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I'm Gonna Live Forever


I’ve always been destined for greatness.  It just hasn’t happened yet.  I came the closest in middle school, when I begged my parents to sign me with a talent agent.  As a mediocre actor with absolutely no musical ability, I had no discernible talents an agent could peddle.  I starred in my fair share of school drama productions, but only because males in the department were so freakishly rare.  Ten years after the fact, I still wake in a cold sweat, sheets hobbling my ankles, as I relive (with striking clarity) my disastrous stint as Seymour in my school’s production of Little Shop of Horrors.
            Playing the part required no huge stretch of the imagination.  Slap on a fistful of hair gel, deftly curled cow lick, a pair of tortoise shell glasses, and I became the dictionary definition of nerd.  They cast me, essentially, to play a role I already played beyond convincingly in real life.  Looking the part was simple.  Acting the part, however, demanded far more courage than I held in reserve.  For an introverted social outcast, Seymour had an inordinate number of solos demanding all eyes on him.
            From the start, doubt crippled my performance.  I was a boy among men, the cast filled by both middle and high schoolers (the speaking roles generally doled out to the junior and seniors … somehow I snuck through that filter).  My body had barely begun to contemplate puberty, let alone pump my body full of deep, rich, masculine testosterone.  Unable to get through a spoken sentence without my voice cracking, I had no hope of holding a sustained sung note.
            And rhythm.  My dear lord, did I ever lack rhythm.  Step-ball-change, kick kick, sashay, tappa tappa tappa.  These terms meant nothing to me.  The choreographer learned early on to expect very little from me, and simplified my dance numbers to periodic shouts from the darkened wings: “Bryan!  Just stand still and try not to look so awkward!”
            My father, in a misguided show of paternal pride, filmed all three of the performances and screened them for anyone expressing the slightest interest.  Incidentally, not many people expressed the slightest interest.  Months earlier my family agreed to host a visiting Yale Wiffenpoof, the elite acapella group slated to perform at my school.  Unfortunately for him, his visit coincided with Little Shop’s opening to a lukewarm audience.  I returned home from the cast party to find my Technicolor humiliation shuffling across the TV for the traveling troubadour’s amusement.   Mortified, I slunk into the living room to see my pasty, pudgy self warbling off-key, a look of bemused confusion on our guest’s face.  Both my parents, bless ‘em, beamed with pride.
            “Dad!  Turn it off!”  I shrieked, my voice cracking to add unintentional emphasis to my embarrassment.  “Don’t make him watch that!”  It caused me physical pain to watch myself, and I knew someone who actually could sing was wracking his brains for some polite critique of my phenomenally unremarkable musical talent.
            “No, no,” he assured my dad.  “I’m fine.”  Fine.  The catch-all, non-committal word, underlined with an unspoken “But I sure wouldn’t have any objections to you turning this off.”
            The private screening of my own personal hell heralded the end of my stint in musical theater; my career on the great stages of Broadway died gasping its first breath, screeching a note never before heard by the human ear.  So musicals were out, but straight up acting still offered me my glittering future.
            I knew I could deliver a line convincingly.  I managed to beat out the Brazilian student for the role of Seymour only by the grace of my acting chops.  That and the fact that his spoken English sounded like a man fresh from the dentist with a mouth numbed by Novocain.  Ironically, he was cast to play the masochistic dentist.  I remained confident I could play any role thrown my way … as long as it involved no singing.
            And thus began my campaign for a talent agent.  I had no schemes to land myself in a summer blockbuster, nor did I want to make my rounds in commercials hawking snack packs or Sunny Delight.  I didn’t want power lunches with Hollywood movers and shakers, nor did I want to nosh with the glamorous elite.  I wanted one thing and one thing only: a role on Star Trek: Deep Space 9.
            If there have been any doubts up to this point about my dorkiness, let me quell them now.  I will unabashedly claim my geekdom; I revel in it.  I’ve been a Trekkie since the first time I heard the trumpet notes of the original opening theme.  I squealed with joy when I first saw the trailer for the revamped Star Trek movie, bringing no small amount of embarrassment to my date.  I am well-versed in lore and trivia.  I do indeed know the trouble with Tribbles, I can list with unquestionable authority all of Dax’s symbiotic hosts, I will stand in strong defense of Captain Janeway’s managerial capabilities, and I will always wonder why Deanna Troy ever deserved a senior position on the bridge.
            I knew with my sights set on the Deep Space 9 soundstage (a veritable tractor beam of focus and determination) nothing could stand in my way -- nothing except my parents.
            My parents rolled their eyes when I first told them of my intent to be the latest great actor delivering the opening speech at Star Trek conventions scattered in strip malls across the greater Midwest.  Even though I knew with absolute certainty that legions of adoring fans (dressed as my complex yet loveable character) would beg for both my autograph and attention, my parents remain coolly skeptical.
            “Bryan, this is a phase.”
            Star Trek is not a phase!” I countered.  “It’s one of the longest-running franchises in television history!”
            “What happened to the dream of playing violin in Carnegie Hall?”
            “The chin rest gave me a crick in my neck.”
            “Playing back-up guitar for Belinda Carlisle?”
            “The string popped when I was tuning it; I could have been blinded!  I’m scared now.”
            “Being a vet for the Ringling Brothers & Barnum and Bailey Circus?”
            “I don’t trust elephants.  The clowns freak me out too.”
            My parents are dream crushers.
            I shelved my dreams of gallivanting across the universe.  If my parents refused to pay to have me discovered, dreaming would only spiral me further into my well of depression.  My rehearsed interview with Matt Lauer and Katie Couric would never air.  Rosie O’Donnell would never fling a Koosh ball my way and ask how it felt as the youngest cadet out of Starfleet Academy.  My star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame would go to someone else.  I would forever eek out a commoner’s existence, gazing into the stars at night, wondering “What if?”

