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I am so fucking sick of this delusional bullshit. I can’t seem to smoke a single joint without some millionaire’s twenty-year old baby romanticizing being poor.

We all know these sniveling motherfuckers. I met the most recent one at a  party. I was drunk or stoned—very much so—and someone said that I just had to meet Aaron or Todd or some other fucked up Caucasian name.

So I wandered over to the couch where Cody or Aiken was holding court. He had his old guitar, and a bottle of five dollar sugar wine, and old khakis—obviously from a thrift store—and fucking sandals, in fucking March.

He talked to me about the many jobs he’s had and the wandering he’s done across the country. He had read Jack Kerouac’s novels as non-fiction—like a fucking moron–and transformed himself into a green wad of spit in the face of real poor people.

Oh no, my family is wealthy, not me, he whined through his nose, while his sippped his self-righteous cough syrup.

Dude, shut the fuck up! I yelled—really loudly—and knocked the fucking goblet from his hand. He was in shock. No one had ever gotten violent with him before. His eyes were starting to water.

I grabbed him by the throat and shoved him into the back of the couch. I had my knee jammed in his groin.

I saw homeless man die once, I hissed and squeezed his jugular slightly.

I had to go to a fucking soup kitchen, because my girlfriend and I were running out of food. Do you fucking get that, ass-hole? We had no fucking food and no fucking money! And there was no one who could help us! The rich boy was crying by now.

We didn’t have rich parents to rescue us if we got sick or hurt. We were on our own. We were both unemployed and sending out hundreds of fucking  resumes and job applications a week with zero responses.

He started blubbering apologies and crying harder. And on the way to the soup kitchen, I saw this homeless man leaning against a wall coughing. He was coughing and sobbing and praying to God, and then he just dropped dead in front of me. Blood spurt out his nose and he shit and pissed himself.

Little Bobby was crying like an infant now and begging me to stop. Several people were trying to pull me off him. I let him go and stood over him. He curled in a ball and sobbed.

Have a good time wandering around in your fantasy land, what-the-fuck-ever, I said calmly, but don’t you ever fucking forget that the rest of us live in fucking reality.

I leaned forward a yelled again. And things fucking suck in reality, asshole! Your just on another rich boy vacation! Fuck you!

I told the hosts to go fuck themselves, and went home.

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Dear lovely readers and commenters:

I’m sorry I haven’t written for so long. I’ve missed writing to you all. I was just going through a dark place these past few months. You know how it is, I started to think things that even I don’t feel comfortable writing about—frightening, masochistic, sadistic, thoughts and feelings.

I told my psychiatrist. I know my warning signs. She wrote me a second prescription. I’m feeling much better now. In fact, I feel better than I did when I was a teenager. I feel strong and confident.

To be honest, I think that’s why I haven’t written as Tom Hardie for awhile. I mean, don’t get me wrong, Tom Hardie is a very real part of me. I imagine him as the gruff, tough wild man of the wilderness, ya know, that part of me that would not be broken when I was a child. The part of me that society caged away, deep in a small dirty closet at the base of my identity. Ursula LeGuin described little Tom Hardie’s reality best.

The door is always locked; and nobody ever comes, except that sometimes–the child has no understanding of time or interval–sometimes the door rattles terribly and opens, and a person, or several people, are there. One of them may come in and kick the child to make it stand up. The others never come close, but peer in at it with frightened, disgusted eyes. The food bowl and the water jug are hastily filled, the door is locked, the eyes disappear. The people at the door never say anything, but the child, who has not always lived in the tool room, and can remember sunlight and its mother’s voice.[1]

And yet, somehow, Tom Hardie survived in me. He became a man. He discovered his voice. He discovered he was naturally good with speaking. He loved to perform for people and make them feel things with his words.

But underneath all the partying and sex poems—there was anger. There was an old anger that I was afraid to let out. Do you know how that is?

Have you ever felt so angry that you honestly thought: if I let this out, I will fucking kill people. I lived in that place. I held all of my rage in. When I hit thirty-seven, I exploded. I couldn’t contain so much shit anymore. I needed a place to dump it. Hardhang.com was born.

This website represents the sum total of my linguistic working through, so far. The key to  beginning my recover from the trauma child abuse was so brutally simple. I had to prove to myself, intellectually, that I was not as horrible as I thought I was. The only way to do that, I figured, was to put myself completely out there.

I had to present the worst of my memories to the world—twenty-four hour free access to all of the thoughts and memories that I thought made me a horrible person.

I used doses of medical marijuana to loosen me up, and I just wrote. I wrote everything I could remember. I wrote until I thought I was going to vomit. I wrote for entire days without eating. I posted everything.

I wrote until I felt empty of it. I wrote myself in a deep depression of grieving. I cried every day for several hours. I lost my job. My family was furious with me. My personal relationships were stretched to the breaking point. Many of them broke. But I felt unburdened. I felt relieved. Throw in a little medical tweaking and I feel lighter than ever have as an adult.

The AA people would call this website my Step Four: Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves. In retrospect, I would have to agree. This is everything I can remember. Browse around. It’s as close to brutally honest as I could mister.

But don’t misunderstand me, I have a lot more internal baggage to search through. I don’t think my Step Four work is over, by any means. I don’t think the inventory ever ends for a truly ethical person. That’s what makes it so hard to be one, I think.

Anyway, I will still use Tom Hardie  to compile my inventory, but I will probably do some general pissing and moaning about the state of the world, also. Why? Because it’s healthy to vent.

Thank you for all of your time and attention in 2009. I hope to share more of my life with you in 2010.

Happy New Year!

-Tom Hardie


[1] “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas.” Read it. It’s amazing.

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01
Dec

Our society is based on lying. It was built by liars. You have to be a liar to thrive in it.

I always hit that wall. I’m too honest. Take my writing, for example. I have done nothing but speak brutally, honestly about my life, my thoughts, my feelings.

There have been disastrous consequences.

I lost my job. My whole family is angry with me. I get a lot of hate emails. People call me vicious names. People have wished painful death on me.

It’s hard to avoid an unpleasant conclusion. I have to be a liar. I have to hide who I am. When I don’t, the world rejects me. Some on the world want to destroy me.

That’s so fucking sad.

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