Monday, June 29, 2009

On showering and mortality

In the morning, after coffee, I stepped into the elevator and was transported back to my childhood, in the small upstairs shower of my father's house. Smell is the sense most intimately tied to memory. This is largely because the olfactory bulb is part of the limbic system and smell is linked to memories in an intimate way, like the threads of a spider's web. It was a disconcerting feeling, to be standing in our small elevator with green carpet, dotted by almost indistinguishable white dots, industrial lighting overhead, the remains of a poster, half-torn, for an event that had already passed, lying on the floor, the plastic top of a cup, trash from college age detritus all around me and yet I was suddenly nine years old taking a shower in the upstairs bathroom at my father's house.

The scent left me with an overwhelming sense of nostalgia, a physical pain for the past, for that child. In truth, I did not want to be that precise child again, still scared of the dark, of diving, of so many things. Nor did I want to experience that summer again, which was full of pools and wiffle ball but nothing to demarcate it as special. What I wanted was for the world to have all of its doors open again. I wanted to be rubbing a quarter sized bit of Selsen Blue into my hair, just as my father had shown me, oblivious of the string of disappointments that were yet to come. I suppose it's a lie then when I say I don't want to be that boy. I do, though what I really mean is that I'd like to be him with the knowledge that I have now. What a rush it would be to move back into such a body, cold, naked and alive with possibility. I imagine myself stepping from the shower into a room filled with the light of unexplored possibilities.

Of course, what I'm really saying is not that I've made poor decisions in my life, though I occasionally have, but rather I'm mourning that I've had to make so many decisions, to have allowed so much time to pass, like water beneath a fast moving ship. It's a peculiar thing, getting older, similar to that odd part on the bottom of the banana. Why is it there? As I stood inside that elevator for ten or fifteen seconds, I was reminded of mortality, that my days will one day come to an end.

I should confess that it takes a great deal out of someone to be surprised in the morning like that by the prospect of the unrelenting specter of death. I'm certain that happier things must have occurred after that in my day, but I can't remember them at all. I remember the white tiled shower, the fuzzy pinkish carpet just beyond the shower door, damp, because I wouldn't close the door all the way for fear that I might drown. I remember the smell of the shampoo, the silky feel of it in the palm of my hand, and I can see from here the shape of things to come.



Sunday, June 28, 2009

Of horse meat and other things................

8:28 A.M. Arise from eight and a half hours of sleep ready to face Saturday. Perform Pilates movements including rolling like a ball all the while reminding myself that their is nothing inherently feminine about working on my core strength. Why am I the only man in my class?

9:00 A.M. Eat a bowl of Kashi cereal. As my father-in-law says, the neat thing about eating Kashi is that when you're done eating the cereal you can just eat the box since it tastes about the same.

9-9:30 Think intently about writing cover letters.

9:45-Dash off a cover letter that actually almost brought me to tears. I didn't realize how many great things I had to say about myself until I really got rolling. I realized that the sort of megalomania that is part and parcel with writing a cover letter needs to be fully accepted.

Excerpt: Andrew traveled to Tazmania where he shot a wild boar while teaching the children of several developing nations to speak English accentlessly. He also busied himself by fashioning arrowheads and curriculum. He thinks he would be a great asset to your school/archaeological dig/company.

10-10:40-Clean the house while Steph fixes the grandiose elements of my cover letter and turns them into something presentable.

11-3-Go to work. Read a book about Martin Heidegger. I do not undertand Being and Time, but I do understand Descartes. I think therefore I am. But I do not think intelligently therefore I am not. Spend an inordinate amount of time wondering whether the computer I'm typing on is real or merely a perception of my senses that is ungrounded in reality. Stop wondering about the existence of the computer and continue typing e-mails.

4-7-Go to my wife's work party. Listen to a podcast on the way that is about Dante's Inferno.

Stephanie: "Can we listen to something that's not boring.
Me: "This is boring?"

The podcast was particularly about the relationship between Paolo and Francesca. The inspiration for a sculpture called "The Kiss" by Rodin, which was our favorite in France. The white unfinished statue, shows Paolo's hand decoroulsy lingering on the thigh of his lover Francesca, while her hand is wrapped around his neck pulling him towards her mouth avariciously. The two bodies are coiled around one another and locked in a eternal embrace. The experience of being in the room with the statue is visceral and erotic, an artistic Viagra.


Listen to the people at the party, including the former governor of Maryland talk about horses and yachting.
"Do you think that I should tell them that my only experience with horses is eating them?"
Steph: "I don't think this is the time."

In reference to an idlylic swing, the sort that has a board strung between two pieces of rope that was hanging over a patch of ovegrown ivy.
Steph: "How old do you think that swing is?"
Me: "I think they probably just put the swing in today to impress the company."
Co-workers-uncomfortable laughter. "He told us that swing has been up since before he moved in."
Me: "Really." Go back to the table for a second glass of wine.

