Heavyweight - #52 Lenny
Episode Date: October 5, 2023Lenny was Jonathan's childhood best friend, but they drifted apart as they grew into adulthood. Now, Lenny is dying and needs a friend. So Jonathan makes the call. Credits Heavyweight is hosted and p...roduced by Jonathan Goldstein. This episode was produced by supervising producer Stevie Lane, along with Phoebe Flanigan. The senior producer is Kalila Holt. Production assistance by Mohini Madgavkar. Editorial guidance from Emily Condon. Special thanks to Lauren Silverman, Neil Drumming, and Jackie Cohen. The show was mixed by Bobby Lord. Music by Christine Fellows, John K Samson, Blue Dot Sessions, Katie Condon, Paper Rabbit, Boxwood Orchestra, Principle, and Bobby Lord. Our theme song is by The Weakerthans courtesy of Epitaph Records. Heavyweight is a Spotify Original Podcast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Do you wear shoes with shoelaces?
Or you wear Velcro?
Do you come up with these questions by yourself?
No, I have a writer's room.
No, I'm just curious.
I remember you used to like Velcro.
You said that anybody who is foolish enough to have to stoop down and tie their shoelaces deserves what they get.
That shoelaces get covered in urine and bile,
and that Velcro is the fabric of the future.
That's what you'd always say.
You have shoes with shoelaces, right?
I have shoes with shoelaces, yes.
Do you always double knot them?
No.
You don't?
Any other compelling questions, Johnny, that you have?
Hmm.
If you showed up to a bowling alley
With a watermelon
You think they'd let you bowl with it?
I'm Jonathan Goldstein
And this is Heavyweight
Today's episode
Lenny.
Right after the break. The number one feeling, winning, which beats even the 27th best feeling, saying I do.
Who wants this last parachute?
I do.
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Back when I was a kid, I often carried around a tape recorder.
An outstretched mic created a buffer between me and the world.
Recording was my way of managing life, and so I recorded everything.
My parents' arguments.
She's good natured.
There's a difference between stupid and good natured.
Their phone calls.
Hannah, I'm telling you, it's rocket fish, but stunk.
My mom pretending to audition for soap operas.
Amanda, darling, how are you today?
Mostly, though, I recorded myself.
I made radio plays.
Fruit Steam Productions present
the Adventures
of Natalie.
With no one to share in my love for
a medium DOA since the Truman administration,
I put on the plays alone, all the voices performed by me for an audience of zero.
Our story opens up where Nedley is about to get up.
Ah, what a lousy day.
That's our Nedley.
Nedley was an 11-year-old spitfire who did as he pleased.
Since I myself was an 11-year-old rule-following nerd,
Nedley was my id.
Here comes Boom Boom.
She's my dream girl.
Hi, Nedley.
Hi, hi, hi, hi, hi, hi, boom, boom, boom. And the whole psychodrama played out as a one-man show.
This movie was directed by Jonathan Goldstein,
screenplay by Jonathan Goldstein.
All voices in it are done by Jonathan Goldstein.
This is a Jonathan Goldstein production.
It was all just me and my microphone.
Until the day Lenny came along.
I was 12 years old when we were first introduced at a birthday party.
Immediately, Lenny asked me what blood type I was.
Oh, I said uncertainly.
blood type I was. Oh, I said uncertainly. Me too, he shouted, genuinely excited to find some small thing we shared. I was an aloof kid, but was quickly won over by Lenny's goodness. And the
fact our mothers were already best friends made our best friendship feel faded. Plus, that Lenny
proved as obsessive about recording as I was
sealed the deal.
The weekends revolved around our recording radio plays.
Lenny and I would sleep
in the same fold-out in his parents' den.
His dad, Izzy,
a large man with a thick Polish accent,
would make us breakfast
in just his underwear,
his undershirt tucked into his jockeys
like it was some style imported from the old country.
One time, trying to explain to Izzy
how I liked my eggs and having no success with fried,
I described two suns and a cloud.
Lenny loved that so much
that he started ordering his eggs that way too.
Two suns and a cloud.
Two suns in a cloud.
After breakfast, we'd head to Lenny's bedroom,
shut the door, and record all morning.
We were a gang of two.
Golden Lennox presents...
