by Bill Tiepelman
The Floral Jester's Solitude
Once upon a timeβbecause everything always seems to start with βOnce upon a timeβ and Iβm not about to break traditionβthere was a clown. And not the fun kind either. No balloons, no honking noses, just one seriously depressed jester sitting in a chair that looked like it was stolen from a 1950s grandmotherβs house. You know, the kind with way too many flowers and that questionable smell of lavender and... regret. The clown, whose name was probably something ridiculous like βBingoβ or βSparkles,β sat there for days. Or maybe it was years. Itβs hard to tell when your only companions are flowers that smell better than you and shoes that are two sizes too big. He wasnβt quite sure how he ended up in this floral prison, but he had a feeling it involved one too many tequila shots and a dare gone horribly wrong. Clowns, after all, werenβt known for their life choices. As Sparkles (weβre just going to call him that) slumped deeper into the overstuffed armchairβlike a sad sack of potatoes in a velvet tracksuitβhe sighed. Not a cute little sigh either. It was more like the kind of sound you make when you realize your credit card bill is due, and youβve been buying βself-careβ items from online influencers for three weeks straight. Yup, Sparkles was tired. And not just βI need a napβ tiredβno, he was bone-weary, soul-crushing, existential-crisis tired. The kind that comes from a life of painted smiles and pratfalls, all while your internal monologue is screaming βWhy do I even bother?β The flowers didnβt help. They were too bright, too cheerful, like those people who always tell you to βlook on the bright side.β If Sparkles had a dollar for every time someone said that to him, he wouldnβt be sitting in this hideous chair. Heβd be in a mansion somewhere, probably still miserable, but at least heβd have good Wi-Fi. He looked at the petals around him, blooming with obnoxious, vibrant joy, and wondered if they were mocking him. If flowers could laugh, these ones would sound like a bad laugh track from a 90s sitcom. βOh look at you, Sparkles,β they seemed to whisper, βsitting there all mopey while weβre out here thriving. Pathetic.β But it wasnβt his fault. He tried, okay? He tried the whole 'happy clown' thing, but it turns out thereβs only so much glitter and red nose-wearing a person can do before the crushing weight of absurdity sets in. And now? Well, now he was just a weird guy with face paint, sitting alone in a chair that screamed βIβve given upβ louder than his last relationship did. The flowers werenβt the only weird thing though. There was a strange smell. It wasn't coming from himβthough let's be honest, he wasn't exactly fresh. No, this smell was more... floral? But also kind of like old socks? The kind you find in the bottom of your gym bag that have been there since the last time you actually exercisedβwhich was, letβs face it, 2017. Sparkles wrinkled his nose and glanced around. Maybe it was the chair? Had the chair always smelled like that? It had definitely seen some things. He was pretty sure if it could talk, it would tell stories that would make him blush. And he was a clown. Blushing was practically part of the uniform. One of the flowersβa particularly smug-looking roseβswayed gently as if to say, βWhat, you thought this was going to get better? Honey, youβre a clown in a floral chair. Just embrace the weirdness.β And honestly, that was solid advice. Sparkles took a deep breath, or at least as deep as you can when youβre wearing pants made of satin that squeak every time you move. He decided then and there to stop caring. If the flowers wanted to mock him, fine. If his shoes were too big, whatever. If he was sitting in what looked like the living room of a retired circus performer who had an unhealthy obsession with floral patterns, so be it. He was Sparkles, dammit, and if this was his life now, he was going to make the most of it. He reached down, grabbing one of the overgrown dahlias next to him. βHey,β he muttered to it, βyouβre coming with me.β The flower didnβt resist (because, letβs be real, it was a flower). He placed it in the pocket of his garish jacket, giving himself a little flair. If he was going to be a sad clown in a ridiculous chair, at least he could accessorize. And that was that. Sparkles, now with a newfound sense of defiant apathy, sat back, crossed his oversized feet, and stared off into the middle distance, waiting for whatever came next. Probably more flowers. Or maybe a nap. Either way, he wasnβt going anywhere anytime soon. The chair had claimed him, and honestly, he was okay with that. After all, it wasnβt the worst thing that had happened to him. That honor went to the time he tried to juggle chainsaws at a bachelorette party. But thatβs a story for another day. Β Β The Ballad of Sparkles the Clown Oh Sparkles the clown, in his floral despair, Sits slumped in a chair that smells worse than the air. His shoes are too big, his lifeβs a sad joke, And his satin pants squeak every time that he spoke. βWhat the hell happened? Where did it go wrong?β He wonders while tugging his pant leg along. Was it the booze? The tequila? The shots? Or that one time with chainsaws? (He forgets lots). βThe flowers are smug,β Sparkles whispers with spite, βThey mock me, they taunt me, with colors so bright.β Those roses, those dahlias, those blooms full of cheer, He glared at them all with a cynical sneer. βOh sure, you look happy, so plump and so lush,β But you donβt know crap about being a mush!β He pulled at his ruffles, adjusted his nose, And mumbled some insults at the damned happy rose. His hair was like cotton, his smile was a mess, But Sparkles the clown was done caring, I guess. Heβd given up hope, tossed it all to the wind, And sat there like laundry no one bothered to spin. βScrew it,β he said, with a chuckle and snort, βIβm a clown in a chair. What more can I court?β He crossed his fat feet, leaned back with a shrug, And whispered, βLifeβs short. Letβs all just say... 'bug!'β So Sparkles stayed put, in his floral cocoon, A clown in the corner, humming some tune. If you find him someday, donβt ask him whatβs wrongβ Heβs busy not caring. (And the flowers? Still strong.) Β Β Feeling inspired by Sparkles' floral-infused existential crisis? Or maybe you just need something to brighten up your home that screams βIβve given up, but make it fashionβ? Either way, you can bring a bit of that quirky clown energy into your life. Check out throw pillows that will cushion your own self-loathing, or grab a fleece blanket to wrap yourself in while you ponder your poor life choices. If youβre more of the artsy type (and letβs face it, arenβt we all pretending to be?), hang a wood print of Sparkles on your wall and let him judge you from the corner of the room. And for those who really want to take the clown on the go, thereβs even a stylish tote bagβbecause nothing says 'I'm over it' like carrying your groceries with a sad clown by your side. Shop now and embrace the weirdness!