Tag Archives: marijuana

Delivery Chronicles

All I think about is work, which must make me a workaholic. I used to have an imagination doing deliveries. Those times were traumatic. I wasn’t making much money (not that I am now either), and I drove all day and night through Los Angeles, with a two-hour break in between, which in some years I devoted to meditation and writing. Sometimes the dispatchers would send me downtown to pick up nine-hundred-dollar food deliveries and deliver them to one of the companies in the skyscrapers. I get a panic attack just remembering. If you’ve ever been to downtown Los Angeles, you would recall the one-way streets of Figueroa, Hope, and Grand, and how, if you missed the address, you would have to start all over again.

I went through panic attacks on the road.

One time, I’d come home at around 9:30 p.m. from another shift and smoked a bowl of potent weed and took a shot of whiskey when I was smoking every day. My dispatcher, who was also my boss, sent an order to my phone for a sushi restaurant. The order was huge, and the tip was over fifty dollars, and I was already high, so I panicked. I couldn’t tell him I couldn’t drive there. It was the end of the shift, and the other drivers had gone home. I could’ve gotten in trouble if I rejected the order, and I couldn’t tell him I was stoned, so I decided to drive to the sushi restaurant. A cop could’ve pulled me over and tested me for drugs. Now that they can do that somehow, I would’ve been fucked.

I made it there okay and entered the restaurant high as hell. My eyes must’ve looked like two fireball candies. I was paranoid. It felt as if the customers were looking at me. I was so high, and I had to stand in there and wait for them to make the sushi rolls, and the restaurant was filled to capacity on a Friday night. Did I mention it was raining? There was nowhere to sit and try to relax, so I stood near the sushi bar for about twenty minutes and waited for them to finish the job. When they did, I grabbed the sushi bags and got the hell out of there. (Actually, I used bags of my own. The restaurant owners were too cheap to afford plastic bags. Anyway, I bagged everything and left.)

It was a dangerous trip up Laurel Canyon to a house in the hills on a stormy night, where the road curved like a sidewinder, and I had to be careful turning and looking out for cars speeding down the opposite lane to my left with their bright white headlights making me temporarily blind. Somehow I dropped the food off safely to the customer who’d ordered sushi that late at night and drove back down the winding road.

I forgot how I got home, which usually happened when I was high. I was the character from the movie Memento who forgot everything with no short-term memory, so he had to write everything he’d experienced to recall what happened. That was me on weed. I don’t smoke it now, but my memory is evasive. I forget a thought from a minute or so ago, so I sit and try to recollect it. Some of them are important, so I should probably write them down as well, but I never carry a notepad, and my phone is too complicated to sort through. By the time I get to the note app, I forget what notes I was supposed to take.

So that was one story of when I was doing deliveries in Los Angeles. I’ll write a book someday on my experiences doing that job, just not now. I’m not ready. I’m working on other stuff. Sometime in the future, like with my month in rehab and the hospital in Pasadena, I’ll get to it. Unlike those nightmares I lived through as a delivery driver, I took notes at rehab every day and kept them in my closet somewhere, and I’ll take them out in a few years.

What Got Me Through Those Years?

A lot of reading got me through those years. I read Bukowski, Fante, Hemingway when I was in my later twenties. Those times were rough, but not as rough as when my friends would move when I was thirty-two. I turned to drinking vodka every day, and smoking weed all by myself sometimes.

I knew a twenty-one-year-old who turned me onto marijuana at that age. I smoked religiously and bought a card. He talked me into it so long ago. I still remember the dispensaries resembling places that were selling crack. I never smoked the crack. Imagine though. I pictured how a crack house looked and thought, My God, don’t ever let me smoke the pipe. Dispensaries don’t look the way they look today. Today they’re more like Apple stores. They’re bright and white with smiles and tablets, too.

I never would’ve thought it would be legalized. But here I am. I’m stuck inside this state of California, which has ended up completely bonkers, having quit all drugs.

My brain can’t function like it used to do. I wish it would. I can’t remember what I’ve read. It’s like I’m reading gibberish. I think the drugs destroyed my brain. What can I do?

But anyway, I work from home. A lot has changed in six egregious years, with Trump as president. My job has gone remote, and marijuana is now sold as if it’s beer or medicine. You choose.

I can’t recall a sober day when I believed it was a good idea for the plant to be a legal drug. It makes me wonder what insanity is coming next. Not like I want to know. I see dispensaries throughout this town and think how many people have been walking high or working high.

I’m just a dude who lives alone and doesn’t bother anyone. Whatever. Do your thing and I’ll do mine. Reality has fallen short. I cringe at what I was a while ago. Those days were dark. I lost myself inside the gap. And now I sit and ponder, staring off in coffee shops while others drink their teas and socialize. I’ve got nobody else to talk to but myself. This loneliness perpetuates. I’m sure some people can relate to what I mean.

It’s getting worse out there. You can’t go browsing at the store for records anymore. They’ve closed them down. That used to be my favorite thing to do was stay in record stores for hours and peruse the rows of compact discs and tapes. Now everything is sold on Amazon. Don’t get me wrong. I love convenience, but the record store was once a place to go to get away from home, to dwell outside. Not anymore. No wonder I was stuck with drugs and alcohol though all those years. I miss the friends I had, the times we shared together. All of it has passed me by. They’ve since moved on from me. It isn’t what it was. I hope someday I’ll look upon today and think it was a phase.