will I get home now? She asked me if I was a strong swimmer. I told her I wasn’t. I told her I would probably drown before I got out of the bay of Bondi beach. She asked if I had a driver’s license? For what, I asked, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang? There’re several thousand kilometers of ocean to cross for me to get home. Oh yeah, she said, I forgot. I told her that she probably caught it from me. What do you mean, she asked, do you mean caught fish from the ocean you’re going to have to cross? No, I said, forgetfulness. They say that fish don’t have a good memory, she said. I said, they also say that they don’t have feelings… I wish I didn’t. Have what, have fish, she asked? Have you got crabs? Have feelings, I yelled. Why, she asked? ‘Cause then I wouldn’t feel embarrassed about turning up at the airport with a stale jam sandwich in my hand. You didn’t turn up with a stale jam sandwich, she said, you turned up with an expired New Zealand passport in your hand. I know I know, I said, I was trying to be clever. Clever with the jam, she asked? No I just meant that both things are useless to me. You could feed the bread to the ducks. To the fucks, I asked? No, she said, the ducks. What ducks, I asked? The ducks you see flying around the skies, she said. Do you think I should harness them, I asked her? For what, she replied back? Well maybe if I got enough ducks together and enough stale jam sandwiches then maybe I could feed then tie some rope around the ducks and get them to fly me home to New Zealand. I wouldn’t need a passport then. She looked at me and told me I should go boil my head. She turned her head and started driving towards the embassy.

The guards at the embassy lowered their guns so we could enter. They both lowered their air rifles to the ground butts first. One of the guards brought his rifle down too quickly and the gun accidentally fired a pellet into his forearm. The guard screamed and yelled, holy shit, and pulled his sleeve up. There was no blood but you could see where the pellet had ended up in his arm. The guard leant his rifle against the gate of the embassy and asked the other guard to help him dig it out. The other guard lay his gun down on the bitumen and rolled his sleeve up higher. I looked at my favourite carer and raised my eyebrows. She raised her eyebrows too so we past both of them into the compound. If the guards didn’t care about us why should we care about the guards? We had to go up in the lift to the first floor. There was a security video mounted on a flagpole but it was positioned so it faced down into the ladies toilets in the park across the road. There was a topless woman standing in the toilets playing with her breasts. Another of the guards was standing with a pair of binoculars looking into the ladies toilets. There was dribble dribbling down his chin. He kept licking his lips but he wasn’t fast enough to catch all his saliva. The guard suddenly started rubbing his crotch. He rubbed it faster and faster until smoke started to rise from the front of his pants. He put the binoculars down on the ground and hurried towards the toilets. I wasn’t sure if he was going for a wank or to douse the smoke. He was probably going to do both.

I picked up the binoculars and saw her. I started dribbling. She had great boobs. They were big and kind of pointy. They were almost ski-jumps but with enough round in them to not be. Her nipples were bigger than fifty-cent coins. I started rubbing my crotch too until my favourite carer slapped me around the side of the head and told me to watch it. I told her that I was watching it. She slapped me upside the head again and told me to behave. I hung my head and said, okay, and followed her into the office. I turned around for one last look before I put the binoculars down on the desk. I pushed my wheelchair into the room. There was a topless Maori woman wearing a grass skirt sitting on a big rock in front of the main desk. I said, Kia Ora. She said, gidday mate. I asked her what she had just said? She said, nothing cobber. I told her that her boobs were not as good as the ones of the woman in the toilet across the road. There is no woman in the toilet across the road, she said. Whatever, I replied. I’ve come to renew my passport, I told her. Why, she asked? Why not, I said. I want to know why, she stated? I told her I was off to join the French Foreign Legion. She laughed and said, death wish. I told her she was right.

We sat and waited a good half an hour before a man wearing a pair of black rugby shorts, gumboots and a red and black checked sleeveless Swandri walked up behind me. He said, are you here about the Legion? I said, no, I’m here about the Hari Krishna’s in the square. He laughed and patted me on the head before pushing me out of my wheelchair. I hit the ground face first. My nose started bleeding and the tinnitus in my ear turned up the squeal. He yelled out, there isn’t any square any more. I called him a bastard. He asked me, well what about your father? He’s a Hari Krishna in the French Foreign Legion, I said. The man sniffed and beckoned me into his office. I got back into my wheelchair and pushed myself into his room. There were four sheep in one corner eating a bale of hay. The sheep had left their little black poohs littered all over his office. The room stunk sour. I asked him if he wouldn’t mind opening a window? He said, that’s going to cost ya. How much, I asked? About four hundred dollars, he replied. Okay, I said, don’t worry about the window, I would prefer to smell sheep shit than your shit. I leaned into his desk and told him, the real reason I’m here is for a passport renewal. He laughed and told me that he couldn’t renew my old one because it had expired. Well, I said, can I buy a new one then? That’s going to cost you four hundred dollars too, he said. What is everything here four hundred dollars, I asked? He said, everything but the sheep shit. I asked why, is that more?

