Archives For September 2003

stories, fables and myths

September 23, 2003 — Leave a comment

i love to read, as i`ve said before i`m avaricious in my reading. but i`ve realised my true love is for short form writing. short stories, novellas are a joy to me. all my favourite authors are masters of the short form.

one of the joys of the short form are fables and mythologies. i grew up on aesop, homer and anansi and as i got older i discover the stories of other peoples and culture. i also realised that if you read enough of these myths and fables, the names of the heroes and locations may change, but they`re the same story.

every culture on the planet has a flood myth, stories of tricksters. i can`t say i`ve read every myth or fable on the planet, but in my reading i`ve come across quite a number of similarities.

this is not a scientific treatise, but i believe that if you follow this progression, you`ll realise there`s one source to all our stories.

here are a couple of links to myths and folklore online courtesy metafilter

folklore and mythology e-text

tales of wonder, folk and fairy tales from around the world

hope these bring you as much happiness and entertainment as they have me.

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sleeping in airports

September 22, 2003 — Leave a comment

in the course of my wanderlust over the last 6 years, i`ve only had occasion to sleep in an airport twice, well, only once really.. i came across this little tidbit on metafilter about the best and worst airports in the world to sleep in.

my first and real airport sleeping experience came on the end of my first trip to see vic. i was on my way back to trinidad via a visit to, travel maven, sam, who now lives and works in mississippi [did i spell that right? i can never get it]. i had spent a few days with her after my amazing week with vic. it was only a 4 hour bus drive.

sam managed to find me an uber-cheap flight on air tran from memphis to miami. if you`ve never flown air tran it`s like going by greyhound only faster, but just barely. uncomfortable seating, long pointless layovers. after a massive delay in hartsfield i managed to get into mia at a little past 11pm. i didn`t know anyone in miami and had no cash to stay at the airport hotel, so i did what any traveller worth his salt would, slept in the airport.

first of all mia has the loudest fucking florescent on the face of the planet, i`ve flown on turbo props that were quieter. conceive if you dare an swarm of angry bees with a lord vader complex in your ear.

and if that isn`t bad enough, i believe they`re actively discouraging sleeping in that airport. the seats are designed in such a manner, making laying down almost impossible. it`s two tiny seats, armrest, then two more seats.

i decided that if i was going to get any sleep at all i would just lay on the carpet and use my bag as a pillow. wouldn`t you know it, the carpet felt damp and smelled worse. i realised i was in for a long night.

i started roaming the corridors of the very closed terminal, if only to completely exhaust myself to enable me to fall asleep. i never did. i caught naps here and there on the chairs in front of the airline counters.

the plus side of that experience was even completely bleary eyed or maybe because i was completely bleary eyed, the woman at the counter put me on the earlier flight instead of making me spend an extra 6 hours in mia.

my other airport sleeping experience occurred quite recently, in our very own overpriced fiasco of an airport, now here`s an airport built for sleeping, subdued lighting, seats for four, managed to catch a good long nap before some ridiculously early flight a few weeks ago

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wanderlust

September 22, 2003 — Leave a comment

my soon to be ex boss returns to today. she`s been out of the office a week, it`s been calm and productive. there a number of meetings today, so productivity is going to be way down. i also think today is the announcement day, i`ve been keeping a secret. don`t like those, but i was asked to do so in confidence, so hopefully, she`ll say her piece and i can get it off my chest.

which brings me to my point, i think i`ve worked out the insomnia, the unease, the general malaise, i`m ready to move on. not just from the job, but the country. i need a change of scenery. i think if i don`t get this jamaica job i`m going to be completely shattered, i`m hanging a lot of hopes on this job.

i need to know i`m taking a step forward, getting out of here, closer in proximity to vic, doing something to improve our situation. all i feel i`m doing right now is marking time.

hard to believe

September 21, 2003 — Leave a comment

that in this third millenium that we still have need for something like the amercian library association`s banned books week

looking through the list 100 most frequently challenged books of 1990 – 2000, i get a strange sense of doom. some of the books on the list, i grew up with and actively encourage my children to read.

random sampling from the list:

I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

Harry Potter (Series) by J.K. Rowling

The Color Purple by Alice Walker

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

what the fuck is going on?

according to the ala website:

“Between 1990 and 2000, of the 6,364 challenges reported to or recorded by the Office for Intellectual Freedom (see The 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books):

1,607 were challenges to “sexually explicit” material (up 161 since 1999);

1,427 to material considered to use “offensive language”; (up 165 since 1999)

1,256 to material considered “unsuited to age group”; (up 89 since 1999)

842 to material with an “occult theme or promoting the occult or Satanism,”; (up 69 since 1999)

737 to material considered to be “violent”; (up 107 since 1999)

515 to material with a homosexual theme or “promoting homosexuality,” (up 18 since 1999) and

419 to material “promoting a religious viewpoint.” (up 22 since 1999)

Other reasons for challenges included “nudity” (317 challenges, up 20 since 1999), “racism” (267 challenges, up 22 since 1999), “sex education” (224 challenges, up 7 since 1999), and “anti-family” (202 challenges, up 9 since 1999).

