Week 9, Day 5

8 09 2009

& thus another long & strange day of being lived by The Bailey Sisters draws to a close!  I hardly know where to begin.  I could tell you where I end: on a pile of cushions underneath my mother’s dining room table.  But how did I get here?  Let me turn back the clock & lead you by hand.

I woke up this morning to Jess on the phone.  “I’ll be outside at nine!” she told me.

“Yes, of course!” I responded cheerily, reflexively hiding the fact that she’d just woken me up.  WHY was she calling me before 7:00am?  As I hung up I saw the time on my cell phone.  8:47!  So it looks like my alarm didn’t go off after all.

Somehow I made it out the door.  Bella was very excited that we were about to go on a long trip but her face when I reached the door & begin to leave without her nearly killed me!  I could hear her mournful wails in the elevator.  But Jess will have taken her for a walk tonight.

only destiny is awake

only destiny is awake

Stumbled into the car (I’ll buy Jess breakfast another day) & began the drive to the Horseshoe Bay Ferries.  Today I was supposed to travel with 1. the soundtrack provided by the Bailey sisters.  The soundtrack turned out to be silence.  & the occasional song + static on Jess’ car radio.  It’s ok.  It lent an air of reality to the whole thing.

Fortunately I made it.  Did Jess come with me?  No.  The Coin of Destiny had determined that I would 2. travel alone.  Travel alone I did, bleary-eyed & unbathed as any decent hobo.

Once on the ferry, I 3. flipped the Coin to see if I could have Coke for breakfast.  NO.  4. Coke with breakfast? YES!  Well, what do you know.

I 3. ate out on the ferry, not sure if I’d have a chance on the island.  There’s a photograph of the meal for evidence, but do you really want to see a picture of a tray of egg & toast?  The most exciting part is the big paper cup of Coca-Cola.  Boy does that stuff make my heart sing.

After a few bites of mystery meat & so forth, I headed to the top deck.  Where I pondered things.

i should be wearing a yellow pantsuit

i should be wearing a yellow pantsuit

Then I found a seat & (rather sheepishly) 4. consulted the I Ching to see which 5. Radio Lab podcast I should listen to.

sixteen going on seventeen

sixteen going on seventeen

Well I got Hexagram 16 (Following) with the variable Hexagram 17 (Providing). The answer is clear, right?

“Choice.”  That’s what I listened to.  It was good & relevant in a way my notes on it aren’t.  It lasted just as long as the ferry ride.  Then I got off the ferry.

On the way up the gangplank or whatever it’s called I flipped the Coin again.

  • Do you think because I’m in Nanaimo, the Nanaimo bars are extra good? (NO)

Eventually I encountered my mother, who greeted me by doing what she soon explained was 6. a goldfish dance.  Intriguing.  & very strange.   That wasn’t my plan for “goldfish” but it seemed to be destiny.  I decided to keep her goldfish dance as a back-up.

On the drive over, I faced a barrage of decisions.  Did I want to go horseback riding?  Which of the following seven restaurants did I want to eat at?  & what about Christmas plans? Did I want to drive a few hours for oysters?  Sit in the front seat?  So many decisions!  I politely refused to make any of them, & things calmed down a little.  Though accidental attempts to force me into decision-making did recur on occasion throughout the day.  If I flipped a coin for each of the options my mother gave me, I’d probably be floating in a hot air balloon somewhere over Mexico right now.

Just how do you think I got where I am today?

We ate out again.  At a pub.  For lunch.

Eventually, we arrived at my mother’s home.  She headed out with her husband to buy a trillion oysters & I, after coordinating some things for the project, (& seeing a friend’s post on facebook about a sick goldfish getting an injection at a fish hospital in India!) took the family station wagon out to 7. Qualicum to see the Free Spirit Spheres.

I traveled alone & in silence.  As specified by The Coin.  Oh I also had a 8. lighter in my pocket.

I got lost, but only a little.  Isn’t it nice out there?

HESITATE

HESITATE

That’s me turning around.

oh, bother

oh, bother

I eventually found the spheres but, as I suspected, no visitors without appointments.  My fault? No. 9. wasn’t allowed to make reservations so I wheeled back around.  But someday I’d like to go stay in those spheres.  They sound interesting.

Disappointed?  Remember what they tell you on inspirational posters.  It’s about the _______, not the ___________.

& this was a journey full of interesting private revelations.

On the way back I picked up a bottle of wine for dinner & remembered I had to flip for a 10. either/or directive set provided by one of my commenters.

I selected Ben Trafford’s, & ended up with HEADS.

why, kissing is gross?

why, kissing is gross?

I have to 11. tell you why I think kissing is gross.

I believe I said something to that effect on Twitter a long time ago?

Anyway, kissing is gross, I don’t just think it is.  The human mouth is absolutely filthy, much filthier than a dog’s mouth, & it’s a little strange that people like to put their mouths on each other’s mouths & lick each other’s tongues.  Did they always do that?  Before dental hygiene?  I certainly hope not.

I like to think they call it French kissing because the English didn’t do it at all until recently.

However, just because I think kissing is gross doesn’t mean I don’t enjoy it on occasion.  You don’t kiss with your brain, you know.

Satisfied? Titillated? I wouldn’t be, but to each his own.  Next!

Several hours later, I was back in my mother’s home. On 12. the water.

not pictured: shoes, ships, sealing wax

not pictured: shoes, ships, sealing wax

She’d returned with an absolute bounty of oysters!   Five dozen, to be precise.  First, her husband put some on the grill.

(Cover your eyes, Ptolemy! I’m about to have a wholesome good time).

So I ate a barbecued one.  I hope you don’t get fired for looking at a picture of it:

oh dear.

oh dear.

Then I set to work shucking.  I’ve never done it before but I became very good very quickly!  I think I may have found my calling.  I only cut myself once.  I prised open an oyster & told it “HA! Serves you right for being an oyster.”  & then it cut my hand.  I was very proud of it.

gluttony is its own reward

gluttony is its own reward

The oyster, not my hand.

I asked the coin if I should pick one of these three to release into the wild.

tails. sorry guys.

tails. sorry guys.

So I ate 36 oysters.  A dozen for each Bailey sister.  Proud?

& then tucked into a dinner of steak.

I flipped The Coin periodically throughout the day in several minor, uninteresting situations.  Eg., on the theme of steak “Should I put Tabasco on?” So you get the point.

After dinner, we explored the obedience of the dog by balancing meat on his paws & cheese on his head.

there's got to be more than this

there's got to be more than this

Then it was time to 13. Go camping.

The video is rather long, but full of voyeuristic delights. & I think you should see the kind of ingenuity that runs in the family.

After my tent was set up, I went for a walk along the ocean.

As for my date tomorrow? I’m flipping now.

  • no makeup
  • indoor
  • pants
  • hair down
  • booze
  • smoke
  • don’t talk about project
  • goldfish

As for Vancouver, should I go back in the morning or afternoon? (MORNING.  noooooooo.)

Once I’m done with this entry, I’ll go to the water again.  I’m supposed to do something involving a 14. poem, I believe.  I’ll attempt to write out there.  But if that fails, I’ll recite something.

Then? To bed:

q. did you hear about the fire at the circus? a. it was in tents

q. did you hear about the fire at the circus? a. it was in tents





Week 8, Day 2

28 08 2009

I’m writing this entry just before sunset, on a wooden deck on the edge of a cliff overlooking the ocean.  I’m surrounded by pine & arbutus trees & the occasional mosquito, 1. sipping a glass of the wine we picked up at the vineyard today & watching the hawks as Bella noses around the moss & paving stones.

I learned it from watching you

I learned it from watching you

Nicely done, Allyson!

We left this morning for the 2. 11:35 ferry to Salt Spring Island, picking up some sandwiches for lunch along the way.

