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Nonfiction

Black Hole/White Hole

10 November 2017
Categories: Nonfiction

A white hole is a hypothetical region in space, a mathematical probability that’s never been observed. It is an eruption of matter and energy, a moment of spontaneous creation.
–        Einstein’s Theory of General Relativity

_ _ _ _ _

I was counting the stars above Amma’s house, and I wondered whether the moon was a star. It wasn’t – I learned that in first grade, in a yellow schoolroom papered with posters of the Milky Way, the solar system, meteor craters and asteroid belts. The Sun, the Moon, Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto, which was still a planet then. Mrs. Rukmini said that if you shrunk the Milky Way to the size of North America, our solar system would fit inside a coffee cup. The moon, a dissolving grain swimming in that cup with the others – planets, comets, stars, a black hole. The entire solar system warms the palm of my hand.

_ _ _ _ _

A black hole is a region in space with a gravitational field so intense that no matter or radiation can escape it. Even light travelling at a speed of 186,000 miles/hour can’t escape. It draws its formidable strength from matter being shrunk into a tiny space. This happens when a star collapses and dies.

_ _ _ _ _

The Tell Me Why encyclopedia Tami got me for my sixth birthday teaches me everything I need to know. Each night before bed I thumb through a new section. Last week was Mammals, before that was Life-Forms and Oddities. This week I found Space; it is one of the longer sections of the encyclopedia and would take me more than a week. There is an entry on black holes, with a picture which shows their interior. The speckled debris around the edges – yellow, blue, purple, and white sparks – is supposed to be stardust. It’s pretty but I can’t tear my eyes away from its dark heart. These days I dream of dying stars.

_ _ _ _ _

Carl Sagan said, ‘It is better to grasp the universe than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring.’

_ _ _ _ _

On that night at Amma’s, I knew nothing of black holes and dying stars. I knew the moon and the stars, and I thought the moon must be jealous of the stars. On our old white wrought iron swing-set that was slightly tarnished by the rain, I lay with my legs in Amma’s lap as she patted me to sleep. I refuse to sleep indoors, in the safety of my cot under its cotton covering. I like the open skies, the night at a slant.

_ _ _ _ _

Scientists are fascinated by the two great mysteries of the universe: the moment of creation and the black hole. Neither of these phenomena can be observed or tested directly. Even so, some of our greatest minds have spent the entirety of their careers seeking answers that we have no way of knowing are right or wrong.

_ _ _ _ _

A tree grew beside Amma’s house, shooting all the way up to our balcony. Its branches bowed under the weight of webbed leaves and yellow flowers that it shed all year long, like golden rain perfuming the floor. Amma said that Mama had planted that tree. Mama had a green thumb. There’s a funny way genes have of showing up or not at all.

Of the many nicknames I’ve had, my favorite and least favorite at different times was given to me by my sister Tami, Cactus.

‘You’re prickly,’ she begins listing out.

‘Maybe,’ I say.

‘And you’re not much of a hugger,’ she goes on.

‘Oh yeah, definitely.’

‘Most of all, you’re happier on your own,’ she says.

‘So we shouldn’t blame the people I’m with?’

‘You’re my cactus.’

_ _ _ _ _

If the object stays clear of the black hole’s event horizon there is the merest possibility of its return, but past that is the point of no return. The object is eviscerated.

_ _ _ _ _

I can’t get used to seeing her old and frail. Watching the blue veins creep along the back of worn hands. Wrinkles piling upon wrinkles. I used to kiss her cheeks, which smelled faintly of lavender and rose oil, rushing on my way out to keep a play date, join in on a game of pithu, or live out some bookish fantasy.

W.W.N.D.D.?

What Would Nancy Drew Do?

At five I’d go around the neighborhood, a notepad and pen in hand, following unwitting neighbors, jotting down furious notes in attempt to uncover a big criminal conspiracy.

Why was the milkman seven minutes late on Tuesday?

Why was Mrs. Sood walking Bruno down a new route in the evenings?

No mystery was too small. Following strange men, eavesdropping on municipality meetings, breaking into house no. 1087 and 1093, it was all in a day’s work.

‘You can’t break into people’s houses, Baby,’ Amma said.

‘I didn’t break anything,’ I said.

‘No, I mean you can’t climb through their windows into their houses.’

‘Why did they leave them open, then?’

‘Just use the door and wait to be invited in,’ she said.

I didn’t understand what I was doing different.

When Amma was sixteen she’d threatened to push her tutor off the Koti tower if he gave her too much homework. A year later she’d dressed as a man to enter the Piccadilly Show Jumping competition in Shimla. A few months after that she won the Miss Summer Queen Beauty pageant for being the most ‘graceful’ and ‘docile’ contestant in the running. I was only trying to be Nancy Drew.

‘I’d like for your papa to come back to find you in one piece, Baby,’ she’d said over her cards at one of her weekly bridge parties. ‘No breaking into any more houses, and be back before sunset.’

Our home was like a club, with Amma its hostess shining in the center, surrounded by her eclectic selection of guests. All kinds of people came visiting us. Socialites, politicians, writers, actors, military men. I have hazy memories of these gatherings. Sudden vivid flashes intercepting the blurred images of a smoke-filled drawing room crammed with people. There was Netaji telling his long-winded stories about local politics. What the panchayat was discussing that month. How the sarpanch was surely after his land. These stories never seemed to have an end, one drew into the other that into another, like a never-ending saga of intrigue and mischief. Perhaps they did end, but I was too distracted by the long white hair growing out of his nostrils to notice. Shanta Nanu was usually there. I remember when she was recovering from the terrible accident where she’d lost her right forearm. I had stared at the soft rounded stump so long that she’d offered to let me stroke it. I took two showers that night and didn’t return for dinner.

Those nights, like Netaji’s stories, merge into each other, the same elegant women and decorated gentlemen, society gossip that didn’t mean anything in my little world.

What I liked best were the platters of finger foods – pakoras, sheesh kebabs, devilled eggs – which were carried up and down from the kitchen. The parties brought out the best in Biju – he never cooked like that otherwise. For days after I’d sneak the leftovers up to my room, a feast for one.

Now this empty house seems unrecognizable

_ _ _ _ _

Thermodynamic time runs backwards within the black hole. It is essential for the black hole to know the future for it to be created. The only pocket of space that is one step ahead.

_ _ _ _ _

I was always jealous of Polly but never of Tami.

‘But all little sisters are jealous of their older sisters,’ Amma said, missing my point entirely.

‘It’s not that,’ I insisted. ‘I’m sick of playing catch up.’

‘Don’t, then. It isn’t a race.’

But, it was. It was a race I wasn’t winning. I wasn’t even in the running.

Too young to be taken on holidays, too babyish to bring around older girls. No fancy gifts of lip glosses and hair mascaras for this one, too inappropriate. Not for Polly though, she was bang in the middle, at a threshold where you’re neither a kid nor a teen, and no one knows what to do with you.

_ _ _ _ _

The white hole elegantly juxtaposes the black hole, such that if one exists the other should too. A satisfying spectrum for the scientific community. The naked singularity of a white hole provides a complete time reversal of the black hole. A do-over.

_ _ _ _ _

The fear of missing out was defined by Dr. Dan Herman as a new form of social anxiety particular to millennials all over the world. The first I heard of it I’d felt strangely validated: there was the monster under my bed, neatly summed up in an acronym, FoMO.

‘See, it’s a real thing,’ I said, flashing my phone in Amma’s face.

‘You children these days,’ Amma said, shaking her head.

‘Fighting to be everywhere all at once and then not being anywhere at all.’

‘Sure I am. I’m here, aren’t I?’ I said, scrolling through my Instagram feed. Svalbard looked pretty in an ice-prison kind of way, I would survive a day there. Not like the Young Adventuress, who was currently in the middle of a month-long hike through its glacial terrain. I would never do well as a travel blogger. Oh, this looks pretty; Yasemin’s chic penthouse balcony, white roses blooming everywhere, it must smell so…I miss Milan. A holiday right now would be perfect.

‘I think you’re missing the point,’ I say. ‘It’s about experience, as much life as you can fill yourself with.’

‘How will that come to be?’ Amma asked. ‘Look around you. This is your life. In a slip of a second it’ll be gone, and your memories will be of you staring at a screen, wishing you had more time.’

_ _ _ _ _

In 2006, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) voted Pluto out of the solar system. A planet was an object orbiting the sun, rounded by the sheer force of its own gravity, dominating the neighborhood of its orbit. It was a syntactic decision. In 2017, a new definition of a ‘planet was put forth by Kirby Runyon. A round body that has never undergone fusion and has less mass than a star. This would bring Pluto back into the solar system, along with 101 more planetary bodies.

_ _ _ _ _

As the youngest child I’m supposed to be a natural-born performer. I know first-hand the pains of having to constantly charm and entertain everyone to earn your keep. I was the kid who put on plays for the grown-ups. The one who could recite all the Ladybird Favorite Fairy-tales from start to finish in a single breath, backwards with Sleeping Beauty. I was never afraid to scale the walls of our house, jumping from one balcony to the other, the two story drop below made me feel alive. Above all I had a knack for worming my way into the secret society of older girls.

The thrill of being under the dim lights of Polly’s room, as she and her friends talked about boys, make up, The Cranberries, and Tom Cruise in Top Gun.

I would follow Polly everywhere. One afternoon chasing after her on her way to Diya’s I heard her call out to Amma, and in my enthusiasm to keep up I tripped, tumbling all the way down to the bottom of the staircase. I was crying till I was all cried out. The horrid Doctor Arya was called home. I never liked him, always ready with his needle.

‘It’s not so bad,’ Amma said, looking at my forehead which now sported a unibrow, as both Tami and Polly struggled to hold back their giggles.

But as a reward for being brave, the next time Polly had a sleepover at Diya’s I was taken along. When they went to watch Jumanji, they bought me a ticket too. On the next visit to Rose Garden I got to ride shotgun.

The small scar between my eyebrows is a physical reminder of my initiation into the world of adults. For Amma it’s a reminder of something else. In her jewelry box safely tucked away she’s kept an old white rag spotted in red from where it held pressure to a wound. She has yet to throw it away.

_ _ _ _ _

On July 14th 2015, the New Horizons spacecraft brought us the first topographical images of Pluto. The dwarf planet at the periphery of our solar system is undeniably captivating, with its ice water mountains and heart-shaped plain.

_ _ _ _ _

I am convinced there’s a thief in the house. He slips in at night, when he knows no one would come looking. He never comes for the little curios, knick-knacks, and junk kept around. Wall plates from holidays, my parent’s wedding china, the crystal vases Amma likes collecting. He’s not there for the old silver bowl left ignored in the drawing-room. He doesn’t care about the jewelry kept locked away in the safe. The money left carelessly loose doesn’t tempt him. His heart is set on something of greater value to us.

Generously he helps himself to memories of bright summer days spent on holidays at Amma’s, of first steps, first words, first dances, and lasting vows. Bit by bit they disappear.

When I first moved back home I would roam the house when I couldn’t sleep at night. It was a rehearsed walk. Down the passage from my room, down a flight of stairs, across the drawing-room, stopping before the big wooden door with the shiny brass handle.

It’ll be like before, I wish stupidly, clammy hands clutching the cold metallic handle.

When I open the door it creaks. I know she won’t wake up. She has the appearance of a fitful sleeper, ragged breaths, twitching eyes, but she sleeps long and deep.

What a joke it made of my teen rebellion. I’d sneak in and out of the house, slamming doors in my drunken stupor, none the wiser.

These days, it scares me.

*****

Some physicists, such as Alon Retter and Shlomo Heller believe the Big Bang was a result of a white hole. An event when a tremendous amount of energy and matter spontaneously appeared out of nowhere. Spewed out of nothingness, the first step in our existence. We don’t know for sure, and in the absence of information we speculate.

_ _ _ _ _

I felt lost at Papa’s second wedding. We were all given small jobs to keep us out of the way. Everyone wanted to do their parts.

I felt infused with a childish sense of self-importance, handing out moringa garlands to the arriving guests. To match my task Amma had dressed me up in a yellow lehenga skirt and a red blouse, the chiffon scarf meant to go around my shoulders trailing after me, ignored.

The months leading to the wedding had been busy. Families meeting families, old friends reunited. Marriages in small communities are insular like that, festering within themselves, growing atomically.

I didn’t mind Nannu Aunty. She brought us gifts when she visited, sang us songs, and read The Shoemaker and the Elves as many times as you asked her to.

_ _ _ _ _

Since the discovery of the quantum nature of our universe, there has been a seismic shift in our scientific worldview, a change so momentous that it has transformed the course of human history.

_ _ _ _ _

Every time we talk about the wedding my sister says, ‘You couldn’t possibly remember. You were so small.’

Except I do.

We’d returned from a picnic at Pinjore Gardens and I was too wound up on a sugar high for my afternoon nap. Amma insisted I get one anyway and Nannu Aunty volunteered to take me to bed. She sang ‘My Grandfather’s Clock’, as I tried to ape her words, getting them all wrong. We were laughing and I wasn’t sleeping when Amma walked in. She stood by the door watching us, an odd, wounded look on her face that I didn’t understand as she turned to leave.

The wedding banquet was held on a hot May afternoon. I stood by the table fan, cooling in its breeze watching the whirling hands. I wondered if it was as fast as the speed of light.

Stick your finger in, whispered the voice in my head. Before I could stop myself, before I could think, I felt the sharp whack of the fan blade and then nothing.

Polly was shrieking beside me as Nagu uncle wrapped the edge of his saffa around my bleeding hand. I was inconsolable, all I could see was blood, when Doctor Arya made his appearance poking tenderly at my wound.

‘It’ll leave a scar,’ he said.

More tears.

‘Don’t worry Baby,’ Amma said. ‘Scars tell the best stories.’

In the basement of her house, in a musty old trunk, lies the yellow lehenga, folded neatly between the old clothes and cloth diapers.

_ _ _ _ _

The basic tenants of quantum physics say that information can never be lost. The universe, unlike the mind, does not have memory lapses.

_ _ _ _ _

Spiced tea sweetened, bread and butter for breakfast. Each morning I prepare her tray. She eats little, a bite, a sip. Most of it goes to waste. I enjoy the ritual. From the kitchen window I watch the sunrise, the first light pouring through a canopy of pink bougainvillea.

Amma once said, ‘Nature’s the golden elixir. It cures any illness, physical or of the mind.’ Here we’re surrounded by natural life: her garden alive, yet the house is like a cactus left ignored for too long.

The blue tablet, the white tablet, the cod liver oil beans are reminders of her sickness. Looking at her you won’t know, but watch for the thief – he comes when I look away.

Tray in hand, I’m at her door for the second time today, I kick it open with a satisfying thud.

‘Morning,’ I say. ‘Gorgeous out, isn’t it?’

The weather doesn’t deserve the enthusiasm, but as I watch her lift herself, straining with the effort, I’m at loss for words.

Embracing her delusion is easier than pulling her into my reality. Hawking said, history and memories are but a deception.

‘Amma, you know me, right?’

Don’t, I scold myself, you don’t want to…

I swallow the panic growing within me.

‘You recognize me?’

I watch her form the words, the right ones, in the right order.

‘Baby…’ she says finally.

_ _ _ _ _

The black hole information paradox deals with the loss of information inside the black hole. Once it approaches the event horizon it is stretched and compressed beyond recognition; passing through it is lost to us forever. Except information can never be lost.

_ _ _ _ _

Sitting in the backseat of the car, I watch my aunts and uncles wave goodbye. Papa and Nannu Aunty sit in front. Amma watches hawk-eyed through my window.

There are butterflies flitting in my stomach. I don’t know Papa, or Nannu Aunty, I know Amma. I don’t want to leave.

The car starts to roll out of the driveway and she waves goodbye.

_ _ _ _ _

Stephen Hawking’s solution to the paradox: the information is stored at the boundary of the event horizon, released through quantum fluctuations in a random order that makes its original state unrecognizable. Like memories trapped in a brain.

_ _ _ _ _

The stars Delhi don’t shine as bright. Even the moon hides behind a haze of dust and city lights. Tomorrow Amma will call. We’ll talk about the weather, the traffic, my new school, and the friends I’m yet to make. Before hanging up she pauses, like she’s going to say something important, and then sighing she says goodbye. The phone clicks off.

‘I miss you,’ I mutter into the static.

Wild Blue Parakeet

3 April 2017
Categories: Nonfiction

Running in Central Park again. That morning six miles. The day before, five. Running from my husband’s EKGs, running from those words – unknown risks. Running to quell a dread that rose in me like a moon tide. But it was useless. As soon as my feet stopped, the dread flooded back.

And then a streak of blue whizzed past me. At first I kept moving, my eyes trained on the crushed gravel track, my feet pushing forward, step, after step, after step.

But then, something made me stop, turn around and circle back.

There in the green foliage I spotted a tiny blue parakeet with piebald markings. It pecked at a cluster of purple berries dangling from a nearby bush. No inkling that its appearance there in the urban woodlands of Manhattan Island was an odd sight. Its plumage a surprising brushstroke of cornflower against the city’s grid of granite high-rises and the dingy brown feathers of the noisy flock of sparrows gathered nearby.

I stared, brimming with questions. Perhaps the bird sensed my fascination because it gazed back at me through tiny, thoughtful, black eyes. Here Birdie. It cocked its snowy head the same way my pet parakeet at home responds to my calls. But then it shot off and joined a flock of boisterous sparrows on higher branches.

Parakeets aren’t known to survive on their own in New York City, especially through its cold winters. I supposed that the bird’s arrival in the park was recent and accidental, a likely consequence of bird curiosity and human error. An open cage, a window raised high, the lure of an azure September sky.

After the bird fluttered off, I watched as it pushed deeper and deeper into the foliage, which was on the cusp of fall. Grasses bowed heavy with sprays of golden seeds, olive-hued husks swollen with ripe chestnuts swung from trees, a carpet of russet acorns lay underfoot. The bird hopped from heavy branch to branch, and then disappeared.

I assumed our meeting was over. But before I jogged three more steps, the bird flitted back again and began nibbling on a blade of grass near my feet. Surprised and slightly excited by this vote of confidence, I cautiously moved toward the creature. First, I bent my knees, then slowly and carefully moved my hand toward the tiny being, feeling a small hope rise inside me with each inch closer that I drew.

How I wanted to rescue this blue creature, restore it to domesticated comfort and provide warm shelter from the coming frost, and a dish of fresh seeds and clean water. Far more than a pack of dirty brown Park sparrows could offer. When my hand reached the spot where it pecked, I held my breath, hoping it might take some tiny leap of faith and hop onto my hand. But the parakeet dashed off to its drab flock and then vanished into the high trees. I stood on the track, scanning for a flash of blue, waiting for its return. No, that fantastic creature was gone.

But what the bird started in me stayed. My feet began moving again and with this came more wondering. What kind of dramatic turn had its life taken, suddenly unmoored from a safe harbor and catapulted into a foreign world. And then the words of my husband’s doctor flooded back, nipping at my heels – a procedure with complicated risks such as stroke, heart attack. In rare cases, death.

I sped faster.

But despite the worry that drove me that day, I couldn’t stop thinking of that blue bird. Had we crossed paths for a reason? Certainly, my mind was hungry for some kind of sign from afar. A way to connect dots that were impossible to grasp. Plus, I couldn’t shake the image of its cornflower feathers, or drop questions about how it found itself in the park that day. I was quite sure it hadn’t chosen its freedom, having most likely mistaken an open window for a new room to explore that offered more light and space. How could it have known what a leap toward a clear blue sky would mean for it? Did it panic when it discovered it was suddenly apart from all it once knew and depended on? I felt sorry for the bird, believing its situation even more terrifying than what I now feared for myself. That of a wife in black standing over freshly turned earth. A silent home, a cool unwrinkled side of a bed. Something that those who are happily paired don’t expect to contemplate in middle age, still believing we are young enough to avoid such catastrophe. One’s world wiped out by a wide-open window, or the screech of tires, a gun blazing terrorist. Or the slip of a doctor’s ablating probe sending a life-ending clot to the brain.

Starlings and Titmice called from trees.

Would he survive? Get better? Ever be the same?

Step, step, step. I pictured the blue bird’s thrill as it soared out the window, its excitement to be flying as high and as far as it pleased, not knowing that each flap of its wings took it further away from all that mattered to it. How was this so different from the hope I sometimes dared to feel about my husband’s chances? How I could soar at the thought of his new life free of drugs, and doctors and limits.

But the bird’s thrill was only half of this story. Sometime while sailing over the tops of buildings, fatigue must have forced it to land on a grimy windowsill, the foul belch of exhaust below. There it caught its breath and then flew further and further away until it found a pack of wild sparrows that it followed to the Park’s woodlands, worlds away from everything it had once known. I saw all this that day in the park, when I had looked into the bird’s eyes and it recognized in me something that had once mattered to it. Perhaps its memory of another life – the sound of keys jangling in the front door, the call of its name, the drone of a cable news talking head, the familiar in-out, in-out sound of human breathing during an afternoon nap.

The rest of the day I looked for the bird whenever I saw a sparrow anywhere. I couldn’t forget its tiny white face and onyx eyes, and the way it had gazed at me.

But the bird was gone.

How did it befriend this pack of wild brown birds? How did it keep up? Know what was right to eat? How to sip water from a puddle? How to survive? As I prepared myself for my husband’s possible outcomes, I wondered, What if? What if, I found myself all alone? How would I survive? How would I feel befriending a pack of sparrows or lumbering pigeons or noisy robins, when I had been so contented swimming side-by-side with my husband, the two of us like a pair of swans mated for life?

As much as I tried to block it out, my worry hammered away right below my surface during the weeks leading up to the date of his procedure and then as I packed my bag, taxied to the airport and lifted off into an unknown. When we were landing in Boston, I saw from the airplane window that fall was already slipping away. The sky had turned stony, the trees were almost bare. Skins of ice covered rain puddles. When they wheeled my husband on his gurney into surgery, I held his hand until someone in green scrubs parted us. I let go. He mouthed, I love you and raised his finger before the door shut behind him. I found a seat in the waiting area where I stared at cement walls the color of putty and an asphalt parking lot while the specialist entered my husband’s body with probes. Starting at his legs those probes traveled on a complicated journey up yards of veins to the chambers of his beating, misfiring heart, so electrodes could poke and burn its tissue for hours to fix it. I sat by the window, watching the cars pull in and pull out, turning to the doorway each time I heard footsteps, hoping to see a face appear to tell me my husband was all right. Repaired – not paralyzed, or critical, or gone.

 

I should not think of these things – I who at this moment am back to running in Central Park, my husband home from Boston and safe, recovered. But you see I cannot stop myself. The spot where I first set eyes on the bird still leaves so many questions unanswered and reminds me each time I jog past it, of what I could have lost, what still can be lost. When I reach the place on the path, I always think of the blue bird and then immediately the journey those probes took, and how I waited those six hours while they wended their way up to the spot where love begins and how they burned a piece of that away. And the look my husband had when he awoke – as if someone had taken some part of him while he slept. And how it felt, finally, to feel his warm hand squeeze mine back.

I know I should drop these thoughts. Fly as far away as possible from them. But I can’t. It’s what I do – recall an event that caused great pain and recalibrate myself around the spot. Adjust and readjust. Just as birds have learned to take flight from snarling dogs and loud noises and tiny children clamoring after them with curious, jabbing fingers. I do not know if a slug or mosquito does this. I’m pretty sure that cats and dogs and horses do. Our brains are burning in new awarenesses for our lives, laying down tracks of memory, of pain and pleasure, from the moment we peck through egg shells or make our way through the dark canal to the blinding light.

House of Mirrors

3 April 2017
Categories: Nonfiction

Turn the lights off. Gaze into a mirror and repeat “Bloody Mary” three times. In its origin, the game was played as a bonding ritual among women. Urban legend had it that repeating the mantra would reveal a flash of their future husband’s face—or, alternatively, a nod from the Grim Reaper, a lonely death foretold. Modern interpretations of the game expose players to risk of summoning an evil ghost—Mary, covered in and dripping blood—ensuing death by curiosity. No matter: the mirror remains essential in divulging one’s destiny.

The intentions of a game anchored by a mirror have ostensibly evolved, but the crux remains the pursuit of phantasm. In a planar, or flat mirror, an object likely appears its same size at the same distance. However, the reflected image in a mirror is contingent on various conditions—from the most obvious variables being lighting, the type of mirror, and the objects facing it, to the latent, being cultural pressures, self-esteem, and trauma. Place an object containing type in front of mirror, and the text displays backwards in its reflection. If the object is a chubby, young twenty-something struggling with confidence, her flaws magnify—her thighs appear meatier, her hips wider, and her chins multiply, stacking atop one another like pancakes. Just as the game Bloody Mary banks on hallucinations triggered by low-light, the perception of the objective self depends on one’s mental self-image.

Bloody Mary. Bloody Mary. Bloody Mary.

 

Mirrors reflect light at 300,000 km per second. A happy accident that revealed itself in polished brass and copper around 6000 BC in modern-day Turkey became the silverback mirrors mass manufactured by German chemist Justus von Liebig in 1835, still used today. Think car-wash adventure meets spray tan: scrub the glass and rinse with demineralized water; add one layer of liquefied tin and silver and two layers of paint; seal with copper and dry at 71 degrees Celsius for 75 seconds; slide it into an oven preheated to 118 degrees Celsius, copper side up. Acid rinse. Cut. Release.

Throughout history, mirrors have satisfied various needs: during the Middle Ages, witches used divination mirrors to glimpse into the future; magicians use mirrors to create illusions in their vanishing acts; on college campuses, bathroom mirrors are likely scrawled with inspirational messages written in cherry red lipstick: women reminding one another that they are beautiful, despite living in a world that has conditioned them to believe they’re not enough; hand mirrors aid young women on their journey towards self-love and sexual self-discovery; and decorative mirrors are suggested to introduce beneficial feng shui energy to any room—or so our interior decorator said to justify their place in our home. The mirrors were meant to inspire calmness. They didn’t. The mirrors were meant to magnify the rooms in our home. They did.

Mirror placement and size are powerful enough to enhance or dampen the energy of any room, effecting the disposition of those occupying the space. Feng shui design theory suggests full-length mirrors increase self-esteem, while many small mirrors negatively influence self-perception, as the individual begins to identify themselves by their fragmented reflected parts rather than as a whole.

The Galerie des Glaces (Hall of Mirrors) at the Palace of Versailles, built in 1678, inspired many replicas, from Kanye West and Kim Kardashian’s Bel Air home to the small-scale Wall of Mirrors in my childhood bedroom—mirrored, sliding closet doors, stretching 12 feet across the room, towering four feet over my five foot frame. It wasn’t until much later that I learned these mirrors were not conducive to my self-esteem, and positioned facing my bed, they were a feng shui faux pas—contrary to our interior decorator’s suggestion—because the soul is believed to leave the body while asleep and your reflection may startle it.

 

At 24, and in a mirror, I no longer registered my face as my own. Jacques Lacan writes that infants are able to recognize themselves in a mirror between six and fifteen months—as can chimpanzees, orcas, elephants, orangutans, and bottlenose dolphins. Lacan’s “mirror stage” shatters the illusion of wholeness, signifying the birth of the ego and the fragmentation of the self. Our subjectiveness is born through this initial separation; when looking in a mirror, we become both subject and object; we become our divided selves. At 24, I resisted to identify with my objectivity as an act of resistance: my way of tempering the anxiety and guilt that ached in my marrow for the privilege that came with “passing,” for the whiteness reflected in my face, and its allure.

When most people grow frustrated with the monotony of everyday life, they move to New York, or sleep with the wrong person, or take a semester off college, or dye their hair pink, or buy new lingerie, or juice. It wouldn’t be out of character for me to spend $400 on a poorly made Betsey Johnson leather handbag, justifying it’d symbolize a new, more sophisticated adult me. I was always trying to reinvent myself. And 2013 was a rough year for me: I became a retail slave, ended a four-year relationship, and spent the summer visiting my family in Lebanon, paranoid that anyone with a pudgy tummy and every parked car could be a bomb. A new handbag wasn’t going to do it this time. I wanted a new face.

I caved. A few months after I turned 23, I got a nose job.

 

Growing up, I became hyper-aware of my body and of the way I was expected to present. Like many Arab mothers, my mother stressed that I should always look my best, and it was clear that she would help me achieve this goal in any capacity she could. My mother is the type of woman who takes her appearance as seriously as she takes her profession, always wearing a full face of makeup in case she gets called into the hospital for a delivery, which she conducts in wedge booties and with acrylic nails on; the nurses call her Jennifer Lopez because she too seems to be ageing in reverse. She stresses wearing clean underwear and cute pajamas to bed in case our house burns down and we make it out and the neighbors see us or we end up on the news or something. Almost every morning until my junior year in high school, she would help me pick out an outfit for the day, as I dozed off while she tugged at my hair with a round brush, blow-drying my thick curls straight. Often, without notice and without fail, she would interrupt me mid-sentence, as if distracted by my flaws, to say, “Turn your head, let me see your profile.” Her index finger would meet the tip of my nose, lifting it upwards. “We just need this to be a shorter and raised up a little bit with some filing down of the bridge,” she’d continue, moving her finger up and down along the bridge of my nose, as if filing it down, too impatient to wait until my eighteenth birthday, when she initially planned I’d undergo surgery. I often fantasized about having a different face and body, but they were just that, fantasies. There’s something disquieting about having your twisted thoughts validated by someone you love, when the option of aesthetic plastic surgery becomes available to you. It damages you, even when the intention is admirable. Imagine if each time you looked into the mirror, you thought your face was one not even your mother could love. At the time, it felt lonely. I know now, I was not alone in my experience.