Please note that the number of challenges and the number of reasons for those challenges do not match, because works are often challenged on more than one ground.

Seventy-one percent of the challenges were to material in schools or school libraries.2 Another twenty-four percent were to material in public libraries (down two percent since 1999). Sixty percent of the challenges were brought by parents, fifteen percent by patrons, and nine percent by administrators, both down one percent since 1999).”

am i going to have to start secreting books for my children to read?

it`s too nice a day for me to get this worked up.

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new york story

September 20, 2003 — Leave a comment

a few years ago, in the middle of my second advertising job, i realised that i hadn`t left trinidad for close to 10 years and i was in dire need of some inspiration. i was unhappy with the work that i was producing, so i decided that it would be a good idea to go on a hiatus, explore the wide world, well NY at least. i had never been as an adult and i figured if 6 weeks in the city that never sleeps didn`t fire the creative juices again, nothing would.

my friend sam, travel maven and born and bred new yorker, found me with a place to stay, held my hand for the first few days, then unleashed me on the city.

one of the coolest things about the trip was where i was staying, i lived in the east village, in an apartment cum art gallery cum performance space, know as a gathering of the tribes, run by steve cannon, i covered my room and board by interning for steve. the space, half a block from the nuyorican poets cafe was revolving door for a number of artists.

strangely i didn`t actually do any art, i spent my time running errands and learning the city. running a non-profit out of your apartment, means there isn`t much cash about, so i learned the joys of the nyc bus and subway system.

i`m not being facetious about the system, i enjoyed taking the buses and subway. i think i mastered the timing of it in about 2 weeks. i got flashed on the subway, actually having some sit across from you and masturbate hardly constitutes flashing.

one of the funny stories about my trip is a bar i found in the last three week i was there. i though i was spending too many evenings sitting around the apartment while steve was out, so i decided to explore the neighbourhood. i found a $3 cinema, which in turn lead me to  this bar, which watching something eminently forgettable there was an ad for this bar with a dart board and red stripe.

what a lure for me, i own darts and had travelled with them and red stripe, it was a call to my jamaican ancestry. so after the movies, i trekked around the corner to the bar, funny thing, it was a country and western bar with red stripe and guinness on tap. with my short dreads i stood out like a sore thumb, but then nobody seemed quite at home at this bar, not the irish and english guys throwing darts, not the guys in cowboy hats. the bar tenders used to heckle me, cause i would come in, order a red stripe and put el paso on the juke and go throw my darts.

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managed to go play pool last night and get my ass soundly whipped. as the night progress my losses became more spectacular. couldn`t get the simplest shots to go in.

some how i still managed to get in just before midnight and next week, i`ll be back at it again. i like shooting pool, it`s relaxing, the company`s great and every now and again there are these really good shots.

my brain hasn`t quite fired up for the morning, so before i become the thing i hate, i`m off

my unsexy list

September 19, 2003 — Leave a comment

after reading the nerve unsexy list, i decided i would come up with my own list of things that will never be sexy to me.

in the order that they come to me:

hipster fucking pants

we all know how i feel about them. un-fucking-sexy. anyway you take it, it`s plumber`s fucking butt, definitely not sexy.

stupid people

part of any attraction for me is intelligence, we have to be able to converse on some level

no sense of humour

sex is something that needs not to take itself seriously, so an inability to laugh, particularly out loud is a major minus

surfeit of smell

everything in moderation. excessive amounts of perfume or insufficient baths. not good. the key to attraction is naturally occurring pheromones, covering them with perfume doesn`t help. and if you don`t bathe, your stench over powers them as well.

VPL

visible panty line. actually not just VPL, any deliberate exposure of your underwear. i`ll see it when you take off your clothes. i don`t need to see the thong over the tops of your pants.

rudeness

particularly to service staff. that`s never, ever sexy. if you can`t work out why on your own, you`re a fucking moron [see stupid people]

*edit

inappropriate attire

wear clothes that are comfortable and appropriate to your age and occassion. too tight, too short, too young, too old, too much of anything is not sexy.

language abuse

how do i say this and sound like a snob. i need to understand what you`re saying at all times. there is a time and place for dialect, but mangling language for the sake of being cool [say it with me now: un-fucking-sexy]

one dimensional character

be more than what you`re wearing, where you work, where you live. read, live, travel, have an opinion, be yourself.

i`m sure there will be additions to this list as they come to me.

*addendum I

spandex

it`s a right, not a privilege

the comb over

it`s either you`ve got the hair or you don`t. combing it over does not hide male pattern baldness.

dragon toes

nail clippers are not expensive. trim those toes nails.