Counter-clockwise, from left: ginger beer, coconut water, ham & cheese, roast beef, salt & vinegar

Clockwise, from left: ginger beer, coconut water, ham & cheese, roast beef, salt & vinegar

It was a two hour ferry ride, but the scenery out here is beautiful, as most of you probably know.  Mountains, covered in pine trees, rising straight out of the (very calm) ocean.  Pleasant weather, a cloudy sky.  While on the ferry, I entertained myself by 3. making little pen sketches of things I saw (four sketches in total, none of them very good, as passengers tend to move around & the view passes quite quickly).  Later this week, I will 4. Mail them to Allyson in her Lived By care package.

Then we entertained ourselves by reading until we arrived. TD brought five books, among them Massacre at Montsegur: A History of the Albigensian Crusade.  But on the ferry he opted for lighter fare: King Leopold’s Ghosts.  I stuck to Colette.

Don't you think the Clinton's should have been at Ted Kennedy's funeral?

Don't you think the Clintons should have been at Ted Kennedy's funeral?

Salt Spring Island seemed like a very cheerful place, more developed than Galiano.  We passed many little bakeries & fishmongers & more than one vineyard.  Also several sweet-looking B&B’s.  It’s a shame we only had an hour on the island!  It would’ve been nice to spend a whole day there.  There was so much we would have liked to see (& eat!  Like oysters!)  Maybe someday.

After getting lost (but only a little) we arrived at 4. the Salt Spring Vineyard. It was so picturesque!  The little street outside it was dripping with blackberries.  There was live music playing as we approached & I 5. made a recording with my iPhone. Mostly, you just hear gravel crunching under our feet, but I’m sure that lends an air of authenticity to it all.  I’ll 6. e-mail that to Allyson later tonight.

I could feel Allyson getting excited

I could feel Allyson getting excited

The vineyard itself was quaint & beautiful.  Two little boys played with a golden retriever in front of a pond with some white ducks.

We headed in, where we were not treated very kindly by the college kid manning the bar.  The large older woman in a stained shirt with gaping armholes that revealed her green lace bra was even less pleasant (perhaps they smelled the American on us?).  That soured things, but only a little!  Our surroundings were so pleasant that not much could dampen our moods.

Quaintastic.

Quaintastic.

We sipped four varieties of wine, then 7. bought one (plus one) bottle(s) of the best one, a red of some kind.  We also picked up a truffle goat cheese & a container of olive tapenade.  I was dying to try the blackberry port, but they only sample four wines a day.  Didn’t want to shell out for a wine I hadn’t tasted!  There was no love lost as we said our goodbyes to the proprietors.

Soon this shirt will be irreparably stained by blackberries

Soon this shirt will be irreparably stained by blackberries

I will 8. mail the label from one of the bottles to Allyson later this week.

As you can see, I also 9. posted two pictures of our surroundings.

I picked some blackberries while TD took the car around.  They were PERFECT.

I'd post a picture of me picking, but it isn't pretty.

I'd post a picture of me picking, but it isn't pretty.

Then we wheeled back towards the ferry.  We had enough time to stop in town for a loaf of bread & a couple local figs.  Then we 10. caught the 3:55 ferry by the skin of our teeth.  & enjoyed a much shorter ride home, eating some bread with tapenade & discussing Satanist weddings, among other things.

Once home, we 11. took Bella for a nice long walk. It’s true, she was sad about being cooped up in the cabin all day (she loves Galiano above all else), but I think we made it up to her.  She was treated to woods, rocks, & the ocean.  & she also enjoyed licking some raw egg off the rocks.

[In the bar, I've tried over ten times to upload the final two photos, but it's simply not working!  Island wireless is unreliable, what can I say?  You'll miss a scenic shot of a man in a blue sweatshirt & a big black dog leaning together on a rock as they look out onto the ocean's horizon as well as a shot of aforementioned dog running toward you down a wooded cliffside path with a large tree on the right jutting over the ocean.]

It feels nice to be done by 8:00!  We’re about to head out to dinner & internet now.  I’m looking forward to a pleasant meal, liberally spiced with hostile glances from the island hippies who look at me tapping away on my MacBook with distinct distaste wherever I go [edit: it's all happening, man].  Do they know, I wonder, that it’s all in the name of ART?

TD is getting sick, unfortunately & of course, so I’m not sure if we’ll do anything tooooo fun.  But if we do, I’ll be sure to 12. tell Allyson about it.

Tomorrow, after accomplishing my Day 3 directives, we will head back to Vancouver so TD can convalesce in a more civilized environment.  The Chancellor, too, will be very happy to see us.  He has probably been sharpening his claws on the antique furniture to punish us for being gone.  Still, we (TD, Allyson, Bella & I) have had a wonderful vacation so far.

Also, I’ve found the keys!  They were under a telephone.





Week 7, Day 7

26 08 2009

Wow!  Final day of being lived by Fernando, guys.  I got everything accomplished, much as I always do, though I have yet to have read, have dinner, write for an hour, & go for a final walk.   I won’t bore you with the details as I’m on an island in the middle of nowhere with a half hour of wireless access in a restaurant about to close!  So I’ll stick to the most interesting things.  Today oatmeal just doesn’t make the cut.

BRUSH HARDER!

BRUSH HARDER!

TD woke early & took the dog for a walk.  Came back & brushed her as I ate my oatmeal.  She’s going through her late summer shed.  Plenty of fun, I assure you.  Then watched Viridiana — at first thought I hated it (it’s not exactly a morning movie. Is ANY movie?  Why, Fernando, did you have me watch all these movies in the morning?), but then I realized it wasn’t the movie, just the main actress.  I actually liked the movie very much.

Then I did the most interesting project-related thing of the day: I ate 6 slices of bacon as a low-carb snack.

We went for a walk.  On assignment, of course.  I wrote, in a public place, the word “HI” with my finger on TD’s back.  Check, check, check, I lose track of my own gold stars over time, people.

Then ate some lunch (seared tuna appetizer & a glass of pinot blanc for me; tomato soup, bread, & beer for my carb-loving gentleman caller).

We headed to the car rental place, which was ludicrously expensive, I won’t budget it in.  It will come out of my own pocket.  I mean my pocket & the project’s pockets are one.  But I’m hoping some kind donor will bail me out if I fall too hard towards the end of the year.

Can I keep you?

Can I keep you?

Our car was parked in spot 13.  Uh oh!

Then we got some supplies & raced to catch the ferry.

Made it!  Made it straight to lane 13.

Farewell happy fields

Farewell happy fields

After a very enjoyable twilight ferry ride, passed this restaurant.  Open!  They are open late tonight, for some reason.

But closing as we speak!  Run over to the weekly schedule, I’m about to put up our very own ashroyer’s!  She’s living vicariously though me starting tomorrow.  Her bio & video will be up tomorrow, when I’m not working with such a tight external deadline!

Sleep well all.  Or good morning.





Week 7, Day 6

26 08 2009

Today was my first good day of being lived by Fernando.  I’m not sure what it is.  The company?  The light at the end of the tunnel?  Or the inevitable resignation to the week which comes, each week, by Monday?  Anyway, friends, it was good.  Or good enough.

I woke up early, as usual, but had to 1. stay in bed until 10:40 (up late with Jess [P] I didn’t make it to bed until 2:40 last night).  I find when I’m confined to bed until a particular hour, I experience a much greater sense of impotence than I did when “paralysed” & confined to a wheelchair, as in Week 6.  I tossed & turned, & read some of the Nicholson Baker book I picked up recently.

Then arose.  Did some light housework while Jess was in the shower & then made some tea for her (hot 2. water for me) & chatted before she left for lunch.

Jess, artfully backlit.

Jess, artfully backlit.

