The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Cigarette Day

 

“I sat there and poisoned myself with cigarette smoke and listened to the rain and thought about it.” — Raymond Chandler

“This cigarette or this box of matches contains a secret life much more intense than that of certain human beings.” — Joan Miro

“The time of a cigarette is a parenthesis, and if it is shared, you are both in that parenthesis.” — John Berger

 

 

Cigarettes in contemporary art: Jac Leirner ‘Lung’, Yang Yongliang ‘Cigarette Ash Landscape’, Tom Wesselmann ‘Smoking Cigarette’, Richard Prince ‘Untitled (man’s hand with cigarette)’, Xu Bing ‘Tobacco Project’, Marcel Duchamp ‘Couverture-Cigarette (Stripped-Down Cigarette Tobacco)’, Chris Jordan ‘Toxic Forest’, Julian Opie ‘Ruth with Cigarette 3’, Jon Pylypchuk ‘Cigarettes’, Pavel Büchler ‘Work (All the cigarette breaks)’, Robert Larson ‘Quantum Marlboro’, Chris Jordan ‘Running the Numbers, An American Self Portrait (2006-2007)’, Wilhelm Sasnal ‘Girl Smoking (Anka)’, Roy Lichtenstein ‘Cigarette’, Maria Nordman ‘Filmroom, Smoke’, Donna Conlon ‘Step on a Crack’, Camilo Rojas ‘Flavor’, Paul Erschen “Newport Room’, …

 

 

Historians have long concurred in identifying professional authors as the occupational group most prone to habitual tobacco use.

Writers are most closely associated with the practice of smoking in particular, as if, in the general consensus, the scribe could find inspiration in a tobacco pouch or pry the muse from her hiding-places with a few puffs of poisonous fumes. Other stimulants have found favor among the authorial class; a special example being coffee—Voltaire and Balzac were known to have downed prodigious quantities on a daily basis—but no substance, except for printer’s ink, has been seen to play so important and intimate a role in the life of the workaday wordsmith.

History has preserved only the slimmest visual record of other fads and fashions of tobacco-taking, such as snuff-inhalation and wad-chewing, perhaps because of the unattractiveness and perceived vulgarity of the sniffing and spitting attending these methods of ingestion, although posterity has left many prized examples of sterling silver snuff boxes and gleaming brass cuspidors. Archives abound, on the other hand, with groaning files of photographs of this or that celebrated author taking a deep, satisfying drag from pipe, cigar, or cigarette. (continued)

 

 

Cigarettes is identified by Harry Mathews as his only “purely Oulipian novel.” Its method of composition has not be revealed beyond a statement that it is based on a “permutation of situations”.

‘During this time, I decided to write an Oulipian novel. And I created this abstract scheme of permutations of situations in which A meets B, B meets C, and so forth. There’s no point in looking for it now because no one will ever figure it out, including me.’ — Harry Mathews

‘In the Oulipo, there are two schools of thought. People like Calvino and Perec said that the author should acknowledge the methods he’s been using. And the other clan, which included Raymond Queneau and myself, thinks it’s much better not to let on, because this will keep the reader straining to find out.’ — Harry Mathews

INTERVIEWER: Cigarettes… Why that title?
HARRY MATHEWS: The question, “Why is the book called Cigarettes?” is a question that should be asked.

 

 

‘Jessica Price was assaulted in the street by Carl Powell, who attempted to strangle her and dragged her to a remote spot to kill her. But she asked to share his cigarette, which convinced him not to harm her. After the 23-year-old called police to report her ordeal, she learned that he had killed another young woman in almost identical circumstances just a month earlier. She had recently returned from travelling overseas and was enjoying a reunion with friends on the night of the attack. Although the evening did not wrap up until 3am, she decided to walk the 40 minutes to the family home alone, as she was very familiar with the route. She listened to her iPod on the walk, but when she noticed a stranger catching up with her she turned down the volume in order to be on the alert. Seconds later he lunged at her, wrapping his hands around her neck and throttling her. ‘I noticed he was smoking a cigarette,’ she says, ‘and with the little breath I had left inside me, I managed to say “Can I have a drag?” I don’t usually smoke, but I asked for a drag, if only so he could see I had something in common with him. He gave me a drag and even apologised for scaring me. After a while, I just said to him, “Look, you’re headed in the same direction as me. Let’s walk together”.’ He clutched her hand as they started walking back up to the main road, with Mr Price making a mental note of where Powell dropped his cigarette butt. ‘I told him I needed to get home as my mum would be frantic. Then he said to me, “At least feel what you’re doing to me,” and he shoved my hand down his trousers. I squirmed as he smiled. I thought quickly and said, “But we shared a cigarette!” That seemed to confuse him, and he let me go. “You’re right,” he said, almost sheepishly. Then I escaped. I hope he burns in hell.” — Daily Mail