My mother’s feedback is not unusual from parents in Middle Eastern culture. Because Arabs take great pride in their presentation, critique has become embedded in the cultural fabric. Each summer I’d visit family in Lebanon, my cousins would greet me at the airport with comments on my appearance almost immediately. Once, my cousin congratulated me on my slimmer waist, but told me I needed to tone my arms and thighs and tame my bushy eyebrows and get them to match. When I’m overseas, the locals view me as less Arab and more American. Perhaps my frizzy curls, casual clothes, and dull, vitamin-D-deficient skin give me away. In the States, I’m known as the put together friend, never leaving the house without at least concealer and tinted moisturizer, to even out my skin, and mascara, to plump and lift my lashes, though my essentials pale in comparison to those my age living in Lebanon. Lebanese women are as close to human Barbies as they come—long, silky black hair, tattooed eyebrows, sun-kissed skin, and colored contacts concealing their coffee-colored eyes (no cream!)—that is, if Barbie was brown.

In the Middle East, plastic surgery is less stigmatized than in the United States. Lebanon is known as the “Mecca” of plastic surgery because of its relatively inexpensive prices and is home to many of the top cosmetic surgeons in the world—those who earned a strong reputation after their reconstructive work on post-civil war mutilated patients. Cosmetic procedures have increased 13{0d6c0367c8c8ce3328d7385a3995d880bbc0bef238b7f2a91697c38c5b607893} annually since 2006, despite the country’s economic recession and political turmoil. Lebanon has a population of 4 million. Roughly 1.5 million operations are performed each year, with rhinoplasty ranking highest in demand amongst both men and women—so much so that banks offer cosmetic surgery loans up to $5,000. Lebanon draws in about 20-40{0d6c0367c8c8ce3328d7385a3995d880bbc0bef238b7f2a91697c38c5b607893} of foreigners for cosmetic procedures. Companies such as Image Concept—launched in 2009—specialize in Cosmetic Tourism in Lebanon, booking various procedures such as cosmetic surgery, aesthetic plastic surgery, liposuction, rhinoplasty, hair and breast implants, and more. Tourists are enticed by the low prices, expertise, and the normalization of the cosmetic procedures, allowing them the comfort to enjoy Lebanese tourism and nightlife as soon as two days after surgery. It’s not uncommon to see Lebanese people wearing their surgery splints proudly at restaurants, malls, night clubs, and at the beach.

After my surgery, performed here in the States, I hid in my room for days and when I regained the ability to chew, my mother took me out to breakfast at Bob Evans, certain we wouldn’t run into any of friends or family there; I was concerned about being seen disfigured, as my face was puffy and heavily bruised still, while my mother was more concerned with me being seen at all.

 

In a way, it is impossible to talk about my plastic surgery without talking about Brian Forrest. “You know, you could totally pass as white,” he’d say. “The only thing that gives you away is your nose.” Brian Forrest, at twenty-two, was my boyfriend of six months, and a native of a predominantly white town adjacent to Dearborn, yet world’s away. His real name is not Brian Forrest, but save for an ironic cartoon tattoo on his calf, he would be hard to distinguish in a lineup of scrawny, pale, Newport-smoking, vintage-cardigan-wearing, aspiring Pitchfork music critics with patchy, scruffy facial hair. You know, the kind of guy who eats organic but drinks Pabst Blue Ribbon, and would be much more attractive if he had a better relationship with his mother. I remember his features were sharp and his laugh was one he appropriated from an ex-girlfriend. He exists in my memory as in the overexposed photo I took of him wearing a crew-neck sweatshirt with a spider on it and the words MEET ME ON THE WEB one Halloween; his face expressionless, his blue eyes (or were they green?) piercing through the image as if responsible for the camera’s aperture. Brian spent the early part of our relationship crafting me Beatles mixtapes, leaving me notes and hand-drawn comics on my car’s windshield, and building the semi-permanent blanket fort we called Fort French Kiss, illuminated by Christmas lights and a television streaming all nine seasons of Seinfeld. Toward the end of our relationship, he became my unsolicited guide to whiteness:
“Do you know anything by Bruce Springsteen?” he asked.

“Not off the top of my head,” I replied.

“Here,” he said, handing me a stack of records, “This is the shit you should’ve listened to growing up. Brush up.”

When he wasn’t drinking and when we weren’t kissing, he’d remind me of all the ways in which I was not white—I wasn’t allowed to spend the night at his house like his ex-girlfriends did; I didn’t know how to order a drink at the bar, or much at all about alcohol because no one in my Muslim family drinks; I didn’t have ironic tattoos—or any at all; I didn’t listen to NPR. I was the first Arab girl he’d ever dated. Somehow I felt like the ambassador for Arab-American women; the entry ethnic dish white folks consume to feel worldly. Brian seemed pleased with my racial ambiguity and I felt fine being his store-bought tub of hummus.

Similarly, cosmetic surgery becomes a way to neutralize ethnic features. Body modifications are popular all around the world in various capacities, but with the rapid westernization of Eastern countries such as Lebanon, it’s hard to ignore which features qualify as the most beautiful.

The first time I met with my plastic surgeon for consultation, he suggested I narrow the bulb of my nose, and opt for a subtler version of the popular, Eurocentric ski-slope nose. He wanted to introduce sharpness to my round features, I refused. At the time of my consultation I wasn’t familiar with ethnic plastic surgery, the supply to the demand to understanding different cultural standards of beauty, instead of adhering to a Eurocentric one-size-fits-all model; rather than snipping away one’s heritage, plastic surgeons are becoming increasingly skilled in enhancing unique ethnic features. My interest in minor adjustments—primarily ridding my nose of its tiny bump and shortening it so my lips would appear fuller and I more confident wearing lipstick—had more to do with my fear of looking like Joan Rivers, than it did with preserving the integrity of my Middle Eastern features.

Before going into surgery, the doctor gave me a hand out with a list of things to expect after surgery. It warned of severe swelling and bruising underneath the eyes, of blood clots clogging the nose, congestion, inflammation for up to six weeks, and I’d have to wait six to eight months before seeing what my nose would really look like. I’d like to add: if you get the urge to pick the crusty blood crystals from your nose, be careful not to accidentally rip out of any stiches—even if you do, it’s unlikely that your nose will unravel and fall off like I feared it would; the swelling is not so severe that the healed nose will resemble a deflated giant bubblegum bubble on your face. Each time you tell someone about your nose job, it will feel like you’re telling some dirty little secret. Lovers you mention it to years later will change the way they kiss you, they won’t notice, but you will; proceeding with caution, as if your nose is still malleable. You will be expected to feel guilty. Your feminism will be challenged. You’ll feel like a fraud.

 

Undergoing rhinoplasty feels like getting your wisdom teeth pulled, only $3500 later and when the anesthesia wears off, you feel like shit and look less like a chipmunk and more like Sloth from The Goonies, even after the bruising fades. Many studies suggest that although body image satisfaction increases post-surgery, self-esteem doesn’t improve; that is, the problem area is no longer a problem, but the quick fix doesn’t make you any happier. For more than a year post-surgery, the divide between myself and reflection surged. I struggled to look in the mirror, not wanting to identify with my neutralized, white-washed face. Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary. I spent time preaching self-love to friends online, while loathing myself. I would cite feminist articles about resisting pressure to adhere to unrealistic beauty standards, but was complying to them offline. I portrayed myself as a proud Arab, but was secretly ashamed of my heritage. When I looked in the mirror, I saw my face as a canvas to paint, a foreign object, not an extension of myself. The minor changes in my nose neutralized my face. I felt immense guilt enjoying this neutrality, excited to have been able to escape my previous self yet maintain some distance from my new self. In a way, I was able to transcend my body, to find a mini vacation from real. Surgery tempers the ugly, crossing one insecurity of the list. Especially when its on your face, it’s a pretty big deal. When I look into a mirror, I no longer fixate on my nose. This feels liberating.

 

Looking in the mirror separates us from our physical selves, but our relationships with others act as mirrors, too. It is human error to believe the things we are not threaten the things we are. We see in others the qualities we do not want to identify with, what we desperately want to distance ourselves from. I’ve spent so long blaming others for my pain, not with the intention to play victim, but perhaps building my case to plead innocent. Identifying strongly and publicly against certain values fuels the blame we place onto others. By outing my mother for valuing aesthetics, I’m distancing myself from being perceived as shallow. By calling Brian out for his microaggressions, I’m ignoring the racism and judgment I’ve internalized and exhibited towards my own people. I doubt he hated me (at all really), the way or as much as I hated myself. Blaming others becomes a way to cope, to avoid accountability for self-perpetuated pain. It’s possible to feel hurt by those who never intended any malice, however miscommunication doesn’t invalidate your experience, or minimize your pain because truth is simply a matter of perspective. Learning compassion only empowers you to heal yourself just as your body heals itself.

Distancing myself from my objectivity became more clear – looking in the mirror I felt guilty that the face staring back at me is one that succumbed to whiteness because this type of surrender is not one my ego wants to identify with. I feel guilty because I feel shallow and I reprimand others for their vanity. I find myself feeling guilty for not regretting my nose job. I feel guilty with how terrible it sounds when I say neutralizing my face allows me to distance myself from my physical self, viewing it as a vehicle to carry me through various spaces instead of an object I’m imprisoned in.

 

Undergoing rhinoplasty some days feels temporarily liberating because I spend less time fixating on my flaws. My nose no longer gives me away. Is it possible to purchase white guilt? Because even as I tell others to celebrate their differences, I still think of ways to mute my own. And I’ve learned that the pain never really goes away. You just feel it ache someplace else.

I live in a house of mirrors; nearly every room has a mirror, or someone in it that comments on my appearance. In trying to protect me from her insecurities, my mother inadvertently instilled them in me. “I’m just giving you the same advice your grandmother gave to me,” she says.

The woman who raised me doesn’t believe in tattoos outside of permanent eyebrows and permanent makeup—choices that support what is considered conventionally attractive, while my peers view body alterations through piercings and tattoos as beautiful because they work to communicate individuality. When my feminist circle found out about my surgery, I could feel friends silently judging. As feminists, we admit our image-driven culture is problematic. We pride ourselves on being aware of the struggles men and women go through in hope to resemble the ideal and then reprimand them when they do.

 

Society tells you that you need work done, and if you believe it too and decide to alter your appearance, prepare for the ramifications, not necessarily of looking differently, but of being treated differently. For women, it seems mirrors serve as check-in platforms for comparison. What do mirrors compromise when it comes to women and their self-esteem? Women are forced to consider the way they look and the ways in which that can undermine their contribution to the world separate from their physicality—as if taking too much pride in the way you look means you’re only making a show out of your deep-rooted insecurities and have nothing valuable to offer. What is threatening about women feeling empowered enough to decide the ways in which they alter their bodies? Why do we as a society feel threatened by confident women? What’s wrong with wanting to feel and look pretty? Why are beauty and shallowness viewed as mutually exclusive—as if one cannot have sex-appeal and substance? Is it because in mirroring relationships and seeing the presence of all the desirable things makes us feel inferior?

The “love your flaws” model to life seems ineffective, as does the Nip/Tuck strategy. I think it’s important for people to self-reflect and find new ways to improve themselves, even if it’s just physically. Don’t “love your flaws,” but examine them.

On Visibility

3 April 2017
Categories: Nonfiction

If you had asked me, when I first came out as transgender, if I wanted to be seen, I would have said yes. I wanted people to really see me—the way I saw myself: as male. But, in truth, what I really wanted was to be so ordinary that I completely blended into a crowd of men. I wanted a beard, a deep voice, a flat chest, a driver’s license and birth certificate and passport that declared me male. I wanted to be invisible.

I’ve spent five years working toward that goal: injecting testosterone, legally changing my name and gender, carefully cultivating my facial hair until even some cisgender men are jealous. In most ways, I’ve done it. I haven’t yet saved the six grand I’ll need to have a surgically altered chest, but a $30 cloth binder I bought on Amazon works well enough for now. My birth certificate still says female, but I can typically use my passport instead. My voice is a little higher than I’d like—I still get “ma’am”-ed on the phone and in the drive-thru a significant percentage of the time—but I can reach the low notes when I sing Garth Brooks at karaoke and my voice doesn’t really catch anyone’s attention. If you ran into me at the bar, at the grocery store, at the bank, wearing my usual uniform of jeans and a flannel shirt and work boots, you’d have no idea that I was anything other than an ordinary guy in his late twenties. And that’s exactly what I want—what I’ve always wanted.

Isn’t it?

                                                                                *

When I first started my transition, I was twenty-four years old and about to begin my second year of graduate school. Everyone I interacted with on a daily basis—my friends, my classmates, my professors, my students, even the baristas at my favorite coffee shop and the bartenders at the drive bar where we sang karaoke every Tuesday night—all knew me both before and after the transition. Even when I met new people, after I began to be seen as male, I knew they would, eventually, find out. For a city with 850,000 people, Columbus, Ohio can feel incredibly small and it was practically guaranteed that anyone I met was also friends with one of my good friends, or would be within weeks. Even if I didn’t address it directly with them (I didn’t, for example, explain to Karen the bartender why I suddenly had facial hair), everyone knew who I was: that I was male, but also that it wasn’t quite that simple. I didn’t have—and therefore didn’t have to make—a choice.

Then, a couple months after I turned twenty-seven, I moved to a new city for a new job at a new university. While most of my colleagues know, having read my CV and listened to me talk about my writing during the campus visit, I don’t think I’ve had to tell anyone since my first week in town, when I met the other new faculty members and they asked, “So, what do you write about?” I had to decide, pretty quickly, who needed to know and who didn’t—and who I wanted to know. I went from having a 90/10 split between my friends and colleagues and acquaintances who did and didn’t know to something more like 20/80. Although Muncie, where I now live, is much smaller than Columbus, there’s a much bigger divide between my friends who know and my friends who don’t. It’s easier to remain invisible.

I essentially live two lives here: the first is the guy who writes personal essays about his gender identity and who, if prompted, tells his colleagues (and occasionally his students) what he writes about. That’s who I am in faculty meetings, in classrooms, in my office hours, at writers’ conferences.

But then there’s my second life, where the most out-of-the-ordinary thing about me is that I use the phrase “to be” (i.e., this needs to be cleaned—instead of this needs cleaned, the favored sentence construction among Muncie natives). That’s who watches football on Sunday afternoons and plays bar trivia on Tuesday nights and grades essays on Saturday at Starbucks. In this second life, I question everything I post on Facebook and Twitter because I’m friends with the other trivia night regulars and the guys who talk to me about football at the bar. I’m always afraid they’ll figure it out. I’m careful to change the details when I talk about my childhood—girl scouts becomes boy scouts, softball becomes baseball, gym teachers become men, the crushes I had on girls in high school caused angst for boring teenage boy reasons.

I’m not sure why I’m so afraid they might find out. While there are a handful of people who might look at me differently, who might not want to hang out with me anymore, I’m sure the vast majority of my friends wouldn’t care. My friends Craig and Dylan, both bartenders at the bar where I spend most evenings, would probably say, “Oh, okay. You want another beer?” They give me shit about many things—my bike helmet that lights up, the way I act after a couple too many glasses of wine, my love of the Buffalo Bills in Colts country—but I don’t think they’d ever even mention it again if they knew. I think what would bother me most is that I would know that they knew.

Sometimes, on Wednesday nights, it’s just me and Craig and our friend Andy at the bar late at night, and the three of us end up sitting there for a couple hours, watching whatever game is on TV, and talking. All of a sudden Andy’ll ask, “You have to take a road trip from Muncie to Jacksonville, Florida,” and Craig will make a joke about Jacksonville and then Andy will say, “And you have to go with either a white guy with dreads or a born-again Christian. Who do you choose?” There’s nothing about this conversation that’s gendered, nothing about it that is unique to three guys talking to each other, and yet there’s something about the way they act around me—the way they all act around me, the other men who hang out there in the evenings—that makes me feel like I’m part of the club, like I belong, like I’m just like them.

I’m not afraid that they’ll treat me differently. They’re nice guys, good guys, who wouldn’t do that. But I’m afraid that I’ll believe they’re only treating me that way to be nice, and good—that they will see me differently and just won’t ever say anything.

                                                                                *

I wonder, sometimes, if I have an obligation to be visible.

I’ve been lucky: my family, even my great-uncle Bill, now in his 80s, accepted me for who I am. My friends, almost without exception, supported me. While the National Center for Transgender Equality found that the transgender community’s unemployment rate is twice the general population’s and nearly a quarter of their survey respondents had been or currently were homeless, I am—despite my six-digit student loan debt—solidly middle class. I have a good, stable job with health insurance. I’m not rolling in dough, but I’m able to afford my mortgage, car, student loan, credit card, and utility payments every month and still have enough left over to buy groceries and put gas in my car and eat out a couple nights per week.

I worry, sometimes, that when I stay silent, I’m privileging my own comfort over the lives of transgender kids. I know that may seem like a stretch, but I’m not sure that it is. Trans kids and teenagers and even adults who come out later in life struggle to see the success stories. Now we have Chaz Bono and Caitlyn Jenner, but even that is such a limiting view. What happens when you aren’t already rich and famous? There’s Laverne Cox, sure, but what about the kids who look at her and say “I’m not that pretty or that talented or that lucky” and end up believing that the lives they’ve imagined are impossible? What about the kids who don’t want to be famous? Where are their role models—the teachers, the police officers, the mechanics, the farmers—who have gone before? Many feel hopeless, unable to see a future for themselves where they are seen how they see themselves—hopeless to the point where over 40{0d6c0367c8c8ce3328d7385a3995d880bbc0bef238b7f2a91697c38c5b607893} of transgender people attempt suicide compared to just 4.6{0d6c0367c8c8ce3328d7385a3995d880bbc0bef238b7f2a91697c38c5b607893} of the general population.

A few days after Christmas 2014, a few months after I started my job, a 17-year-old transgender teenager named Leelah Alcorn scheduled a suicide note to post to Tumblr and then, around 2:30 in the morning, walked onto Interstate 71 on the outskirts of Cincinnati, Ohio and was struck and killed by a semi. In the aftermath of her suicide, it was revealed that she had come out to her parents as transgender at 14 and, after refusing to accept her gender identity, they sent her to conversion therapy and removed her from school.

I read about Leelah’s death in my office, during a break from working on my syllabi for my spring semester classes. I didn’t know her, but it felt like I did. There’s a picture of her that accompanied all of the articles I read, and which is now on the Wikipedia page describing her life and death. In it, she’s in a dressing room, trying on a black and white dress that falls just above her knees; she holds her cell phone in her left hand to take a picture in the mirror and rests her right on her hip. She doesn’t look up at the mirror. Instead, she’s looking at her cell phone, at herself reflected back. Her delight in seeing herself, the way she wanted to be seen, is obvious; she’s not smiling, really, but she seems like she is. She’s happy. I’m sure, in those early days when I’d go to Walmart in my small college town and try on men’s jeans and dress shirts and ties, just to see, that my expression was nearly identical.

In the weeks after her suicide, activists started the hashtag #RealLiveTransAdult on Twitter. There, transgender adults—who had struggled, too, and managed to create a life for themselves—made themselves visible. They posted encouraging tweets for teenagers, for young adults, for the people who were struggling to understand how they could create the lives they wanted. I read them all. I wrote my own, so many times, and then deleted them all before anyone could see. It’s been over two years and I still feel guilty.

I know that my tweets wouldn’t have changed anything for Leelah, and I doubt that my tweets would have had much of an impact overall, but I wonder if there’s one kid—just one—who wants the kind of ordinary, boring life I’ve created. He hears from other trans people about moving to New York City or San Francisco and being part of a queer community, and he sees Chaz Bono on Dancing with the Stars and Laverne Cox on Orange is the New Black, and none of it makes him feel any better because that’s not the kind of life he wants. He wants to live in the Midwest, maybe, and he wants to be a teacher, and he wants to grow a beard and wear work boots and go to the grocery store. I worry that that kid needed me to speak up—needed someone to tell him that the life he imagines for himself is possible, that someone else has already done it, that I see him—and instead, I stayed silent, invisible.

                                                                                *

A few months ago, I told two of my closest friends, Mel and Aaron. I met them at the bar, through a friend, and they’re part of my second life where no one really knows. I’ve been friends with them for nearly a year and they’ve quickly become like family. I spend Friday nights with them at high school football games and Mel’s family—her sisters, her parents—have welcomed me as if I’m one of them. I felt bad not telling them, felt like there was this huge secret between us that I couldn’t let sit any longer. I also just wanted someone from my second life, someone who wouldn’t care and wouldn’t treat me any differently, to know. It was exhausting to live these two lives simultaneously, to be these two separate people at once, and I wanted them to overlap, just a little.

And so, one night, after one too many beers, I leaned across the table in the crowded bar and told them. Neither one of them had known (I had been afraid that they might say, “Oh, we’ve known for months. Everyone does.”), hadn’t even suspected, but they weren’t shocked—or even surprised, really. Mel’s brother-in-law, another good friend, had asked her a few weeks before if I was. He has transgender friends and had started to suspect that I might be, too. It didn’t matter, really, because Mel and Aaron—and Mel’s sister and brother-in-law—didn’t care, didn’t look at me differently, didn’t think it was a big deal at all. It was as if I’d told them I like pepperoni on my pizza, or that I preferred Coke Zero to Diet Coke.

For weeks, though, I wondered: was it the outline of my binder under my shirt? My distinct lack of an Adam’s apple? Is it something about the way I talk or hold my body or dress? Every time I looked in the mirror, I worried that there was something I couldn’t see that was giving me away. When I finally asked him how he’d known, Jarrod shrugged. “I saw some of your old pictures on Facebook.”

I know that this is unsustainable. Eventually, people—the ones who haven’t, like Jarrod, flipped through my old pictures on Facebook and noticed the way my facial structure has changed, the way my hips used to be more pronounced—will know, whether or not I want them to. I would someday like to publish a collection of my essays and, if it happens, I doubt I’ll be able to keep it a secret. Eventually, someone is going to find the essay I wrote about changing my name—which is currently the second result when you Google me—if someone hasn’t already. Eventually I will have to either tell people or deal with the aftermath when they figure it out on their own. I will have to accept whatever happens. I will have to get over my anxiety about how others see me. I will have to let them see me. But for now, I want to remain invisible—as invisible as I can be—for just a little bit longer.

Other Lives

28 November 2016
Categories: Nonfiction

I am standing in line at the French Broad Chocolate Lounge in Asheville, North Carolina, a place as exotic as it sounds. It is late March, and I am in desperate need of this vacation. Back home, a small town tucked high up in the Blue Ridge Mountains, I work for our county’s domestic abuse and rape crisis agency, and the ache of the work is ever with me, saturated with tales of violence and terror. Winters are brutal, too, snow-laden skies and cutting winds often hanging around well into May, but when roads are passable, more temperate weather is available within a couple hours’ drive.

 

Today in Asheville the thermometer has reached seventy degrees, and I am giddy with something that feels very much like hope. City workers are cleaning out the flower beds that surround the downtown squares, and I breathe in the warm perfume of newly-turned earth.

This morning I roamed the streets and ended up in a downtown bookstore where I stayed for a while, sipping coffee and jotting notes in my journal, unwinding into the open day.

   

Now, some hours later, I am here at the Chocolate Lounge. The menu lists a dizzying variety of truffles like Homegrown Lemongrass and Lavender Crème. In addition to plain brownies, already decadent enough in their own right, there are Cacao Spicy Nib or Coconut Macaroon Brownies. Any of these confections I can wash down with a creamy Guinness stout or a silky Pinot Noir. 

I feel deliciously unmoored, overcome with a sense of having been lifted out of my life and deposited into another one altogether.

In line ahead of me are a man and two women, all appearing to be in their mid-twenties. One of the women, a dark-haired girl with blue eyes, is talking with her tiny blonde friend while the man places their order.

The dark-haired girl says, “I mean, I saw him get his first kiss. I was in his room.”

“Yes,” says her friend.

I incline my ear, leaning forward to listen while appearing as if I am not listening, one of many sinful writerly habits. 

“We skinny-dipped when we were in seventh grade. I watched him grow up.”

Her friend responds, “I know.”

“In high school he started dating this girl and they got married, but then she cheated on him and now they’re divorced.” 

“Right,” says her friend.

“And I just keep wondering if we have a chance now.” She glances at me, and I incline my ear back where it belongs.

They move ahead, pay for their order, and leave. 

 

Listening to their conversation, I have been catapulted back forty-some years to a dark lake on a summer night. My high school boyfriend slips out of his t-shirt, lets his cut-off jeans and briefs fall onto the wooden dock, barely making a sound as he dives, his long beautiful body white in the murky water. 

“Come on in,” he calls.

“No!” I whisper, pulling my sweater around me. “Someone will come!”

“Chicken!” 

I hear him swim away and out of my life, and my heart races for a moment, snagged on the tripwire of memory. 

 

 “What can I get for you today?” The boy taps his pen on the granite counter, bringing me back. 

“A Coconut Macaroon Brownie,” I say, but one foot is still in the past, and I can swear I hear the distant splash of lake water as I take my change. 

Recently I joined a group of women who call themselves “Woo-Woo.” I am not so Woo-Woo. I wish I could be, but I have not yet been able to get the hang of it.

These women are a little freaky with all their fifth-dimension-higher-vibration-energetic-beings talk. Still, they invite me to their circle and I come, in part because I adore them and their creative bent as well as their tendency to produce red wine and chocolate for nearly any gathering. And because they allow me to dance around their sparky little fire, where I keep some distance but am nonetheless drawn to the light.

The women sometimes speak of past lives – as ancient Egyptians or sea captains or Greek soldiers. They talk about who they have crossed paths with in this life that they have known in other lives, discussing the issues they are working out even now, all these millennia later.

Past lives pose a problem for me. For one thing, I have the nagging sense that I’ve made enough of a mess of this one – two marriages, two divorces, a failed love affair, lost friendships, and far too many financial snafus to name – that I would rather not envision a string of previous painful sagas from eons gone by.

It also seems sadly unimaginative of any Creator – for the notion of reincarnation seems out of necessity to include a Creator, or at least Someone in charge – to make only a relative few templates and keep recycling them.

I know there are traditions that adhere to a doctrine of reincarnation. I have not been able to embrace it for myself, is all I am saying. Still, as I have been pondering the notion, it has occurred to me that when people ask about my background it is not unusual for me to disclose, “In my other life I was a pastor.”  Light years away from where I am now, having if not completely lost my faith, then misplaced it pretty well, leaving me to toss around rimless questions that call into doubt the very existence of God.

In another life, on Sunday mornings I donned my robe and vestments, led confession, preached the Gospel, presided at communion, and blessed the congregation on its way.

“In my other lives,” I really should say, for I have had a number of them. I have been a baby sister, gazing with adoration at my older siblings, and a wild college student hell-bent on self-destruction. I have been a receptionist for a lecherous dentist, a stock trader for a Midwestern state pension fund, a preacher of the Gospel, a teacher of composition, a writer of grants, a teller of tales.

Reminiscent of an archaeological dig, like the Jericho Tel I visited when in Israel many years ago, I am able to toss a stone and show you the layers – there is the year I first rode a horse, there the year of my first kiss, and there the year I left home for college. There, a decade of desolation, there an age of rebuilding, and that bright layer there a time of creativity and babies and hope and delight. Layer upon layer, year upon year, loss and gain buried, folded – all past but all present, too.

It is now evening, and I am walking to dinner at a Caribbean restaurant. When I arrive I find it has not yet opened. I sit on the bench outside and open a book I’ve been reading, a memoir by an author whom I am coming to admire more with each new chapter.

Within several minutes the door opens and I am invited inside. I find a spacious table in a front corner and settle. I have my book and my journal and a tall glass of herbal iced tea, and in front of me a menu featuring a heart-stopping variety of entrees.

Several more diners wander in – two young couples who are seated far to my left, and then a young boy, around seven years old, and with him a woman who appears to be in her thirties. The boy is slim with dark hair and keeps his hands tucked in the pockets of his khaki trousers. He is wearing a neat button-down white oxford cloth shirt and moves with self-assurance. The woman with him is tall and willowy, with long wavy reddish hair. She treats the boy with a kind of deference that causes me to think she is not his mother – maybe an aunt, maybe one of his mother’s good friends. They sit off to my right, chatting easily.

For a while I am lost in my book. The author is in France. She and her lover drink brandy in the middle of the day and hop on a train that takes them into the lush countryside. I am in the process of being swept away with them when my Roasted Pork Quesadilla arrives.

I set aside my book and give full attention to the food, savoring the pineapple salsa and the caramelized plantains.

Then I overhear the woman to my right saying in a clear voice, “I lived in Pennsylvania for a while.”

And the young boy, the seven-year old responds, “In 1968 I owned a hardware store in Trenton, New Jersey.”

I stop chewing.

The woman says, “I lived in New Jersey, too.”

I incline my ear.

They continue their conversation as if they are discussing the boy’s swimming lessons or the last movie he saw. They continue to talk as if this child is not offering details about the nails and washers and nuts and bolts that he would sell for a nickel apiece, about the people who frequented his store in a previous life.

There comes a sudden sensation, as if I am floating.

Later I headed back to my hotel, tacking along the city streets amid the sounds of traffic, a soft breeze on my arms and dusk just beginning to lower.

Along the way I passed a group of street people, three men and three women scattered across the sidewalk, singing and laughing. One man in particular, with long matted gray hair and a tangle of beard, trained a wild stare on me. As I drew near he waved and caught my eye.

“It’s all about quantum mechanics!” he shouted at me.

“It always is,” I shouted back.

The group laughed and applauded.

For some years I have been feeding a fascination with quantum physics. I don’t recall what first sparked my interest. I majored in English and American Studies in college and shied away from the more brain-taxing sciences.