As she prepared to leave, I 3. prepared my breakfast of oatmeal.  By now you know the drill.  I 4. added some blueberries as it was cooking & then 5. sweetened the whole mess with honey.  Said my goodbyes to Jess & got on the phone with a future participant (not to give too much away, but it involves a vineyard!).

Meanwhile, Bella finished my mostly uneaten oatmeal.

Mairzy doats & dozy doats

Mairzy doats & dozy doats

Then I waited… & waited… & waited for Braden to arrive so we could 6. watch La jetée/Sans soleil.

Just as I gave up & started the movie(s) he arrived.  We had a grand old time with the films.

They seemed a little dull at first & throughout. I eventually liked the first one very much.  The second one made me awfully sleepy, & there was a particularly horrible moment in which I had to watch a dying giraffe with spurts of blood coming out of the gunshot wounds on either side of its neck.  That woke me up a little.

By the time the second film ended (& it seemed interminably long) I realized that the movie was not boring, exactly.  Rather, it so closely approximated a dream state that it was impossible not to feel very sleepy as it was going on.  I can’t say I exactly enjoyed watching it, but after it was over I felt I was in a heightened state of consciousness.  I’ve never seen a film quite like it before.  Nor a film quite like the other one (composed almost entirely of still snapshots & a voiceover).  Each worked within an entirely unfamiliar genre & I was certainly improved by watching them.  It’s hard to explain, though I’m sure I could do it if I wasn’t so tired right now.  If you’re curious, I recommend that you watch them for yourselves.

Bella & Braden fell into deep post-Sans Soleil slumber.

Bella & Braden fell into deep post-Sans soleil slumber.

I 7. Read the booklet that came with the DVD.  I liked it much better than the other one.  There was a short interview with Chris Marker (the director) & I appreciated his refreshing snarkiness.

Woke up Braden, & began my long 8. walk to the 7-11.  Then we sat in a park, where I was to 9. Write whatever came to mind. Prompted by Sans soleil, I decided to write a list of the first 10 things I saw which “quickened the heart.” I would have liked to take corresponding photographs, as it seemed only right, but I’d left my phone at home, sadly.  Here’s the list.

  1. glint of bearded man’s septum piercing
  2. pigeon coasting on an updraft
  3. brown water moving over green tile inset in stone moat of fountain
  4. tree with a knot in it, small manageable size
  5. congregation of pigeons bathing on ledge of fountain
  6. skull patch on arm of sweatshirt belonging to 1. as he leaves park
  7. my shoelaces are still too long (I always appreciate this extravagance on part of designer)
  8. shadows of pigeons on blue, sky-colored wall
  9. long ears of Wiemaraner disappearing behind wall of red flowers, smoke coming out of owner’s nostrils
  10. airplane noise? passing train? buses.  like movement of wind over mouth of cave/breath over neck of a bottle

So there, I’ve 10. posted what I wrote.

Then I went home, where I prepared my 11. no-carb lunch.  It’s an exciting new take on cucumber sandwiches.  I cut open a cucumber & scraped the seeds out, then put a can of tuna in the middle.  With some seasoning & mayonnaise for good measure, of course.

Curiouser. & curiouser.

Curiouser. & curiouser.

I ate this bizarre concoction.  I 12. took my time, enjoyed it.

Then, after some more Nicholson Baker, I read a random page from 13. Luis Cernuda’s Written in Water. The poem was “Time.”  The final paragraph of the poem reads:

There, in the absolute silence of summer, underscored by the murmuring water, my eyes open to the clear half-darkness that heightens the mysterious life of things, I saw how time can hold still, suspended in air, like the cloud that conceals a god, pure and weightless, never passing.

Quite appropriate.  It encapsulated the strange sensory experience I’d been having since the movies ended very nicely. Right down to the murmuring water.

I went about my chores.

Then I finished my (somewhat pornographic) Nicholson Baker book on the couch.  As soon as I was done, I had a call from TD.  He was outside!  He’d finally arrived!  I took out the garbage & then joyfully went to greet him.

After I got dressed in normal clothing, we went for a 14. walk.  Where did we walk?  To 15. dinner.  It was delicious, if carb-less.  He consumed the entire contents of the breadbasket.  Good.  It was otherwise too tempting to me.  We got some oysters & he had some chowder & I had some steamed clams.  I would’ve taken a picture but I’d forgotten my phone again.

Upon returning home, TD took the dog for her nightly constitutional & I sat down to 16. write for an hour.  Here you see the result of that writing.

Tomorrow we have a very busy day.  Not only do I have to accomplish all of my directives for Day 7, I also have to run some errands, rent a car, & ferry over to Galiano Island, where a family friend has graciously agreed to lend me a house for the first few days of Week 8.  Quite excited.  Next week we will witness a new strain of vicarious living, perhaps more true to the intentions of the project.  It’s being choreographed by a certifiable stranger (only the second true stranger we’ve seen).

All I have left to do is 17. abstain from use of electronic devices in the hour before bed & 18. go to bed at 2:20am.  I’m at this point so well-versed in Week 7 that I have the whole schedule down by memory.  Staying up late will be hard to do– I have almost three empty hours looming before me, along with a house guest who will certainly be asleep well before 2:20am.

I suppose I will occupy myself by responding to comments, handing out a gold star, & maybe picking up another book to read before turning in.

Oh, the fun of it.





Week 7, Day 2

21 08 2009

Readers, why is it that the handle of a teaspoon placed in the neck of a bottle of champagne stops the bubbles from going flat?  Also, did you know that tuberculosis can be treated with tablespoons of iced champagne?  Or, while we’re on the topic of champagne, that the pretty story about Dom Perignon accidentally discovering it & shouting to his fellow monks “Come quickly, I’m drinking stars!” is really just a fairytale invented by an advertising company?  I was sad when I found out the latter.  But also impressed.

Anyway, I’m not drinking champagne to lift my spirits.  I’m drinking a local Brut.  It probably won’t cure my tuberculosis, but sparkling 1. wine is a small consolation for the bureaucratic nightmares I’ve suffered today!

Let’s start at the very beginning (a very good place to start).

I woke up at 8:15.  Unfortunately, since I went to bed at 2:20am (catching up on my extracurricular reading), I was required to 2. lie in bed until 10:20 at the earliest.  I’m good at sleeping in, but not when I’m forced to.  Dozed fitfully on & off until 11:00, then rose.  Then spent about half an hour gazing at myself in the mirror, as per usual.

Then I set about preparing my breakfast: 3. oatmeal, cooked the old-fashioned way.  As it cooked, I 4. added some blueberries & then (surprise, surprise!) 5. sweetened it with honey.  Then a glass of lemon 6. water saw my meal complete.

Food for the birds / strictly from hunger.

Food for the birds / strictly from hunger.

Ate it.  Mission accomplished.

Then I set about 7. Watching Death of a Cyclist. Fortunately, some wonderful person (not Fernando, of course) has posted the complete film in eight parts on YouTube.  It took me awhile to watch the whole thing, what with the stolen wireless & all, but I was absolutely engrossed.  It’s a very good film– in marked contrast to yesterday’s mess.  I find you can tell if most movies are worth your time within the first two minutes.  & I generally walk out if I don’t like the first ten.  Anyway, with this one I knew right away it was a very good movie.

It’s a smart psychological drama with a complicated premise & a beautiful leading lady.  I don’t want to give anything away, so you better just watch it for yourselves.  I was thinking a lot as I was watching the movie that most really good art does not simply reflect reality (something which is hard enough, I might add! art which manages that is totally adequate)– but creates a convincing state of hyper-reality.  When it comes to hyper-reality, this movie succeeded admirably. (At this point in the project, I recognize true hyper-reality a mile away.  I’m living it, after all.)