He went off to some room behind him and came back out with a game of Twister. He laid it out on the floor, spun the dial and told me, if you can beat me I’ll give you your passport for free. What’s that got to do with the price of chips, I asked him? The price of tits, he asked? No, I said, the price of chips… tits are free these days, I’ve already seen two sets today. I asked him if I could have a new passport now? What for again, he asked? I told him to stop jerking me around. Ok, he said, I’m sorry; I’ve been having a bad day. So have I, I said. I went to hop on a plane and was told I was four years too late. The man winked at me. Please don’t do that, I told him. Do what, he asked as he winked at me again. That, I said. He winked again and asked what? What you’re doing, I said firmly. I’m not doing anything, he said, I’m waiting for you to give me five hundred dollars so I can give you a new passport. I thought you said four hundred dollars, I said. He sniffed loudly and winked at me again. I told you to stop that, I said. Stop what, he asked? Stop winking, I screamed at him. He smiled and said, I’m not winking I’m blinking. Do you only blink at the end of each sentence out of one eye, I asked him. Yes, he said as he winked at me again. All of you should be locked up in an asylum, I told him. All of us, he asked? All of you but the topless wahine in the lobby, I told him. What topless wahine, he asked? Ok, I said, I’m ready for a game of Twister.

The man reached under his desk and pulled up a dark (well it wasn’t really dark, but it wasn’t really light either, it was a cross between dark and light) blue chilly bin. He pulled out two cans of Canterbury Draught and slammed them on his desk. He pointed to them and said, the first one to skull his gets his passport for free. Don’t you have a passport, I asked him? No, I swim home, he said. He looked me in the eye and said, are you ready? You slammed the cans, I said, the beer will be too frothy. He grinned and said one… two… three… fou… I picked my can off his desk, pulled the ring tab and started swallowing. Beer froth spilled out the corners of my mouth. He was halfway through shouting the word, Hey, before I’d finished mine. I slammed my empty can on his desk and wiped my mouth with my other hand. The can crumpled under the pressure. You cheated, he screamed. No, I said, I pre-empted. That’s the same as cheating he said. No, I said, that’s the same as clairvoyance. I knew you would come in here today, he said. Crystal ball, I asked? No, he said, I’ve got crystal balls. Well what about my passport, I asked? Can you look inside your pants and tell me my chances? I don’t have to, he said, I already know. And, I asked? Maybe, maybe not, he replied. All I came in here for was a passport, I whined, and you people keep fucking with me. Do you mind, he asked? I’d prefer to be fucked by the topless wahine in the lobby, I replied.

The man snorted and coughed up a big light green piece of phlegm. He spat it on his desk between us. You just spat on your own desk, I told him. So, he said, it’s my desk. You’re right, I said. I know I’m right, he said, I always am right. I’m bored, I said, I came in here for a passport and all I’ve seen are topless women and your phlegm. What would you rather see? A passport so I could get the fuck out of here, you people are crazy. We’re crazy, he asked, you turned up to the airport four years late and you have the gall to call us crazy? That’s right, I drawled. Okay, he said, give me a minute and I’ll see what I can rustle up. He left the office and was gone for five minutes. I looked at the pictures on his wall. My favourite was a photo behind his desk of a large ram with it’s back to the camera. It had a huge set of wrinkled balls that hung almost all the way down to the ground. He came back in to the office with a pile of papers. There would have been at least four hundred sheets of A4. He stacked them between us and said, you’re going to be here a while. Do I have to fill all of those in, I asked him? No, he said, the first three hundred are photos my mate took of the topless women who uses the toilet across the road. What do I want to see those for, I asked? They’re not for you to look at, they’re for me to look at, he said. Can I just have my hundred to fill in, I asked? When I’ve finished looking at my three hundred, he replied. I snorted and spat a big piece of brown phlegm on his desk. Hey, he shouted, that’s my desk! I told him I knew.