Still, I suppose I have always, in some fashion, been wondering about how and why the universe works. I have a long-standing friend with a Ph.D. in Philosophy of Physics, and he and I have shared many boozy late night discussion about the String Theory and the God Particle and a host of other notions that in previous centuries could have gotten one locked up as a lunatic. Educated and learned scholars and researchers are having these conversations, too, with perfectly straight faces, theories so wildly challenging that they call into question our very concept of Reality.

For example, noted British astrophysicist Lord Martin Rees speaks of “origami” universes, multiverses that exist on planes much the way folded origami paper creates multiple surfaces. Some multiverse theories posit that we are having many lives in many dimensions all at once. One may even pass one’s energetic “self” on a city street but never know it, the dimensions overlapping or intertwining or existing side by side in the same way that AM and FM frequencies occupy the same airwaves.

“We interrupt this broadcast to bring you a special announcement.”

It is only in the writing of this essay that I have recalled a curious incident that occurred several years ago when I was driving from Ohio, where I had just sold my house, to North Carolina, where I was moving to serve another church. I had pulled into a McDonald’s parking lot somewhere in the hills of Virginia, in need of a restroom, hot coffee, and something to munch on. It was summer and the place was crowded with travelers. As I walked toward the entrance I noticed coming my way a heavyset middle-aged man, and an older and younger woman, between them a little girl, about two years old. The little girl looked at me with something very like recognition, her face lighting up with a wide smile, and I stopped and looked back at her as something shifted somewhere – the ground or my gut or the sky.

The child’s hair was a cloud of peach colored curls, her face round, her brown eyes large – a clear description of me at age three. The child gazed at me, rapt. My breath caught.

The two women slowed to see what their little girl was looking at, all the while she and I staring and staring at one another. Then she tore herself from them and ran to me, her eyes bright with joy.

She uttered a soft happy cry and looked back at the women, grinning at them, as if to say, “Look who I found!” Then she reached her arms up to me.

“Have we met?” I asked her, half laughing, half trembling, checking a sudden insane urge to pick her up and run with her.

The women came rushing, apologizing. One of them said, “We don’t understand,” and the other, “She never just goes up to people…”

The girl kept reaching to be picked up while the women kept reaching for her, and at last she wrapped her arms around my legs for a few seconds before letting go, and as they took her, she began to cry. I stood trembling, watching as they carried her away.

When the four of them had gotten to their car, the older woman stopped to turn and look at me, her brows furrowed. I thought she might wave but instead she reached into the back, fastened the child into her car seat, and shut the door. As the car pulled away I could see the child’s small face looking out at me through the rear window.

I watched the tiny dot of her head all the way to the interstate, and then watched until the car itself was a speck that disappeared around a wide curve, watched the busy freeway a long time after as the sun lowered itself into the emptying sky and the light faded into the low droning of tires on pavement.

Boy in the Van

1 April 2016
Categories: Nonfiction

The French boy had hair the color of wet sand. Not beach sand, but desert sand. The six months I lived in Saudi Arabia, it never rained in Dhahran, but if it had, the color of the sand and the color of the boy’s hair would have been the same.

I was 13 and he was 10 when we met. It was 1973 and a Friday afternoon, the first day of the weekend in a Muslim country, and of course it was hot and muggy. The boy and his hippie French parents were in Dhahran for only a few days, on a road trip from France to Yemen in a VW bus.

I don’t know how my parents met these people. Ever since moving to Saudi Arabia, they had “tried to be friendly” — joining water aerobics classes and the Northrop Cribbage Club — and now here we were, going on a drive to the sand dunes with people they’d met through friends of friends.

The French people had parked their van outside our apartment complex, and my mother whispered, “Be nice to the boy,” as we walked down to meet them, probably because she knew I wouldn’t be. That’s when I saw him: tall for his age, thin like a cheetah, his bright blue eyes brimming with curiosity and friendliness. He was standing next to the van — a sorry old thing of faded red, with patches of duct tape holding it together — and clutching a black binder to his chest.

The air smelled brackish and sour from the Persian Gulf down the street, but it wasn’t the stench that bothered me, or even the sticky heat. I could tell that this boy was excited to be friends with me — one hundred percent, nothing barred. I couldn’t do it. Even now, I can show myself only bit by bit, never all at once.

“Hello. I am —” the boy said, but I didn’t catch his name. I walked right past him and lumbered into the back seat of the van. The boy was not deterred. Still smiling, still bright-eyed, he got in and sat down next to me. He smelled like fresh laundry and had a scab on one knee. Our knees touched. I jerked away. Again, he was not deterred.

He opened up the binder he’d been holding. It was full of loose-leaf paper, and as he turned the pages, I saw an assortment of blue ink drawings: a scrawny little dog asleep in a flowerbed; a girl in a long ragged dress, sweeping a doorway; a shirtless, shoeless boy herding goats along a rocky path; an old man, toothless and grinning, leading a donkey from a barn. Each drawing had a caption scrawled beneath it, written in French, which I couldn’t understand, but I knew it was his writing — I could spot little-boy handwriting from a mile away. And yet the drawings themselves were so delicately constructed and detailed, and the lines so precise, I wondered if his mom or dad had drawn them. But I saw the ink stains on his fingers, the same color as the ink on the page, and I knew they were his.

His smile turned shy. Here is a precious thing, his smile said, and I want to share it with you.

But I frowned and turned away. This was all too much — he expected too much of me. To this day, I can’t tell you what I thought he expected, but that’s how it felt: like I was being asked to give him something that I didn’t want to give.

So I looked out the window and watched Dhahran go by: the cinder block buildings and busy streets; the men in long white thobes; the women in black, leading long lines of dark-haired children through crowded souks. There were plenty of things for him to draw — couldn’t he see that? Couldn’t he just leave me alone?

The traffic thinned out beyond town. The endless sand shimmered with humidity. I saw the boy in the reflection of the glass, gently turning the pages of his journal. My heart softened. I had a journal, too: nothing as grand as his; filled mostly with observations about the cute lifeguard at the compound pool, and my theories as to where he came from, and snippets of dialog I hoped we would have one day. The thought of showing my journal to anyone made my face burn. How brave this boy was to show his to me.

So I turned back to the boy and smiled. He smiled back, and together we pored over his drawings. He told me stories: about the blind man who fixed their van when it broke down in Sarajevo; the family of gypsies who swam alongside him in the Black Sea in the moonlight; the group of boys who played soccer with him in an empty lot in Bagdad. When we came to the end of the journal, he drew a picture of me — he gave me shy eyes and a shy smile, but I looked happy, and I knew someday a new friend of his (in Oman or Yemen, or maybe Dubai) would see it, and the boy would say, “Here is my new American friend,” looking proud and pleased. When we said goodbye, I scribbled my address below my picture, and to this day, we’ve kept in touch. He’s the most interesting friend I have. The bravest one, too.

…

But no. That didn’t happen. I kept my head turned from him, and after a while, the boy moved up to the middle bench to sit between his mom and mine, where he joined the adults in their half-French, half-English conversation:

“How’s the van holding up, all this way?” my dad asked.

“The engine is — how do you say …” The French dad looked to his son in the rear-view mirror and rattled off a question.

“It is ‘a genius,’ Papa.”

“Yes, the engine is a genius.” The boy’s dad patted the dashboard with affection.

“Yes, that is true,” said the boy’s mom, “but the tires are shit.”

My own mother stifled a laugh, while the boy proceeded to scold his — in French, of course, but intermingled with a good deal of laughter.

“So sorry,” his mom said, good natured and not at all embarrassed. “The tires are no good, that is what I meant.”

And sure enough, soon after that, the back left tire began to squeak and then to squeal; so we didn’t stay long at the sand dunes once we got there but headed back home, just in case. And that’s when the boy started telling jokes (“Why was the bee deaf?”) and giving the answer before anyone could respond (“Her ears were full of the wax!”). On and on he went, making us forget about the tire, and him laughing a great big belly laugh each time, so infectious that even my dad chucked once or twice, even though he rarely laughed at children’s jokes.

Not me, though. Oh no. That would have been admitting something: for instance, that I felt left out; that I wanted to join in. But I couldn’t admit those things. It was too late. The boy had forgotten about the sullen girl in the back seat.

But I’ve never forgotten him. I hear about this boy all the time: a man with wet-sand hair. He plies the waters of the Amazon in a log canoe. Travels solo on camel from Marrakesh to Timbuktu. Walks the Great Himalaya Trail with nothing but a knapsack. Along the way, he tells corny jokes to the natives. And he keeps a journal. A black binder full of loose-leaf paper. His drawings are precise, concise. Beautiful.

Don’t ask me the boy’s name, though, because I never learned it. He’s the boy in the van, that’s all. The friend I never had.

The Case for Steve Gutierrez

1 April 2016
Categories: Nonfiction

I’m middle-aged now and batting away a number of ghosts. In short, I’m haunted by the same platoon of terrors that made my high school years very bad and ruined my life in untold ways. I’m closer to death and I want to feel better by the time I go. But I think I won’t. Not unless I make some real effort to understand myself. As it is, I think I do understand myself but have never articulated it fully, neither for myself or what audience I might find in the reading world. I am a writer, obviously, a fucked up one. That will be my theme here: I am fucked up.

“Supremely.” I have never confessed my true self to anybody outside a therapist and my beloved wife, and even then with circumspection, with care. I am afraid of being deemed more monstrous than I already feel. I want to tell you what I know about myself, though, for the relief it might provide me, this simple confession of my own shortcomings—my own guilt, my own agonies. And for the balm it might provide for your own sentence on earth, your own distinct pain, your own unbearable loss and rupture and exile from Eden. I trust that you’re lost, too, and bear the marks of your struggle. I take it on faith that you have known the cross, Christian, Jew, Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu or whatever (lack of) religion you profess. You are not so shallow as to have been spared suffering, not so happily relieved to have coasted pain free. If you are, I am not for you. I am not the writer to read. Pass on me, and find a less lugubrious, more cheerful essayist to enjoy. I am Catholic, and I have been nailed in three places.

Fittingly, I am punctured by a triumvirate of spikes so sharply driven into my flesh and spirit they remain embedded in me. Bits of them stick, and hurt, as if pounded in only yesterday. I cry inside with fresh doubt. “Oh, my God! What is this about? Why am I penalized for living?” I rue the duration of the sacrifice. “Why haven’t my sufferings alleviated in time, and disappeared? Why are these damn nails so permanent?”

I belie my condition. I appear in the world unconcerned and carefree, no more worried than most adults with a past that isn’t splendid, even more at ease than many. I get by with fakery, or will, or duplicity, which perhaps is a combination of the first two strategies—the effort put forth to reveal a better self that I pretend is real. I can’t be good, can I? I’ve got too much shit inside me. Even love can’t help. Or can it? We’ll see.

This testament is written in love.

I twist on the cross. I bow my head crowned with thorns. I identify with the ragged Jew who went before me readily.

I look up and howl. “Oh, life, oh, life! Who the fuck were you to doom me?”

 

 

Who I Am Is Three1

A Testimonial in Regard to Myself

 

I, Steve Gutierrez,2 am built on three premises that govern my existence: I am the ugly child of a stricken father of a despised race. Everything else in my life is insignificant compared to those permanent facts. I plead the fifth when it comes to my mother, a major force behind me.

And I am a blessed man. To wit:

I am lucky I am not in prison, not for reasons you might imagine with my last name, Gutierrez, barrio dude, etc., etc., etc., but for another cause separate from race and class, from money and upbringing. In fact, I always had enough money growing up, at least in the years preceding the hardship of my father’s illness. And my upbringing—how I was taught to behave in the world—was exemplary. No, I almost killed a man for another reason, separate from all that.

First off, he deserved it. The world can do without certain Homo sapiens. This creature that I can hardly call a man, so venomous and anti-life was he, so against the spirit of all that is great within us, so dismissive of simple compassion when he smelled weakness and powerlessness—this foul thing stained the earth like a bipedal blob of animated human shit. He was an expendable mistake. I can still kill him on a good day—a good day for me, a bad day for him.

To everything turn, turn, turn…

But I didn’t kill him. I stopped myself before it was too late. I experienced an epiphany. I knew the act I set in motion to be a great sin. On the verge of consummating my hate, I desisted less for legal reasons than a spiritual law.

It was wrong to kill a man. Don’t laugh! “Ha! You’re on to something there!” Please don’t laugh. I have been laughed at enough in my life.

“Aren’t you a genius?” Don’t mock me because I didn’t know what you already know so well—the value of life. That is because I didn’t have one, a life. When you have been excluded from the flow of the day before you—from the people and events passing outside your window—and are so distant from everything considered (and indeed) unique and impressive and beautiful about the times you live in, you withdraw, and stew. You howl at your terrible sentence. You reach up a hand, and find—glass, paned glass. You learn the serial killer’s plight. It is only a miracle that can stop you from becoming a monster.

Miraculously, I realized his right to exist and my place in his life. At least I wasn’t supposed to end his. I didn’t have the right against his right, right? So simple, so basic. Thou shalt not kill. But that ancient directive is exactly what Cain forgot in the field.

“Why not? The time seems right, and this son of a bitch bothers me.” I broke the Ten Commandments over my knee and almost over his head. I nearly strangled him to death.

He lucked out that day. Maybe I erred. It’s possible I disappointed God and all the angels above by letting him live, because the worthless thing really merited death, and my act of mercy is not commendable, but weak. After all, he had challenged my very right to live by deliberately driving in one of those nails I will elaborate on soon, and then another, pounding them in gleefully, with a smirk on his face. He tried to kill my spirit. Which fills my body purposefully, or my body is dead. I am absent.

He did his best to murder me. He hunted me down and played his tortuous games. Then came the day I let him know I wasn’t to be fucked with anymore. And he was older than me, and scared. But I wasn’t a kid anymore, and cowed.

I read it in him, his cowardly fear, not even an honest fear that came from sizing up a credible opponent and entertaining doubt, but punk fear. I came forward with much adrenaline in me, and no fear.

“And you think I’m scared of you?”

“No.”

“Say that again.”

“No.”

“It’s not enough. I want you dead.”

“Quit fucking around, man.”

“I’m not fucking around. I’m about as serious as I can get. Don’t you know I’m the craziest fucker around, sucker? You didn’t know that, did you? You’re scared now, aren’t you? I’m not afraid of you, dude. I’m not afraid of you at all. I’m gonna strangle your fucking ass. I’m gonna pounce on you in a second.”

“I’ll kick your ass, man.”

“No, you wont. You don’t scare me at all. I hear it in your voice. You’re scared. What’s the matter? Am I too close to you now? Are you getting scared now, punk?”

*                              *                              *

I’m still edging up to him, standing face-to-face, ready to act. I am not healed. I have not forgiven.

I am fucked up, and upset.

I’m going to break it down for you, my life, as succinctly and honestly as I can. I’m convinced that if everybody composed his own life history in the same spirit, briefly and ruthlessly, we might love more. If everybody kept such a reminder of all that makes her less than Godly, less than she at her shining best when even God blushes to be so favored a parent, getting up in the morning would be easier. Hung up in a prominent, public place, like a kitchen or an office, the testament wouldn’t rebuke, but inspire. The world wouldn’t hate so much. We would all get along better, and laugh more. We might even learn to be joyous, weighed down by the past lightly, lightly. Christ would make his escape from the cave without fanfare, and head into the desert on his own. You stand among the chosen few who catch the last of him, arriving in time to watch him go deeper into the rugged landscape burdened by an orange ball of fire until he dwindles to a mere speck, a dancing dot on the horizon, his time on earth done.

 

 

Breaking It Down

A no-frills account of me

 

I want to say my father. I want to say my body. I want to say my race. These are the three things that make up my essential self. Taken together or separately, they constitute me.
Me in three.

 

“My father, my father!” I cry out in the wilderness.

“Oh, my father!” I go looking for him in fear. I rue the task.

 

My father was slow. Stricken with a horrible disease in his prime, it wasn’t the terror of his ugly condition that marked me, but the prelude. Early-onset Alzheimer’s grabbed him and shook him up before it settled into his brain and ate away. I saw the aftermath of the feast, the body wasted, the mind gone, the will long sapped. But I could get over that.

My aunt Didi said: “My God, I’ve never seen suffering like that!” Years later, she recounted the horror of seeing him in his bedroom at home. He hadn’t been put away yet. He slumped in a wheelchair in a corner, as if occupying the dingy hall in a convalescent home, or already he laid in bed, emaciated, eyes aglow with fury or dimmed in complete senescence, smelling like death.

“I got out of there fast,” she said. “I couldn’t look at him. I couldn’t bear it.”

I could. We all could in the end, we in the family who had no choice anyway. In time, even the howling intensity of his futile cry to be released from his suffering would fade in our ears, a very rough passage of life endured. Maybe I never got over that spectacle entirely. My mother thought I didn’t. Before she died, she expressed regret that she kept him at home for too long. “I should have put him away before I did. I can see it in your eyes even now when we talk about it.”

“Why didn’t you?”

“I couldn’t find a place for him. Nothing was open. Nothing that I wanted had room. There were so many bad ones. Ugh,” she shuddered. “Convalescent homes. I couldn’t make up my mind. I knew some were just too bad for him. I kept him at home.”

“You sure did.”

“It was hard on all of us.”

“It sure was.” But that didn’t last. There was an ending.

He died. What lived on in me was a more insidious and powerful form of terror. Slowness. Dullness. Bewilderment.

That’s what killed me inside.

“It’s not Dad’s death that wrecked me,” I told her at the same kitchen table conference, and tell my sister still, “but his life.”

“Okay, his life,” my mother said. They both nodded their heads. They were there; they couldn’t dispute my analysis. But my candor still bothered them.

“I know what you’re talking about, it’s hard to admit. But you’re right, you’re always right.”

“No, I’m not.”

“Now you are.”

“You are, Steve,” my sister said. “I know what you’re talking about, too. I agree. I mean I never saw it that way. I was just a girl, but—yeah, I can see that. It’s terrible but true.”

Bring on a drum roll. My father was slow. Related to the scary symptoms to come, the forgetfulness and the moodiness and the paranoia and the anxiety associated with the complicated disease that beset him, came an early sign. In league with the hereditary Alzheimer’s that only later got diagnosed properly, aggravating the central condition that the best doctors didn’t understand then and still don’t, still struggling with this horror that afflicts my extended family (I’m free of it), came another malfunction, less understood, less measurable. It was a quality of mind, of being itself.

This attribute can best be described as difference. It sounds simple, but it is hard to explain. I reduce it. My father was slow. I reacted accordingly, like any sane pre-teen with intelligence, any child already beset with troubles he hardly recognized would. I hid him. I kept him away from my friends, not allowing them near him in ingenious ways, and always got nervous on occasions when that might happen. He wouldn’t be like their dads in conversation. He wasn’t normal. He was off. He was—slow. I’m going to officially declare this refrain mine, this most painful iteration of all that haunts me, and go even further. I propose that the word retarded is not quite misplaced when used to describe the type of slowness I mean. It is horrible, it is insulting, but it is true, too. It is accurate, which is about as great an honor I can bestow on my father. Like me, he is big enough to withstand the truth. In death, he lives on in the spirit of his son. We’re not fucking around with words, with life as it passed in that house in that cursed era.

At last, I can speak unashamedly about this most shameful aspect of my life with the help of my computer friend, which lets me take back anything I set down immediately if I wish, hunched over the keyboard nervously. I can exhibit bravery in refusing to flinch, flee or lie, and in opting not to rename it. Not to give it a fancy medical term or euphemistic turn to make my mother happy (rest in peace) or anybody else who might object. Not that I smell cowardice in my siblings, quite the opposite. “Go on, Steve, tell the truth,” they say, my older brother dead like my father, only younger and taken down more savagely yet, the bout over, the winner declared, “E.O. Alzheimer’s!” in the ring of life. Forgive a bad metaphor. I don’t give a fuck about good writing at this moment.

My father was slow. He was impeded due to astonishing factors, not all of them clearly identified by the bright men and women in wispy gowns, with stethoscopes—good ghosts in the spooky castle, the lugubrious hospital for railroad men. “There’s something wrong there, yes? On top of the forgetting and moodiness he seemed a little off, a little different? I can see that. I can’t give you an explanation for it, though. We’re barely beginning to understand this.”

Doctors are great. Doctors know much, but not all. “He made it this far. You should be proud.”

“We are.”

“He is lucid.”

“He is. I’m speaking of something else.” Maybe my tearful mother had a conversation like that when she could no longer pretend that nothing was ever wrong. Something was always wrong.

My father stumbled through life, afflicted with a disease from hell, but his uneasy steps seemed almost separate from it, confusingly. He couldn’t keep up with the crowd, the normal men. I don’t question normality or inveigh against society as a flimsy social construction designed to keep us in check, mediocrely. Nah. Normal is normal is normal. It is pretty evident. Its opposite is equally apparent. My father wasn’t the same as other fathers in any neighborhood in the country—not yours, not mine; not any other community with better norms or mores or values or expressions. Nonsense.

My father owned that strangeness that flavored his life, and mine. He exuded incapacity while holding a job for many years, and functioning well. Yet something was awry in him, noticeably awry with the greater burden looming over him, the core illness. He was odd.

Everybody knew it. Everybody saw it. But nobody really spoke of it. Thus, shame builds up. I am a shame-filled person. As motors hold oil within, I hold shame inside. Stick a dipstick in my mouth and learn I’m full. Quarts and quarts of black, viscous, gooey shame keep me in top running disorder, or maybe it’s a lighter weight, green shame, perhaps even a high tech, environmentally friendly brand meant to maximize my performance in the world. It is still shame. Grade A, 100{0d6c0367c8c8ce3328d7385a3995d880bbc0bef238b7f2a91697c38c5b607893} shame.

I wanted to kill him. I wanted him to die.

My father wasn’t right. I was bright. But I didn’t need intelligence to be ashamed. Nobody wants a slow father, not charmingly slow, not working-class oafishly slow, but obviously slow. My father was…

“There’s something wrong with Alberto,” the relatives said. I caught it.

“Fuck you,” I rebelled inside. “Leave him alone!”

I loved him! I hated him! I couldn’t reconcile my rejection of his weirdness and my need for his love. Both warred within me. Complicating things, at times he showed himself no different from the best fathers in the world. It happened occasionally, a lifting of the veil or shroud that moved with him, gray and ghastly, and sickened him. When it disappeared, momentarily or suddenly or surprisingly—when it happened—I saw another man, my father. I saw him as he could be, as he should be. I wanted him like that all the time. Was this too much to ask?

I needed divine assistance.

“I want my father to be normal!” I got on my knees every night before getting in bed. Once under the covers, I continued my prayer: “Please, God, make him normal.” It was a holy favor I pled for, a heavenly long shot, but who else to turn to in desperation? God was all-powerful. God knew the score of us below and what we needed and what we didn’t.

Well, I surely needed a healthy dad. I wasn’t asking for a material thing or anything bad to happen to my enemies, jerks at school, but for something good that would benefit everybody. It might happen! I might wake up one morning and find my dad okay in the living room, sitting on the couch, relaxing with a cigarette, all signs of disturbance gone. This was the big dream I had!

This was the miracle I prayed for! “Please!”

The downside of it wasn’t so great.

“Take him away if you can’t make him normal! Take him away, away from me…” I set myself up for major guilt through prayer.

“Kill him if you need to. I wish he were dead.”

My father worked for many years at the Sante Fe Railroad Hobart Yard in Los Angeles, honorably. He wore overalls and climbed atop trains and scooted under them with a wrench in hand, a heavy tool. He squinted in the greasy gloom, with an image of home in his mind. His was a tragic life, marred by unavoidable sickness. His last years were a study in torment, a descent into a deep pit crowned by suffering neither medicine nor faith could help. We had none, faith. We weren’t religious. It is only in retrospect that I see anything like the hand of God in his life, and that only barely. He suffered so that I may live.

Rest in peace. Father. You were not slow. You are aglow. Trudging to work in the last days of your shaky health, you got in the car and drove the crowded industrial boulevard to the vast train yard for the swing shift, getting out in the parking lot and meeting your friend the mexicano Baldomero, who graciously drove you home when you forgot you had driven yourself to work at night’s end, knowing better than to argue with you, imbued with the finest Mexican manners, the truest politeness. At your velorio before your burial, your customary Mexican wake, he stood in the back of the mortuary chapel in a baggy gray suit, wiping his face before the service, and hanging around in the hall after the condolences were accepted in the nook where your family sat a few feet from the coffin—two body lengths from death, from their boxed-up father and husband. He lit up when Albert and I greeted him—sus hijos, your sons. His closeness to you came out in the way he spoke, recalling the good times before the illness, and the bad times when he looked after you. He didn’t admit it. He was too humble a man. He gave you all the credit for getting here in one piece. Yes, death was a triumph. Faced bravely, it became a part of you, not an enemy who had won. He brought out the Mexican in me, shuffling next to him while Albert listened intently. He knew him better.

He had cried out when he first saw him. “Baldomero!”

They had clasped hands, and hugged. I had joined them.

“Your father was a gentleman,” he said. “A hard worker. He did it all for you. He knew he was sick, but he kept coming back to work until he couldn’t. ¿Era mexicano, no? Trabajo y familia, ¿qué más tenemos?” Work and family, what else do we have?

“God?” Albert asked, keeping a hand on his shoulder.

There also was closeness. It came from all the times Albert had picked you up, found you in a daze, and consulted with Baldomero on your worsening condition.

“Oh, yes, without question, God.” He looked up. He smiled.

He left us looking up, smiling nervously at the rafters.

 

“My father, my father!” I cry out in the wilderness. It is still a search. It is such a dangerous task, hunting down your father.

 

The second influence is so painful I might not complete this essay. I might shut down the computer and go outside and stand under a tree. But I promised you me in three.

Without duplicity. Next up is my physiognomy. I call it that. Label it fancily. But it’s nothing but my—face.

My looks. Number two. How to go on without breaking down here on the page? Laying my head on the screen of my computer and just sobbing? Me, Stephen Gutierrez, with a D in the middle—yes, David, come help me!—reduced to childlike helplessness, blubberingly.

“I’m sorry!” I cry out, nonsensically.

(I’m going to hide myself within parentheses to ease the pain. “Ssshhh,” I put a finger to my lips to remind you to be quiet, still, and not draw any attention to us.

(I don’t want to be seen. I really don’t.)

 

(I was born with big ears that stuck straight out of my head and were later corrected badly in a shoddy program for underprivileged freaks, along with my sister’s identical ears. My mother, a fetching, sophisticated woman who could do no better given her meager resources—our modest income provided by the man above, my sick, kind father—acted on our behalf. She took my sister and me by the hands and led us up the steps of White Memorial Hospital in Los Angeles, and enrolled us in The Plastic Surgery Center that welcomed beggars like us. She signed the forms with confidence, and charm. She was always classy!3 She truly wanted the best for us and did what she could, crying the night before we got surgery, dabbing at her eyes in the corner of the hospital room for all the pain we had endured and the necessity of this humiliating procedure. But I didn’t like her much. I hated her. I loved her. My mother! is not the subject of this section.

(The Plastic Surgery Center at White Memorial Hospital in Los Angeles is the focus. My brother grinned down at our bedsides, kindly, a goofy fucker I’m not going to bring in because the sadness becomes unbearable when considering his own brave, thwarted life battling the beast that took my father. He is in an essay or two of mine that you can find in one of my books.

(God bless Albert. God bless my family. We were actually kind, decent people, reasonably intelligent and loving – my father’s terrible illness aside – and totally fucked up. My father stood at the foot of my bed touching my feet, then my sister’s.

(Our ears stretched from wall to wall in the room, ridiculous beyond measure. You can look it up in Ripley’s Believe It or Not. But relief came in the morning on the sixth floor where the gowned surgeons at The Plastic Surgery Center kept busy working on cases like ours. They put a mask over my nose and asked me to breathe deeply, and got to work. Our flappers got folded and pulled out and cut at the hospital known for serving no meat, and run by religious nuts of some kind, Methodists, I think they were called. Anyway, we got surgically corrected at the low-rent hospital near downtown L.A. close to my birthday in August of ’67 by a team of incompetent residential surgeons wielding hacksaws and pliers. It was not all that bad, the doctors were actually goodhearted and kind, the nurses sweet and caring. But my mother must have gotten us in that way, that low-income way—I never bothered to find out—and it was painful. It was painful before the surgery and it was painful after the surgery. They didn’t get it right. I am not right.4

(Later, in a horrendous episode that I have not outgrown, my unattractively big, Indian nose attracted the attention of the cruelest people I would come to know. They represented all strata of the surrounding civilization, and collectively served the cause of mockery faithfully, these pigs for whom Auschwitz should have been built. I would have turned on the gas with glee. No, that would have lowered me to their standard and made me one of them. I refuse that still. I would have had a guard do it. Sickness breeds sickness, hatefulness the same. I apologize to the Jewish people for using Auschwitz literarily. I meant to make a strong point, obviously.

(They ranged in age from young to old, and covered the racial gamut, the socio-economic sphere, the sub-cultural mix. Oh, yes, I can hear them still in one nasally mean voice, calling me names. White, brown and Asian, male and female, communist and capitalist, cholo and surfer, recreation leader and reputed porn star (really), they all stood in the chorus at one time or another. My nose left its mark on my face for the rest of my life. I still feel it big there. I am a freak. “The Steve Show.” I star in it.

(I got plastic surgery again in my eighteenth year, but nothing fixed a sense of wrongness so deeply ingrained in me, I wake up with it and go to sleep with it. Not God, not love, not another go under the knife to get it right at thirty-two. Round two. Plastic surgery time. ((No, round three! When you count back to the ears.)) Nothing. The sad sitcom goes on. I am a bumbling clown in a face not my own staring at the world with steady tears pouring down my cheeks. They are unseen unless you get real, real close to me and smell my bad breath that goes along with all the evil inside me.)

 

My father. My physiognomy. Number two is the biggest thing to happen to me, the single most important influence on me. It fucked me up for good.

