ROW80 DAY 23
CHECK IN WEDNESDAY AUGUST 1, 2012
A DAY TO
REMEMBER - PART 3 - THE HELL WITH IT – LET’S JUST CALL IT WHAT IT REALLY IS: “THE SHIP OF THE DAMNED”
**SORRY
WALTER LORD - ALSO POST BACK TO NORMAL LENGTH TOMORROW, PROMISE
Okay, so,
when we left off, our intrepid folks were hanging out in the ER waiting room of
TGH. A very busy night indeed, and the ones hanging on for the duration weren’t
feeling better for the wait. We also have an interesting shift in the type of
clientele that is seeking medical assistance. What were working men, soccer
moms with banged up kids, has changed to, rasta guys, gang bangers, gits and
hos with ‘tats and ‘tudes. The maladies have changed as well. From bumps,
bruises and broken bones to overdoses, knifings, black eyes and minor gun shot
wounds. The really bad ones we just hear as the ambulance rockets past to the
Surgical entrance; the siren echoes eerily, magnified off the cement canyons of
the patient wings. It is a lovely, lonely, urgent sound. I hope for those who
are being borne along. I hope they recover physically and spiritually. I hope
this will be a turning point for them. That they will realize their lives are
worth so much more than being borne to this place, little more than sacks of
dying flesh, for dedicated men and women to fight and labor over to save, only
to go out and tempt that dragon once more.
I was one of
those sacks of dying flesh once. The saviors had to do a lot of saving. I
decided I wanted to live. I still tempt dragons but of a better class and in another
way and I am forever graced for this gift, this insight; splendid, unasked-for
opportunity. My redemption lies in my voice; my ability to tell, ask, verbalize
and lyricize. To help and try to understand, be compassionate, care and help.
That will be my salvation in a life ill-spent. And to tell really great
stories, without any type of segue. Lucky you! Enough Hallmark Card Precious
Moments.
Back in our ER, the Titanic-TGH ER, Jack
Hanna comes out on the TV with something resembling a Bobcat. It’s little and
feisty, and it has the cropped tail, of a Bob, but it has the big feet and
pointy ears and cheeks of a Lynx. I get up to get closer to the screen. Now, I’m
standing under the screen, sort of, wearing glasses, holding whackamole. There’s
a man sitting near me with his obviously very ill and uncomfortable wife. They
are touching to watch. He has been reassuring and comforting to her. They have
been patient and talking to us all there. It’s a shame to meet people under
those circumstances, but so, so endearing and ennobling to witness. The man
says, “I’m scared of cats and birds. That cat has prongs. What is that?” For I
know not what reason, I blurt out , “We had an accidental bobcat once!”
Well. This was met with dead silence. I
can hear necks creak. So, I launch into the whole stupid story: When we moved
to San Diego in 1963, we found ourselves petless for a while. In San Diego at
the time, there was still quite a bit of undeveloped land. We lived in a
housing tract that was built on top of a canyon ridge. The bottom of the canyon
ridge still contained yucca bushes, cacti, jackrabbits, coyotes and such. Fun
for kids to play in. My cousins lived a block away and we had many adventures,
falling into cacti, getting bitten by scorpions, teasing tarantulas; the poor
‘rents.
Around my birthday in December, my mom
asked me what I wanted for my present. I told her I wanted a kitten. Eyeroll.
She missed having pets too, but after the traumatic death of our last cat, and
her fragile mental state she wasn’t really willing to make an emotional
investment, yet, but she knew I was hurting. So, one bright Saturday, off we
went to the local ASPCA to pick out a kitten. I seem to remember they had these
huge wire baskets full of kittens. It must have been kitten nap time after milk
and cookie time at kitten kindergarten because every damned one of these guys
were asleep. Curled up in little balls, so I have to hope that the one I pick
out by color at least has feet, because my father is standing there hollering,
“DON’T DISTURB THE KITTIES!”
So, I look and I see one particularly
fuzzy little number; he or she looks kind of spotty on the belly, kind of
browny and black on his/her blacky. So, I reach down and pick up this little
guy. Blink, blink, blue-green eyes. Fuzz, big feet. My father, who adored cats,
reached down to hold him and cup his hindquarters. Bobtail. “I’ll be damned.
He’s a manx. A little boy manx.” Sayeth the Cat-Whisperer. My mom holds him and cuddles him; he goes
back to sleep. We run home with our prize. He slept all the way home.
Of course, being the soul of
creativity, I named him “Robert.” Robert the bob cat. Which he turned out to
be. Our first inkling type of kitten we had purchased was about 15 minutes
after we got him home. We had put paper cut-out snowflakes up on the windows.