 

 

‘The flip-top cigarette pack is one of the most successful pieces of packaging design in history. Tank Books pay homage to this iconic form by employing it in the service of great literature. We have launched a series of books designed to mimic cigarette packs – the same size, packaged in flip-top cartons with silver foil wrapping and sealed in cellophane. The titles are by authors of great stature – classic stories presented in classic packaging; objects desirable for both their literary merit and their unique design. Titles: Joseph Conrad “Heart of Darkness”, Ernest Hemingway “The Undefeated” and “The Snows of Kilimanjaro”, Franz Kafka “The Metamorphosis” and “In the Penal Colony”, Rudyard Kipling “The Man Who Would Be King”, “The Phantom Rickshaw” and “Black Jack”, Robert Louis Stevenson “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde”, Leo Tolstoy “The Death of Ivan Ilych” and “Father Sergius”.’ — Tank Books

 

 

Message boards say that Winston’s are the closest a person can get to an unfiltered cigarette that actually has a filter. This note is listed with a picture of a 1974 ad that says, I smoke for one reason. I don’t smoke a brand to be like everybody else. I smoke because I enjoy it…Real taste—and real pleasure—are what smoking’s all about. Winston is for real.

I wonder if they know what “real” is. Real is having a mother who might have cancer. Real is her fear of being buried alive and her fear of fire. Real is your mother requesting to be Saran-wrapped in her recliner with a cigarette in her hand to preserve her legacy.

That what’s real about Winston’s. (continued)

 


Irving Penn

 

Breakfast
by Jacques Prévert

He poured the coffee
Into the cup
He put the milk
Into the cup of coffee
He put the sugar
Into the coffee with milk
With a small spoon
He churned
He drank the coffee
And he put down the cup
Without any word to me

He lit
One cigarette
He made circles
With the smoke
He shook off the ash
Into the ashtray
Without any word to me
Without any look at me

He got up
He put on
His hat on his head
He put on
His raincoat
Because it was raining
And he left
Into the rain
Without any word to me
Without any look at me

And I buried
My face in my hands
And I cried.

 

 

Candy cigarettes predispose children who play with them to smoke the real things later, new research concludes. The look-alikes made of candy or gum are marketing and advertising tools that desensitize kids and open them moreso to the idea of smoking later on, says study leader Jonathan Klein of the University of Rochester. Candy cigarettes cannot be considered simply as candy, Klein said. The study is the first to show a statistical link between a history with fake cigarettes and adult experiences with real smokes—22 percent of current or former smokers had also regularly consumed candy cigarettes, while only 14 percent of those who have never smoked had eaten or played with candy cigarettes often or very often. Candy cigarettes reportedly have been restricted or banned in Canada, the United Kingdom, Finland, Norway, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, among other countries. Legislative bans also have been proposed in several U.S. states and in New York City over the years, but all these failed except in North Dakota where a ban stood from 1953 until it was repealed in 1967. In the United States, candy cigarettes are typically sold next to bubble gum and trading cards, but some retailers refuse to sell them. For instance, Wal-Mart bans the sale of tobacco and tobacco look-alike products to minors in its stores nationwide.’ — livescience.com

 

 

 

“Did the game of stealing please many? Here, on the other side, they were in sync, their bowls of muesli crooning to the sidelong bats of evening, and then they were let out to smoke a cigarette in the meadow.” — John Ashbery

“We sure live in a bizarre and furious galaxy, but now it’s up to us to make it into an environment for maps to sidle up to, as trustingly as leeches. Heck, put us on the map, while you’re at it. That way we can smoke a cigarette, and stay and sway, shooting the breeze with night and her swift promontories.” — John Ashbery