The door to his office suddenly burst open. The hinge on the top of the door splintered away from the frame. Two guards stood in the doorjamb holding big bags of paua. The biggest of the guards looked at the man behind the desk, pointed at me and said, is this the man bro? The man behind the desk said, look at him; he’s not a man he’s in a wheelchair, he’s only half a man. The guard said no that’s not what I meant. I meant is this the man who was sexually harassing the woman behind the desk? The way he said the word desk made it sound like he had said disk. I turned to face the guard. He was twice the size of me. The man behind the desk said, this is the man and this man is being a nuisance. I turned and told the guard that the incident at the desk had been a simple misunderstanding. He smiled at me. He didn’t have any teeth. He said, there is no such thing as a simple misunderstanding. He said, it would be simple if there were no misunderstanding. Are you a scholar, I asked? I’m not giving you a dollar, he shouted at me. I didn’t ask you for a dollar, I asked if you were a scholar. He turned to his mate and said, listen to this Pakeha; now he wants two dollars. Listen mate I don’t want any money from you. I actually came in here to give YOU guys some money. How much have you got, he asked, how much are you going to give me? I didn’t mean you, I said, I meant that I came in here to give some money to get a new passport. Are you a Kiwi, he asked? Yes, I said. How did you get here in the first place, he asked? I told him I swam. He said, bullshit. Ok, I said, I actually gave some ducks some stale jam sandwiches and got them to fly me over here. Ok, he said, now I believe you. He picked me up out of my wheelchair and threw me into another office. There was a lady with hairy legs sitting behind a desk. That’s not fair, I said. What, she asked? Your legs are hairier than mine, I replied. You should shave them, she said, that would make them hairier. You’re the one that should shave your legs, I replied.

I spent half of a day, almost twelve hours in the New Zealand passport office slowly devolving into madness. Just for the record I am already mad but I spent half a day devolving into their kind of madness. I rang the airline of the flight I had missed and the person who answered the telephone only laughed at me. They laughed so hard that they must have pissed their pants. When they’d finished laughing I asked them if I could buy a new ticket to get back to Christchurch? They said yes, but it will cost you five thousand dollars. I told them I had expected as much. Okay, they said, it’s now gone up to six thousand dollars. I had learned from my mistake so kept my mouth shut and just gave them my credit card details. The person on the phone asked if I had any luggage to take on board? Yes, I said. Any sheep, they asked? No, I said, just a topless wahine sitting on a rock, a ram with balls hanging down to the ground, three hundred photos of a topless woman playing with her breasts in a toilet, an empty crushed can of Canterbury Draught, a man who won’t stop winking and a Hari Krishna in the French Foreign Legion. The person on the phone said, all right buster, the ticket’s now seven thousand dollars. Ok, I said, do you accept New Zealand Express. They said no but they would accept a photo of the ram’s balls as payment. I told them I was putting it in an envelope.

I arrived at Mascot and wheeled up to the gate with my favourite carer. I thanked her for wasting her day with me. She said it was okay. I told her that I couldn’t believe she had been and was so nice to me. She told me that I was nice to her in return. I don’t think I am that nice. I feel like I owe her now. My favourite carer stayed with me until she was sure I would not get lost and was positioned right in front of the departure gate. She gave me a big hug (just what I needed) as she left. I flew Big Bird. Each seat on the plane had a set of peddles in front of it. I looked out the window and saw paper propellers. I told the stewardess that my legs didn’t work. Okay, she said, your arms do, you can shovel coal into the boiler. Ok, I said, that’s better than shoveling shit. By the time I arrived in Christchurch I was covered in dust from the coal.

