David Alan Dedin
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The Lyin' in Winter

11/27/2023

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So, I just saw "The Lion in Winter" onstage a few nights ago, my fifth live theatrical performance in just three weeks.  I absolutely love the film; it's venomous banter is delightful during the holiday season.   In addition to TLIW I've also seen Nevermore: The Story of Edgar Allan Poe, Little Shop of Horrors, Sondheim's Assassins, American Psycho (obviously my favorite), and a few others whose name escapes me.  I'm going to see The Betty Boop musical this weekend, and I'm curious how the show presents its vintage source material to a modern audience.  I mean, does anyone even know who Betty Boop was? I'm hoping they portray her as "Toot" from Drawn Together.  I'm definitely in the mood for a show centered around an aging alcoholic with body shaming issues - especially if we get to see Toot "cut" herself, as she did in the show.  

On the subject of cutting one's self, it's been almost four months since I was staggering through my living room one fine evening, sobbing so hard it looked like I was fucking, digging into my wrists long-ways with a kitchen knife - and leaving a trail of arterial spray throughout my house.  There was blood...everywhere.  On my carpet.  On my walls.  On my vintage toy collection.  On the keyboard where I write my books.  After 40+ years, my depression had finally overtaken me, and had a worried passerby not seen me with a knife on my porch (and called 911), I wouldn't be alive to write this blog.   I ended up hospitalized for two solid weeks, and when my Mother was called to pick me up, she pleaded with the unit's staff not to release me.  Her demeanor was so frightening, the orderly who walked me out actually pulled me aside and warned me ahead of time.  "She doesn't want you released," he told me.  "She wants us to keep you here - and she's almost hysterical."

The "hysterical" thing is why I was hospitalized to begin with. Writing When People Go Away marks the end of a 40-year journey (and a 30-year writing project), as my brain - literally - has been using the written word as a means to repair itself, after a severe, untreated childhood concussion.  Of course, as though the brain damage weren't bad enough, I'm also the victim of Oedipal sexual abuse in the late 1970s - a series of behind-closed-doors encounters that broke my further into three different personalities.  I have been suicidal since 1996, and the only thing keeping me from going through with the act was the fact that I knew I was put on this earth to be a writer - and I refused to die without writing my masterpiece.

And When People Go Away is that masterpiece.

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There isn't a single symptom of Dissociative Identity Disorder that cannot be dismissed as alcoholism.  "Missing time" is a blackout.  Switching alters is "getting into character" or "putting on a game face."  Forgetfulness is the expected consequence of long term drinking.  Anxiety comes from DT's.  Even suggesting that an alcoholic might have multiple personalities is immediately dismissed as the mother of all denial systems.  And I totally agree.  As a man who tried to drink himself to death, it is farrrrrrrrrrrr more likely that I'm making excuses for drunken behavior than it is that I have eleven different personalities.  But the proof is in the pudding.  This website contains over a decade's worth of archives, the blogs in particular, which show a broken brain that's slowly - and successfully - triaged itself back together.  Take a moment to explore "Dave's Blog Archive" on the drop-down menu.  If you start at the beginning, you can clearly see my personalities reintegrating, with distinctively different voices contributing to every post.  You can also see my multiple personalities coming out in my cartoons over the years - especially the arrival of "Alan" who suddenly appears in my comics' David Alan Dedin signature, after 96'.  DavidAlanDedin.com is a priceless "history" of the human brain healing itself after unfathomable trauma caused by what I believe is one of the worst cases of child abuse/neglect in modern history.  

Chuckling.  When I told Mother that this would be my last Christmas on earth, she immediately shot back that I'm always "threatening" - and that "some things never change."  I guess that means my three suicide attempts, the last one causing three different hospital stays (and a big carpet cleaning bill, as Mother quickly wanted to clean up and hide the mess) were just...threats.  

​It's amazing how deep Catholic guilt can run.

PictureGoodbye to Beekman Place, my first novel, on display in Chicago's Leather Archive.
Anyway, as I'm off to see Boop - followed by a stop at "G2" and later of course, Touche - I'm looking forward to enjoying the holiday season this year, as I'm surrounded by friends, rather than family.