Blessed Be


God has always eluded me.  Raised nominally Catholic, my only connection to God was an aversion to church on Sunday mornings.  But even as a kid my family didn’t attend church regularly.  In Caracas my parents were unwilling to drive across town for the only English service, and barely knew enough Spanish to say “hello” let alone understand the complexities of the local Spanish masses.  When we lived in the Middle East, there was a fairly large Catholic expat population, but it was legally barred from building a church.  To circumvent the laws, we met in our homes, living rooms transformed into sanctuaries and over-stuffed couches substituting hard-backed pews.  Even our priest, Father John, bore an uncanny resemblance to Jesus with his shaggy brown hair, Birkenstock sandals, and comfortably liberal San Fran vibe.
Every Tuesday night, homes across the compound would open wide their doors to Catholic diaspora of Qatar and we’d shuffle in under the cover of darkness.  Father John’s support staff consisted of one Filipino woman who made the communion wafers, so members of the congregation stepped in to fill other roles.  A rivalry developed between the children to see who would act as altar servers, the higher visibility positions.  Competition always reached a boiling point around Easter for the annual pageant.  I like to think the year I was cast to play Jesus lingers in the mind of the congregation like a sweet dream.
“How such a young boy was able to portray the agonizing conflict between duty and desire is astounding,” they must have thought as I was nailed to the cross.
“That is most assuredly a young man headed the priesthood.  Or show business.  Either way, he’s destined for greatness,” another might have murmured to her companion.
“Does Jesus have mascara and Sun-In highlights?” the more astute audience member would have remarked.  My love affair with the Catholic Church ended the day I could no longer wear costumes and make-up in celebration of the Lord.

