I am currently 2/3rds of the way through what I imagine will
be the only pack of cigarettes I will ever buy, and I must say I’m mildly
disappointed. I expected something that would tempt me towards the gritty
life. Instead, I have discovered a mild
laxative that has the side effect of eventual death. They are Marlboro Menthols, and they have no
perceptible relaxing or inspiring effect on me.
The best I can say is that they remind me fondly of numbers I’ve smoked,
numbers someone else has rolled. Twice,
once in the company of each of the friends I will tell you about, I thought
maybe I felt something akin to the tobacco buzz they ride. Looking back, what I felt was surely the
self-congratulation of doing something nasty for a change. The excitement of trying something new from the ever-dwindling pile. Hope on the wing.
I don’t imagine that anyone has written a pro-cigarette
article in fifty years. I’m going to do
my best to change that, even considering my crushing failure to be
tempted. It goes without saying that I’m
not encouraging anyone to pick up a bad habit.
Likewise, it should also go without saying that people who go looking
for bad habits on the internet ought not to do so, and perhaps deserve whatever
they get.
It is undeniable that cigarettes are indeed cool. They’re still cool. The worse we know they are, the cooler it is
to be seen with on one. That’s the whole
point. It’s not necessarily cool to be dead, but it’s cool to casually tease
death as if life was both infinite and worthless. A cigarette is a little,
precisely measured few inches of life.
Going, going, gone. Shall we
smoke another?
Find a picture of Steve McQueen with a cigarette. Sure, he’s dead. But look at the defiance that lives there
still, in any photo you might have found.
Look at that little burning wick, some of it drifting off into the
ether, some of it coursing down into the lungs or forced out perversely through
the nostrils – no need to get it all, no need to rush. You can never catch it
all. It’s not like when you see some guy
eating a tuna sandwich on his lunch break, and he’s got his hand cupped around
its ass to make sure he doesn’t lose any tuna out the back end. Hell, half the smoke in a cigarette floats up
to the dead homies while the smoker contemplates the state of things.
That’s one thing cigarette smokers have going for them: They’re forced to often just do the one thing
and nothing else.
“Hold on a second, let me finish my cigarette while I stare
at some cars.”
Often times, a cigarette smoker is doing nothing else but
smoking a cigarette. He may be dead, but
he was cool. And sometimes we’d rather be
cool than alive, because being cool means you don’t care either way – or at least it
means looking like you don’t, which is just about the same thing, as far as you care. And anyway, how you're remembered looking is finally who you are.
I’ve made a friend this year. She’s a fabulous, tall, beautiful, young woman
with what I can only be assumed is referred to in low places as fuck-me
hair. I asked her what she wanted me to
call her in this article, since many smoke in secret, and she replied, “I don’t
care. Surprise me.” See what I mean? You couldn’t resist this girl either.
She’s never heard of Greta Garbo, or at least has never seen
a Garbo movie, so she has come by her Garboesque qualities honestly, like monkeys
happening upon Hamlet. But there she is,
the Swedish Sphinx, reborn in Los Angeles in 2015, and she smokes. She’s not a smoker. You wouldn’t call her that.
She often tells me, somewhat begrudgingly, that she has “bought another pack” and did I want one? Help her bear this burden. The first few times, I told her I didn’t and never had smoked, but would instead surely be happy to stand in parking lots and watch her smoke and shift her hair from the Hollywood Hills to Catalina Island and back again.
She often tells me, somewhat begrudgingly, that she has “bought another pack” and did I want one? Help her bear this burden. The first few times, I told her I didn’t and never had smoked, but would instead surely be happy to stand in parking lots and watch her smoke and shift her hair from the Hollywood Hills to Catalina Island and back again.
“You’ve never smoked when I’ve offered you?” the Sphinx
would ask. She couldn’t recall, or
didn’t.
“Nope.”
She didn’t even notice who else was smoking in her immediate
company. She smokes in her own dimension. Eventually, I decided that if I
were ever going to give into peer pressure, it would be this peer and that
pressure, which was no pressure at all.
“You make the rules for you,” she would say, and then a errant
thatch of her hair would drop into place as if managed by unseen
stagehands. Eventually, I took one. She didn’t notice that either.
When I see the Sphinx, which is often but not often enough
for my taste, we usually end with ten minutes of standing around, each smoking
a cigarette, while I wait for the Uber. She often forgets to offer
me a light, and I stand there like an asshole.