- Sir Dave

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Better With Friends on Veteran's Day

11/11/2023

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Chuckling...so, I kinda' got kicked off the Fox News lot yesterday :)

Actually, it's not as bad as it sounds.  I was in the city for a day to chill, to hit a museum and to grab dinner somewhere.  The manuscript is as perfect as I can make it, and, after months of unanswered email messages (where I was undoubtedly dismissed as a crackpot), I decided on Thursday to just throw on some clothes and take the Metra to the city, where I'd planned to leave a printed copy of When People Go Away at the Fox News reception desk.  But I was told (understandably) that unsolicited packages were not accepted, though one of the building's security staff pulled me aside and suggested I return on Friday morning, when the channel broadcasts live in the courtyard outside the studio, during football season.   I thanked the employee gratefully, then grabbed a room at at The Congress, ironically, the IML host hotel.  I threw an overnight bag together at Walgreens, enjoyed an unnecessarily-expensive burger at Five Guys, then spent the evening exploring both Michigan Ave & State Street - taking in the holiday decorations and tipping a few buskers. 

I couldn't sleep of course, so I got up early, grabbed breakfast, made sure I had my manuscript, then went walking through downtown Chicago at 5am.  I love the city at night.  I love the early-mornings, in particular.  I arrived at Fox, and found the spot where the hosts would be located.  I'll admit, I was expecting a "Janice Dean say-hi-on-the-sidewalk" sort of greeting, but instead I was told firmly to leave and to never come back (obviously because my Schott & Muir wasn't the preferred aesthetic for an audience background).  I sighed and left.  It was yet another roadblock in the 30-year-process of writing WPGA.  So, I just said "fuck it," and FedEx'd the book to Gutfeld, dropping it on his desk like a bomb.

​I have, literally, done everything humanly possible to share my story, and at this point ... I'm done.

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On a different topic, I saw a solid community theater production of Stephen Sondheim's "Assassins" last night - and absolutely loved it.  It's no secret I prefer Andrew Lloyd Webber over Sondheim because I enjoy ALW's melodies and wordplay - though I openly admit SS is the superior lyricist.  ALW gives you songs in your head to take with you after leaving the theater, but SS really gives you something to think about after leaving the performance.  ALW is big & brassy, SS is subtle & eloquent.  ALW's "Memory" is a breathtakingly-beautiful, while SS's "A Little Priest" has a lyrical structure as complicated as a line of DNA code.  I had never seen Assassins (I hadn't even YouTube'd the soundtrack), so like a first viewing of the Rocky Horror Picture Show, I was, ironically, a "virgin."  I'll remind myself of that the next time I open Grindr.

The reason why I enjoyed Assassins as I did was that I finally understood how gifted Sondheim was.  There was a moment during the performance when every character on stage points a gun directly at the audience, threatening to shoot.  As soon as I saw that, a "connection" was made in my head, and I realized that SS was using words in the same manner as me - he sets up moments where his characters are conduits, where he can share grand ideas while always maintaining the safety of claiming it was "just a story."  It was at that moment that I realized just how dark of a show Assassins is, and what an irony seeing this show at this moment in my life really was.  Quite frankly, now that the manuscript is literally out of my hands, the wall that has protected me from three failed suicide attempts has come down.  And I couldn't be happier.

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Speaking of unexpected community theater, tomorrow I get to see a show in Streator, Illinois.  Yup - I said Streator.  For those unfamiliar, Streator is known for its high per-capita of registered sex offenders, which has something to do with the placement of schools: apparently, Streator's educational system allows enough physical distance for offenders to live in close proximity of each other, without the restrictions of being too close to a children's playground.   Fun.  I'm reminded of OZ's Vernon Schillinger, sitting on the throne of Shakespeare's Hamlet during the show's final season.  I'm going to see "Nevermore, the Imaginary Life and Mysterious Death of  Edgar Allan Poe," another virgin-production that I'm unfamiliar with.  It looks really good, and as my personalities reintegrate, the one who loves Broadway Shows - a child, sadly - has been playing fuckin' musicals on my iPhone for a solid month now.  I'm tempted to cheat, and to listen to Nevermore online first, but after having such a good experience at Assassins last night, fuck it.  How can that show with that subject matter performed by that pool of potentially-pedophole-thesbians not be priceless?  I mean, Poe died in the gutter, so why not use musical theater to rise him from one?  I totally want to see an ensemble cast of serious ex-cons, dressed to the nines with the best that the prison linen closet can offer, singing, of course,  A Little Judas Priest. 

On an unrelated note, I just realized that When People Go Away is "God's suicide note."

(Smiling sadly.)


 - Sir Dave

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