The Lennox was from Lenny,
the gold from Goldstein. For the first time, I no longer felt alone
Together, Lenny and I recorded prank phone calls
Our parents' dinner parties
And we made radio play after radio play
Creating characters like Flip and Will
Two burned out radio DJs
We take you to Flip
Flip is going to introduce me
No, no, Flip is taking you to Will, okay? Will.
No, Will is taking you to Flip. No, back to you, Will. Back to you, Flip.
Okay.
As a part of the Flip and Will radio show, we did live phone outs to our quote-unquote listeners.
In the 80s, dialing a phone was so arduous, it's surprising people even bothered.
But without driver's licenses or money, Lenny and I made the effort.
The phone brought us a sense of freedom and adventure.
Okay, it's ringing.
It's ringing. Peace be with you.
Hello, what would you do if you had a million dollars?
This is a television survey.
Give it off to him.
Why, thank you.
This station needs it.
Bye.
Bye. The Cold War is not over. It never was.
This is Lenny Now, age 52.
John, what is not understandable about this?
Because I'm getting frustrated now.
I'm in Minnesota, and Lenny is in Canada.
We haven't spoken in nine years.
And at the moment, for some reason, we're discussing Russia's role in Ukraine.
Well, still there?
In our late teens, Lenny and I began to have less and less in common, and we drifted apart.
Our first conversation in almost a decade is not going well.
I mean, I'm not sure that I fully get it.
You mean that...
It's really simple. I mean, it's not that complicated. It's not.
Yeah.
We destroyed communism using their communism.
Now they're destroying capitalism using our capitalism.
Okay, I'm sorry, John, I guess it's not your subject.
The last time I saw Lenny was back home in Canada.
Our mothers, who are still best friends,
thought it'd be nice
for the families to get together. Lenny showed up at the restaurant with a shaved head and thin
chinstrap beard. With the way he kept his arms crossed and his posture erect, that evening Lenny
had something of the dictator about him. He was living in the bachelor's apartment in his parents'
basement in Chamonix Laval, a suburb we grew up in just outside of Montreal. Lenny drove a school bus for Orthodox Jews and said the Hasidim
had nicknamed him the surgeon because of how he zipped through narrow streets with such precision.
At the end of the meal, Lenny asked if I wanted to go outside and smoke a joint,
a for old times' sake kind of thing. The idea of smoking a joint outside a suburban strip mall restaurant
while our aged parents waited inside was unappealing, so I said no.
At least stand outside with me, Lenny said, and keep me company.
But I dug my heels in, and Lenny grew angry.
We parted on bad terms that evening, almost 10 years ago.
And that was the last time I saw Lenny
or thought too hard about him.
Until now.
The reason Lenny and I are speaking right now
is because he has only months to live.
Lenny is dying of pancreatic cancer
and is undergoing chemotherapy and radiation.
He's recently gone through 11 hours of surgery to keep the cancer from spreading,
but it was no use. Even though that first conversation went poorly, I continue to spend
my evenings talking to Lenny. Because somewhere in the back of my mind is the memory of the kid
from my childhood, the kid who stayed by my side, tending to my adult-sized depression.
In the darkest hours of my teens, I remember days and nights spent in Lenny's bedroom,
just lying in his bed under the black bulb of his light fixture,
listening to Pink Floyd and Iron Maiden, too scared to face the world.
Back then, Lenny would reassure me, telling me to think all the bad thoughts I could,
to get them out of my system,
to exhaust them,
so that eventually I'd only be left with the good ones.
Being with Lenny was one of the few places where I felt safe.
And so, I call him again and again.
Hey, John.
Hey, Lenny. How are you doing?
Uh, same shit.
Yeah.
Our conversations usually occur at night,
with Lenny still in his parents' basement,
the same basement where we spent our childhoods,
and me wandering the silent streets of my Midwestern neighborhood.
During these phone chats, I never know what to say.
I struggle to find common ground, but always come up short.
When I bring up old mutual friends,
Lenny speaks of them resentfully.
With jobs, it's the same.
The idiots at the trucking firm,
the anti-Semites at the refrigeration company.
On the rare occasion I raise something personal about myself,
it gets no traction.
When I tell him how I'm now a father of a five-year-old, Lenny, a bachelor, says that people who have kids only do it for ego reasons.
Mostly, we stick to the subject of Lenny's pain, which is brutal.