 

The third influence is the expected, race, what used to be called race. Since discredited, it was popular then.

“What race are you?”

Do you really want to know? Are you sure? No, you don’t. You are going to lose respect for me and quit reading.

(Mexican.)

*                              *                              *

I am Mexican. El sangre de mexico runs through my veins. The blood of Mexico colors my veins. Not preferred Spain. Not a fabulous, generic Latino land but down home Mexico. It’s in me. I am Mexican. And I am not. I am not close to being Mexican.

“What is your race? What is your ethnicity? What is your nationality?”

“Um, Mexican, of course!” They knew, but they had to ask to be sure. You couldn’t mistake anybody for a Mexican. It was a grave, grave insult.

“Sorry.” Contrarily, it was a badge of pride.

“For what?” And inbred shame.

“I don’t know.”

It was a dubious distinction, a default identity since you didn’t have another one. Damn it, you needed one! Everybody was somebody! Everybody claimed a heritage!

It was a mess of things that couldn’t be contained in the word but spilled over into life.

“Fuck you, I’m Mexican-American, what of it?”

“Don’t be so sensitive. I’m just trying to figure out what you are.”

Conservative-minded people complain about multiculturalism and the lack of assimilation among the immigrants, but they conveniently forget how impossible it was not to feel othered as a Mexican-American in my time. It didn’t matter if you weren’t an immigrant, or even the child of immigrants. We got reminded constantly that we didn’t qualify as true Americans, only whites did. Thank God my parents had the common sense not to impose a cultural regimen in the house that was not suitable. We kids weren’t made falsely Mexican.

Thank God for English being the first language in our home. Thank God. I am neurotic enough without language confusion.

“Speak English?”

“Man, do you write English? Do you know what English is? An American sentence?”

“Sorry, didn’t know you’re so touchy.”

“I’m not. But you’re kind of obsessed, aren’t you?”

Actually, such conversations have been few and far between in my life.

I’ve always spoken good old broken, working-class American English as practiced in my Chicano neighborhood, expertly. Nah, fuck you. You’re not fluent, so don’t pretend. Don’t try. Working-class American English is so rarely permitted on the literary page, I indulge in this brief display for the mere fuck of it. Only its facsimile pops up now and then, an acceptable version crafted for polite, middle class ears that like to hear it and pretend openness. But the real deal? Fuck no. It’s too raw. It doesn’t take a sensitive constitution into account. It doesn’t adopt a morally superior stance that looks down on less than proper English as a colorful aberration that still lacks in ethical fortitude. The vulgar speaker hides the sweetheart inside. No, the fucking speaker is the moral equal to you (or whoever the stupid reader is) just the way he or she is. Get it? Asshole.

I’m mad. I’m bad. I’m Chicano sad.

Not Latino. Puro So Cal. Which never used Spanish like that when I grew up. Not in my hood. I learned sweet Caló off the streets of Los I roamed and met some vatos on and talked. I talked with the worst. I took a crash course in street talk, Chicano style. It is a necessary tongue in many parts of the country where old school gente still chatter and trade recipes—lowrider soup is one of my favorites. I’m petitioning Rosetta Stone to include Caló in her list of language-learning courses.

It wasn’t always so acceptable.

Ni modo. Who gives a fuck?

Let me start up. Again. I point out differences. I don’t downplay cultural specificity or pretend it’s not there, it doesn’t exist, a cultural distinctiveness that marks it and distances it from others, the culture. I don’t cry over being misunderstood or the lack of insight that didn’t see in us a common citizenry. Fuck that. We were Chicanos, which means to be American, exactly. Not everybody agreed. Our differences got picked up alertly, appearing as alien signals on the radar screen of racially proud, patriotically vigilant white Americans, and decoded as un-American. They were full of shit. I am as American as Johnny Cash.

I am as Mexican as César Chávez, who wasn’t Mexican at all, but a brilliant, manipulative, paranoid American labor leader who spoke with a Mexican accent. I don’t speak with a Mexican accent. But maybe I did growing up. Probably I did. Surely I did.

I stick a dirty sock in my mouth. “Sorry.” I speak around it.

“I’m only a stupid Mexican.”

Is it getting old? It is old. It is also historically accurate. Born in 1959 and raised in Los Angeles, in my time it still hurt to be Mexican. It still paid to keep it quiet. Not bring it up. Not flaunt it. Not risk reprisal. Registered under my skin are the countless slurs and casual putdowns, the cruel jokes aimed at keeping me in my place, the basic stigma associated with the word.

Mexican. Behind the good-natured laughter a more sinister truth lived. What inspired the joke was timeless. The worthlessness of the subject. The despicableness of the race itself. This handy assumption had been inherited from a previous generation and lived on. Even if not fully articulated, it functioned as the subtext for all the ridicule and disparagement, and hate.

“I fucking hate Mexicans.” I heard that embittered declaration enough times to absorb the sentiment and not question its wider prevalence, not for a second. It was there in L.A., Mexican hate. I knew the real reason why.

“Fucking hate them.”

Mexicans were the lowest people on earth. Half-Indian, half-Spanish, they owned none of the nobility of either subpar people, the Mexican Indians late savages, and the Spaniards deficient Europeans, overall. The worst got together and produced an abysmal creature called a Mexican. In the great schema of racial fitness, he might fall below a black, on a bad day, and never rise above a white, on any day. He kind of competed with a Plains Indian on a charitable day, if you forgot the cannibalism and noted the brilliance of the advanced primitive culture that the Spaniard improved with his entrance, but the mixture caused eyebrows to rise and reduced the Mexican to a question mark.

“He was just a damn Mexican.” Deep inside me, a fearful boy curls up against an adobe wall with a gigantic sombrero on, head bent, hands clasped around his knees, huarache sandals—not the type The Beach Boys wear—strapped on his dirty feet. It is a movie set designed by America. It is my generation’s uncomfortable secret. We are typecast forever.

“We don’t need no stinkin’ Actors Equity badges! We swat flies away from our faces for free! Big moscas like this! Así!”

Off the set, keep it to yourself. Blend in. Be suave. Cool.

It’s not only an L.A. phenomenon, but a statewide role. When you leave the hood, you’ll know.

Stay low. Beware of the admission that you are Mexican. Some might grin stupidly. “Mexican? Really?” Others might hide their astonishment with weak smiles. “Are you really Mexican?”

“Yes. No. Not really. I mean I’m not a real Mexican.” Who would want to be a real Mexican? Not you. Not anybody.

I exaggerate. I lie. I create a racial dystopia that is far harsher than the day-to-day reality of coexisting in post-World War II L.A. The 60’s. The 70’s. We had Chicano Power going on, all that pride! It transformed the whole Southwest! We were California, and still are the truest Californians, arguably, or should be. We come before the mythic surfer whose existence proves my point. Only a white American could arise to embody the state in the minds of millions of Americans. Only a cousin to a farm-bred Nebraskan and a flinty New Englander and a blonde North Westerner and a slowpoke Southerner could supersede the obvious candidate for statewide embodiment, yours truly. We were invisible, as loud as we were.

I guess the lowriders weren’t good enough, or got it wrong, laughably, again. They’re more Cali than surfboards. Not limited to gang members or signifying violence in any way, they defined a wider swath of people, of territory. But they remain freakish in our minds, not acceptable, outlaw. Alien. People across the country know the hopping beasts now, but have no firm idea of the drivers, unlike the man on the surfboard, the goofy, grinning, serious, dedicated, mellow, kind surfer. Lowriders were just a bunch of kids riding the black waves of L.A. pavement as iconoclastically as any mild rebel bucking conformity. I sat in one jumping ’64 once, high, and had a spiritual experience. It was equivalent to the glory of being “in the tube,” as a few surfer friends attempted to explain, “with God.” But ended with a vehicle violation from a fucking pig in an empty parking lot, hassling a couple of Mexican kids for kicks, the blue-eyed monster. His brown-eyed twin supported the need to ticket my friend, the driver. To put him in place.

“You know this is illegal?”

“Yeah, yeah.”

Mexican. At school, everybody got razzed. Mercilessly, we tore into each other for cruel fun. Nobody got a pass. In my part of town, the Eastside, the minority kids, the whites and Japanese Americans and few others, could be persecuted terribly. I felt bad for some.

“You fat blob, white piece of shit.”

“Nip.”

“You fucking wetback.” Even the immigrant Mexican might hear it from a Chicano.

And the Chicano got it the next round or somewhere down the line from the frankly racist white, the arrogant Japanese American, the displaced black.

“You’re just a fucking wetback, like all the others.”

Nobody escaped the lines drawn about race. Only later, when we got older and wiser, we might repent. “I’m sorry, man. I didn’t know what I was saying.”

“That’s okay, man. I don’t know what I’m saying half the time.”

“Your mama does! I saw her selling tacos in front of Kmart! ‘Tacos! Feefty centavos!”

“And your mama, too! I saw her riding an Irish bike, with big bags of potatoes hanging from the handlebars. The old lady was swigging whiskey with one hand!”

“Tacos!” It all works out in the end in America. We are all part of one big experiment that’s like a melting pot, I learned in history. It kind of made sense. It applies to me. I’m all gooey with you.

At some point in your life, you have considered the word Mexican foul. I assert this with no proof but my experience. I damn nobody, especially myself anymore. It’s okay being a Mexican.

Being Mexican, rather. The truth is contained in an indefinite article, or its absence. For some, the definite article made things a little more difficult. They themselves, separately, individually, played the role of the Mexican in an all-white school, an unmixed town. The true minorities among Chicanos, perhaps bolstered by a few Mexican-Americans they just as likely hated or kept a distance from, they can tell you much.

More than me. But I can tell you this. My Mexican heritage came at a price. Frankly, it doesn’t seem exorbitant now. You can read the receipt yourself, which is stuck on my wet back after a terrible binge with other naked Californians in a healing hot tub, rubbing and soothing and working things out just fine. It’s impossible to scrape off. The bill sticks to my skin.

The California Experience, it reads at the top, with an itemized list below.

Fucking wetback. Mexican. Don’t ever think you’re really an American. You’re not.

It hardly makes sense that I needed to pay for this, but the cost is still visible.

Su alma, it reads, even though I don’t speak Spanish. Not real Spanish. I fake it. I get edited.

I rushed to look it up in translation.

“You fucking wetback. You’re not smart enough to do that.” Just kidding.

 

It is distressing that the least important of my three influences takes up so much space in my testament, as if it is paramount. It is not. It is small compared to the other stuff, and getting smaller every day, every week, every month, every year that distances me from the past because I embrace the present. I get along with everybody, I hate nobody. I love largely because I can. It’s a Chicano thing.

Cora. Heart. If we don’t walk it and not just talk it—yup, prison talk—we’re nothing special. A bunch of lame claimants to a magical culture that isn’t anything but common, and worse. Excessively violent and undereducated. I lay it out as it is, not as we want it to be.

Oralé! I’m our spokesman. Pull the plug on me and chase me out of town. I don’t give a shit. I’m on the outskirts already.

One more time! “Uno, dos, tres, cuatro! Stephen does Cali…”

I am a maladjusted adjusted citizen of the realm, a perfectly assimilated Mexican-American of a certain generation and class. I love America, is the solemn truth. I hate crybabies.

Your soul, the tally comes to. Your soul. I looked it up. I got mine still.

 

Now it is time to conclude my testament. I am a formal man who insists on correct execution in all things literary. When I attempt a testament, I want nothing left out. I just have more to say.

My mother. Our tortoise.

You now know me, Stephen D. Gutierrez. I am who I am because of three accidents in my life. I was born a Mexican freak to an incapacitated father and an imperious, demanding mother, hardly mentioned here, who had something to do with everything, every aspect of my life. Connected to my father both legally and emotionally—they shared children they cared about, which isn’t a given in every family, I learned then and especially later, talking to the children of people who should have never had them—and obsessed with “the race” in good and bad ways that show in me, and too concerned about looks because she was beautiful and the race itself is unsure of its true face, she left her influence on me, oh, did she! I was born in August.

That same month and year my paternal grandfather died. In Tijuana. Wheelchair bound, he lifted a hand to the future. “¡Suerte!” Luck!

I never met him. I take his sick spirit in stride.

I’m a crippled Chicano from birth. My first words were: “¿Qué pasó? Why am I here?”

Crippled and stunted. My retarded father. My ugly face.5

I was born in the morning. I was one with the dawning of the new day.

My mother didn’t expect a third child, and got me. She held me in her arms, rocked me, or didn’t do either of those things, most probably. After ascertaining my basic healthiness with a piercing assessment, holding me up to the light as she half lay in the hospital bed, she tapped my lips for kicks, “Huh!” and handed me back to the nurse, a cute little Mexican-American girl in her eyes, still young compared to my mother’s thirty-two years.

“Please? Just for a minute?” She called my dad in from the hall. She sprung up and gathered her things and rushed out to the car at the curb after a quick stop at the desk, taking me from the nurse.

“Yes, we’re going to be fine!” she sung out, pressing my face to the window.

“Look, the world! Isn’t it ugly?” She jiggled me on her knees, and hummed, and pulled down the shades as soon as she got home, always wary of spies, of intruders, of others peeping in, seeing us, and donned an apron, and checked out books from the library, and dressed well when she needed to, very stylishly, very understatedly, and popped valiums to battle “her nerves” for the next twelve years leading up to my father’s serious illness, when she doubled the dose and had a breakdown.

My father helped around the house. He worked the different shifts at the railroad yard and came home and did what needed to be done, scrubbing, cleaning, changing light bulbs and mowing the lawn. He limped before he lost all mobility and speech, a slight limp that almost passed unnoticed. We had a pet tortoise, a California Desert Tortoise we found on the barrio street of my grandparents’ neighborhood. It plodded along in our backyard, nibbling at the greens along the fence, and hibernated under the water heater in the garage in winter.

The turtle. The tortoise. It had a hard, gray shell. It had reptilian eyes and a beaked face.

My family sat in the living room and laughed. Yes, on occasion laughter spilled out of the windows on Senta Avenue as the TV played or a dumb board game got going on a summer night.

 

“Did you see the damn turtle?”

“What?”

“It was nibbling at the ivy again.”

“Good. Let it.”

“It was digging under the fence, too, trying to get out.”

“It never will,” my mother says, fatalistically. “There’s a big board your father put under it. Didn’t you, Alberto? And it’ll never get out. That turtle is stuck. It’s ours.”

My brother coughs out a handful of nuts. “It’s ours, man, dude,” he says. “La Tortuga!” He opens his eyes wide for me.

My sister rubs her hands before spinning the wheel. “Damn turtle.”

My father moves a game piece tentatively.

“It’s not your turn, Dad!”

“Well.”

“What does Steve say? He’s so quiet tonight. Mr. Silent.”

“Nothing. I’m thinking of that turtle trying to escape.”

“La Tortuga,” my brother says.

“It’ll never get out,” my mother says. “Never.”

“Maybe it will,” I say. “You never know. Turtles are ingenious.”

They all look at me, incredulously.

“Ingenious?” my sister asks.

“Get the dictionary!” my mother says.

“I know what that means,” my sister says.

“So do I,” my mother sings out. “I just want to read the definition. I want to be precise in my understanding, Norma. Get the dictionary.”

“El diccionario,” my brother says.

“Look up misery instead,” I say.

“Misery?” My mother looks at me sharply, concerned. Her brow furrows and her brown eyes are soft, sad, but penetrating.

“Why do you want to look up misery, Stephen? Tell me.”

“There’s a turtle in trouble in our backyard, Mom. We won’t know how badly it’s hurt until it’s too late.”

She stares at me for a long, long time before turning back to the game with a sigh. “Ah, Life,” she says. “What a game.”

 

And that is my life. That is me. Me in three, three and a half, four. Family. Race. Father. Face.
I rest my case.

~

“Oh, God, what a member of the human race!” you say. “A contemporary writer who rhymes like Dr. Seuss and seems to have no shame. Not be embarrassed by anything lame. God, he’s infectious! I better stay away from his game!”

You better. It might turn violent. Hardly. But with a history like mine, you need to be assured.

You want the rest of the story. “What happened that night?”

You know what happened. I didn’t commit murder. I didn’t sentence myself to a good long stretch in la pinta. I don’t own a record but for minor traffic violations and an afternoon spent in the drunk tank in Northern California after storming out of a bar at noon, mounting my ten speed and crashing into a light pole, a parked car, and an astonished old lady, all the while raving something about Dostoevsky. I had been drinking since six with a compadre. I sat sadly and droopily in the drunk tank.

I looked down at my hands, which were blood free, and I thanked God for that.

“Thank you, God. Thank you.” It was about that time that I almost choked the cowardly fool down in L.A., my hometown, on spring break.

I desisted. Something in me stopped me. Don’t go looking me up online. Digging up the dirt. Making sure I’m not lying. You won’t find me there. You won’t spot me among the unshaven criminals posing for mug shots with savage pride or the arrogant cast of privileged men staring coldly at the camera for heinous crimes we’ll never understand. You might read about me in a list of semi-distinguished writers, those who have not quite made it but are known to the cognoscenti. Sure. You might see that I am earning a living in a respectable and even honored profession and to all outward appearances stable. But I am not. I am rocky, broken, desperate. My every act of normalcy is a small victory over darker forces wanting to ruin me. So far, so good, I am ahead. I do some writing, tolerably well, yes? And I do some thinking, embarrassingly shallow, no doubt. And, of course, I do some reading that aids me in all this, and provides satisfaction like little else does: sex, writing, reading are my main pleasures, in that order. But I do more.

I wash the cars. I work out with weights. I love. In so far as my terrible constitution is capable, I love. I love my wife and my son and a few friends. I love my sister, and perhaps nobody else, truly. I love my God, as the idea of supreme goodness invested in one luminous, unfathomable mix that pervades the universe and that does not resemble a big man in the sky is enough to keep me going. I love writing and breaking the rules about details and all that shit. I love giving up on narrative, fuck that! And not expanding on the murderous episode. Rather, I love giving you, the reader, something that might be a little useful, practically.

I hope you love yourself with all that you have gone through and that you commit no murders in your life to brag about falsely, or to be ashamed of terribly. I hope for this fervently, and pray that instead of gripping a man’s throat in fury and watching his eyes widen in disbelief, you think twice, “Good Lord, what am I doing?” and loosen your grip, and let him up. And send him on his stupid way. “Get the fuck out of here! Just go! No, I don’t want to shake your hand. I don’t want your apology. Don’t come near me. I hate you and always will. Just get the fuck out of here, I said. It’s over.” Spin around. And cry and call out to God in the street the minute the bastard disappears. “I am lucky, the luckiest man in the world!”

I hope you dance a little two-step in celebration, with a tear-stained face aimed at the heavens. “Thank you, thank you, thank you! I am a sinner, a big, bad sinner beloved by you! I have been given everything! Why am I so ungrateful? Why am I so sinful? I almost killed a man tonight! Oh God, oh God, what have I become?” And repent, on your knees, in solitude. “Lord save a sinner from all that he shouldn’t be. Please God, save me from the worst.” And that you get up off the floor in your room shaken but stronger, and once you step outside, walk away in utter humility from the unruly crowd gathered at the corner of Hate and Vengeance, claiming your time is theirs. “Come on back and kick it with us, you know you like the action. It’s never boring. It’s one big, bad show where you’re in charge, hating yourself.”

“Nah, I ain’t got the time, man. I’m headed somewhere else.”

“Where?”

“The graveyard on Whittier Boulevard in East L.A. Calvary Cemetery.”

“What for?”

“To stand and cry over the grave of an old friend I almost killed once.”

“Who?”

“Myself.” Look back, once.

Shrug, and carry on.

You got a grave to put flowers on. You got plenty of mourning to do.


1. Not the Father, Son and Holy Spirit in case you suspect literary games. No. ↩

2. Sometimes preferring my formal name, Stephen D. Gutierrez, the D for David, a Jewish prince I identify with for moxie and luck.↩

3. She was classy enough to warn me that the word “classy” is vulgar. Shit on that, too! It’s a damn good word. She was also a word freak. Loved to read. Widely. Schlock. Tolstoy. Dostoevsky. The heavyweights.↩

4. God bless the internet. I just looked up White Memorial Hospital. It was founded by Seventh-Day Adventists, not Methodists. I don’t want to knock them, either. They provided a service for people without incomes for Beverly Hills surgeons. ↩

5. And I apologize, to both. “Sorry, Steve. Sorry, Dad.” Good thing he’s proud of me for getting on with my life, positively. In the realm of the dead, he and my mother cheer me on, holding fast to each other, leaning forward, and pumping their fists. “Go, Steve, go!” my mother says. My father approves of my testament. The dead know what we need to live, what we need to heal in our short time left on earth, we the wounded survivors, the innocent victims—the children. He loves me. He continues to love me. I honor him daily by the practice of my craft, his indomitable will to live strong in me. ↩

Octogenarian Wheelchair Basketball

2 November 2015
Categories: Nonfiction

On the Siskin Hospital for Physical Rehabilitation second-floor wheelchair basketball team, I was tied for most valuable player. Or the least valuable, depending on your perspective. I was the hoop, the Red Team hoop. The Blue Team hoop was a more-or-less dignified lady—whose name I don’t recall—of perhaps not quite eighty, the second youngest player in the ward. On weekend mornings, we faced each other in the Recreational Therapy room, nine or ten wheelchair-lengths apart, arms held out before us in broad O-shapes. Between us were two facing rows of octogenarians, mostly women, in various degrees of infirmity: my Red Team dozing to my left, the spry enemy Blue Team to my right, plotting as always. This particular Sunday morning, I was ready to do anything I had to. Today, I told myself, that plastic gold medallion would be mine.

* * *

I was sixteen years old. Six weeks earlier, I had twisted my fourth-hand ’92 Lincoln Continental around an ancient hemlock tree. Or maybe it was a cedar or Virginia pine. I can’t remember, and the small stand of evergreens along the edge of East Broomtown Road is gone now, logged for timber not many years afterward. But it feels right to me to think of it as a hemlock, which shares the name of the unrelated poisonous plant that killed Socrates, though he chose to face that end. I choose to remember my tree as a hemlock.

At the time of the collision I had been alone, sober, alert, and on my way to high school marching band practice; the weather had been sunny, clear, and dry, with no other cars to be seen along the hardly-ever-trafficked backwoods road. It was the kind of catastrophe where, when asked later why it happened, I can only ever answer with a seemingly evasive “it just happened.” But it had. For a careless moment I had drifted too far to the right and let my tires dip down off the pavement and onto the grassy shoulder. I had jerked back on to the road too abruptly, an overcorrection that had me swerving back and forth for a handful of agonizing seconds before—my panicked and inexperienced foot pressing stupidly on the accelerator rather than the brake—the car left the road entirely and collided with the tree. Crash. And there I was, for no reason at all. I was trapped in the car for two hours, give or take, and after the first handful of seconds, I never lost consciousness, my head pinned between the driver-side window frame and the knotty roots of the hemlock. Had the car rolled a few more inches, I would have been decapitated. As it was, my head suffered only a deep scalp laceration. The real trouble was below.

Eventually the rescue team arrived, jaws-of-lifed me out of the wreck, and choppered me via Life Force to Erlanger Hospital in Chattanooga. I was in pretty bad shape. My left femur had snapped and been driven through the top of my thigh; as a result, I’d lost a great deal of blood. The trauma surgeon nearly chose to amputate, he told me later, but opted in the end, though doubtful of success, to try to save the leg. Thank God, I often think to myself, thank God he didn’t go the other way. What’s more, my left arm was shattered. In my right knee, only one of the ligaments remained untorn. The nerve trauma left my right foot numb and paralyzed. My ribs were broken, my heart and lungs badly bruised. My arms, hands, and face were thoroughly pocked with granules of auto glass. In short, my body was profoundly broken. But I was alive.

* * *

The rules of wheelchair basketball at Siskin Rehab are simple. This is not the wheelchair basketball you see on TV, with Olympic-trained disabled athletes or injured former basketball pros racing down the court at impressive speeds, pulling out-of-nowhere hairpin turns and 180s, and faking out to shoot a surprise three-pointer. No, this is a different game altogether, the official sport of the extremely elderly and infirm, of hip-replacement patients everywhere, or, at very least, in the Tennessee Valley tri-state region. Or maybe just at Siskin Rehab, second floor. I honestly don’t know how widespread the game is—having personal knowledge of only one physical rehabilitation center, this one in Chattanooga, the second floor of it in particular—but I do know how the game is played.

Only four elements are essential: a coach (a role filled by the recreational therapist) who doubles as a referee and may or may not choose to use a whistle; a special balloon, tougher and slightly larger than the average birthday balloon but light enough to cause no injury to the players, who tend to bruise easily; the players themselves, some willing, some not in the least (it was, after all, mandatory therapy); and enough wheelchairs for all, though anyone not already confined to a wheelchair would have no occasion to play in the first place. It’s a close-quarters but (one hopes) non-contact sport, yet I have witnessed questionable collisions on more than one occasion. The Red Team is wheeled into a line, side-by-side, parking brakes locking them in place. The Blue Team is wheeled into a facing formation, almost literally toe-to-toe with their opponents, the two columns of slippered feet just inches apart. And at each end of this double line formation, there is a hoop: one Red, one Blue.

The hoop’s job is to be, well, the hoop; in this case, a kind of anthropomorphized hoop. Fingers laced together, arms held out to form a circle, the hoop is both a goal and a proactive player. Think of the hoop as the opposite of the goalkeeper on a soccer or hockey team: he or she does everything within his or her power to make sure the ball goes through the hoop. An unenthusiastic hoop—the player content to make a stationary circle with his or her arms and let the other players worry about the rest—can be, at best, a non-asset to the team and, at worst, their doom. A dedicated hoop, however, is a team’s most powerful weapon. God help the team whose hoop cares less than that of their opponents.

* * *

I am not an athletic person, nor have I ever been. Despite having always been overweight and essentially bookish, I loved and still love wandering around the woods and pastures of the family farm—hiking the deer trails, devising methods of circumventing the ubiquitous barbed wire, scrambling across the floors of leaf-carpeted forest ravines, scouting thickets for hidden nooks and creeks for signs of tadpoles or crawdads—and that has always been my primary outlet for physical engagement with the outdoors. When it comes to team sports, however, I have always been, for whatever reason, unenthusiastic. I have, I think, a basic understanding of the appeal of sports on an intellectual level, but despite a handful of attempts to become a sports fan, the capacity for that particular enthusiasm eludes me, this despite having actually played team sports as a child, back before the accident. I had, in a way, been tricked into playing by my mother, though it had not, I am certain, been her intention to do so.

I must have been about five years old at the time. I recall sitting in the LaFayette Recreational Center bleachers with my mother, watching my older brother’s team play basketball against another team on the city league. She turned to me and out of what seemed like nowhere asked if I wanted to play tee ball. I said yes, mostly, I think, out of boredom. I did not know what tee ball was, but the way she asked me there on the bleachers, the question just seeming to occur to her on the spot, I assumed it would be something I would do right then, right there at the Rec Center, something to let me escape the boring children’s basketball game I didn’t want to watch anyway. I thought if I said yes she would take me immediately to some different room where I could play the mysterious game of tee ball.

From the name, I envisioned there would be a huge box full of foam pieces shaped into the capital letter T. Somewhere in the box there would be ball, maybe a ping-pong ball, and I would have to face down three other kids—one of us on each side of the box—as we all dug through the box together, searching for the elusive ball among all those Ts. It seemed like kind of a weird game, but I was willing to play it if that’s what it took to get me away from the noisy and uninteresting basketball court. I remember feeling confused and a little miffed when Mom didn’t take me anywhere at all after I agreed to go play the strange game of tee ball, but I wasn’t yet the type to question the authority of adults, so I let it go.

I could not possibly have imagined right then that a few weeks later I would be shoved into a pair of tight gray baseball pants (complete with a blue and white jersey and hat), coaxed into Mom’s Chevy Astro, and deposited on a Rec Center baseball diamond where a strange man who smelled like my Paw Paw—like chewing tobacco, I now know—deemed me an ideal catcher, which is in tee ball perhaps the second least important position, right after right field, which is where he moved me after my inevitable failure behind home plate. Tee ball, it turned out, was just baseball for little kids. The ball was not pitched but hit from a tee—not a foam letter at all, but a stationary pedestal designed for exactly this purpose—and on the pitcher’s mound stood the batter’s coach, who doled out advice and encouragement. Otherwise, tee ball was baseball.

My mother had completely unwittingly duped me into joining a city baseball team. And so I played. It wasn’t torture exactly, and it seemed to make my mother happy to see me out there on the field in my uniform playing, if poorly, and becoming thoroughly socialized among my tiny uniformed peers. The next year the tee went away and the game became baseball in earnest and still I played. It became for me just one of the things that I was supposed to do, like make good grades and memorize Bible verses and always answer adults with a “ma’am” or “sir.” On and off throughout my childhood I would play, always in the right-field position of some unlucky team. The years when the coaches were smart, or maybe just more competitive, my most frequent position was bench, which turned out to be the position I was most suited to. Baseball, it seemed, just wasn’t my calling. But baseball was not octogenarian wheelchair basketball.

* * *

No, wheelchair basketball was a different story, and for the Red Team of Siskin Rehab, second floor, that was a lucky thing indeed. I was their hoop, and in octogenarian wheelchair basketball, a good hoop can make the difference between a crushing defeat and one to six days of glory—consisting, in this case, of a plastic gold medallion and, more importantly for me, affectionate approval from Rose, the gorgeous twenty-something recreational therapist who was, to my sixteen year old mind, the sexiest and most angelic creature to ever toss a set of Yahtzee dice.