“There is a great deal on the ground today, not just mud, but things of some importance, too. Like, silver paint. How do you feel about it? And, is this a silver age? Yeah. I suppose so. But I keep looking at the cigarette burns on the edge of the sink, left over from last winter. Your argument’s neatly beyond any paths I’m likely to take, here, or when I eventually leave here.” — John Ashbery

 

 

THE CIGARETTES by D. Foy: That Saturday, on his way home from the Quik Stop where he’d blown his allowance on sweets, near the edge of the field, he saw a pack of cigarettes. Had the brand been Benson and Hedges, or Vantage, or Pall Mall—anything short of Marlboro or Camel, which to his mind even then were the only cigarettes worth their smoke—he might’ve kept on. But in fact they were Marlboros, and not Marlboro Lights, in the white and gold pack, but Marlboro Reds, in the soft pack, totally superior. It wasn’t that he could not not look at this package in the weeds. He could not not stop looking at this package in the weeds.

Already the cigarettes had him, already he was theirs.

Blue skies ruled, sunshine ruled, summertime would come with its water balloons and swimming pools, milkshakes and barbeques, mornings late in bed his father gone to work, cartoons daily, mischief with his pals in the afternoons, baseball practice and baseball games, the A’s on the tube, the Paradero’s hideout, camping in Yosemite, and—best of all!—firecrackers and firewheels, roman candles, M-80s, bottle rockets and Piccolo Petes, smoke bombs and sparklers and cakes . . .

On the street now and then a car hummed by, the drivers thoughtless of his schemes—some stupid kid staring at a field as he gummed his lollipop and farted.

Three or four robins bounced through the sprinklers on a lawn, and cabbage moths roamed the field at whose far side, near the eucalyptus by the freeway, stood a fort, actually just a big bush in whose hollow boys pretended they were gunners in their nest or hunters in their hutch, and older boys banged their girls or jerked off to the honeys and bunnies on the pages of Playboys and Hustlers left behind for fledgling crooks like him. The old willow before the Elks Lodge up the way had begun to bloom. Late last summer Mike Paradero had bared his ass from a fork in its branches to shit down on him and Paul Paradero and Pedro Jones, that weird redhead kid who just a few weeks back had led them to his yard to peer through the window as he, Pedro Jones, sneaked up to his fat mother snoring naked on the couch and plucked one of the hairs on her belly and thighs. A block past the Elks Lodge, a lab at his heel, an old dude dumped a catcher of grass into his pickup truck. The sun was shining. The sky was blue. Some doves swept by, then circled round to settle in the willow at the lodge. The sun was really shining. The sky was really blue.

The pack was still half full, he could tell, or thereabout. He picked it up, and, by golly, there they were, eight of them, just as he’d thought, almost half a pack of real-life actual cigarettes. (continued)

 

 

Cigarettes in the feed: History’s Dumpster: Forgotten Cigarette Brands, Bird Starts Fire With Cigarette, Burns House, My Strange Addiction: Eating Cigarette Ashes, Check Out These Weird Russian Cigarette Brands That Target Young Girls, Cigarette Butts Help Bird Nests Repel Parasites, Patent: Cheese-Filter Cigarette, Camel “Crush” cigarettes spray menthol from internal capsule, Electronic cigarette explodes in man’s face, blows out his teeth, part of tongue, ‘Vaping’ culture ridiculous, Tobacco advertising in the 1920s was weird, Cigarette Smoke Tricks, Cigarette-Smoking Monkey Weds Fellow Primate, Would You Drink Tobacco Flavored Vodka?, Medicinal uses of tobacco in history, Polar Cigarette Cards, Dad’s plea to litterbugs fuelling son’s cigarette butt habit, The Cigarette Century, School allows kids fag breaks to stop them bunking off, “Fu King” Smoke Shop Name Has Residents Fuming, Artist creates Brad Pitt portrait using cigarette ash, Smoking While Pregnant May Lead To Gay Babies, …

 

 

