Текст песни Snow, Love, and Sludge (Toybox mix) - Shael Riley
I've
got
a
gift
But
the
gift
needs
batteries.
In
some
way
I'm
sick.
I
can't
get
it
out
of
me.
I've
broken
all
the
wishes
that
I
can.
And
if
you
leave
me
now,
If
you
would
leave
me
now,
Then
my
death
be
complete.
But
I'm
a
tin
man.
I'm
a
toy
soldier.
And
you
know
where
I
sleep.
It
was
the
year
after
I
graduated
from
college.
In
January,
I
go
down
to
Baltimore,
to
do
some
voice
acting
for
a
tiny
production
company
making
their
first
game.
They
operate
out
a
disheveled
house,
owned
by
a
recovering
alcoholic--the
president
of
the
company's
father.
The
president
himself
is
a
quietly
impish
man,
as
hospitable
as
he
is
enigmatic.
As
gaudy
as
he
is
impeccable,
as
much
a
conceptual
humorist
as
a
businessman.
There
is
a
trophy
that
says
"Number
One
Rapist"
with
his
name
printed
underneath,
Sitting
on
his
desk,
and
he
won't
explain
it.
Sometimes
he
wears
a
dress.
His
girlfriend
is
fat,
but
pretty.
I
spend
two
weeks
drinking,
going
to
the
mall
and
watching
movies.
No
one
in
the
company
seems
to
do
any
work,
but
the
vice
president
does
receive
packages
From
record
labels
who
think
he
might
be
in
a
position
to
afford
licensing
their
artists,
From
time
to
time.
We're
making
a
dance
game.
Ten
days
into
the
trip,
my
girlfriend
comes
to
visit
us...
And
a
woman
who
will
eventually
become
a
stripper
buys
her
a
nightie.
She
is
the
ex-girlfriend
of
the
vice
president.
They
aren't
on
good
terms
but
she
needs
a
place
to
stay
for
the
night
And
he's
going
to
drive
her
to
the
airport
in
the
morning,
After
they
sleep
together.
Me
and
my
girlfriend
sleep
together
too,
As
do
the
president
and
his,
the
one
who
is
fat
but
pretty.
And
for
one
night,
the
whole
company
is
swallowed
up
in
sex.
In
the
morning,
which
is
four
PM
for
us,
we
go
down
to
the
basement
and
record
the
voice
overs.
The
session
only
lasts
about
four
hours
and
it's
the
only
session.
But
for
the
next
five
months,
when
people
ask
me
what
I've
been
doing
since
I
graduated
from
college,
I
tell
them
I've
been
doing
some
voice
acting.
From
February
to
May,
nothing
of
significance
happens.
My
girlfriend
flies
to
Japan
to
become
an
exchange
student.
I
get
a
three-month
trial
membership
at
a
gym
And
the
highlight
of
my
day
becomes
fifty
minutes
on
the
elliptical.
This
is
because,
during
this
trial
period,
it's
the
only
thing
I
leave
the
house
for.
I
spend
a
lot
of
time
chatting
online,
and
I
call
"networking."
I
change
my
dietary
habits:
no
cheese
or
red
meat,
empty
carbs
or
fried
food.
I
eat
garlic,
and
raw
ginger,
and
I
will
live
forever.
A
twenty-dollar
rice
cooker
improves
my
quality
of
life.
I
lose
fifty
pounds.
I
make
an
appointment
to
have
that
hand
surgery
I've
been
putting
off;
For
two
years
carpal
tunnel's
been
stealing
my
ability
to
play
guitar,
but
I
can
still
type.
In
May,
I
get
a
job
in
a
writing
lab
at
a
local
community
college.
It's
a
good
job.
Although
It
doesn't
give
me
any
satisfaction
from
helping
people.
I'm
not
even
sure
I
am
helping
people;
I'm
probably
under-qualified
to
do
that,
but
what's
important
is
that
it
doesn't
give
me
the
dissatisfaction
I
would
get
from
working
retail—the
only
other
viable
option.
I
discover
previously
unimagined
nuance
regarding
correct
usage
of
the
definite
article.
