Esperando el milagro: Square one

[A writing project in gestation…]

“Man builds on the ruins of his former selves. When we are reduced to nothingness, we come alive again. To season one’s destiny with the dust of one’s folly, that is the trick.”Henry Miller

*

If you’re reading this, there’s a good chance you’re a rapist or a murderer. Then again, you might just be a drunk checking in for the night. Most likely though, you’re the guy with the blank stare who shoves the food under the bars twice a day. In any event, you probably won’t understand a fucking word of this.

Jesús pointed to the fourth-from-the-last word with a smile. He worked at a KFC in South Carolina for two years, long enough to spot the eff bomb even when concealed within the gerund form of the verb. He handed me the roll of toilet paper and bid me adios. He was off to meet someone who maybe knew someone who knew about a job out on the oilrigs. The roll of papel higiénico was just as he had described it a few days earlier. Black ink. Covered from the first sheet to the hollow tube with English. “Bathroom graffiti” was my first thought when I heard about it. Apparently his nephew, who lives in a tiny coastal town, found the roll months ago in an abandoned, forest-hidden building while he was foraging for scrap metal. It had become quite the little conversation piece. When word spread that Jesús was putting up a couple of Americans, the roll made its way to our little pueblo for official verification and translation. One square in, and the hairs were standing up on the back of my neck. What we were all expecting, I suspect, was a few moments of hilarity while I asked my wife how to translate the blowjob solicitations and racist diatribes that would surely dominate the narrative. In truth, silly as it sounds, one square in I felt as if I had just been given a map leading to buried treasure, or an ancient scroll that foretold my destiny. So it was with heightened anticipation that I ran my fingers around the roll until I found the edge again. Sitting in a white plastic chair with my feet up on a white plastic table, the whole strange story unspooled before my eyes.

Or at least it was one chapter of the whole strange story. Perhaps the rest was scratched into tree bark, or written in the sand on a secluded part of the beach. More likely, the rest of the story was written on other rolls that were either lost, destroyed, or—I shudder to think—used. My best guess is that it’s a work of creative fiction, perhaps written as a lark by someone on vacation, or by a graduate student, or the spouse of a graduate student (like myself). Students have been coming down here for years to study the Mayan artifacts, and I can’t be the first gringo to come down here with a notebook and the intention to write. The toilet paper thing is a nice twist though. I certainly don’t think the thing is an actual cry for help, that someone really woke up in a prison cell with a head injury, not knowing what they did or how they got there. I mean, amnesia? Come on now. You’ll see when I have time to transcribe the rest of it. It’s probably a short story, either incomplete or abandoned. As fiction it is, in truth, pretty unremarkable. But the fact that a roll of toilet paper covered in English handwriting has somehow found its way into my hands? Now that’s pretty remarkable. Extraordinary, really. I haven’t been in the pueblo two full weeks and already I have something extraordinary to post to my travel blog. Just what I was hoping for.

I’m also hoping that these nine months will be more than just a break from having to go to work every day; more than a chance to catch up on some reading, writing and guitar playing; more than an opportunity to learn Spanish and experience Mexican culture. Those things are enough to make it all worthwhile, but still, I’m hoping for something else, something big, something totally awesome that will change everything. The Scroll of Charmin, regardless of its origin or authenticity, is, by its mere existence, pretty fucking awesome. I can’t think of a better way to begin this trip.

Core story

Reverb 10 Prompt (from Molly O’Neill): What central story is at the core of you, and how do you share it with the world? (Bonus: Consider your reflections from this month. Look through them to discover a thread you may not have noticed until today.)

Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Had to get that out.

I don’t do well with endings. I remember watching Grease with my family back in the early 80’s. After the final cheesy scene (when John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John go flying off into the sky as the cast sings “We go together”) and the credits began to roll, I found myself holding back tears. Even in a light-hearted musical, I just couldn’t stand the feeling of “it’s over” or “goodbye”. I know, I know… There’s a thing called “Google Reader” that can keep us all in touch if we’re so inclined. Still, I find myself already missing this month of discovery. And while it’s true I discovered a few worthwhile things about myself, what I valued most was discovering you all. Yes, this is going to be sappy and sentimental. I told you about Grease, right?

Glancing back over my posts, it’s immediately clear to me that the core of my Reverb 10 experience in not to be found in my responses to the prompts. Maybe there’s a central story threading through them that captures my year. I’m sure there is. But today I’m more interested in reflecting on the core story of this past month, which has been all about you, and in order to do that I need to read between the lines, and I need to recall your blog posts, and our exchanges via comments and tweets. While I did try to invest the very highest quality attention I had available to respond to the prompts, it was a real struggle most of the time. Rarely did I feel myself writing straight from the heart. Some of this had to do with time and energy constraints. A lot of it had to do with the fact that much has weighed on my heart this month (and this year) that I simply couldn’t write about publicly. Whereas posting was often a struggle, commenting on your posts and responding to comments was pure joy. That’s where my most heartfelt writing can be found, and that’s where my core Reverb 10 story is written. Connection. Community. Friendship. Support. Togetherness. Love. Told ya it was gonna get sappy!

