{"id":333,"date":"2001-04-06T09:54:39","date_gmt":"2001-04-06T16:54:39","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.ryanspeck.com\/blog\/?p=333"},"modified":"2023-06-24T00:49:52","modified_gmt":"2023-06-24T07:49:52","slug":"blofly-sings-the-blues","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.ryanspeck.com\/blog\/blofly-sings-the-blues\/","title":{"rendered":"Blofly Sings The Blues"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"boldgrid-section\">\n<div class=\"container\">\n<div class=\"row\">\n<div class=\"col-lg-12 col-md-12 col-xs-12 col-sm-12\">\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\" style=\"border-width: 0px;\">Ernest Blofly wasn\u2019t very happy with his day. Mr. Blofly was, in fact, fairly pissed off about his life in general. This was because, unknown to most, God hated Ernest Blofly.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">And so it was that all of the worst things that were possible happened to Ernest Blofly.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Ernest Poquat Blofly was born at a very young age. He was a child of the 1950\u2019s and, growing up in the suburbs outside of the bustling mining-town of Oberwalz, he was used to the usual amenities of the middle-class lifestyle.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">At first, it seemed that he was a normal child. It was not until after his second birthday that the bizarre occurrences that became typical of Blofly\u2019s later life became so unnervingly common.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">It was on October 17, 1955, that Blofly was playing outdoors unattended when the first major incident occurred. Initially, it was considered a simple accident, but it was much more than mere chance.<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Young Blofly was playing outside with a toy tee-ball set when a man in a large Ford drove down his street. It was an amazing shot, an odds-breaker to anyone who didn\u2019t know better, when Blofly used his small hollow plastic bat to launch the miniscule whiffle ball through the air at an incredible speed, connecting with unnerving accuracy on the right temple of one Mr. Saul Menders, knocking him senseless and sending the speeding car that he was driving careening into a nearby tree, which, despite its extremely large size, crumpled across the right front quarter of the Ford, falling onto the legs of young Blofly.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Later, they would try to explain the sudden collapse of a seemingly healthy 142-year-old oak by pointing out a strange and uncommon form of European Oak disease that had, oddly, infested the tree very recently. Still, this explained to no one the unbelievable physics that allowed the tree to topple at a right angle to the force applied to it onto Blofly instead of either onto the car or away from the car, as one would imagine would happen. Yet again, this was another occurrence blamed on chance.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Fate\u2019s finger was not as fickle when Blofly\u2019s medical bills put his father into severe debt. The elder Mr. Blofly was a furniture salesman who owned his own showroom. He would have usually been able to afford the bills to mend young Blofly\u2019s legs, but his showroom had suddenly burnt down under mysterious circumstances only days after Blofly\u2019s accident. Even stranger was the fact that, somehow, the United States Postal Service had managed to lose the check mailed to the insurance company that covered his place of business. This meant that, when the white mice that had been released accidentally by thieves robbing the nearby pet store several evenings before had chewed through the wiring of his father\u2019s showroom, creating a massive blaze only fueled by the fabric upholstering of the couches, his father was no longer covered by fire insurance and the ensuing bills and loss of income sent his father into bankruptcy and spiraling debt.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Blofly came out of the incident no worse for wear except for a chronic limp that would plague him for the rest of his life. The problem was sheerly cosmetic in comparison to the crippling that Blofly had managed to escape.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">His family situation would have been tolerable, scraping through poverty after his father took a job in the catheter mines, but the breadwinner of the family was imprisoned within a month for failure to pay back taxes. To the best of anyone\u2019s knowledge, all taxes had been paid, but discrepancies in the paperwork somehow showed that the old man owed several thousands of dollars more than he had paid over the previous decade. He was to spend the next 14 years in jail.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Ernest Blofly was forced to live in squalor for the rest of his formative years, his mother having no other place to turn to for shelter or money after the house was seized by the government, her parents having died years earlier, never having any siblings, and being too proud to ask for help from distant relatives that barely knew her. His father\u2019s highly religious relatives ceased to trust Ernest\u2019s family, believing that his father was some sort of corrupt man who had lied to them all for years and had stolen from out great government. Some even contemplated if they might be Communists.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">So it was that Ernest ended up living, first, in motels and, later, in a ramshackle shed of a house on the beleaguered outskirts of Oberwalz\u2019s ever-growing industrial sector. He and his mother lived in squalid conditions and he longed to escape them, but, being only a small boy, he had no other options.