There were a few scenes where I felt as if realism was sacrificed for symbolism in rather unfortunate (sometimes unintentionally comical) ways (Darling! Not here! We’re the only two adults in a circus tent full of clowns & children!), & of course the moralistic ending of the film was clearly tacked on by fascists, but even moments of occasional melodrama were not enough to mar this incredible film for me! Everything was tight & perfect, character development superb, & almost every shot was a pleasure to view.  I’ll happily discuss the film in more detail in the comments section– only with people who have actually watched it, however.  A plot summary would do no justice, & if you have time to hang out reading this blog I’m sure you have an hour & a half to spare sometime for a movie!

Then I was supposed to 8. take a 45 minute walk & also 9. Write about what I just saw, whatever comes to mind, in any format, in a public space.

I multitasked admirably.  Disguised as a teenager in a hoodie & braids I made my way contemplatively along the sea wall with my iPod on shuffle.  “Fly Me to the Moon” came on first.  After the movie, everything seemed hyper-real.  The world took on a renewed sense of meaning.  Every dog & seagull was in crisper focus.  The people too, unfortunately for them.  Partway through my walk I sat down to write:

Whatever comes to mind.

Whatever comes to mind.

Oh, look, I just 11. Posted what I wrote.  I was trying to make my writing legible, apparently it’s usually il-”".

Poked a hole with a pen & stuck a dandelion through for good measure.

Left it under a rock

Left it under a rock

Beside a park bench where it will never be found.

Beside a park bench where it will never be found.

My well-intentioned note will likely molder beside a piece of used chewing gum until the end of days (soon).  But what do I care?

On my way back I stopped at the store & bought supplies for my next two meals.

Upon returning home, I began to prepare 12. My lunch! It was 5:00 o’clock, after all.  Well, I wasn’t allowed carbs so I decided I’d have some fun with it.

I'd say about 9"x3"x1.5"

I'd say about 9"x 3"x 1.5" of fun, all told

I broiled an enormous steak.  What’s that on top of it, you ask?  I slathered it with butter.

It’s the first steak I’ve ever cooked!  I’ve always left the meat to the men.  But there aren’t any here.

It came out perfectly regardless. I would have made a nice salad or something, but, well– carbs.

Thanks, cow. Sorry vegetarians.

Thanks, cow. Sorry vegetarians.

Actually, I tend to like things a little more raw than that.  But I’m not complaining.

Bella enjoyed her snack of gristle & drippings greatly. & the Chancellor liked his cm of beef too.  I tried to take a picture but– horrors!– iPhone was broken!  I quickly 13. Read some Octavio Paz (good, I’m sure, but a little hot-blooded for me at present), 14. Learned something about him (who knows what it was, but thanks, book-jacket) & raced out into the night to try to get my phone fixed.  There went my 45 minute walk. In fact, I walked much longer, muscles aching as an effect of last week’s disuse.

I won’t bore you with the details of bureaucratic nightmares alluded to earlier in this post.  Suffice to say, Canada is a wholly uncivilized country in which it takes you a week to even make an appointment at the genius bar.  Fortunately, I used my wholly American sense of entitlement to get them to explain what was wrong with my phone.  Then fixed it myself. Problem solved.

Returned home to a notice from the Idaho courts saying my driver’s license will be suspended in five days if I don’t pay a speeding ticket I received on July 3.  For goodness’ sake.  I was going three miles over the speed limit. They only caught me because I was the slowest car down the hill!  In Canada, the post offices & banks seem to believe they need a two day weekend every week.  What an awful country.  I’m going to move out as soon as the project is done– but not to Idaho.  Of all the states I’ve ever visited (South Dakota included!) I liked Idaho least.  But I’ll pay that ticket on Monday, by hook or by crook.  I hope Idaho knows I have plans for it when I’m king.

Once home, I opened a bottle of “champagne” & 15. Wrote for an hour.  This entry.  It actually took me much longer than an hour.  I’d intended to write some smart philosophical ramblings in a private book but I simply didn’t have the energy.  & I don’t like to post my private thoughts here.  They’re all private for a reason.

Now I just have to 16. Have dinner & 17. Stop use of all electronic devices in the hour before 18. bed. So lights out is at 1:20am tonight.  As far as dinner goes– well, I picked up some salmon.  But after that steak?  I think I’ll make a dinner of cucumbers in rice wine vinegar & soy sauce instead.  I always knew the Atkins diet was a stupid idea, but now I can really FEEL it!

Nothing some quality time with The Chancellor can't fix!

Nothing some quality time with The Chancellor can't fix!

Now for a glorious two day weekend!  During which I may sort out my credit cards & do laundry & panic about the coming week.

See you all on Monday!  & I will, of course, continue to tend to the comments section with the love any good gardener feels for his work.  So don’t feel too abandoned, flowers.





Week 7, Day 1

20 08 2009

This was an insufferably long & mundane day.  Please excuse me if this post drips occasionally with venom.

Things began at 11 am when I left the house to get the week’s required supplies.  What did I need?  Three specified books of Spanish poetry, a DVD player, fruit, oatmeal, & five criterion collection DVDs.  But I couldn’t eat breakfast until any of this was done.

I got a library card, finally (remember my mishaps Week 1?) & checked out the three required books.  I checked to see if they had any of the DVDs but they only had one copy of each, all out.

As my pocketbook resigned itself to the idea of purchasing them, I went to Futureshop (carrying my heavy purse on my left shoulder to even my posture out, thanks Week 5!).  They did not have a single one.  I went to Chapters.  None.  One might be available on special order.  By now I was getting very irritated.  Some people seem to think that expensive DVDs of obscure foreign films just materialize instantly whenever you need them.  This is not the case, especially not on the west coast of Canada, which has neither Netflix nor interesting art of any kind.

It's foreign to me, too.

It's foreign to me, too.

I went to a used DVD store & showed them the list.  “Are these French?”  The guy led me to the World Music CDs.  “They’re movies.” I said.

That certainly narrowed it down.  They had a shelf of fewer than 100 foreign films, including such timeless classics as The Break Up, starring Jennifer Aniston.  Most of the films were Japanese.  No dice.

Well, I don’t have enough impotent rage in my life anyway.

I started walking toward Burrard & 4th, about two miles away, where the guy at Chapters had told me there might or might not be a building with a silhouette of Alfred Hitchcock on the side of it.  This building might or might not have one of the movies I needed for the week.

“Is it walking distance?” I’d asked him.

“I don’t know what’s it’s called.”

Uh.

Earlier in the day, I’d taken these directions with a grain of salt, but this mysterious Alfred Hitchcock building seemed to be my only recourse.  I trudged along.  The bottoms of my feet, by the way, are now covered in blisters.  I spent all last week in a wheelchair, remember?

Also, my purse was full of heavy library books.

Fortunately, on the way I spotted a little hole-in-the-wall video store.  The guy behind the counter helped me search all the movies in their database. They only had Exterminating Angels.  Well, I thought the film was called Exterminating Angel, but presumed it was a typo.  This was in their computer as a foreign film, after all.  & it was my movie for the day. Full of relief, I rented it– or tried.  My credit card was declined.  What?  Has someone stolen my identity?  I’ll sort that out tomorrow.

The man let me borrow it anyway, without a deposit.  Because I look like an honest girl.  Lucky for him, I am one.  I could’ve run off with Exterminating Angels & never returned!

Earlier, I had refrained from buying a DVD player because, I thought bitterly to myself, there was no point in buying one if I didn’t have any DVDs.  But now I did.  I went to Futureshop & bought the cheapest one.  Then, stopped at a grocery store & bought oatmeal & frozen blueberries.  Are you on the edge of your seat or what?

I arrived home & heaved a sigh of disgusted relief.  The whole excursion had taken me over three hours & it was past 2:00.   Also, I am always in a terrible mood when I can’t have my juice.

I angrily 1. cooked my oatmeal the old-fashioned way, stirred in some 2. blueberries & 3. sweetened with honey. Ate it pacing around the living room.  Then attempted to set up the DVD player.  It works– the TV doesn’t.  Nearly smashed it (eerily foreshadowing the film that was to come!)