As we grew up, my family went to church less and less.  Rather than that comforting point of familiarity each week, church became the occasional torture my parents would drag us to when they were feeling particularly guilty about something.  Once we moved to the heavily-Catholic Venezuela, with easy access to mass, we virtually stopped going.  My family attended church only when home for the summers and Christmas, and even then it felt like we went only because it was what was expected of us.
I began dabbling.  That’s really the only word for it.  Primed at a young age to believe in some sort of deity, there was a vacuum of faith when Catholic doctrine was removed.
In my life, I’ve met many people who have been on their own odysseys of faith, people dissatisfied with the religion of their childhood and searching for something new to fill the void.  For most, the path takes them in and out of mainstream services, tending to deposit them in either the atheist or agnostic camp.  Sometimes they wind up in the ranks of the nondenominational Christian or evangelical mega churches.  Rarely, some left-leaning suburbanite decides to dip their toe in the pool of Asian religion to lay claim to Buddhism, rarely knowing little more about the faith than what you can pick up on the back of a take-out menu.  My own wandering was atypical from the start.
My eighth grade history teacher assigned a project on the Salem witch trials.  In those days, long before the advent of Google and Wikipedia, a research project was a Herculean task weighed down by the Dewey decimal system and dusty card catalogues.  Hoping to outsmart all my classmates who would similarly be hunting down the library’s limited history of witchcraft books, I asked my dad to pick up some literature on his next trip to the States.
My father is an amazingly oblivious man; one need only look at my childhood of My Little Ponies and musical theater, and his incongruous disbelief when I eventually came out of the closet.  Many a conversation between my brother and I has centered around speculation on my father’s behavior at work.  Certainly in order to climb the corporate ladder as high as he did, he must have been intent, laser-like, at work.  To be so focused on the task at hand, ready to spring cat-like into the corporate fray must have been utterly exhausting, for my father was anything but present when he was at home.  We learned over time that speaking directly to my dad, holding sustained eye contact, was no guarantee he was listening to you.  I like to imagine that not unlike a computer, my father cycled into power reserve mode each evening as he clocked out.  He retained motor skills enough to navigate traffic home, and nod his head in general assent to what was said, but never enough to function at true capacity.  My father, it was assumed, never fully powered back until walking through the office door the next day.
            It was this cloud of oblivion that prevented my father from recognizing exactly what he handed off to me in my formative teen years.  I try to imagine the scenario of my dad in a bookstore, asking some goateed clerk for assistance.  My father, harried and haggard from a trans-Atlantic flight, shuffles into a bookstore.  He knows he wants some political or war thriller for himself, and vaguely remembers the requests of his family.  Rather than walk the aisles for the correct title, he will grab the first book with an obviously chick-lit cover for my mother, citing ignorance when it is not the right title.  He knows I have a grade riding on my request, so can’t simply grab the fist book that strikes him.
            The clerk who helps my father is either genuinely incompetent or unabashedly fucking with him.  When my dad asks for books on witchcraft, the clerk leads him to the Neo-Pagan section and hands him three primers on Wicca.  Somehow the clerk mistakes my father, dressed in a starched business suit and cowboy boots, for a freewheeling soul interested in fostering a connection with Nature and a closer relationship with the Goddess.
            Upon arriving back in the Middle East, my father hands out the books like middle-management Santa.  My mom attempts to hide her disappointment at getting the wrong book, but she will exact her passive-aggressive revenge in due time.  My father hands me my stack of Neo-Pagan lit and my passport into my awkward teen years.
            I don’t remember my final grade on the witchcraft project.  But I do know I steered that ship in a direction far different than the one envisioned by my teacher.  I poured over my new books, entranced by the primal beauty and simplicity of the faith.  I was a quick convert to the cause, ready to defend Neo-Paganism to any monotheistic bigot who refused to understand.  My project—meant to be on the 1692 trials, mind you—was a one-man show touting commune with nature, divination, and spell crafting.  I expounded on the Rule of Three, a Wiccan take on karma, admonishing my peers to be vigilant of the energy put into the Universe, for all would be returned in a multiple of three.  And, in a tangential reference to the original impetus of the project, I climbed atop my soapbox to rally a stupefied class: “Never again the Burning Times!  Fight religious intolerance!”
            I never descended to the depths so common among rebellious youth.  I never dressed in all black, nor applied heavy make-up (my days of playing Jesus long behind me).  I never allowed my hair to twist into dreads and forswear all products not naturally collected from the forest floor.  In the years I studied and practiced Wicca, it was a fiercely guarded secret kept from my parents.  My only outward show of defiance was hidden from them.  On the rare occasions they’d force me to church, I would gravely trace a Sharpie pentacle over my heart.  But even that was impermanent and hidden from view by my Sunday finery.
            Online chat rooms and Wiccan forums became my best friend, my only access to information on my new spiritual path.  Many were the nights I locked myself into the family computer room to log online and chat with Pagans scattered across the globe.  My parents, banging on the locked door, thought I’d simply discovered the joy of porn and masturbation.  Sky Dancer in Cincinnati was particularly helpful in identifying magickal herbs commonly found in the kitchen.  Wolfsbane Thunderclap of Eugene, Oregon taught me the mystical properties of the trees native to the region.  And Persephone Moonbeam showed me how to be most comfortable with my body when worshipping skyclad (read: naked).  I wish I’d held onto Persephone’s contact information as the years marched on; rather than grow more comfortable with my body, I’ve developed habits to avoid nudity at all costs—I’m mere months away from showering in slacks and a sweater.
            A teenager trapped in a foreign country, my access to the Neo-Pagan community was markedly limited.  Not only was I unable to sip a nice honey mead in the forest after a long night Calling Down the Moon, I had no learned coven to take me into their arms and show me the ways of The Craft.  All of the books my father brought me praised the value of the solitary practitioner, the witch unable/unwilling to find a group with whom to work.  Suddenly, I had a title for my loner status; I wasn’t the ridiculed outcast from mainstream faith, I was a Solitary Practitioner developing my personal connection with the universe without the interference of some heavy-handed middle man in a robe.
