Tonight I got a phone call from an old friend in San Francisco who wanted to let me know that an old-time acquaintance of ours was on his death bed stricken with AIDS.
The news threw me back to exactly 8 years ago, a weekend in January 1997. The weekend of my housewarming in the Lower Haight was a particularly debaucherous one. The house filled with glamorous and skanky people, skateboards lining the long Victorian hall downstairs. One roommate asked me if I would tell my friends to move their boards, and I reported that only one friend had his skateboard there (my semi-boyfriend, John, visiting from Seattle). My roomies and I had a shared moment of realizing the house was full of people we didn’t know. Shortly afterward, someone started smoking crack in the kitchen.
All my raver friends were in attendance of course, including a guy named Rick who was a friend of a friend. He brought his turntables in a big fancy coffin (for the uninitiated, that’s what portable tables are stored in: a coffin), and was playing jungle in the living room.
Eventually we decided that we had to kick everyone out, and the easiest way to do that was to GO out, so I headed into the late night with my pack of motley ravers, headed to some party that had the word “heart” in the title. We were on raver time, though, and showed up at 6am just as the party was shutting down. No matter: to the after-party!
Rick rode in my tiny car with John and I, and before we got out he informed us that he had his tackle box of drugs with him and offered us some. John, who had a whole tackle box of his own back in Seattle, was impressed by Rick’s collection and generosity, and so we took Rick up on his offer before heading into the after-party.
At this point, two sheets to the wind would probably be a pleasant euphemism for the state I was in. I was like laundry out on the line, flapping around the dancefloor and talking to some nice girl I met about how she’d just moved to San Francisco (”ME TOO!” I squealed through my clenched jaw). We held hands and sat down leaning against a wall, and she told me about how she’d just started stripping (”Oh — I work at a law firm,” I apologized.)
I have pictures of that night. I have an inhuman glint in my eye, and was with a friend who was dressed up like a drag queen with plastic leaves in her hair and 3″ long fake green eyelashes. She sticks out in my memory as the only person I’ve ever known to own a tooter. The friend who called me tonight was also there. He was wearing a bright orange shirt, was carrying a teddybear, and had his libret piercing in. Now he works for NASA, doing research for the Space Station. He, like me, made it out with his faculties intact.
The morning wore on, and things only got bleaker. The only people left on a dancefloor at 11am on a Sunday are pretty much wrong in every sense of the word, and there I was: totally wrong with the rest of them.
I left around noon with John and Rick, and we went back to my house to retrieve Rick’s turntables. I was starting to crash pretty hard, hours of sleep dep and chemical abuse catching up with me, but out came the tackle box and then John and Rick and I were up for another round.
It was at this point that even in my dulled, confused, heading up and down simultaneously state I started to realize that these two tackle box boys were sparring over me. John and I were casual (he lived out of town, we both saw other people), but he was always looking out for me, and Rick picked up on it. The two of them were subtley testing each other and prodding one-another to see what the deal was and who got what piece of the sorry-ass cracked out 21 year old raver girl with inverted bob and the glazed over eyes. What a sorry prize.
The two tackle box boys compared tackle box contents. Who had the windowpane? Who had the glass? Who had the orange microdots and who had the darker dank? Who had the blue shoes and who had the liquid? The two tackle box boys compared musical tastes and petty crime records. They laughed at each other’s jokes in that hard way that people do when they’re trying to size each other up.
At some point, I snuck downstairs and called my best friend in Seattle sobbing. My head was caving in, the boys were sparring, I’m so tired, but my heart’s pounding really hard, but I haven’t slept since Friday and I’m supposed to go to work in 16 hours and god knows what else I said. For years my friend wouldn’t tell me, and then she finally admitted that I hadn’t really said anything: I was mostly just crying and rambling and she couldn’t really understand much of it.
I couldn’t have known it then, but maybe I was crying over the fact that in eight years, one of the tackle box boys would be dead from drug-induced heart failure, and the other would be dieing of AIDS somewhere after several stints in jail and years of IV drug use. Maybe I was crying over the fact that I knew that this lifestyle was only temporary for me, but some of us would never find our way back out. Maybe I was crying because I realized that I wouldn’t always be 21, and at a certain point time would catch up to me and my futuristic, synthetic-loving friends and we’d all be hitting 30 and suddenly the party girls who passed out on the toilet are in jail for breaking probation, and the younger brothers who always seemed so wacky and wild would be on major rehabilitative medication after long stints in treatment, and all those little bad habits, too, those would catch up with you: the bad eating, the bitchy attitudes, the fake tanning, the cigarettes, the running of red lights. The first decade of adulthood comes to a close and things get reckoned with and some of us just don’t make it. The tackle box boys didn’t make it.
I consider myself inordinately blessed and lucky that, of the three of us hovered over that tackle box on a Sunday in January 1997, I am the only one who made it out. I have moments of feeling like it was a close call, but I look back in my journal and I can see that even then I knew where the tackle box boys were headed. I didn’t know why I was crying, but maybe I had a tiny glimmer of awareness. And for that I am glad.
UPDATE: For those who would like some pictures to go with this story, here are a few photos taken that night, including several of my ex, JTB.
Hey there. I'm Ariel Meadow Stallings, a native Seattleite who's written my way up and down the Left Coast. Electrolicious is where I post daily randomata, but I also write for a living. My first book, Offbeat Bride, was published last year.
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paisley jane
January 27th, 2005 at 1:45 am
thank you
i feel this in my
own way.
Lori-Lyn
January 27th, 2005 at 5:19 am
Thank you for sharing this story. It’s something I think about a lot: those who make it out of youth and those who do not. I was not a raver, but in my pink-haired days and my tag-along party days, there was always a little voice in me that knew I wouldn’t always be doing these things, and a fearful longing for the people I felt might lose themselves completely. I think of the missing everyday and wonder. And hope.
