
Around the turning of the New Year, I decided to make a directional change to my wardrobe. It was time to step up my clothing game, I felt. Part of it was for me, of course…I just thought it was high time for a change, and with all the changes happening this year, it seemed like a good time to do it. A lot of the reason for the change, though, was a reaction to exactly how trashy this culture has become. When I go about anywhere, it seems the bulk of the herd has become unapologetically out of shape, sloppy, and stupid. They lack any sort of critical thinking skills, and their vocabularies are pitifully small.
We need to get serious about the vocabulary situation because the current state of linguistic affairs is frankly embarrassing. It’s a wasteland out there. People walking around with five-dollar haircuts and ten-cent vocabularies, content to grunt monosyllabically while the English language – that great, sprawling beast of expression – gets slowly suffocated by emojis and corporate buzzwords. Not on my watch. Today we are digging into the dark stuff. The heavy stuff. The kind of word that sits in your mouth like a piece of lead shot before you spit it out at some unsuspecting bureaucrat.
Today’s word is tenebrous. It means dark. But not just “I turned off the light” dark. We’re talking about something shadowy, obscure, and generally gloomy (which, now that I think about it, describes my last 20 years pretty accurately). It’s the kind of darkness that implies difficult comprehension, moral ambiguity, or the specific lighting conditions of a San Francisco bondage club at 03:00 on a Wednesday when the bartender has stopped making eye contact.
It comes from the Latin tenebrosus, which itself crawls out of the primordial sludge of tenebrae (darkness). The French got their sticky fingers on it (ténèbreux) somewhere in the Middle Ages before it landed in English in the 15th century, presumably dragged there by some brooding poet who found “dark” too pedestrian for his specific brand of suffering.
I was halfway through a plate of eggs that looked like they’d been cooked in a radiator when the realization hit me that I was essentially vibrating. The coffee in this place was less a beverage and more a tactical assault on the central nervous system, a tar-like substance that tasted of burnt rubber and cancer. I was trying to ignore the man in the booth next to me, who was loudly explaining the geopolitical significance of Bitcoin to a waitress who clearly just wanted to go home and watch the Real Housewhores of Wherever-the-Fuck, but the brutal, unadulterated madness of the situation was becoming impossible to ignore.
My own head felt like a bag of cats. I had spent the previous night arguing about the inherent dishonesty of modern brutalist architecture with an English major who kept trying to buy me shorts of cheap tequila…Cuervo, specifically, which I am medically forbidden from consuming but which I, once enough social pressure is applied by the right girl, inevitably consume in quantities that will kill a lesser apex predator. The sun outside was offensively bright, a glaring, accusatory glare in the sky that seemed personally offended by my hangover, but inside the diner, things were different.
The air conditioning was rattling like a dying lung, and the smell of old grease was so thick you could almost chew it. I looked down at my notebook, where I had scrawled three incoherent sentences about the declining intelligence quotient in America’s universities and a drawing of a lizard wearing a top hat. It was garbage. Absolute trash. But then the door swung open, blocking out the painful daylight, and for a second, the entire back corner of the diner was plunged into this weird, heavy shadow, a sudden, tenebrous gloom that seemed to swallow up the sound of the Bitcoin enthusiast and the clatter of silverware, leaving me alone with my palpitations and the sudden, terrifying clarity that I should probably order more toast.
N.P.: “Faxed Invitation” – Underworld