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secretary

September 19, 2003 — Leave a comment

this is the original short story on which the movie is based. it is a nerve premium subscriber thing, so i`m going to attempt to repost it here.










The typing and secretarial class  was held in a little basement room in the Business Building of the local community college. The teacher was an old lady with hair that floated in vague clouds around her temples and Kleenex stuck up the sleeve of her dress for some future, probably nasal purpose. She held a stopwatch in one old hand and tilted her hip as she watched us all with severe, imperial eyes, not caring that her stomach hung out.

#SPLIT#

The girl in front of me had short, clenched blond curls sitting on her thin shoulders. Lone strands would stick straight out from her head in cold, dry weather.

It was a two-hour class with a ten-minute break.

Everybody would go out into the hall during the break to get coffee or candy from the machines. The girls would stand in groups and talk, and the two male typists would walk slowly up and down the corridor with round shoulders, holding their Styrofoam cups and looking into the bright slits of light in the business class doors as they passed by.

I would go to the big picture window that looked out onto the parking lot and stare at the streetlights shining on the hoods of the cars.

After class, I`d come home and put my books on the dining room table among the leftover dinner things: balled-up napkins,  glasses of water, a dish of green beans sitting on a pot holder. My father`s plate would always be there, with gnawed bones and hot pepper on it. He would be in the living room in his pajama top with a dish of ice cream in his lap and his hair on end. “How many words a minute did you type tonight?” he`d ask.

It wasn`t an unreasonable question, but the predictable and agitated delivery of it was annoying. It reflected his way of hoarding silly details and his obsessive fear that I would meet my sister`s fate.

She`d had a job at a home for retarded people for the past eight years.

She wore jeans and a long army coat to work every day. When she came home, she went up to her room and lay in bed. Every now and then she would come down and joke around or watch TV, but not much.

Mother would drive me around to look for jobs.

First we would go through ads in the paper, drawing black circles, marking X`s. The defaced newspaper sat on the dining room table in a gray fold and we argued.

“I`m not friendly and I`m not personable. I`m not going to answer an ad for somebody like that.

It would be stupid.”

“You can be friendly. And you are personable when you aren`t busy putting yourself down.”

“I`m not putting myself down. You just want to think that I am so you can have something to talk about.”

“You`re backing yourself into a corner, Debby.”

“Oh, shit.” I picked up a candy wrapper and began pinching it together in an ugly way. My hands were red and rough.

It didn`t matter how much lotion I used.

“Come on, we`re getting started on the wrong foot.”

“Shut up.”

My mother crossed her legs. “Well,” she said. She picked up the “Living” section of the paper and cracked it into position. She tilted her head back and dropped her eyelids.

Her upper lip became hostile as she read. She picked up her green teacup and drank.

“I`m dependable. I could answer an ad for somebody dependable.”

“You are that.”

We wound up in the car. My toes swelled in my high heels. My mother and I both used the flowered box of Kleenex in the dashboard and stuck the used tissue in a brown bag that sat near the bump in the middle of the car. There was a lot of traffic in both lanes. We drove past the Amy Joy doughnut shop. They still hadn`t put the letter Y back on the Amy sign.

Our first stop was Wonderland. There was a job in the clerical department of Sears. The man there had a long disapproving nose, and he held his hands stiffly curled in the middle of his desk.

He mainly looked at his hands. He said he would call me, but I knew he wouldn`t.

On the way back to the parking lot, we passed a pet store. There were only hamsters, fish and exhausted yellow birds.

We stopped and looked

at slivers of fish swarming in their tank of thick green water. I had come to this pet store when I was ten years old. The mall had just opened up and we had all come out to walk through it. My sister, Donna, had wanted to go into the pet store. It was very warm and damp in the store, and smelled like fur and hamster. When we walked out, it seemed cold. I said I was cold and Donna took off her white leatherette jacket and put it on my shoulders, letting one hand sit on my left shoulder for a minute.

She had never touched me like that before and she hasn`t since.

The next place was a tax information office in a slab of a building with green trim. They gave me an intelligence test that was mostly spelling and “What`s wrong with this sentence?”

The woman came out of her office holding my test and smiling.

You scored higher than anyone else I`ve interviewed,” she said. “You`re really overqualified for this job. There`s no challenge. You`d be bored to death.”

“I want to be bored,” I said.

She laughed. “Oh, I don`t think that`s true.”

We had a nice talk about what people want out of their jobs and then I left.

“Well, I hope you weren`t surprised that you had the highest score,” said my mother.

We went to the French bakery on Eight-Mile Road and got cookies called elephant ears. We ate them out of a bag as we drove.

I felt so comfortable, I could have driven around in the car all day.

