Heroin & Hyperconsumption – A Poem

Ever since beginning work on my book, Dreamland, I’ve been struck by the way opiates isolate those addicted to them.


As I wrote and researched, they grew into a metaphor for modern American life.


Opiate addiction, seems to me, is some kind of final expression of our own destruction of community, our lack of connection across the country – both in poor communities and wealthy ones. cropped-Virgin-of-Guadalupe-dec-12-2012-La-Placita-11.jpg


We exalt consumption and the individual over community and have for a long time now.


These drugs seem to fit that; they turn everyone who abuses them into self-absorbed, lonely hyper-consumers.


The poem below was written by Andrew Smith, one of the thousands of Americans who died in 2014 of a heroin overdose. He was 24.


His mother, Margie Borth, discovered it after his death.


“There were several writings, this one is about scoring heroin and the lonely world that became his life,” she wrote, sending me the poem. “His brilliance still shines in his dark, sad words. His best friend described this as `hauntingly beautiful.’  I knew nothing of his addiction until just five weeks before he died. I was in a blur of grief when I first read it.  But now I do see the beauty of his writing.  I miss him so much, just like the thousands of other parents who are thrown into this nightmare. “


Simulate the Static


by Andrew Smith


____


The waiting, oh god


The waiting


The parking lots, the bathrooms, the empty parks that close after dark


The driveways, the bus stops, the car backseats


The posh bank lobbies, flea bag motel rooms, gas station pumps


Oak trees, palms, and retention ponds meant to beautify


The ditches, the swamps, and one off dead roads that lead to nowhere


And the loneliness of that trap.


The broken windows,


The made for TV dinners


The busted speakers blaring bass on a burner cell phone


The children going hungry, ignored in the corner


Staring at a broken television; simulating static.


The characters


The hangers-on, the worn out, the washed up


The good, the bad, the ugly


and the pretty young white girls with the blank eyes


Staring in awe at this newfound world.


The sun is setting and it’s starting to rain


My eyes are closed and I’m wishing I’m somewhere else.


When I hear a tap on my passenger window


Within 30 seconds, he’s gone


And the wait seems like a thousand centuries ago.


                  In this moment, I rest my eyes a second


Breathe a sigh of relief and know that all is right with the world


At least for these brief few hours.


The rain falls and my windows are up


It casts shadows across the dashboard


And the radio plays a news story


From a country whose language I do not speak


And a land I do not know.


                  Life is a quest


And we all search for something:


Money, fame, power, an identity.


For most they never find it;


And like a mirage in the desert,


it wavers in allure on their weary walk forward.


For others, they do.


And what’s worse,


They’re left in the emptiness of what it means.


But in this moment a fleeting comfort comes to me


And I know I’m not alone.


(Feb 2014)


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Published on July 19, 2015 12:35
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