It’s Yesterday Once More

My friend sent me this:

It reminds me of these passages from Philip Roth’s The Human Stain:

Ninety-eight in New England was a summer of exquisite warmth and sunshine… in America the summer of an enormous piety binge, a purity binge, when terrorism – which had replaced communism as the prevailing threat to the country’s security- was succeeded by cocksucking, and a virile, youthful middle-aged president and a brash, smitten twenty-one-year-old carrying on in the Oval Office like two teenage kids in a parking lot revived America’s oldest communal passion, historically perhaps its most treacherous and subversivepleasure: the ecstasy of sanctimony.

“The ecstasy of sanctimony”…I love that.

William F. Buckley referred to Clinton’s lack of judgement as “incontinent carnality.” That’s great, too.

Roth goes on: It was the summer in America when nausea returned, when the joking didn’t stop, when the moral obligation to explain to one’s children was abrogated in favor of maintaining in them every illusion about adult life, when the smallness of people was simply crushing, when some kind of demon had been unleashed in the nation,  and on both sides, people wondered, “Why are we so crazy?…”

Sound familiar?

 

Thanks to KB for blog fodder, which shall heretofore be referred to as “blogfod”.

Reality Check

This really happened. Or maybe it didn’t. I can’t really be sure in this age of punitive scrutiny and politically dictated appropriateness and subject matter.

Teacher: Two things about Beowulf that are really great…

Ricky: Nothing about Beowulf is really great.

Gabbi: I like Beowulf! He’s kinda stuck up, but he brings it! It ain’t just braggin’ if you can kick some dragon ass!

Teacher: Right. Two things about Beowulf that are really great are the vivid imagery and the diction.

Javier: Suck my diction!

Teacher: Javi!

Maira: What is diction?

Teacher: Diction is word choice. It is the author’s chance to use the one specific word out of all the words that there are to say exactly what she or he means. Mark Twain said it is “the difference between the lightning bug and the the lightning.” The right words can change “Girl – you wanna be my boo?” to “I love thee to the depth and breadth and height my soul can reach…”

Ricardo: What the hell does that mean?

Gabbi: It’s like the difference between ‘sperm’ and ‘cum’.

Teacher: Wow! I totally did not see that coming!

Javier: That’s what she said!

Maira: What is the difference between ‘sperm’ and ‘cum’?

The room grows eerily quite as all eyes turn to the teacher, who is a strange shade of fuschia and squirms uncomfortably on a desk at the front of the room. She looks around. All eyes are watching her expectantly. Very few of the students are smiling. They look curious.

Teacher: Ummm…’sperm’ are small cells with tiny tails that are produced in males and swim through the male and female reproductive systems to fertilize the egg and begin the process that results in a baby. The correct, more appropriate term for ‘cum’ is ‘semen’. Semen is sperm and the fluid it swims in.

Shillay: Why they gotta swim?

Javier: What do you expect them to do? Take the bus?

Shillay: Why they gotta have fluid?

Teacher: They need the fluid to get through the male’s body into the female’s.

Blank stares all around.

Maira: Where do they come from?

Trey: It’s called ‘semen’!

 Maira: Where do they semen from?

Teacher: Huh. Again, unexpected. The semen are produced in the man’s testicles…

Javier: Huevos! Balls! Nads! Junk! Nuts!

Teacher: …and then they swim in this fluid that acts like …well, a river. They go through this little tube called the ‘vas deferens’ and into the man’s…

Javier: DICK!!!!

Teacher: Penis; it’s called a penis. Then the sperm go into the woman, still in the liquid and through her fallopian tubes, where one of them connects with the egg and fertilizes it to start a baby.

Silence, again. Perhaps the students are shocked because the teacher said “penis”. Twice.  The teacher is feeling like maybe, in this era of budget cuts and teaching only towards state mandated tests, she has said way too much.

Finally, the silence is broken.