Then we went to a lawyer`s office on Telegraph Road. It was a receding building made of orange brick. There were no other houses or stores around it, just a parking lot and some taut fir trees that looked like they`d been brushed. My mother waited for me in the car.

She smiled, took out a crossword puzzle and focused her eyes on it, the smile still gripping her face.

The lawyer was a short man with dark, shiny eyes and dense immobile shoulders. He took my hand with an indifferent aggressive snatch. It felt like he could have put his hand through my rib cage, grabbed my heart, squeezed it a little to see how it felt, then let go.

    “Come into my office,” he said.

We sat down and he fixed his eyes on me. “It`s not much of a job,” he said. “I have a paralegal who does research and legwork, and the proofreading gets done at an agency. All I need is a presentable typist who can get to work on time and answer the phone.”

“I can do that,” I said.

“It`s very dull work,” he said.

“I like dull work.”

He stared at me, his eyes becoming hooded in thought.

“There`s something about you,” he said. “You`re closed  up, you`re tight. You`re like a wall.”

“I know.”

My answer surprised him and his eyes lost their hoods. He tilted his head back and looked at me, his shiny eyes bared again. “Do you ever loosen up?”

The corners of my mouth jerked, smilelike. “I don`t know.” My palms sweated.

His secretary, who was leaving, called me the next day and said that he wanted to hire me. Her voice was serene, flat and utterly devoid of inflection.

“That typing course really paid off,” said my father. “You made a good investment.” He wandered in and out of the dining room in pleased agitation, holding his glass of beer. “A law office could be a fascinating place.” He arched his chin and scratched his throat.

Donna even came downstairs and made popcorn and put it in a big yellow bowl on the table for everybody to eat. She ate lazily, her large hand dawdling in the bowl. “It could be okay. Interesting people could come in. Even though that lawyer`s probably an asshole.”

My mother sat quietly, pleased with her role in the job-finding project, pinching clusters of popcorn in her fingers and popping them into her mouth.

    That night I put my new work clothes on a chair and looked at them. A brown skirt, a beige blouse.

I was attracted to the bland ugliness, but I didn`t know how long that would last. I looked at their gray shapes in the night-light and then

rolled over toward the dark corner of my bed.

My family`s enthusiasm made me feel sarcastic about the job, about any effort to do anything, in fact. In light of their enthusiasm, the only intelligent course of action seemed to be immobility and rudeness. But in the morning as I ate my poached eggs and toast, I couldn`t help but feel curious and excited. The feeling grew as I rode in the car with my mother to the receding orange building.

I felt like I was accomplishing something. I wanted to do well. When we drove past the Amy Joy doughnut shop, I saw, through the wall of glass, expectant construction workers in heavy boots and jackets sitting on vinyl swivel seats, waiting for coffee and bags of doughnuts. I had sentimental thoughts about workers and the decency of unthinking toil.

I was pleased to be like them, insofar as I was. I returned my mother`s smile when I got out of the car and said “thanks” when she said “good luck.”

“Well here you are,” said the lawyer.

He clapped his short, hard-packed little hands together and made a loud noise. “On time. Good morning!”

 He began training me then and continued to do so all week. No interesting people came into the office. Very few people came into the office at all. The first week there were three. One was a nervous middle-aged woman who had an uneven haircut and was wearing lavender rubber children`s boots. She sat on the edge of the waiting room chair with her rubber boots together, rearranging the things in

her purse. Another

was a fat woman in a bright, baglike dress who had yellow in the whites of her wild little eyes, and who carried her purse like a weapon. The last was a man who sat desperately turning his head as if he wanted to disconnect it from his body. I could hear him raising his voice inside the lawyer`s office. When he left, the lawyer came out and said, “He is completely crazy,” and told me to type him a bill for five hundred dollars.

 Everyone who sat in the waiting room looked random and unwelcome. They all fidgeted. The elegant old armchairs and puffy upholstered couch were themselves disoriented in the stiff modernity of the waiting room. My heavy oak desk was an idiot standing against a wall covered with beige plaster. The brooding plants before me gave the appearance of weighing a lot for plants, even though one of them was a slight, frondy thing.

 I was surprised that a person like the lawyer, who seemed to be mentally organized and evenly distributed, would have such an office. But I was comfortable in it. Its jumbled nature was like a nest of available rags gathered tightly together for warmth. My first two weeks were serene. I enjoyed the dullness of days, the repetition of motions, the terse, polite interactions between the lawyer and me.

I enjoyed feeling him impose his brainlessly confident sense of existence on me. He would say, “Type this letter,” and my sensibility would contract until the abstractions of achievement and production found expression in the typing of the letter. I was useful.

 My mother picked me up every day. We would usually stop at the A&P before we went home to get a loaf of white French bread, beer and kielbasa sausage for my father. When we got home I would go upstairs to my room, take off my shirt and blouse, and throw them on the floor. I would get into my bed of jumbled blankets in my underwear and pantyhose and listen to my father yelling at my mother until I fell asleep. I woke up when Donna pounded on my door and yelled, “Dinner!”

