Back in the leather saddle of a desk chair

Two things I’ve learned over the weekend:

  1. Never buy a Frenchman a bottle of wine, and
  2. Never buy a Sicilian a copy of the film, “The Princess Bride.”

More importantly, I’m beginning to wonder if the recent short episodes of fever/headache/sinus infection are related to the weeks…nay, months-old tick bite places on my legs that haven’t completely healed.

Most importantly, I’m glad I have my wife.  Despite our differences (she thinks of Gene Kelly when she hears “Singing In The Rain” and I think of Malcolm McDowell, which leads to the Malcolm Baldrige award and then to Malcolm Gladwell’s pop novels), she has my best health in her thoughts, or so her actions lead me to believe without question.

If only I could blame the tinnitus on tick bites.

Most Monday mornings, I’m rather depressed because the weekend had filled me with new personalities and their busy lives to ponder and compare my quiet Monday mornings to.

But then, in the middle of a dream last night, I was at some gathering and up walked my best friend in high school, Monica, her face covered in reddish-purple makeup that I just now realise was in the style of a character named Mystique in the film, “X-Men,” who reached up, rubbed my chin and shivered, rubbing her own smooth chin, saying, “You know I don’t like beard stubble,” and me apologising, saying, “I know, I meant to shave before I got here but didn’t.”

I suddenly remembered my moonlighting job as a stringer for the Huntsville Times covering high school sports in the mid-1990s and woke up.

I cannot be what I am not.  Or I can be what I was not but then I’m not what I was.

Then I remembered where I live, a great place for technology-centred people like me who can help people of all shapes and sizes, such as Zero Point Frontiers Corp.

And I opened my iPad to a lecture by the self-promoter, Noam Chomsky, on the obvious fact that democracy is merely a word to the U.S. socioeconomic condition.

Finally, for the first time in years, I sat down in the leather office chair to start writing this blog entry and was able to push myself back against the upright portion of the chair, thanks to the months and years of dance training by Joe, with more recent massage work by Abi, with dance instruction by her and by Jenn.

I don’t know how lucky I am.  I really don’t.

I wish I knew that people are as delicate and needful as I am for social interaction, rather than assuming I am the only one who’s afraid to speak my thoughts because I might sound weird and uninteresting to the uninitiated.

How, then, do I reconcile the difference between my wanting to say out loud that a particular piece of art or the artist’s work in general is not interesting to me because I have no connection to the style or message, and my fear that everyone will say the same thing to me at once and I will feel more alone, completely lonely, than ever?

Thoughts to ponder on a Monday morning!

 

Food and exercise, not necessarily in that order

Thanks to Terrance at Krystal, a brother in the right place at the right time; HSDS and the Rocket City Jazz Orchestra at the Flying Monkey; Stacy and William at Hardee’s.

If there’s anyone I’ve forgotten to thank lately, your face is in my thoughts filled with gratitude, such as Chyna at Best Buy.

Flat-footed

During my morning walk, passing through a wooded lane and out into former cotton/soybean/corn fields where I used to fly remote-controlled airplanes in winter, down the country road not far from old horse and emu farms turned into suburban tracts, the concrete slabs of sidewalk held bird droppings, algae, hardened footprints of a small dog and the label for a Sears brand lawnmower.

At six in the morning, cars and trucks rolled past, their occupants hidden from view.

Low clouds hung in the air as if to say, “We could have been fog if the air had been colder and more humid.”

Walking for 35 minutes, I met no other person walking or running.  I saw one jogger off in the distance.

I was left to my thoughts, the early morning haze of dim dreams and leftover conversational thought trails.

Have you ever been overcome by smoke?  Perhaps a campfire, a house on fire or chemical fogging?

Lack of sleep for months and years have turned me into a murky-minded zombie of sorts.

While people are dying while playing out their version of the Boston Massacre in Egyptian cities, I have the luxury of complaining about the lack of sleep.

Not a complaint, really.

Merely an observation about a snoring wife and cats who like to play musical chairs with beds and sofas at night.

After the walk, I returned home, kissed my wife on her way to work and showered, sitting down at my work desk, thinking about a friend who counseled my family during my father’s last days and penned the following note:

Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ:
After faith in Jesus Christ and loyalty to family and to church, I hold two other things dear — my memory and my integrity. Recent events have made me question the first, but I hope my integrity remains intact. Therefore I feel I must tell you what is going on with me.
Recently I have had several occasions where I have forgotten a meeting or forgotten to do something very important in the context of my ministry. Because of those two episodes, during my annual physical, I ask my physician to perform a mental acuity test. For the most part I passed with flying colors, but there was one glitch which “might” indicate something else is going on. My doctor is taking a “wait and see” attitude for this one.
Also as a part of the physical I was given several tests to measure depression and it was determined that I was “mildly clinically depressed.” My physician has elected for now to treat the depression without drugs; however, he feels, and I concur, that probably both my forgetfulness and my depression is the result of stress.
One bout of extreme stress when I was first called to Colonial Heights resulted in a series of physical events which could have been quite serious and still require medication. I hope this helps you understand why this current battle with stress must be taken very seriously.
My physician has written to Session with a prescription that I take a mandatory three weeks away from ministry; no worship preparation, no sermons, no classes, no visitation, no funerals, no phone calls, etc.  Quite honestly admitting to you and to myself that I have “hit the wall” with my stress levels at first produced even more stress than before; however one must “name the demon” if one is to get well. So here I am naming my demon and his/her/their name is stress. Now that I have actually named it “out loud” I feel a good bit better.
After talking with Session and staff I will be “away” and unavailable from July 29 through August 18. The only exceptions are two promised events one on July 30 and another on August 2. In the past I have never taken all my vacation/study leave/sabbatical time which may be why I am having this problem now. I still have vacation and study leave time as well as having never taken more than 4-5 days of sick leave in almost 10 years, so time away is not an issue.
Please, please do NOT allow my problem to cause any of you worry or consternation. While this can be serious, it is not life threatening, and with God’s help I will recover. I plan to be fully functioning in a few weeks and God willing, plan to continue to serve Colonial Heights Presbyterian Church for several years to come. Your prayers are always appreciated.
Yours in Christ, Tom

Tom had given his time unselfishly both while my father lay dying and after my father’s death so naturally there is a permanent bond between us just as there is a permanent bond to the man who married me to my wife.

I cracked open the Bible (Revised Standard Version) given to me by the Colonial Heights Presbyterian Church on September 26th, 1971, signed by the church pastor at the time, H. Reid Montgomery — nothing like having a real Scotsman for your Presbyterian minister to impress you as a child growing up in the church.

I immediately turned to the 23rd Psalm:

1 A Psalm of David. The LORD is my shepherd, I shall not want; 2 he makes me lie down in green pastures. He leads me beside still waters; 3 he restores my soul. He leads me in paths of righteousness for his name’s sake. 4 Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no evil; for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff, they comfort me. 5 Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of my enemies; thou anointest my head with oil, my cup overflows. 6 Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life; and I shall dwell in the house of the LORD for ever.

With that in my conscious thoughts, I wrote a letter of sympathy to Tom, asking him to let his stress-based depression be a gift rather than a burden.

During my walk and while writing, in my thoughts were remnants of a conversation last night between my wife, Guin and myself and a subsequent conversation between my wife and me about the previous conversation with Guin.

From an early age, I knew I was a socially-dependent person.

Even though my sister was a rival for my parents’ love, she was also a good companion to have because she followed me around and would do anything her big brother would.

She was a litmus test for my curiosity and courage.

When I was a teenager, I intercepted a note between a boy and girl in band class.  The boy said I was in love with her and the girl wrote back that it was no big deal because I would fall in love with anything and anyone, even a piece of shit.

I knew what she meant.  I have no filter for my love, accepting people for whomever they say they are or want to be, willing to overcome my subcultural conditioning and ignorance to determine their needs, helping to the best of my limited abilities.

As a person by myself, I have no needs, wants or expensive hobbies.  I have been happy for many years now spending most of the day at home without human contact, writing books, coining journal/blog entries (often in response to online news/comments) and piddling around in the yard/garage.

However, should a person come to the door, I’m like an eager dog wagging his tail, desirous of conversation and face-to-face body language communication.

My codependent tendencies, my desire to please others, has not been completely detrimental to my health but it has caused problems, such as when, through rewards and encouragement from coworkers and upper management, I would give my all to a company objective only to miss the fact that the company no longer needed my department, laying off my employees but keeping me, giving me headache-inducing survivor’s guilt.

My hearing loss and blinding headaches in the last few years have, according to my wife, affected my memory, just like Tom.

For me, the question of whether being a virtual caged animal in a marriage of diminishing returns (i.e., if marriage is a protective nest for procreation, what happens when the chances for offspring approach nil?) is par for the course for my personality traits and/or not healthy/normal has not been answered despite marriage counseling and psychologist/psychiatrist sessions back in the 1990s.

My wife told me it has not gone unnoticed that when she, Guin and I are in conversation, Guin and I tend to mimic each other’s movements, as if Guin and I are two codependent personalities feeding off each other.

Guin is about the same height as my sister, with very similar body features — brown hair and medium athletic build.

She is athletic like my sister, like I thought my wife was when we got married, who went camping and hiking with me for several years before she admitted she’d rather stay at a hotel or B&B in the mountains than hike to a mountaintop and sleep in a bag on hard ground, her clothes and hair smelling badly like campfire smoke on the way back to our house late Sunday evenings, requiring a late-night shower instead of much-needed sleep.  I admit that I hike less than I used to, replacing hikes with suburban walks/jogs, like substituting cotton candy for nutritious fruits and veggies.

Because my memory loss has increased, I have fully adopted the writer’s slogan, “Never let the truth get in the way of a good story.”

Or better yet, maybe a fake quote by Mark Twain would apply better here: “During my recent European excursion, I spoke to a man named Freud who was convinced that all of man’s thoughts and actions are based on sex. He’s obviously never met Mrs. Twain.”

