A Pounding in My Head

For god’s sake man, what are you doing? Pounding back and forth across the floor above my head, back and forth, the length of your apartment, back and forth. What are you doing up there? What could you possibly be doing up there besides driving me crazy down here? Last night I layed in bed an hour listening to your goddam elephant feet until you finally sat down or layed down or goddam jumped out the window at around midnight. Now you’re at it again, this new habit, god, let it not be a habit. Holy shit! Are you trying to drive me insane? Are you trying to get me out of my bed, into my clothes, fuming mad out of this apartment and up to your door? One day I’d like to live out this fantasy of banging on the door of a loud neighbor and beating his head with a hammer. No, probably not a great idea, but so damn rewarding in my mind. What the hell is wrong with people that they were set on this world simply to drive me insane…

3 Responses to “A Pounding in My Head”


  1. 1 hempstead

    clipity clop clipity clop clipity clop

  2. 2 David L Mandell

    They really should just pay the extra money and have the jacuzzi company install it for them. A bit more expensive, but a lot less noisy.

  3. 3 online poker

    Thank you for your wonderful web site and this guest page

Leave a Reply


Subscribe

    RSS El Camino de Los Internets

    • Morality: 2012: Online Only Video: The New Yorker - The social and cultural psychologist Jonathan Haidt talks with Henry Finder about the five foundations of morality, and why liberals often fail to get their message across. From ?2012: Stories from the Near Future,? the 2007 New Yorker Conference.

    • Life With Alacrity: Community by the Numbers, Part II: Personal Circles - Unlike the group limits, personal limits actually measure something different: the number of connections that an individual can hold. They're yet another thing that you must consider when thinking about communities of people. (I'm looking for more info on Familiar Strangers).

    • Findings - For Good Self-Control, Try Getting Religious About It - NYTimes.com - "Religious people, he said, are self-controlled not simply because they fear God?s wrath, but because they?ve absorbed the ideals of their religion into their own system of values, and have thereby given their personal goals an aura of sacredness. He suggested that nonbelievers try a secular version of that strategy." . . . "So what?s a heathen to do in 2009? Dr. McCullough?s advice is to try replicating some of the religious mechanisms that seem to improve self-control, like private meditation or public involvement with an organization that has strong ideals."

    • Single Spot Camping - SingleSpotCamping.com? is a brand new website which offers all land- and lot owners to present their own "single-spot-camping". The idea is: Anyone who owns land (it can even consist of your garage entrance) and would like to welcome one or a couple of camping guests are welcome to connect to www.singelspotcamping.com.

    • Lunch Break, Red Bank, NJ - If you're looking to make an end-of-year donation, you could do worse than Red Bank's Lunch Break. These guys need a website overhaul, badly. No online donations and I had to use google to find out whether or not my donation was tax-deductible.

    • Review: Radioshift Touch for iPhone | iPhone Central | Macworld - listen to radio stations on your iphone

    • EveryTrail - iPhone Application - With this geotracking application, you can record your movements, take geotagged photos, make notes and immediately upload it all to EveryTrail, the leading online community for travel storytelling

    • E-Democracy.Org - Discussion Forums with Political, Elections, News, and Government Links

    • Helder Luis -

    • What is Equally Shared Parenting? - Equally sharing the care of your children with your partner is about balancing your life, balancing your family's collective life and sharing equally in the joys of raising a family.

    Add Jim to your del.icio.us network