1. Yes, yes, I see you. Get in. Get in.
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2. Your mother's having another one
of her episodes.
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3. Last night, she went to see A Doll's House
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4. with a couple girlfriends,
and now she has ideas.
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5. I emerged from my sanctum, this afternoon,
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6. to discover that not only had she
not made me lunch,
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7. which is a meal I need in order to live,
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8. but she'd furthermore, locked herself
in the bedroom to weep... loudly.
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9. Now, it's one thing for a woman to weep,
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10. but when they do it at such a volume
you can hear it through the door,
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11. then you know they're doing it
just for the attention.
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12. Anyway, I was able to cobble together
a sandwich for myself,
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13. so, I'm the real hero of the story.
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14. It was a couple hours later
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15. when I realized I was on a good run
with my novel.
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16. I had this really interesting sentence
that kept going for pages and pages,
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17. and I thought about how rare it is
to really get in the groove like that.
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18. How, most days, I can't concentrate
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19. because my idiot child
is blasting the television,
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20. and it suddenly dawned on me;
hot cock on a rock,
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21. she never even picked up
the little noise and snot factory!
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22. So, here I am, being your mother,
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23. which I know is giving you all sorts
of mixed-up ideas about gender,
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24. while your brain
is still loose and stupid.
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25. Just remember,
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26. if you become a queer later in life,
this isn't my fault!
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27. Don't you sing no songs in your nightclub
act called, "My Daddy was My Mommy,"
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28. while gazing longingly
at a tangled string of pearls.
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29. Pearls are for ladies, BoJack.
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30. Pearls are for ladies.
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31. You know Sunday is my writing day.
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32. Sundays are the one day
that are just for me and my craft,
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33. and still, you and the black hole
that birthed you
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34. conspire to ruin it for me.
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35. What am I supposed to do now?
Just go back to writing?
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36. I'm out of the zone now,
the whole day's shot!
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37. All because of you
and that brittle wisp of a woman
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38. you made the mistake
of making your mother.
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39. No. It's not her fault.
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40. She's doing the best she can, after all.
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41. It's just that...
you can't depend on women.
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42. You can't depend on anyone.
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43. Sooner or later, you need to learn
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44. that no one else
is gonna take care of you.
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45. That's what I learned
when I had to make my own sandwich.
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46. You can't rely on other people, BoJack.
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47. It's good for you to know that.
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48. And she's a good mother
for teaching you that.
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49. You've got a head start on most kids.
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50. You're actually very lucky.
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51. Thaaaaank youuuuu?
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52. So, I stopped at a Jack in the Box,
on the way here,
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53. and the girl behind the counter said,
"Hiya! Are you having an awesome day?"
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54. Not, "How are you doing today?"
No. "Are you having an awesome day?"
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55. Which is pretty shitty because it puts
the onus on me to disagree with her,
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56. like if I'm not having an "awesome day,"
suddenly I'm the negative one.
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57. Usually, when people ask how I'm doing,
the real answer is I'm doing shitty,
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58. but I can't say I'm doing shitty
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59. because I don't have a good reason
to be doing shitty.
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60. So if I say, "I'm doing shitty,"
then they say, "Why? What's wrong?"
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61. And I have to be like,
"I don't know, all of it?"
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62. So instead, when people ask how I'm doing,
I usually say, "I am doing so great."
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63. But when this girl at the Jack in the Box
asked me if I was having an awesome day,
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64. I thought, well, today
I'm actually allowed to feel shitty,
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65. today I have a good reason,
so I said to her, "Well, my mom died."
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66. And she immediately burst into tears.
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67. So, now I have to comfort her,
which is annoying,
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68. and meanwhile, there's a line
of people forming behind me,
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69. who are all giving me
these real judgy looks
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70. because I made
the Jack in the Box girl cry.
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71. And she's bawling, and she's saying,
"I'm sorry, I'm so sorry,"
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72. and I'm like, "It's fine. It's fine.
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73. I mean, it's not fine,
but, you know, it's... fine.
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74. And I would like to order
a Double Jack Meal,
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75. and I've kinda got somewhere to be,
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76. so maybe less with the crying
and more with the frying, huh?"
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77. And the girl apologizes, again,
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78. and she offers me a free churro
with my meal.