Listen to yachting stories. Regret not wearing my sailor's suit to the party. Briefly wonder if I should eat a can of Spinach and grow forearms like tree trunks. Decline for fear of scaring the former governor.
Eat no less than seven cookies in secret. More situps in the morning.
And indeed there will be time
To wonder, “Do I dare?” and, “Do I dare?”
Time to turn back and descend the stair
-T.S. Eliot Prufrock

Friday, June 26, 2009

Today

My brief foray into the art of Zen Buddhism came to a rapid halt last week when I discovered that I had inadvertently injured my back while putting my left leg on my thigh and sitting for five minutes. As it turns out, human beings have a muscle in their backs, which objects rather strenuously to the lotus position. Anyhow, the point is that anyone over the age of about nine should not attempt Zen mastery, and certainly not people teetering on the edge of 30.

Today I worked at the American University Library, proving myself to be an integral part of the staff by affixing post-its to shelves for a solid couple of hours. I felt pretty good about myself, until I was told that they'd hired a chimp to replace me. The dumb bastard couldn't even put the stickers on properly, but he was willing to work for bananas, and I demanded medium wage.

I've been looking for a job recently and have discovered that only two kinds of jobs exist in the world. They are as follows:
Job One-Come save the (environment, world, democratic party, polar bears, redwood forests, oceans, developing country a, b or c, DC statehood, children whose last names are hard to pronounce and who suffer in silence) all for the incredibly high salary of 20,000 dollars a year. That's right, we'll pay you in pennies, but you'll be happy to be serving the homeless when you are living out on the street with them, and with these salaries, that will happen in no time. Think of the joy you'll get from ringing random doorbells and harassing strangers on the street, asking for just a minute of their time while they turn away in disgust, come, be a leper!

Job Two-Come to work at (corporation or NGO). We'd like someone to start working in our (HR department, data analyst, accountant, middle manager, computer systems) We offer a competitive salary and benefits. Yay! We ask that all candidates applying for the position of computer keyboard gluer have at least seven to ten years of gluing experience, with at least two coming in a business corporate setting. Please feel free to apply for any posting if you've worked in the same field for 5-20 years and are looking to make a lateral move (corporation x, y, z) are hiring soon. If you don't have experience then why are you applying? How do you get experience, we don't know, but you better get some if you intend to work here.

I'm going with job three, which invovles sorting panickedly through job ones and job two's until today is over. Yay!

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Working hard or hardly working

"My whole life is a vacation but sometimes that's hard because vacation just feels like another day off." Andrew Bertaina

Let us go then, you and I,
when the evening is spread out against the sky
Like a patient etherized upon a table;
T.S. Eliot The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock

7:42 A.M. Sit up quickly and begin editing this blog.
7:57 A.M. Desist in trying to access my blog because the computer has yet to turn on.
8:10 A.M. Complete sit ups and briefly pull the computer into my lap and acquire third degree burns from the overheated battery. Watch as the screen rolls away as though it were an early version of PowerPoint. Sit patiently while the computer tries to turn on. Secretly suspect a volcano at the center of my computer.
8:20 A.M. Decide to pursue Zen Buddhism as a means of obtaining a better sense of harmony with the world.
8:25 A.M. Discover that the lotus position is only possible for me at the age of seven. Attain half-lotus position and listen to my knee pop in thirteen discrete places. This is good for me, I remind myself as I stare with my mind empty at a piece of the carpet.
8:30 A.M. Desist in yoga because my web-site has recommended that I not set unattainable goals in trying to become a Zen master. The world seems like it has a bit more harmony or perhaps breakfast has just settled.
9-10 A.M. Fill out a job application with minimal errors. Submit job application and have the feeling that I've accomplished more than enough for one day. Reward myself by taking some time to read.
10:20 A.M. Learn that my brother and his wife are having a baby girl. Congrats to them! Now that he and his wife have had a baby girl and a baby boy I come to the stark realization that my only way to be original now is to father a hermaphrodite. Think about moving near a nuclear plant to increase chances. Decide against it. Feel bad. Read Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides as penance.
11-4 P.M. Work part-time at a library inventorying books, which consists of checking to make sure that every book is in it's proper place in the library. Listen to podcasts about generative math and music. http://www.longnow.org/projects/seminars/
12 P.M. Go to library picnic and attempt to not overeat. Leave early because I get antsy that the books in the library are missing me.
4:10 P.M. Sneak into the back of the library and take a piece of left-over chicken from the fridge and put it in my bag. Note: I think the chicken was up for grabs, but I tend to do these sorts of things secretly, as though people were watching me and just waiting for the moment that they saw me with the chicken to jump out and say, "Put that chicken down you thief." And then spend the next few minutes berating me for chicken theft, and perhaps resorting to torture (just kidding American government) And there I'd be embarrassed and possibly fired, and my hands would have BBQ sauce all over them, and I'd try to apologize but would probably wind up crying or at the very least getting BBQ sauce on my one nice pair of jeans, and for what? For a stupid piece of chicken, I mean, how stupid is that?
4-5:30 P.M. Spend about fifteen minutes working on my novel (insert Stewie voice here: the hero's journey is not always a happy one.") Briefly debate moving the setting of my novel from nineteenth century Africa to twenty third century Uzbeckistan...less to research that way.
6:00-7:00 Work out. Make copious use of mirrors to check on my declining body. Thirty looms.
7 P.M. Have a delicious dinner centered around a nice piece of chicken that turned up in my fridge.
8-10 P.M. Read a book, change the background colors on this blog. Spend an inordinate amount of time with my wife trying to post a resume on G-town's home page. Fail. Post it with mistakes anyway, they have to realize they suck.
10:30 P.M. Having posted two job applications today I retire heroically to this blog, feeling a bit like Washington must have felt when he cornered Cornwallis.

