Charles Bukowski A Veces Estoy Tan Solo Que Tiene Sentido Pdf I Info

At 4:00 a.m., he poured the cooking sherry. It tasted like regret mixed with cough syrup and a hint of rotting plum. It was perfect. He drank it warm, straight from the bottle, standing at the window in his underwear. The city was a grid of yellow lights, each one a cage with a different kind of animal inside. Couples sleeping back-to-back. Insomniacs watching infomercials. Children with fevers. None of them knew he existed. None of them would have cared if they did.

“A veces estoy tan solo que tiene sentido,” he said aloud, rolling the Spanish like a loose coin on his tongue. Sometimes I am so lonely it makes sense. At 4:00 a

He lit a cigarette. The smoke curled up toward a water stain on the ceiling that looked exactly like the state of Nevada. He’d been there once. Lost a hundred dollars on a horse named “No Dice.” The horse finished last. The jockey later tested positive for heroin. That was the closest thing to a miracle Henry had ever witnessed. He drank it warm, straight from the bottle,

He’d found the phrase scribbled on a napkin three days ago at a cantina in the bad part of town. A woman with a mustache and a gold tooth had left it behind. She’d been drinking mezcal with a man who kept crying into his sombrero. Henry had stolen the napkin. He didn’t know why. Maybe because the words were truer than anything he’d written in ten years. Insomniacs watching infomercials

The title at the top of the page read:

I am so alone that the walls have started to listen. They don’t answer, but they don’t leave either. That’s more than most people.