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">His mother got a job in one of the various catheter refineries in the industrial sector, but, true to his luck, his mother lost a hand in a catheter press during her third week of work. Her medical bills were covered by the company, but she was promptly let go. After that she was forced to turn to prostitution.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">By then, young Ernest Blofly was five, old enough to understand many things that were going on around him. He was enrolled in school, but he was embarrassed to go to Mitchell Bufonze McPhillster Elementary with children that were of a higher social class and who made rude references to his mother\u2019s methods of earning money.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Ernest wasn\u2019t old enough to understand the sexual act, but his mother\u2019s visitors and the noises he had heard at night were enough for him to know that he didn\u2019t like what she did.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Things went fairly well for Blofly over the next several years, excepting two cases of bronchitis and a nagging bladder infection that lasted for an inordinate amount of time without any form of relief.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Medical treatment was, of course, not of the highest quality. Blofly\u2019s mother still adored him, but had barely enough money to keep him fed, as Oberwalz was not yet prone to tremendous desire for whores and she could only do so much in a day. She was also not very popular with the more desirable men, as many were disgusted by her stump.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">It was in his ninth year of life that his mother came down with a virulent sexually transmitted disease that ravaged their already trickling monetary flow, leaving his mother only the most undesirable gentleman callers coming to their \u201chome\u201d at all hours. The noises that he had heard became commonplace and he was, by then, far too old not to know what was going on under their roof.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">At first, he was mildly standoffish with his mother, but it quickly evolved into a case of severe bitterness toward the only person that had loved him.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">He did poorly in school and became friends with only the outcasts and loners, vandalizing property after school hours, shoplifting, and getting brought home by the police on regular occasions. His mother\u2019s loving pleas worked on the police for the first few occasions, but they became hardened to her begging for her son\u2019s well-being as his acts of crime became more frequent.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Soon, though, she would be unable to plead, regardless. As Ernest was arrested by the juvenile authorities and reprimanded repeatedly, his mother came down with a case of tuberculosis.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Ernest grew as his mother withered, coughed, spat blood, and died.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">He left the Morston Villachang School when he was 13. He would never complete his education. He spent most of the rest of his life working.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">At first, he reveled in his freedom. He was able to make a small amount of money working as a mechanic trainee at the Samung Catheter Factory, where he made friends with a young man named Rufus Mogwell.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Rufus began hanging around Ernest\u2019s home regularly and introducing Ernest to the joys of cocaine.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">The timing of their meeting was very unfortunate for Ernest Blofly, who was caught in a sting operation designed to bust Rufus and take him and all of his compatriots into custody.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Blofly began his sixteenth year of life in jail.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">When he was released in 1977 from the Oberwalz County Correctional Institute For The Wrong, he felt as if something might go well in his life, as though the anal violation, the random incidents of violence, and the mental and physical abuse might finally be over.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">As usual, Blofly had no idea of what was in store for him.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">He was twenty-five, still young, fairly able, and only had a criminal record, a lack of education, and a bum leg to hold him back.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">He got a job at a meat-packing plant, loading crates and boxes into trucks. He had only been at the job for two weeks when the FBI arrived late one Wednesday night, arresting everyone working there. It seemed that the warehouse was actually a mafia front for gunrunning.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Blofly went back to jail for five more years.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">A thirty-year old man, Ernest Blofly tried to manage life as an ex-convict, but the 1980\u2019s were hitting Oberwalz hard. The catheter mines had closed down and despair and crime had moved into what was formerly peaceful Oberwalz County.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Blofly was of a desire to stay far away from crime. In this Oberwalz, alien in comparison to the world he had once known, there wasn\u2019t much left for him.