On March 9, 1994, the universe finally collected the tab on the “Dirty Old Man” himself, Charles Bukowski, who checked out of this absurd mortal coil in San Pedro, California. At 73, leukemia accomplished what decades of catastrophic whiskey consumption, violently cheap cigars, and the existential horror of the United States Postal Service could not. He died having thoroughly dismantled the polite, cellophane-wrapped fiction of the American Dream, leaving behind a staggering mountain of visceral, beautifully unvarnished poetry that made the literary establishment collectively clutch its pearls.
The man spent the vast majority of his adult life operating aggressively on The Fringe. He was a creature of the racetrack and the dive bar, a guy who effectively treated his own liver like a hostile combatant while typing out literature that bypassed the brain entirely and punched you squarely in the balls. He was the patron saint of the spectacularly flawed, the chronically unemployable, and anyone who ever looked at a nine-to-five job and felt the urgent, biological need to vomit.
The most magnificent detail of his departure – the absolute chef’s kiss on a life lived with middle fingers permanently raised – is his gravestone. It features the silhouette of a boxer and exactly two words: DON’T TRY.
Now, some saps, the ones who write poetry about dew drops and puppy dogs and other such horseshit, will interpret that as a resignation, a surrender to the inevitable crushing weight of existence. And if you think this was some sort of slacker mandate or an endorsement of perpetual lethargy, you are entirely missing the point. Those of us who’ve actually read the man, who’ve tasted the bile and beauty in his sprawling, messy oeuvre, know better. This was certainly not an invitation to lie back and let the world roll over you. It was the opposite of laziness, a middle finger to effort that pretends, to straining after immortality or Cadillacs or applause. Don’t force it. Don’t posture. Don’t grind your teeth and squeeze out art likes it’s a dump you scheduled. Wait. Watch. When the thing – the line, the image, the liver-kick truth – crawls close enough, you reach out and slap it down or pet it, depending. But you don’t chase it down the street waving a net made of MFA workshops and ambition. You do it because it’s there, aching to get out, not because you’re trying to be somebody.
He believed real art should feel effortless, gritty, unforced. No pretentions. No counterfeited depth. Just the raw spill of whatever was rattling around in the skull after the bars closed. And if didn’t come? You waited. You drank. You typed anyway. But you didn’t try.
And then came the funeral, a masterclass in cosmic irony. You might expect a man who chronicled the chaotic, grease-stained realities of Post Office and Factotum to be sent off with a violently rowdy wake involving broken bottles and cannons (a la H.S.T). Instead, his funeral was conducted by Buddhist monks. Yes, a chorus of serene, chanting ascetics offered up a profoundly quiet, surreal contrast to a lifetime defined by spectacular, screaming chaos. It is exactly the kind of wildly unpredictable punchline the old man would have loved.
He left behind a body of work that still smells like sweat and cigarette ash and the inside of a bus station at 2 a.m. He wrote about losers, drunks, gamblers, the chronically unlucky – and in doing so, he made them mythic. Not heroic, not redeemed, but seen. He carved out a literary kingdom for the people who never get statues, only arrest records.
And maybe that’s why he still matters. Because in a culture obsessed with polishing itself into oblivion, Bukowski remains a reminder that the truth is usually found in the stains, the cracks, the parts of life that don’t photograph well.
So raise a terribly cheap glass to Bukowski today. He was a glorious, infuriating disaster of a man who accidently captured the rawest elements of the human condition while actively trying to ignore them. And whatever you do today, just don’t try.
N.P.: “Hot Stuff” – Mythic Prophesy