He can't eat without pain, stand, or even lie down without pain.
Sometimes, he'll put the phone down,
and I'll listen to him as he howls from the bathroom.
There are drugs, some prescribed and some not,
but no matter, there's always pain.
And anger at the pain.
And anger at, what seems like, me.
On most nights, after a typical conversation,
I come home and say to my wife, Emily, that maybe this is a bad idea.
We drifted apart for a reason, I say. We're strangers.
And yet, even though Lenny doesn't seem to even want to talk to me, we continue to talk, night after night.
I'm beginning to get the impression that maybe he has no one else.
You don't mind if I eat a little while?
No, no, no, of course not.
Well, wish me luck.
Lenny says he wants to leave something behind,
and so we record, just like we did when we were kids.
Back then, we performed different characters.
Now, ostensibly, we're just ourselves.
Mmm.
I really outdid myself with the rice.
Lemon, lime, garlic, and pepper.
Wow, nice.
Nothing complicated.
And it is gorgeous.
Great.
And how's your sleep been?
I sleep like shit.
What do you think?
I have to take a med every two hours.
A horrible life. Lenny is no longer the sweet, lonely kid who told me not to squat the housefly in his bedroom
because he was his pet,
the boy with whom I'd been so close
that I'd run my hands through his thick black hair
as though it were my own.
Smooshing it up into the air,
I pretended I'd invented the latest in men's hairstyles,
the Beethoven.
That Lenny seems to be long gone.
Even though Lenny and I weren't in touch,
over the years, when I'd ask after him,
my mother would always say the same thing.
Lenny and his parents were fighting like cats and dogs.
Lenny's father died about a year ago.
Now it's just him and his mom. Do you see your mother every day? Unfortunately, I make an attempt to treat her like a human being.
And every day she disappoints me. She's a gross mother. My father too, he was gross.
Too gross for me. But you loved him. You loved your dad. Yeah, I did. But he was a gross man. My father, too, he was gross. Two gross people. But you loved him.
You loved your dad.
Yeah, I did, but he was a gross man.
Always did everything that made his life easier.
My life harder.
Lenny's parents had had another son before him,
but because of profound mental and physical disabilities,
he was institutionalized.
After that, they adopted Lenny. Both Lenny and I
were raised by parents who saw screaming and hitting as the solution to all of life's child
rearing dilemmas. But from Lenny's perspective, worse than that was the neglect. Lenny's dad
worked a lot, and his mom always seemed to have more time for her friends than for him.
It's something Lenny still can't let go of.
It's called normal responsibility.
You know what I mean?
All my friends got it.
How come I didn't?
Yeah.
Well, what's so unspecial about me that I get the shitty fucking neglect, you know?
I did my best.
That's my favorite line, I did my best.
You know, if that's the best,
maybe you shouldn't have bought it. Yeah. That's my favorite line I did my best. You know, if that's the best, maybe you shouldn't have bought it.
That's your best.
I'll tell you the truth.
I'm looking forward to having that one last chance
knowing that it's finally done
and I can just, like, rest.
Because it's been a bitch.
This life has been a bitch
and it's mostly because people have been a bitch.
And they remain bitches.
What does one owe a childhood friend,
especially when that friend seems to have changed so much?
Over the course of our phone calls,
a question that keeps kicking around in the back of my mind
is whether all of Lenny's anger has somehow eaten up the goodness.
I continue to phone Lenny over the next couple months
in hopes of seeing it, feeling that goodness again.
And so we talk, about the sex ed books at the YMHA library,
watching The Love Boat on Saturday nights
when his parents were out with my parents,
raiding his mom's freezer for TV dinners
while playing ColecoVision.
Mostly, though, I just listen and try to be there.
And over time, Lenny grows softer with me,
and I grow less afraid of offending him,
afraid of offending a dying man.
And then one night, I receive a message.
Listening to it now, I'm struck by how much Lenny's voice had mellowed since our first conversations.
Instead of Jonathan or John, Lenny calls me Johnny, just like he did when we were kids.
Like he did when we were best friends.
Hi, John. I'm sorry to call you directly like this without signaling or anything,
but it's been a development and I needed to talk to you as soon as you can.
Yeah, John, is it too late?
No, no, no, it's okay. How are you?