            I set about securing the necessities for individual worship, a slightly difficult task considering it was all done in secret and done without the benefit of the occult shops dotting American major cities.
            Candles were a cinch.  Raid the cupboard for Mom’s dinner party tapers, play dumb when questions get asked, and the deal is done.  Other tools were slightly more difficult to procure.  As a religion that relies heavily on masculine and feminine imagery, my altar (which most would call “a desk” when not draped with my cheap swatch of stars and planets fabric) needed to be adorned with both and athame and a chalice.  Anyone with passing knowledge of The Da Vinci Code will recognize the knife and cup as intensely sexual images, especially when one is thrust inside the other.
            But I had no way to get my hands on a ceremonial blade.  I could scroll through websites, oohing and ahhing over the craftsmanship and heavily bedazzled hilt of some knife sold out of someone’s garage in Missouri.  The blurb underneath the picture always promised the blade to have been forged in the fires of Mordor, in the flowing lava of Aunaloa’pekeekee, or tempered in the fiery exhalations of a Welsh dragon.  Though the prospect of such a potent blade of mystical origins made my heart race, I couldn’t afford the price tag attached to each knife.  Nor could I quite get over the thought that it was virtually impossible for one man in middle America to own dozens of athames of supernatural origin; more than likely this was a weapons-buff with a welding shop and an idea of how to make a little extra cash in the Renaissance Festival off-season.
            I faced a similar stumbling block when it came to finding the perfect ceremonial chalice.  My options were plentiful, from one guaranteed to have been given by the Lady of the Lake to King Arthur, to the Holy Grail itself (a steal at only $249.99).  I could choose from simple polished metal cups, ones hewn from a solid chunk of driftwood, to a classy ornate affair with dragonflies bracing a cup crawling with other jeweled insects.  I just couldn’t afford any of them.  And try as I might, I couldn’t convince my parents to buy one for me for Yule (which I would call “Christmas” when talking to my Christian overlords).
            “Wait, run that by me one more time.  You want a what?” my mother asked.
            “A dragon-stemmed, hammered gold chalice,” I said matter-of-factly.
            “For Christmas you want a cup?”
            “A chalice, yes.”
            “A chalice, of course.  And why exactly do you need a $300 chalice?”
            This is where I faltered.  Where to begin in convincing my mother that I needed this?  How to explain the significance, the symbolic uterus representative of sustaining life?  Would my mother ever appreciate the beauty of the exquisitely sculpted, (synthetic) ruby-eyed dragons supporting the vessel hand-crafted by blind gnomes living in seclusion in the Chilean Alps?  No.  Not a chance in Hell.
            “Well,” I continued, “Sometimes I just want to feel fancy at the dinner table.
            My mother leveled a cool stare in my direction.  “You can be plenty fancy with the cups we already have in this house.”
            And so I had to rummage through our kitchen drawers.  To my particle board desk/altar I added a pilfered Ginsu knife and plastic cup tossed from a Mardi Gras parade float.  I reasoned so long as intent was spiritual, outward appearance was irrelevant.  And this train of thought led me to litter my altar with an eclectic collection of seashells, incense burners, and action figures serving unconventional duty as idols; my altar looked more and more like a garage sale with every piece of crap I laid out on it.
            Every witch needs a cauldron, a fact any elementary school child can tell you.  From Macbeth to The Wizard of Oz, we’ve had the image of hook-nosed crone stooped over a bubbling iron pot seared into our collective imagination.  The cauldron is, in fact, a common tool of the witch and as a solitary practitioner I was now tasked with finding one for myself.  My mother’s gumbo pot, while the ideal addition to my growing flea market, would have been too easily missed.  I had to set my eyes on something smaller, moving out of the ransacked kitchen and into the rarely-visited formal sitting room.
            An easily overlooked potpourri holder became my target cauldron.  My mother picked up this little pewter accent piece when we lived in Indonesia, where our pewter home décor increased exponentially.  Pewter candlestick holders, animal figurines, soon-to-be-cauldrons, my mother hoarded every knick-knack she could find.  These pieces glinted sunlight in nearly every room of our house, and for this reason were one to suddenly go missing, it was highly unlikely my mother would notice.
            I snuck the pocket size potpourri dish out of the living room under the cover of darkness, a whispered prayer to Hecate (goddess of magic and witchcraft) the only sound as I padded across the rug.  Tossing the potpourri in the trash would have given me away the next time my mother tossed something out, so I had no choice but to destroy the aromatic evidence.  With my parents asleep one night, I christened my mini-cauldron by igniting the potpourri as it sat on my altar.  Though the room freshening properties of potpourri are well-known, very few seem to know of its high flammability and suitability for use as kindling.  Instantaneously the entire cauldron was ablaze, flames leaping dangerously high with an eerie whumph, licking eagerly at my ceiling.  With no sort of insulation coating the holder, I began to worry nervously about the melting point of pewter.  The sides glowed an ominous orange, and I seriously began contemplating how best to mitigate the damage certain to be caused when molten pewter began running down the side of my desk and onto the laminate floor.  In addition to being remarkably flammable, potpourri is also strikingly slow-burning.  Minutes passed and the flames betrayed no sign of dying down.  I waited anxiously for the fire to burn to embers, but the fire seemed to feed on itself and burned with a frightening intensity.
            As logical thought fled my mind in a panic, I risked my fingertips and picked up the searing pot.  I scuttled to the open window, planning to shake the flaming flower petals into the waiting night.  Yowling in pain, the scent of charred flesh wafted up to join the powerful smell of burnt potpourri already looming oppressively in my bedroom.  I flung wide the window and waved the burning potpourri pot into the air, watching the flames dance into the night, carried burning away into the darkness.
            I spent the remainder of the night with my fingers submerged in an ice bath, soothing the blistered tips.  I briefly debated a life of crime, knowing now that my fingerprints were irreparably damaged, yet I knew deep within that the Goddess would frown upon my potential life of crime.
            The next day, as my mother stepped into my bedroom to deliver folded laundry, her nostrils flared.  “It smells like a bonfire in here” she remarked.  I shrugged noncommittally, my swollen, scarlet fingers absently tracing my freshly applied marker pentacle tattoo resting beneath my t-shirt.  As my mom handed me my crisply folded boxers, her eyes drifted toward my altar, now stripped of ceremonial cloth and adornments. 
She paused.  “Was that scorch mark always there?”

