Monday, November 21, 2011

John Wayne Gacy, Jr, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Embrace the Sobering Truth







I listen to this song when I feel wrong. When I was getting tired of the craziness Juniors Abroad last May, I lay on my Paris hotel room bed, listened to this song and cried for the world. It's a sobering truth in the light of our relationship with God. We all fail. And it's all just as bad. We all are disgusting sinners.   I'll give myself a minute to wallow in it, pick myself up, and then go ahead and try to figure out what am I going to do about it?

His father was a drinker
And his mother cried in bed
Folding John Wayne's t-shirts
When the swingset hit his head

The neighbors they adored him
For his humor and his conversation
Look underneath the house there
Find the few living things, rotting fast, in their sleep

Oh, the dead
Twenty-seven people
Even more, they were boys
With their cars, summer jobs

Oh my God
Are you one of them?

He dressed up like a clown for them
With his face paint white and red
And on his best behavior
In a dark room on the bed

He kissed them all
He'd kill ten thousand people
With a sleight of his hand
Running far, running fast to the dead

He took off all their clothes for them
He put a cloth on their lips
Quiet hands, quiet kiss on the mouth

And in my best behavior
I am really just like him
Look beneath the floor boards
For the secrets I have hid.

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