Not well, John. It's hard to tell you anything else
I'm sorry
what's going on
I'm just I'm weak
I'm going to go into palliative care
okay
there's no other recourse
yeah
it's getting harder and harder to function at home
yeah because I'm not too good with pain John it's getting harder and harder to function at home yeah
I'm not too good with pain John
well you've been dealing with so much of it
no I mean my whole life
I've never been good with pain
I'm a whiner
I'm just a big wuss
it's funny through everything
the pain's still there
pain never ends
even with the drugs yeah
it's not bad John
I don't foresee getting better
if I suddenly disappear or you know I can't talk to you
you know I'm probably like gone
I had my last drive yesterday
I drove around the Laval
just like one last highway ride
it's not a huge deal.
I did a lot of driving in my time.
I have plenty to remember.
I'm dying anyway.
I have bigger things to think about.
What do you find yourself thinking about?
Nothing.
I lived as well as I could in my capacity
I had good experiences at least
you know
wasn't the best life of all lives
but it wasn't the worst either
could have been worse
that's the legacy of my life
could have been worse
just gonna have to
I just want to enjoy looking at the sky
looking at things
yeah
revealing and being alive
and I still am
I remember the last lady
she was scary
who's this? the last lady, she was scary.
Who's this?
The last lady witch.
She was a little pudgy.
Remember?
Lenny would sometimes drift into delusions,
imaginary flights that would weave throughout our conversation.
But other times, the delusions were mixed up with childhood memories,
like time had collapsed and Lenny was all ages at once,
dying but also back to an age when his parents drove us to the mall in their Cutlass Supreme.
So if you want the front seat, go grab it now.
The delusions were tender and vulnerable,
and observing them was like standing over his bed, watching him dream.
Maybe I should just go home.
I'm dead tired.
For some reason, we're at the Y taking a course.
We're at the Y.
We're at the YMHA taking a course.
Fuck, I'm really delusional. No, it's okay.
It's okay.
It's okay.
I'll tell you if I can't follow.
It's so weird, though, that I would have such a delusion.
Maybe it's a subconscious desire to visit with you in a normal way, in a normal setting.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, we're visiting for holidays, normal, everything's normal.
is normal, everything's normal.
So, um,
when was it?
When were we going to see each other?
In a couple weeks.
The plan is for me to see Lenny during a
visit back home, my first since
COVID. Hope I lost that one.
Yeah.
No, I'm serious.
I'm not being facetious.
Yeah.
It's down to the wire.
Maybe the last few weeks
of things.
Maybe. I don't know.
Don't get depressed or anything.
Lenny wasn't just saying,
I don't want to bum you out.
He was one of the few people
who knew how fragile I could be.
Even now, he was trying to protect me,
even as he was dying.
It's hard to say that,
but I wish you were here.
Yeah.
I wish you were here.
Yeah. Yeah.
Recently, my therapist recommended ketamine to me, a drug sometimes prescribed for untreatable depression. In my case, she thought it might help shift my perspective, which still tends
towards darkness. A day after Lenny and I had this conversation,
while taking several hits from my ketamine inhaler
and about to go for a Saturday morning run,
I was suddenly overcome with sobbing and a feeling of unreality.
As a man inured to epiphanies, I was shaken.
Like most, I don't often see my existence on Earth
approximating anything close to a quote-unquote arc.
Instead, things come in flashes.
I'm four years old, eating a chocolate bar at my Aunt Tilly's house,
taking such tiny bites that Tilly calls me the mousy.
My theory is that if the bites are small enough, it will last forever.
I'm six, regretting having told my father about my kindergarten crush, because he's just
told a table full of relatives about it. I will never trust this man again, I think. I'm 15,
and seeing a breast for the very first time. European sunbathers are at the same beach as me.
The image will claw its way into my thoughts over and over for the next 10 years.
I'm 16, getting turned down to prom on a city bus.
Lorraine Kaufman is telling me that only I would ask someone to prom on a city bus.
Then, for some reason, I'm 50 and moving to Minnesota.
While waiting at JFK for the flight that will take me and Emily
and our then two-year-old son,
Augie, to our new life, Augie walks up to a stranger and hugs his legs and I burst into tears.
A smell, a meal, a day at the beach, and so goes a life.
Without the record button pressed down,
life is fragmented and fast and nearly impossible to make sense of.
