…’tis the season…
Author Archives: treetrunkrick
Come here, hon. Is love wrong?
Bai checked her Fitbit stats on the laptop screen. “I’m 60 calories over my limit for the day. But wait — your massage will cause me to burn those off. I’ve got to eat something. Hmm…”
“How about…?”
“A piece of bread.”
“Toast? With tofu?”
“What?”
“Yeah, like what you brought to the studio.”
Bai pulled a cellophane-wrapped square of yellow-orange American cheese out of the fridge and folded a slice of bread into half a cheese sandwich, the cellophane (Mr. Cellophane, do you know my name?) disappearing ritually yet unceremoniously into the rubbish bin.
Almost blending into the futon, Bai’s assistant, Aluar, looked up from her tablet PC. “Hi, Lee.”
Lee waved. “Want some moonshine?”
“No, thanks.” She poked her Scotty dog asleep beside her. “Wakey, wakey! You aren’t going to fall asleep on me now and want to play in the middle of the night.”
Bai padded the folding massage table. “Okay, Lee, I’m ready. Lie on your back.” She turned from Lee to Alaur. “And you can start packing bags for my six a.m. departure and worry about your dog later.”
“When do I get my massage?”
“Sorry I’m running late, but I’ll get you both in, I promise.”
George stood up. “I’ll see you guys later.”
Bai looked disappointed. “You aren’t staying for a movie.”
“Naw. I’ve got something else going on.”
Lee leaned up from the table. “Tell her I said hello.”
“Sure. Thanks. See ya.”
Bai leaned her face in toward Lee’s, purposefully moving closer until she’d satisfactorily broken through his personal zone, Lee unable to push his head deeper into the folding table’s mat. “Are you ready?”
Lee looked into Bai’s dark eyes, her chin a few inches from his, smelling her breath, her body wash, the dye in her hair, telling himself, alone with two women on a cold night, his hands and wrists aching, chilled to the bone, his body cooling down after a group dance lesson, that Bai’s first admonition she gave him the moment they met in the merry month of May, that it wasn’t always about his male thoughts and what was in his pants.
What was in his pants?
His jeans pockets were empty.
Lee wanted to pull Bai closer, taste her breath, feel her lips on his, his hand holding the stiff violet locks of hair on the back of her head as they tested the internal magic of a new dance.
Lee sensed a deep happiness in Bai that had been missing the last time they shared this position three weeks before.
She all but begged him to stay, having just heard her gentle boyfriend yell at her on the phone from Paris. She had wanted comfort, to be held for two or three hours, seeking solace in the company of a man she could trust.
Lee didn’t always understand women, although he had gotten the hint Bai was hurting when she banged around the kitchen, insisting Lee stay until she had started supper, thrashing through the fridge’s freezer compartment to find a large frozen length of turkey sausage which she proceeded to scald in a frying pan, torturing the meat with a spatula in ways that made Lee more fearful than usual of his dominatrix dance partner, massage therapist and friend.
When Lee said he probably should go, Bai looked at him with reddened eyes that opened her thoughts to him, a view he hadn’t seen with another woman in years.
She had been in severe pain.
Lee knew what that meant.
Bai was vulnerable.
Lee, ever sympathetic, even empathetic, sometimes pathetic, prefix unneeded, wanted to stay.
He wasn’t sure what held him in place like a statue, just as he’d been the first time he played spin the bottle at age ten, the times backstage in high school when girls wanted his hugs, which he gave, disappointed he didn’t know he was supposed to kiss them, too, all the way up to a recent visit with a former college girl friend who lived alone, invited him inside, and kissed him on the lips as a dare, shocked when Lee continued to hold her but broke away the kiss in a sense of…what did he convince himself it was…propriety? Respect? Fear?
Lee stood at the door that night as Bai gave him one last lost puppy dog look and wanted to kick himself for carrying in his thoughts the subcultural training that all but forbid him staying a few more minutes in close proximity with the woman he wholly trusted with his body.
His will had been strong before but he hadn’t been arm-in-arm for hours, or stretched out on a massage table with those women.
Lee didn’t kid himself. He knew polyamorous relationships were unique, intertwined, complicated, unfettered by time or pretense.
But his wife wasn’t polyamorous, he reminded himself, preferring one man, him, for her dance partner.
Lee had started keeping a secret journal, secure from the analytics and prying eyes of computer networks, in which he documented his innermost feelings, compartmentalising his thoughts, pulling apart his blended self, creating a schizophrenic existence that twisted space and time.