This post is dedicated to the cops on Woodmont Avenue in Bethesda....you kind of suck.

5:40 P.M. Reading the book "Home" by Marilynne Robinson. Phone rings. Have brief conversation with mechanic where I am asked if "I've noticed the tires wearing unevenly?" Decide not to tell said mechanic that I'm not sure I've even noticed the car had tires. "I hadn't noticed that," I answered. Secretly wish I was Fred Flinstone so that my tires could not wear unevenly. Do rocks wear unevenly? Did he drive with rocks. I know nothing about cars, even one's from the Stone Age. Did the Flinstones originate in the Stone Age. Correction, I know nothing.

6:04 P.M. Take a right turn and am directed to pull over by a traffic cop. "I pulled you over because you can't take a right turn onto this street." Look on bewilderly as other cars turn onto the street and cruise right past said officer. "Did you see the sign?"
Answer: No
"Are you from around here?"
Answer: No
At which point I've apparently misunderstood his line of questioning because I believed we were moving towards a mutual agreement of a slapped wrist, and we both go on about our days feeling as though we've done something useful, maybe top off the day by hassling some bums and teenagers. I can see that we're going to be friends, this young gentleman and I. However, the cop, and I use the term as a pejorative here, asks for my registration and proceeds to write me a ninety dollar ticket as I watch cars take safe left turns onto the street.
"Why do they get to turn?"
"They are taking lefts. You can't turn right onto this street between 4-7 P.M."
It's hard to argue with logic like that. I consider prostrating myself before him for giving the offense of taking a right turn. In retrospect I should have offered to turn around and come back to the street after taking a proper left turn. I bet he would have been impressed.
"Are you really giving me a ticket? It's not as though I was brazenly breaking traffic laws." (I did use the word brazen here).
Officer departs my vehicle to stop traffic, so I can go on.
I sit in the car with a ninety dollar ticket wondering what just happened. I took a right turn onto a two street, with two way traffic, that has random times assigned to it and got a ticket. That seems fair. Drive away and briefly wish I had gone to law school, so I could contest the ticket.
Return home and briefly rant to my wife about the modern bureaucratic state, and its tendency to crush the struggling individual. Insensitively compare the cops on Woodmont Avenue to the Gestapo. Repent, but still hate them.
11:30 P.M.-12:15 A.M. Attempt to turn a resume into a .txt format and to properly paste it into a separate form to apply for a job. Continually paste text and move it into proper order, save it, and then watch as it adjusts itself into some random order that occasionally and inexplicably includes all caps. Ex: Below.

Andrew Bertaina

May 2009

BACHELOR WITH WRITING EMPHASIS

Note: Not what my actual resume looked like.
12:50 A.M. Go to sleep having accomplished next to nothing. On the bright side, it's slightly better than nothing.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Day 1 without a job

I'm not actually writer, but I played one for three years while getting my M.F.A. from American University in Washington, D.C. Anyhow, in the course of obtaining my degree I had a short story entitled "Forty Days" published by the Wilderness House Literary Review. http://www.whlreview.com/no-2.3/fiction/AndrewBertaina.pdf

I was also fortunate enough to be anthologized in their best of 2008, though my story was published in 2007?
http://www.lulu.com/content/4921477

Now for things not related to self-promotion.
8:00 A.M. Woke up and conducted a round of sit-ups using my pilates class as a rubric for chiseling my abs.
8:15 A.M. Realized that no amount of rolling like a ball is going to chisel my abs. Briefly debated using a hammer like Michelangelo to chisel my abs.
8:30 A.M. Rooted around in the linen closet for a hammer, realized that combination of linen closet rooting and Pilates, (now apparently capitalized) made me suspiciously feminine.
10-10:30 A.M. Listened to Ulysses online read by a husband and wife combo. This book is still unintelligible, but at least they seemed to be having a good time reading it together...the bastards.
10 A.M.-2 P.M. In lieu of looking for a job stretched and then played basketball for two hours. Came home. Relived basketball glory in my head.
2 P.M.-6 P.M. Took my car in for a routine oil change. Routine oil change turns out to cost 604 dollars. Briefly debated saying, "That must be some expensive oil" to the clerk. Declined to do so because I was imagining myself pouring boiling pitch on his head from a lofty rampart.
6 P.M. 10 P.M. Discussed finances with wife. Come to conclusion that M.F.A. degrees do not result in people becoming millionaires. Consider starting my line of books written under the pseudonym Daniele Steel.
10 P.M. In lieu of trying to get a job started a blog.
11 P.M. Swore that I'd work harder to get a job tomorrow.