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79. And as I'm leaving,
I think, "I just got a free churro
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80. because my mom died."
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81. No one ever tells you when your mom dies,
you get a free churro.
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82. Anyway, I'm sorry,
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83. that's not part of the...
All right.
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84. Okay, here we go. Let's do this.
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85. Here I am, BoJack Horseman,
doing a eulogy, let's go.
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86. Hey, piano man,
can I get like a, like an organ flourish?
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87. Nicely done.
You know, I was a little worried
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88. I wouldn't have the right
accompaniment today.
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89. I guess it's a good thing my mom
was an organ donor!
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90. - What happened to the organ?
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91. Why don't you leave
the comedy to the professionals?
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92. Okay? This is a funeral, sir,
for my mother.
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93. Can you show a little respect?
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94. I'll take it.
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95. Beatrice Horseman, who was she?
What was her deal?
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96. Well, she was a horse.
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97. Uh, she was born in 1938.
She died in 2018.
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98. One time, she went to a parade,
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99. and one time, she smoked
an entire cigarette in one long inhale.
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100. I watched her do it.
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101. Truly a remarkable woman.
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102. Lived a full life, that lady.
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103. Just, all the way to the end,
which is, uh, now, I guess.
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104. Really makes you think, though, huh?
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105. Life, right? Goes by, stuff happens.
Then you die.
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106. Well, that's my time,
you've been great! Tip your waitress!
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107. No, I'm just kidding around,
there's no waitress.
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108. That's all I have to say about my mother.
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109. No point beating a dead horse, right?
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110. So... Now what?
I don't know, Mom, you got any ideas?
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111. Anything?
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112. Mom?
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113. No?
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114. Nothing to contribute?
Knock once if you're proud of me.
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115. Can I just say how amazing it is
to be in a room with my mother,
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116. and I can just talk without her telling me
to shut up and make her a drink?
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117. Hey, Mom. Knock once
if you think I should shut up.
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118. No? You sure?
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119. I mean, I don't want to embarrass you,
by making this eulogy into a me-logy,
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120. so, seriously,
if you wanted me to sit down
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121. and let someone else talk, just knock.
I will not be offended.
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122. No? Your funeral.
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123. Sorry about the closed casket, by the way.
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124. She wanted an open casket,
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125. but, you know, she's dead now,
so who cares what she wanted?
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126. No, that sounds bad. I'm sorry.
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127. I think that if she could've seen
what she looked like dead,
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128. she'd agree it's better this way.
She looked like this.
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129. Kinda like a pissed-off toy dinosaur.
The coroner couldn't get her eyes closed.
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130. So, now her face is forever frozen
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131. in a mask of tremendous horror
and anguish.
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132. Or as my mom called it, Tuesday!
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133. Tuesday! My mom called it Tuesday.
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134. Hey, Mom, what did you think of that joke?
You like that?
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135. You never did care for my comedy.
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136. Here's a story.
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137. When I was a teenager,
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138. I performed a comedy routine
for my high school talent show.
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139. There was this cool jacket
that I wanted to wear
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140. because it would make me
look like Albert Brooks.
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141. For months, I saved up for this jacket,
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142. but when I finally had enough,
I went to the store and it was gone.
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143. They had just sold it to someone else.
So, I went home and I told my mother.
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144. She said, "Let that be a lesson.
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145. That's the good
that comes from wanting things."
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146. She was really good
at dispensing life lessons,
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147. that always seemed to circle back
to everything being my fault.
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148. But then, on the day of the talent show,
my mother had a surprise for me.
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149. She had bought me the jacket.
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150. Even though she didn't know how to say it,
I knew this meant that she loved me.
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151. Now, that's a good story about my mother.
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152. It's not true,
but it's a good story, right?
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153. I stole it from an episode of Maude I saw
when I was a kid,
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154. where she talks about her father.
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155. I remember when I saw it,
thinking that's the kind of story
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156. I want to tell
about my parents when they die.
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157. But I don't have any stories like that.
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158. All I know about being good
I learned from TV.
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159. And in TV, flawed characters
are constantly showing people they care
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160. with these surprising grand gestures.
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161. And I think that part of me
still believes that's what love is.