This Sunday morning, as Rose entered the room through the double doors ahead—bright green balloon in the curve of her arm, plastic whistle dangling from the cord around her neck—I had my game face on, back straight, fingers laced, testing the flex of my biceps. “Are we ready to play?” Rose said, cheerful, forgoing the traditional parking-brake check. Some players murmured; some waved a shaky hand. I made no obvious response. My eyes, I knew, told her everything she’d need to know. Whistle between her lips, she pushed the balloon into the air. It arced over the Blue Team’s heads and into the midst of the formation. Her whistle screeched, and a drowsy, uncoordinated hell broke loose.

* * *

The summer before the crash—not long before it, in fact—some friends and I had invented a new sport we proudly dubbed Ultimate Tennis. I know what you’re thinking—really, another digression?—but bear with me. It is important because it would be the last game of its sort that I would ever play. Like its precursor and namesake Ultimate Frisbee, Ultimate Tennis took the implements of an existing game—in this case the tennis ball, racquet, and court—and increased the scope and intensity of play. The simple throw-catch-throw-catch of backyard Frisbee, pushed to its Ultimate form, became the fast-paced, competitive team sport well known to—and variously revered or dreaded by—church youth group members and college undergraduates throughout America. It had taken a simple pastime and given it structure. Ultimate Tennis did precisely the opposite.

This particular aspect of the game—its almost complete lack of structure—I claim as my own contribution. Let me explain. On the hot midsummer day when Ultimate Tennis was invented, I had accompanied a group of friends to the LaFayette High School tennis courts. Ryan was on the school team, and was the kind of guy who was so obviously honest, careful, and trustworthy that the coach had given him his own key to the courts so he could practice whenever he liked. The other guys had a passing familiarity with tennis thanks, I think, to having played with their parents now and again throughout childhood. I, on the other hand, had never in my life played nor ever intended to play tennis. That just wasn’t something a McRae did; there were no tennis courts on the farm. Needless to say, I didn’t know any of the rules, and my coordination with the racquet was nothing short of pathetic. After a maybe half an hour of attempted play—clean serves on their part, immediate failure on mine—it became obvious that a normal game of tennis would not be a practical goal in the schedule of the day’s merrymaking.

I could neither serve nor successfully return even the most pitying of serves, but what I could do is run around like a feral child, hammering savagely at the ball with the racquet and hollering out absurdities with the kind of bravado only a teenage boy aware of and fully alive in his own incompetence can manage, so that’s what I did. And thus Ultimate Tennis was born. All pretense of attempting civilized tennis was dropped as we threw ourselves into the frenzy of our new creation.

There was to be only one true rule in the sport of Ultimate Tennis: THE BALL DOES NOT STOP. Ideally one would use only his racquet to ensure the unceasing movement of the ball—dribbling it like a tiny basketball when necessary, balancing it on the netting like a bright yellow egg in a frying pan, catapulting it with the racquet as in lacrosse—but if that became impossible, anything was permissible in service of the One Rule of Ultimate Tennis. Grab the ball and throw it, kick it, put it in your pocket and run until someone tackles you, anything to keep it moving. All three courts within the fence were in bounds, and even outside the fence was in bounds if the ball went there. It was chaos, pure and simple, and it was glorious.

I still remember with surprising vividness the ball rocketing over my head and me turning to chase it down, running with wild abandon, arms flailing, doomed to reach the fence two courts away long after the ball struck there and maybe wedged itself in the tilted checkerboard of the chain-link fencing. Running, running, running, and loving it. That is the last memory I have of running, of moving and feeling only the good kind of pain, before a Lincoln and an ancient hemlock took running from me, before shattered bones and crushed nerves and scar tissue stole from me the capacity to be awake and moving and yet not in pain. It is a very good memory.

* * *

The game was not going well for the Red Team. It seemed to be a particularly sleepy Saturday morning for the majority of my players, many of whom were nodding off more than usual, which is saying something, and allowing the Blue Team basket after mostly unhindered basket. Mercifully, the Red Team player just to my left—let’s call her Josephine—was alert and in reasonably good spirits, and so together we managed to secure enough baskets not to be embarrassingly behind our opponents, but things were still not looking good. Only one other player on our team seemed interested in helping us stay above water, but she—Betty, perhaps she was called—was a loose cannon. When the balloon came near her, she swatted at it frantically, even rising a few inches off the seat of her wheelchair, a practice frowned upon by the therapists (most of these players had somewhat recently had hip replacements, after all) but not strictly speaking against the rules. Yes, Betty had spirit, but when her swats did finally land there was no telling where the balloon might end up: shot out of bounds (usually), twirling toward the wrong hoop (at least once or twice), or maybe, just maybe right at me at just the right angle to slip through the circle of my arms and score our Red Team a basket, though directly into my face was also a possible and eventual destination.

With any other hoop at their end, the Red Team would not have stood a chance against the crafty and determined Blue Team, but they did not have just any other hoop. They had me. I was young and long-armed and determined to win, and despite having by far the most plates, bolts, rods, screws, and staples in me of anyone on the second floor of Siskin Rehab, I was a force to be reckoned with. I would arc my arms up over my head or bend down low toward the floor, would lean and twist my body in any direction necessary to make sure any gentle tap from Josephine or wild swat from Betty became, in the circle of my arms, a basket for the Red Team. Get the balloon even remotely close to me, and I would turn it into points.

Maybe it wasn’t as intense Cinderella-story of a game that I remember it as, and maybe I wasn’t the unstoppable force of nature I remember myself being—in fact, I am certain the objective reality of that particular Saturday morning at Siskin Rehabilitation Hospital, where broken people came to be healed at least as much as it was possible to heal them, was nothing like the event that I am able to conjure up in retrospect—but I do know that we won. I do know I wore that plastic gold medallion around my neck as I wheeled myself back to my room. I do know that Rose smiled at me as she placed it on me, her hand lingering on my shoulder so that I knew she was proud of me. And I know that two weeks later I was released. I didn’t walk out—that would come later—but I was healed enough to return to my home, the medallion dangling from the rail of my home hospital bed.

In the eight weeks between the morning of the crash and the morning I saw the farm again and wheeled myself back into my home, I had healed remarkably, from meat on the butcher’s block of trauma, of almost-death, to this: still broken, still far from what I had been and would never be again, but alive and home and happy, more or less. I would never run again, would never climb through barbed-wire fences with the same ease, would never stroll carefree down a deer trail without feeling the tiny knives twisting inside my leg, but I would walk again, and hear the crackle of autumn leaves beneath my feet, and remember at least sunshine and sweat, what it felt like to run and jump and holler with the joy of its ease, the wind of it against my face.

Pressing Pants

2 November 2015
1 Comment
Categories: Nonfiction

I am an accomplished pants presser. In a day, I press sixty pants. I press pleated pants so that the pleat turns into the seam without a break. I press corduroy pants, not with the steam lid, but with my hands. I hold my foot on a steam pedal that clouds my glasses and clears my sinuses, that burns my wrists if I do not move quickly. I press pants one leg at a time, from the cuff to the crotch. I press the pelvis of the pants with a cork-handled steam iron as they drape loose on a hanger. I hang pants on the hanger so that the creases of each pant leg line up and form a flat spread of cloth over the hanger rung.

The pants that are easy to press usually don’t need it. Their creases are sewn in ever so discreetly and have been carefully stiffened, just enough to keep the crease without messing up the way an empty sleeve falls. Then there are the pants that need it: bent out of shape, stretched in the wrong places, old and faded or torn or stained. I have cried over these pants, stained or bleached, a single string running or pinching the fabric, the sleeve too broad for the press or too short to stay on, the pants torn and stapled with a bright green tag that reads “Defective Condition.” I don’t know where they come from, and I think of someone struggling to stay on top, look professional. I want to take them to the store and buy new pants. Embarrassed and frustrated at how little I can do, I move on to the next pair, which might easily be the same. My boss comes to me with a pair of cotton slacks accidentally put in the washer. He trusts me to press them so the owner cannot tell that they were machine washed.

***

At six in the morning, an hour before my shift starts, I don’t care about what I’m wearing. Even if I did, I have only three pairs of pants that are whole and unholed, unfaded, unfrayed and unstained. As for shirts, I have as few blouses and my t-shirts tend to be loose, graying, and tight around the neck. My clothes could use a lint roller.

Other than that, I dress for the weather: the industrial gym of the laundry has its own forecast. When I arrive at seven in the morning, half the lights are powered, ghosting down from the ceiling twenty feet up. The other half of the laundry is shadowed. An invisible air-conditioning system runs at the flip of a switch, its breeze tangled and forceful. I come wearing a white leather coat and a beanie. Often I’m still freezing. On the other hand, when the AC is down and my heart rate is up, I fall ill with heat, even in the light t-shirt I wear.

Apparently, the climate doesn’t bother my co-workers as much. Between shifts, I pass by their stations and see them in trendy jeans, V-neck and fitted tees, earphones in their ears where I have earplugs. Sometimes, they’ve seen me first: waist length braid, no makeup, jeans that need a belt. Everyone is friendly, but I can’t help but notice when the two girls waiting for their shift track their eyes towards me, their faces pointed towards each other. I don’t think they are judging me, and when I pass we talk about our classes and commiserate about the clothes that fall off of the hangers. But, sometimes I don’t think I fit in. I feel different and vulnerable.

***

The afternoon I decided to exclusively date my now husband, Michael, I noticed a dry cleaning tag on his pants. In the bustle of classes and a new job, I had forgotten the laundry, but there was a tag I’d seen so often stapled to one of his belt loops, a brown tag with a three digit number.

Michael has mild Cerebral Palsy. Standing straight, he is as tall as I am but this stretches his knees, keeping him a few inches shorter than me while we walk. His voice stretches when he talks, his vocal chords constrained to broad adjustments for inflection. When he is tired, it is as though his tongue is clamped to the roof of his mouth and he labors to form distinct consonants and vowels. I have spent time enough with him that I understand what he is saying with little effort, though I notice how he sounds again when other people struggle to hear him.

Right now, Michael works as an attorney doing contract work. Before he graduated law school, his mom and others recommended that he never wear jeans to class, so most days when we were dating, he wore slacks and a button up dress shirt. The first time we went to the law school together, I was surprised to see other students in jeans and tees or blouses. I mentioned this, and he said, yes, he dresses differently: he is the minority. It occurred to me, his body is the minority.

Michael works from home right now, but when we meet up on campus for my classes, I’ve taken to buttoning or rolling up his sleeves. I invite him to untuck the half of his shirt that is still pinched into his pants. His pants are usually stained in a few places and faded with wear at his knees or along the seams. Very likely, I have pressed his pants, which he brings to the laundry I have spent hours working in. I wonder if I have judged his pants or questioned what they were doing at the dry cleaners. Easily, one of these pairs of pants could have been stapled to a green tag that reads “defective condition,” and I could have cried out in frustration that I couldn’t do more with a pair of pants that I have judged insufficient. I could have cried that I couldn’t give back his money and say, “this isn’t what you need. This won’t help you.” I don’t want to say that anymore.

***

In contrast to the low-maintenance dress I used to take to the laundry, during my first few weeks dating Michael, I took meticulous care of my appearance. I pulled out the nicer jeans from my drawer, the ones still fitted and vivid from disuse. I rotated tops from light, collared blouses to cardigans to snug V-necks—which I say in the plural form, but I really only had one or two of each. I cut my hair from waist-length to a comfortable, status-quo shoulder length. I even let my mom take me shopping for new outfits, a present she didn’t really have the money for and a present I have never allowed.

I wasn’t dressing for Michael. That is, I wasn’t dressing so that he would be interested in me. Rather, I wanted to communicate something to those around us, to the nameless and numberless onlookers who didn’t know what to make of us because of Michael’s cerebral palsy. I was shouting that I am as capable and attractive as anybody, that Michael and I are a thing for real, and not because either of us is less awesome but because both of us are totally worth it.

***

The work is private at the laundry, which seems appropriate, the way a dresser or a closet is private. For me, four hours from seven to eleven at the laundry is a much needed exercise in solitude. It’s a time-out from the complicated expectations and negotiations with other people. It is time to breathe.

I feel rewarded in my most invested moments, when pressing pants feels like a connection with people in the best, solitary way. I lean my body into the feeling that I am being trusted with someone’s palpable, personal coverings—a kind of sterile, safe connection, but a connection nonetheless. I’m not sure if this makes me an invader or a confidante.

All the same, this solitude has a cost; it is an exercise. I try not to look at the clock for the first two hours. Instead, I count pairs of pants until I have finished three or four stacks of hangers from the box. I distract myself from the time by pressing the pants with my eyes closed, which I’m told could be dangerous. From the start, my body is a constant, stubborn yawn, and by ten in the morning, there is an abiding hunger that bites my belly.

It feels remarkable that I nearly prefer it to my job as a writing tutor—a job I love. Almost every other job I’ve done has left me drained, exhausted, anxious, and depressed.

In part, a crazy combination of privacy, space, and touch between myself and the wardrobe of others turns into a labor of love. I enjoy the success of physical labor and the way my mind and body work together, the way I notice my veins and tendons, the shape of my skeleton, the swing of my movement. I enjoy the aesthetic pleasure of seeing wrinkled pants gloss over into firm, even sleeves. I feel a sense of pride in being able to turn “sloppy” into “professional.” It’s a job that I relax in and requires little skill or learning, though I will eventually realize, a great deal of dexterity and balance that I have taken for granted.

When we dated, I found myself wanting to tell Michael about this shared space and the meditative, consecrated hours of patience. But I was worried to admit that, along with probably having pressed his pants, I had likely wondered about where they came from and perhaps even pitied the owner. We had talked about far more vulnerable things, and generally he knew my secrets—but admitting thoughts about the quality of his pants felt like a dark, betraying confession, and I didn’t want to imply that he needed to change.

***

As one part in the food-clothing-shelter trio, our clothes are intimate casts of our flawed, human bodies. I want that to be what laundry is about. Not just being clothed but feeling at home in your personal fabric-shelter and the first impression of who you are. So, I lean into a suit with wet heat and the wrinkles exhale themselves. I move my hands from the steamer to the presser with a pair of pants, press the button, pick up the hand-iron and let it form the pants. I step back and forth in a tight area of cement while the pants move along.

***

Michael has a black belt in Karate. I believe he told me this on one of our earlier dates, but I somehow cataloged this information as, “Oh, I must have imagined that.” Only recently, when he sent me a file of videos that show him walking through his younger ages, including three of him decked out in karate uniform, did I recall that memory and ask him about it. Yes, he confirmed, a black belt. I tried to conceal my total surprise and asked him if he wants to do karate with me, which he was giddy about. Sometimes, Michael gives me impromptu lessons. He shows me how to move my body for protection, and only when he is teaching me do I realize how precise his own movements are. His own hours of patience and meditation come to bear on a directed fall of his arm, a turn of his foot.

In many other ways, Michael is highly skilled. He writes Supreme Court amicus briefs and has written legal and political reviews, he tutored math while double majoring in math and economics, and he has a spread of literature memorized from Dr. Seuss to Ecclesiastes. Yet, he couldn’t work at the laundry. That is, he could, but to do so would be a sentence of perpetual pain. Michael certainly works with his body through play or chores, but I imagine Michael working at the laundry for a summer—operating a press and steamer where a wrong move, easily avoided under normal circumstances, could leave a hand burnt and crushed. He would yearn to return to academically and emotionally challenging work and would fight to stave off the feeling of less-than-adequacy. Psychologically speaking, there is a pain about failing in the mundane that no amount of extraordinary success can relieve. We judge ourselves. We sentence our hearts to a whispered pain.

***

When I do tell Michael about investing in a pair of pants and being worried about the owners, he is fine. He says, “It’s kind of a vindication,” which I don’t understand until he explains: “you’re so emotionally invested in, you know, a pair of pants. You want to know the story. Now you know one of them, and it isn’t a sad story.”

Pine Notes

18 April 2015
Categories: Nonfiction

There is a language within language that gets passed between poet and poem. Certain words stir us up, in a way that feels secret and charged.

For me, this word: pine.

Out of the thousand-plus poems in my poetry folder (the folder on my computer desktop, not the one on top of my birch veneer desk), there are 139 mentions of the word tree.This means that about 13.9{0d6c0367c8c8ce3328d7385a3995d880bbc0bef238b7f2a91697c38c5b607893} of my poems contain some form of tree.There are four mentions of cedar.Six mentions of pear blossom.Nine mentions of birch.Twelve mentions of magnolia.Sixteen mentions of evergreen.Thirty-eight mentions of pine.

A tree of expansiveness. A tree that is old and still green. The pine is outside of time, is a constant through time.

Think of a dark sky with stars, and the darker peaks of pines along that sky’s hem.

Think of Bob Ross with his fan brush, pushing the paint back and forth, back and forth along a trunk, giving this advice: “Leave some limbs out there; little birds gotta have a place to put their foots.”Think of the viewer who stands before his easel, nodding, fan brush raised, the feet of little birds accounted for. Think of the viewer who watches from her couch, no easel, no paint. The pine emerges, it seems, from the blank mists of the canvas; the paint uncovers the tree.

The baby tree I was given on Earth Day, wet paper towels wrapped around its roots like a diaper. Pine trees start as a seedling, grow into a sapling. That’s not true, exactly. Pine trees start as a seed, which comes from a pinecone, which comes from a tree. To make a pine, you need a pine.

Think of Third Beach tucked away inside Stanley Park in Vancouver, a beach inside a park inside a city. Picture the shaggy pines waiting at the edge of the sand. Think of pine needles underfoot in the sand.

Think of sixth grade camp. Think of being a young camper, hiking within the trees, kicking a pinecone downhill, happy or homesick or flirting. And then think of what it felt like to return to camp six or eight years later as a counselor. That marked distance we feel between the self at twelve and the self at eighteen. We don’t wish to be twelve again, but that tugging feels a little like wishing.

Think of walking through pines, patches of shadow giving way to mostly shadow. How the woods help you hear your own footfall.

Think of fall, of orange and red leaves and green pines.

Sure, think of winter, snow on the pines but not under them. Do not think of a Christmas tree, unless, like me, you never had a Christmas tree.

Think of boughs, of wreaths. Of a front door that you stand before. Maybe also made of pine.

Here are words I have carried around inside myself: “Stradivari . . . selected his pine from the Tyrol. I have no doubt there was . . . and still is, some quality in the timber grown there which recommended it to their attention. The density, elasticity, and durability of the wood depends so much upon the soil in which it has been grown.”These words come from an old book, Old Violins and Their Makers. Written by J.M. Fleming, and published in 1883, it is a fascinating cultural artifact. It contains all kinds of intriguing charts, how varnish was created, the anatomy of violins. In the back, there are ads for other (ridiculously-titled) instructional books by this publisher, including The Book of Bee-Keeping, Mushroom Culture for Amateurs,and Practical Taxidermy.

Old Violins and Their Makers was published after J.M. Fleming found himself wondering what made the violin sound so good. It then found its way to a library’s shelves, where it waited for me for over 120 years. Innumerable hands touched it. It was checked out in 1962, in 1967 by Sister Mary Gorman, in 1981 by Vivian James, and in 1996. In 2006 I visited a library book sale. I picked this book up, bought it for a quarter, and it has lived in my home since then, in the three far apart cities my home became.

The density, elasticity, and durability of the wood depends so much upon the soil in which it was grown. Here is some real beauty. Because of the climate and weather, the soil developed in a certain way, which caused the pines to grow in a certain way, which caused Stradivari to want those pines for his violins. The violin sounds beautiful not just because of the violinist but because it is an object of place. The instrument carries within itself a memory of the dark woods, of the dark dirt. The sound of the wind in the pines helps to make a violin, a seashell that spills out the ocean.

Think also of pine, the verb. To torture, to suffer, to afflict, to languish. As in, I pine for you. To pine away, to become a shadow of oneself. To long, to yearn. To pine.

In my poetry folder, twenty-one mentions of longing.

Some of us are gifted with longing. There’s me, raising my hand. It feels like waiting, and sometimes, there is the illusion that the waiting will be solved. A song can encourage longing. Or a person. A book. A coincidence. A sign that we are going in the right direction, and then that sign passing. A desire for more, for an experience that grabs sensation by the hand, says, this is why you feel like this. One practices longing, you might say—a sort of devotion.

At thirteen, I became enamored of the singer Hayden, and his album Everything I Long For. His low, scratchy voice bothered me, but in the way that I craved hearing it. That album is an odd mix of ordinary and dark. In “My Parent’s House,” (my favorite song on the album), the lyrics beg an absent beloved to return to the singer’s childhood home, to come back in bed for a weekend. The song is incredibly, plainly sad—there’s desperation, but more importantly, wistfulness. In this song, the beloved will not return. The singer knows it. I knew it. And standing there, in that place of longing, of wanting as an end, not just a means—something in that lesson appealed to my thirteen-year-old self.

So much planted in us wants the gone thing. But if that gone thing returned, think of how many songs, stories, poems, paintings would never exist. I can’t get no satisfaction. I remember the night and the Tennessee Waltz. Time hurries on.

To pine. Not named after the tree, it turns out, but after pain. To cause pain in oneself, to suffer. I think of you, not here, and I feel pain. Doctor, it hurts when I go like this. But if I don’t go like this, I begin to forget.

Keats gets it, the good ache, the planted distance. From “Ode to Psyche”:“Yes, I will be thy priest, and build a fane / In some untrodden region of my mind / Where branched thoughts, new grown with pleasant pain, / Instead of pines shall murmur in the wind . . .”The poet-turned-lover will loiter in the darker places of his mind, and call that loitering worship. For every poem, a forest of longing.

Not named after the tree, but why not. The heady scent of pine, sticky, delectable. The delectable absence of something. The self with a larger future, more time to burn. Or the beloved.

Nineteen mentions of the word beloved.One hundred thirty-two mentions of love.

Or the beloved place. So often, we define our places by their trees. Meet me by the big pine, we could say, or under it. A shelter. A pine is a place, in and of itself.

The pine as stillness and movement. As shaken underbrush. As disturbed skirt.

Think of this poem that many people rightly love. “All the new thinking is about loss,”Robert Hass begins in “Meditation at Lagunitas,” and he is also thinking about pines right from the start. Lagunitas, California, a place lush with water and forest, whose name makes me think of lagoon, and also lacuna. Pineshows up as a word, italicized, a little more than halfway through the poem: “After I while I understood that, / talking this way, everything dissolves: justice / pine, hair, woman, you and I.”

This is a poem of recollection, gathering up the past to let it slip through our fingers. Hass remembers a friend, a lover. But also, nearly unprompted, his own childhood. And then the splash of this cannonball: “Longing, we say, because desire is full / of endless distances.”In this place, he pines.

Desire, full of distance. The thing that makes us want to eliminate distance—to chase, or leave, or return. Odysseus pining, and Penelope, and Calypso, and the pine tree mast on Odysseus’s boat.

Think of how a pine does not have leaves, but needles. This is a sharp tree. A needle can puncture, can stab, can stitch.

My favorite cocktail: a gin and tonic, which tastes clean and sharp and sweet. Lemon, lime, and pine, the piney taste owing to the juniper. Pine needle as swizzle stick, as cocktail sword.

Think of the Pines Hotel in the Catskills, a resort that my grandparents took my family to when my sister and I were young, twelve and ten. How there were no children there, except for us, how our parents seemed so young there. How my sister and I played shuffleboard alongside the elderly, and how we felt even then that this place was on the brink of collapse. Our grandma and grandpa swore that it used to be glamorous—the ballroom, the nightclub, the royal blue and teal carpet in the hallways. How this would be the last family vacation before the divorce.

The stickiness of pine. Also its ability to dissolve. Back and forth.

Think of the slideshow of photos of ruined Catskills hotels by Marisa Scheinfeld, abandoned grandeur: rows of rusted chairs amidst wreckage, weeds growing from moldy tile near an indoor pool. I held my breath, knowing I might see the Pines, and there it was, third image in the slide show, and eighth, ninth, tenth, and eleventh. Five of the twelve images. There’s the Pepto pink dining room, tables and chairs covered in bird shit, insulation and wallpaper peeling from the entrance to the nightclub. Most spectacularly, there’s the lobby, carpeted in green moss, garden hose and unplugged phone draped over the check-in desk, a lone music stand tilted and waiting in the center of the room.

This place was destined for ruin. It’s not that I long for that place. But there is a little pang—I know that my grandparents, if they were still alive to see these photos, would be heartbroken.

We collect abandoned places: “Thirteen Abandoned Shopping Malls You’ve Got to See to Believe!”or “Twenty Beautiful and Haunting Abandoned Amusement Parks.”Seeing a place designed by humans, languishing without humans gets to us. The ghost of intention looms large here, and the beauty of a world from which humans are conspicuously absent. And yet, the place seems to wait for humans to return. Loyal. Pining.

Is this what it looks like to lose love? A woman reclining on a couch, covered with moss and crying. A man dusted with rust, staring out a window. Odysseus looking out into the water, later dreaming of Ithaca, Ithaca, Ithaca. Each of them says, I pine for you. It will stop hurting if they stop standing still.

One hundred forty-five mentions of the word still.As in stillness, without movement. And also, continuously.

Think of that photograph of the oddest, most beautiful tree house. An old pine had fallen, but continued to grow—horizontally along the ground. The homeowner built a tree house over that tree, which snakes along under the structure. And in the floor, a hole, so you can see the tree sleeping. A window in the floor. To live in this tree house, alongside the tree: a life within a life. In every life, parts that have fallen, but continue to grow.

The longevity and resilience of pine. How it passes on its medicinal properties.

The pine tree graveyard your friend describes after Christmas, in the streets of San Francisco. The corpses of pines lining the curbs, spilling into the roads in January, no snow to hide them.

Think of the entire previous year while the pines were alive and growing.

The pine that became my ship as a child when I tied a sprinkler to the trunk. Every pine tree could be a ship, green branches for sails, trunk for mast. That would mean the boat would be invisible or underground.

In February of this year, off the coast of Wales, dark peaks began rising from the sand, like shark fins, like the tops of pines. These were the stumps of a submerged forest, which had been growing five thousand years ago, rising to show trees had once stood here. Oak and pine. Within the year, the stumps will be gone, buried again under sand by the water.

Think of every pine you have stood under in your whole life—maybe ten of them, maybe thirty-two, maybe only three. But think of the way you walked next to the trunk, and stared up through the branches, and then down at the fallen needles. Pick-up sticks. An alphabet.

The most beautiful typo that I stole for a poem: everygreen.

Smile

13 April 2015
Categories: Nonfiction

Twenty-eight teeth form neat pickets along my upper and lower gums. The teeth have been artificially straightened and whitened. My toothpaste contains fluoride, tartar control, and additional whitening agents. My electric toothbrush rotates forty thousand times and oscillates four thousand times per minute. Each night, after brushing, I gently prod a plastic-bristled pick between each tooth and along the gums. I drink milk to make them stronger. I wear lipstick to make them seem whiter. I smile.

 

When I was a snaggle-toothed tomboy entering kindergarten, my parents bought a Those Wonderful School Years Memory Album: a cheap, spiral-bound book organized by school year, each with a spot on which to glue a class photo; blanks for listing best friends, pets, favorite subjects, what I want to be when I grow up; a pocket for report cards and mementoes. Illustrations of wholesome multiracial 1970s children engaging in wholesome 1950s activities accompany each page, and age accordingly, so that the freckle-faced lad shown menacing a blond pixie with a toad in first grade becomes a tall, muscle-car driving teen taking that same blond to prom in the twelfth. When I was very young, my mother and I would assemble each page together; later I took over the job entirely, my cramped, boyish handwriting replacing her elegant script.

Here, in first grade, is a photo that for me best represents my grade school years. I’m wearing a red vee-neck sweater, have a blunt pageboy haircut (Mom’s handiwork), and look either stoned or miserable or both. I remember feeling gloomy and uncooperative (perhaps because of that sweater Mom had selected) on the day of the school pictures, and when the chipper photographer instructed me to “Say ‘Peaches!’” I did so in the best deadpan a six-year-old could deliver. Weeks later, when the pictures arrived, Mom was aghast. “You didn’t smile! We shouldn’t even buy these!” But she did, because that awkward, grim-faced kid was, in fact, who I was.

 

When did I first read Hamlet? I remember having to memorize and recite Marc Antony’s funeral oration for Caesar in twelfth grade, and dimly recall Romeo and Juliet around the tenth. I must’ve encountered the melancholy Dane in school, but I don’t remember when; the worlds of kings, queens, murder and magic that Shakespeare had created seemed cold and remote. I preferred Stephen King and the Beatles. But Hamlet begins close to home, with a mom and stepdad whose kid is bumming everybody out. C’mon, cheer up, they urge him; you’re bringing everybody down with the black clothes and the sad face. Would it kill you to put on a smile?

“You have a very small mouth,” my orthodontist said. I don’t remember what I replied; probably something like “unggh,” since his fingers and instruments were inside my too-small mouth at the time. At any rate, I was too young and naive at fourteen to find anything sexual in his remark, though boyfriends to whom I later repeated it certainly have. I was just there to be fitted for braces, which I insisted I didn’t need, despite the jumble my permanent teeth had become. I was afraid of the pain, the awkwardness of stuck food and popping rubber bands, of looking even dorkier. “It’s important to have good teeth,” my parents said. Both of them had grown up poor, had gone without a lot of things, including orthodontia. “We want you to have a beautiful smile.”

 

Approximately 80{0d6c0367c8c8ce3328d7385a3995d880bbc0bef238b7f2a91697c38c5b607893} of American teens wear or have worn braces. Just over 50{0d6c0367c8c8ce3328d7385a3995d880bbc0bef238b7f2a91697c38c5b607893} of American teens have engaged in oral sex.

 

Another photo: ninth grade, a pinkish vee-neck Izod sweater (what’s with the sweaters?), a Pat Benatar mullet haircut. Either someone said something funny, or Mom must’ve leaned on me that morning, because I’m smiling, a mouthful of chrome. Who could’ve cracked the joke, to make me grin like that? Not the photographer; it must’ve been a friend. I was just forming a group of good friends, who studied together for Shakespeare exams, smoked a little pot, swapped Kurt Vonnegut novels and Led Zeppelin tapes. I dutifully recorded their names in Those Wonderful School Years. We laughed a lot; we smirked more than we smiled. It must’ve been one of them.

