Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Band Names Taken Entirely From the Dialogue of the 1990 Film Home Alone

Band Names Taken Entirely From the Dialogue of the 1990 Film Home Alone

By: Dave Woehrle

Grow A Goatee

Kevin

Make Me

Ornaments Out of Fishhooks

Toilet Paper and Water

Fancy Orphanage

Hideaway Bed With Fulner

I’m Living Alone

Not In The Winter

South Bend Shovel Killer

Back in ‘58

The Salt Turns To Bodies

$122.50

Early!

Easy On The Pepsi

Get A Plate

Such A Disease

Pee All Over Me

Real Crystal

Uncle Frank Is This A Joke

Acey Said 10 Percent

Reading Glasses

The Silver Tuna

I Did

Odd Marketable Securities

Nothing To Chicago

I Don’t Know No Snakes

Polka Bums

Big In Shebogan

Basements Are Like That

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

26 on 26


26 on 26
By: Dave Woehrle
I recently turned 26 years of age. The following are some bits of wisdom I’ve acquired during my earthly stay thus far. Enjoy.
1. Never high-five a woman after sex. Never. She will neither comply nor laugh.
2. It’s okay to consume a whole anything (pizza, watermelon, a bottle of Jim Beam, box of Fruit Loops, carton of ice cream, birthday cake that isn’t yours, etc.) Never let varying units of measure hinder completion.
3. A really fat man walking a really small dog is one of the most agreeable sights.
4. Read. Do it. Yes, you have time to do it. No one talks about how playing Angry Birds on the long train ride changed their life. On your deathbed, you will NOT regret missing “Dancing with the Stars” either. Missing out on some Steinbeck, well, that should haunt you.
5. Make love outside at least once in your life. It’s the best way to get grass stains.
6. If you’ve been drinking, do not attempt to ride those playground creatures on bouncy springs. You will get severely injured.
7. There’s a moment of profound yet wonderful dread when you meet the eyes of another person eating fast food alone in the parking lot alone, just like you.
8. Never trust a man who wears a sweater vest or hair gel. Especially if he’s smiling. He’s trying to sell you something.
9. Get lost in a foreign country at dusk at least once. It’s the best way to know your ego.
10. I’m not saying good love-making will solve the world’s problems, but it’s not like Barry White was a terrorist.
11. You never see a squirrel walk. They always scamper and dash. They’re up to something.
12. The word “Agenda” sounds like the name of a beautiful black woman.
13. When all else fails, dip pretzels in cream cheese and watch Sportscenter until you pass out.
14. Don’t reach the age of 26 without owning at least one of the following: a cowboy hat, a ukulele, a cross-bow, or Van Morrison’s Moondance on vinyl.
15. The Golden Rule was God’s way of telling us oral sex is highly encouraged.
16. Falling off an elephant makes you feel alive.
17. Beetlejuice is the greatest movie ever made.
18. Shania Twain should die.
19. The sum of all human tragedy can be summed up with this: “I didn’t want that to happen, but then it did. Damn it.” It’s difficult for academics in the humanities to admit this.
20. Never start an acappella gospel band no matter how good you feel about being alive.
21. Bisexuals are just people who’ve done the math.
22. You never see gardeners mope.
23. The largest game of leap frog used 849 members. When I’m having a bad day, I think about each of those 849 individuals and hope they know how beautiful they are.
24. Chicken noodle soup, a homemade quilt, sweatpants, and a Disney movie cures the common cold.
25. Buffalo Wild Wings…it happens.
26. The daughter of a fellow musician friend of mine gave her review of the musical “South Pacific” and inadvertently said what I hope are my last words: “I didn’t really get it, but the music was nice.”