 I would go down with her then and sit at the table. We would all watch the news on TV as we ate. My mother would have a shrunken, abstracted look on her face. My father would hunch over his plate like an animal at its dish.

 After dinner, I would go upstairs and listen  to records and write in my diary or play Parcheesi with Donna until it was time to get ready for bed. I`d go to sleep at night looking at the skirt and blouse I would wear the next day. I`d wake up looking at my ceramic weather poodle, which was supposed to turn pink, blue or green, depending on the weather, but had only turned gray and stayed gray. I would hear my father in the bathroom, the tumble of radio patter, the water, the clink of a glass being set down, the creak and click as he closed the medicine cabinet. Donna would be standing outside my door, waiting for him to finish, muttering “shit” or something.

 Looking back on it, I don`t know why that time was such a contented one, but it was.

 The first day of the third week, the lawyer came out of his office, stiffer than usual, his eyes lit up in a peculiar, stalking way. He was carrying one of my letters. He put it on my desk, right in front of me.

 “Look at it,” he said. I did.

 “Do you see that?”

 “What?” I asked.

 “This letter has three typing errors in it, one of which is, I think, a spelling error.”

 “I`m sorry.”

 “This isn`t the first time, either. There  have been others that I let go because it was in your first few weeks.

But this can`t go on. Do you know what this makes me look like to the people who receive these letters?”

 I looked at him, mortified. There had been a catastrophe hidden in the folds of my contentment for two weeks and he hadn`t even told me. It seemed unfair, although when I thought about it I could understand his reluctance, maybe even embarrassment, to draw my attention to something so stupidly unpleasant.

 “Type it again.”

 I did, but I was so badly shaken that I made  even more mistakes. “You are wasting my time,” he said, and handed it to me once again. I typed it correctly the third time but he sulked in his office for the rest of the day.

 This kind of thing kept occurring all week.

Each time, the lawyer`s irritation and disbelief mounted. In addition, I sensed something else growing in him, an intimate tendril creeping from one of his darker areas, nursed on the feeling that he had discovered something about me.

 I was very depressed about the situation. When  I went home in the evening I couldn`t take a nap. I lay there looking at the gray weather poodle and fantasized about having a conversation with the lawyer that would clear up everything, explain to him that

I was really trying to do my best. He seemed to think that I was making the mistakes on purpose.

 At the end of the week he began complaining about the way I answered the phone. “You`re like a machine,” he said. “You sound like you`re in the Twilight Zone. You don`t

think when you respond to people.”

    When he asked me to come into his office at the end of the day, I thought he was going to fire me. The idea was a relief, but a numbing one. I sat down and he fixed me with a look that was speculative but benign, for him. He leaned back in his chair in a comfortable way, one hand dangling sideways from his wrist.

To my surprise, he began talking to me about my problems, as he saw them.

“I sense that you are a very nice but complex  person, with wild mood swings that you keep hidden. You just shut up the

house and act like there`s nobody home.”

“That`s true,” I said. “I do that.”

“Well, why? Why don`t you open up a little bit? It would probably help your typing.”

It was not really any of his business, I thought.

“You should try to talk more. I know I`m your employer and we have a prescribed relationship, but you should feel free to discuss your problems with me.”

The idea of discussing my problems with him was preposterous. “It`s hard to think of having that kind of discussion with you,” I said. I hesitated. “You have a strong personality and . . . when I encounter a personality like that, I tend to step back because I don`t know how to deal with it.”

He was clearly pleased with this response, but he said, “You shouldn`t be so shy.”

When I thought about this conversation later, it seemed, on the one hand, that this lawyer was just an asshole. On the other, his comments were weirdly moving, and had the effect of making me feel horribly sensitive. No one had ever made such personal comments to me before.

The next day I made another mistake. The intimacy of the previous day seemed to make the mistake even more repulsive to him because he got madder than usual. I wanted him to fire me. I would have suggested it, but I was struck silent. I sat and stared at the letter while he yelled.

“What`s wrong with you!”

“I`m sorry,” I said.

He stood quietly for a moment. Then he said, “Come into my office. And bring that letter.”

I followed him into his office.

“Put that letter on my desk,” he said. I did.

“Now bend over so that you are looking directly at it. Put your elbows on the desk and your face very close to the letter.” Shaken and puzzled, I did what he said.

“Now read the letter to yourself. Keep reading it over and over again.”

I read: “Dear Mr. Garvy: I am very grateful  to you for referring. . .” He began spanking me as I said “referring.”

The funny thing was, I wasn`t even surprised. I actually kept reading the letter, although my understanding of it was not very clear. I began crying on it, which blurred the ink. The word “humiliation” came into my mind with such force that it effectively blocked out all other words. Further, I felt that the concept it stood for had actually been a major force in my life for quite a while.