I smoke. My mother and her partner don’t but they said it would be okay if I smoked in their driveway. I was sitting in my wheelchair having my fifth smoke for the day when I saw a naked man running down the cul-de-sac towards me. He was old. As he got closer I saw his face was a bright pink. He ran right up to me and asked, do you know how they made Lake Wakatipu? Lake Wakatipu wasn’t made, I said, it was formed hundreds of millions, or billions of years ago. No it wasn’t, he said, I saw it being made. Ok, I said, how was it made? The Japanese, he screamed! The Japanese, I asked? Yes, he said, I watched them. They all formed a circle and pissed in the hole. Really, I asked? Yep, he said. Can I ask you a question, I enquired? Go for it, he said. How come there’s no competition here? There’s plenty of competition, he said, there’s the rugby and the cricket and the sailing and the rugby league and the hockey to name a few. No, I said, I didn’t mean that I meant for products. I passed a service station before and they were charging fifteen dollars a litre for unleaded petrol and I went to the supermarket and there was only one brand of deodorant. With no competition it becomes a monopoly. I prefer Operation or the Game of Life, he said. I asked him what he meant? He said, as opposed to Monopoly. I’m not good at that game, he said, I always blow all my money buying Mayfair. The porno, I asked? No, he said, the street on the board game. I’m not talking about the board game, I told him; I’m talking about a free market. I’ve never heard of that game, he said. It’s not a game, well it might be to traders, but do you mind paying world market price for everything and having only one brand to choose from, I asked? What choice do I have, he said? He was right. Do you want to borrow some clothes, I asked him? No, he said, but could I borrow four hundred dollars? I told him, no, bugger off. He turned around and I watched his skinny white bum wobble away from me back up the cul-de-sac.

I don’t know who I’m angriest at, my #, the ^ in New Zealand or myself? I’m probably angriest with myself for believing/trusting my #. They had arranged for the ^ to assess my mum’s house to make sure that it was wheelchair accessible. I was told that it was. It wasn’t. It isn’t. I’d asked my Australian # to arrange a commode chair with an opening on the right hand side for manual evacuation. Manual evacuation means sticking a finger in my bum to pull the poohs out if the enema won’t get them out. When I got here I found the commode chair had no opening on the right hand side and the hole for my bum to hang through was no bigger than a fifty-cent piece. My poohs are sometimes bigger than a can of tennis balls. More importantly the doorway to the bathroom is too small to fit my wheelchair through. I’ve been going for a shit in the bed that I’m using and I’ve been wiping my arse with the sheets. I’ve been pissing in the corner of the room I’m staying in and spraying it with air freshener afterwards. The corner of the room is getting damp and mouldy and there are big red toadstools with white dots on them growing there. I asked my mum to cook them up for breakfast for me. She told me that she wouldn’t because the toadstools were poisonous. I told her I didn’t care. She said, all right then, and asked me how I would like them prepared. I told her to sauté them in a little butter. I’ll let you know how they taste.

I’ve only been here three days as I write this. I’ve only been here three days and so far I’ve eaten more red meat than I have in the last ten years. I turned on the telly last night. There are only three channels. I turned the television on at seven-thirty (prime-time) and flicked around the channels. One station was playing Open all Hours. The next was playing Only Fools and Horses and the other was playing The Billy T James Show. New Zealand is the land that time forgot. I saw a boy riding a Moa to school yesterday and today I saw a young boy flying a kite standing next to a girl flying a Pterodactyl with a piece of rope around it.

Oh yeah, I don’t think I even told you why I came to New Zealand. I came here for my mum who is getting remarried. I met my father while I’ve been here and even he has a new partner. I am happy for my mum and my dad. They have both got new partners. They are both happy with new partners, new friends and new lives. They got a chance to turn around. I met and went on what I thought was a date with a woman before I left Sydney to come to Christchurch. All throughout our date she kept mentioning some man called Richard. I eventually asked her, who’s this Richard you keep mentioning? Is he your brother? No, she said, Richard’s my boyfriend. She stole the smile from my face. She stole the smile from my heart. I sat and wondered why she had come out for dinner with me when she had a boyfriend sitting at home waiting for her? I sat and wondered if I would ever be happy again? Everybody gets a chance to turn around. Everybody gets a chance to turn around but me.

Andrew Stuart Buchanan

POLAR BEAR PISS STINKS

Yesterday was International Day of Disability. I was the headline act in a group showing of artists. There were three of us. They showed mine, the art of a polar bear with only one paw (I mean it was missing three) and the art of an aardvark with no snout or ears. I didn’t want to go. I knew there was something rotten in Denmark. Not only was there something rotten, there was no Denmark. The flyer for the showing said there would be a breakfast and a lunch provided. I couldn’t be ****** turning up for breakfast and was about to go to the gym when I received a phone call from the person who’d organised the exhibition asking where I was? I asked if it was actually necessary for me to be there? I was told it would be beneficial if I were. I rang a car. When the driver turned up I tried to make conversation. He ignored me so I started taking to myself. He eventually told me to shut the hell up so I pulled my pant leg up and started pissing on the floor of his car. He shouted, HEY, and called me a dirty-rotten-dog cunt. He’d already undone his seatbelt before he’d pulled up a distance from the curb. He flung his door open, opened the backdoor and pulled my wheelchair out and threw it to the ground. The wheelchair bounced on the asphalt. I said, Hey! He went to the boot and got the wheels out and threw them to the ground. I said, Hey watch it! I asked him to bring my wheelchair closer so I could assemble it. He said, no go suck a fart, and walked back to the driver’s side. I thought about being petulant and refusing to get out of the car but thought better. He was a hot head. He was obviously capable of anything.