Then TD called to tell me he had just eaten a pint of ice cream.  It soothed my nerves a little to know that there are still people out there living lives of lazy indolence.  I’m not being sarcastic.  It really did.

I had to watch the movie after breakfast.  Had no way of watching it.  What was I to do?  I resolved to buy a new computer.  I’ve been meaning to ask for one for Christmas, but this was an emergency.  Went to the Apple Store but realized I just can’t afford it.

Called Braden.  He saved my life.  Or rather, he saved Fernando’s.  He was having lunch, but he’d lend me his computer when he got back!

I went home & poured myself some 4. wine. It was that or water, people.  I also found many of the required films online.  They’re not DVDs, but they’ll have to do.  I also got some good tips on other video stores from my Twitter pals & will seek out some other films on my day off.

Decompressed until around 4:00 when Braden arrived to save the day.

We all worship him around here.

We all worship him around here.

Braden decided to stick around for some wine & a movie.

Friends, Exterminating Angels is not a Bunuel film.  But the fundamentalist Christian in me reared its head & told me there was a reason for everything.  Thanks, Week 3.  We 5. watched it anyway.

The plot is very tragic.  Set in (approximately) the present day, it’s about a middle-aged director, Francois, who has a brilliant & groundbreaking vision for a film. Young women masturbating on camera!  Not pornography– an exploration of taboo. Why did nobody invent this idea before?  It’s great!

Anyway, everything goes wrong, as it always does when well-meaning older gentlemen are victimized by young women.

The film opens with Francois’s dead grandmother appearing to him in the night.  Then, two dark angels also appear (20-something brunettes clad in low-budget mismatched black tank-tops)—they’re invisible to him.  “Be careful with him!” says Grandmere – “He’s only a child.”

I guess you’re always a baby to your grandma.

Next, Francois is videotaping a young actress for a screen test in which she has involuntarily started masturbating for the camera.  It’s just something about him! He makes her feel so safe.  He wears a bemused, world-weary expression & a long untucked button-down shirt—as he will every time we see him.

The auditioning actress confides that she just experienced her first ever orgasm. Though Francois chooses to go with “a slightly better actress” for the role, the seeds of an idea begin to form!  At the prompting of the dark angels (they prompt his subconscious self, anyway), he begins auditioning women for his innovative film on “taboo.”

The auditions involve Francois choreographing (though certainly not filming– these are only auditions, after all) mutual masturbation in fancy restaurants, hotel room threesomes, & a lot public lesbian fondling– etc.  Our director is strictly an observer, of course.  This is all in the name of art.

The girls are all quite young & pretty & one of them is periodically possessed by the devil.

Bella is scandalized.

All WHAT? Bella is scandalized.

Poor beleaguered man!  These young women inevitably fall in love with him left right & center.  He doesn’t understand it! He tucks them into bed after they suffer schizophrenic episodes, kisses their foreheads after videotaping their threesomes, all while maintaining a very professional directorial distance– he’s just like a father to them, as he emphasizes more than once.

“Be careful!” His wife warns him.  These lovelorn girls are dangerous & will take advantage of him.

Old women are so wise.

After Francois allows the producer to fire the two main actresses on the first day of shooting (Charlotte, possessed by the devil, destroys the set) the film is made & it’s a big success!  But, as if our poor Francois hasn’t been victimized enough, one of the girls goes to the “gutter papers” with a totally unfounded accusation of sexual harassment.  The exact nature of her claim is not specified in the film.  Anyway, this libelous act gets Francois sent to prison for a year!  Tabloids have so much power these days.

When he returns his wife has left him.  Quel dommage!

"Let's go out & bop until we drop"

"Let's go out & bop until we drop"

Then, a gang of masked intruders break into his apartment & tenderize him with a baseball bat.  Do we spot the devil-possessed young lady behind one of the masks?  Is there no end to this poor man’s victimization?

The film ends with our long-suffering director being wheeled onto set in a wheelchair.  Grandmother appears again.  “Francois?  Francois!”  But he doesn’t respond.

Roll credits.

Are you surprised to learn that it’s semi-autobiographical?  We googled & the director  (slash writer, of course) was recently imprisoned for a year for sexually harassing two actresses.  Likely their charges were even more baseless than the ones our good Francois faced!

Anyway, it was a lol & a half, maybe I should get the director to do a week for me!  I promise I won’t send him to prison.

One of my favorite things about the film, aside from the nudity, of course, was that Francois carried his camera around in a plastic grocery bag.  Also, after the first threesome, one of the women turned to the other & said “Let’s go out & bop until we drop!”

Though it’s not worth watching all the tedious dialogue & clumsy attempts at symbolism just for a few dimly lit scenes of soft-core lesbian pornography, I believe this film would make an excellent drinking game.  I will write one for it some day, when I’m not so busy.

(Sidenote: as soon as the movie started, Braden exclaimed, “Ptolemy will like this!”)

The moral of the story?  The symbolic meaning behind this?  What have I taken & learned? From my misadventures? From Francois’s?  Sloppy art has dire consequences.  Think about it.

I was supposed to 6. Read the booklet that came with the DVD immediately after.  There was no such booklet.  There will never be one.  I will likely go to my grave without having read this informative booklet.  I firmly hold that this isn’t my failure. It won’t go in the failure book.

Then I 7. Went for a walk. Fernando generously told me “You have 45 minutes.”  Well, you know me, I’m an overachiever.  I got the walk to the liquor store out of the way in around 10.

Then I 8. Sat in a coffee shop & wrote about what I’d just seen.  Sitting in a coffee shop isn’t much fun when you’re not allowed carbohydrates or any beverages besides water. I bought some Perrier & wrote some of the above.  Once this entry goes up, I’ve 9. Posted it.

Oh good.  It was finally time for 10. Lunch.  8 o’clock, after all.  I got some ginger beef from a Chinese restaurant, since I’m not allowed carbohydrates.  I wonder, does Fernando know what a carbohydrate is?  I 11. Took my time & enjoyed the queasy sensation of eating a meal consisting entirely of a handful of greasy meat & water glass of red wine.

Meanwhile, I 11. Flipped through the complete poems of Cesar Vallejo.  They were a little too Whitmanesque & life-affirming for me at that point, though I certainly enjoyed one or two of the quieter ones.  I also 12. Learned something about the author in that time.  I looked in the book jacket. He’s from Peru.

9:15, my trusty (canine) companion & I headed out for 13. A 45 minute walk.  We witnessed many stages of canoodling on the grass, from outright fornication to tender proposals of marriage.  Sure, I felt a few pangs of loneliness, but as you know I’m married to my art.  As I walked, I 14. Thought about what I’d read. Conclusion? Men & women are, like, different in lots of ways.

Once home, I was supposed to 15. Write for an hour, with the day’s texts acting as a trigger for something. Well, here you see the result of that hour– & the following half hour too.  Fernando probably wanted me to write poetry or something, but– well– I 16. Just let it happen.

Now I just have to 17. Eat dinner — a carbless one.  Well, there’s some cut-rate salmon burning a hole in my fridge.  Some wilting dill too.  I’m sure it will be delicious.

Then, after 18. An hour without any electronic devices, I will 19. Go to bed for eight hours. I’m going to aim for a bedtime of 2:00am, as I need to 20. Keep my bedtime consistent throughout the week.  The project requires that I keep late hours & I don’t want to get stuck partway through a blog entry at 12:30am or something like that.

Prognosis?  Wino.

Prognosis? Wino.

Tomorrow you should witness a return to our standard inspirational fare.  & soon I’ll figure a way to make this interesting.





Week 6, Day 6

18 08 2009

The end is near.

This was Day 6 in a wheelchair.  Of course, I also had other things to accomplish.