 

“I just can’t believe it. Let me see again,” my father said. I swallowed my mashed potatoes and bared my teeth. “I can’t believe it. That’s such an improvement.” I nodded and forked more potatoes, the only thing I could bear to chew the day my braces were removed.

“Oh, it really is,” Mom chimed in. She and Dad eyed my sister, who looked nervous.

 

Why belabor the pictures? They’re all the same: the angsty teen, the terrible sweaters, the grim or glum or tentative or falsely cheerful line of my mouth. I was unhappy, and often angry. All teenagers are unhappy and angry. College students, too. Graduate students. Married women. Women whose parents are divorced. Divorced women.

“Smile, Juliana,” Dad said from behind the camera on Christmas morning, every Christmas.

Mom shouted, “Show your teeth!”

 

And, eventually, I did. I don’t know when, exactly, but perhaps around the same time I realized I no longer wanted to be with my husband, I started smiling. It’s as if some part of my brain finally sizzled with the message, It’s what people want you to do, so just do it. It’ll be easier.

And it was. I was charming and funny at dinners. I smiled at everyone. They smiled back. When I couldn’t remember someone’s name at a party, I said, “Oh, hi!” and smiled as if delighted. I made it through tedious anecdotes by grinning like a Cheshire cat. When I got stuck in an awkward conversation, I still got away from that person as quickly as possible, but did so with all my pearlies flashing. I made a good impression in job interviews. In my classroom, I became an upbeat professor encouraging her students with positive energy.

I went for long runs. I listened to loud music and hurt my hand pounding the walls. I sometimes cried. The laugh lines deepened.

 

“Assume a virtue if you have it not,” Hamlet advises Gertrude, begging her not to share a bed with her murderous husband, but to seem nonetheless a loving, faithful wife.

Earlier in the play, the Prince has a different epiphany: “That one may smile, and smile, and be a villain.”

No statistics are available on the number of American teens with braces who have engaged in oral sex while watching Hamlet.

 

It is quite possible, these days, that my friends and acquaintances consider me an optimist. They might even believe that I am happy. And, most of the time, I am, or at least happy enough. But what bothers me is how quickly the mask of a smile is replaced by directionless anger; how I drive away from boring first (only) dates by blasting Arcade Fire and pounding my fist into the dashboard; how I can endure a faculty party for only ten minutes before I duck out, shaking. Being happy is exhausting.

When I divorced my husband, a friend advised me in all kindness to talk with a therapist. I refused. It’s normal to be unhappy in a situation like this, I reasoned. Unhappiness doesn’t mean there’s something wrong with me; in fact, it means the opposite. Happiness is not a default, or an entitlement. I believe this. I say it with a smile.

 

Brian Wilson was close to completing what would have been The Beach Boys’ finest record, Smile, when he suffered a mental breakdown in 1967. Wilson has struggled with depression and anxiety for over forty years. Smile—a very dark album—was released to unanimous critical acclaim in 2004.

Most of my friends take some form of antidepressant. I never have. Neither did Hamlet, and I don’t believe either the melancholy Dane or I really need them. When the wind is southerly, I know a vee from a vee-neck.

 

My father looked a little perplexed when I told him, a few years ago, that making me wear braces was the best thing my parents had ever done for me. He doesn’t get the smile– the mask, the shield, the sheer weaponry of it—because I use it on him. For the last decade, off and on, he has been dating the ex-wife of my orthodontist; in fact, he was seeing her when he and my mother divorced. Dad told me on his last visit that they were talking about getting married.

He could see how happy I was. I showed my teeth.

Unreal

20 November 2014
Categories: Nonfiction

“Thank God we’ve never had any of that in our family,” your mother tells you for the umpteenth time, though her own father had dementia when he died, and by now she’s moved from Independent Living to Assisted Living to Sylvan Glen’s Long-Term Care facility for dementia herself.

“You should see some of the patients here. Unreal.” She thinks they’ve stolen her possessions, and searches in their closets and drawers for missing clothes and knickknacks. “My things. All my beautiful things,” she wails.

Most days she believes she’s one of the nurses. “We’ve got our hands full, let me tell you.”

 

You live on the West Coast and your mother’s on the East Coast, so when the doctors start calling every day they call very early in the morning. 6:00 a.m., 5:00 a.m., even at 4:00 a.m., when you sit straight up in bed in the dark, confused and disoriented, your heart pounding.

That time they wanted permission to send her to the ER, but most of the time they want to talk about your mother’s refusals. Refusal to take medications. Refusal to eat. Refusal to allow blood to be drawn. She rages against her caregivers and nurses, prefers sleep to waking, and her elaborate fantasy life to the everyday reality of the nursing home. Bingo! Crafts! Sing-alongs! Who can blame her, really.

The phone calls become progressively more pointed. Do you want your mother to be comfortable, or do you want to continue the trips to the ER and aggressive testing and treatment? The doctors and nurses and social workers tiptoe around euphemisms, language a minefield of unexpected surprises. Comfort is code for just letting her be, it seems, and you favor letting her be, but when you consult your brother he calls it unethical since her dementia isn’t terminal, after all. Each time the phone rings at 5:00 a.m. and you drag yourself out of bed you think of comfort, and wonder whether it’s your own comfort you crave, or your mother’s, and what comfort means, really, when someone’s as old as your mother, who hasn’t known comfort since your father died seven years ago.

She no longer answers the phone, which she keeps under the covers in her bed, and it’s hard to ask her anything anyway. “Imagine, I just had another baby,” she exclaimed last week. “At my age! Another woman on the ward had fourteen babies. They thought she was finished but then another would come, and another. It was just unreal. Can you imagine!”

You keep thinking of Faulkner, and “My mother is a fish.” How the brain spawns stories in a world devoid of narrative. Naturally. One, and then another, and another!

“I’m pregnant again. Jim can’t believe it,” she announces the next time you call. She chuckles, delighted with her fertility.

Your mother is in labor. All week while you’ve been immersed in the quotidian, brushing your teeth, showering, getting dressed, making coffee, slicing bananas on your cereal, driving to the university, teaching classes, eating your lunch, having conferences with your students, teaching more classes, driving home, making dinners, eating with your husband and son, washing dishes, paging through books and magazines, changing into your pajamas, turning out the lights, tossing restlessly in your sleep, she’s been giving birth to death.

You knew. The seemingly endless series of daily phone calls culminated in a call from her general physician. Compassionate but blunt, he said, “Your mother is dying. The best thing we can do now is allow her a natural death. I would strongly advise against sending her to the hospital at this point.” And you’d agreed with him, and hadn’t even bothered to consult your brother, just called to say, “Mom is dying, and she’s comfortable, and not in any pain.” She’d stopped speaking or opening her eyes. The doctor thought she could hear. That was Monday.

Monday afternoon in your restorative yoga class you lay in the dark breathing deeply, wondering whether this was what it was like to die. You took a long walk that evening, and the next, and the next. You looked down at your black tennis shoes, putting one foot in front of another, walking faster and faster, filling your lungs with air. Was this what it was like to live?

The street in front of your house was littered with yellow leaves. Brown leaves crinkled underfoot as you strode along the sidewalk. It was cold. In the fifties, but it felt very cold to you. You put up the hood on your sweatshirt and jammed your hands in the pockets, kicking at the leaves as you walked.

You remembered raking the leaves in New Jersey when you were a child. Your mother wasn’t there—probably inside in bed, nursing one of her chronic complaints. You and your brother jumped into huge leaf piles, excited, laughing. Afterward your father set the pyramid on fire and the three of you stood around the bonfire in the chill autumn air, watching sparks and curled skeletal leaves floating upward in the blur created by the intense heat. The fire crackled and your face was hot in the glow of the flames.

 

It isn’t until Saturday, six days later, that the phone call comes, from a nurse with a heavy Filipino accent. “Your mother died at 2:05 p.m. We’re sorry for your loss.” At least you think the nurse said 2:05 p.m., not realizing until you begin to fill out lengthy forms for the death certificate and the cremation that you’re required to know the exact time of death. Many other facts have died with your mother, such as where she was born. Was it Denville or Boonton or Morristown or Newark or Jersey City? Somewhere in northern New Jersey, and you won’t know until later when you can open the safe-deposit box and find her birth certificate and passport. By then it won’t matter. You say Denville, pretty sure it isn’t true.

Your mother once told you a story about the hospital in Denville, before her dementia became acute. A true story about her own mother going to the hospital with some other women on a charitable errand that involved a dance with the inmates of the mental ward. She’d danced with a perfectly charming man whom she thought was a doctor and it turned out he was a mental patient. When would this have been? The thirties, the early forties maybe? Was it a widespread practice then, bringing suburban housewives to hospital dances to cheer up the mental patients?

“Unreal” was one of her favorite expressions. “Just unreal,” she’d say, shaking her head. And it seemed that even before her dementia your mother lived in a surreal universe where everything, from the most mundane to the most outlandish, was equally unreal.

 

After her obituary appears in the local New Jersey newspaper, you begin to receive condolences. A few cards from older relatives, in elegant, spidery, Catholic school handwriting. A scattering of e-mails from school friends you can barely recall. “I remember your mother as a very sweet and caring woman,” one writes, and you’re astonished. You search your memory for a time when your mother could be described as “sweet” or “caring.” Have you lost some crucial piece in the jigsaw puzzle of the past, or is this just a common platitude in notes of condolence?

“Was your mother sick?” a good friend asks when you e-mail her about your mother’s death. You’re not sure what to say. She was stubborn, self-absorbed, truculent, and serene by turns, delusional. She could be vindictive and judgmental. Deceptively jolly, especially with non-family members, particularly with men. She was sociable, far more so than your father, and always enjoyed a good party. Her ill health was her main topic of conversation for sixty years, but even at the end, she wasn’t suffering from any serious illnesses. No, she wasn’t exactly sick.

 

In the months before her death your mother dreamed of what she liked to call “galas,” public celebrations, lavish ball gowns, life in the limelight. “Just turn on your TV tomorrow night,” she’d say frequently, her tone mysterious. “You’ll see.”

The screen on your TV is black. You unearth the control from under a pile of pillows on the couch. You don’t know what to expect. A woman with fourteen children telling her story to Oprah Winfrey? “So many mouths to feed,” she’ll say. “One, and then another, and another.” Your mother in Oscar de la Renta, ascending the stairs with fourteen beauty pageant contestants? Or will it be an inaugural ball in the capitol, your mother in Versace, fourteen waiters dancing on tiptoes holding silver trays with glittering glasses of champagne aloft as they weave through the crowd? Is that your father in a tuxedo on the other side of the room? “Come dance with me,” she’ll call over the music, though your father never danced. Perhaps she’ll extend a foot coyly and say, “These are the most comfortable shoes I’ve ever owned.” The band will shift into a new melody as your mother twirls away, lavender taffeta skirts billowing. “I could have danced all night! I could have danced all night! And still have begged for more.” Your mother’s singing along, head thrown back, like she always did. You can hear her warbling above the violins, until the full orchestra comes in, and her voice fades away.

“It was just unreal,” she’ll tell you tomorrow. “You should have seen it. Unreal.”

The Muskrat

17 November 2014
Categories: Nonfiction

From where we are standing on the Fifth Street Bridge, we can see an oval body stream through the sluggish water of the Conewango Creek. “What’s that?” my partner Anthony asks. “A rat?”

Anthony grew up in Brooklyn. To him, every wild animal is a rat.

It’s true that there could be rats here. Norway rats—or “river rats” as those who live in blue-collar river towns like ours call their undesirable neighbors—can often be found on the creek’s banks. But this isn’t a rat. The body makes a V-shaped trail in the waves, with a long scaly tail snaking behind it. Then a soggy shape, smaller than a house cat, crawls onto a tiny island that has almost dissolved in the water. It balances for a moment, and crouches low, its dark fur spiked with water. It gazes upward its small eyes shiny beads in the sunlight. It’s a muskrat.

We are out for our first real walk since spring has fingered its way through the long winter. The skunk cabbages have uncurled; the forsythia bushes sport bright yellow flowers. The air is cool, not cold, and the sun is bright, teasing us with a promise that warmer days are ahead.

It’s been a long winter. I have lived in the snowbelt of northern Pennsylvania most of my life, so I am used to snowstorms where accumulations are measured in feet, not inches. I dress in layers in preparation for mornings that start out near zero but afternoons that climb into the forties. I bundle up against the Arctic winds that dip down from Canada. I get snow tires and learn to predict the slide of black ice on the roads.

But what I have never grown used to is the lack of sun, the weeks upon weeks where gray clouds cling to the sky, and this winter has been especially dark. My aging father has been in and out of the hospital. A local pastor was reported missing the week before. A friend’s husband has been diagnosed with stage four kidney failure. “We don’t want him to go on dialysis,” she explained, looking exhausted. Later, I will find out why. Those with kidney failure who do go on dialysis have less success with a transplant.

And, at home, we are nursing a dying cat, although neither Anthony nor I want to admit that our beloved three-year-old Lola is dying. Idiopathic chylothorax. When I say the words out loud, I mispronounce the diagnosis every time. Her chest cavity is filling up with a fatty tissue that is pushing against her internal organs so it’s hard for her to breathe. It’s very rare.

Idiopathic. “Of unknown origin,” our veterinarian explained.

I may not understand chylothorax, but I know what idiopathic means. We don’t know the cause. We also don’t know what to do. It also means there’s nothing we can do.

I am thinking about Lola, as I outline the muskrat’s tail in the air with my finger, trying to show Anthony the difference between a beaver and a muskrat. In the sixteen years we have been together, I have often found myself explaining differences in the world of nature: a wood duck may have similar colors to a mallard, but it has a hooded head; a coyote is much bigger than a red fox; a song sparrow has streaks across its chest while a tree sparrow sports a small smudge. Today, I add that in spite of the name, the muskrat is not related to the rat, that it was named because of the scent glands near its tail. I stop before I can add that muskrats were important in the history of America’s fur industry, before I start sounding like a textbook.

I fell in love with the muskrat at a young age. Our small local library had a set of children’s books by Thornton W. Burgess. His series, set in a pastoral world of Smiling Pool and Laughing Brook, featured such memorable characters as Jimmy Skunk, Sammy Jay, Bobby Raccoon, and Billy Mink, who were personified with human characteristics. But my favorite was Jerry Muskrat, a mischievous trickster who rarely listened to his mother. He wasn’t bad, really. Yes, he did get into trouble with traps set by the farmer’s boy, but he also went on a journey to save Laughing Brook, which had dried to mud and sludge because of (horrors!) a beaver’s dam that was built further upstream. I knew, of course, that real muskrats didn’t wear rolled trousers with a hole cut out for a tail, so I found picture books with real photographs, showing round balls of wet fur with partially webbed back paws. It was through these books that I learned that muskrats ate cattails and water lilies, and could stay underwater as long as fifteen minutes—a feat that seemed incredible to me considering I had timed myself, and I could only hold my breath underwater for a mere thirty seconds.

Given my introduction to the muskrat in books, I wanted to see one of my own, so I nagged my brother until he took me to a pond located about an hour from our home. I was disappointed when we didn’t see a muskrat, and only mildly entertained when a beaver appeared, who, when I slid and fell into the water, splashed its tail, warning off his peers that a human presence was near. Even at that time, I thought the beaver was a show-off, sort of like the kids who stationed themselves by the door when the teacher left the room to act as lookouts. When they spotted her in the hallway, shouting “Teacher!,” they always looked so pleased at the attention they received. I didn’t want to see a show-off of a beaver—I wanted a muskrat.

What I suspected then but now know for sure is this: muskrats are sturdy creatures. They can make their homes in water stained orange with acid mine drainage. They can travel far underwater for food. They don’t even hibernate—instead they make do by lodging together for warmth with other muskrats in their homes, and when they do venture out into the cold, they survive by breaking through cracks in the frozen ice. Naturalists have also noted that they build “push-ups” or tiny lodges by gnawing through the ice and shoving vegetation through the holes for later meals. Yes, sometimes muskrats could be considered a nuisance—their burrowing in banks and dams causes damage to property—but mostly they mind their own business, swimming through the water, their tails as rudders, their front paws clenched in toward their chests.

Perhaps unconsciously I felt a sort of kinship with the muskrat. After all, I was a tomboy, marked by scrapes and bruises, fighting hard to grow up in a rough and tumble neighborhood of boys in a tiny, rural Rust Belt town. Muskrats and me: we were both survivors.

Today, I tell Anthony that it’s odd to see a muskrat in town. Around here, they usually make their homes further upstream where old camps dot the creek and swampland turns into ponds during heavy rain. They usually stay away from people. Skittish and twitchy, they sometimes slap the water to warn other muskrats, but most of the time they simply slide silently through without making a splash. They are also usually crepuscular, which means they are most active at dusk and dawn.

But it’s the middle of the day. Cars rumble past us on the bridge, occasional blue exhaust coating the air. Nearby, kids play in the park, their voices echoing in the river valley. An old man walks his sheepdog along the creek-side trail. Occasionally, the dog slips into the water, splashing. The sounds of the human world are very different than the hum of pond life: the cricket song, the bullfrog’s gurgle, the red-winged blackbird’s sharp trill.

The muskrat seems undisturbed.

“I wonder what it is doing here?” I ask to no one in particular even though Anthony is the only one around.

“Looking for a new home,” Anthony suggests.

It’s possible, I suppose. We’ve had heavy rain. Maybe somewhere upstream its home was washed away. Muskrats actually build two types of homes: they either burrow into banks or dams or they build dome-shaped mounds from sticks, plants, and mud. It’s the second type I am most familiar with, and it’s true that they don’t look very sturdy, that a flood caused by too much rain or a sudden spring melt could dismantle the structure and wash it away.

But both folklore and records of close observation suggest that muskrats are smarter than the weather. Some believe muskrats will build bigger lodges higher off the water in preparations for a severe winter or heavy rain. American naturalist John Burroughs recorded his thoughts on the subject in his observations of the muskrat in his native Catskill Mountains. For weeks, he watched the construction of lodges, and noted that one year, when the muskrats were especially tardy with their buildings, which were not yet complete in December, the winter was mild. He also noted that the muskrats were caught off guard by at least one flood, and that their home was pushed downstream by heavy rain that turned the sluggish pond into angry waters, but this did not shake his awe. “Who can really predict a flood?” he questioned, shrugging off the one-time incident. He remained convinced that the muskrat knew more than we did about the weather, and indeed were better forecasters.

We watch as the muskrat cocks its head toward us, tilts its face to the side as if listening to our conversation. Drying a bit in the sun, its fur sticks up, as if it is a little boy who cannot smooth down a cowlick in his hair. It pushes its paws together as if it is in deep thought.

The next day, our cat will go into respiratory distress and Anthony will make one final trip to the vet’s office. In another week, a search-and-rescue team will find the body of the pastor lodged under the very bridge where we are standing. In two more weeks, our friend will slip into stage five kidney failure and be forced to go on dialysis while waiting for a kidney. These are things that we do not know yet.

“It’s lost,” I say, looking at the water below.

Poet as Scientist

11 November 2014
Categories: Nonfiction

When anyone asks what I do, I say, “I’m a poet and writer.” This is true now, and it has always been true, although for more than thirty years I held job titles like Math/Science Specialist, Chemistry and Biology Instructor, Science Writer/Editor, Life Sciences Staff Coordinator, Director of the Hall of Health (a hands-on museum), and Staff Scientist. How did this happen? How did these jobs impact my poetry?

It was clear to me by the time I was six years old, when Eisenhower was president, that I wanted to be a poet, and I wrote poems enthusiastically at home and at school. Every discovery about poetry was thrilling, including my second-grade realization that I could write about negative thoughts as well as positive ones: “When trees are red / It’s lovely to see, / But when trees are bare / It’s ugly to me.”

One of my first encounters with science, though, was a definite turnoff. My sixth-grade teacher, Mrs. O’Gara, gave an assignment: select one chapter to read in our science text and present one of the activities at the end to the class. I chose astronomy. My demonstration would be to hold a nail in a flame. According to the book, it was supposed to turn red, then white, then blue, just as stars do as they age and get hotter.

I brought a candle, a nail, and a pair of pliers to school. In front of the class, I lit the candle and, holding the nail with the pliers, put it into the flame. As I explained what was supposed to happen, the nail turned not red but black. Everyone snickered and laughed. Mrs. O’Gara said she didn’t think the experiment was going to work. I said, “Maybe it just takes more time,” and insisted on continuing for another few minutes, by which time everyone was pointing at the black nail, hooting, and yelling, “Lucille, it’s not going to work!” Mrs. O’Gara, who gave me a C for this debacle, said I should have tried the experiment at home. It occurred to me that the people who wrote the book should have tried it too. Perhaps a particular type of nail was required; if so, this should have been specified. When I told my mother what had happened, she assured me that I and everyone else would eventually forget about it, and it would be as though it had never happened.

But twenty-two years later, I remembered the incident well when I co-authored a book entitled How to Encourage Girls in Math and Science: Strategies for Parents and Educators, which included activities and experiments for kindergarten through eighth grade. My co-authors and I not only tried all of the activities ourselves, but had children do them, as well, before we put them in the book.

I also remembered it thirty-four years later when I wrote a poem entitled “Homage to Henrietta Swan Leavitt and Annie Jump Cannon,” which was included in Infinities, my collection of science and nature poems:

The first computers: spinsters

who scanned photographic plates
at Harvard College Observatory
in the late nineteenth century,
recording the colors
and brightness of stars
in fine Victorian script.

Barred from taking classes
and earning a degree,
one woman could catalog
five hundred thousand stars
in a lifetime, betrothed
to the universe. An ordinary
person might have cursed
all the elements in the spectra.

Their work considered
too menial for an astronomer,
the women knew the sky
more intimately than anyone.

Henrietta’s world
was Cepheid variable stars.
She watched them day after day,
growing dimmer and brighter
through weeks and seasons—
grains of salt on dark plates,
until the sky told her,
The brighter the star,
the longer the cycle will take,
and she showed the way
to measure distances
between galaxies, even
light-years from Earth
to the edge of space.

Every fact is a valuable factor
in the mighty whole, Annie said,
and she told the astronomers
how to classify stars
by temperature and color:
O, B, A, F, G, K, M.
Oh, be a fine girl, kiss me,
the students would say,
missing the irony,
and the blue-white, white
and yellow-white stars
beat like pale hearts
millions of light-years away.
The yellow, orange and red ones,
colder, were closer now,
familiar as lemons, oranges
and apples glowing
on the breakfast table
in a black lacquer bowl.

These women actually had the job title “computer” and did the work that electronic computers do today. Annie Jump Cannon, who worked at Harvard College Observatory from 1896 to 1940, single-handedly catalogued 230,000 stars and did groundbreaking work on star classification. Better late than never, she finally received the title “astronomer” in 1938.

After the sixth-grade fiasco, I might have permanently avoided science, but another memorable incident occurred in seventh grade. A rebellious and unmotivated student, I frequently found myself in the office of Louis Ferry, principal of Piedmont Junior High School. On one occasion he said, “You have a good mind. Unfortunately, instead of putting it to work, you use it to get out of working. If I had your mind, nothing would stop me.”

“What would you do?”

“I’d be a doctor or a nuclear physicist. I certainly wouldn’t be sitting here arguing with kids like you.”

I had no idea if this were true, but I took it as high praise and thought of it four years later when I was a sixteen-year-old mother, divorcée, and high school drop-out stapling lids, napkins, and salt packets to chicken dinner plates for a living. With beads of perspiration on my forehead and the scent of frying chicken in my nose, I remembered Mr. Ferry’s words and asked myself, If he was right, why am I wasting my life at Chicken Delight?

Back in school after a three-year hiatus, working toward my high school diploma at Oakland Adult Day School, I read Madame Curie’s biography by her daughter, Eve Curie, and promptly decided that I would be both a scientist and a writer. No one suggested that I might have to choose one of these careers. Maybe the idea that someone who had already made such a mess of her life would do either seemed so outlandish that no one took me seriously enough to warn me about the difficulty of trying to do too much.

As an undergraduate at the University of California at Berkeley, the first major I declared was physics and biology, although I remained as passionate as ever about writing in general and poetry in particular. I knew I would have to study science to be a scientist, but, naively, I thought I could pick up writing on my own. Physics was not a snap for me. Although I earned all As and Bs, it was my most difficult subject. At the time, I had a young daughter, tutored minority students in physics, chemistry, and math, and craved a social life as much as any other young woman in college. Something had to give, and it was the physics. I changed my major to biological sciences, with specialization in cell biology.

I stayed at Berkeley to pursue a Ph.D. in zoology, and by the time I started graduate school, I so desperately wanted to spend my time reading and writing poetry that I started to fear that majoring in science had been a big mistake. Yet I persisted and at the end of my first year of graduate school, I won a three-year National Science Foundation graduate fellowship.

To feed the other part of my soul, I joined the Berkeley Poets Cooperative and thrived there, even though it wasn’t easy for me to write good poems and I wasn’t always understood. One of the poems I read at the Wednesday night co-op workshop concerned my research on age-related changes in brain enzymes in mice:

Neurochemist

Past the insectary and deserted labs
I stride. Like boredom and bad dreams,
empty rooms open on either side of me.

In blue jeans and tie-dyed coat I climb
past the boa cage and metal boxes
of rats and mice, smelling of sawdust and crap.

I select a cage containing five pink-eyed
puffs of white fur, and take my scissors—rusted,
blood-stained, and dulled from cutting through bone.

It’s the brain I want, with its stellate cells
and elegantly fluted lobes. The mice
know my coarse white gloves. One whiff and they

scramble, squealing, in every direction,
but I grab one around the soft, pulsing belly.
When it writhes, I tighten my grip.

Quickly I cut through the neck and drop
the twitching body into the sink. Blood spurts
as the heart clamps shut. I hold the head,

mouth open, eyes distant, glazed; I prepare
to enter the skull, looking for what fills
that hollow place: mud, quicksand, love.

One of the women at the workshop said, “I don’t believe that mice feel love.”

The poem, of course, is not about mouse love. It’s about trying to fill the hollow place inside myself. Also, neurochemists use mice as models for humans; what they really want to understand is how the human brain works.

But neurochemistry was not for me. I couldn’t even anesthetize the mice, because that would alter the enzyme levels in their brains, and I kept having nightmares about it. In one, naked, decapitated human bodies were thrashing around in a huge sink. In another, the elevator in the Life Sciences Building took me beyond the top floor to an attic where human bodies were being cut into very small pieces and stuffed into plastic bags.

I switched to electrophysiology to work in the laboratory of Professor Richard Steinhardt, where I would attempt to measure the fertilization action potential across the membrane of an egg cell of a marine snail. Psychologically, I could handle piercing snail eggs with electrodes. The trouble was that my hands were too shaky to do it with any reliability. I learned that I have a “familial tremor,” a genetic hand tremor so slight that under normal everyday circumstances, no one, myself included, had every noticed it. The first—and last—problem it ever caused for me was inability to use a micromanipulator to place electrodes in the snail eggs. Good thing I never aspired to be a surgeon!

If the tremor had been my only problem, I would only have needed to change projects again, but women weren’t yet quite trusted as scientists, and Rick Steinhardt was suspicious of me. Once when I came back to the lab after visiting the women’s restroom, he asked, “What are you doing here?”

“I work here.”

“I thought you’d gone home for the day.”

On another occasion he asked me to come to his office to take a test. It had twenty questions covering a wide range of topics in biology. I finished it quickly and waited as he corrected it.

“You got everything right,” he said. Before I could begin to feel pleased, he continued, “Do you know what this means?”

“No.”

“You’ll never be a great biologist.”

“Why?”

“You’re too good a student. You’re too concerned about grades. I’ve given this test to undergraduates, graduate students, and other professors in this department, and no one else has ever gotten everything right. But I’m not surprised. You’re so good at taking classes and passing tests, you have it down to an art. It’s all you care about.

“None of the great biologists were good students. Darwin was not a good student, and Francis Crick was not a good student. Great biologists care about ideas, not grades. They learn what they need to know in order to pursue their ideas.”

I was stunned. I agreed, of course, that scientists, or any other scholars for that matter, need to be more concerned about ideas than about grades. His logic was flawed, though, in his assumption that someone who got good grades must care about that above all else.

I tried to defend myself, but he’d already made up his mind. I thought he was right that I would never be a great biologist, but he had the wrong reason. Grades had nothing to do with it. I would never be a great biologist because I didn’t enjoy working in the laboratory and wasn’t any good at it.

There was more: “You’re getting a B+ in Comparative Neurophysiology.”

“Why did you mark me down?”

“You spent more time working on your report than you spent in the laboratory because all you’re interested in is your grade.” He paused before adding, in a tone that anticipated being challenged, “B+ is a respectable grade.”

I had an aha! moment. I had indeed put a lot of work into my report (although I don’t think it was more than I’d put into working in the laboratory), but it wasn’t because I cared more about my grade than I did about the experiment. No, what I instantly realized was that I was more a writer than a scientist, and I could not understand my results until I started writing about them. Sitting in the laboratory and staring at the oscilloscope screen didn’t do it for me: all those squiggles didn’t make any sense until I started translating them into English. Moreover, I would have gotten more pleasure from writing a poem about the experiment than the boring report. There was no point in arguing with Rick, because in truth I didn’t care about my grade.

What would I do with my life now? It was clear that I wasn’t going to earn a Ph.D. in zoology working with Rick. I decided to take the exams for a master’s degree, and I headed for the University Placement Center to check out my job options.

