2001 was pretty weird. I was 16, chubby, had braces and carried around a neon green Sony Discman CD player with obnoxious looking behind-the-back earphones. I was obsessed with Dance Dance Revolution, hair dye and hanging out in a digital world that consisted mostly of Starcraft and Internet Relay Chat on a sever named after creatures from Final Fantasy.
Kids at my high school in Ohio called me gay on the virtue that I carried a messenger bag as opposed to a Jansport backpack (nice purse, fag!) and because I had no passion for sports other than my aggressive pursuit of underage drinking.
As you can probably tell, I was pretty adverse to sunlight - so much to the point that when my parents would plan vacations to semi-exotic locales like Cancun or Hilton Head that involved venturing south of the Mason-Dixon, I'd skip out. Instead, I'd get a plane ticket to New York City along with a little bit of spending money. This happened annually for a three-year period, but the destination was always the same: my cousin Kevin's apartment; a third-floor walk up in a tenament around the corner from Liquiteria in the East Village.
Despite our significant age difference (11 years), we had been very close from the moment he threw a Genesis controller in my hands to play Golden Axe with him in the early 1990s. Looking back on it, I don't know how the fuck Kevin was able to tolerate the teenage version of me on an annual basis in his shotgun apartment for a week at a time.
My memory of exactly what happened is a little bit hazy. I remember sitting on Kevin's floor while his grey blob-shaped cat Quentin rubbed up against Sleater-Kinney jewel cases and Sega Dreamcast accessories. At some point, Kevin wandered over to his CD player and pressed play.
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