In the journal, he wrote to himself about his true desires, his true self not typed for the sake of a global audience composed of strangers, friends and family whom he did not want to offend with his personal opinions that, like noses, mostly smelled.
In the journal, he tasked himself to design one or more futures that branched from the one currently on track.
Lee looked at the details of Bai’s face looming over him, her lips so close to his chin he couldn’t see them.
Lee knew with his worsening hearing loss came memory store-and-recall changes, his sense of reality shifting outside of “normal” spacetime, his fiction masking facts in favour of a good storyline.
Lee couldn’t remember how much Bai had whispered in his ear as she began to massage his right shoulder because he couldn’t hear what she was saying.
An incantation? A prayer?
He only knew she had put a spell on him for life.
She did not have to wear her public face for him.
The whispers echoed a day later. “I want you to relax. I want you to be mine for as long as I say this time, all right? You cannot control every moment of your life. You are my experiment and will have to deal with it. You say you love me, then you say you hate me, but you keep coming back for more, like everyone else, don’t you?”
Lee closed his eyes. Bai brushed his face with a finger and Lee involuntarily shook his head. “Sorry. I’m trying not to flinch.”
“That’s okay.”
Her face still lined with his, Lee admitted with words what he could not fully articulate emotionally, either alone with Bai or in the presence of her assistant. “I do love you, you know?”
She nodded. “I hear what you’re saying.”
They both left what was unsaid as a small cushion between them.
Lee felt Bai wince. She rubbed her right pinky finger where her fingernail had fallen off.
Right after he had left her flat that night three weeks before, Bai was emotionally distraught, torn up over the argument with her French boyfriend and rejection by Lee the same night.
She closed the door, hearing Lee bound down the outside stairwell. Then, unstable on her feet, she stumbled across the room, reaching out for a doorway and falling, jamming the top edge of her fingernail into a doorway, tearing the root of the nail and peeling it back, the nail attached to her finger by two hangnail points.
“I’m sorry [I wasn’t there for you when you needed me most,” Lee finished saying with the intonation of his voice].
“That’s okay [there’ll be time to make up for it in the future,” Bai finished saying with her eyes as she kissed her sore pinky finger].
To be continued…
Readers plead, “don’t retire, we want retreads…and Keds for kids and goats!”
Lee looked up through the cathedral windows of his modified ranch house, the cobwebs cupping leaves like babes in cradles.
The outside temperature stabilised just above the freezing point of water.
Lee thought back to the previous night, trying to separate fact from fiction.
His wife working the night shift, he made his way over to Bai’s flat after an hour or more on the dance floor with new instructors Maelzel and Katerina a married couple who taught Lee the nuances of ’40s Charleston.
He recalled muscle memories, the light touch of Katerina’s waist on his fingertips as they performed the barn door and mirror moves. He ran his internal eyes through visual images stored like a video recording her long, red hair, sculpted eyebrows and dance style that made her look like she floated on air, a graceful double-jointed marionette.
Her green eyes were well-hidden mysteries she shared most often with Marvel, doling out eye contact to Lee with private, reserved purposes.
Maelzel stretched his arms in the air like with happiness, seeing his partner enjoying the dance lesson.
Lee walked into Bai’s flat.
He carried Christmas presents for her.
Her flatmate, George, opened the door and smiled, inviting Lee in.
“Bai’s not here.”
“No problem. I can wait. I brought some moonshine, if you want some.”
They clinked glasses. “Cheers!”
After two heavy shots of the peach liquor, Lee heard Abi arrive.
Looking cute but sexy, Bai walked in wearing a short skirt and cap made from the same lime-and-pink Argyll-patterned sweater. She removed the cap and tossed it on the sofa with her ivory wool coat. Her hair, freshly-dyed purple and still wet but drying, was pulled back with barrettes.
“Hey, Lee.”
His silly grin crossed his face. “Hey. Want some moonshine?”
“No thanks. I’m on a 24-day cleansing diet. What do you think?”
She spun around on her toes.
Lee’s heart skipped a beat. He thought Bai was really going to kill him one day…like a moth to the proverbial flame, he was…
He nodded. “You’re slimmer. Your waistline looks great!”
“Good. Let me change and I’ll be ready to work on you.”