There was only one opening that required my background in science: sewage-treatment specialist for the nearby city of Richmond. The job entailed sampling and testing sewage to see if it was being properly detoxified. The application instructions said that a limited number of applicants would be selected to take a written test, and those who scored highest would be interviewed. I applied and waited. A couple of weeks later a postcard arrived saying that hundreds of people had applied for the job, and I was one of sixty who had been selected to take the test. I pictured myself trudging between great vats of sewage in hip boots and a yellow slicker. I saw myself in the laboratory in a gas mask, goggles, and gloves. I didn’t show up for the test.

I made an appointment with the community college adviser at the placement center. “If I get my M.A. in zoology, what are my chances of getting a teaching job at a community college?” I asked him.

“Zero. Community colleges aren’t looking for Ph.D. dropouts. They want people who’ve planned a career in teaching and are committed to it.”

“How can they tell the difference?”

“It isn’t difficult.”

“Suppose I tell you right now that I’m committed to a career in teaching. I loved working as a teaching assistant, and I was good at it. I hated working in the lab, and I was bad at it.”

“Your chances are still zero.”

“Why?”

“The community colleges want someone who’s married, has roots in the community, and is a man.”

“I have roots in the community. I’ve lived here all my life.”

“But you’re not married and you’re not a man.”

“I expect to get married soon.”

“But you’ll never be a man.”

The word “sexism” was just starting to surface in 1973, but I knew it when I saw it. Of course, I would teach chemistry and biology at a community college one day, but that would be in the future. For now, during this terrible interview, I realized what I had to do. There was a new interdepartmental group on campus that offered a Ph.D. in science/mathematics education, and so far, only a handful of degrees had been awarded. The requirements for admission were a master’s degree in math or science and a professor committed to supervising your dissertation.

Rick Steinhardt was enthusiastic and said he would give me a good recommendation; Max Alfert, also a zoology professor, agreed to supervise my dissertation. Hugh Rowell, another professor in the department, urged me to stay in zoology and do my dissertation in ecology instead of cell biology, which would enable me to do field research instead of lab work, but I didn’t know if I would like fieldwork, and I didn’t want to risk embarking on another project that might not suit me. I knew that I liked to teach, as well as to write, which would be handy for writing curricula. Doing research on how people think and learn appealed to me; I thought I would find it interesting and rewarding.

I took my NSF fellowship with me to the program in science/mathematics education, and the degree led to jobs that enabled me to feel that I was doing something worthwhile. In a public school district, I worked on a project to encourage girls in math and science; at a community college, I taught chemistry and biology classes to prepare remedial students, mostly minorities, for regular college science courses; at a national laboratory, I translated the latest scientific research into terms a layperson could understand; and for seventeen years, I served as Director of the Children’s Hospital Hall of Health, where I also co-directed a project to develop a fourth- and fifth-grade curriculum in health and biomedical science.

All the while, I kept writing and publishing poetry, always believing that I was more a poet and writer than a scientist, but that I had necessary work to do in the other realm. Sometimes, it seemed that my science writing and curriculum writing were at odds with my creative writing. In one realm, I had to avoid ambiguity, emotions, and the personal pronoun; in the other realm, these were perfectly fine and often desirable. In one realm, careful explication was a virtue, in the other, a potential disaster. Yet I found others—including Pattiann Rogers, Alison Hawthorne Deming, and Roald Hoffmann (a Nobel laureate in chemistry)—who were bringing the ideas and imagery of science into poetry to the benefit of both realms, and their work inspired me to continue straddling both worlds myself:

Fear of Science

I have no fear of Dolly, whose genes came
from the nucleus of a starved mammary cell,
or of tomatoes sprayed with gamma rays
to kill maggots, worms and Salmonella,
or of mice whose mutant myosin disrupts
the alignment of muscle fibers in the heart.

Nor do I fear the frog and carrot, cloned
from mature cells long ago, or the outdoors
where cosmic rays bombard my DNA
and radon gas emerges from the earth,
or people with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy,
whose heart cells are in disarray.

Should I fear grana stacks, where chlorophyll
molecules capture light in an oak leaf,
or the sunbeam itself—dancing photons
arriving after a long journey through space,
or the beat of my own heart, squeezing
blood one way through its four chambers?

I don’t even fear the way neutrons
from a uranium nucleus cause fission
of a second nucleus, changing mass
to energy, making a chain reaction possible,
and certainly not the electrical signals
traveling like thoughts through silicon chips.

What I fear is the imperfection
of the human brain, quick to anger,
oblivious to the needs of frogs and carrots,
mice, oaks, sheep, confused by too much
or too little dopamine, unable to remember
clearly the color of manroot, the cry of geese.

In addition to joining the Berkeley Poets Co-op, while I was still in my twenties I attended the Squaw Valley Community of Writers and enrolled in writing workshops at both U.C. Berkeley and San Francisco State University. I learned to get rid of extra words, use images and action rather than explanation to convey meaning, and sometimes take routes other than a straight line of thought to get from point A to point B. Twenty years later, I went back to San Francisco State to earn an M.A. in English and an M.F.A. in creative writing with the idea of teaching creative writing. My poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction all improved, but in the end, it didn’t make sense to leave the career that so reliably paid my mortgage, and I never applied for a creative writing position.

Instead, until 2009 I continued to work at the Hall of Health. This position brought me into close contact with the scientists at Children’s Hospital Oakland Research Institute and also gave me many opportunities to travel to Washington, D.C., where I served as a grant reviewer for the National Institutes of Health and the Institute of Museum and Library Services. More and more, I found that my passion for poetry and science, image and fact, and emotion and reason came together in poems about health and environmental issues. Global climate change, loss of species, destruction of ecosystems, and widespread pollution of all sorts are some of the most significant problems we face, and such issues remain among the driving forces of my poetry:

Where the Radiation Goes

When an earthquake cracks
a reactor, iodine molecules
ascend. Tumbling in hot wind,
they drift to a grassy slope
where mottled cows graze.
Soon children will drink milk
that scintillates like a galaxy.

A woman opens an umbrella,
but broccoli, lettuce, mustard
and spinach are suddenly
bathed in strontium rain.
There’s nowhere to go except
earth, sky, and sea—algae,
fish, clouds, birds, trees.

Radiation from a test in China
ends up in Utah and Colorado.
Fifteen years after Chernobyl,
the isotopes were still found
in stalks and delicate gills
of wild mushrooms gathered
by picnickers in France.

Many times through the years, I have asked myself if I would have written more and better if I’d never studied science and instead had pursued a career focused solely on writing and literature. This question, of course, is unanswerable. What I can say for sure is that my poetry has benefited from my work in science and vice versa. I’ve written many poems that would never have occurred to me without my engagement with science. Also, just as writing the report for my Comparative Neurophysiology class so long ago enabled me to understand the results of the experiment, so too writing poetry has helped me broaden my perspective and clarify my thoughts on many scientific issues. Moreover, I’ve learned that the flexibility of thought required by poetry is useful in solving scientific problems: whether you’re dealing with a poem or an experiment, sometimes to make it work, you have to let go of a particular approach or idea and try something entirely different. The similarity between a poem and an experiment does not stop there: both go through many drafts or iterations even when they’re going well, and both require careful attention to variables, whether they be things like temperature, light, and duration, or rhythm, line breaks, and vowel and consonant sounds. In both realms you can ponder everything from the ozone hole to the behavior of voles, and the two cultures converge in the end.

 

 

Poetry credits: “Homage to Henrietta Swan Leavitt and Annie Jump Cannon” and “Fear of Science” from Infinities, by Lucille Lang Day; “Neurochemist” from Self-Portrait with Hand Microscope, by Lucille Lang Day; “Where the Radiation Goes” first published in Canary.

Notes on Being a Mistress

21 February 2014
Categories: Nonfiction

Names have been changed because even a former mistress needs to keep secrets.

The first time Nick tried to kiss me, I resisted. He was dropping me off at home after we’d stayed at work late, drinking there because no one was left in the restaurant and we couldn’t risk being seen together out at the bars, couldn’t let anyone know that sometimes, when we were alone, we would tell each other secrets and stare at every part we ached to touch. I couldn’t erase the way he looked at me, searing hot blue beneath a predator’s brow, burning like frost bite, like fire. When he asked me to stay and drink with him that night, it felt delicious and forbidden, a slow unfolding of a situation I had been bred to understand.

We reached my house and I opened the car door, then turned to him. He’d taken off his wedding ring. He leaned forward to hug me, his lips tipped towards my mouth, but I threw my face in his way and his clumsy wet kiss landed on my cheek. I feigned drunken stupor and tumbled from his passenger seat, laughing. I didn’t want to give in that easily, knew I had to take it slow because he’d only been married a little while and even before then had always been faithful. I was his first mistress; he’d never done this before. But I had.

 

My first time, I was in eighth grade. Joey Stevens knelt before me, pants around his ankles, his mother at work. His girlfriend, Nikki, was my best friend. I’d never had sex before. I didn’t know how it worked. He told me to put it in, but I didn’t know what he meant. He dragged me forward on the couch and fucked me so fast I wasn’t sure it really happened, then he pulled out and came on his shorts. Wiped it off. Told me to hurry up and leave, his mom might be home soon.

Two weeks later, Nikki got pregnant. She was fourteen. We were all fourteen. We had no idea what we were doing, but we thought we did. Nikki knew I liked Joey, got close to me because I was already friends with him. I felt no guilt because Joey had been mine first, she had betrayed me, she was the enemy.

He told me that I was his escape; I was the only one he could trust. Even after Nikki got pregnant, Joey and I had sex a few more times, in the woods, in the creaking shells of abandoned houses near the beach. Afterwards he always talked, talked for hours, telling me all the things he couldn’t tell Nikki. I was grateful for that furtive part of him, the access to secrets that Nikki didn’t possess. “You’re my best friend,” he’d tell me. “I can tell you anything. Plus you’re so much better in bed than she is.”

I told myself that I’d rather have this honesty than be the girlfriend who got lied to, told myself it was enough. Eventually, though, she made him choose. Joey came up to me one day after class and told me he couldn’t see me anymore. “I’m sorry, but she needs me,” he said. “I have to be there for her now.”

I nodded. “I understand,” I told him, voice thick, eyelids trembling. “You love her more.” It wasn’t about love, exactly, but I don’t know that yet.

“Don’t get me wrong, Cyn, you’re great,” he said, placing a hand on my shoulder, staring into my face. I gathered the nerve to look back at him, and he smiled. “I mean, we’ve had a lot of fun. And you’re totally better than Nikki, neck down.”

This phrase would haunt me for the rest of my dating life. I began to believe that the best I had to offer was sex and secrecy.

 

My mother knew exactly what she had to offer. I’d grown up watching her flirt with married men at work, at a small bus yard in a small town way out on the eastern end of Long Island. School bus moms often arrive with their children bundled and blinking in the chilly morning air; it’s easier to take their kids with them each day than to find a sitter willing to work from six to eight in the morning. I helped my mother tug my sister Tracy along; she was seven years younger than me, was actually my half-sister. Neither of our dads were around. It was usually just the three of us, and sometimes a man would show up in our lives, but never to stay.

We’d all get to the bus yard as the sun was coming up, bright red but still cool, damp gravel crunching underfoot, hands warmed by 7-Eleven coffee. Mom would set her cup down to go smoke one last cigarette before the route and I’d climb into the driver’s seat and play with the handle that opened and closed the doors, watching and waiting for her to return.

Most days, she took her cigarette over to the area where the mechanics were working. She liked to flirt with a man named Bob, a man she was secretly dating. Bob’s wife, a dispatcher at the yard, came to work at noon, so Mom would only flirt with Bob in the early morning shadows. We always had to avoid walking past the bus yard women, sipping from cardboard cups next to the dispatcher’s window in the garage. We’d take the long way over iced stone driveways rather than walk through that gaggle of gossip, the accusing eyes and sharp smiles. The women knew they couldn’t trust my mother, and they gave me the same glares, glares which were probably pity but which I interpreted as judging and hateful, felt that the women were projecting my mother’s sins onto me. These women didn’t trust either one of us. We didn’t trust them either.

Bob wasn’t the first. Years before there had been another mechanic, from a different bus yard, a warm, broad-shouldered bearded guy named Steve. I was about ten at the time, but I was Mom’s only confidant when it came to Steve, and later, the others. She would spill her deluge of secrets, giddy and conspiring, out of her desperate need to share with someone who wouldn’t judge her, someone who would be on her side when the women at work began to suspect, then turn against her.

By the time I had sex with Joey Stevens, I had already learned a number of recited and implied rules from my mother. She’d recount the details of her affairs while she put on her make-up in the morning, the only time of day when I had her undivided attention – or, rather, when she had mine. She didn’t wear much make-up, just a few neutral tones from CoverGirl’s Country Woods palette, dabs of which I would steal while she made coffee. With her baggy jeans and thrift store sweatshirts, she wasn’t often girly, so it was one of the few times I got to experience a mother-like thing that I’d later read about in memoirs and novels, sitting on the tub edge watching her swipe dark shadow in her creases, tap lighter shades on her brow-bone, taking a few careful minutes out of her frenzied morning to make sure that, when she saw Steve or Bob or some other mechanic, she would look pretty, enticing.

My mother was Steve’s first and, as far as we knew, his only affair. They were together for a few years. Steve was handsome, unlike most of the men my mother usually brought home. He looked like a man who I’d want to have as a father: large and friendly with cool long hair and big, calloused hands. What I liked most, though, was that he made my cynical, sarcastic mother twinkle somehow. The night he told her he loved her, she couldn’t stop talking about it, about him, about the things he said. With the other guys she usually only talked about sexual details, even while I was young: favorite positions, whether or not she came, how hard, how long, how many times. With Steve, I got to see her act like a schoolgirl. Almost innocent.

Eventually, his wife found out, and he and Mom had to break things off. She transferred to another bus yard and met Bob, older, intelligent, soft spoken. She still drove past Steve’s house sometimes, would call him and hang up when his wife answered. My mother would call me over the next few years and tell me, “I just ran into Steve at the 7-Eleven by his house, you know, I have to stop there sometimes because the ATM at the one by our place doesn’t always work and besides, his place is on my way home from the bar, and anyway he looks really great, he’s still doing well, he’s healthy…” Mom worried about Steve; he had bad headaches, and she couldn’t call him to check up on him, couldn’t arrange to meet with him, couldn’t run into him at work. She was cut out of his life completely. Well, almost completely. There was always 7-Eleven.

Steve got brain cancer a few years later. Mom freaked out. She couldn’t call him, couldn’t know how he was progressing, whether he was getting better or worse, couldn’t get any information except what she heard at the bus yard water cooler. The man she’d loved and known intimately for years was reduced to common gossip. A decade later, long after the bus yard and Bob and halfway into a new marriage, she got a phone call from Steve’s wife, Joan. Steve had died. Mom couldn’t go to the funeral, of course; a mistress has no place at the husband’s funeral, even my mother knows that. So this phone call was in no way an invitation, but a surprising courtesy, a courtesy that my mother didn’t deserve. I heard parts of their conversation and could feel Joan’s pain, her loss, her desperation to connect with the one other person who had felt for Steve the same way that she had. I’m not sure if Joan’s calm attitude arose from age and wisdom or pain and isolation, though I’m guessing it was the latter. I watched my mother’s face deconstruct, watched her hands wring her lighter in white-knuckled grief, unable to talk even to me, wanting only the comfort of another woman who had loved the same man.

 

After Joey, I was determined to never again be the other woman, and I avoided relationships through high school. But when I was twenty-two, I met a man named Brad in an amber-lit bar on Long Island. We were both heartbroken, but we made each other laugh. At first there was no shadow, no pretense, though that would all change in a few months when I ran from the east coast to Arkansas and Brad got a girlfriend named Mackenzie. Each time I went home to Long Island for Christmases and summers we would make out in the back of his Impala—a dark parking lot, an empty beach—and we made out for hours, sometimes with clothes, mostly without. We would grind and rub and kiss and moan like teenagers.

Brad became the person I went to first whenever my heart was broken and I needed comfort. He was never jealous, and always knew what I needed to hear: that I was smart, young, pretty, successful; all the things a father would say if I’d had one to run to when some boy hurt me, things no other man had ever said. Lacking that, though, I ran to Brad, the only man whose long-distance shoulder was always there for me to cry on. Well, not always. Only Monday through Friday, nine to five, when he was at work—away from Mackenzie’s watchful eye.

 

My mother’s dad was incapable of loving her, she often told me. I never knew him. He was a strict, stoic astronomy teacher, Austrian and German, distant and cold and devoutly Catholic. He was never affectionate towards her, only her sister Marian, who was his favorite. Mom learned to pilfer that attention, steal it in quiet, slow increments. When that stopped working, she acted out; negative attention was better than none. Eventually she went too far and got pregnant and he kicked her out and spoke only to Marian, who was still his favorite.

He died when Mom was sixteen. They hadn’t spoken in months. In the movie of my mother’s life, there would be a letter that he wrote before he died, or a speech he delivered to a nurse before his death. But neither of these exist. There is only my mother a decade later, listening to the radio in her shabby VW van, chain smoking cigarettes with tears streaming down her face, left with the absence of the man whose love she could never claim unless she stole it from her sister.

My mother was too broken and unaware to stitch herself together, let alone mend my torn seams and loose threads. I had my sister Tracy’s father, Joe, to turn to, but it was always borrowed time, shared time, because Tracy would glare and pout and wail whenever anybody else had Joe’s attention. My childhood flashes of father-time are limited: watching movies with him and Tracy, them cuddled on the couch, me on the living room floor; her sneer when they would leave me behind to go fishing, when he took her to baseball games and I stayed home with a book; me creeping into the basement to help him fold laundry, his quiet time, and I didn’t want to disturb him by talking so we would sit silent in the damp basement, dryer humming and hot, the sun trickling through wet lint that caught in our lungs. Mostly, though, my memories are of watching Mom and Joe fight, then watching him bolt, tires shooting gravel bullets, Tracy crying at the window, watching her father leave again, and again, and again. No wonder she didn’t want to share him. She barely got enough of him when he was around.

Like my mother, I’ve been stealing love from another woman my whole life.

 

After a couple of years in Arkansas, I went to live with my mother, who’d just bought a summer home in Myrtle Beach that I could stay in year-round. I started waiting tables at a restaurant surrounded by swamps, suffocated by heavy hot air that tasted wet and salty and smelled like rotting grass. Nick was a manager at the restaurant. He was twenty-six, just a couple of years older than me, and had just moved to Myrtle Beach like so many other Northeast men, after honeymooning there and falling for the warm beach, the breezy palms, the cheap rent. I couldn’t keep my eyes off him, despite the ring that sat heavily on his left hand. Maybe even because of that ring. Maybe it was easier to be the mistress, no expectations, all fun and fling and ease.

We started flirting at work, shamelessly when no one was watching, cautiously when they were. He never talked about his wife. She was invisible to me, a ghost, and so it was easy to pretend she didn’t exist. It was easy for me to ignore the very idea of her. When I did think of her, she was the woman who judged my mother at the water-cooler, she was my wailing sister reclaiming her father, she was the monster, not me. This was her fault, not mine. It’s easy to make yourself the hero of your own story.

At first, when Nick would go home to his wife at night, it didn’t bother me. But then he began choosing her over me. She’s tired tonight—she wants me home and I’m sorry, we made these plans a week ago and I’ve gotta open in the morning, I can’t. I would lay awake and daydream about her finding out, about him trying to have sex with her but not being able to get it up, about him confessing that he just doesn’t love her anymore, or, my personal favorite, her leaving him for another man. Nice and clean that way.

One morning he woke up to find his wife, Stacy, clutching his cell phone, crying. “Who the Hell is ‘Cyn’?” she demanded.

He showed up at my place pale and shaking. He’d told her I was just some girl who’d come into the bar at work. There weren’t enough text messages to prove that it was something more; he’d convinced her that it was all flirtatious banter. “She wants to call you,” he said to me. I told him I could talk to her, I could handle it. Then he told me we were over, gave me a trembling kiss good-bye then left to go be with her. I sat quiet on the couch thinking how strange it is that the man you love might be the love of someone else’s life, someone you’ve never met.

I thought that if Nick’s wife and I were to meet we’d probably get along, be similar. If he loved the both of us, how different could we be? I’d had conversations with her in my head, mature conversations in which she said she understood how I’d fallen in love with him—after all, she’d fallen for him too. How could she blame another woman for seeing in Nick what she’d seen? I heard the long talks Mom would have with Steve’s wife, Joan.

When Stacy called, she told me I was a whore. I knew Nick was quivering next to her while she yelled at me. “I don’t care who the fuck you think you are. Nick is my husband. You need to stay away from him. I love him. He’s my husband. You’re just some stupid skank and you have no business trying to steal my man.”

I hated her thick Jersey accent, her nasal tone, her crude slang. I’d pictured her as someone I could be friends with, someone nice and easily hurt, someone I could see Nick loving the way he loved me. But now I was glad to find that she was strong enough for me to hate, and I was glad to find that I hated her instantly, powerfully. I was ashamed of Nick for marrying a woman like that. I thought he’d have better taste.

I muttered something that sounded like an apology. I’m not sure what I said. I let her call me a slut and a home-wrecker, absorbed the abuse knowing it would help her feel better. I owed her that much.

Months later I found out that Nick was leaving Stacy for another woman. He’d been sleeping with this third woman and me at the same time, lying to all of us—his mistress, his other mistress, and his wife. The other mistress wrote to me, asked me if anything ever happened between me and him because there had always been rumors and she knew the way rumors worked, knew that usually they were true. I’d been trained to keep quiet, to be loyal, to not succumb to being one of those petty women, those bad mistresses who threaten their men, blackmail them, spill all their secrets just because it ended, when being a mistress entails knowing it has to end, eventually. Being a mistress means keeping his secrets.

 

A year or so after Nick left me, I received a text from Brad: Just to let you know, so you don’t have to hear about it on Facebook. Mackenzie and I are engaged.

It was a message I’d been expecting for six years, but the news was still a deep, guttural blow. I pocketed my phone, told a friend of mine to cover my section at the restaurant, and walked across the street for a shot of Patron. The bartender knew me, knew my drink; it was poured by the time I hit the counter. I shot it, bit hard into a lime, walked slow into the bathroom, and burst into tears.

There in the bathroom I thought about the last time I’d seen him, only a year before but so recent in my mind that I could feel that warm voice and slow smile, could see him as he sauntered up the drive, hugged me, said, “You still smell the same.” He said this to me every time I saw him. This time, he buried his hands in my hair, lifted it off my neck, and kissed my collarbone, my shoulder. I smiled at him and asked if he wanted to go for a walk, because I was staying with a friend, and I couldn’t invite him inside. I didn’t ask about Mackenzie, and he didn’t talk about her. We walked down to the beach. He told me how good I looked; I told him the same. We talked about the water, the seagulls, the sand, and then he was kissing me, circling my body with his arms, picking me up and laying me on the gritty pebbles, sea foam pressing through my dress.

Corrida de Toros

21 February 2014
1 Comment
Categories: Nonfiction

My father’s used Town Car was riding on a spare tire, leaning hard to the left as we drove across a bridge into Mexico over the muddy waters of the Rio Grande. It hadn’t rained in weeks, the river looked low, and dust rolled from behind the car as we drove down a border road. I heard the car lighter pop, then my father pulling it from the dash, and I knew he was pressing the red-hot coils against the end of his Winston. He took a drag from his cigarette, filled the inside of the car in a cloud of smoke, and said, “Welcome to Juarez.”

He wasn’t saying this to his wife, Christie, sitting next to him, or to her son, Danny, sitting behind him, but to me. I didn’t say anything. I was looking over my shoulder through the rear window, thinking of how my mother had warned me just days before not to cross the border with my father. My parents separated five years earlier when I was seven, divorced when I was eight, remarried other people when I was nine, and my father moved from Ohio to El Paso a year before now, starting over again with a new family. My mother found out that my father was moving the same day I did, when she dropped me off for my regular visitation at his house one weekend, and an Atlas Moving van was blocking the driveway. Now I was twelve, and after years of wrangling over the conditions of my custody, my mother was convinced that my father intended to take me across the border someday, beyond her reach and the reach of the American legal system. Her fear seemed irrational, but then again, there we were—across the border, beyond her reach.

The bank sign back in El Paso had read a quarter to four and 102 degrees, but my father told me this was a “dry heat,” which I took to mean more tolerable. The forecast called for a slight chance of rain, but so far this afternoon all it had been was hot. The wind was picking up though, and clouds slid across the sky, daubing indigo in white billows as they slipped over the peaks of the Franklin Mountains that divide East and West El Paso.

My father rolled the windows down, letting the cigarette smoke out and the summer heat in, and I could taste the dust rising from the road to meet us. The car’s A/C struggled to compete with the outside air as we passed by a blur of buildings. Dentista. Farmacia. Taquería. As we got deeper into the city, traffic started to bottleneck, slowing us to a crawl. My father looked at his watch, drummed the top of the steering wheel with his thumbs, then turned on the radio. He scanned through static until he hit a station that promised Menos conversación, más música, and a lively mariachi song spilled from the speakers.

After a minute or two of sitting bumper-to-bumper, my father cut the wheel, taking a left down a pot-holed and rutted side street, and I worried about a flat tire. What then? Maybe my mother was right. I trusted my father, but maybe crossing the border was a bad idea.

My father smoked the Winston down to the filter, snuffed it in the ashtray, then craned his head to look at me in the rearview mirror. “This isn’t Cancun or Cabo,” he said as we passed through a graffiti-tagged barrio with barred windows, crumbling stucco, and chipped terra cotta tiled roofs. “This is the real Mexico.”

It was my first time there, and my father wanted to immerse me in the culture. He said he wanted to show me the glass blowers at Casa Mendoza Artesanías, eat dinner at El Presidente, maybe gamble a little and watch the greyhounds run. But first, we were headed to the Plaza de Toros to watch a bullfight.

Christie pressed her palm against an A/C vent, lowered the thermostat as far as it would go, then fanned herself with the Rand McNally. My father took the hint and rolled up the windows. A block or two later, Christie said, in her overly proper London accent, “I need to use the loo.” When Christie and my father first met, she was living in Madrid, recently divorced from Danny’s father, a native Spaniard, but, as my father once said, “She was born and raised a scone’s throw from the Thames.” Christie stabbed at the radio, stopping the mariachi music mid-song. “Did you hear me, Adrian?” she said to my father.

“Where do you want me to pull over?” he said, gesturing through the windshield as we passed vacant lots overgrown with salt cedars and sagebrush, and homes where laundry hung from lines, flapping in the wind. But then he saw a corner store ahead with hand-painted signs advertising hielo,cerveza, licores, cigarrillos, and botanas. There was a baño located at the back of the building. “How ’bout here?”

A gust of wind blew, stirring dirt to life and a tiny dust devil danced across the parking lot, whisking up debris and trash in its path. Christie looked at the sagging cinderblock building, at the cracked window covered in tape, and the cobwebbed neon signs.

“Are you trying to wind me up?” she said, “I’m not going in there.”

My father shrugged. “Then you’ll have to wait ’til we get to the bullfight,” he said, pulling back onto the road.

Christie thumbed through the atlas, stopping on a dog-eared page. “Do you even know where you’re going?”

“Of course,” my father said, poking a finger somewhere below the dotted Texas-Mexico border, but never looking down at the map. “We’re almost there.”

My father knows the way, I reassured myself. He had been to Juarez several times. He used to live in El Paso before now with his third wife, Giuliana, and their two boys. El Paso was also where my father met Louise, my mother, who had a son of her own from her first marriage. In fact, it was my father’s history with this area that made my mother so leery. She was aware of things I didn’t know yet, like how my father sued Giuliana over the terms of child support and alimony after they divorced. He cited jurisdictional issues because she and her sons had moved to Manassas while my father was still living in El Paso. It became a landmark case, making it all the way to the Virginia Supreme Court.

A little more than a decade later, here he was again, my father, moving west and starting over. My mother was suspicious of everything he did, wary of repeated patterns, but my parents didn’t argue anymore. They hardly even spoke.

When we got to the Plaza de Toros, Christie found the bathroom while Danny and I went with my father to buy tickets and drinks, a couple Tecate beers for him and Christie, Cokes for Danny and me. As I watched my father thread his way through the crowd toward the bathrooms to join up with Christie, I was struck by how much the plaza reminded me of being at Riverfront Stadium waiting to watch the Cincinnati Reds play. My father and I used to go to baseball games every summer, even after my parents divorced, a constant that I found comforting. We also played catch from time to time, my father often crouching in a catcher’s squat, punching the inside of his mitt, and saying something like, “Give it the ol’ pepper, kiddo.” But that hadn’t happened for quite a while. After my father moved to El Paso, I would play baseball with other kids in the neighborhood, but even when their older brothers or fathers joined in, we still never had enough players for two teams. So it was common for someone like me to hit a double and yell, “Ghost man on second,” a placeholder for the person who wasn’t there.

I lost sight of my father in the plaza for a moment and stood on tiptoes straining to see over the crowd. Then I found him waving to Danny and me to follow him and Christie in the direction of an arrow that pointed toward the entrance. By the time we found our seats, it was nearly 5:00 p.m., but the open concrete stadium was still sun-scorched and I was thankful my father paid extra for tickets stamped sombra, so we could sit in the shade. The plaza was perfectly round with concentric rows of seats that descended to the dirt ring below, where I could see the fight had already begun.

I would find out later that bullfights are divided into three stages, and that I was watching the last one, the tercio de muerte or “death third.” The bull, slick with blood and sweat, had already been speared with lances held by horsemen, and skewered in the shoulders with barbed banderillas that bobbed up-and-down as he trotted around the arena, looking for a way out. At first, there was a cartoonish quality to this image, and it didn’t fully register what I was looking at. The music, amplifying through the loudspeakers, sounded almost carnival-like, and the banderillas were fringed in festive colored tissue paper, so the bull almost looked like a piñata.

