Metalepsis (me-ta-lep’-sis): Reference to something by means of another thing that is remotely related to it, either through a farfetched causal relationship, or through an implied intermediate substitution of terms. Often used for comic effect through its preposterous exaggeration. A metonymical substitution of one word for another which is itself figurative.
“You’re a bamboo shoot in shorts ticking all the boxes with your rubber stamp nose. Skinny as light coming through a crack in a wall in the bedbug central motel on the outskirts of hell. What do you think?”
I was talking to myself’s reflection in my full-length dressing mirror. I didn’t think much of what I saw. I made myself miserable and took off to catch the bus to work, which sustained my misery.
I worked as a tele-scam man. Today, we were doing “walk-in showers for old military veterans.” The whole point of the scam was to get a deposit from the mark. I affected an old man demeanor. I would call the mark “Sonny” and he would tell me he’s no “Sonny” and I would laugh and ask for his first name, but use “us” and “we” throughout the call. It worked almost always with over-eighties who I built strong identifications with—coordinating our selves and steering us where I wanted to go.
I hated myself for doing this eight or nine times a day. I was a deposit shark, a bullshit-filled balloon, a dirty joke, a heartless hoax. I wanted to shrivel up like an over-ripe tomato, be rolled down a bowling alley paved with broken glass, and explode in a shower of juice and seeds when I hit the pins.,
I had to pay my kid’s college tuition, my mortgage, credit cards, car payment, food and utilities bills, not to mention alimony. I was divorced and was tasked with taking care of my elderly father too. His needs are bigger than a boil on an elephant’s ass—think about it.
So, I pulled eight successful scams for the day and hopped the bus home. The guy sitting next me smelled like boiling water swamp water, scalding my nostrils with its steaming stench. I’d rather have my nails pulled out one by one, but I needed to get home in a hurry—my angst was waiting for me in the mirror—my brother in harms who reflects my misery while I narrate it.
I think I need a new job. Ripping off the elderly is taking its toll on my soul.
POSCRIPT
I got a new job. I am a ticket taker at “Golden Projections,” the local movie theatre. It’s unionized, and it barely pays the bills, but it has improved my self-image substantially. When I look in the mirror now, ready to go to work, I see a slack-jawed cynic dressed like a monkey.