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162. But in real life,
the big gesture isn't enough.
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163. You need to be consistent,
you need to be dependably good.
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164. You can't just screw everything up,
and then take a boat out into the ocean
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165. to save your best friend,
or solve a mystery, and fly to Kansas.
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166. You need to do it every day,
which is so... hard.
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167. When you're a kid, you convince yourself
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168. that maybe the grand gesture
could be enough.
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169. That even though your parents
aren't what you need them to be,
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170. over and over and over again,
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171. at any moment they might surprise you,
with something... wonderful.
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172. I kept waiting for that, the proof,
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173. that even though my mother
was a hard woman,
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174. deep down, she loved me
and cared about me
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175. and wanted me to know
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176. that I made her life
a little bit brighter.
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177. Even now, I find myself waiting.
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178. Hey, Mom, knock once if you love me
and care about me,
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179. and want me to know I made your life
a little bit brighter.
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180. My mother did not go gentle
into that good night.
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181. She went clawing and fighting
and thrashing, hence the face.
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182. If you'd seen her,
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183. I swear to God the only thing
you'd be thinking about right now
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184. is that I am nailing this impression.
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185. I was in the hospital with her
those last moments,
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186. and they were truly horrifying,
full of nonsensical screams and cries,
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187. but there was this moment,
this one instant of strange calm,
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188. where she looked in my direction
and said, "I see you."
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189. That's the last thing she said to me.
"I see you."
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190. Not a statement of judgment
or disappointment, just acceptance
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191. and the simple recognition
of another person in a room.
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192. "Hello, there. You are a person.
And I see you."
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193. Let me tell you,
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194. it's a weird thing to feel
at 54 years old,
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195. that for the first time in your life
your mother sees you.
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196. It's an odd realization that it's
the thing you've been missing,
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197. the only thing you wanted all along,
to be seen.
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198. And it doesn't feel like a relief,
to finally be seen.
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199. It feels mean, like,
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200. "Oh, it turns out that you knew
what I wanted,
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201. and you waited until the very last moment
to give it to me."
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202. I was prepared for more cruelty.
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203. I was sure that she would get
in one final zinger,
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204. about how I let her down,
and about how I was fat and stupid,
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205. and too tall to be
an effective Lindy-hopper.
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206. How I was needy and a burden
and an embarrassment.
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207. All that I was ready for.
I was not ready for "I see you."
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208. Only my mother would be lousy enough
to swipe me
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209. with a moment of connection
on her way out.
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210. But maybe I'm giving her too much credit.
Maybe it wasn't about connection.
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211. Maybe it was a... Maybe it was
an "I see you," like, "I see you."
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212. Like, "You might have the rest
of the world fooled,
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213. but I know exactly who you are."
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214. That's more my mom's speed.
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215. Or maybe she just literally meant
"I see you.
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216. You are an object
that has entered my field of vision."
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217. She was out of it at the end,
so maybe it's dumb
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218. to try to attribute it to anything.
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219. - Back in the 90s,
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220. I was in a very famous TV Show
called Horsin' Around.
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221. - Please hold your applause.
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222. And I remember one time, a fan asked me,
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223. "Hey, um, you know that episode
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224. where the horse has to give Ethan
a pep talk,
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225. after Ethan finds out his crush
only asked him to the dance
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226. because her friends were having
a dorkiest date contest?
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227. In all the shots of the horse,
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228. you can see a paper coffee cup
on the kitchen counter,
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229. but in the shots of Ethan,
the coffee cup's missing.
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230. Was that because the show
was making a statement,
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231. about the fluctuant subjectivity of memory
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232. and how even two people
can experience the same moment
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233. in entirely different ways?
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234. And I didn't have the heart to be, like,
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235. "No, man, some crew guy
just left their coffee cup in the shot."
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236. So instead, I was, like... "Yeah."
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237. And maybe this is like that coffee cup.
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238. Maybe, we're dumb to try to pin
significance onto every little thing.
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239. Maybe, when someone says,
"I see you," it just means, "I see you."
Copy !req
240. Then again, it's possible
she wasn't even talking to me.
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241. Because, if I'm being honest,
she wasn't really looking at me,
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242. she was looking past me.
There was nobody else in the room.