‘In Cigarettes are Sublime, that great elegy to smoking, Richard Klein predicts a time when there are no smokers left anywhere in the world: ‘What was once the unique prerogative of the most refined and futile dandies, having become the luxury of billions of people, may abruptly vanish. Will anything have been lost? On the day when some triumphant ‘antitabagist’ crushes under his heel the last cigarette manufactured on the face of the earth, will the world have any reason to grieve, perhaps to mourn the loss of a cultural institution, a social instrument of beauty, a wand of dreams?’ Well, something will have been lost – the entire 20th-century movie canon for a start. Can you think of any good movies without smoking in them? March of the Penguins, anyone? If you discount historical films such as Barry Lyndon or Ben-Hur, a diet of non-smoking films would be almost unwatchable. But what would be most tragically lost are the great black-and-white smoking films of the 1940s – Casablanca, Now, Voyager, The Big Sleep – where wreaths of smoke are an essential and beautiful part of the cinematography, and where smoking quite clearly stands for sex. All these symbolic nuances will be lost once smoking is abolished. Already, I think they are being distorted as modern audiences view smoking with new, health-conscious sensibilities. There is a great scene in The Graduate when Mrs Robinson draws on her cigarette just before Benjamin suddenly kisses her. She holds the smoke in until the kiss is finished and then exhales, with just the slightest hint of contempt. At the time (and to me still), it seemed the ultimate proof of her sophistication, but I suppose to modern, non-smoking audiences it just seems disgusting.’ (cont.) — Lynn Barber

 

 

Q:Why do a lot of writers and musicians smoke cigarettes?

A: Stress. Unfathomable, breathing down your neck stress.
A: That, and usually some sort of a death wish, but in a very odd sense. Or even a wish to have some control over your own destiny.
A: Because contrary to popular belief, creating art, literature, and music does not come easy. Creating something of actual relevance and substance is often an intensive struggle, and can inadvertently create a lot of stress. Some even go as far as to say that any good artist must suffer.
A: Because artists like to be intoxicated in one way or another. Perception is everything in their line of work.
A: Nicotinic receptors in the brain. Nicotine helps to stimulate the neuro-muscular junction. It also helps to stimulate awareness and short term memory function.
A: smoking has always been an intellectual activity. historically, the smoking of tobacco to the smoking of fine herb was done by someone with at least enough knowledge to identify usable plants, usable parts of plants, and proper preparation of herb to make it smokable. my guess is this is primarily because the psychoactive effects smoking of certain substances has on the mind puts one in a adjacent state of mind to normal states of conciousness. This juxtaposition in the mind creates friction between the two experienced states, allowing for interesting thoughts, feelings, and perceptions to be formed. These effects could easy be seen as going hand in hand with the goals desired by writers and musicians. Since smoking weed is illegal and cigarettes are legal and highly addictive, it makes sense that writers and musicians would utilize cigarettes to help create desirable states of mind for the creative process.
A: cuz lower/middle-class life sucks.

 

 

How to inhale a tornado: ‘The trick works best with a hookah, so fill the hookah’s cone with tobacco just as you would with weed. Do not put anything in your base except water. Milk will ghost it and cause mold even if you clean it. A few ice cubes and cold water means less flavor but a potential for thicker clouds. Use shisha with a high glycerine content, like fantasia. Use a vortex, phunnel, or bowl that stops the juices from dripping into the base. Manage your heat well and you should get thicker clouds. Another option is to skip the hookah and use an electronic cigarette, or personal vaporizer. If you use an eLiquid that’s high in vegetable glycerine on a low-resistance device, you produce very thick clouds of vapor that are slightly heavier than air. In any case, whether using the e-cigarette or hookah method, take a huge drag and hold it in your lungs. Basically, let out the smoke slowly from your mouth directly onto a flat surface. If it’s milky the smoke will just sit on the table top. Make sure the table is clean and it should be cold. Also don’t forget to make sure theres no air current (fans). Basically your face has to be touching the table to be able to get a nice plane. You can also freeze a marble slab and chill the smoke by breathing it into a frozen beer mug then pour it on the marble. The smoke will sit low and react like this. Then in a fluid motion slide your hand (in a karate chop position) through the smoke and raise it quickly. You can rotate your finger above the vortex to get a better tornado but after awhile you can get good enough where you don’t need to. I shit you not the entire plane of smoke shot up vertically into a perfectly cylindrical 1.5 inch diameter vortex about an inch off the table. We just looked at each other in awe afterwards to confirm that we weren’t tripping and just freaked the fuck out. Craziest shit I’ve ever seen. This is a marvelous form of sorcery.’ — trees

