(I'm not actually leaving San Francisco. I'm just scared I'll miss out and won't be able to contribute to the I'm Leaving San Francisco Letter genre)
I can still remember the day I set foot in San
Francisco. The air was aglow and the fog
tasted sweet, like simple syrup. Every
day I would walk to work from my huge apartment in North Beach that cost $124 a
month to my very cool job doing something creative with a lot of cool people
who were also cool and unusual. Then we
would go to underground dance fashion raves in SOMA before there were offices
there or before people called it SOMA until 4 am and then be fine at work the
next day because the very spirit of San Francisco would keep you invigorated.
It’s different now, of course; it’s not My San Francisco any
more. I guess it started when the
Thorvites emerged from the sea and began eating large sections of the Sunset,
their gaping, blood-soaked jaws full of pavement and stucco and hapless dog
walkers. Of course, incinerating Golden
Gate Park with thermite and napalm temporarily halted their shrieking march
across the city, but at what cost? The
new Golden Gate Parking Lot is convenient but I miss the trees. Am I being selfish, though, I wonder. What makes the old SF any better than the new
one?
There were the little changes, things that seemed small but
then started to add up. The coffee place
down the street, where the owner, Rose still made delicious lattes and served
heavenly muffins straight from her own oven, closed suddenly and was replaced
by a Physical Form Transmutation Center, another one of those places where you’d
go to have your molecular matrix disassembled and transmitted to a pulsar of
pure energy. There’s probably one in
your neighborhood too. It’s like they’re
taking over! They're like the Chase banks of physical transmutation places. And I knew the cobbler shop
probably wouldn’t last, but I was more than a little taken aback when it closed
and reopened as an Alien Assimilation Center.
I know our new overlords are mighty; I guess I didn’t expect them to be
so pushy, too!
I sigh and try to remember that change is inevitable. The Mission was an Irish neighborhood once,
then Hispanic. Now it’s Biomutant. From “It’s a Long Way to Tipperary” to “Oye
Como Va” to “Feast on the Skulls of the Screaming Ones, For We Are the Damned
of the Night.” All good songs, just
different voices. Change. In 30 years, the Biomutants will be the ones getting
pushed out, and they’ll probably complain about how the Drillbots have ruined
the neighborhood by drilling holes in everything and driving right over the
intricate temples of human bones the Biomutants spent so long assembling. “I remember when this was a cool
neighborhood, before the Drillbots messed everything up,” they’ll whine, in
between bites of a child’s forearm. It’s
inevitable.
The last straw was when Gozor and his Reptile Clan won the
Battle of Potrero Hill and slaughtered the last of the Golden Cadre. The streets had barely stopped running thick
and red with clotted blood when I came home to find a 3-day Notice tacked to my
door. Gozor was Ellis Acting me
out. A quick look at Craigslist and I
knew my time in San Francisco was over.
I’d had some pretty sketchy apartments here, but $3000 a month for a muddy
Hellpit dug in the sandy soil and covered with a bamboo lattice seemed a little
ridiculous. Especially since I also had
to share a cooking fire with Jaku the Forgotten One, who honestly did not look
like he kept a clean kitchen.
6 comments:
+1
I, too, remember the good old days, before I added my four new arms. Don't forget that we Biomutants were once like you. Sure, we now find you delicious, and are repelled by your lack of bioenhancements, but we miss Cafe Macondo, too.
Gozer the Traveler: he will come in one of the pre-chosen forms. During the rectification of the Vuldrini, the traveler came as a large and moving Torg! Then, during the third reconciliation of the last of the McKetrick supplicants, they chose a new form for him: that of a giant Slor! Many Shuvs and Zuuls knew what it was to be roasted in the depths of the Slor that day, I can tell you!
As always, TK, making me laugh at work.
You are, as my brother would say, a blessing.
Congrats on the "Childhood's End" of I'm Leaving San Francisco Letters.
Stephen - Even the grotesquely mutated can miss Doctor Bombay's.
Stuff - Goddammit, I knew I should have reconsidered Gozor.
Rachel - Thanks, Rachel!
Michael - Thanks but I haven't watched that show yet is it any good
The Childhood's End show started pretty good for a SyFy miniseries, admittedly a low bar, but completely jumped the shark by the end. Your Leaving SF Letter perfectly mimicked it, as if you were channeling Carl Jung's Collective Unconscious. Your Christmas post, by the way, is genius, and I want to hear the Garbage City Band live.
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