Today seemed as if it would be quite taxing, but in fact it was one of the better days I’ve had so far!  Funny how it always seems to work out like that.

First I 1. got up & showered.  I’m getting used to showering in a wheelchair.  So at this point, it was fairly routine.  Fifteen relaxing minutes in above the tub.

Then, around one-ish, Olivia arrived & we 2. Took Bella for a walk. This is the first time this week I took the dog myself!  Bella was pretty good.  I kept running over her toes & at one point she was attacked by two off-leash toy poodles.  The owner shouted, from a safe distance, “If she bites it will teach them a lesson!”  Certainly, if the intended lesson was death.  But Bella seemed to understand I didn’t have the strength to wrangle her & stood very still as the poodles jumped all over her, biting & yipping. Lucky for them.  She’s not always so tolerant.

After this, Olivia & I 3. Headed to the Vancouver Art Gallery.

Speaking of chairs,

Speaking of chairs,

I didn’t feel like going to the museum on a nice sunny day, but actually it was very pleasant & relaxing.  It took us an hour to get through the exhibitions.  I was expecting that it would all be Canadian artists, but, thank God, it wasn’t!  It was a show of 16th & 17th century Dutch realist painters.

There was also, for some reason, a reconstruction of a 1950s household.  I felt very happy rolling about in it.  As if I were in Mad Men!  But with none of the disappointing Season Threeness.

We would have got better pictures, but we had to be very sneaky.  Photos, after all, are verboten in art galleries.  I got Olivia to pretend she was texting on my phone & finally we got one.

By the way, I look kind of fat in the picture to the right.  I’d like to tell you all that that is the material of my skirt & shirt!  Not, in fact, my stomach.  If you remember the spandex photos, I am blessed with an essentially flat stomach.  Vanity!  will be the death of me.

I was supposed to 4. Spend two hours in the exhibitions, but there wasn’t exactly two hours of looking to be done.

Nor was there time to look & eat (part of 5) before everything closed down.  So I may or may not have accomplished that particular directive.  I certainly have spent beyond two hours in the exhibition in my heart.  It’s stuck with me all day, in fact.  Also, I’ve never been to the VAG (of all acronyms, Vancouver, really?) — never WOULD have gone, & now fully intend to return.  So perhaps I’m on a payment plan?  This doesn’t feel like a failure, but it possibly is.  I’ll leave it to you to decide.  Please note, too, that I was on the property of the VAG for at least 3.5 hours.

My "pity me" expression could use some work.

My "pity me" expression could use some work.

After wandering through the exhibit, we 5. went to the Gallery Café for lunch- it was certainly difficult & interesting to 6. find the alternative entrance! It involved all sorts of tricks.  Intercoms, elevators, secret passwords– but eventually we made it.

Also, I was mistaken for Kyla for the first time this week!  I knew it was bound to happen & am somewhat surprised it hasn’t happened sooner!  When we were younger (19-ish), we were often mistaken for identical twins.  As life has taken its terrible toll on our faces, we no longer get that much.  But evidentally one woman at the museum still sees the resemblance.  I’m flattered!

I’ve wanted a nose job FOREVER & I always tell Kyla that if I ever scrape the money together I’m going to ask for her nose.

The food was mediocre but the company was very good.  Olivia & I don’t know each other that well (she’s one of my friend’s younger sisters) but we bonded over all sorts of topics.  & now we are actual friends!

Also, we managed to get a bucket of beer for happy hour price, though it was not yet happy hour, because I was in a wheelchair.  So that lubricated things a little.

My only sunshine

My only sunshine

Olivia doesn’t like this picture of her but I felt I had to put it up.  She’s too adorable!  If she asks me, I’ll take it down.

After lunch, we hung out & chatted by the fountain.  Kyla called me earlier today &, unprompted, cancelled one of her previous directives.  I was supposed to 7. Sit outside on a busy street and hand out Emily, Lived By: postcards & get a friend to do the same on a street nearby, noting the difference in attitudes between my experience & that of my friend’s.

Well, I ALWAYS accept cancellations (though not last minute additions to schedule).  Olivia & I were both pleased that we didn’t have to humiliate ourselves in this manner.  You can imagine what it would have been like– it’s the idea of doing this that’s most important, really.  Me enacting it for you all would not have made much of a difference.  I commend Kyla for (with, I promise, no pressure on my part!) recognizing this.

Olivia & I delighted in the unexpected free time.  Sat by the fountains & pondered life.  So forth.

Olivia & her sisters are also on board to do a collaborative week.  So we discussed that a little.  Very excited to learn that their week (though I don’t know the details!) will be a real departure from many of the somewhat mundane self-improvement schedules I’ve encountered so far.  Lately, my schedules, though very improving, have been a little dull– or at least, psychologically unchallenging– for me.  So it’s nice to know the tides will shift soon.  Perhaps this shifting will provide a good example for future participants!

Look at Olivia. What a saint.

Look at Olivia. What a saint. She practically glows!

Fortified by our new freedom, etc. we headed to a bar.  Where we drank two pitchers of beer– goodness!  Can you believe I’m writing this so coherently?

Olivia will also accompany on my directives tomorrow.  We’ve plotted up a way to make them more interesting.

She helped me wheel home & before she left I gave her my copy of Suze Orman’s Young, Broke & Fabulous, as I think it might help her sort out her credit card troubles.  Thanks, Mom, for Week 1!

Now I have only a few things left to do.  I’ve 8. Relaxed & also  9. Spent time writing my blog.

I just have to 10. Make dinner & eat (I’m thinking some cheese puffs?) & finally 11. Lie in bed & contract my muscles from head to toe, working down my body including face, fingers and toes. Contract each muscle for 30 seconds, release, then go to sleep.

It will be done AND done.

Regarding the coming week: I received my schedule two days late & overwhelming majority of commenters proposed that I take two days off but blog about both of them.  Looking at the schedule, I see that it’s not too taxing. It’s kind of weird to blog about my days off & I really hate the idea of not doing this project for three whole days in a row.

SO. I’ve decided to compromise: I will take one day off.  I will blog (& project) for five days of the week, but have a rare two day weekend.  In the future, as Ben Tilly has suggested (uncannily in line with my thoughts), I will have understudies ready to step in & late schedules will no longer be a problem.

Hi up there!

Hi up there!

If any of you have complaints, you can address them to the Chancellor.

I’ve also come up with an amazing plan for my final week.  You’ll just have to wait till then to see what it is.

See you tomorrow!





Week 6, Day 5

18 08 2009

Well, here we are.  Did you miss me? I’ve missed you terribly.

Yesterday was my day off.  I spent most of it in bed, gravely ill.  In fact, I thought I had tuberculosis, as I was coughing up blood.  But today I’m practically back to normal.  A little feverish, a few sniffles.  But certainly no coughing-of-blood.  What a relief.

Today, I was back in a wheelchair, as this week’s schedule requires.  I stayed in bed until shortly before noon, milking my illness as much as possible.  Then I arose & 1. took a shower.  It’s an uncomfortable affair these days, as I must transfer myself out of a wheelchair & onto the edge of the tub, then from the tub’s edge to a little stool.  Then I must shower seated upright with only a little shower nozzle for my companion.  I soaped up quickly then got out!

I was also supposed to 2. prep dinner from a specified recipe.

You'll have to make do with an awkward self-pic.

You'll have to make do with an awkward self-pic.

The recipe was for a “vegetable bake” from some British healthy foods cookbook.  I’ll admit, it was extremely bland.  Basically: tomatoes, oregano, zucchini (“courgette”), eggplant (“aubergine”), onions, mozzarella, & a shockingly minimal amount of garlic (three cloves).  Prepping took much longer than it would normally, however.  So I’m glad the recipe, if uninspiring, was easy. Some of the cleanup I will actually have to leave for Wednesday!