 

 

“He who doth not smoke hath either known no great griefs, or refuseth himself the softest consolation, next to that which comes from heaven.” — Edward Bulwer-Lytton

“Tobacco, divine, rare, super excellent tobacco, which goes far beyond all the panaceas, potable gold, and philosophers’ stones, a sovereign remedy to all diseases … but as it is commonly abused by most men, which take it as tinkers do ale, ’tis a plague, a mischief, a violent purger of goods, lands, health; hellish, devilish and damned tobacco, the ruin and overthrow of body and soul.” — Robert Burton

“The smoke is inhaled very sharply and the teeth are bared. Then the head turns to give you a profile and the smoke is exhaled slowly and deliberately and the grey jet stream becomes a beautiful blue cloud of smoke. What are they trying to tell us?” — Jeffrey Bernard

 


E-cigarette explodes in man’s pocket in New York


E-cigarette explodes in man’s pocket


E-cigarette explodes in man’s pocket in New York

 

At our center, from October 2015 through June 2016, we treated 15 patients with injuries from e-cigarette explosions due to the lithium-ion battery component. Such explosions were initially thought to be rare, but there have been reports, primarily in the media, of 25 separate incidents of e-cigarette explosions from 2009 through 2014 across the United States. More recently, there have been case reports in the medical literature.

‘Injuries of the Face, Hands, and Thighs Caused by E-Cigarette Explosions.). Patients have presented with injuries to the face (20%), hands (33%), and thigh or groin (53%) — injuries that have substantial implications for cosmetic and functional outcomes. Blast injuries have led to tooth loss, traumatic tattooing, and extensive loss of soft tissue, requiring operative débridement and closure of tissue defects. The flame-burn injuries have required extensive wound care and skin grafting, and exposure to the alkali chemicals released from the battery explosion has caused chemical skin burns requiring wound care.’ — University of Washington Medical Center

 

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** Dominik, Hi!!! Happy brand new year. Yeah, I don’t understand people who, say, use social media as a place to unload their opinion about everything that happens both to them personally and in the world and seem to just assume that everyone in their feed is riveted, even when no one even ‘likes’ what they say. The possible collection is kind of a bunch of fictional odds and ends, experiments in different styles and kind of random, which is why I don’t know if they’ll combine well. Hope so, and thanks. Yeah, they switched the NYE stuff to the Champs Elysee, but I stayed far away, which didn’t really work because someone in the building next door decided to end the year blasting the most horrible, low end, wall shaking techno until 5:30 in the morning. I think I would kill for a bowl of lentil soup, yum. Even if it didn’t lead to wealth. What a nice good luck idea. Much better than black eyed peas, trust me. Love first leading you into a thrift store where you see a strange looking ashtray on sale for 10 cents which you buy on a whim and then leading you onto the set of ‘Antiques Roadshow’ where you present said ashtray to one of the experts who tells you that it’s actually a one of a kind sculpture made by Jean-Michel Basquiat that’s worth 10 million euros whereupon love reveals that he is in fact a multi-billionaire and buys it from you, G. ** Misanthrope, Cake review, please. Really, you only have chain restaurants to choose between? I’m flabbergasted. I suppose I shouldn’t be, but I am. Jeez, those TC rumors are whoppers. We should all be so hot and have people who lust for us so ferociously that they’ll believe the most ridiculous shit about us as long as it involves our mouths and/or genitals. ** Damien Ark, Hi. They probably are dirtier. Oh, unless a book announces itself boldly as a memoir or non-fiction work, I tend to think of it as fiction. My idea of what constitutes fiction is pretty broad. When something starts out as a supposed truth and an individual writes that supposed truth down, it ceases being a statement of fact as far as I’m concerned. So that’s why, I guess. The next year is here, whether we like it or not. My guess is that it’s going to be a good one if you don’t count politics and the election. And I guess the heating earth. And so on. Hope so. May yours win this decade’s beauty pageant. ** Linnea, Hi, Linnea. Nice to meet you! Oh, when you comment, I alone see your email address, so I’ll send you my physical address via that method today. Thank you! I’m very interested to hear your work. Amazing New Year to you! ** Ben, Wow, you’re Ben, Ben. That’s a very nice drawing there. Score. Seems good vibes-heavy, at least in jpeg form. HNY! ** Charalampos, Hey there. Thanks, pal, about the promising year ahead, and same to you. And may it be packed with both our writings. Becalmed Paris vibes. ** seb 🦠, Hi, seb. Hi, 🦠. It sent. Well, obviously. New Years’ resolution … dude, I am such a predictable, broken record guy these days because my only resolution is to finish our film and have it enter the world at large in an exciting, successful way. And maybe start a new novel. Good luck with the taste changing. I’m not sure which of us has the easier goal. Even though I’m giving the entire blog over to cigarettes today, they suck. Don’t smoke them again, I say. Accessibility, interesting, I get it. And microbes do seem pretty ace. And that’s a pretty hot emoji as emojis go. Ping pong paddle! I like ping pong. I used to be really good at it. And at trampoline jumping. And especially at playing pool because I grew up with a pool table in my bedroom. So godspeed back into your corner left pocket. ** Steve Erickson, Big up on that wish, man. My New Year’s Eve involved being kept awake all night by horrible, lowest common denominator techno pounding my walls thanks to an extremely inebriated neighbor and his friends. Otherwise, I’m guessing NYE went off okay here, although I haven’t looked at the news yet. I hope you’ve awakened today bright and chipper. ** Okay. That paean to the cigarette up there is pretty hodgepodge-y, but at least I tried, and I’ve seen worse paeans to the cigarette, I think. Smoke ’em if you got ’em, and see you tomorrow.

