Confessions of a Career Scumbag

Here’s a hypothetical situation I’d like you to consider.  You’ve got this friend who is, for lack of a better word, a career scumbag.  You knew this when you befriended him many years ago, but when you were both kids getting into fights, being loud and offensive in public, and generally pissing off anyone and everyone who crossed your path were your favorite pass times.  You were mostly compatible as friends back then but find yourself running on the strength of reminiscence and loyalty alone today.

You thought his stories of promiscuity, cheating, and heartbreak were funny and exciting. Secretly you were a little jealous. The more you listened to his stories and marveled wide-eyed at his conquests, the more you validated his cycle of sweet deception, sexual attainment, and brutal rejection of the opposite sex. He can go from 80’s mix-tape to telling the town about the stench of her privates in sixty seconds.

As a man you find his ability to perjure his way into a girl’s panties almost godlike. As a compassionate human being your association with him makes you feel embarrassed, and a little slimy.

When out on the town your friend makes it his personal goal to bad-mouth, mock, or offend everyone in the room. In the early days of the media’s “Operation Shock and Awe” on our generation’s minds, his brand of humor was edgy and pushed your comfort boundaries with him as well as the people he verbally ravaged;  but in the imposing shadow of South Park’s 11th season, the Don Imus situation, and a media that has turned offensiveness into a profitable commodity, your friend’s brand of humor is getting tired. When you acknowledge it at all it’s not with a dropped jaw and a look of shock, but with  rolled eyes, a shrug, and a yawn.

His biting words and venomous tongue have made him more enemies than friends through the course of your friendship, and more and more you find yourself forced to choose between him and the rest of the world.  Your sense of loyalty tells you to stick by his side while every molecule of decency, compassion, and common sense which comprises your mind and soul is telling you that your misplaced loyalty will have you follow him straight to a lonely Hell. It also tells you that he would not do the same for you.

The question I pose is as follows.  Would you stick by this individual, pretending that somehow you can affect him and reverse his malignancy? Or do you accept that some people grow apart; that your friendship had a good run, but the time has come to cash out?  Someone help me out.  This situation tears me apart, and I can’t afford a shrink.

4 Responses to “Confessions of a Career Scumbag”

  1. You Know Who Says:

    You write all this so delicately as if he (or she)would read this, not be offended by it and change his (or her) entire life patterns. The truth is you’re way over his (or her) head and the motherfucker NEVER listens, justs waits to talk.

  2. breich Says:

    I wrote it delicately because in a way I hoped he would, eventually, stumble upon this blog and read it. I don’t want to hurt him but I want him to know that he’s hurt a lot of people and that includes people that do or have cared about him.

    I think in one respect this friend of mine would be offended by what I wrote, but he’d act indignant as always and pretend that the many ways in which he intentionally makes himself unlikable are somehow endearing. He’d get angry with me (granted, that’s probably well-deserved) and I’d be another name on his list of enemies. I also know better than to think he’d change his lifestyle. He’s lost plenty of friends and lovers to his attitude, and I know one more isn’t going to change him; and I know his path in life is going to lead him to a dark place in life, I just fear that I’ll follow him there out of misplaced loyalty. At this point he’s forcing me to make a choice, and this time around I don’t think he’s going to win.

    Anyway thanks for the response. I’m glad someone knows where I’m coming from.

  3. dan Says:

    THIS IS ABOUT ME, ISN’T IT? Rabble rabble I hate you! :)

    Oh wait, I’m an awesome roomate. I miss the high-stepping hilarity and trash bag crawls to the kitchen for a saltine, soy sauce, and cereal dinner!

  4. Potts Says:

    I was in damn near the same situation with a person I considered my best friend since 7th grade. It came to a head when he said some things about my girlfriend that would get you shot a hundred years ago. It only got worse when he tried turning his family against me with his bullshit, but they saw through it. I work with this guy and he has alienated everyone we work with but its never his fault. In the end I only acknowledge him when I have to and his few overtures of peace with me have usually led me to reply with “why the fuck should I talk to you after what you have done”. It’s not easy, but sometimes you have to do it.

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