The Twit in the Quit, Part II
I had reached quit-month three,
it had not been much fun,
but it seemed somewhat better than
back in week one.
I'd abandoned my evil twin back
in Slip City,
I thought my quit status was now
sitting pretty.
So I left on a road trip to most
points southwest
to put my quit up for a rigorous
test.
I passed out of New England,
and crossed a big river,
I made it past Scranton with hardly
a shiver.
I gassed up across Mason-Dixon's
old line,
saw hump juniors on sale for just
one eighty-nine!
But I stuck to my guns. It
would not be much fun
to destroy my whole quit by just
smoking just one.
So on to the motel in Maryland
I zoomed
where I smugly rented a nonsmoking
room.
I sat there in my skivvies, bare
feet on the table,
as I flipped through the great stuff
they send us on cable.
"I'm so lonely and bored, and
I've driven so far"
I complained, as I got my stuff
in from the car.
I swung the door closed, and
I heard a faint yell,
wafting from the convenience store
near the motel:
"we're just one eighty-nine,
and we'll taste mighty fine!"
The nicotine sirens had started
to whine.
"I'll ignore them and put myself
straight into bed,"
I told myself, "I know itís
just in my head."
But the whining continued well
into the night.
I covered my ears and I closed my
eyes tight.
I awoke the next morning with such
a bad crave,
I could think of no more than the
dollar I'd save.
All the tumors might turn out to
be quite benign,
and I could smoke humps for a buck
eighty-nine!
Then I thought to myself "I
sound just like a junky."
I thought a bit more and I got out
my trunk key
In the trunk was the reason, my
own next of kin,
In the trunk was old Winston, my
own evil twin.
"It's about time you found
me," he said with a smile
"I knew you'd been craving
some smokes quite a while."
"So where are we going today?"
Asked the twit,
a stow-away threatening to disrupt
my quit.
"You cannot come along, I do
not want you near,"
I told Winston, and saw he was shedding
a tear.
"But we've been such good friends"
he said, sniffling a little
"how bout if I smoke while
you munch on your Skittles?"
"Oh, all right," I
relented, sensing a fall.
"Unlike our old times, I won't
tempt you at all,"
said my evil twin Winston while
lighting a smoke
and he blew a cloud at me that near
made me choke
"You behave," I admonished,
a lump in my stomach,
"or I'll throw you right into
the muddy Potomac."
As I drove to my field sites,
old Winston rode shotgun.
It was so hot and sweaty with thorns
that were not fun.
He never helped out, he just sat
in the car
While I stumbled up hillsides through
woods near and far.
Poison ivy, mosquitoes, big ticks
and small chiggers,
The hardships of field work, my
worst smoking triggers.
I was done for the day, the sun
starting to set
We had just time to get out to Morgantown
yet.
So we skipped eating burgers in
East West Virginia
And headed up into the mountains
for dinner.
As I drove I heard ominous weather
predictions
That tornadoes would come in our
very direction.
The sky turned a sickly and pale
shade of green,
It was one of the scarier sights
I have seen.
Radio said "pull over do not
hesitate"
So we drove into Flintstone, off
I-68.
There was no sign of Barney, and
no sign of Fred,
But I soon would be wishing that
I was just dead.
Stores were closed except Billy
Bob's smokes and bait shop.
We went in there as hail really
started to drop.
Billy Bob and some locals were hanging
around
Saying funnel clouds touched down
just west of that town.
Rain came gushing straight down
and then straight to the side
I was wondering if we'd saved our
very backsides.
Winston said to me "look,
now it's just local blokes,
No one cares if you purchase a pack
of some smokes.
You could smoke them right here,
and you'd feel a lot better,
It's the best way to keep your mind
off of the weather."
I thought back to the last two months,
working so hard
At combating the habit, inch by
inch, yard by yard.
"It really won't count,
cause you're caught near some twisters"
said my evil twin Winston, no lover
of quitsters.
"Besides that, we're bored,
you're surrounded by smokers,
you might just as well join with
the rest of these jokers."
Winston knew my worst weakness,
that's what he does well.
All my best intents were slipping
straight into hell.
As pitchforks and hammer handles
fell from aloft,
I approached Billy Bob, asked for
Hump Juniors, soft.
He handed them over, I quickly unwrapped
them
Not knowing how badly I'd soon feel
like crap then.
Winston said "don't you worry,
just smoke all you want to"
And I pondered 'bout hell, where
my quit had just gone to.
Soon I wondered just how I had
gotten so hooked
On such foul-tasting stuff; I quite
nearly puked.
The second one tasted a little bit
better,
As my heart started up its old-time
pitter-patter.
The third made my brain buzz, a
hive of bad bees,
And I asked my pal Winston "got
another light, please?"
We smoked and we smoked and we
smoked til I choked
And I thought my quit status would
sure be revoked
Tobacco's a laxative, made me quite
queasy,
"How on earth did I start?
This could not have been easy,"
I thought, as I jumped in my car,
off I sailed
Leaving Winston to hitch his way
home in the hail.
He's been back many times since
that perilous trip
When I see him, I hide out of fear
that I'll slip
He comes by much less often in month
number nine,
So I think that my quit will continue
just fine.
As long as I see him before he sees
me,
I will stay here in Quitsville,
hunkered down but smoke-free.