So many memorable chapters, delightful discoveries, precious moments. Like when Emma tweeted that my very first post moved her to tears. Like discovering Kim’s magnificent writing and that warm, cozy feeling I felt each day checking into her blog. Like that first week, when I nervously posted a video/song I had made earlier in the year, and Tizz dropped by to say she thought is was wonderful. Like all those wonderful posts Tizz herself wrote with such fire, wit, humor, and her positively uncanny combination of vulnerability and bad-ass flair. Like Shannon’s constant, unwavering support throughout the entire month, and her own sometimes hilarious, sometimes courageous, always awesome, daily posts. Or when Stereo appeared in my comments announcing “Oh my, we’re going to be friends.” And she was right, and it’s been an honor and a privilege. Like Mrs. Mediocrity’s daily poetry, which nourished my soul. Like the wonderfully refreshing honesty, authenticity, and absolute lack of pretense in everything Katie posted throughout the month. The genuine sweetness of her writing voice, like that of the buoyant, kind-hearted Aba, fills me with hope for the future of humanity. And the vulnerable, moving, open-hearted responses and supportive comments of Emily and Alana. Patti’s down-to-earth, laugh-out-loud, nod-your-head-and-say-hell-yes daily doses of wit and wisdom. Like when I discovered the Little Yawps blog, nearly falling out of my chair as she described the joys of the perfect poop. Like when I nearly fell out of my chair every day after that from the sheer awesomeness of her writing. Like when I totally lost track of Sam, my very first commenter, only to reconnect weeks later, just in time to read about the heart-wrenching moment he shared with his daughter about the realness of Santa. And how about when Brooke shared her elation about how her Heal With a Meal project had caught on and touched lives. And then there’s Rebecca. The way she somehow managed to infuse every post, every comment, every response to a comment, every tweet — every word, truly– with a sense of warmth, grace, and beauty.

I’m sure I can’t recall every significant exchange, because they were all significant, to me (and because my memory isn’t that great). The core story, the heart of the matter, for me, this month, is there in those moments. It IS those moments. The thread I discovered today, after taking the entire experience to heart, is this mysterious, magical process that brought us together. Again, I must tip my hat and then bow deeply to Gwen Bell, Cali Harris, and Kaileen Elise for making this whole thing happen. They created the space, and then graciously invited us all in. Most of you I discovered through a series of seemingly random events. You happened to tweet your response a few minutes before or after mine. I noticed you commenting regularly on a blog I really liked. How is it that I can feel like I know you, that I can actually care about you, when I’ve never even seen you, heard your voice, when this is all just zeroes and ones and blips and bloops on a screen…?

Must be magic.

Thank you, and Happy New Year!

Gift

Reverb 10 Prompt (from Holly Root): This month, gifts and gift-giving can seem inescapable. What’s the most memorable gift, tangible or emotional, you received this year?

This being the second-to-last day of Reverb 10, I want to make sure I don’t forget to thank Gwen Bell, Cali Harris, and Kaileen Elise for putting this whole thing together and giving me an opportunity to interact with so many wonderful people over the course of this month. It’s been a heck of a great ride. Every single person who commented on my posts or gave me a shout-out on Twitter — each one of you gave me a gift for which I am most grateful. I’m sorry to have lost track of some of you as the days marched on. Things were blowing up exponentially for a while there, and I became overwhelmed by all the connections I wanted to maintain. Many of you came back to visit me again and again, and it’s because of you I was able to dig as deep as I did to get the most out of these reflections. Many of us will drop off each other’s radar screens after tomorrow. Some of us will stay in touch, become friends, maybe even meet in person one day. Who knows what the new year will usher in. In any event, thank you all for the gifts of your acknowledgement and feedback. You’re all tangibly, emotionally, memorably, and inescapably awesome.

Sam
Emma
Kim
Mehnaz
Kathy
Heather
Creatively Sensitive
Tizz
Brianne
AnnMarie
Wei
Brooke Farmer
Shannon
Katie
Rebecca
mrs. mediocrity
Emily
Sam
Stereo
Jim Cook
Stephanie
Alana
Patti
Aba
Abby
Diana
Debra
Krista
Beth
Roxanne
Little Yawps
MDTaz
Mark
Lauren
Mrs. Which
Toddy

Defining moment

Reverb 10 Prompt (from Kathryn Fitzmaurice): Describe a defining moment or series of events that has affected your life this year.

For whatever reason, I’m imagining myself twenty years ago, thinking ahead about how my life will be in 2010…

1990. Fall semester of my junior year at Binghamton University is in the books. I’m officially a psychology major now, and it’s a relief to be off the biochemistry/pre-med track. I finally hooked up with a girl, and she’s a smoking-hot goddess. She was the teacher’s assistant in my stats class, and I used my recent knee surgery as a pretense for needing lots of “extra help” between classes. She even got me a work-study job taking over her old office assistant position. This is perfect, because I won’t be able to continue working as a dishwasher, given that I’ll be on crutches for a while. It’s winter break right now, and for whatever reason I find myself imagining what my life will be like twenty years from now, in 2010. I’ll be forty years old. Probably have a big gut and no hair on my head, if everything I learned about genetics is correct. I suppose I’ll be some kind of psychology… doing… guy. A psychologist, a professor or something like that. I assume Anna and I will be married by then and probably have a couple of kids, own a nice home, the whole nine yards.

Oh 1990 Bob, if you only had a clue…

Believe it or not, in 2010 you’ll still be working as an office assistant at a university! Easy now, don’t lose your lunch. It’s just a temporary vacation from all that psychology stuff you did for the previous fifteen years. It was just supposed to be for the year your wife wrote her doctoral dissertation, but you know how these things go. Not that YOU ever finished your Ph.D. You were admitted to two programs, the first of which restructured itself while you were about two years in, so you cut your losses and left with a master’s degree. The second program offered you a really nice scholarship, but you turned it down and instead played in a rock band for several years. I know, I know… you don’t know how to play any rock instruments and you can’t sing, but that will all change in about four years. And yes, I did mention your wife. But it’s not Anna. She dumps your ass before graduation even. And this will not be the only time you will have your heart ripped out of your chest. Don’t even try to predict what life will be like from year to year dude, because you won’t even be close. What if I told you that in three years time, you’ll pack up everything you own and move to San Francisco, just for the hell of it. Or that in six years you will have long hair — we’re talking Jesus Christ long — and you’ll be driving a 1971 VW Bus (which you’ll keep for a dozen years). Or that you’ll live in Mexico for a while. That you’ll destroy your other knee seventeen years from now.

What was the prompt again?

Oh yeah, so anyway…[shaking head to regain focus]. Defining moments of 2010:

(1) The Minor Stars CD Release show in January. I would never have imagined I’d be on that stage again, years after moving away, seeing all those familiar faces in the crowd. I was told by more than one person that I “rocked balls.”