The fruit flies, already having a little party above the empty wine bottles in my sink (some of them [the flies] quite purple by now), will be ecstatic for the next few days.

As I cooked, I 3. Listened to Music for Egon Schiele, by Rachel’s. Not my sort of thing, but it lent the preparations for dinner a somber air that I quite appreciated.

Kyla wants to “control my senses” this week & so far it has certainly worked. Strange perfume!  Unfamiliar music!  New foods!  Not to mention no real use of my legs.

During this time, the girl (excuse me, woman) who was supposed to accompany me for my tasks tomorrow suddenly bailed.  Panic!  There’s no way I’d be able to accomplish anything alone.  Fortunately, I posted a desperate plea on facebook, & I’ve found someone.  All it will cost me is $50, lunch, & my dignity.  But that’s better than failure by far.

Shall we dance?

Shall we dance?

I still needed to 4. Take Bella for a walk as I have learned to in a wheelchair. Walking her myself in a wheelchair, I’ve learned, is nearly impossible.  Much better to get her estranged father over for a little custody visit.  He showed up with Shannon & they took her out for an hour.  Meanwhile, I wandered around YouTube, expanding my horizons.

Some of my horizon-expanding entailed watching old Peter Cook & Dudley Moore clips.  The original Bedazzled is one of the most highly underrated films of all time.  Perhaps it resonates more deeply with me lately because of this project?  But I encourage each of you to rent & watch immediately.  Am I George or Stanley?  I want your thoughts.

Speaking of YouTube, I find it intriguing that “Putting Away Groceries in a Wheelchair” has already reached well over 1,000 views– by far more views than any of my videos has yet enjoyed, including Meg Tilly’s famous Week 1 address.  I can’t imagine why this is. Can you?  I’d like to hear your thoughts.

Then I 5. Made dinner and 6. Read excerpts from Mee’s A Nearly Normal Life while the food was in the oven.  Then I 7. Welcomed guests (Kyla & her fiancee).  I also 8. Made conversation.

We ate the bland dinner that I had prepared, then proceeded to more enjoyable things.  Like discussions about horror, torture, & suffering around the world.

Kyla & I, making up for the technical failures that prevented her first video from reaching you, also made a nice little film for you all.

At some point, our conversation was supposed to 9. lead to stereotypes and myths of the disabled without seeming contrived. I realized this hadn’t happened & said, quite naturally, “Have you noticed that I haven’t led the conversation to stereotypes of the disabled without seeming contrived?”  Well, I’ll count that as a dodgy success.  But I’ll put it in my failure book just in case.

Now, all I have left to do is: 10. Lie in bed and contemplate my last few days for at least 10 minutes.

I’ll accomplish that no sweat unless I fall asleep first!

But here’s where I need your help: my participant for Week 7 is very late with his schedule.  He has, however, promised to get it in by tomorrow.  A new clause allows me to take one day off for each day the schedule is late.  So next week I have the chance of having a three day weekend.  Somehow, this doesn’t rest easy with me– though I’d welcome the time off, three whole days on my own seems like an awful lot. Still, the psychological demands of this project are enormous, & a day & a half is not always adequate time to prepare.

I thought I’d leave it up to commenter vote.  Should I get an extra two days off?  Or only one?  None?  Or should I get my two days off but blog about them as usual?  Please leave your response in the comments.  YOU, friends, will determine my fate.

I will accept it uncomplainingly, whatever the outcome.

Now, onward!





Week 6, Day 3

16 08 2009
She's willing to wait it out.

She's willing to wait it out.

So.  Third day in a wheelchair.

Saturdays seem to be my most “normal feeling” days, so I accomplished basically everything.  But I’m also getting sick so that added a twist to things.  Keep coughing, feel about to die.

I stayed in bed till nearly noon.  I was supposed to 1. read the selected essay excerpt in bed.  Unfortunately, though I kept checking my trusty iPhone, I did not have the selected essay excerpt, as Kyla was sowing her wild oats till late last night.  I was unable to read the excerpt in bed.  However, after finally arising slightly before noon & 2. transferring out of bed, I found the file in my email.

I don’t have all the citation info, but the essay is called “Beauty & the Freak” & is written by Rosemarie Garland Thomson.  I’m not able to make much sense of it now, late at night after a long day, but suffice to say it makes the sort of points you’d expect about “freakish” bodies put on display & the history of such displays. In the essay, Garland draws a somewhat predictable parallel between freak shows & beauty pageants.

I read it, & was also supposed to 3. ask someone without an MFA to read & discuss.

The trustworthy Ptolemy Tompkins answered my plea.  & we discussed the essay over Skype.

Somehow captured single instance in which he looks beningn & I creepy

Somehow captured single instance in which he looks benign & I creepy

Afterwards, Shannon & the man arrived & The Man 4. took Bella for her daily constitutional. Then the three of us (Shannon, man, I) 5. Went for lunch at restaurant of their choice. It wasn’t inaccessible so I didn’t make note of it.  Though we did pass other inaccessible spots along the way.

We had a nice long chat about how America is the best country in the entire world, & how awful it is to live surrounded by culturally illiterate Canadians.  That was my thesis (I jest. I jest-ish.) at least.

Then 6. headed to Shopper’s Drug Mart nearby me. I was supposed to 7. find an article in a magazine that related to disability.

Obviously– & I’m not saying this is a good thing– none of the magazines related directly to disability.

I did search.

I did search.

So I rolled around, encountering a few obstacles.  Noticed, for first time, how most tempting junk food is placed at a child’s eye level! Never noticed this when I was two feet taller.

Also encountered inaccessible barrier.

Observe the frustration!

Observe the frustration!

Did you see my lap?  I’d eventually found the perfect magazine.  LIFE magazine’s tribute to Marilyn Monroe.  Not only is it full of pleasantly voyeuristic photos, it also has plenty of text to keep one occupied.  Well, I didn’t note any of this.  I just knew it was perfect, posed for a picture, & purchased.

I want to be lived by you, just you.

I want to be lived by you, just you.

“I sense a project!” The salesgirl said.  Right she was.

I was supposed to 8. Make a convincing connection between the magazine & disability & blog about it. This seemed much easier six or seven hours ago.  Fortunately, I wrote notes, “Beauty & the Freak” still fresh in my mind.

Garland notes how, after the 1920s, freak shows began a decline & beauty pageants became much more popular.

I’ll give you my verbatim (sloppy) notes:

society turns away attention previously reserved for freaks & focuses it all on beauties.  marilyn monroe first casuality!  in tribute magazine, they speculate about abortions & cite her gynecologist.  what do we know of stephen hawking’s doctors?

“freaks” now at least are granted dignity & privacy.  but when have you heard a parent tell a child not to stare at a beautiful woman?   in the case of many, beauty is a debilitating & often terminal illness, disguised as a blessing.

does this coincide with the decline of the nuclear family?  everybody becomes everybody else’s property, so we can ruthlessly exploit the commodity of others’ beauty while feeling a sense of  guilty responsibility towards weaker members.  decline in the boundaries of the body?  hmm

I’d originally intended to formulate those, & other thoughts (I assure you, I have many), into a coherent argument, but no hope for that now.  Though I feel a little queasy about providing you with my basically arbitrary jottings, at this point it’s preferable to the alternative (attempt at lucid argument). Now you might choose to challenge me, but I have an excuse!

Finally, I went to Kyla’s for 9. Dinner & a movie. I wheeled the whole way by myself!  Five blocks (all uphill!) took me about thirty minutes.  It was difficult, but making it there was a matter of pride. I was somewhat surprised that NONE of the people who passed me offered help.

After dinner (thanks, Kyla!) we watched my grandfather’s film The Men.  Marlon Brando’s first movie.  Actually very good. Probably resonated with me more this week than it might have otherwise, as Brando plays paraplegic war vet.  For its time, very progressive.

