Being gay is far far down on the list of what makes him vulnerable in my town. However, like I said, we've had this filed under dealt with for almost a year. Hahaha. She's a little late to the party and has brought her own grudge borne out of her own sexual trauma.
Here's what stands out to me in your comment .... You called this bitch my friend. Hahaha. Yuck!
Reminds me of being homeless two years in Kansas. Great for stories but too much drama. I am able to keep it at a distance now. I prefer that.
As long as Kid A is a-okay... but I worry about kid K... gay = vulnerable in so many ways and if kid A feels anything is inappropriate then maybe you or him can tell him (don't assume he knows). Your wackadoo wannabe-a-cop friend can do him and others great harm. And kid K should have that pointed out to him.
Your post has made me relive this, so I'm sharing it: So one night, when I was visiting home from college, I woke up in the middle of the night to a full presence and awful pop-pop-pop in my ear. My parents got to be on the receiving end of my full-on panic. I ran into their room screaming that popping bug (apparently actually called a "click beetle") in my ear, and mom way-too-calmly asked how I knew what was in my ear. Because it was thrash-banging in my ear canal while it scurried against my eardrum.
She drew away from me while I bent sideways and pounded on my head opposite the ear it had invaded. She was trying to make me stop, saying something about injuring myself while my dad stoically went off to hellifiknowwhat. Probably just to get away from my screaming about the bug and my mom yelling at me to stop hitting my head like that.
But it was working. It started to slip, and kept popping, as it finally fell out onto their bedroom floor. It popped a few more times, doing its crazy somersaults. Exhausted, I stumbled back to bed to leave her to deal with it. "Wow, it is a popping bug," she said.
Point is, I felt this post, and now I don't want to go to bed.
Soundtrackers is awesome for getting people to think about music and how it rides alongside their writing. I'm glad you recognized your emotional attachment for music and you're able to get the cathartic benefits of it.
Also, sounds like my dude needs to drive his own car. For real though, I get it. Sometimes you look like you've lost it when people are like, "It's just a ______" and it's like yeah, you're not getting it.
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