Showing posts with label Amelia Morris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amelia Morris. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Joe Lies
by Amelia Morris
The summer before tenth grade, I was confused. I had just quit gymnastics yet retained the look of a slightly taller Kim Zmeskal circa 1992 and was starting a brand new school in the fall.
The only thing I had going for me was the one friend I’d made in my new town. That summer, needless to say, she was my best friend. She was also a total punk rocker.
At my previous school, I had fallen comfortably into a sort of alternateen identity. I listened to Liz Phair, Tori Amos, Smashing Pumpkins and dressed accordingly—tshirts from thrift shops and cargo pants. But as anyone who has attended high school knows, if I wanted to fit in with my new group, I would need to cloak my Zmeskal-ian body with a brand new identity or risk being completely alone forever.
I bought a pair of doc martens, cut my hair short, tore up and patched my jeans, bought a shit load of punk rock CDs, (and so sadly, no, I didn't start with The Clash or The Jam or even The Sex Pistols. I got me some freshly used Op Ivy, Swinging Utters, Anti-Flag, and Minor Threat) and I started going to shows. "Not a concert, Mom. A show! And… I hate you!"
For the most part, it worked. I had a new group of friends and no one called me a poseur, except for my then on-again-off-again crush and now husband, Matt, who was no longer punk, but New Wave and who called me out for the alternateen I really was.
The only problem was I couldn't stand the music I'd bought. I hated the shows, too, especially the mosh pits. All the songs were too fast and too loud, and why was everyone so angry? I was way too young to be jaded—I didn’t mind the system or the suburbs and, to be honest, my mom was a really nice person.
But then came “Joe Lies” and The Bouncing Souls, and slowly my head began to bob along. Was this considered punk, too? Because I liked this. I liked how the song sort of swelled and then fell into the bridge that made me wait to belt out the refrain. I liked the lyrics too with their simple, relatable message: No. More. Lies! (For some reason, it rang truer to my tiny ears than Anti-Flag’s, You gotta DIE gotta DIE gotta DIE for the government!)
No more lies indeed? By Christmas the following year, I'd found a new group of friends, dropped the old ones in the classic, awkward way that you stop being friends with people with whom you’d previously shared jagged half-heart necklaces, grown my hair out the best I could, purchased Pablo Honey and The Bends, and was generally back to my old self again. My old self with some Bouncing Souls coming out of my step-dad’s Subaru’s stereo, that is.
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