He spanked me for about ten minutes, I think.

I read the letter only about five times, partly because it rapidly became too wet to be legible. When he stopped he said, “Now straighten up and go type it again.”

I went to my desk. He closed the office door behind him. I sat down, blew my nose and wiped my face. I stared into space for several minutes, every now and then dwelling on the tingling sensation in my buttocks. I typed the letter again and took it into his office.

He didn`t look up as I put it on his desk.

I went back out and sat, planning to sink into a stupor of some sort. But a client came in, so  I couldn`t. I had to buzz the lawyer and tell him the client had arrived.

“Tell him to wait,” he said curtly.

When I told the client to wait, he came up to my desk and began to talk to me. “I`ve been here twice before,” he said. “Do you recognize me?”

“Yes,” I said. “Of course.”

He was a small, tight-looking middle-aged man with agitated little hands and a pale scar running over his lip and down his chin. The scar didn`t make him look tough; he was too anxious to look tough.

    “I never thought anything like this would ever happen to me,” he said. “I never thought I`d be in a lawyer`s office even once, and I`ve been here three times now. And absolutely nothing`s been accomplished. I`ve always hated lawyers.” He looked as though he expected me to take offense.

“A lot of people do,” I said.

“It was either that or I would`ve shot those miserable blankety-blanks next door and I`d have to get a lawyer to defend me anyway. You know the story?”

I did. He was suing his neighbors because they had a dog that “barked all goddamn day.” I listened to him talk.

It surprised me how this short conversation quickly restored my sensibility.

Everything seemed perfectly normal by the time the lawyer came out of his office to greet the client. I noticed he had my letter in one hand.

Just before he turned to lead the client away, he handed it to me, smiling.

“Good letter,” he said.

When I went home that night, everything was the same. My life had not been disarranged by the event except for a slight  increase in the distance between me and my family. My behind was not even red when I looked at it in the bathroom mirror.

But when I got into bed and thought about the thing, I got excited. I was more excited, in fact, than I had ever been

in my life. That didn`t surprise me, either.

I felt a numbness; I felt again that I could never have a normal conversation with anyone again. I masturbated slowly, to put off the climax as long as I could. But there was no climax, even though I tried for a long time.

Then I couldn`t sleep.

It happened twice more in the next week and a half. The following week, when I made a typing mistake, he didn`t spank me. Instead, he told me to bend over his desk, looking at the typing mistake

and repeat “I am stupid” for several minutes.

Our relationship didn`t change otherwise. He was still brisk and friendly in the morning. And, because he seemed so sure of himself, I could not  help but react to him as if he were the same domineering but affable boss.

He did not, however, ever invite me to discuss my problems with him again.

I began to have recurring dreams about him. In one, the most frequent, I walked with him in a field of bright red poppies.

The day was brilliant and warm. We were smiling at each other, and there  was a tremendous sense of release and goodwill between us. He looked at me and said, “I understand you now, Debby.” Then we held hands.

There was one time I felt disturbed about what was happening at the office. It was just before dinner, and my father was upset about something that had happened to him at work. I could hear him yelling in the living room while my mother tried to comfort him. He yelled, “I`d rather work in a circus! In one of those things where you put your head through a hole and people pay to throw garbage at you!”

“No circus has that anymore,” said my mother. “Stop it, Shep.”

By the time I went down to eat dinner, everything was as usual. I looked at my father and felt a sickening sensation of love nailed to contempt and panic.

The last time I made a typing error and the lawyer summoned me to his office, two unusual things occurred. The first was that after he finished spanking me he told me to pull up my skirt. Fear hooked my stomach and pulled it toward my chest. I turned my head and ried to look at him.

“You`re not worried that I`m going to rape  you, are you?” he said. “Don`t. I`m not interested in that, not in the least. Pull up your skirt.”

I turned my head away from him. I thought, I don`t have do this. I can stop right now. I can straighten up and walk out.

But I didn`t. I pulled up my skirt.

“Pull down your pantyhose and underwear.”

A finger of nausea poked my stomach.

“I told you I`m not going to fuck you. Do what I say.”

The skin on my face and throat was hot, but my fingertips were cold on my legs as I pulled down my underwear and panty hose. The letter before me became distorted beyond recognition. I thought

I might faint or vomit, but I didn`t. I was held up by a feeling of dizzying suspension, like the one I have in dreams where I can fly, but only if I get into some weird position.

At first he didn`t seem to be doing anything.

Then I became aware of a small frenzy of expended energy behind me. I had an impression of a vicious little animal frantically burrowing dirt with its tiny claws and teeth. My hips were sprayed with hot sticky muck.

“Go

clean yourself off,” he said. “And do that letter again.”

