By Fred Owens
This week’s issue of Frog Hospital is a little different. It
is long for one thing, and it is inspired by the writing of Karl Ove Knausgaard
and his six-volume novel, My Struggle.
It was Harvey Blume of central Cambridge who encouraged me
to read My Struggle. Agent Blume, as I call him, thought I might learn
something from this renowned Norwegian writer. Yes, I am inspired by the work
and this week’s issue shows the influence of Knausgaard.
I am a chameleon when it comes to writing. I tend to absorb
the last author I read and certain styles carry over subconsciously. I read
Hemingway, then I write like Hemingway, or Nabakov or Bellow, but not just
quality writers, I am influenced by the dreariest and most common place of
authors. It can’t be helped. I run an open shop.
This week it’s Knausgaard
The Quotidian
Monday
morning. I got up. I put on the coffee. I went out to the driveway and picked
up the newspaper. I noticed the air was a bit foggy and cool. I went back in
the house and cleared the cat litter box, then I turned on the TV for the
morning news. I kept the volume down low because we have a new housemate and
the sound of the TV might disturb him.
I
emptied the dishwasher. I try not to clatter the plates when I do this first
thing in the morning. By now the coffee was ready.
I took the rubber band off the furled newspaper and stuck the rubber band in a
plastic bag in the tool drawer.
I
glanced at the front page of the newspaper. I decided to skip that part and go
to the sports section to read about the US Open. The golf story was
interesting. I checked last night's scores for the Dodgers and the Angels, then
I skipped over to Dear Abby and the funnies.
By
now the coffee was ready. I poured a cup. I like it black.
I
looked at Facebook on my iPad. Mitch Friedman was posting photos of his roots
journey. He -- and I assume his wife -- has been to Athens where they stayed in
a hotel with a view of the Acropolis. He posted a selfie with the ruins in the
background and my first reaction was -- how heavy the stones!
My
years of gardening in New England have altered my perception. In New England I
wrestled with large and small granite stones and rebuilt the old stone walls.
Stone upon stone, and so often I thought of the ancient
ruins --- the castles, temples and
pyramids -- huge stone-works built by massive manual labor.
If
I spent a day or a week moving stones then I appreciated how much work it was
for ancient men, toiling up the hill with marble slabs to build the Acropolis
so that we, the heirs, might pose for selfies in 2017.
There
was Mitch Friedman, at the Acropolis, among the Greeks.
Mitch
Friedman is scarce of hair on the top of his head, so he shaves it proudly bald
and smiles lightly. I know Mitch from his old days in Earth First!. The year
was 1988. The month was January, when we resisted the loggers at Fishtown
Woods. Mitch and his Earth First! cohorts -- I always resented their
interference in what had been a moderate and local protest. But why didn't I
say something at the time?
And
why say anything now, 29 years later? Mitch and his group coordinated the
protest and mass arrest at Fishtown in 1988. Later he lived in Bellingham and
made a good living as a promoter of wilderness preservation.
Now
I see him on Facebook, howling with wolves or catching a Seahawks game in
Seattle.
Or
in Athens, on the balcony of his hotel room with a view of the Acropolis.
The
thing is, when I saw his photo standing proudly in front of the ancient stones,
I was happy for him. I was glad that he made this life journey, even though I might
not ever get there myself.
I
am so commonly envious of other people. Why did Mitch Friedman become a successful and well-known environmental
activist? He saved the wilderness in eastern Washington. He spearheaded the
introduction of wolves to that area. He went to court and won. He organized
hundreds of donors. He led petition drives. He left the notoriety of Earth
First! And put those radical days behind him. “I’m being reasonable now. I
accept moderation and gradual change.” He re-shaped his image in that way.
I
envied his success. If people ask, but nobody asks, what have you done to save
nature? When I hear that I start to voice a rasping scream, an inarticulate
wordless moan, a string of obscenities. Even now as I write this, my breathing
gets heavy.
