Columns > Published on June 17th, 2020

Writing, Weight Loss, and Cops

Original images via Andrea Piacquadio & Rosemary Ketchum

I pitched this before the protests, before the tragedy of George Floyd. I recently started using a health app called Noom. Even with the malaise of Covid-19 and the stress of trying to run a publishing company and write during the pandemic, I have lost weight. The app works, but I don’t know if the way the police do their job works. I know I should just talk about Noom and how writers could learn a lot from it, but I just got back from a protest and I can’t just talk about weight loss and writing. So I am going to talk about writing, Noom, and the problems with the police.

First, weight loss is hard and writing to get published is hard. In my experience it takes so much trial and error to succeed at these things. You try different genres and you try different diets. I was the Keto guy like three years ago and I guess now I am going to be the Noom guy. I’ve done Noom for a month and I’ve lost eight pounds. I like that it’s only eight pounds because it’s slow and steady and I’ve learned that slow and steady, whether it be writing or weight loss, is usually the way to make things stick.

At the rally I went to today, cops were giving out free pizza to the protestors...It made me think of something I learned in Noom...Eating a pizza can’t and won’t fix our problems, despite the momentary comfort it brings.

I see how doing Noom is pretty similar to how I approach writing. Time, routine, and consistency matter. I don’t write on certain days and that is okay, just like I sometimes fall off my diet for a day or two. As long as I get back to it the day after. What helps a lot with writing is I have fellow writers that I check in with to share my progress. Noom offers someone who checks in on you to see how things are going, along with a group of other people also trying to lose weight.

The writing habits I've developed over time have stuck. I don’t really fall off the wagon anymore. I just write without thinking much about it—it’s the publishing aspect that’s hard for me. I also wish weight loss could be easier for me, but the Noom app has definitely made a difference.

I first struggled with weight loss a decade ago, when I was in my early twenties. I had just moved to Washington, D.C. with my girlfriend and we had a rough breakup. I was also managing a porn store while trying to finish an MFA and start a band. I gotta be honest, if I knew writing, music, and weight loss would still be a struggle years later, maybe I’d be doing something else. Purpose is more important than hardship.

I didn’t just learn that writing and weight loss were hard while working at the porn store, I also learned there was a real toxicity within the police force. 

The Northeast D.C. and Maryland cops liked to hang out at the porn store a lot, probably because the conservative owner of the store thought it was a great idea to give free porn rentals to them. Most of these cops would walk in and act like assholes. They were just like the bullies from high school—no matter what race they were. There was just this disdain for non-cops and even the community they served. There was a rottenness that emanated off them. This was also the only time I ever snitched, because a lot of these cops wouldn't return the free rentals. I feel like snitching is always wrong, except when you are calling out cops. Ironically these guys thought they were above most rules and laws. There was something about the culture of cops that felt off, outweighing anything positive.

But what about the good cops?

I did meet a “good” cop. I’ll call him Officer J., a young African-American from the D.C. area who also struggled with his weight. We both got addicted to the Ethiopian and Caribbean food in the neighborhood (which was mostly African American and Ethiopian). He was supposed to walk around and patrol the area (which seemed more like military occupation than policing). Instead of doing that he’d hang out in the porn store and watch comedy specials.

Officer J. did the bare minimum in all areas. He would hang out while I worked on my novel and read. I wouldn’t say we were friends—more like work colleagues. He was a good guy and, ironically, his lack of motivation set him apart from the other cops, but I wouldn't say he was a good cop. I noticed cops like Officer J. didn’t want to troll the block, which a lot of the other cops loved to do. He didn’t want to make waves, and made sure to stay cool with the other cops. He wouldn’t even help me get back the damn porno tapes that my boss was going to make me pay for.

The ‘good cops’ like J. just wanted their pay and pension and to not get involved with the messy and problematic politics of the job. The cops that actually liked being cops were the ones who always started shit, who really relished the militarized aspects of the job. Cops who let a toxic culture and historical systemic racism force (or maybe allow) them to be less a part of the community (even those of the same race) and more a authoritarian force. 

At the rally I went to today, cops were giving out free pizza to the protestors. It appeared to be a nice act, a way to bring goodwill, but it made me think of something I learned in Noom: we turn to food like pizza to assuage the bad feelings we have and erase the guilt and anxiety we feel. Eating a pizza can’t and won’t fix our problems, despite the momentary comfort it brings.

I am not saying I have the answers about how to reform the police, but a fucking pizza isn’t going to bring back all the innocent black lives that have been lost. I wish there was an app to help, like with dieting or writing, but it’s going to take moving mountains for the police to demilitarize, and it will involve change on a local, state, and federal level to reform an institution many people feel does more harm than good. On the scales of justice, there is too much dead weight to feel good about how the police do their job.

About the author

Christoph Paul is the Managing Editor and owner of CLASH Books, who have published over 60 books and have been covered by NPR, Poets & Writers, Rolling Stone, Believer Magazine, Oprah Magazine, The Observer, Fangoria, and Publisher's Weekly. The press has had books translated into Spanish, French, and Italian. He has been editing books in almost every genre for over a decade. As an author, he won a humor award and had viral cult success under a pen name. He is the lead singer and bass player of the rock band The Dionysus Effect, who have received positive reviews in Loudwire, EARMILK, and Red Rock Magazine. He sometimes writes songs about the books he publishes because even artists are inspired by their day jobs. Follow him on Twitter @christophpaul_ @clashbooks @dionysuseffect.

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