In any case, my wife says that I have gotten into the habit of making up what she said to me, wishing she had access to a voice recorder that could play back what she really said in a conversation versus what I twisted and reworked into a personally-entertaining blog entry or short story.

So, what is the truth?  Why do I enjoy dancing with Guin in ways unimaginable with my wife?  In Mars’ gravity, for instance.

Is it simply the recognition of a similar thought set in another person, eager to let thoughts and ideas take off exponentially/logarithmically as if there is no tomorrow because after you’ve been in a life-threatening automobile smashup and seen Death, shaking his cold hand and smelling his bad breath, you embrace life because you know there is no promise for a tomorrow on this planet?

Is that why I have a burning desire to see myself in writing at least once day, virtually screaming to the world “I’m not dead yet!”

Would I dance every night until they turn off the lights if I had the chance?

Would dancing for hours completely flatten out my feet like marathon training/running used to do?

If there is no tomorrow, hadn’t I better answer these questions today?

Phrase of the day

Best line last night: “Welcome to Cheers…” where, “guys, it’s not always about what’s in your pants.”

Time to think about the honeydo list before designing/building a sculpture.

We learned briefly last night a short lesson in dancing from Chris, whose 25-year dance instructing career included working at a Fred Astaire dance studio when all male teachers had to wear a three-piece suit. Now Chris wears blue jeans.

Thanks to Abi for her encouraging words during our hourlong lesson.

Advice to a small world

So what can I say? In a town full of suits, my wife and I walk into an office building on the square (where it’s hip to be square) and meet, much to our surprise, Kelly Moise, investment advisor for Dryden, Bound & Associates, also wife of Patrick, a new friend of ours.

Great to know that Kelley has finished several marathons which she compared to giving birth — you don’t remember the pain of the last one until you’re well-committed to the next.

We look forward to securing our financial future.

In the meantime, we enjoy good food and drink at Below The Radar Brewhouse, thx to George and the crew.

Redirected thought patterns

Weeks (months?) ago, I deactivated my Facebook account, removing myself from the habit of reading posts about the lives and daily habits of close to a thousand people, a few I’ve known since early childhood and several hundred I got to know during my secondary school day over 30 years ago.

Before that, I had taken a few social media holidays, not checking Facebook/LinkedIn for weeks at a time, but found myself returning because of the temptation to click on an app icon or scroll through my list of favorite Web links for personal entertaining distractions.

I have missed some of my Facebook friends because I do not see them in my life except through social media contacts.  Some of them said they have missed me, too.

This morning, while bemoaning the fact my wife was once again too tired last night to stay and dance at the nightclub after our West Coast Swing dance lesson, aching for someone to dance with but even our feline companions too wrapped up in their catnaps to play with me, I desire conversation with anyone, in any form, to feed my need for social contact.

What’s the point of planning a trip to Mars, with the major deadline 13421 days ahead, if I won’t assert myself when my needs clash with my wife’s?

She, like many other patrons at the nightclub, works in a day job.

She, like many others at the nightclub, have experienced tragedies in their lives that weigh heavily on their thought sets at the most inopportune times.

At a moment like this, I remember again the advice that Wilma in the Finance department of our local GE office gave me.

Wilma had called me to ask why I had exceeded the customary number of sick days for the previous quarter.

I explained to her that my wife had not been feeling well lately and wanted me to stay home with her on those days, in order to make her feel better.

Wilma told me it was a sign of weakness on both my wife’s and my part to facilitate the behaviour of a female spouse feeling sick and wanting her husband to care for her, taking both of them away from their social duties as active/useful employees of respectable companies.

Wilma, a spinster/bachelorette who liked going to nightclubs to see male strip shows, said that as an older woman, even if she’d never been married, she knew a thing or two about the way women will try to manipulate and control men.

She felt I was too easily giving in to my wife’s subtle control of the marriage.

That was in the late 1980s, early in my marriage.

Fast-forward nearly 25 years later and here I sit, remembering what one of the ladies with whom I danced briefly as our dance instructor had us rotate partners during the dance lesson said to me last night.

The beautiful brunette, wearing a dark-coloured dress that complemented her figure, looked me in the eye after we had struggled through a new dance move and said, before I started to say I must have messed up, “I can’t blame what just happened on you because a lady never blames a man for mistakes on the dance floor.  I will say it was either my fault or neither of our faults.”

Talk about boosting my ego!

In return, I offered that we try the move again.

It was in stark contrast to the previous attempt, much smoother.

It was in stark contrast to what I have often heard my wife say, “You didn’t do this” or “You didn’t do that,” expecting me to be more like the dance instructor in his suave, nearly-perfect dance leadership.

However, my wife is getting better at not putting the struggles to complete a dance move solely at my feet, thanks in part to our instructors pointing out that my wife has equal responsibility to dance her steps correctly so that I don’t have to overcompensate when I sense she is not following my lead.

I have much to learn in my pedestrian life apart from the thoughts of Martian exploration, technology experimentation and searching the world for someone with whom I can carry on a meaningful conversation.

Or maybe, as my parents told me when I was a kid, I just think too much.