I stood slowly, and felt my skirt fall over the sticky gunk. He briskly swung open the door and I left the room, not even pulling up my panty hose and underwear, since I was going to use the bathroom anyway. He closed the door behind me, and the second unusual thing occurred. Susan, the paralegal, was standing in the waiting room with a funny look on her face.

She was a blonde who wore short, fuzzy sweaters and fake gold jewelry around her neck. At her friendliest, she had a whining, abrasive quality that clung to her voice. Now, she could barely say hello. Her stupidly full lips were parted speculatively.

“Hi,” I said. “Just a minute.”

She noted the awkwardness of my walk, because of the lowered panty hose.

I got to the bathroom and wiped myself off. I  didn`t feel embarrassed. I felt mechanical. I wanted to get that dumb paralegal out of the office so I could come back to the bathroom and masturbate.

Susan completed her errand and left. I masturbated.

I retyped the letter. The lawyer sat in his office all day.

When my mother picked me up that afternoon, she asked me if I was all right.

“Why do you ask?”

“I don`t know. You look a little strange.”

“I`m as all right as I ever am.”

“That doesn`t sound good, honey.”

I didn`t answer. My mother moved her hands up and down the steering wheel, squeezing it anxiously.

“Maybe you`d like to stop by the French bakery and get some elephant ears” she said.

“I don`t want any elephant ears.” My voice was unexpectedly nasty. It almost made me cry.

“All right,” said my mother.

When I lay on my bed to take my nap, my body felt  very dense and heavy, as though it would be very hard to move again, which was just as well, since I didn`t feel like moving. When Donna banged on my door and yelled “Dinner!” I didn`t answer. She put her head in and asked if I was asleep, and I told her I didn`t feel like eating.

I felt so inert, I thought I`d go to sleep, but I couldn`t. I lay awake through the sounds of argument and TV and everybody going to the bathroom.

Bedtime came, drawers rasped open and shut, doors slammed, my father eased into sleep with radio mumble. The orange digits on my clock said 1:30.

I thought: I should get out of this pantyhose and slip. I sat up and looked out into the gray, cold street. The shrubbery on the lawn across the street  looked frozen and miserable. I thought about a period of time a year before when I couldn`t sleep because I kept thinking that someone was going to break into the house and kill everybody. Eventually that fear went away  and I went back to sleeping again. I lay back down without taking off my clothes, and pulled a light blanket tightly around me. Sooner or later, I thought, I would sleep. I would just have to wait.

But I didn`t sleep, although I became mentally incoherent for long, ugly stretches of time. Hours went by; the room turned gray. I heard the morning noises: the toilet, the coughing, Donna`s hostile muttering. Often, in the past, I had woken early and lain in bed listening to my family clumsily trying to organize itself for the day. Often as not, their sounds made me feel irrational loathing. This morning, I felt despair and a longing for them, and a sureness that we would never be close as long as I lived.

My nasal passages became active with tears that didn`t reach my eyes.

My mother knocked on the door. “Honey, aren`t you going to be late?”

“I`m not going to work. I feel sick. I`ll call in.”

“I`ll do it for you, just stay in bed.”

“No, I`m going to call. It has to be me.”

I didn`t call in. The lawyer didn`t call the house.

I didn`t go in or call the next day or the day after that. The lawyer

still didn`t call. I was slightly hurt by his absent phone call, but my

relief was far greater than my hurt.

After I`d stayed home for four days, my father asked if I wasn`t worried about taking so much time off. I told him I`d quit, in front of Donna and my mother. He was dumbfounded.

“That wasn`t very smart,” he said. “What are you going to do now?”

“I don`t care,” I said. “That lawyer was an asshole.” To everyone`s discomfort, I began to cry. I left  the room, and they all watched me stomp up the stairs.

The next day at dinner my father said, “Don`t get discouraged because your first job didn`t work out. There`re plenty

of other places out there.”

“I don`t want to think about another job right now.”

There was disgruntlement all around the table.

“Come on now Debby, you don`t want to throw away everything you worked for in that typing course,” said my father.

“I don`t blame her,” said Donna. “I`m sick of working for assholes.”

“Oh, shit,” said my father. “If  I had quit every job I`ve had on those grounds, you would`ve all starved.

Maybe that`s what I should have done.”

“What happened, Debby?” said my mother.

I said, “I don`t want to talk about it,” and I left the room again. After that they may have sensed, with their intuition for the miserable, that something hideous had happened. Because they left the subject alone.

    I received my last paycheck from the lawyer in the mail. It came with a letter folded around it. It said, “I am so sorry for what happened between us. I have realized what a terrible mistake I made with you. I can only hope that you will understand, and that you will not worsen an already unfortunate situation by discussing it with others. All the best.” As a P.S. he assured

me that I could count on him for excellent

references. He enclosed a check for three hundred and eighty dollars, a little over two hundred dollars more than he owed me.