(2) My wife finishing her Ph.D. in May! A long, long journey, which included such exotic stops as Veracuz, Mexico and Lexington, Kentucky. Finishing her degree meant, among other things, that my wife and I could live under the same roof for the first time since 2007. This didn’t exactly pan out, because my wife and I still don’t have jobs in the same town. But we’re spending many more nights together, and I’m grateful for that.

(3) My last performance with Minor Stars, in June at Studio B (the local NBC station). Bittersweet, but it was time for me to shift gears and start devoting my limited spare time to my own creative projects.

(4) Discovering the music of Irish rocker Glen Hansard in August. I don’t know why this hit me the way it did, but I haven’t been this into an artist in years. This dude is my musical soul-brother, and discovering his musical vibe has completely transformed the way I approach my own music. I can’t explain any of it, like I can’t explain why Henry Miller exploded my head back in my mid-twenties, inspiring the very birth of my creative life.

(5) Going to the Rally to Restore Sanity on October 30th. This was big for a couple of reasons. First, I actually followed up a moment of inspiration (“Wow, that sounds like an awesome idea. I’m so glad Jon Stewart is doing that.”) with some concrete action (By actually showing up in DC), breaking with my usual tendencies. Second, my wife joined me for the adventure, which was totally unexpected. She’s been completely immersed in school/career stuff for a long time, and it had been way too long since we did something semi-spontaneous like this, together.

(6) And of course, turning forty. So maybe it didn’t turn out quite the way 1990 Bob figured it would, but I’m more than okay with that.

2011? A big question mark, indeed. Just the way I like it.

Photo

Reverb 10 Prompt (from Tracey Clark): Sift through all the photos of you from the past year. Choose one that best captures you; either who you are, or who you strive to be. Find the shot of you that is worth a thousand words. Share the image, who shot it, where, and what it best reveals about you.

I’ve long been susceptible to feelings of intense nostalgia, and so have spent many an hour wistfully flipping through family photo albums. It’s not merely a longing for days gone by or the innocence of youth. The whole terrifying, blooming, buzzing mystery of existence can be evoked in a single facial expression. A gleam of the eye can hit me as powerfully as a sky full of stars. And I must confess, I’ve always been particular fascinated by pictures of myself. It wasn’t until this year, my fortieth on the planet Earth, that I noticed myself filling with dread as I examined the photos of me that periodically found their way to my computer screen via email and Facebook. Damn! Is my hair thinning that much?!?! Where did that neck-waddle come from? I LOOK OLD!!!

I used to be annoyed when my Mom or Dad would refuse to be a part of a snap-shot. Now I understand completely. The self-concept for many of us stops aging at about 28 years, while the body dutifully marches over the hump and on down the decline. I think I’m beginning to come to grips with this though. Although many people expressed genuine surprise that I was turning forty this year, my attachment to being perceived as younger than I really am has been getting less reinforcement for the past couple of years. This is a good thing, as this particular attachment has been holding me back and weighing me down in ways I’m only just beginning to understand. For now though, I will feed the beast once again as I select the 2010 finalists for “Photo of the Year” (You didn’t think I’d stick to just one, did you?):

(1) Matt, Bob, and Eric, a.k.a. the rock band Minor Stars. I didn’t appreciate these guys fully until I left the band in June. I especially miss the feeling of being part of something beyond the walls of my lonely little world.

(2) I just realized that the previous photo was taken in December of ’09. As long as I’m breaking the rules, here’s my very first school photo from 1975. Rebecca of the wonderful Zina Dreams reminded me of this one. I rediscovered it this year while rummaging through a box of keepsakes. Maybe it’s because I could feel my fortieth birthday looming, but for whatever reason I became fascinated with this photo, placing it on the fridge with the many photos of my nephews, and even using it as my Facebook profile pic for a while.

(3) When I finally did turn 40, I decided my profile pics should be updated to more accurately reflect my state of decrepitude, so I snapped this one of myself a couple of weeks ago. It’s probably just straight-up narcissism, but I have a long-standing tradition of taking a photo of myself immediately following the recording of a new song and then posting it on my blog along with the tune. I took this one right after recording my latest.

(4) And the winner is… Big Sky Country. My wife and I flew to Montana in August for her cousin’s wedding. I had never been on a horse before (That’s me in the red shirt). Dingo was his name, and it was truly wonderful to ride through the beautiful countryside with my wife and her lovely family. It was truly wonderful, that is, until the last half-hour or so, when the pain from bouncing around in the saddle started to approach the near-unbearable point. Aside from the awesomeness of the scenery, I especially like this photo because it was of a brand new experience that took me by surprise.

New name

Reverb 10 Prompt (from Becca Wilcott) : Let’s meet again, for the first time. If you could introduce yourself to strangers by another name for just one day, what would it be and why?

I could ramble in any number of directions with this one. Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated two years before I was born, and my parents had him in mind when they named me. I was known as Bobby throughout most of my childhood, shortening it to Bob when I wanted to be taken a bit more seriously. If my mother referred to me as Robert, it meant I was in some trouble. If I heard “Robert Joseph!”, the trouble was deep. Perhaps because Bob is such a generic, radio commercial kind of name, I accumulated an impressive list of nick names. My Dad called be Bosley. Uncle Jack preferred Boshalowski. Uncle Jim went with Boslikoff. Aunt Donna often called me Boo. Grandpa liked to call me Bobby Doodah. To Grandma I was, even as a young adult, her little Boshe (sounds kinda like “beige,” but with an oh sound). My soccer teammates in high school called me Bobby D. My closest college buddies often referred to me as either Bo-bo or Bobus Maximus. At my first job after graduation, one of the developmentally challenged guys I worked with was fond of saying “Poor Bobbo” whenever I seemed to be tired or frustrated. Soon everyone in the building called me Bobbo. And on my very first day in Mexico I was dubbed “Bob Esponja” (Sponge Bob) by our host family. Whenever our hosts said “Bob”, it sounded to me like they were saying “Bug”, which reminds me of a little story. Actually, it’s a pretty long story, so feel free to skip it. But I have to sign off now to prepare for my holiday travels, so even though I wrote this three years ago in my journal (which is totally cheating, I know) and I don’t have time to edit it or to set the context, this story is what the prompt brings to mind and it’s all I can offer today…