I pulled my legs out of the car and transferred down to the road. I sat on my bum and assembled my wheelchair while cursing the driver as he drove away. I shook my fist at him, gave the bird, and used my arms to get into it. I wheeled my chair up onto the footpath and into the building. The building was right downtown. The flyer for the exhibition said it was on the thirteenth floor. I should have known better and gone straight home. I wheeled to the lift and pushed the button to go up. When the lift finally arrived I pushed my chair into it and looked at the buttons but couldn’t find one for the thirteenth floor. They stopped at twelve. I studied the buttons for a good thirty seconds hoping I‘d overlooked it. I couldn’t find it. A woman walked up to the lift like a power walker. She was all arms and legs. I said, hey. She looked at me and said, straw’s cheaper and grass is free. I asked her if she had any. She said, any what? I said, grass. She rolled her eyes before she said, all you cripples are the same. I said, possibly, but could you please tell me how to get to the thirteenth floor? She rolled her eyes again before leaning into the lift. Her arm shot out around the door and she pressed the button marked one and then the button marked three. Both of the buttons back-lit and she sighed as her hand went to her hip. By the way, I said, I’m not a cripple I’m disabled. What’s the difference, she asked? I said, the spelling. She yawned. I asked if she was going up and wanted to get in with me? We were on the ground floor and there wasn’t a basement. She said she would rather wait till the lift was free. I asked her if she meant till the lift was free of me? She said, exactly. I wished I’d saved some of my piss to throw on her.

There was a piece of A4 paper taped to the inside of the lift. Someone had written Art For Arts Sake in crayon on it. I wondered why there weren’t any signs on the outside of the building. The door opened and I saw my fellow contributors. The polar bear was sitting in a corner being guarded by four keepers wearing faded blue overalls and the aardvark was standing in the other corner with its head down. The polar bear and the aardvark were both virgins. They stunk of the innocence of virginity. I could tell and I was jealous. It really is something to have then have-not. Ignorance is bliss. I have only had sex once since the accident. I thought of how my girlfriend left me as I lay in a hospital bed and my face burned. The way she left me turned me into a person I didn’t want to be. The way she left me made me desperate and unsure of myself. I was sexually desirable to her before the wheelchair and brain injury. As far as I could see it I would never have anyone find me sexually desirable again. That bitch. The polar bear and the aardvark had never been seen as sexually desirable to anything. Sometimes ignorance is bliss. How can you miss something you’ve never had? I wheeled up to the polar bear and the aardvark and introduced myself. The polar bear was wearing a tuxedo jacket, no pants and a pair of cheap black sunglasses. The polar bear was trying to hard. I asked it if there were any peeled grapes to eat? It showed me its teeth. I was frightened but I laughed. The aardvark squealed at me that men in wheelchairs shouldn’t make fun of polar bears. I asked the aardvark what the smell was? The aardvark cried a single tear of blood and gulped air.

The polar bear’s art was three pointed wooden stakes set in a triangle formation. The stakes sat on two red milk crates on top of each other. It had three fish heads stuck on each of the stakes. I liked it. The heads looked like Atlantic salmon. The stakes had pierced through both eyes of the fish heads and the eyes appeared to be bleeding a clear, gelatinous substance. It looked like petroleum jelly. The bear snarled at me as I entered the room. I looked at the wall and saw my photo up there. I smiled at the bear and asked it how it was? It showed me its teeth then shuffled on its bum and tore my piece of art off the wall with its teeth. It turned to look at me before sitting on it. It rolled onto it’s left side and started pissing on my work. Polar bear piss isn’t like human piss. It’s a dark orange and smells like a rusty ship. The piss collected in the middle of the canvas before running down over the sides. I wanted to punch the bear but was scared of it. Even though it only had one paw it definitely still had its teeth. I wheeled up to the bear and said, thank you sir for doing that. The bear snarled then rolled onto its right hand side and started poohing on my canvas. The polar bear’s pooh was bright orange and circular. It looked like big cumquats. Five or six turds dropped out of its backside. It sat up and started squishing the turds onto my canvas with its bum. I asked it if it wasn’t afraid of getting shit stuck to its fur? The polar bear showed me its teeth again.