Sloth


As one of the seven deadly sins, sloth gets an undeservedly bad wrap.  I am, quite possibly, the laziest man alive.  Maybe that’s me being melodramatic, prone to hyperbole (or, as my students would correct me, “hyper-bowl”).  But I am definitely the laziest man I know.
Perhaps there’s some mathematical relationship of which I am unaware—the more active your imagination, the more inactive your body.  I’m sure a lot of people understand where I’m coming from, maybe you too like to indulge in the occasional TV marathon, your ass never wandering beyond a six inch radius on your couch.  But this is a genuine concern for me.  When furniture shopping, I always make sure to ask how much a couch will hold up under strenuous wear and tear.

The salesman will smile knowingly, “Got little’uns jumping around on it?” he’ll ask with a chuckle.

“No,” I admit. “Law & Order marathon on cable.  My last couch didn’t make it a year.  Plus, I just got HBO; the cushions are worn paper-thin.”

I’m not a terribly fat guy, but when I settle my weight on my couch, it’s like a glacier eroding the Himalayas.  Over the course of a single day of lounging, my cushions drift like tectonic plates, new mountain ranges of foam and upholstery rising in majesty at my feet.

Ensconced in my nest, it’s often very hard to rouse myself to any level of physical activity.  Walking the dogs is a necessity only because cleaning up their messes would require a greater physical effort on my part.  Thankfully, one of my dogs eclipses me in laziness and it’s merely a matter of strong-arming the other dog into an abbreviated walk no more than two blocks from the front door.

My gym is two minutes down the road from my house; I literally have only two turns to make before pulling into the parking lot.  When buying my house, I chose one not only within reasonable commuting distance to school, but also one with quick and easy access to a gym.  Ink still wet on my deed, I marched my butt over to the gym and signed up, allowing the fine folk at the home office to deduct forty bucks a month from my pathetic bank account.

I’ve rarely gone.  The few times I have dug my workout clothes out from mothballed storage, it was motivated by guilt.  Perhaps the night before I’d powered my way through an entire bag of salt and vinegar chips, or the morning found me licking the lingering crumbs from a store-bought dozen of sugar cookies.  I dust off the running shoes, recharge the iPod shuffle, and sigh my way down the street.  After thirty minutes sweating through my sorority girl workout on the elliptical, I pack it all in, and consign my gear back to the attic, to return only once the numbers on the scale start to creep back up.

Periodically I’m struck by fits of inspiration, usually around New Year’s or other momentous occasions (such as the arrival of swimsuit season), where I dedicate myself to a regimen of health and fitness.  I ransack my kitchen, throwing out any food bordering on unhealthy until I am left with nothing but water and canned tomatoes.  I run to Wal-Mart and clean them out of workout DVDs and home exercises.  I map out a schedule on my calendar: when I’ll start (tomorrow, inevitably), which routines I’ll do, which healthy meals I’ll cook.  On the dawn of the new, healthier me, I dress in my gym shorts, fill my water bottle, press play on the DVD player, and settle down onto the couch.  Never will I get up and join them in their workout.  Occasionally I’ll pop open a beer (this is hard work!), kick back, and wistfully dream of the day I am just as lean and sexy as the men and women sweating it out on my TV screen.