Bug in the Jug

I’m sitting in a corner of the room, surrounded by all our belongings. Some guys are putting in the floor tile today, so my world has shrunk to a six by six foot pile of stuff while they work on the rest of the room. Presently, the workers are taking a little Pepsi break, chatting about this and that. The word chinga tends to come up a lot. Undoubtedly, they must be curious why I choose to remain in the room while they work. However misguided and ultimately self-defeating, I tend to view most others here as potential criminals, out to fuck me over as soon as the opportunity presents itself. People have families to feed, and here’s my stuff all laid out like a five-finger discount flea market. I remember a line from Fight Club: “The things you own end up owning you.” This couldn’t be more true for me right now. I am attached to my things with shackles.

At this point, I’m against putting in the tile, as a way to protest the cost being jacked up at the last moment and because the process promises to be a major inconvenience. They say “no hay problema, muy rapido,” half the tile in today and the other half tomorrow, but experience tells me to expect otherwise. The room is my safe haven, where I have established at least enough privacy, order, and control to maintain sanity. I can feel the shackles chafing.

Of course, when it’s all said and done, it will be nice to have tile, as the floor figures prominently in my plan to take over the world. It’s a simple plan really: To resurrect every stinking, rotting intention that lay buried in the dung-heap of apathy, excuses and half-assed efforts I spent a lifetime compiling in the U.S. Every last little desiccated seed will be resuscitated and nurtured to fruition. Among other things, this means a book will be written; a language learned; an instrument mastered; and a body and mind recalibrated, re-inhabited and renewed.

Along with Miller’s Tropic of Cancer, I’m currently reading Full Catastrophe Living, by Jon Kabat-Zinn. About the level of commitment necessary for self-realization, the author quotes psychologist Carl Jung: “The attainment of wholeness requires one to stake one’s whole being. Nothing less will do; there can be no easier conditions, no substitutes, no compromises.

I love this kind of “balls out” sentiment. Miller strikes a similar chord, vis-á-vis art: “Art consists in going the full length. If you start with the drums you have to end with dynamite”. My bandmates and I used an inside catch-phrase to capture this carpe diem vibe, demanding of ourselves and each other that we “head the gong.” Those of us who grew up worshipping the rock band Led Zeppelin know well that drummer John Bonham, who died young of a drug overdose, used a gong as part of his drum set-up. Anyway, the guys and I went out to see a Led Zep tribute band one night, and as the drummer wailed away during the famous ten-minute Moby Dick drum solo, we couldn’t help notice that he held back a little toward the end. “Dude,” I said to my friends, “if you’re going to do Moby Dick, you gotta go all the way, you gotta throw yourself head first into the gong. Yeah man, you gotta head the fucking gong!” Throw in a case of Pabst Blue Ribbon and there you have it – a defining moment in the too-short four year life of the band.

I’ve often told myself I would one day put into print the “Head the Gong Manifesto”, making explicit to myself and the world precisely how I intended to live, should I ever find the requisite strength and courage. Well, here’s the gist of it, in slightly greater detail than above: I’m going to meditate everyday; write the book I’ve been not writing for the last ten years; finish up and properly record every song idea in my cassette archives; learn Spanish, then Chinese; study a martial art; step up my exercise regimen with daily stretching and calisthenics; learn some cover tunes and refuse to shy away from opportunities to perform; rededicate myself to the study and practice of Somatic Education (a form of neuro-muscular/body work); find a way to teach for a living…

I’m sure more will come to me. And I’m off to a good start, I must say – writing like a madman, Spanish improving by the day, soccer practice every night, a few days into formal meditation practice and a solid floor exercise routine. It’s amazing what not having a job (or kids) can do for the daily schedule.

*

Yesterday’s soccer practice. My pulled quad muscle was still troubling me. Trouble was, every time I kicked the ball with my right leg, I felt a good deal of pain. In my broken Spanish I tried to explain to my amigos that I might have to sit this one out. At the last moment, I decided to press on. Didn’t want to look like a candy-ass, what with all the machismo in the air. The previous practice I came up with a mantra to help me stay mindful of my rickety frame: “Stay in your legs, stay with your breath, and go get the ball!” Unfortunately, as we lined up for the scrimmage yesterday, the mantra slipped my mind. Not two minutes into the game, the ball squirted my way and my adversary and I raced to take possession. Our legs collided in a most inauspicious way, causing my left knee to twist violently out of place. I distinctly heard a crackling sound at the moment of impact. The pain was blinding, and I quickly hopped off the field saying “muy malo, muy malo!” (very bad!)

On the sidelines I fell back into the grass and stared up at the sunset sky. Curiously, there was not a thought in my mind, just a sense of absolute resignation. A pack of children quickly surrounded me, peppering me with unintelligible questions and finding much humor in my predicament. One of them pointed at a cloud floating by, saying it looked like a tortuga, a word I recognized as turtle. And it did look like a turtle. That much I could hang my hat on.

My “ambulance” arrived after the scrimmage. It was bicycle with a little carrier thing on the back. I climbed aboard and held on for dear life, wincing with every bump and jostle as we headed back to the river, which had to be crossed in order to get back to town. My amigos had to carry me across the felled street-lamp beam that served as a bridge.

