how david letterman saved my left hand
HOW DAVID LETTERMAN SAVED MY LEFT HAND
i once ate pizza every night
bought $50 books i never read
and kept the fridge stocked with packets of coke
then i quit college
got a job
in an injection molding plant
second shift
pressed the same two buttons
at the exact same time
4,000 times a night
for a buck over minimum wage
out came plastic earpieces for glasses
and those plastic thermometers
people stick in turkeys in microwaves
the buttons were overhead
and about two feet apart
you had to use two hands
you had to press them simultaneously
for the machine to work
the design was to prevent
crushed hands, skulls, law suits, workman’s comp, any bleeding
that might occur
on their $1,000,000 machine
but i figured out how
by using a pen in my mouth
and standing on my toes
i could press the left button this way
and simultaneously the right button normally
(or the other way around, but
i think you’ll find most people
would prefer to lose their left hands)
i had the time
eight hours a night
five days a week
and headed nowhere
and in need of a ferrari
but i hung on to my left hand
i’d drive home in time for letterman
mom left dinner leftovers warming in the oven
i watched lettermen with the volume down low
because my father could hear a spider plant sneeze
i sat in the dark eating chicken
mashed potatoes, stuffing, greens
laughing
at letterman’s
first episodes
and it was like a shaman
had landed in my living room
the thing i liked most about letterman
more than his jokes, his grin
how he grilled guests or his band
was how he made not knowing
what the hell he was doing
look so respectable
i once ate pizza every night
bought $50 books i never read
and kept the fridge stocked with packets of coke
then i quit college
got a job
in an injection molding plant
second shift
pressed the same two buttons
at the exact same time
4,000 times a night
for a buck over minimum wage
out came plastic earpieces for glasses
and those plastic thermometers
people stick in turkeys in microwaves
the buttons were overhead
and about two feet apart
you had to use two hands
you had to press them simultaneously
for the machine to work
the design was to prevent
crushed hands, skulls, law suits, workman’s comp, any bleeding
that might occur
on their $1,000,000 machine
but i figured out how
by using a pen in my mouth
and standing on my toes
i could press the left button this way
and simultaneously the right button normally
(or the other way around, but
i think you’ll find most people
would prefer to lose their left hands)
i had the time
eight hours a night
five days a week
and headed nowhere
and in need of a ferrari
but i hung on to my left hand
i’d drive home in time for letterman
mom left dinner leftovers warming in the oven
i watched lettermen with the volume down low
because my father could hear a spider plant sneeze
i sat in the dark eating chicken
mashed potatoes, stuffing, greens
laughing
at letterman’s
first episodes
and it was like a shaman
had landed in my living room
the thing i liked most about letterman
more than his jokes, his grin
how he grilled guests or his band
was how he made not knowing
what the hell he was doing
look so respectable
Published on November 17, 2012 08:45
No comments have been added yet.