The aardvark seemed happy to see me. It walked up to me and started talking. It pointed to its art. It had glued a dozen or so pieces of different broken plates together for one piece. Another was made up of vacuum cleaner heads. There were nine of them. They were all pointing with the inlets of the heads outwards. They looked like a beehive. The aardvark had also set up four mannequin heads. The heads had black Afro wigs and were dressed in whorish makeup. There was a big hole in the ears of each and they were tied together using bloodied tampons. I told it I liked its art. I lied. It talked small talk with me for about two and a half minutes. It sounded nasally. It sounded like it was holding the nose that was no longer there. The aardvark came up closer and told me that it was horny. It asked me if I could do with a blowjob? I said definitely, who from? It said, from me. I said, on second thoughts I’m okay. The aardvark leaned in and whispered, you don’t look like you’re gay. I scratched my head while thinking of what to say in response. I said, I didn’t say I was gay I said I was okay. Oh great, it said. I’m glad you’re not a fag. Where shall I give it to you? Do you want to pull your pants down here or are you bashful? If you’re shy I’ll lead you to the toilets. No I said; I would love a blowjob but just not from you. Is it because I don’t have a nose, it asked? Not really but kind of, I replied. The aardvark said to me, you know that you’re in a wheelchair and you wear hearing aides don’t you? I said, of course. And you think you can afford to be picky, it asked? I can’t afford anything, I replied.

I was bored of talking to the aardvark so I looked around for the lunch. I saw four long trestle tables in the corner so wheeled my chair up to them. I saw a pile of laminated sheets of A4 on the first. I grabbed the one off the top. It mentioned all three artists. My name was the first on the list. I wondered why I was mentioned first? There was a pile of Styrofoam plates so I picked one off the top and headed towards the middle table. There was one plate with a pile of cheeses on it, one plate with a pile of water crackers and a plate with Christmas mince tarts on it. I thought it was strange to have Christmas mince tarts before Christmas but grabbed one anyway. There was a bread and butter knife next to the cheese. I grabbed it and took a big chunk of cheddar. The cheese was warm and crumbled against the knife’s edge. I kept looking around for people but there was only myself the bear and the aardvark. I wondered why there wasn’t a sign outside the building as I kept hacking away at the cheddar. The water crackers were stale and soft. I ate all the cheddar cheese while wondering if it would constipate me? I hoped it would. Nobody likes watery poohs. I turned around and saw the polar bear staring at me. I waved at it. It showed me its teeth again. I wondered why the bear instinctively didn’t like me? What had I ever done to it? It reminded me of a neighbour. She was an owl who had given birth to a titmouse. Every time I looked at the titmouse she looked like she would cry. I never found out what it was about me that made her so sad. I could never understand why I brought her to tears so easily.

It didn’t feel bad. It felt uncomfortable. The woman who had arranged the event kept coming up to talk to me. I didn’t want to be there. There was nobody there. Not one single person came inside to look at the art. I asked her why there was no sign outside to let the passing suits know there was a showing inside? Is that what you would have done, she asked? I told her I don’t know what I would have done. I told her I probably couldn’t have been bothered to do anything. All of you cripples are the same, she said. That’s the second time I’ve heard that today, I told her. Don’t you agree with the statement, she asked? No I don’t, I said. I’m sitting in a wheelchair, the bear doesn’t have any legs and the aardvark can’t even smell it’s own shit. Can you smell your own shit, she asked? That’s all I can smell, I replied. And where are all the people, I asked? What people, she questioned? Exactly, I said. It’s like having a box of condoms in a monastery. What do you mean, she asked? Well, I said, it’s like having lots of condoms but nobody to fuck. That would make a great title for our next exhibition, she said, nobody to fuck. There won’t be a next exhibition, I deadpanned, and if there is it won’t include me. You should call it watery poohs, I said as I smiled at her. Do you think people will come then, she asked? I don’t know, I replied, all you people are the same anyway.

Andrew Stuart Buchanan