When I got back to the house, our hosts tried to drag me to some local healer for a “massage” that would make me good as new, but I put my good foot down and insisted on a healer with a diploma on the wall and access to an X-ray machine. Having been through this whole rigmarole before (torn right ACL; broken left tibial plateau), I consider myself somewhat of an expert on busted knees. I wanted to ice and elevate overnight, postponing till morning the extremely bouncy car ride along the road/minefield to San Pedro. Juana, of course, tried to explain why ice was bad and that what I really needed was a hot avocado leaf, or some shit like that. At that moment, I realized I was fucked. Molly was frantically trying to translate the back and forth, and the best we could do was get them to take us to a doctor immediately, as for some unclear reason Jesús couldn’t make the trip in the morning. Besides, we were told, there was no way to get ice at 9:00pm.

The long, bumpy ride to San Pedro was a chance to test my newly acquired meditative powers. “It’s only pain” became my new mantra. We arrived at the clinic and I was able to get some X-rays taken. I sat for a few minutes, waiting for the results and wondering why they didn’t cover my groin with a lead mat, like they do in U.S. radiology rooms. No importa! I was also hoping for a fracture, as that result would be clear-cut, conclusive, and unlikely to require surgical repair. The X-rays showed otherwise, however, revealing only a congenital floating kneecap fragment (which greatly confounded the initial diagnosis). The trauma specialist then examined my knee and reached the tentative conclusion that meniscus and/or ligament tears were causing the pain and swelling. He also told me I have the knees of a sixty year-old and recommended I give up sports entirely.

As the nurse injected some unknown substance into my ass, I slowly slipped back into self-pity mode as “I’m fucked” jumped back to mind. Aside from translated conversations, my entire social life here consists in playing hacky-sack with the kids and soccer with Jesús and his amigos. Lately, guys wave to me in the street, asking if I’ll be at practice later, whereas before there were mostly hushed comments, giggles and stares as I walked through town. Not two hours before the injury, I spent a poop-load of pesos on gear, photos, and registration fees. All outside of “the budget” and all down the crapper now, not to mention the mounting medical expenses.

My thoughts went on like this the whole ride home. Poor Bobbo. Can’t even walk into town to use the internet or buy groceries. Just when I was getting my shit together, it’s back into the belly of the beast. And things just got worse from there. The tiling process was not proceeding as scheduled. For two days, the men worked from morning until well into the night, so I could not relax and recover in my own room. A day and half had passed before I could get any ice for my knee, so it looked like a grapefruit and I sat in our hosts’ living room in agonizing discomfort for hours and hours.

I was able to suck it up for the first twelve hours or so, and even had a nice moment or two. Jesús’ brother Manuel, who had helped carry me across the river, stopped by to see how I was doing. Manuel played soccer in old, beat-up sneakers because, according to Jesús, he couldn’t afford cleats. Realizing my soccer days were over, for a while at the very least, I asked Manuel if he would accept my brand new cleats as a gift. He seemed touched, and the good feelings buoyed me along for a few hours or so. But the overall misery level – from pain, extreme discomfort, exhaustion, lack of privacy, worry about my health, etc. – eventually crossed the line as the hours ticked away and it seemed like I’d never get back into my room and into bed.

It was about 10pm, the day following the injury, and I sat there in the middle of the living room surrounded by everyone and all the stuff from our room. I couldn’t keep up the “I’m okay” act any longer, so I pulled my cap down over my face and asked Molly to instruct everyone to please leave me alone. I tried my best to disappear, to completely dissociate from my body, which at this point was in uncharted realms of discomfort. Kids would periodically come by and look under my cap to see if I was awake. I just played dead. Every now and again I’d notice mosquitoes landing on my legs, nourishing themselves on my vital fluids. I imagined I was buried alive in a form-fitted casket, observing the pain and restlessness in my body from a place of near total detachment. I felt as vulnerable as a newborn baby – immobile, uncommunicative, completely at the mercy of others, waiting, hoping for mercy to be shown.

At some unknown hour of the night, Molly roused me and informed me she had successfully pleaded with our hosts and the workers to make a small space in our room where the bed could be re-assembled and my lifeless carcass deposited. I lied there with my hat over my face until the workers at last left for the night. They explained to Molly that they had needed to finish the room, no matter how long it took, because they had another job tomorrow morning they could not afford to miss. The bathroom tile would have to wait until that other job was completed. At last there was privacy enough to let the sobs come. They were necessarily stifled sobs, of course, as our host family was but a few feet away behind a thin curtain. The tears flowed under my cap for a long time. I felt like everything that had been holding me together had been stripped away.

*

Two days have now come and gone, and I am once again in my familiar spot next to the window, leg braced and propped up on the bed. Molly has gone to the store to stock up on the bare necessities. Grocery shopping used to be my job, along with cleaning dishes and the assorted odd jobs that require a man’s strength. Now, and for at least the next few weeks as we see how the knee heals, everything falls on my wife’s shoulders. Without modern conveniences, chores here are rather time-consuming when able-bodied and aided. Now, everything is just one big pain in the ass after another. And, as far as my wife is concerned, I am just one big pain in her ass. I can’t argue with that.

I hate being dependent on anyone, especially on our hosts, and on Juana in particular. Since I arrived, the sound of her voice hits me like nails on a chalkboard. Everything she does annoys me to no end, no matter how helpful she tries to be. This is all me, one hundred percent my issue, but under stress I have a hard time keeping it in check. The other night, while our stuff was being put back into our room, we noticed our water jug was empty. Molly is not strong enough to confidently lift a full twenty-liter jug into the dispenser, so Juana swooped in to the rescue. She got the job done, providing me with convenient, bedside access to life-giving agua. Yet, all I could think was: “Did she just spill water all over my books?” and “She didn’t clean off the top of the jug before she put it in, did she?”

I smiled and thanked her just the same, as always, but as soon she left I disgustedly inspected her work. “Ah ha! There’s a bug swimming around inside the container! Inside the jug, contaminating my clean water! It was probably crawling around in the dispenser as she put the jug in. I should’ve tried to do it myself”, I thought. I pointed the bug out to Molly and she rolled her eyes at me in disgust, weary as she must’ve been of my perpetual state of dissatisfaction.