I suppose ten more minutes with The Sphinx is worth ten less minutes of
my life right at the end, which is what they say a cigarette will take from you,
and I figure it’s just the final ten minutes of screaming fear or crying I stand to lose,
anyway. They say the same thing about
an egg yolk. But nobody looks cool sucking an egg yolk. People don’t scarf down
six or eight egg yolks in the afterglow. If they did, they would start screwing again, and sometimes it's enough already.
If she wanted instead to walk up and down the street keying expensive cars, I would surely join her. But instead we smoke.
If she wanted instead to walk up and down the street keying expensive cars, I would surely join her. But instead we smoke.
“You make the rules for you,” she says.
You would do well to be a cigarette smoked by The Sphinx. She puffs, looks off into the middle
distance, takes the cigarette out and starts to smile, then changes her mind
and puts the cig back in. I have no
defense against pretty women, never have, even when the best I usually get to
do is stand there and admire them, a stone commission of some forgotten do-gooder.
She won’t smoke forever. Her smoking is her way of displaying her age, like a spread of feathers. The meter hasn’t even started ticking yet on her mortality. When she decides it is time, she will put the cigarettes away, and her body will begin to regrow itself in any places she ruined it. Her lungs will regenerate, pink and perfect. She will be married and have kids, and I will see a pretty woman smoking a cigarette and think of The Sphinx.
She won’t smoke forever. Her smoking is her way of displaying her age, like a spread of feathers. The meter hasn’t even started ticking yet on her mortality. When she decides it is time, she will put the cigarettes away, and her body will begin to regrow itself in any places she ruined it. Her lungs will regenerate, pink and perfect. She will be married and have kids, and I will see a pretty woman smoking a cigarette and think of The Sphinx.
I’ve got an old friend.
We’ll call him Raoul, specifically because I’ve never known anyone with
that name and imagine I never will, and I think he'd like it. He has chain-smoked as long as I’ve known
him, which is more than twenty years. I
don’t recall ever seeing him without a cigarette, unless circumstance actively
forbade it. You can’t smoke at
Disneyland. But you can play with the
box in your pocket and finger the next one.
He’s a good sort, with a bit of sad Oscar Levant charm to
him. He knows the cigarettes will
eventually kill him. He hopes so. I’m not sure he has quite pictured what it
will be like to carry his spent yellow lungs in a paper bag, connected to his
chest by a grey tube, but he will surely bear that fate with as much dignity as it possible to do when one is spitting out green little chunks of yourself all day.
Spurred into curiosity by the undeniable style of The
Sphinx’s ten minutes, I ask Raoul about the habit.
“You love cigarettes, right?
Tell me, what is the effect?”
“I don’t recommend them,” he said, with seriousness.
“What are you talking about?
You love cigarettes! You’re
always smoking a cigarette! You don’t
like them?”
“I’m addicted to them.
It’s awful. I get the shakes, I
get the shits. They’re expensive. It’s awful.”
Raoul knows the name on the bullet is lung cancer. Or he may be one of those guys who gets to
smoke cigarettes until he’s 90 and then die of something else. All things being equal, do what you
want. All things being equal, you make
the rules for you.
Raoul and I drive around Los Angeles in his little car,
finally old enough to talk about the old days and mean it, shaking our heads at
the wildly flat nature of real life. We
are too young to do this, but we have only our own lives to draw any scale
against. One day, if we're lucky, these will be the good old days.
I love The Sphinx. I
love Raoul. There’s nothing I can do to
save them. I can no more stop them from
smoking cigarettes than I can keep them from messing with the dark things of
the universe, or keep the dark things of the universe from messing with them
them. The cherry end of their cigarettes
will wink in the dark, flare when they suck, fizzle when they’re done.
No single human being has any fucking idea what’s really
going on. Some have hunches that they
obsess over. Some have given up
obsessing and are hoping for at least one more plate of Mexican food before
they have to meet their ultimate fate, when they know their personalities will
be wiped clean, their essence returned to the greater essence of God, and that
glass they’ve been striving to see though, darkly, will clear like another
sunny day - but it will not be them
seeing it. The stuff mucking up that
glass is them. The stuff mucking up the
glass is me.
In the light of the void that yawns before us all, it seems
like we should let our cigarette smokers smoke.
I know we’ve all known people who we’ve lost to that habit, but if
there’s any such freedom in life, it’s in being a fool, in making the rules for
you, in taking the wrong way home, in chain smoking until your body dies. Your
loved ones are not yours. It’s wonderful
to know them as we pass, but too much attachment is clearly a bad idea. Nature’s lesson all around us reiterates,
again and again, that going up slowly in smoke, drifting lazily up towards somewhere
that is probably nowhere, is the meaning of life. Or if not the meaning, the mechanism. It's how we move from here to there.
Next up: Comedy.
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