To be continued…
Retiring this blog
Every so often, I retire a blog and move on, creating a new thought set for myself to explore the universe in the only way this humble set of states of energy can.
This is my last entry in this blog.
Thanks to those of you who stopped by to glance at another person’s writing. I appreciate your kindness and generosity.
Affluence is not just for the wealthy
Talking to myself again
Today is one of those days when I just sit here and wait to die. Not the first and won’t be the last.
We all experience (enjoy/suffer) changes.
Recently, a spate of three events caused a significant change in my way of thinking:
- I appeared in my first Internet video (in fact, it was the first time I had participated in any form of video chat (e.g., Skype) not associated with a corporate conference call) in which I was asked to and got to say whatever I wanted to an international audience,
- Abi gave me a deep-tissue massage during which I might have asphyxiated on the massage table, my heart going into arrhythmia and my body shivering uncontrollably, and
- I had my annual physical examination where an EKG showed an abnormality within a few days of participating in a charity party where whiskey/whisky tasting was the main event.
A subsequent fourth event — following in my father’s footsteps as a legacy — added to the change.
I live for the thrill of change, no matter how small or large — a change in composition of air molecules in the space around me or a major shift in the sociopolitical environment.
But the thrill is only important enough when I have two components to rely upon — an imaginary reader and imaginary/real girlfriend(s).
If I don’t have the last two, no change is significant enough to keep my heart beating.
When I was on the massage table and Abi was working out knots in my muscles, my esophagus was pressed closed while my face was pushed into the hole/opening of the massage table. Between the seemingly excruciating pain of Abi breaking the knots apart, my breathing cut off and my trying to divert the primal male ego from working through its usual passing thoughts of sexual fantasies, I entered a trance, a set of thoughts that I have been trying to understand, let alone explain to you or me, since then.
For a span of time that couldn’t have been more than a few minutes, maybe even a few seconds, my personality disappeared and I did not exist.
In what I can only describe as a body forgetting how to breath, its heart forgetting how to beat, my core self, down to the medulla oblongata itself, briefly merged or tried to align with Abi’s.
I can describe closely similar feelings: getting in synch on the dance floor with a dance partner, reaching simultaneous orgasms with a sexual partner, taking hallucinogenic material with friends, cheering jointly with 100,000 fellow fans when your team scores a last-second victory.
However, not a single one of those is close enough to what happened to me that day in Abi’s flat.
That alone would be enough to send me into psychological fits akin to psychosis.
But then I also got to express in five to seven minutes during an Internet presentation a life’s worth of opinions in my description of a robotic art piece, opening a virtual pressure valve and releasing all of my pent-up emotions/thoughts about the ultimate futility of technological innovation in relation to our species’ place in the universe.
That alone would suffice to drop me into silence the rest of my life.
The whiskey/whisky tasting proved to me that my days of heavy drinking should be, for the sake of any desire for longterm physical fitness and/or long life, behind me.
The physical exam confirmed all of the above — great cholesterol levels associated with exercise and happiness (due in part to love for my virtual girlfriends fictionalised into characters named Guin and Bai) but an abnormal heart rhythm because I had, in a way, achieved my life’s work.
I believe I know now why some people die within months of retiring from their life’s work — their thoughts aren’t trying to the rest of their bodies to stay healthy or aren’t pushed to work beyond their normative capabilities anymore.
I once had a girlfriend who said that the ultimate experience for her, when she could say she was ready to die happy, would be to sit next to someone without touching and the two of them simultaneously think themselves to an orgasm, meaning that she had melded her thoughts with someone which was important to her because she often felt alone in her thoughts.
We discussed how a mental relationship with a deity is supposed to feel the same way except she couldn’t because she didn’t think of God in sexual terms, even if the person next to her was supposed to be one of God’s creations, thus an extension of God and, by proxy, God physically manifested,
When I lost myself in the presence of Abi, it went beyond the physical, beyond the sexual, into something new.
Something good but at the same time scary…
Wordless…
Emotionless…
…like a window opened onto the eternal infinity of the universe without our species’ memes getting in the way.
I have no idea what to do with the rest of my life!!!!!!!
Humbled by social connections
Thanks to Cheryl, hostess, cashier, “busboys”, and kitchen at Gibson’s BBQ; Jackson Centre workers, DJ, and Christmas party organisers; Linda at Walmart; Ciera, Amanda, Jennifer and Lexi at Cuts By Us; Michael’s; Lowe’s.