10 Comments

  1. Dominik

    Hi!!

    Thank you! Happy death of the previous year!! (And how absolutely PERFECT it feels that the 1st of January is also a Monday!)

    This post is just so… pleasing. Interesting, too, but just scrolling through it is a pleasure in itself. Thank you!

    I’m fascinated with social media as a phenomenon – with all the possibilities its successful use provides. That said, I also find it baffling when someone posts their opinion on something and expects their (existing or nonexistent) audience to treat it as anything more than what it is – a random person’s subjective opinion.

    Either way, it sounds like an exciting experiment – to polish so many different pieces you’ve written and see whether they grow into something bigger together.

    Ugh, I’m sorry about the techno party… Apart from a constant stream of fireworks, things were pretty okay here.

    Okay, well. My heart would ache for the Jean-Michel Basquiat ashtray-sculpture, but… 10 million euros. I’d love to start the year with that in the bank. Hell, I’d love that a LOT. So thank you, love! Love who’s a chaotic bratty demonic someone, Od. (Mugshot’s profile – in the New Year’s slave post – is pure perfection.)

  2. _Black_Acrylic

    I used to have a minor cigarette habit about 20 years ago. Very much renounced!

    I’m full of cold so my intro to 2024 has been kind of a downer. Blaming my baby nephew who I think passed this on to me over Xmas. Not planning to exact my vengeance right now though.

    Leeds United won today 3-0 so that is a good start to the New Year by any measure.

  3. alcyon

    Dennis,
    Hope you are doing well today! Can’t wait to know what today’s post is about.
    This summer, in July, we talked a bit through the comments section of your blog (my pseudo was alcyon). I asked you about “your Paris” (where I live too, although I am less of a Parisian than you are, as I moved here 3 years ago to study), about your favorite bookstores (I went to After8 thanks to you: it’s a small yet amazing place, thank you! and now I know where I can get your books in English), and you kindly suggested that we meet around a cup of coffee.

    In these comments I did not introduce myself much: I am a 22 yo French guy that studies here in Paris. Indeed, I write a little bit – especially poems. I am part of a poetry group that meets every week at night (and sometimes until dawn!) in a bookstore, a little secretly. I would obviously love to meet you. Are you in Paris this winter? I can’t wait to learn more about your work.

