They all think
Mikey's mad, but Mikey isn't mad. Let me tell you
about Mikey. Mikey's the kind of guy who has too much
energy to contain in a smaller than average frame.
Always on the move, sitting at the pub table, legs
jittering, fingers fiddling; Mikey has a way of converting
beermats into...well, into bits. He looks around while
you are talking to him, like there are other things
he should be doing, if only he could name them. Looking
around for other people he knows and Mikey knows everyone.
He's a sound bloke.
I first met him peeing
up the door of a bank after closing time. That is
he was doing the peeing, not me. Most blokes I knew
around that time and that place would have been doing
this as a futile gesture of anarchic protest against
the greed orientated tyrants of debt laden third world
despair, but Mikey? He was doing it because his bladder
was full. I did not speak to him on this occasion.
It is kind of an unwritten law, an understanding between
the male group collective that one does not engage
in conversation with another male while both or either
of you is emptying a bladder. There are exceptions,
drunkeness in either or both parties being one of
them. This exception was in operation at this particular
juncture, but I exercised my right as a free individual
to walk past Mikey with just a nod of the head. It
was a week or so later when I was using the pub phone
that we first engaged in anything resembling conversation,
the phone was eating money and I was mugging my own
pockets in a pointless attempt to fish out some change.
"Here, take this quid coin mate", Mikey
to the rescue. Once I had broke into a fiver I drifted
over to where he was drinking with two or three girls
to give him back the pound, "No worries, mate,
it's only money..not a concern or hang up of mine,
generosity is a state of mind" was the reply
I received along with a refusal to accept the coin
I offered him. It was only in the following weeks
after we had gone through the saying hello a few times,
to sitting at the same table, to getting to know him
as a mate that he informed me that all the "generosity
is a state of mind" stuff was an attempt to seriously
impress one of the girls he was with on that night
who had just got into Buddhism and was still experiencing
the first flush of enthusiasm for a new life path.
The fact that one of the other girls had handed Mikey
a tenner to get her round in as she did not like going
to the bar, and it was some of her change he had generously
donated to the cause presented him with no inner turmoil.
That it turned out that the budding Buddhist had gone
for a trial period of celibacy did cause some internal
angst for Mikey, but like most things in his field
of awareness it didn't last for long.
So why do they think
Mikey is mad? Well, I suppose it is because he does
make his point in strange ways. He does this deliberately,
he says, to make a statement about aspects of our
society. Case in point: Bloke in the pub rattling
on about how great satellite and cable TV is, the
sport and all that. So Mikey stands next to him, brushes
invisable specks of dust from his baggy check trousers
and with malice of forethought inquires, "so
if I come round your house grab your television, video,
CD player, microwave, etc, and then offer to sell
it back to you, that'll be alright then?". This
bloke puts down his pint considers this in a silence
that is just short of long enough to gain effect and
replies, "what are you going on about Mikey?"
Mikey deals with this foreseen outburst by simply
repeating his question. This time, however, there
is no pause before the reply of "No, it wouldn't
be alright, you knob, Why would I want to pay money
to you to buy something I already own?" comes
this bloke's considered reply, said with deliberation
and emphasis in all the right places. Mikey looks
up at him, slowly drinks the remainder of his lager
top and says, "I dunno, but the satellite companies’
managed to get you to do it", turns and walks
off grinning to the gents with the words,
That was Mikey at
work, making social statements that most of his intended
pupils failed to understand, such were the subtleties
of the metaphors in his parables. I do not think I
shall ever lose the image of the four teenagers swigging
expensive designer beers straight from the bottle
after Mikey had informed them in detail about the
brilliant restaurant across the road that sold food
of a lesser quality than it had before, but for twice
as much money and made you wash up all the dishes
after you had finished. Yeah, I know, it took me a
while to get the point, but think of a pub that had
all it's customers drinking from bottles. No glasses,
no washing up, less money spent running the pub, you
would think that would be reflected in the prices
wouldn’t you?; and a bottle isn't even a pint.
Mikey's
not mad, maybe a lot of us are, but Mikey? Nah.