Gabi: Why is the cum – I mean semen- why is the semen white?

Teacher: Wow. I mean…wow!

Miguel is very quiet. He sits in the back of the room with his head down. He does not raise his head or his voice, but the class is shocked into such quiet that everyone hears him when he mumbles:

Miguel: Glucose. Like frosting on a cake. Definitely glucose.

This seems to be a good stopping place for this discussion, the teacher thinks. A nice, definitive answer and we move on from this teachable moment and retread the path students have tread since the 8th century: the analysis of Beowulf

Melissa has not spoken thus far in the conversation, though she is usually a Chatty Cathy; or perhaps, more appropriately, a Mellifluous Melissa. 

Melissa: See, that’s why we need sex education!

 Javier: Why? So we know why sperm is white?

Good point, Javi, the teacher thinks. Perhaps this whole off-topic conversation has been an exercise in the ridiculous. We wasted all of this time, and really, what is the take-away from it? A good teacher knows when to redirect. A professional knows when to get the point and not be overwhelmed by surprise an the niave notion that every question deserves an answer.

Melissa: Shut up, Javi! I’ve had two babies and I didn’t know the difference between ‘sperm’ and ‘cum’! I didn’t know there was a “vast difference”! It matters! It really matters! By now I should know it all!

Good point, Melissa. Old enough to ask, old enough to know.

From my stand-up routine

Lately my dog has been going to the same spot, over and over again, to, you know, “do his business.” We’ll be walking along, sniffing the morning and wagging our tails, and then, all of a sudden, at exactly the same place, he’ll stop and drop a squat in that weird hunched up way dogs have…same spot every time! I guess he’s just overcome by a sense of deja doo doo…

Get it? I don’t know how I come up with them!

Okkervil River, without a paddle

Photo by Callum Pontom, callumpontom.com

So, the other night I decided to go out. Actually, I didn’t just spontaneously “decide” to go out; I had planned this particular soiree for months. Planning is not really my thing. Generally, I don’t feel comfortable with making an effort, so committing to doing something and then making it happen is a bit of a departure for me.

In about June of this year, my good friends – well, I hate to be a name dropper here, but just between us- my good friends, the band Okkervil River- called me and told me that they were going to be playing in my town and asked me to please come to their gig, so that perhaps they could experience the coveted “Smaller Adventure Bump” that comes when my fans get wind of my whereabouts and activities. They’re all solid dudes (and one totally badass wicked-cool lady), and they’ve worked hard; I’m always willing to give deserving kids the benefit of my unique station in life. Besides, Okkervil and I go way back; here’s a picture I took of them when we took our big canoe trip down the actual Okkervil River, which is in St. Petersberg, Russia. 

Ah, we had a big old time! It was a great trip, and we all became really close. I swear this is all true. Except for this part: I didn’t really take that picture. I got it from Google Images off of Dave Krause’s website, floatingfoam.com. And also, that part about the band calling me; it either went down exactly like that, or maybe I looked on their website and found out their tour dates. On account of I don’t, you know, really “know” the band. I did meet the bass player at a backyard party a South by Southwest one year. OK, “meet” might be a little strongly worded; someone I was with said, “Hey look! That tall shaggy guy over there! That’s the bass player for Okkervil River!” But there really is an Okkervil River in St. Petersberg; well, according to Wikipedia, anyway. I wouldn’t know. I’ve never been to Russia.

So, anyway, when I heard they were coming I wrote it down on my calender, even though the actual show was months away. I talked it up to all my friends. The one I thought for sure would go with me watched a video of the band performing one of my favorite songs, said it “sucked dong”, and shortly thereafter moved to another state. Others expressed vague interest- “Oh yeah, I’m always down for new music – what kind of a weird name is that for a band anyway? Are they, like, country?” – but I began to resign myself that nobody wanted to go.

Except for me. I wanted to go. And so I decided that goshdarnit, I would, even if I had to go by myself.