Narrating it helps me to shed light, but always in retrospect.
With the ketamine coursing through me, though,
I saw the dots illuminate and connect,
each handing off with purpose, one to the other like a succession of dominoes.
Tracing the seemingly useless years that got me to where I was, with the wife, the child to the other, like a succession of dominoes. Tracing the seemingly useless years
that got me to where I was, with the wife, the child, the job, it all felt so precarious,
like I was standing on a narrow column of shoeboxes. It filled me with vertigo.
To the question of what one owes a childhood friend, in my case, I owed Lenny everything.
It was through knowing him in those
early years that the base of the tower was formed. It was in making tapes together in his bedroom
that I discovered a feeling I'd pursue towards a career. Suddenly, I could see how everything
counted, that Lenny counted, that my love for Lenny counted. I wanted Lenny to know this. I wanted him
to know that while our personalities
might have driven us apart, a deep-rooted love brought us back together. But later that day,
I got a call from my mother informing me that Lenny had died. We'll see you next time. Winning in an exciting live dealer studio, exclusively on FanDuel Casino, where winning is undefeated.
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In the months after Lenny's death, I'm unable to let go of how I wasn't there for him in his last days.
I obsess over what his final moments might have been like.
I begin accidentally calling my son by Lenny's name.
I do this so often that eventually my son begins to ask,
who in the world is Lenny?
I try to answer him, but never know quite how.
We were best friends when I wasn't much older than you, I say.
And then I get COVID, and I isolate in my basement.
I watch all the old movies Lenny and I used to watch.
Animal House, Monty Python, Annie Hall.
But instead of laughing, after each punchline, I cry.
Lenny had an older cousin named Betsy,
who'd taken on the task of cleaning up Lenny's basement.
I reached out to see if Betsy could set aside
some of Lenny's art or photos for me,
but she said that wasn't something I should pursue.
It's not a situation where I don't think
you'd want any of his coveted items.
That place was a hoarder's paradise.
It was filthy.
That place has not been cleaned in 40 years easily.
And there was vermin.
It probably could have been condemned.
Betsy says that Lenny had taken the baseboards off the walls
with an eye towards renovation.
But then he let the project go and never put them back,
which allowed mice into the house.
And the mice got into everything.
My dad had stopped by to do an errand for Lenny's mom and had the same kind of report. It was like going into a dark
subterranean world, he said. My father described Lenny's room as cluttered with books and DVDs
from floor to ceiling, the windows blocked out so the son couldn't get in. How could anyone live under those circumstances, my father said.
How could anyone, and especially how could Lenny?
I keep thinking about how when we were kids,
winding up in our parents' basements
would have been our worst nightmare.
How could Lenny have ended up living out his last days
in the very place he despised most?
That was always the thing that he never
wanted to happen. This is Lenny's ex-girlfriend, Louise. Lenny and Louise dated in their 20s.
I first met her at a bar one night after having not seen Lenny in years. They were coming from
a Kiss concert, and both Lenny and Louise's faces were painted, Louise as Peter Criss and Lenny as
Ace Frehley.
They both wanted to go as Ace,
but Lenny said that would have been ridiculous.
I think I was 18 years old
when I met him.
Oh, I remember he just
there was this
depth about him
that I recognized
immediately.
And it just automatically attracted me to him.
I remember being on the back of his motorcycle and being scared shitless every time.
Holding on to him so tight. I remember
his dog, Max, and how much he loved that dog.
I mean, to know that he finished there in the basement.
Why?
Not only did Lenny hate the basement,
he hated the whole suburb of Chamity.
We both did.
We attended Chamity High, nicknamed Comedy High,
because it was so bad it was laughable.
Pipe bombs in the bathrooms,
a geography teacher who was a flat earther,
and a music teacher who married a student.
I eventually left Shamedy, but Lenny never did, never even left his childhood home.
How could our lives have diverged so?
He was very unhappy.
This is Dimitri, a high school acquaintance who Lenny reconnected with on Facebook in the last year of his life.
Dimitri was the person Lenny saw most during his
illness. He works at a local
Greek restaurant and would bring Lenny salads
at the end of his shift.
He was lonely. I used to talk about
how it would have been nice if he
had a girlfriend and some kids
or he had a kid. It would have been nice
if she was always alone.
I never saw him with anybody, ever.