I know this is all taking a severe toll on her, and I am doing my best to be mindful of how my reactions are affecting her. Today, things are better. Difficult, yes, but better. Routine trips to the bathroom can still turn into thirty-minute chores. Crutches still slip and slide on the wet tile. I need help to wash my feet. I toss and turn all night, searching for comfort, but succeeding only in disturbing my wife’s sleep.

But I’m back writing again, and today I found a way to fix my own breakfast. I’m even washing dishes again. A little while ago we needed to replace the water jug again, and I thought about it doing it myself, but only for a second. I tried to coach Molly through it, but we needed help, Juana’s help. And again, she got the job done. Water splashed all over the floor, but this time we all laughed. Molly noticed the little bug lying dead inside the empty jug. Then it occurred to me. Bug. That’s what everybody calls me here. That’s how they pronounce “Bob.” I corrected them a few times in the beginning, but the habit had already stuck. Besides, I thought at the time, being called “Bug” might make for an interesting story down the road, maybe even providing a touch of irony at just the right moment.

Future self

Reverb 10 Prompt (from Jenny Blake): Imagine yourself five years from now. What advice would you give your current self for the year ahead? (Bonus: Write a note to yourself 10 years ago. What would you tell your younger self?)

Everybody loves to check the mailbox this time of year. Okay, here it is, the letter I’ve been expecting from my future self, which I need so that I can write this post. Tearing it open… and voila! Nothing. A blank page. Cute. Like that book of wisdom with just a mirror inside. Nice. On the bright side, now I know what to send my ten-years-ago self. Convenient. Just like all those email gift cards I sent out to my family for Christmas. Simple. Just what I wanted, today, yesterday, and tomorrow. Seriously.

A lot can happen in five years. A lot will happen. What it if I could know, for sure, how the really important things in my life are going to play out? What if, for instance, my 2015 self told me that despite seven-and-a-half years of repeatedly turning my life upside down in support of my wife’s career goals, our marriage will crash and burn just as soon as she settles in to her dream job? I’d be lying if I said I didn’t fear this on some level, that I didn’t worry that the strain of these years might prove too much for our bond to bear, and in the end she’ll have the job, the job will have her, and I’ll be left alone, again. If I knew for certain that this would be my fate, would I bail right now? Would I withdraw the support my wife has come to rely on just when she needs it most, as she limps toward the finish line? No, I don’t think I would. I think I’d hang on until the bitter end, even if I saw it coming five years ahead of time.

I’ve already learned the lesson that there are no guarantees when it comes to relationships. I remember well the awful feeling when my most recent ex sat me down for “the talk.” This after I had given her every bit of my heart for five years, after I had followed her 2000 miles across the country (leaving my beloved Bay Area) so that we could stay together. She said something to the effect that “I wouldn’t be who I am today without your love. You were the one who gave me these wings, but now I have to fly away.” And so she did. Right into another man’s arms. I definitely didn’t see that one coming, but what if I had? What if my future self had dropped in on me five years prior, on that first day that I laid eyes on her in my Theories of Counseling class? Could I have been persuaded to resist her charms? Would I have been discouraged from boarding that train if Future Bob showed me all the unedited video footage of the wreckage I’d be tangled up in when things would eventually go off the rails? Nah. All aboard!

So fuck it, I don’t want a letter from my future self. Not even a few simple words of encouragement. I don’t want to know anything in advance, however much I pretend otherwise at times. My Dad probably won’t be around in 2015, if the doctors are right. I don’t want to know. I might not be around in 2015. I don’t want even that assurance.

Don’t get me wrong. I hope everything will turn out okay — with my Dad, with my marriage, with my life. But who needs hope if you already know everything will turn out fine? All that drives me to love, to cherish, to attend to with care, to “head the gong” — it all comes from a place of profound unknowing, inherent uncertainty, and incomprehensible mystery. I like the sense of possibility that comes from hoping without knowing for sure. I like surprises. Like yesterday, when I actually did make an important trip to the mailbox.

I was walking to work and decided to cut through a quiet, residential block as I approached the edge of campus. An elderly woman saw me passing by from across the street and in a flash she stepped off her porch and made a bee-line for me. She was wearing slippers and a nightgown, inside of which she tucked her arms tight against her body. It was a bitterly cold morning. Before I could quite register her presence, she was standing right in front of me, flashing me the sweetest little-old-lady smile. In an eastern-European accent she said, “I have a letter in my front pocket. Would you please put it in the mailbox for me?” “Of course! I’d be happy to!” I said, returning a big smile while at the same time realizing that she did not, as I had supposed, have her arms wrapped around herself to keep warm. She had no arms at all. Something in the way she smiled prevented me from registering anything but the gleam in her eyes, and so I reached into her pocket, grabbed the letter, and headed toward the mailbox as if the two of us had been meeting like this every Monday morning for a hundred years. She thanked me as she quickly ran back across the street and into her house, never once looking back to check whether or not I actually mailed the letter.

Her smile, her trust, the gleam in her eyes — I’m at a complete loss to explain why these things mean the world to me, but they do.

Beyond avoidance

Reverb 10 Prompt (from Jake Nickell): Beyond avoidance. What should you have done this year but didn’t because you were too scared, worried, unsure, busy or otherwise deterred from doing? (Bonus: Will you do it?)

Shoulda, coulda, woulda… Well shit, I just beat myself to a pulp in my last post for refusing to play and sing in the same room with other humans. Cut me some slack here Jake! Sure, there were countless other things I either avoided doing or didn’t make the time for over the course of this year. But I’m at peace with this state of affairs (for the most part) because I’ve at long last come to accept a couple of things about myself and my life.

First, I don’t like to be busy all the time. I seem to require a LOT more down-time than most folks. In fact, I’ve never met anyone who blocks off time the way I do for unstructured, non-purposeful activity. I’m just not willing to give up my walks, my movement meditations on the living room floor, or my aimless rock-out sessions up in my bedroom studio. To-do list be damned!