By myself isn’t so bad. I go to eat by myself. I go shopping by myself. I go to the movies by myself. But a concert? That’s cool for young-hipster-wherever-I-go-is-where-the-real scene-is guys, but not for a tiny-middle-aged-double-chin lady.

But still. What do I care if fresh, young, non-jiggling people look at me with a mixture of confusion, pity, and a sense of foreboding doom, as if I was a warning for what life could become? I like the band! I like going to shows! I’m going, dammit!

And so, once I made this decision firm, I had plenty of time to wrap my head around the solo concert experience. In time, I grew used to the idea, and then excited by it. I would go to the show by myself, and I would like it!

But then, strange things started to happen.

I asked my friend who never goes anywhere if she wanted to go, mostly just to be nice. Even if you never want to go anywhere, it’s nice to be invited. Much to my surprise, she said yes.

I told my friend Lisa I was going, because she’s from Austin, and the band is from Austin, and she loves all things Austin, so I figured she’d be proud that I was supporting Austin things. “I love them!” she exclaimed. “Remember the time I thought I saw the bass player at that party? How about my boyfriend and I go with you?”

“Well, all right, all right, all right,” I said. Matthew McConaughey was born in Uvalde, Texas, but he spent a lot of time in Austin, so when I’m around Lisa, I often try to talk like him. I think she appreciates it.

Then, my neighbors called. “We want to go new places and do new things. What’s that band with the weird name again? Can we go? Can we bring our cool friend Andy along also?”

Well, hellz yeah! The more the merrier! I guess where I am is where the party wants to be! Yay!!!! Hello, good times! Let’s roll!

Lisa was the first to drop out.

It seems that unbeknownst to her, her boyfriend signed the two of them up for a reality show called something like “Pimp My Kitchen.”  After a rigorous screening process, if you are lucky enough to be chosen, a camera crew comes to your house, commiserates with you about how hideous and unsanitary your food galley is, and then destroys it. You move into a hotel or something, and they rebuild it, stronger, faster, able to leap tall trees in a single bound.

Lisa’s shithole rat trap of a kitchen made it to the top three finalists, and she and her boyfriend had to make a video showing how excited they were that the kitchen cavalry was coming.

At least it was an original excuse. And besides, everyone else was still in.

I was going to pick up my friend who never goes anywhere at quarter to eight on Saturday. I called her Friday after work.

“So, how you doin’?” I asked this like Joey on Friends did. Remember?

“Great! I’m really looking forward to tomorrow night! 7:45, right?”

I was shocked. I called to give her an out, yet she was still in. Well, yippie ki yay and hot diggity dog!

7:00 came and yet without a cancellation call.  I got dressed.

7:30, and all systems go! I told Atticus not to wait up, cuz Mama was steppin’ out tonight!

7:31, and the phone rings. It seems my friend has a strange flesh-eating bacterial disease and had pancake sized bruises on her legs. I tried to tell her that she’d be fine, but it’s hard to argue with necrotic breakfast food lesions on the extremities. I guess she’d just noticed them. She was out.

But my neighbors and Mr. Cool were still in, and I set off to meet them at 8:00 at a bar they had suggested.

Parking was a little tricky, so I got to the bar at 8:06. The bartender was happy to see me, largely because I was the only patron in the place. The bar was a beer bar.

It had beers from all over the world, in bottles and cans displayed on row after row of floor-to-ceiling shelves. There were beers in coolers, beers behind the bar, and about 20,000 beers on tap.

I don’t really care for beer, or as I like to call it, “bitter liquid burp”. The bartender thought that I was just confused, and that I really did enjoy the brewskis, and lots of them. We discussed this possibility for about 15 minutes before my cell phone rang. I knew what was coming.

“Hi, neighbor!” I said pleasantly into the receiver. “Listen, I know what you’re going to say. It’s all right if you can’t make it tonight. Things happen. There’s a flesh-eating virus going around. I’ll let you borrow my cd’s, and we’ll go see the band the next time they’re in town. Talk to ya later!”