Katherine
January 27th, 2005 at 6:21 am
not a week goes by when I don’t get a flash of those days, that look very much like the ones you survived - and in spite of the fact that I still pay for that past, even though I live clean and positive now, I am grateful for the experiences . . . what a ride, what an eye opener, so many wild diverse people . . . thanks for the post . . .
greta
January 27th, 2005 at 8:49 am
what’s a tooter?
Ariel
January 27th, 2005 at 9:52 am
Greta, try searching google for drug slang tooter.
Janesa Smith
January 27th, 2005 at 10:32 am
I know exactly what your talking about.I remember the good times me and my friends use to have (parties and drugs)I’ve lost 3 friends in a year and instead of waking up and realizing that this is not the road to take, i got worse.I figured if that was how my friends died,then i’m going to die that way to.But my family and other friends came through for me and now I’m an honor student.I think about my friends alot and i sit there and think that they went through hell dieing and my life dosen’t have to be that way.
sincerely,Janesa Smith
maresicle
January 27th, 2005 at 5:58 pm
My fave line was… “Oh-i work at a law firm!’
Seriously, that entry brought back so much. I think everyone from the biggest crack whore to a college girl dabbling outside her usual circle has at least one moment of thinking, “huh, if i continue this i’m going to be completley fucked.” Those of us who paid attention should definitley count ourselves in the very lucky minority.
Jesi
January 27th, 2005 at 6:17 pm
So intense, so real! Thank you for the “reality” of what we former ravers used to experience and submit ourselves too. And thank you for reminding those of us that survived it of what it once was…the strange innocence. I’m sorry for your loss.
allie
January 27th, 2005 at 7:29 pm
What a fantastic post dude; I think all of us who partied our tails off in our teens & twenties (and early thirties ;)), are starting to realize how lucky we are that we aren’t the tackle boys. And you’re right, those of us who made it DID have a good sense of what might happen if we didn’t knock it off and TAKE A STEP BACK! Kudos again, very well written
Miss Mea-Mea
January 28th, 2005 at 5:21 am
For a time I was a faux street kid (I went from a college student on my own for the first time, to a strung out sad sack. My apartment turned into their flophouse/tattoo parlor/drug HQ. Anywhere between 8-10 people in a 1 bedroom). I ditched all my friends to go straight. I hope every one of them got out of Neverland alive, but suspect more than a few didn’t.
That was a great piece about “the life”…the appeal and in-jokes to make us nod and laugh, combined with the insight and wisdom of later years. Thanks!
Vera
January 28th, 2005 at 7:16 am
Thanks for the story. You should write a whole book like this. I’d definitely pay for it!
Ivy
January 28th, 2005 at 8:09 am
I have had 4 friends from Phish tour die of Oxy/H overdoses in 3 years. One of my friends left a detailed list of every drug he took in his CO hotel room before he died. It’s such a fucking waste of person. I don’t get what makes a person do Oxy or H or smoke crack. I have done more than one girl’s fair share of shady substances, but those are just so, so destructive.
leblanc
January 28th, 2005 at 10:47 am
how terribly prophetic.
i never delved that deep into this particular subculture because i ALWAYS had that glimpse - that fear - and in fact, i still do. i get very upset now, i think especially since we’re getting older, when i see my friends doing those same things STILL. are they ever going to pull out? where is the line, and can’t they see this might destroy them?? in the past couple of years i’ve gotten into some friendship rifts because of this very thing - me being the uptight one who can’t help saying something to my friends when i see them pushing the line, and then feeling like the asshole for saying something because they’re all “chill out man, i know what i’m doing, i’m fine” and i’m sitting on the outside yelling “NO YOU’RE NOT” in my head. ugh.
thank you for writing this, and i think you should try to get it published. it needs to be read by a lot of people.
sarah
January 29th, 2005 at 4:44 pm
wow, i am going through this right now. during my last year of high school and about a year afterword, i partied quite a bit. but all the while i knew it was just something i did at that time…not a lifestyle choice. now two years later, i am married and have a 10 month old son. sometimes i’ll hear from “those friends” or i’ll hear about them, and i realize how lucky i am to have gotten out of that mess. i am glad my life is completely different from theirs. i guess i never realized that other people go through this experience too because i dont know many other people who have had that “little voice” in their heads like i did.
but the difference between your story and mine is that my old friends havent experienced the end of the story yet. they still think its a game. its awful to sit and think “which one will go first”, but like you said, its just something that you know will happen…and you cannot do anything about it.
i am sorry for your friend. i wish you, your friend, and everyone else involved much comfort.
is
January 31st, 2005 at 8:59 am
I can relate all too well.
Its refreshing to realize it through someone elses eyes tho. I mad it out too
Amparo
February 1st, 2005 at 9:59 am
Thanks for sharing your story. I’m very sorry about your friends.
I’ve known that way also and I sometimes stop and think how lucky I made it out. Too many have lost their minds, suffered seizures, and died. Yet, those raving days were magical.
Therese, Air's mom
February 9th, 2005 at 7:26 pm
This was a wonderful piece Ariel, very well written, giving a glimpse into that crazy time in your life. I’m sure glad you were 1000 miles away and i didn’t know all the sordid details, but of course I suspected you were learning about the seedy side of life which is important. I’m just so glad you finally realized it isn’t ROMANTIC at all, its just fucked up!! In any case, I agree with your other readers, this would be a great article to print somewhere–there’s a good MIRROR and some of those who might otherwise be lost just might wake up!
Electrolicious» Blog Archive » Writing FAQ: Blogging & Privacy
October 25th, 2007 at 7:49 am
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