I
did as much as Mitch Friedman ever did. I know it, but I can’t prove it…. I guess I am over that now, almost over that
anyway, because when I saw the photo of Mitch in front of the Acropolis I smiled
and I was happy for him. He deserves that pleasure.
I
remembered my Greek teacher in high school. His name was Father Ryan, a young
man, barely thirty, not tall, of a slight torso, neither clumsy nor athletic. He was our Greek teacher for two years. He
only had wisps of grey hair on his head, and except for those wisps, he was
totally bald. It was cancer of some kind and chemotherapy for treatment, but
they never told us what it was and we never asked. Sometimes Father Ryan would
lay his head down on the lectern in the middle of his lecture – just lay his
head down for a few moments and gather his strength and then carry on. This was
1963 and 1964. We didn’t ask questions about his health, but we learned the
Greek and we read Homer out loud, words as ancient as the stones on the
Acropolis.
I
still have the Greek books. I guess I didn’t need to make the trip to Athens. I
carry it in my soul.
------------------------------------------
I’m
sitting in the living room waiting for lunch. I told Laurie I would eat at one
p.m. so I have 15 minutes to go. The big window is open and so is the front
door, the breeze is easy. It is not as hot as they predicted --- meaning here
in Santa Barbara. For some cruel reason I am monitoring the temperature in
Phoenix. You can do that on the Internet. Just type in “Phoenix temperature” in
the Google search box. It says 113 degrees at noon. And you worry about power
failures when it gets that hot, and some old woman living in a small cottage
and the power goes out and the AC shuts down and she suffers through the heat
of the day – 113 degrees at noon means even hotter by 3 p.m.
I
am sitting on the couch and the laptop is on the coffee table. Laurie is in the
far back of the yard picking plums, little hard purple plums. I pruned the
suckers off that tree two years ago, but I haven’t gone back there lately. I
volunteer for garden projects when I can think of easy jobs that will make her
happy. Like hedging the Indian hawthorn by the driveway – that hardly took 20
minutes.
For
lunch I will fix myself an open-face liverwurst sandwich, hold the mayo – just bread
and sausage. I have been enjoying liverwurst on bread since I was a small
child. My mother sometimes took me to the butcher shop on Central Street in
Evanston, back in Illinois. You had to
drive down Prairie Avenues to get there from our house in Wilmette. Drive down
Prairie Avenue right past Uncle Ted’s stucco bungalow. Only we never stopped to
visit Uncle Ted. I just knew he lived there with Aunt Bee and their three
children who were much, much older than me -- so much older than me that I classified
them as adults and not fun.
We
drove down Prairie Avenue to the butcher shop on Central Street. The butcher
would give me a small slice of liverwurst as a treat. Usinger's Braunschweiger
-- that was the brand name. I always like it. I still do.
I
will fix the open-faced sandwich for lunch today and that will finish the
8-ounce package that I bought last week. With that sandwich I might eat a small
fresh tomato on the side.
This
is where Laurie and I differ. She would carefully slice the tomato and put it
in the sandwich. I don’t do that. It gets too messy. You get a fresh juicy
slice of tomato in your sandwich and you hoist it up to your mouth – and then
the juice squirts on your shirt. It’s not worth the risk. Better to have the
tomato on the side and cut wedges and spear them with a fork -- and be sure to
lean over the plate when you hoist it to your mouth. This is a way to keep
spots off your shirt, something I learned recently, the part about leaning over
the plate, rather than leaning back in the chair.
Eat
the sandwich and the tomato wedges, but then think about eating one or two
small, juicy almost-overripe peaches. White-fleshed peaches from Hugh Kelly’s
back yard garden.
Hugh
has gone to England for a month to visit his family and I water his plants for
the one month he is away. And I may was well pick all the peaches when I come
to water – either me or the squirrels.
Hugh
pays me $50 for the vacation watering service. I do gardening work for about a
dozen customers near our house. It sounds peachy doing garden work for friends
and making a little cash to boot, but I don’t like doing the work very much. I’ve
done too much gardening and farm work and yard work over the years. I’m not too
old for the work. That isn’t it, but I’m getting bored with it. Losing interest.