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243. I think she was talking to me,
but, honestly,
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244. she was so far gone at that point,
who knows what she was seeing.
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245. Who were you talking to, Mom?
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246. Not saying, huh? Staying mum?
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247. No rimshot there?
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248. God, whatever I'm paying you,
it's too much.
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249. Maybe, she saw my dad.
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250. My dad died about ten years ago
of injuries he sustained during a duel.
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251. When your father dies,
you ask yourself a lot of questions.
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252. Questions like,
"Wait, did you say he died in a duel?"
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253. and "Who dies in a duel?"
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254. The whole thing was so stupid.
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255. Dad spent his entire life
writing this book,
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256. but he couldn't get any stores
to carry it,
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257. or any newspapers to review it.
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258. Finally, I guess this one newspaper
thought he was pretty hilarious,
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259. because they ran a review
and tore him to shreds.
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260. So, my father, ever the Proud Mary,
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261. decided he would not stand
for this besmirchment of his honor.
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262. He claimed the critic didn't understand
what it meant to be a man,
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263. so he demanded satisfaction
in the form of pistols at dawn.
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264. He wrote the paper, this letter,
saying anyone who didn't like his book,
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265. he would challenge to a duel,
anyone in the world.
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266. He'd even pay for airfare
to San Francisco and a night in a hotel.
Copy !req
267. Well, eventually this found its way
to some kook in Montana,
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268. who was as batshit as he was
and took him up on the offer.
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269. They met at Golden Gate Park and agreed:
ten paces, then shoot.
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270. But in the middle of the ten paces,
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271. Dad turned to ask the guy if he'd actually
read the book and what he thought,
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272. but, not looking where he was going,
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273. tripped over an exposed root
and bashed his head on a rock.
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274. I wish I'd known to go
to Jack in the Box then.
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275. I could have gotten a free churro.
It would've been nice
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276. to have something to show for being
the son of Butterscotch Horseman.
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277. My darling mother gave the eulogy.
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278. My entire life I never heard her say
a kind word to or about my father,
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279. but at his funeral she said,
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280. "My husband is dead,
and everything is worse now."
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281. "My husband is dead,
and everything is worse now."
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282. I don't know why she said that.
Maybe she felt that's the kind of thing
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283. you're supposed to say at a funeral.
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284. Maybe she hoped one day
someone would say that about her.
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285. "My mother is dead,
and everything is worse now."
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286. Or maybe she knew
that he had frittered away
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287. all her inheritance,
and replaced it with crippling debt,
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288. which is a pretty shitty thing
to leave your widow with.
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289. "Bad news, you lost a husband,
but don't worry, you also lost the house!"
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290. Maybe Mom knew she'd have to sell
all her fancy jewelry
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291. and move into a home.
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292. Maybe that's what she meant by
"everything is worse."
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293. Is that what you meant, Mom?
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294. I gotta say,
I'm really carrying this double act.
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295. At least with Penn and Teller,
the quiet one does card tricks.
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296. Hey, piano man,
when I say something funny to my mom,
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297. how about you give me a rimshot?
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298. - Yeah, but not now.
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299. When I say something funny. Like, okay.
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300. What's the difference between my mother
and a disruptive expulsion of germs?
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301. One's a coughin' fit
and the other fits a coffin!
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302. - That's an example of a funny thing.
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303. Thank you. Let's try again.
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304. Hey, Mom. What's the difference between
my mother and a bunch of Easter eggs?
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305. One gets carried in a basket,
the other gets buried in a casket!
Copy !req
306. - Ready for one more? Last one.
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307. What's the difference
between a first-year lit major
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308. and my mother, Beatrice Horseman?
Copy !req
309. One is decently read,
and the other's a huge bitch!
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310. Might have gone a little too far
with that one.
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311. That one might have been a little too
"my mom's a huge bitch" for the room.
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312. I'm sorry, Mother.
You're not a huge bitch.
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313. You were a huge bitch...
and now you're dead.
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314. You know, the first time I ever performed
in front of an audience,
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315. it actually was, uh, with my mom.
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316. She used to put on these shows,
with her supper club in the living room,
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317. and she used to make...
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318. She used to make me sing
"The Lollipop Song."