My reticence to engage in physical activity extends its reach into my housekeeping.  I like to think that at my core I am a very neat and orderly person; I live by lists and rules.  I could not function without the score of legal pads littering my home, classroom, and car.  In times of chaos and stress, I make lists of tasks which must be accomplished, often ranked in descending order of importance and complexity.  It’s not unusual for me to write an item I’ve already completed, if only for the orgasmic satisfaction of crossing it off and feeling that self-satisfied glow of accomplishment.  My DVD collection is organized alphabetically.  My books are organized not only by genre but by size.  Cans in my pantry are grouped according to vegetable, and mode of preparation.

Somehow none of this order translates into my daily life.  I’m like a goldfish, who grows to fit the size of its bowl.  I, conversely, will fill my house with so much clutter that I leave only the bare minimum of livable space.  No matter if I live in a one bedroom apartment or a palatial estate, there will only be enough space to walk from the couch to the kitchen to the bed.  No need for any extraneous spaces.  My coffee table has not been seen in years; it remains buried under mounds of junk mail, forgotten books, and notepads that I swear one day will find a proper home.

My car is a time capsule on wheels.  I have owned three cars in the time I’ve held my license, and there are things in my car now that were in my first car at age sixteen.  They move homes like a hermit crab and I will continue to drive them around until I am a danger on the road due to failing sight and motor coordination.  The yellowed, weathered Time magazine proudly featuring a shirtless Michael Phelps in celebration of his first Olympic games will forever be nestled in the seat pocket.

There are three concentrated areas of crap in my car.  Most items start off in my passenger seat, within easy reach should I need them.  In the event I have an actual passenger with me, the junk is unceremoniously shoveled into the backseat where it ages like wine.  When the backseat reaches critical mass and threatens to collapse on itself like an imploding star, I must find a new home for the collected detritus.

That home is most often the deceptively cavernous trunk.  I buy cars now based primarily on the available cargo space.  A cataloguing of the oddities in my trunk would read like an inventory of Mary Poppins’ handbag.  At last inspection, it included a miniature disco ball, two garden hoses, a serving platter embellished with a bedazzled skull, and an unopened birthday present from two years ago.  And that’s only what’s visible on the top layer, for cleaning out my trunk is an archeological dig.  Periodically, when I realize my mileage has been shot to shit from all the extra weight I’m hauling, I don my spelunking gear and clean out the trunk.

If you’ve ever scampered down the stairs on Christmas morning to joyfully tear open presents, you understand the excitement that comes from cleaning out my trunk.  I ooh and ahh over each bauble I rescue from the chaos. I brush aside the grime, wipe away the smudges, and fondly remember the day it came into my life.  I collect my treasures, clutching them protectively to my chest, and bring them inside.  Where I dump them on the coffee table and the cycle starts anew.  Circle of life.

I’m not a hoarder.  You will not see me on the evening news after I’ve been crushed to death by a collapsed stack of newspapers in my filthy apartment.  I just get lazy.  I’d rather do nothing than exert all the energy required to not only assign a space for everything, but police that everything stays exactly in it’s assigned space.  I have lots of piles, but I know exactly what’s in each pile; it’s organized chaos.

There have been moments when my house is clean and clutter-free.  Rare, brief, special moments, which is perhaps why I remember  them so vividly, like the birth of a child.  One expression of my laziness is procrastination.  Yes, I make lists, but usually only to solidify what needs to be put off until later.  And nothing wastes time like making a list.  My procrastination reaches a frenzied pitch when an important deadline is looming.  I am never as meticulous in my housekeeping as when there is something I really don’t want to do knocking on my mind.  This was especially prevalent in college.

Major paper due tomorrow?  I should disinfect the toilet seat.

Midterms in a few days?  This is the perfect time to scour the oven.

Pass or fail riding on this one final exam?  Let me organize my closet by season and then further by color of the rainbow.

My level of cleanliness is directly proportional to the importance of the task I am avoiding.

I wish I had the bizarre work ethic and aptitude for domestic hygiene of my mother, who seems to channel the undiluted essence of June Cleaver.  My mother has never been able to sit passively and watch a dust mote drift through the air, choosing instead to spring into battle with a can of Pledge and coat the entire house.  My mom has never gone to bed without having swept and mopped the floors at least twice that day.  Where I am content cutting a swath through my own filth to drop yet another dish into a crowded sink, my mother tidies as she passes through a room, often forgetting why she entered in the first place.