In
July,
the
surgery
goes
well,
but
heals
badly.
I
can't
type
anymore.
The
only
potentially
marketable
skills
I've
ever
had
become
inexpressible,
dormant
and
begin
to
atrophy.
I
write
off
this
disability
as
temporary
until
October,
when
I
slip
into
a
slow,
sustained
panic.
I
start
to
worry
that
my
limited
ability
to
use
my
left
hand
is
affecting
my
brain,
As
I've
read
that
doing
activities
that
use
both
hands
in
consort,
Like
playing
piano,
or
guitar,
or
typing,
improve
general
cognition.
Maybe
they're
vital
to
general
cognition;
maybe
they
don't
just
improve
it.
At
work,
my
change
in
demeanor
does
not
go
unnoticed.
I
overhear
my
boss
saying
she's
going
to
fire
me
on
the
phone
And
I
tell
her
I
won't
be
coming
back
next
semester
in
order
to
save
myself
the
disgrace,
And
immediately
she
cuts
my
hours,
leaving
me
with
more
time
to
go
crazy.
My
girlfriend
returns
from
Japan
to
me
in
this
state
and
is
not
unaffected.
She
ends
up
leaving
me
for
a
guy
named
Bob,
which
ruins
"Bob"
as
a
throw-away
name
for
me.
Which
is
a
shame,
since
"Bob"
kind
of
my
go-to
throw-away
name.
In
November
I
shave
my
head
down
to
stubble
and,
for
a
while,
I
feel
monastic.
Then
I
feel
cold.
I
find
myself
sitting
several
times
a
week
in
the
same
Burger
King,
At
the
same
time
of
day,
eating
the
same
meal:
Diet
Coke,
small
fries
and
a
BK
Veggie.
The
worst
of
two
broad-spectrum
dietary
paradigms.
The
healthy
eater
wouldn't
get
the
fries,
but
the
big
fat
guy
would
get
a
real
burger.
Typical
American
martyr.
I
gain
back
the
50
pounds.
One
weekend
I
go
to
Philadelphia
with
a
small
film
production
company
for
a
convention,
And,
in
the
dealer
room,
I
run
into
the
vice
president's
ex
girlfriend.
She's
become
a
stripper
and
has
a
lot
of
money
now.
I
invite
her
back
to
our
hotel
and
she
has
a
lot
of
sex
with
one
of
the
guys
from
the
production
company
in
the
shower,
And
on
the
bathroom
sink,
and
in
one
of
the
bedrooms
and,
For
the
first
time
in
a
long
time,
I'm
reminded
of
Maryland,
And
the
vice
president,
and
the
president,
and
his
fat
but
pretty
girlfriend.
The
next
morning
it's
my
birthday.
I
don't
tell
anyone,
letting
the
rough
cut
film
premieres
and
hotel
room
drinking
proceed
sans
any
potential
minor
complication.
And,
for
the
first
time,
during
long
on-screen
pauses
that
the
director
asserts,
Addressing
the
audience
as
they
occur,
will
be
filled
up
by
music
in
the
finished
version,
I
feel
old.
I
thought
I'd
felt
old
before,
on
previous
birthdays,
but
I
hadn't.
What
I'd
felt
was
the
fear
of
feeling
old.
The
severity
of
the
difference
between
the
two
cannot
be
emphasized
enough.
Consider
a
roller
coaster
vs.
a
car
crash.
I
don't
do
very
much
in
December.
I
fantasize
about
web
log
entries
I
will
never
make,
in
which
I
would
fantasize
about
things
I
would
never
do,
were
I
to
make
them.
A
whole
new
layer
of
inefficiency
opens
up
to
me.
I
shave
my
head
down
to
the
skin,
as
though
doing
so
would
prepare
me
for
my
own
death.
I
give
up
writing
music.
The
willful
cessation
of
self-defining
activity.
This
is
a
way
to
experience
one's
own
death
and
the
hereafter.
And
the
hereafter
stretches
on.
And
on.
And
on.
And
on.
And
on.
And
on.
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