    (Also, have you seen the disgusting images on cigarette packs in France? They are meant to help people quit smoking, yet they are often very weird and funny, and very Getty-Images-ish (e.g.: https://www.francetvinfo.fr/pictures/L4PbILrVt0pOlO70YE2ACXPEkkA/fit-in/720x/2017/01/12/phpBlnYPz_1.jpg))

  4. Kyler

    Happy New Year, Dennis. When they told the author Colleen McCullough to give up smoking because of her macular degeneration, she refused and said in an interview: “The words are in the cigarettes.” True!

    Since we’re the same age, I always think it’s ok to smoke if you do. I strictly have 8 a day, a method I’ve been doing for many years!

  5. Darby 🫁🚬

    Oh how funny the default name for me here had a lung on it. Now I just have to add a cigarette. There. I did it, but it will already be there when u see this.
    I saw your email this morning. I will see which address would be more preferable/less tedious and then I will respond to let you know! Thank u!
    You want to know something I read today?
    One of the maladys/signs of rabies in men is uncontrollable erections and incessant ejaculation
    Honest. It’s in the book I’m reading about it.
    One Greek pyschian even says “the last of his life died from within him just as his seed did”
    How prosaic. Hah!

    I’m gonna work on getting my passport.
    I want to travel! That’s just want I desire and I think it will help me. I was reading about Darwin and though I don’t expect to discover revelations of great propensity the excitement and adventure is just what I want.
    And hey guess where I want to go! I thought about Amsterdam. Germany is nice and I know a lot of German. Of course I love ancient history and I think I would love to go to Egypt.
    But Amsterdam has the Vrolik museum!

    What is your morning like? Do you smoke a cigarette while u write this or do u wait till before/after?
    Say hello to Andrei the pigeon! (

    Hey

    • Darby 🫁🚬

      Idk why it says hey on the bottom. Creepy.

  6. Steve Erickson

    Picking up on the “why do artists smoke?” question, the current American right has a fixation with the idea that cigarettes make you smarter. (Peter Thiel doesn’t smoke but says he’s considering using nicotine patches for the same effect.) They’re upset that marijuana is now more popular in the U.S. than tobacco, based in some old-fashioned idea that if you smoke weed you will think like Bob Marley rather than Joe Friday, but I’m convinced certain right-wing influencers are getting paid off by Big Tobacco to make these claims. Smoking’s making a minor comeback in movies and TV too.

    It feels strange to return to the work week tomorrow. So many E-mails to send out!

    My dad scheduled an important meeting for tomorrow, so that seems like a hopeful turn.

  7. Mark

    Happy 2024 Dennis! Uh, cigarettes… quitting is on my to do list. We had a lovely staycation in SoCal including the Blake exhibit at the Getty Center, Getty Villa, shopping on Melrose, clothing-optional hotel in Palm Springs, thrifting, two birthday parties and in-bed film festival with a double feature of Black Narcissus (1947) and Fox and Friends. OMG Black Narcissus is sooo insanely weird and wonderful! We’ve applied to Paris Ass Book Fair 2024 this May — we’ll see what happens.

  8. Nick.

    *poof* Happy new year! Very important day here it being cig day great way to start the year off I’ll say. Hum updates I went to a party at a bar for new years and didn’t run into this boy i had hoped I would but wouldn’t have anyway if I did something different so I guess everything played out as it should have. And I was surprised everyone was drunk and lame I hate drinking also never been my thing and it tastes really bad so I don’t get it on top of I think it makes people dumber! Drugs don’t do that at least not at first or at least not all of them. Otherwise I nearly cried a couple a times for to me odd reasons as I wasn’t really sad about anything but I picked up on a lot of details about my surroundings and the people in them that probably began to overwhelm me as I don’t have as much cold logic coursing through me constantly anymore so I guess that’s why if I had too. Oh I was also so tired but only in my body not my spirit if that makes sense. What’d you get up too? What’d you eat and what’s up? Oh I said “I wanna see the stuff that makes you a kid again” to this boy the one I was hoping to run into last night and he said aww that’s a genius idea and I really liked that now I’m done so it’s your turn. Ttylxo

  9. billy

    I had the little conrad heart of darkness! the series was called ‘books to take your breath away’

    happy new year x

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