“Wait!” screamed E. Both of my neighbor’s have names that start with the letter E. It doesn’t really matter which one I was talking to, so you can picture either a man shreik or a lady squawk. “We’re still coming! We’re just late! We’re parking right now! And we brought another couple, too! Jeesh! Conclusion jump much?”

There are few things better than when resigning yourself to being ditched results in an impromptu party where you are the star. Everyone ordered a different beer, and the bartender found a bottle of Malbec in a hidden corner just for me. Cool Andy was cool, the new couple were funny and smart, and the E’s fought over who got to sit by me! Oh, how we laughed, HA HA!!! We were beautiful people out for a beautiful evening, casual and backlit by the fading light of an end-of-summer day. My teeth have seldom felt whiter, and my hair had body and shine.

After cocktails it was time to go, and so we arrived at the venue, a 1920’s converted movie theater, and, because I am the luckiest girl in the world, we completely missed the line for tickets and went right in. I heard the opening notes of a great song that absolutely does not suck dong and ran in, skipping down the aisles to bask in the musical glow with my fellow Okkervil fans.

The band was magnificent! The sound was crisp and clear and there was dancing and clapping over the head, and fist pumping. I loved it!

For three songs. Some might call it “the second encore”, because that’s what it was. We were really late. I’m not so good at keeping time, but I thought for sure someone else was. Maybe Cool Andy. As it turned out, I traded good company and a half bottle of Malbec on the patio of a beer bar for the show I had waited months to see.

Crap.

Still and all, I guess it was worth it. It was an adventure. A small adventure, to be sure, and one that is so disappointingly anti-climactic there is  no way to justify an excessively long and detailed re-telling of it, but I got out, went new places, met new people, and heard some fine tunes. I had fun.

I plan to plan to do something again real soon.

P.S. If you are a member of the band Okkervil River, I think we would get along really well. We could be bff’s.  Call me!

 

Just so ya know…

the pictures on the banner of this blog – you know, the cheesy ones- they aren’t mine. My pictures are lovely, inspirational photos of severed arms holding daggers or crows eating a man’s entrails. I go for heartwarming, not cheesy…

Just a suggestion…

I just heard this story, “Paper Lantern”  by Stuart Dybek on the New Yorker podcast from a couple of months ago. I loved it. It’s totally up my alley; Dybek plays with time, space and perception and, though it follows relatively straight paths, it’s not at all linear. It arcs and curlicues, like life does. I do love me some tangential digression, and this story took me to some completely unexpected places. Plus, it has steamy sex, a homicidal maniac, fire and an amazing Chinese food menu. What’s not to like?  You can listen to it here: http://www.newyorker.com/online/2011/07/18/110718on_audio_packer

But I know you won’t.

ZZ Packer reads it, and I like her interpretations and commentaries. She says that the story is like a set of Russian nesting dolls. Sounds interesting, right? You should check it out! You can, right here:

http://www.newyorker.com/online/2011/07/18/110718on_audio_packer

But you won’t. So here’s a little excerpt for ya. These two characters set out for a weekend fling, only they end up arguing for most of the trip. On the way home, they pull off of the highway to watch a big fire. Afterwards, in the car, the woman tells about what she was thinking when they stood on a bridge in twilight, watching the blaze.

“I had this sudden awareness,” she continues, “of how the moments of our lives go out of existence before we’re conscious of having lived them. It’s only a relatively few moments that we get to keep and carry with us for the rest of our lives. Those moments are our lives. Or maybe it’s more like those moments are the dots and what we call our lives are the lines we draw between them, connecting them into imaginary pictures of ourselves.” 