My mom’s inability to simple let it slide is a constant obstacle to ever leaving the house on time.  As the family is walking out the door, she can be counted on to pull out the mop, just so the neighbors won’t be offended if they drop by when we are gone and take a quick peep through the windows at our filthy kitchen floors. As a child, I came to associate the sound of a vacuum cleaner with leaving the home.  To this day, something feels amiss if I’m not locking the door to the drone of a Hoover. Other times, I’ll lose my mother after she calls for me to leave, only to find her in the living room reupholstering the couch.  “What if burglars break in while we’re gone?  I want them to think we have nice things!”

Sloth is not a sin, it’s a quirk.  I manage to get things done, just perhaps not at the speed most people would appreciate.  I manage to clean my house, with the approximate regularity of presidential elections.  I am perhaps best suited as a lector of world history, as I have special appreciation of the time period required for empires to rise and fall.  Namely, the same amount of time it takes me to accomplish any project.  There is hope: this post was completed in record time.  And I promise there will be one to follow, and it just might be ready before the ruins of a once-great civilization stretch from Atlantic to Pacific.

Witch Doctor

I am rarely ill. As a child, I was constantly plagued by strep throat, falling victim at least four times a year. In a testament to the Western can-do attitude, my doctors ripped my tonsils out and pronounced me cured. Regardless, once a year (usually around Thanksgiving), some illness will inevitably lay me out for a week or two. When I lived in China, this was an especially harrowing event, far removed from the sterility and dependability of American medical care.

In early November, after only a few months living in Hangzhou, I developed crippling pains in my abdomen. I put on my brave face, and headed to the West Lake to do tourist things with Deb, a friend in town visiting for the week. It was the first time since arriving in China that I’d felt sick. Gifted with a cast iron stomach at birth, I’ve never encountered a food that made me ill. No matter how foreign, spicy, or downright rancid, my body continues on along its merry way. This illness tearing its way through my body was new. I’ve always been surprised about how casually the Chinese will chat about gastrointestinal disorders and have absolutely no qualms about discussing someone’s la duzi (diarrhea). As I popped handfuls of Pepto and Immodium, Deb casually mentioned she’d once heard that American digestive medicines were useless in China because of the different bacteria. I groaned. “Thanks Deb, now I’m going to have to rely on Chinese medicine.”

I’ve never trusted Eastern medicine. When I am feeling poorly, my automatic reaction is to reach for the exhaustively researched pharmaceuticals stocking my medicine cabinet. I find comfort and predictability in the extensive list of possible side effects. Nausea? I can take a pill to counteract that. Auditory hallucinations? I don’t mind hearing new things. Explosive gas? I’m always the first to laugh when someone farts in a library. There is no predictability in Eastern medicine. I have never cracked open the musty wooden drawers of an herb chest to brew a thick, black tea. Herbs are meant for the kitchen, to add flavor and kick to your dishes, not to cleanse your system of toxins and disease. My opinion, however, is not always popular.

In class one day, the teacher brought up the debate of Chinese versus Western medicine for the class to kick around. With the exception of Tom (my roommate) and me, the class voiced the opinion that Chinese medicine was far superior to Western medicine, as it had a history of thousands of years and was completely natural. I made the mistake of labeling myself as “a product of the modern world,” more likely to trust science and research than a glass of tea brewed from powdered monkey droppings and dried bee husks. Tom likened Chinese medicine to magic and shamanism, it was all placebo effect: you feel better because you want to; it has nothing to do with efficacy. Jaws dropped. How could we take a stand against Chinese medicine? The Korean girls, who normally tittered demurely at my every joke, sat in stupefied silence.

I have sound reason to distrust Chinese medical care; medical care in China had proven to be spotty. At the beginning of October, when a group of us went bowling, Tom injured his hand and had since been in pain, unable to use chopsticks or hold a pencil. Only after weeks of watching him wince could I convince Tom to go to a hospital and get it checked out. Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital, the only medical facility with an English-speaking staff in Hangzhou, prided itself on having above-average medical care and catered to foreigners. When we first arrived, Chinese swarmed the reception area, all clutching their various ailments and clamoring for medical attention. Tom, with his kickboxing glove wrapped tightly around his hand as it had been for the past month, had only to approach reception for them to quickly guide us to the VVIP room. I have yet to figure out what the additional “V” stands for. Presumably, based solely on his natural “white-ness”, Tom immediately saw a doctor, jumped to the front of the X-ray line, and altogether we spent about an hour in the hospital. The diagnosis was unclear and no prescription was given for the pain, but at the very least he found out it wasn’t a fracture. I wonder what the Chinese medical approach would have been. Seriously. Maybe they could have at least brewed a yak butter tea to numb the pain.