It occurred to me to tear up the check, or mail it back to the lawyer. But I didn`t do that. Two hundred dollars was worth more then than it is now. Together with the money I had in the bank, it  was enough to put a down payment on an apartment and still have some left over. I went upstairs and wrote “380” on the deposit side of my checking account. I didn`t feel like a whore or anything. I felt I was  doing the right thing. I looked at the total figure of my balance with satisfaction. Then I went downstairs and asked my mother if she wanted to go get some elephant ears.

For the next two weeks, I forgot about the idea of a job and moving out of my parents` house. I slept through all of the morning noise until noon.

I got up and ate cold cereal and ran the dishwasher. I watched the gray march of old sitcoms on TV. I worked on crossword puzzles. I lay on my bed in a tangle of quilt and fuzzy blanket and masturbated two, three, four times in a row, always thinking about the thing.

I was still in this phase when my father stuck the newspaper under my nose and said, “Did you see what your old boss is doing?” There was a small article on the upcoming mayoral elections in Westland. He was running for mayor. I took the paper from  my father`s offering hands. For the first time, I felt an uncomplicated disgust for the lawyer. Westland was nothing but malls and doughnut stands and a big ugly theater with an artificial volcano in front of it. What  kind of idiot would want to be mayor of Westland? Again, I left the room.

I got a phone call the next week. It was a man`s voice, a soft, probing, condoling voice. “Miss Roe?” he said.

“I hope you`ll forgive this unexpected call. I`m Mark Charming of Detroit magazine.”

I didn`t say anything. The voice continued more  uncertainly. “Are you free to talk, Miss Roe?”

There was no one in the kitchen, and my mother  was running the vacuum in the next room. “Talk about what?”

I said.

“Your previous employer.” The voice became slightly harsh as he said these words, and then hurriedly rushed back to condolence. “Please don`t be startled or upset. I know this must be a disturbing phone call  for you, and it must certainly seem intrusive.” He paused so I could laugh or something. I didn`t, and his voice became more cautious. “The  thing is, we`re doing a story on your ex-employer in the context of his running for mayor. To put it mildly, we think he has no business running for public office. We think he would be very bad for the whole Detroit area. He has an awful reputation, Miss Roe — which may not surprise you.” There was another careful pause that I did not fill.

“Miss Roe, are you still with me?”

“Yes.”

“What all this is leading up to is that we have reason to believe that you could reveal information about your ex-employer that would be damaging to him. This information would never be connected to your name. We would use a pseudonym. Your privacy would be protected completely.”

The vacuum cleaner shut off, and silence encircled me. My throat constricted.

“Do you want time to think about it, Miss Roe?”

“I can`t talk now,” I said, and hung up.

I couldn`t go through the living room without my mother asking me who had been on the phone, so I went downstairs to  the basement. I sat on the mildewed couch and curled up, unmindful of centipedes. I rested my chin on my knee and stared at the boxes of my father`s old paperbacks and the jumble of plastic Barbie-doll cases full of Barbie equipment that Donna and I used to play with on the front porch.

A stiff white foot and calf stuck out of a sky blue case, helpless and pitifully rigid.

For some reason, I remembered the time, a few years before, when my mother had taken me to see a psychiatrist. One of the more obvious questions he had asked me was, “Debby, do you ever have the sensation of being outside yourself, almost as if you can actually watch yourself from another place?” I hadn`t at the time, but I did now. And it wasn`t such a bad feeling at all. 

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keeping myself entertined

September 18, 2003 — Leave a comment

for the web geeks and page designers, the ultimate in 404s

the logical extension to the reality and makeover tv craze

share the love, blog your felicide here [loosed based on the principle that every time you masturbate, god kills a kitten]

the nerve unsexy list

in non-fun news

here`s a good reason for you not to fly jet blue.

and that`s that. now go out and have some fun.

fun with words

September 18, 2003 — Leave a comment

today has just been too weird. but thanks to my love, i have some lovely distractions.

fun words

two of my favourites:

callipygian one having shapely buttocks.

cataglottism kissing with the tongue.

word oddities

and the tremendously funny dialectizer

for the sake of my own amusement, here is my last post in redneck:

whuffo“d i need t`post sumpin like this hyar twice?    

contrary t`th` rumours, i is not kin` cock.  Shet mah mouth! not even prince o` nobleman cock.  

Shet mah mouth!  

fo` th` second time in less thet a year six months four months, i hafta defend mah honour an` virtue.    

no fuckin`, no suckin`, no kissin`, no intimate corntack. nothin`, nada, zero, zilch.    

i didn`t does it. it warn`t me.    

an` no i doesn`t protess too much.    

i doesn`t knows whut th` fuck is gwine on but i`d appreesheeate all th` fantasies about sexual relashuns not include me unless yer married up wif t`me.    

thank yo` an` fine night.

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