I love my customers – they are the best people ever, but I would quit tomorrow
if I could find another source of income. I imagine myself taking all the hand
garden tools out of the trunk of my car – shovels, rakes, pruners, loppers,
hand saws, trowels, tarps – all that stuff. I imagine taking it all away and
putting it into some storage locker somewhere. And I don’t pull weeds anymore.
Maybe never again or maybe not for a long time, like a year or so. I imagine myself taking long walks across
fields and forest, hand in hand with Laurie, looking at birds, only there is no
work, just the walking.
And then maybe I will tell people what I am
thinking.
Cataracts.
They want to fix the one in my right eye. Didn’t say anything about the left
eye. I do have two eyes. Pre-op consultation should clear that up. Dr Katsev
wields the knife. A strange man is going to poke a knife in my eye and they
call it routine surgery. Katsev takes a casual air. I said you must be good at
it. He said I do about 20 a week. The clinic website says he has worked there
for more than 25 years and he is chairman of ophthalmology. Technically, intellectually,
this is all above board. Everybody does it.
Why
don’t I do it, but next year, not this year? I can’t drive at night, so what!
Laurie
says why not do it now, this month. Get it over with.
I
filled out the pre-op form. Did I ever get hepatitis? (among a hundred other
questions) Yes, hepatitis A in 1973, from drinking bad water in Nuevo Leon in
northern Mexico. I remember the well, in the back yard of a peasant home, the
well and the home a hundred yards off the highway that went from Laredo to
Monterey. We pulled off the road and asked the residents if we might spend the
night. They said fine and we drew buckets of water from the well.
Something
about that well wasn’t right. Too shallow, to close to the house. The air was
fetid. Tortilla Tom said it was okay,
but he said everything was okay. Eva said we are as good as the people who live
here and if they drink this water so can we. Tucson wondered where he could bum
a smoke. Fat Tom went off in search of beer.
We
drew the water, started a fire, put on a pot of beans and just sat around or
stood around. It was getting dark. Mexico wasn’t as pretty as we expected.
Later
Fat Tom came riding back to our camp in the back of a pickup truck – two
federales coming to check us out. Pulling the truck up too close to the fire,
getting out slowly.
We
didn’t move. They said Hi, where are you going? -- They spoke a little English. We’re going to
Oaxaca. We’re cooking beans for dinner. You want some? The cops looked around and
nobody moved. They started to smile. They walked back to the truck, threw off
the burlap sack covering a rack of cold Modelo beer, enough for everybody.
Fat
Tom had a big smile now. I love Mexico, he said. Hey, Maria, how do you say
that in Spanish? Mexico me encanta! she
cried out, and she began to sing. The night passed sleeping under the stars.
But
the water from the well was not good. Too natural, to use a term. I got the
hepatitis A from that well water. Ended up in a hospital in Mexico City one
month later. I liked that hospital. They fed me well and let me rest. A clean
bed, a TV, a pretty nurse.
But
I had resources. The same privileged resources I have had all my life, right up
to today, getting cataract surgery at Sansum Clinic in Santa Barbara. My regular
doctor is a good-looking young man -- Dr. Bryce Holderness got his degree from
the University of Southern California medical school.
I
filled out the rest of the pre-op form. No other surgeries, or broken
bones, no strokes, angina, endocrine
disorders, blood pressure -- actually
blood pressure is not so good and I take a pill for that every morning. The
pill must be good, because it only costs $9 a month. My health insurance does not
cover prescriptions. So for $9 a month it keeps the blood pressure within
range.
Cholesterol?
Nature blessed me. Basically I have a license to eat mayonnaise.
Anxiety?
Yes, I take half a pill PRN. I can get nervous. I can get nervous at times when
I used to get angry. Only I am too old to get angry, so I get nervous instead
and take the pill.
This
goes back to the garden work and the field work. It can be very boring and hot
and sweaty and it takes no mental skill for field work. But when I was younger and I was working out
in a field, you start to get angry and you’re out in the middle of the
field -- there is nobody to get angry at.