The soundtrack changed to more dramatic music, and a matador entered the arena to a round of applause. He was dressed in green and embroidered gold that twinkled in the sunlight as he took exaggerated strides to the center of the ring and bowed to the crowd. Danny is from Madrid, and bullfighting is Spain’s national pastime, so he watched this like I did the Reds. He was smiling and clapping as though Mario Soto had just taken the mound, throwing warm-up heat to Johnny Bench. After the crowd quieted, Danny leaned over to me. “If he does a good job,” he whispered, “he gets to cut off the bull’s ears to keep.”

I felt the Coke sour in my stomach as I watched the matador unfurl his red cape and shimmy the sateen cloth. The bull was already tired, breathing heavily, and wobbling on unsteady legs. Snot and saliva streamed from the end of the animal’s snout, puddling near his hooves in the dirt. But when the matador squared up to face him, the bull, as if on cue, pawed at the ground, stirring the dust around him. Then the bull lowered his head and charged, narrowly missing the matador, to a chorus of “Olés!” from the crowd.

Vendors walked up and down the aisles, offering seat cushions for rent, flowers for sale, andcerveza fría, but when Christie saw one holding a corrugated cardboard box with the wordsPapas Fritas written in red, she elbowed my father and said, “I’m hungry.” My father bought a bag and Christie and Danny shared the fries as they watched the bull circle back for another pass at the matador.

A gust whipped across the plaza, snatching a man’s sombrero from his head, cartwheeling it across the dirt ring, and the matador shielded himself with his cape for a moment, waiting for it to die down. When the wind quieted, the plaza looked fogged in an opaque haze. The matador wiped his eyes and walked within inches of the bull’s horns. He shuffled his feet in the dirt to the rhythm of the music that echoed throughout the plaza, dancing a silly jig to a smattering of laughter in the crowd. Danny giggled as well, then looked over at my father who smiled back and reached over to tousle his hair like dads sometimes do to their sons.

Done with teasing the bull, done with his dance, the matador turned his back on him and walked away, apparently unafraid of being gored or trampled under his cloven hooves. Then the music stopped, the crowd quieted, and the matador turned to face the bull again. “This is it,” Danny said, edging to the end of his seat.

The matador stood tall and drew his sword just below his chin, aiming at an area between the bull’s shoulder blades. He ran toward the animal, thrusting the sword forward and into its flesh, hitting nothing but bone. The crowd groaned as they watched the sword get stuck for a moment, then drop to the dirt. The bull stumbled, falling to his haunches, but stood back up. The matador picked up the sword from the arena floor, and without cleaning its blade, tried again. He missed the mark a second time, then a third. It was like Soto suddenly couldn’t find the strike zone. Some in the crowd were angry and protested, throwing their rented seat cushions, and a small hail storm of pillows tumbled into the arena. Others, like Danny, seemed more understanding, blaming the matador’s failures on the windy conditions, the sand in his eyes. The crowd didn’t calm until the matador’s fourth attempt when he hit the spot, plunging the sword into the bull all the way to the hilt.

The bull was already dead but didn’t know it. He lowered his head for one last charge, took a couple steps, and collapsed in a cloud of dust. Nearly everyone stood and applauded, including Christie and Danny, nearly everyone except my father and me. Danny tapped Christie on the shoulder. “I want to go down there,” he said, pointing to the people gathering ringside to throw flowers, and hoping for the chance to shake the matador’s hand.

“We’ll be right back,” Christie said to my father as she and Danny shuffled past him, taking the steps by twos down to the ring.

I looked over at my father, sitting three seats to my right, as he cupped his hands around the end of a Winston, shielding his lighter’s flame from the wind. “Well, what’d you think?” he said, looking down at the arena, at the dead bull slumped in the dirt.

“Mom told me not to come to Mexico with you,” I said, looking down at my feet. “She said you’d take me across the border and never come back.”

“Is she nuts?” he said. He shook his head, laughed a little at the thought, then flicked cigarette ash into his empty Tecate can. “I would never do that.”

I should have been relieved, but instead I felt a slight sting, unwanted in some way. It was the same sting I’d felt the day before when my father picked me up from the airport, the first time I’d seen him since the day he left Ohio, nearly a year before. I wondered where I fit into his life, into his new family. “I know,” I said, clearing my throat. “That’s what I told her.”

The wind gusted and dirt rose in the swell, clouding the plaza again in dust and debris. The wind ebbed and flowed, pushing forward, then receding, quieting back down to a breeze. My father looked off into the distance and I followed his gaze to the skyline. We were facing north and we could see the ridge of the Franklins peaking over the rim of the plaza. In the distance a silver curtain of rain fell from the clouds, but it never hit the ground.

“It’s called virga,” my father said, “A dry rain.” He leaned toward me and pointed skyward. “It’s evaporating before it hits land.”

I looked at the swollen clouds, at rain only willing to meet the ground halfway, then down to the arena where the dust was still unsettled. A breeze swept across the plaza as my father took another drag, and the smoke wafted away. He stared at his cigarette for a moment, lost in a thought, before dropping it into the Tecate can. Then he slid down the concrete bench, closing the distance between us.

Halloween Glossary, D-H

21 February 2014
1 Comment
Categories: Nonfiction

DEATH
Halloween is a celebration of death, of dead things and things that kill—vampires and werewolves and zombies—but also a time of literal death, first the leaves and the grass and the millions of mosquitoes and the creatures that feed on the mosquitoes, then the end of the hopes one always pins to summer, the plans to get organized, to spend a romantic weekend in Cape Cod, to finally finish that novel manuscript, to get that scuba diving certification, to go on a safari and watch a lioness as she stalks an antelope. Also the time of year when my dog died, when I took two elderly Welsh Corgis to the local groomer in preparation for a pumpkin carving party and then returned from the groomer with two elderly Welsh Corgis, but Otis, the tri-color, the one with the little patches of brown fur like eyebrows, which invited us to attribute all sorts of human characteristics—empathy and understanding and high-level cognitive skills—was quietly suffering from a ruptured spleen. I didn’t know the spleen was ruptured then, and I ignored his abnormal behavior when he wobbled across the room wheezing and flumped in front of me with the force of a sandbag dropped from the ceiling; I patted him on the head and then left to drink beer with my friends in the city. While I was out, my wife returned home from work and called to tell me Otis wasn’t standing and could barely breathe. My wife—a nurse, normally calm and rational and never panicked (see also: PANIC ROOM PROCEDURES)—was sobbing and I knew that the dog was dying, had been dying in front of me, that his flumping was a cry for help, that the other dog was at home watching him die and was incapable of understanding why she would never see Otis again, and so, four beers deep, I drove to meet them at the animal hospital, speeding at ninety, ninety-five, checking my phone at the same time for directions, and knowing I was endangering others’ lives, hoping only to arrive in time to see the dog one last time and to be with my wife who had grown up with this dog and who had made many unbreakable associations between the dog and her own long-deceased mother, and I remember thinking: I hope if I get pulled over, the cop is a dog-lover. I remember thinking: I hope he understands.

DEPRESSION
The defining emotion of my youth, the relentless anxiety, the certainty that I was not good enough, the guilt for feeling depressed when I knew, compared to most people throughout world history, I had no right to feel depressed, and in fact had more comfort and luxury and entertainment and safety than anyone has a right to dream of, and still, day to day, there was the creeping dread. Every teenager feels it a little bit, the dread, but I fetishized sadness, sometimes sharpied angry words on my arms—I didn’t have the conviction to be a cutter, but I wanted people to know I was tormented—and I entertained sexual fantasies that began with me overwhelmed by the world and addicted to opium and meeting girls who were intrigued by my worldly ennui and my flimsy grasp of existentialist philosophy. It’s possible I played at being depressed and dark and moody for so long that my personality changed permanently, the psychological equivalent of making a funny face and having it stick that way. It’s also possible there’s just something fucked in the chemistry of my brain, and I was born with a predisposition toward pessimism and self-doubt and isolated misery. I have an inherent appreciation, therefore, of Halloween and its contrived gloominess, my general objections to all mass-produced commoditized holidays, with their kitschiness and costumes and manufactured traditions, notwithstanding.

DESTRO
A villain in the G.I. Joe universe, an arms dealer who wears a steel mask. Responsible, presumably, for the deaths of thousands of innocents. A costume I wore for four consecutive Halloweens until my mother told me it was time to move on to something “a little more fun.” (see also: COSTUMES)

EGG
What you do when you want to fit in with the cool kids and don’t think you have anything else to offer besides the willingness to engage in so-called mischief on so-called Mischief Night (see also: UNPOPULARITY, Solutions To). You collectively bombard the first house, but run away so fast and with such an adrenaline rush that you can’t hear the impacts of egg on vinyl siding over the thumping of your heart, so at the next house you force yourself to wait, peeking over the hood of a parked car to see the homeowner, a tired-looking man in v-neck undershirt and sweatpants, standing in his front yard, suddenly spinning in hopes of catching a glimpse of the god damn teens who did this to his house, and you’re afraid but it’s a safe kind of fear, like being on a rollercoaster, because you all know, and he probably knows, that there’s nothing he can do: he’s too old and fat and slow to catch you and even if he does somehow catch you, what’s he going to do? Beat all of you up? He walks turns his back and retreats toward his house, all slumped shoulders, and then you hurl one more egg, which incites your friends to unload the rest of the arsenal on him; for weeks afterward you will laugh about the daring of your mischief, and only a decade later, when your own house gets egged, will you consider that moment from the homeowner’s perspective. Only at that moment do you understand that you and your friends were responsible not just for ruining that man’s night, but for acting as a cruel reminder that his day had passed, that he was beaten and, whatever exuberance and hopes and dreams he’d once had, they’d been abandoned one by one over the years until eventually all he had left was his house and his dignity and then he was egged—egged!—by some shitty kids who thought of him only as a prop in the low-stakes play of their lives.

EVERYONE I LOVE IS DEAD
A song by the gothic metal band Type O Negative, who called themselves “The Drab Four” and whose catalogue is filled with titles like We Hate Everyone, Bloody Kisses, and Halloween in Heaven. A band I took very seriously in high school and college, in the way all myopic and depressed teens take their music very seriously. I wore mostly black clothes then, and assumed a disproportionate amount of pride in the fact that I’d been to and survived the pits at metal concerts headlined by groups with names like Fear Factory and Hatebreed. While some of the bands I loved then were deeply sincere in their anger and alienation, it took me a disappointingly long time to recognize that Type O Negative’s image was performed sadness, that brooding lead singer Peter Steele was just playing a character. The misery was all external. The band was self-aware and dark and funny, but I wasn’t in on the joke. Without the sense of humor, the performance is almost unbearable.

FAT
Halloween is the start of a massive cultural weight gain that continues until the last stale Christmas cookie has been stuffed into bloated cheeks, and then suddenly there are New Year’s Resolutions about weight loss and love handles and bikini bodies, and with each passing year this pendulous bodyshaping routine becomes codified as tradition rather than the reckless support of a sick economic system that cannot function if people reach anything like contentment. I don’t like giving candy to fat children on Halloween, because I was a fat child and am intimately familiar with the shame cycle of binge eating, and I know some of these children are going to go home with their pillowcases full of chocolate and eat until they’re sick—maybe they’ll even be encouraged by parents because it’s a special day—and then the next time they see their peers they will be acutely aware of only one thing: they are different, they are less valuable, they do not belong, which either leads to a few days of frenzied workouts or instead more binge eating and so on. It seems cruel to indoctrinate children into this system so early, but still on Halloween I’m at the door with a bowl full of treats, handing them to obese children, who immediately appraise the quality of the candy because not only is there an expectation of free food but also that the food will be up to a certain standard, but I opt for healthy treats—pretzels, fruit snacks, the lesser of evils. Still, I give the food away because it’s in the social contract and I know parents on the block expect me to give candy to their children. I also know that if I don’t pay the Halloween tax, then local teens—in their half-assed costumes, their smirky self-confidence itself a mask—will egg my house.

FRED
My father-in-law, a surrogate father to me in the decade since my own father’s death (see also: APPENDIX II, “Index of Dead Relatives”) and also the central figure in my wife’s life. A man who represents for me the possibilities of all that can be good in the world, who is more generous with his time and energy than anyone I know, who likes people, and who, unlike me, can effortlessly see the good in them even while they’re doing terrible things (see also: CANDY, That Time Some Older Kids Stole Mine). Fred has often said that he would give up every other holiday if he got to keep Halloween and the family’s annual pumpkin carving party, which has evolved over fifteen years from a small, three person affair to a forty-person blowout at with an octuple-batch of homemade chili and a few gallons of wine and five cases of beer and a full month of pumpkin stockpiling. The ritual of preparation—Fred joining me and my wife the night before to chop onions and peppers and simmer the chili on medium-low heat and set out pumpkin carving tools and so on—is hard work but also one of the most important traditions in our family. The party itself is great fun, although I tend to annoy my wife by drinking too much and talking too loudly. It’s the one time each year when we’re able to gather almost all the important people in our lives, unless there’s a wedding or funeral to attend. The annual group photo both promises stability and denies it. Roughly the same crew is there every year, but there are always minor changes: new spouses, new children, new plus-ones, people aging, gaining weight and losing it, hair graying and creases forming around our eyes, ex-spouses disappearing, broken friendships and deaths. This year, uninvited, but still attending, there is a tumor. There is always a tumor somewhere, even if you’re not yet aware of it. If you manage to live long enough, you get a malignancy to call your own, to nourish against your will, to name and to hate. This year, Fred has a tumor in his breast, still growing, and his surgery is scheduled for only four days before the party, so he may end up missing out on the one day he would trade for all other days.

GHOSTS
Your past and future selves haunting you as reminders of the mistakes you’ve made and warnings about the ones you will eventually make. The fear comes not from rattling chains and flickering lights and creaking floorboards but rather from the moment you come into contact with a vision of who you actually are. The contrast between your invented self and your material being. One of you exists and the other does not.

GRISLY GOTHIC GABLES
A haunted house where I worked when I was thirteen years old, my first actual job, which I took because all of the cool guys in my eighth grade class were working there, and I’d concocted an elaborate fantasy that this would result in me meeting girls and talking to girls and eventually kissing a girl. My first assignment was a spotlight gig that I got for reasons I don’t understand, maybe I volunteered or maybe, I wanted to believe, the manager at Grisly Gothic Gables saw something special in me that warranted such an important responsibility. At the end of the tour, when each group thought they’d safely escaped the haunted house and let their guard down, my job was to plow through a collapsible wall dressed like Leatherface and charge them, screaming, chasing them away from the house, reminding them there is no such thing as safety and security, and no matter how many precautions you’ve taken, there’s ultimately nothing you can do to protect yourself from a lone madman. The sound of the wall crashing against the ground startled them, but after that I was not a good pursuer, was too afraid to unleash the requisite horrifying scream, because a scream like that requires levels of honesty I was not yet capable of achieving. The lack of conviction drew laughter from one group of high school girls, which shamed me in the way only the laughter of high school girls can, and even though my face was covered with a mask, I wanted to hide and never be seen again. After several subsequent failures, I was demoted, then demoted again, until I was wearing a zombie costume and standing inside a haunted jail cell with a half-dozen other zombies who couldn’t hack it anywhere else—as if the thing that would make jail scary is the presence of zombies and not the fact of imprisonment itself. When a group of cool-seeming guys strutted through, and we were rattling the cell bars, I made eye contact with one of them, who laughed and then, through the bars, punched me right in the face.

HELL
(see: OTHER PEOPLE)

HORROR
When my cousin—thirteen years younger than me—learned I self-identify as a writer, he asked me to write him a scary story. Which I said I would, because I tend to make promises I cannot keep. I forgot about this promise until a few months later when his mother, my aunt, asked for the story. Just a few more weeks, I told her. Give me a few more weeks. She gave me those weeks and then a few more and then he graduated from elementary school. I said then that his gift would be the scary story, but still I never wrote anything. The thing I couldn’t figure out: what could I write that was age-appropriate and still actually scary to a fourteen year old? I thought of the classic horror films, the ones that had knifed through my cynicism and terrified me—Amityville Horror and The Shining especially—but I couldn’t replicate those even if I tried. He’s older now and just started college, still periodically reminds me of the promised story, and I realize now the problem is I was caught up thinking about ghouls and goblins instead of allowing myself to face the true horrors of the world, which prevented me from writing an honest scary story, and now, finally, after years of empty promises, I have for my cousin the scariest story I can write:

The universe is larger than anything you could ever conceive and you’re smaller than you’ve ever conceived, and so the universe is indifferent to you at best and openly hostile at worst. You are bad for the Earth—we all are, the planet is much better off without us here, it would exist regardless. We are an inconvenience, a wound that needs healing, a scab the planet wants to pick, and this is why monsters exist; they are nature’s antibodies designed to eradicate the illness by destroying us. Monsters aren’t the stuff you read in stories, the furry beasts hiding in your closet at night. The monsters are in plain sight: they are the high school senior who torments you during your freshman year, making you get on your knees in the cafeteria and bark like a dog in front of everyone; the friend who tries, the moment you leave the room, to steal your girlfriend, who you weren’t planning to marry or anything but come on; the people who you will love but who will reject your love and who will later with their friends laugh at how pitiful you looked when you exposed your soul to them; the once-beloved uncle who creeps into your bed at night and presses against you, whispering that you’d better be silent or your parents will hate you forever; the neighbor who seems nice enough but as a young man committed wartime atrocities, which memories he tries to suppress with a combination of prescription painkillers and cheap vodka; the anonymous strangers on the internet who, in a matter of seconds, can destroy your identity and everything about your carefully curated life; frightened men with guns and no other options; the strangers who wouldn’t even help you if they saw you being pummeled in the middle of the street by a gang of idiot teenagers; gangs of idiot teenagers, who exist only to create mayhem and to record themselves creating mayhem so they can post videos of mayhem-creation on the internet; the governors and congressmen who hold you in contempt and don’t even pretend not to be robbing you; the world powers stacking nuclear weapons on top of one another and using their stockpiles as obvious surrogates for their penises. True horror occurs the moment you acknowledge your own helplessness and allow this newfound self-awareness to cripple you. The world itself is a nightmare from which you cannot wake, and, over time, you become increasingly aware of the monsters who surround you, are forced to recognize that life itself is a series of almost unendurable terrors that we’re conditioned to endure because what other choice do we have?

 

On Needing

21 February 2014
Categories: Nonfiction

During a recent summer I took up the habit of taking my dog on hour-long strolls around my city, New Orleans. I was fighting the kind of depression that makes you contemplate your existence, and I suspected that my angry, anxious terrier mix, Buddy, might need the release of a long walk as well. Not wanting to be alone with my sad little mind for too long, I typically wore headphones on the walk and zoned out into a podcast or music, not really paying attention to my surroundings.

One afternoon as Buddy and I passed a po’ boy joint on our way to Bayou St. John, I noticed a tall, bone-thin old man standing in the middle of the sidewalk and swinging a cane back and forth into the empty air in front of him. He was wearing sunglasses. He didn’t seem to me to be lost or searching. He was just waving that cane. As we got closer I pulled Buddy to the grass and tried to pass the blind man without him hearing us. The podcast I was listening to was a man telling of the time he was shipwrecked on an island. He volunteered to walk twenty-five miles with little food or water, to try to get help for his friends and himself. The man had decided to go on a sailing trip in the first place to help him come to terms with his alcoholism and the death of a friend who overdosed. The story was just reaching its climax. The man had been forced to drink his own urine, and he didn’t know if he would make it out of the situation alive. He was gaining clarity about the waste he had made of his life. I didn’t want to be stopped by the cane-swinging man; I wanted to cruise wide around him, avoid being stranded with him. But I was wearing my keys on a lanyard around my neck and their jingling gave our presence away.

“Hey,” I could hear the man shout over the din of my ear buds. “Hey, I need help!”

I stopped. I pulled my ear buds out and turned to look back at the man, who, though obviously blind, was staring hard and determined in my direction. Another man, a construction worker, hurried up the sidewalk on the other side of the street. He didn’t even glance over at us. I considered ignoring the blind man. Considered walking on, leaving him. And I hate to admit this; I also considered he might be running some sort of con. He was just going to try to mug me or get money out of me somehow. This was New Orleans. This was America. Strangers asking for help are only looking for trouble. I began to step away and leave him.

He heard my keys jingle again as I pulled Buddy along.

“Aw, no. You just gonna walk away from me? I’m blind! Help Me. Which way to the Street car? Ma’am!”

I stopped myself again and reluctantly shouted over my shoulder, “It’s left!”

“What’s that you said?” The man pleaded. “Where?”

I turned around and stupidly pointed to the left, where the streetcar ran two blocks away. It was like that time George W. Bush waved at Stevie Wonder. “It’s left!”

“Ma’am!” the man yelled. “I’m blind! I don’t know no left! Help me there!”

I sighed. I was being an idiot. Why did I want to avoid this man so profusely? I walked back to him. My angry little dog barked and growled as we shuffled to the man who was still arching his cane in front of him. He jumped back at the sound of the barking, but then he settled. He stopped waving the cane and stared down at the sidewalk to where Buddy’s growl emanated.

“Aw, you got a dog, ma’am? I ain’t afraid of no dog. Hush that barking now. Dogs feed off your vibes. I ain’t scared of no dog.”

Buddy inexplicably stopped his noise. He does not typically stop barking when he perceives danger real or otherwise. He’s one of those dogs. He distrusts abandoned plastic bags blowing toward him with the same ferocity as he distrusts large men. But then, there he was walking with me silently, ears tucked back, toward a strange stick-wielding man.

I placed my hand on the man’s unexpectedly muscular right arm. I was flustered by this change of plans. Because I had been facing him, the street car was to my left. Now I was touching his right arm. “The street car is that way,” I said. “Toward this arm. Left. Just up the sidewalk. Two blocks.”

“Ma’am!” he scolded. “You touching my right arm! You said the street car was left. Just take me there! Can’t you just walk a man to the street car?”

“No.” I said, “You’re fine. Just go up the sidewalk that way.” I touched his arm again. I didn’t want to interrupt my walk. I wanted to know what happened to the man on my podcast. He was still walking the island.

“Ma’am, please. Come on? Just guide me that way!”

I sighed. I agreed. I was still scared there was a con afoot even though it was obvious the man really was blind. I knew a better person would have already walked the man to her car and driven him where he needed to go. I stood beside him and he placed his hand on my elbow, then he let go and replaced it heavily on my shoulder. He felt strong, solid. We began to awkwardly shuffle—the man, my dog and I—toward Canal Street.

“Thank you so much, ma’am. Thank you so much. I’ve been blind for thirteen years, but I see with the Lord. I ain’t worried. I’m blessed. You know what I’m saying? You got to trust the Lord. You are an angel that came walking along.”

I laughed at that. I said it was no problem. An angel would not have hemmed and hawed and tried to point a blind man in the right direction. But then, maybe she would. My guardian angel is probably a goofy-ass airhead, getting drunk, and stumbling around after me wondering why the fuck I’m sad all the time. Happiness is right over there, Silly! Get out of your head and go grab it.

We walked by a little neighborhood restaurant with tables bordering the sidewalk and potted plants hanging from the eaves. The man heard customers talking and the clinking of silverware against plates.

“This is Katie’s right?” he said. “I live right around here. I been walking in a circle for God knows how long.” He had sweat beading on his dark forehead. “It’s alright. I see it as exercise.”

We walked past the tables and I knew the three of us were a sight tripping down the cramped sidewalk navigating the chairs and oversized potted plants. The more we weaved, the more heavily the man pressed on my shoulder. I had to let him go at one point because the tables took up so much space on the sidewalk and I needed to get in front of him for us all to fit without bumping into the gawking patrons. I ducked under a hanging fern and didn’t think to warn him about it.

“Ow! God!” he said. “Got shit swinging at my head.”

I apologized and resumed my place next to him. I placed his arm back on my shoulder.

He rubbed his head. “Ah, don’t worry about it. What’s your name?”

“Erin.”

“Win?”

“Erin.”

“Oh, Erin. Like Aaron Neville?”

“Yep, just like that,” I replied.

“But you a woman right?”

“Yep.”

“I used to work at Tipitina’s in the seventies. A bouncer. Well, doorman. I don’t like the word bouncer. I was there when Aaron won that Grammy. That my boy, Aaron Neville.”

Then the man began to sing. His voice was sweet. Smooth and pleading. “Look at this
man so blessed with inspiration. Look at this soul still searching for salvation. I don’t know much, but I know I love you.”

I found myself giggling. I liked this man. I realized I didn’t know his name, but I didn’t want to ask him for it. I’m not sure why. What an asshole I was for trying to leave him stranded.

We reached Canal and crossed to the neutral ground where the streetcar runs. A car was rattling along just as we got there, but because we weren’t ten feet over at the designated stop, the conductor passed us, even as the man waved his arms at the hissing sound of the car’s wheels on metal tracks.

“That lady drove right by us? It was a lady wasn’t it?” he asked as the streetcar, which was, in fact, driven by a woman, lumbered along, ignoring his waving arms. “Yeah, I’ll remember that,” he said.

“Here,” I said. “Let’s go to the bench.” I lined him up next to the tracks facing in the right direction.

“Thank you so much ma’am. You got me headed toward the river, right? Hey, what color my shirt?”

“Yes, you’re going to the river. It’s white.”

“What’s it say on it?”

“Bienville Book Fair.”

The man smiled and nodded. Then he reached in his back pocket and pulled out a stack of cards. He had a Medicaid card and some forms of Identification. I didn’t think to look for his name on the cards.

“Ma’am, which of these my Medicaid card?”

I pulled the right one out of the stack and put it in his other hand.

“Alright. Thank you, ma’am. Thank you so much.”

Then he grabbed my hands in his, bowed his head, and recited the entire Lord’s Prayer in a fast blur: “Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us, and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever and ever. Amen.”

I’ve heard the words of that prayer hundreds of times and they’ve never meant much to me. They were empty phrases I was supposed to mumble along with because all the old people in the pews were. And now I wasn’t struck with some great epiphany or religious awakening, but the words did have a meaning for me. They connected me to this man. Made me forget myself for a few moments.

I told the man it was no problem. To have a great weekend. Nothing I said sounded sufficient enough.

“You’re a good woman. An angel. God bless,” he said.

“Bless you too.” I meant it.

Buddy and I crossed the street back toward home as the man shouted his thanks one last time. I didn’t feel we deserved it. But I was happy I’d changed my course.

A few days later I put the podcast back on. The man stranded on the island ended up being rescued minutes after he drank his own urine by a group of scientists who happened to be on the beach studying sea turtles. The way the shipwrecked man deadpanned the story in his gravelly whiskey burned voice, this was a funny moment. Seconds before he’d had us thinking he would die. Then suddenly, after drinking one of the worst things a human wants to drink, nerdy researchers stroll up to save his life. If they hadn’t, surely would have died there on the shore. Sometimes people just cross our paths. I wasn’t plucked from depression ready to return to the world with new found clarity, like the man in the story. But I did realize that simply being here, no matter what our condition, is sometimes enough.

Glass House: The First Moment of Her Leaving

21 February 2014
Categories: Nonfiction

Northern Mariana Islands, 1970

My mother, seventeen, perfumes herself against malevolent spirits. Dabs the scent on her wrists and neck. Everyone in the house is asleep. Her four sisters in the sagging bed behind her, their hair knotted over the pillows like seaweed. The night is warm, moist. The sisters have kicked off the thin sheets. In the bed together, they are heavy-limbed and pale. My mother is the smallest, the darkest. She tiptoes over her three brothers lying, fully clothed, on the floor. She can hear the gentle snoring of her parents coming from the other room. At this time of night, there are no cars bumping down the uneven roads, only the immediate noise of her family, then far off the sound of surf, a dog howling, coconuts falling on the tin roofs.

 

The sand path to the beach is empty. There is no danger of being caught; most of the island falls asleep before midnight, but still she looks occasionally over her shoulder and hurriedly makes the sign of the cross.

At this hour the tide is low, the ocean peeled back to the reefs a mile out. The smell of brown algae dried from the sun stinks up the wind. Bare feet pick their way through the scurrying hermit crabs.

My mother, a girl in a pink school uniform, does not notice the moon drifting like a buoy in the dark water. She has no ear for surf dashing the reef. She sits instead, facing inland, on the cool sand with her dry arms hooked around her legs. Rolls and smokes four cigarettes, tucks the burnt ends inside crab holes. She waits.

 

Inside the glass house, lights pop on. One by one. The glow falls onto the beach and tugs at the shadows. My father enters, still young. His wife follows, pale faced, hair the color of wheat swinging down to her hips. On the beach, my mother lets down her own hair, tugs at the ends, dry as grass. Music leaks from the seams in the glass. By now, she has learned all the songs and so she half-sings the lyrics under her breath. The beach is dark, and the water and the sky are dark. The house is lit up from the inside like a shop window. Or else, like a movie screen.

Inside the house, my father and the woman move through the rooms, they smoke a joint and my mother imagines she can smell it. The two inside climb the curving staircase, which will in my mother’s memory build until it winds up at least three levels and in some of her memories even further, in some the staircase keeps going and has no top. On the amber wall behind them, my father’s shadow stretches long over his wife’s. The blond woman says something to him, a scrap of talk thrown over her shoulder.

My mother is seventeen, catching her breath as he pushes the woman up against the clear wall, leaning in hard for a kiss. She holds her breath the length of the kiss, exhaling only when it is over. Something fierce grows inside of her, something that sees only the tableau unfurling in front of her.

Going home with her hair smelling of sea and her bottom caked with damp sand, my mother is a new person. And every night that she can, she walks down to the beach. She doesn’t care that she is learning to sleep less and less, or that at school her head droops over the books. Every night she can sneak out, my mother slips barefoot down the sandy path and waits for the glass house to light up.

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