He would ask me to hug him a lot when he was sick.
He would always ask me to hug him.
I think Leonard didn't feel really much love in his life then.
Dimitri also knew that Lenny didn't want the basement for his home,
let alone his final home.
When I tell him how I've been trying to make sense of how it happened,
he has a theory.
Drugs.
Drugs.
When you say drugs, you mean pot?
Pot, mushrooms, LSD.
Leonard used to like to take acid, a lot of acid,
and just trip out in his room in the dark.
Have a tall look at whatever works,
whatever keeps the demons away there,
but that's a little fucked up.
Ending up in the basement solely because of drugs
doesn't ring true to me.
While the drugs might have helped with the demons, they didn't create the demons.
Plenty of people smoke pot, take LSD, and still leave the house, travel the world.
Lenny, I'll kill you!
Among my childhood cassettes is another of my mother's performances,
but this one wasn't a soap opera audition.
It's of my mother pretending to be her
best friend, Lenny's mom, Hannah. I'll kill you. I'll take that boy and kill him. During those last
conversations, Lenny confessed to not only feelings of resentment towards his own mother, but towards
my mother too, for taking up so much of his mother's time, time she could have spent on him.
for taking up so much of his mother's time,
time she could have spent on him.
As for his dad, Lenny saw Izzy as a constant threat.
This is from another Flip and Will tape.
Okay, the lines are open now.
In the play, I perform the part of Lenny's father,
who crashes straight into the Flip and Will show.
Oh, shit.
What is this, you stupid... Go smack it up.
You stupid...
Come on.
You stupid ass.
Izzy would get physical on occasion,
but our parents weren't so different.
My father favored the belt,
while Izzy delivered what he called pachkas, or slaps.
And in terms of our
mothers, if Hannah had been so often absent because of her friendship with my mother,
then it meant my mother was absent too. So was Lenny just more sensitive than I was,
or was he dealing with more than I knew?
Okay, you just jogged in memory.
This is Louise again, Lenny's ex-girlfriend, with another theory.
Louise recalls a day in college when she stumbled upon what felt like a key.
A key that predates the drugs, me and Lenny's friendship.
It even predates the upbringing he received from his parents.
It was my class for developmental biology.
Okay.
And we were studying the brains of children at that point between zero and 12 months.
And we were looking at separation anxiety.
And we were studying that.
And I remember being appalled when I learned that at seven months, that is when a child's separation anxiety develops.
That's when they know what their mother's face looks like and that's when they start crying when you're handed to another person.
crying when you're handed to another person.
And I remember being appalled because I remember Lenny telling me that he was adopted when he was like six months old.
And that his mom told him that all he ever did was cry.
And I remember coming home that day after school and going,
oh my God, no wonder you cried all the time,
because you knew that this wasn't your mom.
To heal from the loss of his biological mother,
to help him deal with just being a sensitive kid,
Lenny could have used extra support.
But instead, he got less.
Just before his mother was kicked out of the convent,
he was christened Andy Asphalt.
Just as I had created the alter ego of Nedley to feed my id,
Lenny created an alter ego named Andy
that fed Lenny with something I could never put my finger on.
But re-listening to the numerous Andy tapes we recorded all these years later,
Andy feels like an expression of Lenny's vulnerability.
His desperate need for
more love from a parent.
Through the years, he was raised
with fellow orphans.
He never knew the meaning of
mother or father. All he knew
the meaning was of hate.
All the kids would nickname
him.
You're a bastard.
I'm a bastard. Oh, mother.
You have none.
Andy was the only four-year-old child in the orphanage
who every day would sit down in his bed and contemplate suicide.
Oh, no one loves me.
Everyone hates me.
What did I do?
I've got to leave.
I've got to get out of here.
I've got to get out of here somehow.
You know?
I knew by age six I was in trouble.
I knew by age 12 that life's going to be a little harder than I thought.
And I knew by the time I was 18, 19
that I got to get out of here
and then stay out.
I'd already learned helplessness,
I guess.
I've always wanted to write a book,
Lenny said, during one of our late night conversations,
where everything the hero
does is wrong.
I think a lot of books are like that,
I said. A lot of lives are like that. You don't understand, Lenny said. And maybe I didn't.
Perhaps a lot of what we take as a life choice is already encoded in us at a very young age,
younger than we can even remember.