Robert thought these were delightful. He was pretty small, but he could already
jump well over 6 feet in the air. Once he had torn every single snow flake off
the window, including the ones that my father had placed that were taped a good
7 feet up the glass, Then, it was time for a nap. I guess all that snowflake
killing wore him out.
Robert tipped the scales at about 45
pounds. He had springboard hind legs, a bowling ball ass, shorter front legs,
platter feet, longer hair and spots on his tummy and did I mention his tail?
His tail was just the cutest! He had a short little bobbed tail. He had
marvelous ear and cheek mustaches and slept, oh, about 53 hours a day.
He was a placid and benign presence in
the area, but not all neighbors got that memo. We had a couple of neighbors
across the street at the time, named Gary and Sheryl. Sheryl was an “Artist”
and Gary was a mechanic. They were both rather feeble-minded, but sweet. We
lived on a street that was a cul-de-sac and being the early ‘60s, were an
insular and familiar bunch, but G and S were “odd.” Still, they were nice
enough, after several drinks (my father said.)
One night, my folks had Gary and Sheryl
over for dinner because Sheryl had given my mom one of her paintings, After a
few drinks, Gary blurts out, “Gee, we have mountain lions in this area!”
“Really?” My father says. “How do you know?” My mother asks. She’s kicking me
under the table, warning me to keep my mouth shut. Gary soldiers on, “my
chihuahuas were barking in the middle of the night! I got up and went in the
living room and there was this huuuge cat stretched out on the back of my
couch. It musta come in through the pet door! It was huuuge! About 6 feet long.
It had prongs on its face and coming out of its ears! It was terrifying!” My
dad said, “Oh, I’ll bet.” My mom excused herself from the table and said she’d
be right back. “What did you do, Gary?” My father asked. “Well, I went to the refrigerator
and got a raw steak out and threw it out the sliding glass door and said HERE
KITTY, KITTY! And when that bastard went after it, I slammed the door shut!”
Just then, my mom came staggering out of the back of the house, lugging 45
pounds of sleeping bob cat under her arm, and said “Is this your Marauder?” We
thought Gary and Sheryl were going to faint.
So, this is the story I transfixed the
TGH ER waiting room with. About this time, as I am winding down, after the
chortling begins to die, someone starts barfing. This does not cause me to turn
a hair in the least, but I know it’s a trigger for a lot of people. Several
people look at me, pleas in their eyes; “make it stop, or cover it up.” Right
then I am reminded of the James Thurber story of The Pleasure Cruise and How to
Survive It, wherein he is one of the few luckless ones who doesn’t get seasick
and winds up tending those who do. It is a hell few can imagine. Thank god.
Anyway. These poor people are looking at me to turn up the volume, only as luck
would have it, I have just run out of “Robert, the Bobcat Story,” so the
junkbucket of my mind serves up “Three Little Maids from School” from The Mikado which is probably the longest
and most difficult of Gilbert and Sullivan’s Opera’s. It is certainly my
favorite to play. So, I stand up there, madly hollering, operatically, as I
can, because I’ve been around this stuff and I can fake after all. All professional
musicians can fake and if one says they don’t or can’t they’re lying:
Three little maids from school are we
Pert as a school-girl well can be
Filled to the brim with girlish glee
Three little maids from school…
I kind of tapered off. Rasta guy
said, “I can still hear!” So, I bellowed out:
Everything is a source of fun
Nobody's safe, for we care for none
Life is a joke that's just begun
Three little maids from school
2 comments:
I have always loved bobcats, but being in Australia... well, we have none. That lovely fluff on the end of the ears and the coat are just gorgeous! I am amazed you can actually adopt them from shelters!
This is a great story. I love reading your blog Robert. Your redemption lies in your voice, it is true. You have a great gift to give others. Please keep sharing.
(P.S. My apologies for the late arrival, but I was sick and endeavouring to stay out of those awful emergency rooms myself.)
Cheers, Cate (ROW80)
Cate, Thank you so much for reading. This is back in the 60s. I believe there are laws against possessing them. He was our "accidental" bobcat. As near as I can piece together with my 50+ year old sleuth hat now, he must have been picked up with other stray kittens. There were still enough wild canyons around San Diego, California at that time.
Your praise is very kind indeed. This is a new start for me, as I am recently disabled and I am finding my passion and voice again. I intend to keep writing and never spologize for being "late." The door is always open and the kettle is on for tea.
Take care, Cate. I hope you are well and I am coming to visit you! Mary
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