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	<title>Killspeak &#187; ttc</title>
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		<title>I yakked at Eglinton</title>
		<link>http://killspeak.lucasrizoli.com/2007/07/04/i-yakked-at-eglinton/</link>
		<comments>http://killspeak.lucasrizoli.com/2007/07/04/i-yakked-at-eglinton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Jul 2007 06:00:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lucas</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Personal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[anecdote]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[barf]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[puke]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[subway]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ttc]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vomit]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Peter Lynn would like to write a book called The Greatest Puking Stories Ever Told, and I would like to buy it. Not only for the fact that he&#8217;s a good writer, or that he would like to publish it as a handsome leather-bound, but because I enjoy hearing barf stories&#8212;and, honestly, who doesn&#8217;t? Drunk [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Peter Lynn would like to write a book called <a href="http://manvsclown.cracked.com/2007/07/the_greatest_puking_stories_ev.php" title="Man vs. Clown: The Greatest Puking Stories Ever Told"><cite>The Greatest Puking Stories Ever Told</cite></a>, and I would like to buy it. Not only for the fact that he&#8217;s a good writer, or that he would like to publish it as a handsome leather-bound, but because I enjoy hearing barf stories&#8212;and, honestly, who doesn&#8217;t? Drunk or sober, young and old, nothing is as sure to involve and amuse as a good vomit story. That time you puked on your pillow and were too tired to clean it up. That time you put a Swiss Chalet meal back in the container it came in an hour after eating it. That time you followed a trail of what seemed to have once been fried rice and whiskey down some stairs to find three underage drinkers comically passing around a soggy paper bag, laughing and saying <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0105793/">&#8220;If you&#8217;re gonna spew, spew in this.&#8221;</a> That time you vomited for a large audience.</p>
<p>Some friends and I were returning home from a party at a friend&#8217;s place (where the toilet had <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountain_(Duchamp)" title="Wikipedia: Duchamp's Fountain">&#8220;R. Mutt&#8221;</a> scrawled on the side of the bowl). She lived way up by York University, a long subway ride away from home. We were travelling on a Sunday: the trains were few and far between and the cars were pretty full.</p>
<p>I was spinning. We had all had quite a bit to drink; I had all of the night&#8217;s good times souring inside me. Before stepping into the train, I was trying to reassure myself that I did not need to vomit. When at that point, of trying to soothe your stomach with words first imagined and then silently mouthed to yourself, vomiting is inevitable.</p>
<p>My friends weren&#8217;t any help. They&#8217;re the kind of people who, when made aware of your need to barf, will taunt you, jab you in the stomach, impede your frantic scramble for the washroom. You&#8217;ll be throwing up in the bathroom, long past the point of swearing you&#8217;ll never drink again, and reach one of those moments of respite where your body is deciding whether or not to retch some more. My friends? They&#8217;ll be right outside the bathroom waiting for that very moment to begin to make loud retching sounds, provoking another spell of vomiting. They&#8217;ll keep on doing it too, until you&#8217;re exhausted, at the brink of consciousness, just as hoarse from the bile as from cursing their names.</p>
<p>When I answered a curious &#8220;Are you alright?&#8221; with a bleary-eyed nod and a stifled burp, they knew exactly what state I was in. From Finch to Lawrence station, I tried to keep my eyes on the advertisements and the tunnels rushing past the window, away from my friends&#8217; sly grins and fake half-retches. It was awful.</p>
<p>At Lawrence, a group of cheerful young girls came onto the train and sat across from me and my friends. They were sunny, happy, chatting loudly, and perfumed. Their pungent, vanilla-like reek made my stomach churn. I swung against the doors and closed my eyes. I had a wet mouth. It was going to happen.</p>
<p>The doors opened, I rushed out into Eglinton station and met the nearest garbage bin with a big fist of puke. I held onto the garbage and emptied myself. At first it came with strong pumps, but soon became painful and drawn-out, like squeezing all you can from a tube of toothpaste. It was loud. It was gross. It was in full view of everyone in the subway car.</p>
<p>The car driver had left the doors open, perhaps because of a shift-change, perhaps out of kindness (not wanting me to miss the train and have to wait for another). When I had finished, I turned around to see the occupants of the car watching me. They were silent, embarrassed, disgusted. The chirpy early-teen girls were wide-eyed and still. I boarded the train less aware of my acid breath than of the way I was being judged. This was not what the other passengers had wanted to see on Sunday morning. Except my friends. They seemed okay with it.</p>
<p>Lynn, your book idea is great. Think of it: sections dedicated to hasty cover-ups and last-minute dashes, cautionary tales of survival, and leather covers that&#8217;ll be easy to wipe. It&#8217;ll be a bestseller.</p>
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