And by then, it's already too late.
The moments are already handing off,
one to the other like those dominoes that cannot be stopped.
Supposedly, Lenny's biological mother was a 15-year-old girl who eventually came to realize she couldn't raise him on her own.
Who knows what those first six months were like for Lenny
and how they dictated the life
to come. Maybe Lenny was wrong. Maybe his paralysis, his inability to leave the nest,
wasn't, as he said, learned helplessness, but innate helplessness, the kind a baby feels.
Maybe for Lenny, the feeling just never faded away. I was with him all the way to the end.
the feeling just never faded away.
I was with him all the way to the end.
This is Dimitri again.
I remember the last day there.
He goes to me, he calls me up, he goes,
he goes, look, he goes, can you come over and be with me tonight?
He goes, because I'm going to die.
He said it.
I said, shut up, I'm not like that, you're going to die.
He goes, no, he goes, I'm going to die.
He goes, I'm going to die tonight.
He goes, can you just come and be with me? He goes, I don't be alone you know i'm like yeah yeah of course then then i stayed with him and um we smoked a couple of joints together um had a couple of drinks a couple
shots of whiskey i did and um i was just telling him, you know, Leonard, I go, it's okay, you know,
you can go if you want, you know,
don't worry about it.
You know, just, if you need to go, just go.
Because I never made it to Chamity before Lenny died,
because I wasn't there to hug him
or to just hold his hand,
I'm left with a terrible sense of loss.
Of the many questions I have about Lenny's last days,
the one that weighs on me most heavily is about Lenny's anger
and whether it ever subsided.
Do you remember what his state of mind was on that last day when you went there?
Oh yeah, he was completely at peace.
He wasn't worried or scared at all.
I think he had accepted his fate.
I think he was just, honestly, I think he was just tired.
I think he wanted to just go.
He seemed to be okay, though.
He wasn't nervous.
He was just quiet.
I have a video of his last words.
Oh, wow.
What message do you want to share with everybody, bro,
now that you're at the end?
Dimitri sends me the video he took,
and when I hit play, I gasp.
I knew how sick Lenny had been,
but I guess, irrationally,
I'd been imagining him on the other end of the phone line,
looking more like the last time I'd seen him,
at the restaurant with his parents.
In the video, though, Lenny looks cadaverous.
If you had one message for the world, what would that be?
And he sat for about ten seconds, he thought a bit, and he goes...
Love more, fight less.
Fighting doesn't get you far.
Love more, fight less.
Fighting doesn't get you far.
Nor does anger.
In one of our last phone calls in the final days of his life,
Lenny said that he was so weak he could hardly lift himself from the toilet without his mother's aid.
I asked if, in general, his mother was being helpful.
She's trying. She really is
trying. I have to get her out. She's succeeding, too. She's the only help I got. I need her.
It was the first I'd ever heard Lenny acknowledge his mother's effort,
which is to say, it's the closest I'd ever heard Lenny come to forgiving her.
It's the closest I'd ever heard Lenny come to forgiving her.
I knew Lenny in the beginning and can only speculate about the middle.
But I do see that, in the end, in spite of the pain and the delusions,
he allowed his sweetness to shine through.
While I may never know where Lenny's anger came from, I do know where it went.
He laid it down
at long last
to rest. guitar solo
guitar solo Now that the furniture's returning to its goodwill home
Now that the last month's rent is scheming with the damage deposit
Take this moment to decide
If we meant it, if we tried
Or felt around for far too much
From things that accidentally touched
This episode of Heavyweight was produced by me, Jonathan Goldstein,
and supervising producer Stevie Lane, along with Phoebe Flanagan.
Our senior producer is Kalila Holt.
Production assistance by Mohini McGowker.
Special thanks to Lauren Silverman and Neil Drumming.
Editorial guidance from Emily Condon.
Bobby Lord mixed the episode with original music by Christine Fellows,
John K. Sampson, Blue Dot Sessions, Katie Condon, and Bobby Lord.
Additional music credits can be found on our website,
gimletmedia.com slash heavyweight.
Our theme song is by The Weaker Thans, courtesy of Epitaph Records.
Heavyweight is a Spotify original podcast.
Follow us on Twitter at heavyweight, on Instagram at heavyweightpodcast,
or email us at heavyweight at gimletmedia.com.
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