Second, I’m not going to quit my corporate zombie job until my wife lands an academic position (hopefully for the fall of 2011). We need x dollars per month to get by, and if I get off the treadmill, we’re not getting by. Taking on more debt is not an option. I’ve maxed out all my living-on-borrowed-time years ago, during that glorious stretch otherwise known as “my twenties.” So for now the day-job is non-negotiable and, including commute time, it takes 55 hours of my week right off the top. By the time I get home from work and then attend to all the necessary household chores and bodily needs, I have maybe an hour, at best two, to do anything else, and by this time my energy and focus are nil. My friends and family with kids have no sympathy for me, of course, but neither do I weep for them. They all chose to be parents, just like I chose to be a self-centered ne’er-do-well! Privileged we all are to live the way we want to, that’s for certain.

So whatever it is that I want to get accomplished, beyond providing the basic necessities and comforts of home for my wife and me, has got to get done on the weekend, along with the more time-consuming chores and intermittent family/social obligations. My weekends follow an inscrutable mathematical formula (assuming I’m not traveling to visit family): I always have exactly three things that I have to do (i.e. grocery shopping, laundry, finances) and exactly seventeen things that I want to do. Time is the constant. Two years of data graph out into some inescapable conclusions: 1) Choosing to do one thing is simultaneously choosing not to do the other sixteen things; 2) Progress in any one area is very gradual when I try to make headway on multiple fronts; 3) Speeding up progress on any one front necessarily means slowing down or halting progress on some other fronts.

For instance, while I was playing in the band, things progressed steadily — from learning the songs to playing local shows to being featured in the local media to out-of-town mini-tours — but at the expense of all my other personal projects. I got next to nothing done creating a new career path, I wrote almost nothing other than tweets and status updates, and my own music stayed trapped inside my head and on old cassette tapes. I left the band in June, focused more on these neglected projects, and since then have seen some steady progress in a few areas. The fourteen other things? Those lines on the graph are either horizontal or else tilting down toward ground zero. Here’s how it’s mapping out right now [Note #1: A positive slope indicates progress; zero means holding steady; negative means atrophy. Note #2: I suck at math, so none of this makes a damn bit of sense]:

The Seventeen Things

Recording my own music: +4
Practicing songs for live performance: +3
Transferring song ideas from cassettes to computer: 0
Writing in personal blog (Not including temporary Reverb 10 bounce): +1
Writing in semi-professional/academic blog: -3
Maintain/Re-learn Hanna Somatic Education techniques: -15
Formal mindfulness meditation practice: -10
Personal movement meditation/daily somatics practice: +8
Cardiovascular exercise: -2
Strength exercise/calisthenics: +3
Reading: -10
Staying in touch with family via phone calls/facebook: +6
Socializing with friends: -7
Learning Spanish: 0
Working on “book”: 0
Developing “Integral Health” workshop: 0
Working on journal article: 0

Of course, this month has been all about Reverb 10 — so much so that about fifteen days into it I crashed pretty hard from the lack of balance. Again, by choosing to spend my time blogging and commenting, I chose not to do a lot of other things. Like pretty much everything else. When my right arm started to hurt from too much mouse wagging… — that’s when I knew I needed a break. For the rest of the month and in the coming year, I’ll do my best to stay on my feet, juggle my seventeen things, and keep my mouse arm out of a sling.

Try

Reverb 10 Prompt (from Kaileen Elise): What do you want to try next year? Is there something you wanted to try in 2010? What happened when you did / didn’t go for it?

I typically don’t go for it. That’s just the way it is. The way I am. I hate to admit such things, but I gotta fess up. My tendency is to wait until “it,” whatever it may be, comes back around again, when I’ll ostensibly be better prepared to do “it” well. I must know, in advance you see, that going for it will result in it going the way I want it to go. Got it? Otherwise, my default response to opportunity in general is, “I’m not ready just yet, but I’ll go for it once I am ready.” I’m never ready. And so my trips out of the comfort zone have almost always been the result of a two-handed shove from behind. 2010 wasn’t any different in that regard, as my mother-in-law more or less shoved an acoustic guitar into my hands, gave me a look that impressed itself upon me like a shotgun barrel to the temple, and then sat back with the rest of her family to hear me play and sing. Incredibly, this was first time anyone in the room, except for my wife, had ever heard — in person — the sound of my singing voice, and these are people who have known me for ten years.

I bought my first guitar in San Francisco when I was twenty-four years old. I took to it like a duck to water, and within a few weeks I could play a handful of cover songs. A few months later I was getting feedback like, “Hey, I just happened to be standing outside your door and heard you playing. You have a really nice voice. You should play at the open mic on Friday nights.”

No, no, no, no… I’m not ready for that yet. I need more practice.

About a year after that, one of my new roommates knocked on my bedroom door, came in and said, “Dude! You never told me you play guitar and sing! Sounds awesome man. Look, I’m getting a band together and we need a singer. You wanna come to practice tomorrow night and jam?”

Ummm… Thanks dude. That’s cool man, but the thing is, I’m really swamped with grad school stuff right now, but maybe after the semester’s over…

Fast forward about ten years. Christmas in San Antonio, 2006. My wife’s incredible family, all huddled up in the giant living room making merry. The acoustic guitar is being passed around to any and everyone who can play. The atmosphere is one of total acceptance, regardless of how “good” a given performance is. By the time the guitar gets to my corner of the room, I’m conspicuously absent. I’m hiding out in the guest house, kicking myself for not being ready to seize the moment, for not practicing more the weekend before the trip.

I’ll be ready next year.