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Ernest took odd jobs where he could find them, working in a Chinese restaurant for a month until the health inspector closed it down. Then, he went to work cleaning up at an Oriental massage parlor, but some of the things he saw there caused him to go into loud, convulsive prison flashbacks, always ending with him balled up in the floor, crying, in the fetal position, which tended to scare the clientele away, so he was let go.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Other jobs were tried and each one was a miserable failure. His employment managed to destroy 14 legitimate businesses and get him fired from 22 more by the time he was 40.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">At that point, he was balding, doughy, and undesirable. He couldn\u2019t hold down a job. He was three months behind on rent and two behind on bills. His gas had been shut off and it was the coldest winter Oberwalz had seen in years.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">And it was the third coldest day of the year, that day, on which a meteor had crashed onto his Plymouth Skylark.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">He was starting to think that nothing else could go wrong when the power was shut off.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">And all he could say was \u201cd-d-d-dd-d-dd-d-d-d-d-d-d-dd-ddd-dd-da-d-d-ddd-d-da-da-ddd-dd-da-daa-dda-ddam-dam-dam-dd-damn it,\u201d having developed a stutter and lost the hearing in his left ear after being accidentally electrocuted by slipping into a rain puddle during a thunderstorm, which gale-force winds had then promptly blown a power line into, some time before.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Two days later, after being evicted, he laid in a nearby alley, clutching all his vital possessions to his body and praying to make it through the cold night, that coldest night of the year.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">He had tried to build himself a fire in an abandoned oil drum earlier, but leftover chemical residues in the drum had flared up a massive and sudden blaze, that had burned his clothes, which he had been forced to strip off in part to save himself, and singed off his eyebrows and bangs.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">Now, he was desperately cold and all he had left to eat were three brown M&amp;M\u2019s, a stale pizza crust left by the rats, and a stick of Cinniburst gum that had been in his coat pocket, unnoticed, for three years.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">So, he laid there in the alley, in a pool of his own urine, too weak and cold to even stand and piss. He laid in the alley and stared into space, contemplating. Blofly wondered what could be left for him in this world.<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">A shiny object caught his eye and his thoughts were drawn to a Christmas tree in a nearby dumpster, formerly green branches withered and turning brown, and he remembered the Christmases of his earliest youth, with his father, who had died of a heart attack shortly after getting out of prison, and his mother, in their beautiful house with wonderful toys. And Blofly wondered where all that had gone. How had he come to this, laying in urine on a cold slab of concrete, freezing in the winter night air?<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"western custom-indent\">And his mood lightened as he realized that things had to get better because they couldn\u2019t get any worse, that there must be something for him in the future, that he still had time to make something of his life, and that nothing was ever as bad as it seemed, so he never saw it coming as the cow dropped from the sky and crushed his spinal column out of his asshole.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Ernest Blofly wasn\u2019t very happy with his day. Mr. Blofly was, in fact, fairly pissed off about his life in general. This was because, unknown to most, God hated Ernest Blofly. And so it was that all of the worst things that were possible happened to Ernest Blofly. &nbsp; Ernest Poquat Blofly was born at [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"bgseo_title":"","bgseo_description":"","bgseo_robots_index":"index","bgseo_robots_follow":"follow","_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[8],"tags":[24],"class_list":["post-333","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-fiction","tag-short-fiction"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.ryanspeck.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/333","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.ryanspeck.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.ryanspeck.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.ryanspeck.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.ryanspeck.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=333"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"http:\/\/www.ryanspeck.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/333\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":381,"href":"http:\/\/www.ryanspeck.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/333\/revisions\/381"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.ryanspeck.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=333"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.ryanspeck.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=333"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.ryanspeck.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=333"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}