Finally, 10. Wheeled home (with Shannon’s help) to sleep.

Tomorrow is my day off!  I’ll spend it doing errands, etc. Happy to answer any questions, realize this post was fairly cursory.  See you on the other side.






Week 6, Day 2

15 08 2009

So I’ve been in a wheelchair for well over 24 hours now.  It has been stranger than I expected, but for different reasons.

Physically, it’s been much easier than I anticipated.  There are, of course, little inconveniences; say, it takes up to a minute of wrangling to open a door.  I discover my soap & moisturizer are out of reach. It’s cold to take a shower seated upright above a bathtub.  But I’ve always been at home with physical discomfort, in fact, I kind of enjoy it.

Lucky me, because I’m getting sick.  It feels like my lungs are full of honeycomb & wool (the itchy kind).  Do you think it’s because of all the germs I get on my hands from wheeling?  It is, of course, inevitable that this project will take a physical as well as a psychological toll on me.  Eg., a few weeks ago I got lemon juice in my eye & experienced absolutely no sensation.

Anyway, I also thought it would be nearly impossible to navigate the day’s tasks… & it would have been, alone, on the first full day in a chair.  But I wasn’t alone for most of it.

After waking up, I transferred out of bed & then, eventually into the tub where I took my 1. shower.  It wasn’t the indulgent affair it usually is for me (I’m world-renowned for ridiculously long showers) but it did the trick.  Getting dressed in a wheelchair is certainly difficult.  But I’m very glad I store all my clean clothing in a heap on the floor.   Bella’s estranged father happens to live in Vancouver & he came by with his girlfriend (my friend Shannon) to 2. take the dog for a walk. Bella hasn’t seen him in around three years so it was a little much for her to take in.

I 3. sprayed on some of Shannon’s perfume. I like the smell, but it was supremely uncomfortable.  Obviously.  I mean, it was just how you would expect wearing someone else’s perfume to feel.  

Round & round, all through the town

Round & round, all through the town

After the man headed off to the library Shannon & I checked the bus routes.  We wheeled over & waited.

You all want to know about people’s reactions.  Well, I can tell you: they’re different.  They’re different in the way you’d expect them to be different.  I presume that what you mean when you want to hear about people’s reactions is that you want to hear about the emotional reaction I have to these different reactions.  Honestly, it doesn’t particularly bother or surprise me (though I’m sure it would be different if this was my permanent condition), so I’m less inclined to write about the predictable awkwardness of strangers.

Still, ok: there’s the expected range of reactions.  A lot of pitying looks, a conspicuous absence of male interest, a lot of social discomfort (where should I stand? Should I offer to help? Don’t stare!) etc.  I kind of enjoy it, at present.  I always feel exposed in public, &, perhaps oddly, I like the feeling of invisibility disability gives me.  Don’t get me wrong, I don’t advocate this kind of lack of awareness on your parts.  Generally, I think everyone should be treated as human.  However, I feel like an odd & in some ways inhuman person, & I guess at the moment it’s a relief to have a visible marker of it.

Look carefully at that finger on the right.  This is the most you'll see of Shannon all year.

Look carefully at that finger on the right. This is the most you'll see of Shannon all year.

Perhaps it’s because for the past several weeks I’ve had to be so extroverted in a way that doesn’t come naturally to me.  Now people look at me & don’t see me or don’t want to– good! I don’t want them to either.  I was a little giddy with the knowledge that I could behave however I wanted & get away with it.  Once on the bus, I kept thinking I could scream “WHY, WHY, WHY!” the whole ride to Granville Island & no one would put me off.  I would just get sympathetic, uncomfortable gazes.  In my normal life, I experience a lot of reactions from strangers, but sympathy almost never.  Only when I fall down the stairs or in the street, which is often.  Clumsy!

By the way, if you hadn’t already gathered this, I 4. Took the bus.

I also like how people now treat me as if I’m some sort of gentle saint.  I mean, really, I eat it up!!

A man with no teeth came & stared at me & then asked “What happened to you?”

“It’s a long story,” I told him.  “A very long story!”

Then we kept wheeling along.

It’s funny to need people.  It’s funny to need them so badly that you have to pay them to accompany you!  I’ll be doing a lot of that this week.  It’s funny to feel like it’s only right to pay someone for spending time with you.

Spent some time under a bridge with crow.

Spent some time under a bridge with crow.

Shannon & I wheeled around Granville Island & through the market, to see what it was like.

Actually, I found it not much different from navigating those crowded passages in an able body.  Except, of course, you’re much shorter, slower & everyone stares.

Check out my wheels

Check out my wheels

We were supposed to 5. Eat lunch at the Indian stall. Neither of us felt like Indian, but it wasn’t my choice to make.  I hung around, as several people skipped past me in line, & attempted to see into the display case.  I wasn’t quite the right height.  Eventually, we managed to order.  We got four chicken samosas.

Mr. Cellophane should have been my name

Mr. Cellophane should have been my name

They were adequate.  We ate them outside, where Shannon refused to let me take her picture.  “Just the back of your head!” I said.  But apparently she hates the back of her head.

We went for a second lunch of steak & a bottle of wine.  The food was mediocre, the conversation certifiably excellent.  The waitresses were, of course, concerned & solicitous.  So I felt more comfortable than usual sending back my steak.  It was cooked medium & I wanted (…needed!) rare.  I’ve always had an uncommon bloodlust.  I’d eat all meat raw if I could.

I considered my packaged leftovers my 6. Groceries for dinner.  I ate them for dinner, after all.  My goodness gracious.  I can’t believe I’ve eaten two baked potatoes today. How things change.

Then I picked up 7. Groceries for the week.

Four fine balls of mozzarella.

Four fine balls of mozzarella.

Missions accomplished, we 8. Took the aquabus home.

What lies beneath?

What lies beneath?

Do you see the little kid staring?  Totally normal.  I found I liked being at eye level with children.  What I didn’t like, however, was that as children would stare at me with absolutely natural curiosity, their parents would nervously redirect them in such a way that they would realize (often, likely, for the first time) that there was supposed to be something shameful, pitiable, & taboo about physical infirmity.

Upon arriving home, I took a long nap.

Then I headed out to 9. Meet friends at a bar of my choice. I met Krissy & Ray at the bar where I swing-danced with Simon on Wednesday.  I thought there would be a nice parallelism in this.  But it was too noisy for them, & there was a $12 cover (the bouncer pityingly waived it for me) so we went out to walk the streets.  Eventually we ended up elsewhere.

We had 10. a few drinks & talked on a few topics (generally depressing: eg., forced marriage & rape of female virgins before execution in Iran).  Then I10. danced in my wheelchair outside the bathroom.  Very briefly.

Staying "alive."

Staying "alive."

Fortunately, the bathrooms were also accessible.

The caption of the year

The caption of the year

Now I’m home. Soon to bed.  & another long day in the office tomorrow.

All night last night I dreamed normal dreams.  But whenever I walked in my dreams, I would remember that I was supposed to be in a wheelchair.  Then I would feel a horrible sense of guilt at having failed to follow my orders.  Then I would forget again & keep walking. All through the night.  Was very relieved in the morning to discover this wasn’t the case.

I’ve realized, over the course of the past few days, that there’s really no way to accurately simulate the experience of a paraplegic. I can feel the muscles in my legs working involuntarily all the time… helping brace me, keep my balance, etc.  I have managed not to flinch from cold water or unpleasant sensations, but I know that this is absolutely not the same.  Living like this, I can feel how strong my body really is, instead of the reverse.  So I am having two parallel experiences, really: I’m at once able-bodied & disabled.  There’s this mischievous feeling in my legs, which keep telling me walk! They do play along for the time being.  But I know that they’re there if I need them.

It’s only now that I begin to glimpse what it would really be like if they weren’t!