When I announced our plans to backpack across Tibet, I received a flurry of anxious emails from family members concerned about altitude sickness on the trip. Tom and I tried to hunt down the medicine suggested by my Aunt Nanny. We had the name of a prescription drug, but no clue as how to describe altitude sickness or any such complicated concept in Chinese. For some reason, important stuff like this is never covered in your Intro Chinese courses (la duzi, oddly enough, appears to be required learning). But we decided we both knew enough to get the pharmacist to understand what we needed. We were sadly mistaken.

After numerous failed attempts to communicate with the pharmacist, we began to get desperate. Using the words for “altitude” and “sickness” together did not seem to be registering with them, nor did our description of what can happen when someone is unprepared and enters an environment of very thin air (this one had a lot of pantomiming, not unlike the apes who learn sign language). Finally, in a desperate yet fantastically misguided attempt, Tom said (and this is the best translation I can give): “My big mountain is sick and needs help.” Wide-eyed, the cashier pointed us out of the shop. Apparently Watson’s didn’t sell sick mountain medicine.

She was actually pointing us towards another pharmacy in the same building, where we once again went through the same routine. Opting to avoid the “Big Sick Mountain” debacle, we started describing our travel plans. This must have greatly confused the pharmacist. “Great, a couple of lao wai are going to Tibet. Who cares?” Something eventually clicked in her mind and beaming, she led us to the front of the shop, pulled a box from behind the counter, and proudly handed it over. We could only read about half of the characters on the box and that always makes me nervous. However, based on the words “Tibet” and “high altitude” we decided that this was better than nothing. But not before Tom asked, “Is this magic?”

Something gnawed at my mind: surely the medication to combat altitude sickness wouldn’t be an over-the-counter pill? When I got home, I took a few moments see if I could get a better sense of what it was. After conquering the over-zealous packaging, a slip of paper written in Tibetan, Chinese, and English wafted to the floor. We had bought Tibetan ginseng grown at high-altitudes. Regardless, we both faithfully popped the pills the entire trip. Maybe it was in fact a placebo effect, or maybe it genuinely worked, but the entire time we were in Tibet neither one of us collapsed gasping for breath and clutching our chest.

With Deb telling me that Western medicine was useless against Chinese food poisoning, I began to grow restless. Would I have to eat crow, both literally and figuratively? Would I have to swallow my pride and walk into a Chinese pharmacy and ask for something to soothe my incredibly painful stomach? But something else gnawed at my mind. Food poisoning was not the only suspect in this crime; there was something darker and far more sinister. And I don’t think Chinese medicine was in any position to help me defeat that foe.

As part of my Halloween costume, I‘d found an old windbreaker that complimented some salvaged 80s aerobics instructor gear perfectly. Owing to its defective main zipper, I managed to haggle the shopkeeper down to $2 for my jacket. I should have asked for far less. When I left the house, both of the pocket zippers were working, safely guarding my valuables. As Halloween night wore on, both zippers lodged firmly shut and denied me access to my wallet and camera. I tried ripping, tried pulling, tried getting two people to work on it at the same time, all to no avail. Finally, in panicked desperation, I caved and began trying to pull the zipper free by only the power of my teeth. The zipper came apart in my mouth and I ended up swallowing no small amount of metal. The next day the abdominal pains began. In my mind it was terribly clear: I was either suffering from food poisoning or the after-effects of cheap metal tearing its way through my gastro-intestinal tract. I could only imagine dragging myself to Sir Run Run Shaw, being whisked into the VVIP room and asked, “Alright, tell me the last thing you ate.”

“Well, noodles … and a zipper.”


Triumphant Returns

First off, my sincerest apologies to Mr. Alan Summers, my lone follower, who most assuredly was wracked with concern during my five-month absence from the blogosphere.

I’m back.

It’s been a long time coming, but the time has indeed come. My last post was some time in February, and much has changed in the intervening months. But this blog has never been a forum for a detailed recounting of the events of the day; for that I have my journal (which, ironically, has also remained unwritten since the new year). I could come up with a list of excuses why I haven’t written: I got busy; I got writer’s block; I was kidnapped by Mexican banditos. But none of those are true. I got lazy. I began questioning whether I actually had anything worth saying and anybody willing to listen to it.

But that’s just a cop out, and goes directly against the New Year’s resolution made seven months ago. So this is my New School Year resolution. I will write, and write without that fierce internal censor that tends to strike me down in my moments of self-doubt. If my finger wavers before pressing “Publish,” worrying that no one will read and enjoy, then I may as well never write. So I press boldly forward, finger brazenly clicking to post a new entry, sleep untroubled with fears of inadequacy and self-loathing.

Because I know if no one else is reading, at least Alan Summers subscribes.