Copy !req
319. Those parties, they were really something.
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320. There were skits and magic acts,
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321. and ethnically insensitive
vaudeville routines,
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322. and the big finale
was always a dance my mother did.
Copy !req
323. She had this beautiful dress that she only
brought out for these parties,
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324. and she did this incredible number.
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325. It was so beautiful and sad.
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326. Dad hated the parties.
He'd lock himself in the study,
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327. and bang on the walls
for us to keep it down,
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328. but he always came out to see Mom dance.
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329. He'd linger in the doorway,
scotch in hand,
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330. and watch in awe, as this cynical,
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331. despicable woman he married...
took flight.
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332. And as a child who was completely
terrified of both my parents,
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333. I was always aware
that this moment of grace,
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334. it meant something.
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335. We understood each other, in a way.
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336. Me and my mom and my dad,
as screwed up as we all were,
Copy !req
337. we did understand each other.
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338. My mother, she knew
what it's like to feel your entire life
Copy !req
339. like you're drowning
with the exception of these moments,
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340. these very rare, brief instances,
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341. in which you suddenly remember...
you can swim.
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342. But, then again, mostly not.
Mostly you're drowning.
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343. She understood that too.
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344. And she recognized that I understood it.
And Dad.
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345. All three of us were drowning,
and we didn't know how to save each other,
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346. but there was an understanding
that we were all drowning together.
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347. I would like to think
that's what she meant
Copy !req
348. when we were in the hospital
and she said, "I see you."
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349. The weird thing
about both your parents being dead
Copy !req
350. is it means that you're next.
Copy !req
351. I mean, you know, obviously it's not
like there's a wait list for dying.
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352. Any one of us could get run over
by a Snapchatting teen at any moment.
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353. And you would think that knowing that
would make us more adventurous,
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354. and kind, and forgiving.
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355. But it makes us small,
and stupid, and petty.
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356. I actually had a near-death experience,
recently.
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357. A stunt went bad
and I fell off a building.
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358. I'm an actor. I do my own stunts.
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359. I'm on this new show Philbert.
I'm Philbert. Star of the show.
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360. It hasn't come out yet,
but it's already getting Emmy buzz.
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361. Oh, speaking of buzz...
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362. I've to take
two of these every morning,
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363. but my days are so screwed up
'cause of the shooting schedule,
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364. I don't even know
what morning means anymore.
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365. There's a joke in there somewhere,
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366. about a guy
who's been to so many funerals,
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367. he doesn't even know
what mourning means anymore.
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368. Let you guys figure that one out
for yourselves.
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369. Anyway, you know what I thought...
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370. when I was falling off the building
and I went into panic mode?
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371. The last thing that my stupid brain
could come up with before I died?
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372. "Won't they be sorry."
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373. - Cool thought, brain.
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374. No, that wasn't...
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375. Would you just... Dial it back, all right?
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376. I don't even know what "they"
I wanted to be sorry.
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377. My mom, even before she died,
could barely remember who I was.
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378. And of course, my dad's dead.
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379. The last conversation I ever had with him
was about his novel.
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380. He was so certain
this book was his legacy.
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381. Maybe he thought it would vindicate him
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382. for all the shitty things he ever did
in his stupid worthless life.
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383. Maybe it did. I don't know.
I never read it.
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384. Because why would I give him that?
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385. I used to be on this TV show
called Horsin' Around.
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386. Seriously, hold your applause.
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387. - Well held.
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388. It was written by my friend Herb Kazzaz,
who's also dead now,
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389. and it starred this little girl
named Sarah Lynn.
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390. And it was about these orphans.
And early on, the network had a note,
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391. "Maybe don't mention
they're orphans,
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392. because audiences tend
to find orphans sad and not relatable."
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393. I never thought the orphans were sad.
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394. I always thought they were lucky
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395. because they could imagine their parents
to be anything they wanted.
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396. They had something to long for.
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397. Anyway, we did this one season finale,
where Olivia's birth mother comes to town.
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398. And she was a junkie,
but she's gotten herself cleaned up,
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399. and she wants to be
in Olivia's life again.
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400. And of course, she's like a perfect
grown-up version of Olivia,
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401. and they go to the mall together
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402. and get her ears pierced,
like she's always wanted and—
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403. Sorry, spoiler alert for the season six
finale of Horsin' Around,
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404. if you're still working
your way through it.