The guitar was indeed passed around in 2007, and in 2008, and in 2009, and each time when it came my turn I just happened to be in the guest house, hiding. Next year, right? Sadly, no. My wife’s grandfather — the reason we’ve all been gathering in San Antonio every Christmas — passed away on January 4th of this year. The house was sold shortly after. So many wonderful memories, but no one will remember the sound of my voice joining in the joyful chorus, because I did what I’ve always done — I held back. But that’s just Bob being Bob. Bob is a shy one, let me tell you. Painfully shy. When he was a kid he never, not once, called a friend or knocked on a friend’s door to say, “Wanna play?” You see, the only way he could be sure that they wanted to play is if he waited for them to call him. So that’s what he did. Fortunately his friends weren’t so shy. In high school, Bob asked exactly one girl out, because he was given 100% assurance from his friends that this girl wanted him to ask her to the prom. When he finally asked, with voice trembling and knees knocking, she politely declined. He never asked another girl out. Ever. This explains why he dated exactly three women (including his wife) in his entire life.

But Bob, …er I mean “I”, I did eventually call up a few friends, and I eventually kissed a girl, lost my virginity, got married, and — after 15 years — finally did play my guitar and sing in front of a live audience. It was in April of this year. Forget about the fact that I had played in bands for years. Bass players can easily hide behind the front-person, which is what I did. Playing guitar and singing solo is a whole different ball game. It’s true that I had been getting progressively less shy with putting my music up on my blog. Of course, no one was visiting my blog, so I wasn’t being terribly courageous in that respect. But then I started doing the Facebook thing (the first time I ever used my real name online), and suddenly a handful of friends and family members were actually paying attention to what I was doing. In April I posted a video of me covering a Dan Auerbach (of The Black Keys) song. People watched it and “liked” it. A week or two later I found myself on my mother-in-law’s porch, her giving me the guitar and the shotgun glare, and I couldn’t very well bow out with my usual “I don’t know any songs” excuse. They all knew damn well that I could play “Trouble weighs a ton.” Still, I didn’t feel like I was ready to do it well enough, not right there with everyone watching. But I did it. And things haven’t been the same since.

I’m a coward, I know. An absolute, fucking chicken-shit coward. Who knows why I am the way I am, why I waited all these years. It’s not like I haven’t been continuously pushing myself and growing as a person for a long time, but for whatever reason, I didn’t go for this particular “it” until this year. I just don’t know why it took me so long. But I finally sang my song. Well, technically it’s Dan Auerbach’s song, but I’m working on playing my own songs. I even posted a video of one just last week as part of my “11 Things” Reverb 10 response. Yeah, I’m almost ready to play my own songs live. Just need a little more practice. A little more time.

Next week will be the first Christmas in many years I won’t be in San Antonio. Where am I going to be? You guessed it: At my mother-in-law’s house.

Friendship

Reverb 10 Prompt (from Martha Mihalick): How has a friend changed you or your perspective on the world this year? Was this change gradual, or a sudden burst?

I’ve mentioned my buddy Eric a few times already. Last time it was about how I’ve tended to ride his coattails as a way of avoiding living my own life full-throttle. Despite this tendency of mine, Eric has always steadfastly encouraged me to head my own gong. As many of my fellow Reverb10ers know well, following your gut, heart, and dreams at all cost is a road — if you follow it long enough — that features not just spectacular vistas and long stretches of pedal-to-the-metal intensity, but also breakdowns, seemingly endless traffic snarls, and even the occasional jaws-of-life-extraction type of wreck. Over the years, when the going has gotten tough, Eric has picked me up on the side of the road and carried me along to the next town, sometimes to the next state even. It’s true, once I get comfy in the passenger seat, I tend to drift into a slumberous torpor. This year though, Eric has inspired me to get back behind the wheel, changing my perspective by the example of his own tenacity.

This is a guy who keeps moving forward no matter what. After two and half years of blood, sweat and tears orchestrating his magnum opus psych rock album, he was finally on the cusp of the type of recognition and success he so richly deserves. Then his drummer moved to New York. [Drummers…(muttering).] His bass player was next to fly the coop. [Pfftt… Bass players. Who needs ’em…] A short while after that, his lead guitarist moved to Denver. [Ouch.] Undaunted, Eric finished the record mostly on his own, playing multiple instruments. Then he recruited some old friends (including yours truly) to fill out the performing lineup. From there he just kept on making things happen. He booked shows, contacted the press, created websites, “made the scene” week in and week out to network with musicians and other folks in the biz. He also flat-out rocked his fucking ass off every time he took the stage.

Then he got laid off from his job. No problem. Now he had the freedom to take his show on the road, so he started setting up a couple of full-scale tours. But the signature on the title of his new touring van hadn’t yet fully dried when both the drummer and I made it clear that our job-having asses couldn’t manage any extensive touring. Back to square one: No band! Dream over, right? Wrong! He books the tour a couple of months in advance — sans band — , spends the interim time recruiting and auditioning new players, and finally solidifies a fully functioning lineup just in time to hit the road and rock people’s worlds up and down the east coast.

Persistence. Grit. Tenacity. Holding fast to one’s dream when it appears all might be lost. Carrying on. Eric has been on this road now for a dozen years, at least, showing me the way however much I refuse to budge.

This year, for me, has not been about sudden bursts of insight or dramatic, overnight changes in perspective. Turning forty took me by surprise, but it’s not something that happened 18 days ago. It took all forty years. It’s my own crying shame that I’ve been going over much of the same old ground for a good part of the last decade, getting all inspired and talking a big game only to return to the comfort zone at the first sign of trouble. I’m not sure exactly what’s changed, really. Maybe I’ve just finally gotten sick of going in circles, tired of napping in the shotgun seat.

We all know the clichés, that it’s about enjoying the journey and not about arriving at any particular destination. Any way you slice it though, we all end up six feet under, sooner or later, somewhere along the side of the road. I’m okay with this, because I have to be, but I don’t want to arrive at my resting place clutching a suitcase full of good intentions. I’d rather my suitcase be empty. Better yet, like my friend, I’d like to get there with nothing but a big lump on my head, hearing the faint sound of a gong still ringing somewhere off in the distance…