Saturday, October 22, 2011

What To Believe


What To Believe
By: Dave Woehrle
Post-coitus, they cuddle, sweat, and breathe. Faces flushed, groins drained, dopamine pulsing, they smile blissfully on moist sheets. In that otherworldly hum of an orgasm wave retreating, finely smoothing and removing worry, the body and soul murmur one big silent “Hell yeah.” They lay in that Hell Yeah for a few minutes.
She rises to open a window, brave in her glowing nakedness, and a cool April breeze defunkifies the steamy room. She flops back down on the bed and says, “Yowsa.”
He says, “I know. Totally Yowsa.”
She smiles with closed eyes.
He turns to look at her. She radiates. He might marry her. He will. He might. He wants to. He believes he wants to.
He can see them in the future, walking together as an old couple wearing bulky sweaters in a Midwestern park, pointing out bird nests and nodding. He can see them eating warm stew on cold days. He can see them stepping on their children’s toys in the middle of the night and cursing. He can them laughing at themselves.
So in this moment, as he contemplates the future, the heaven of her, she opens her mouth to ask a question.
She asks, “Do you have any margarine?”
He is silent for a moment, a bit bemused.
She asks, “What’s wrong?”
“Of all the things you could’ve said just then, I could’ve never predicted a question about margarine.”
“What did you want me to say?”
“I don’t know. ‘I love you’ or ‘that was great’ or something.”
“I do love you. And it was great. I said ‘Yowsa’ already. I’m just asking if you have margarine.”
“Why do you want margarine? Something kinky I hope?”
“I was just thinking about having a bagel, but I don’t want a bagel if you don’t have margarine.”
“I think I have butter.”
“I don’t want butter. I want margarine.”
“Why?”
“I like margarine more. And it’s better for you. Less fatty.”
“I thought butter was better.”
“Butter isn’t better.”
“Butter isn’t better?”
“Nope.”
“I thought it was.”
“It’s not.”
“Oh,” he says and sighs.
She says, “Well?”
“Well what?”
“Aren’t you gonna go check?”
“Like, right now?”
“Yes, right now. I’m hungry.”
He sighs again.
She says, “Just go check for me, babe.”
He gets up, still naked, and walks to the kitchen and checks his fridge for margarine.
“Huh. I don’t see any.” He only sees beer, eggs, and Chalua sauce, the essentials.
She yells from the bed, “You sure?”
“Pretty sure.”
“Keep looking.”
“Well, if I don’t see any, what else do you want me to – oh wait.” He spots a yellow container in the vegetable crisper.
He says, “All right found some.”
“Nice. What kind?”
“I got some I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter.”
“Oh. Well I don’t want that.”
“Why the hell not?”
“Because it’s butter.”
“No. It’s not butter.”
She says, “Babe, no. It’s called I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter. That’s a double negative.”
“Double negative?”
“Yeah.”
“What do you mean?”
“The Can’t and the Not. It’s a double negative. So it is butter.”
“If it was butter, they’d just call it butter.”
“It’s marketing, babe, a catch phrase. If it were margarine, it would be called I Can’t Believe It’s Butter.”
“You wouldn’t believe it because it is margarine.”
“Right.”
“Right.”
There is a brief silence where both of them sense agreement yet lingering puzzlement.
He says, “So what’s the next step here?”
“I want margarine.”
“Yeah, and I fucking found some.”
“No. No, you didn’t. And don’t swear.”
“Yes, yes I did. And fuck that. This is ridiculous.”
“Double negative, like I said. Can’t and Not. So I believe it’s butter.”
“But that has more to do with the belief system of humans than what is put on a goddamn bagel. It’s a margarine that’s so similar in taste to butter, that you can’t believe it isn’t.”
“That doesn’t make sense.”
“It makes perfect fucking sense, actually.”
She sits up in bed and says, “Why are you so angry about this?”
“I’m not angry!”
“Then stop yelling. We’ll just have to agree to disagree.”
“No. I’m not agreeing with that. Google it.”
“Just nevermind, babe. Whatever it is, I’ll try it anyway.”
He pulls some bagels from the cabinets and says, “I only have bagels that have onions on the top.”
“Oh. I don’t like those bagels.”
“Well, what the fuck? Do you want something or not?”
“I guess not. Thanks, though.”
It’s quiet. He’s mad. He stays mad for a full three minutes. He’s mad but he knows he’s lucky. Just to have such a meandering discussion about condiments after great sex is often a blessing ignored.
And there, naked, defeated, and frustrated, holding a container of I Can’t Believe It’s Not Better and some crappy onion bagels, he suddenly believes he wouldn’t want to have stupid arguments with anyone else as much as her.
He will marry her. He will ask her later in life. With a bagel covered in margarine for a ring.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Five Short Pieces About Moisture

Five Short Pieces About Moisture

By: Dave Woehrle


1.

Rain is silent until impact. Before it collides with house, ground, porch, leaf, or us, each drop is a wet faceless mute in free fall. On the way down, it just hums a long meditative ‘Om’ before splashing a short ‘Ouch’ on a black city umbrella.


2.

It was raining on and off for awhile and my friend said, “Yeah, the weatherman said the storm was gonna hit us or miss us and go a little north of here.”

I laughed and said, “So basically he said it’s gonna rain or it won’t? You could say that everyday.”

“No, dude. He had a forecast. He said it might go north of us.”

“Right, but what I’m saying is that the weatherman kind of copped out with a big fat maybe, which what the weather is everyday. You don’t need a weatherman for that.”

“But he KNEW where the rain was going to be. He had a forecast. All that radar and a buncha green stuff coming in…what’s it called? Starts with a P.”

“Precipitation.”

“Right! Precipitation. There was a lot of that coming in.”

“You’re not seeing my point. I could say the world is going to end tomorrow, or it isn’t, and I’d always be right.”

“Whatever,” he sighed. “Look! It’s raining now.” He pointed to the window and nodded smugly.


3.

Many astronomers believe the universe is tear-shaped and beige, as if all of creation is just a crying man in khakis. And I guess that’s okay. It fits the tragicomedy of days.


4.

Everyone knows the shower is the best place to cry, but no one ever talks about it.


5.

My co-worker at the bakery said, “Dave, you’ll never guess what I found.”

“What’s that?”

“Well, I was out putting out the muffins and checking the inventory, and right next to the cupcakes, I found rocks.”

“Rocks?”

“Yeah. Just a handful of wet rocks by the cupcakes.” She opened her hand to show four moist gray stones.

“Wow. That’s really weird,” I laughed.