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405. Anyway, the horse tries
to warn her, "Be careful,
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406. moms have a way of letting you down."
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407. But Olivia just thinks
the horse is jealous,
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408. and when the mom says
she's moving to California,
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409. Olivia decides to go with her.
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410. And the network really juiced
the cliffhanger:
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411. "Is Olivia gone for good?"
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412. But of course, because it's a TV show,
she was not gone for good.
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413. Of course, because it's a TV show,
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414. Olivia's mother had a relapse
and had to go back to rehab,
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415. so Olivia had to hitchhike
all the way home,
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416. getting rides from Mr. T,
Alf, and the cast of Stomp.
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417. Of course that's what happened.
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418. Because, what are you gonna do,
just not have Olivia on the show?
Copy !req
419. You can't have happy endings in sitcoms,
not really,
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420. because, if everyone's happy,
the show would be over,
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421. and above all else,
the show... has to keep going.
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422. There's always more show.
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423. And you can call Horsin' Around dumb,
or bad, or unrealistic,
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424. but there is nothing more realistic
than that.
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425. You never get a happy ending,
'cause there's always more show.
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426. I guess until there isn't.
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427. My mom would hate it if she knew
that I spent so much time at her funeral
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428. talking about my old TV show.
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429. Or maybe she'd think it was funny
that her idiot son
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430. couldn't even do this right. Who knows?
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431. She left no instructions
for what she wanted me to say.
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432. All I know is she wanted an open casket,
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433. and her idiot son
couldn't even do that right.
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434. I'll stand up here and pretend
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435. I understood
how to please that woman,
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436. even though so much of my life has been
wasted in vain attempts to figure it out.
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437. But I keep going back to that moment
in the ICU when she looked at me, and...
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438. "I-C-U."
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439. "I... see... you."
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440. Jesus Christ,
we were in the intensive care unit.
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441. She was just reading a sign.
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442. My mom died and all I got
was this free churro.
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443. You know the shittiest thing
about all of this?
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444. Is when that stranger behind the counter
gave me that free churro,
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445. that small act of kindness
showed more compassion
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446. than my mother gave me
her entire goddamn life.
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447. Like, how hard is it to do something nice
for a person?
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448. This woman at the Jack in the Box
didn't even know me.
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449. I'm your son.
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450. All I had was you!
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451. I have this friend.
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452. And right around when I first met her,
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453. her dad died, and I actually went with her
to the funeral.
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454. And months later, she told me
that she didn't understand
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455. why she was still upset,
because she never even liked her father.
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456. It made sense to me, because I went
through the same thing when my dad died.
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457. And I'm going through the same thing now.
You know what it's like?
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458. It's like that show Becker,
you know, with Ted Danson?
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459. I watched the entire run of it,
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460. hoping that it would get better,
and it never did.
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461. It had all the right pieces, but it just—
It couldn't put them together.
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462. And when it got canceled,
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463. I was really bummed out,
not because I liked the show,
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464. but because I knew it could be
so much better,
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465. and now it never would be.
And that's what losing a parent is like.
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466. It's like Becker.
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467. Suddenly, you realize you'll never have
the good relationship you wanted,
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468. and as long as they were alive,
even though you'd never admit it,
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469. part of you,
the stupidest goddamn part of you,
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470. was still holding on to that chance.
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471. And you didn't even realize it
until that chance went away.
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472. "My mother is dead,
and everything is worse now."
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473. Because now I know
I will never have a mother
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474. who looks at me from across a room
and says,
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475. "BoJack Horseman, I see you."
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476. But I guess it's good to know.
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477. It's good to know
that there is nobody looking out for me,
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478. that there never was,
and there never will be.
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479. No, it's good to know that I am
the only one that I can depend on.
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480. And I know that now and it's good.
It's good that I know that.
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481. So... it's good my mother is dead.
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482. Well. No point beating a dead horse.
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483. Beatrice Horseman was born in 1938,
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484. and she died in 2018,
and I have no idea... what she wanted.
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485. Unless she just wanted what we all want...
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486. to be seen.
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487. Is this Funeral Parlor B?
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