 

Oh, snap! You know I love that stuff! Moments, transience, the way we see ourselves, the subjectivity of memory – that shit never grows old! The woman continues:

You know, like those mythical pictures of constellations traced between stars. I remember how when I was a kid, I actually expected to be able to look up and see Pagasus spread out against the night. And when I couldn’t, it seemed like a trick had been played on me, like a fraud. I thought, hey, if this is all there is to it, then I could reconnect the stars in any shape I wanted. I could create the Ken and Barbie constellations…

Right! Is what we see what we imagine, or do we really only understand what has been seen and imagined before? But also, do we ever see things as others do? How would we know? Are we blind to what may be right in front of us? Of course we are! And how do we even know where to look? In the Chinese restaurant part of this story that you will never read, these scientist read their fortune cookies. One of them says something like, “when the full moon is pointed out, the imbecile looks at the finger.” How often have I been the imbecile? Lots of times! Are you pointing your finger at me right now? Are you pointing and laughing? What do you mean, “that’s not my finger!”? What the hell are you talking about? The point is, our perception does shape the constellations. But if we can connect the stars in any pattern that we want, how do we know which one is right? How do we recognize truth? What is real? Will we ever see the same pictures, and will the picture always be the same? 

Here’s just a skotch more:

 I realize we can never predict when those few special moments will occur, she says. How… there are certain people, not that many, who enter one’s life with the power to make those moments happen. Maybe that’s what falling in love means…the power to create for each other the moments by which we define ourselves.”

Yeah, love. On top of all of the philosophical unanswerables regarding reality and the nature of experience, there are the equally confusing ideas of shared time and memory, chemistry, and the human need for relationships that are deep and fulfilling, even if they are themselves only momentary.

Damn. That was a real fine story. You should listen to it here:

http://www.newyorker.com/online/2011/07/18/110718on_audio_packer

It’s not that long. You could listen while you clean the house, or go to work, or walk the dog. You could exercise and listen, or take a long bath, or grade papers. You don’t really have to pay attention when you’re grading. Just give everyone an 83. They’ll be happy with that; it’s better than they deserve. Also, you could read the story here: The Best American Short Stories 1996

OK. I know you aren’t going to read it either. Whatevs. Your loss. But if you do, let me know what you thought about it, especially the sex part. Steamy, right?

Paging Bo Peep

 I’ll bet this lambeast would bite. I wouldn’t pick him up, even with the muzzle on. Wild lambs can be ferocious – that’s why they should be left in their natural habitat. Grazing. Sigfried and Roy’ll tell ya, even when they look tame, they’ll eat your face right off. There’s nothing worse than wool gone vicious, I’ll tell ya that right now.

9/11 Numbers

2 towers
4 attacks
19 terrorists
93 – The flight number of the plane that was brought down by the passengers. 44 people, including 4 hijackers, died in an act of sacrifice and heroism that cannot be overestimated. 10 million dollars is still required to finish the memorial.
110 stories in each of the twin towers.
120 minutes; the amount of time it took from the first strike until both buildings were rubble
411 emergency workers died on that day. According to the Washington Daily News, by 2010, more than 916 first responders have died since, mostly from cancers and lung disease. Many of them were denied medical coverage or financial assistance because debate arose over whether their illnesses were caused by their exposure at Ground Zero. 2,5oo contaminants were identified in the dust cloud.
494;  586 miles per hour; the rates of speed the planes that hit the first and second towers were travelling at the time of impact, respectively.
2,996 deaths from the attacks.
2 wars launched.
4,447 US troops killed in Iraq as of June 2011
180,000 contractors, civilians and others killed in Iraq, including 149 journalists, as of August, 2007.
0 weapons of mass destruction found in Iraq.
1,751 US troops killed in Afghanistan as of 9/9/2011
+100,000 troops are still there
77 U.S. soldiers and 25 Afghans were injured in a truck bomb at a small military base in Afghanistan on 9/11/2011. 4 Afghans were killed.
Life is short. Live it well. Sorrow runs deep. Be happy whenever you can.
To all the people that I love: You know, right? I do. I love you so much.