They aren’t there – the people you’re mad at, except for Pedro working 20-feet
from you nearby, only you’re not mad at him.
You
get mad at the field itself? Mad at the soil and stones? Kick the stones, the
stones don’t care……. No, the stones do care, but they say to be calm.
Now I am older, the field is too far away. I
work in the garden. It doesn’t make me angry or nervous, just bored.
After
breakfast I went out to the driveway to wash my car. My car is parked these
past few days in Julia’s spot under the pepper tree. There is a hierarchy of
parking places here. Laurie gets the cement paved driveway. The two renters get
the off-street space, but graveled, not paved – Julia is under the pepper tree
and Ryan is under the jacaranda.
I
park on the street uphill from the mailbox. Mariah parks on the street downhill
from the pepper tree. Gavin, who is here temporarily, parks wherever he can.
It
all works out. But I am in Julia’s spot today because she is gone to house sit
for her brother who lives across town.
So I pulled into Julia’s spot because it is flat and off the street and I
can damp-wash my vehicle.
I
drive a black 2004 Nissan Sentra --
bought it five years ago for $5,800 – never a problem, but it has one of those
lousy Japanese paint jobs, all mottled and disparaged. I hired an artist to
paint acrylic flowers over the discolored parts, so my car is like a moving
mural. I can send you a photo. People tell me all the time how much they like
it. Well, I run a gardening business,
painting flowers on my car is a way to advertise. Not my name or phone
number – just the flowers.
Being
that the flowers are only painted on with acrylic and beginning to flake off, I
can’t run my vehicle through the car wash under those big scrubbers, so it just
kept getting dirtier, until I realized I could damp wash it in the driveway.
Three gallons of water, three clean rags, 30 minutes. Just wipe it down and
wipe it off and wring out the dirtiest rag. Then get a second bucket full of
water and use the second rag for finer work, and then the third for the final
touchup.
Easy,
peasy, Japanesy – that’s what the librarian said in the Shawshank
Redepemption. I hate it when a phrase like that gets stuck in my head. I
did not choose to remember that phrase. I would like to get rid of it, but it is
probably lodged in there forever.
Like
the names of my grade school teachers. I can recite them Kindergarten through 8th
grade. But in that case I am glad to remember those names and I even wrote them
down for the archives.
But
the memory is scarred with trauma – horrible burning events that get buried
deeper and deeper but can never be --- there is no verb – can never be erased,
eliminated, deleted expunged – there is no verb because it is not possible.
You
can force the memory down deeper in your subconscious. Bury it. That’s why they
ancient Egyptians built the great pyramids
--- huge piles of hewn stone symmetrically arranged. The purpose of
these pyramids is to bury something --
we cannot say what. Some terrible, scarring memory is buried under the pyramids
and will never come to light.
Nothing
is ever forgotten. It is all stuck in your brain somewhere, in the lower
drawer, under the cobwebs, in the basement.
People
say I have a good memory. I recall details of events that happened long ago. I
dwell on the past. I love the past – that’s where all the good stories are. I
love the history of all people. I brood over my own life. Often I wake up at 5
a.m. when it’s still dark. I emerge from a deep sleep and my mind begins to
stir. I will my mind to stop working. I tell myself, “Don’t start thinking.
There is nothing to think about. Go back to sleep.”
But
I start remembering older years, very often 1993, when I had the corporate
driving job for Boston Coach and Fidelity Investments. I drove a spanking new
black Buick Park Avenue. I took business executives to and from the Boston
Airport. I spent hours crawling through rush hour traffic, but I was getting
paid by the hour, so I didn’t care.
But
what bugs me in the memory, the part I wish I could forget, is the cheap, black
polyester pants I wore every day. Why didn’t I spend another ten dollars for good pants and
get all –cotton which is far more comfortable? Instead I was itchy in polyester and it was my
own fault. All day driving in itchy pants.
My
life would be different if I had bought more comfortable pants. That small
memory haunts me, and a million other memories that I will bury under a pyramid
in the back yard as soon as I collect enough stones.
thank you,
Fred
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