“You just never know what you’ll find.”

Who does that? Who brings wet rocks to a store and places them next to cupcakes? That’s some Blair Witch shit. And how were they moistened? Spit? Tears? Perhaps he snagged the four stones from the river and said, “Your river days are over, friends. Your new delicious companions are waiting at the nearest bakery.”

Monday, August 8, 2011

Tales From the Deli (Vol. 1)

Tales from the Deli (Vol. 1): Is There Anything in That?

By: Dave Woehrle

I work at a high-end deli. By “high-end,” I mean the women are older, wear more make-up and jewelry, and are perpetually pissed off.

The following is true.

A woman in her late 50s walks up to the deli counter glass display, stoops, points to the vinegar and oil coleslaw, and asks, “Is there anything in that?”

I wait for her to rephrase her question, for her to specify her concern over the ingredients. Perhaps she meant to inquire about fat or salt contents.

However, she does not rephrase her question. She just stares at me, all furrowed brow and vague disgust.

Her question hangs in the air: IS. THERE. ANYTHING. IN. THAT?

Before I continue, I should mention I’m 85 percent smart-ass. The devil on my shoulder is constantly muttering comedic thunderbolts.

My initial reaction was to answer, “Yep.” And then nod once. Put the ball back in her court, so to speak.

Or say, “Yep. There’s definitely something in that. That’s what makes it something. If there was nothing in it, it wouldn’t be a something.”

Or say, “No. There’s nothing in that. It’s anti-matter. It’s a blackhole. It’s a goddamn cosmological phenomenon. You know that old Asian astrophysicist dude from the Science Channel? He comes here after we close and stares at this non-existent coleslaw and vigorously masturbates.”

Of course, customer service jobs always require a suspension of disbelief at the general public’s stupidity. No amount of logic or education can prepare one for the baffling reality of consumers – i.e. Confused White People With Money. If there’s one word I wouldn’t use to describe the typical customer, it’s “aware.”

So I bit my tongue, smiled, and politely listed the ingredients.

Then she asked my favorite question in food service, “Is it any good?”

I said what I always say, “Yeah. It’s great.”

How the hell else do you answer that question in the food industry? The buyer-seller relationship dictates that I tell you what I’m selling is good, right? It’s not like I can say, “No, m’am. It’s bad. It’s really bad. If you eat it, you will die in about 4 hours.”

Anyway, she ends buys a half pound of vinegar and oil coleslaw.

Later, I think of God pondering and pointing at Earth, asking, “Is there anything in that? Is it any good?”

I guess they can be good questions.

Okay with the Gray


Okay with the Gray
By: Dave Woehrle
While visiting my brother at the University of Missouri in Columbia when I was seventeen, I overheard a semi-drunken conversation concerning the color spectrum.
One student, Student A, said, “When you think about it, all colors are actually gray.”
Another student, Student B, asked, very stonerly, the eternal stoner question: “What?”
Student A said: “Well, when you look at the rainbow, you know, like ROY G BIV, you’re seeing the truest or most pure color in each color’s spectrum. Light refracts those colors identically every time.”
Student B, slightly more buzzed and argumentative in his poncho and green headband, said, “Who’s to say what the true colors are anyway…man? And how does fucking light refraction have anything to do with everything being gray?”
Student A sighed and said, “I’m talking about the calibrated spectrum here. The colors you see in the rainbow each have equal degrees of shades in either direction. For example, there are both darker reds and lighter reds than the one found in a rainbow. Likewise, true gray is the midpoint between white and black. I just think the truest sense of each hue is one balanced in shade, the centermost. The best gray is most vibrant.”
The other student swigged his beer and thoughtfully replied, “Fuck.” He fidgeted with his green head band, softly snapping it to his greasy hair, before taking it off and saying, “Well, this green is nicer than any gray, though. I mean, right? Am I right?” He attempted a high five, which was not reciprocated, and then walked to the kitchen for more beer.
I was still in high school at his point. I sat on a smelly brown couch, a little buzzed myself, trying to look cool and old-for-my-age as to appear sexy to the cute, hippie college girls. Although I didn't get laid or even looked at, I liked my first taste of academic life: drug abuse, neat conversations about colors, and people who liked sweaters and obscure bands.
Now, as I graduate from college myself, I think of this conversation about the middle gray as a metaphor for open minds, ones which can dim and darken mutually in thought and life. It's beneficial to understand both sides of the arguments, to flip the coin of our thinking. But sometimes ideas are more like dodecagons than coins. And this is where thinking gets tricky.
***
I initially attended a community college because I simply didn't apply anywhere else. I craved nothing from the world after high school because I was an eighteen year-old boy who was having sex fairly often. What else could possibly matter at that age? Sure, I hated President Bush and was idealistic, but I found it was easier to buy bumper stickers and get high in forests than it was to march or enroll in political science classes.
My experience at the community college was similar to high school: the English and History teachers loved me because I actually asked questions in class. It wasn't that I was, or ever will be, a good student; it's that my peers were such intellectual sloths that I looked like fucking Einstein in contrast. I got all A's and B's and was lucky enough to meet visiting authors, which was invaluable as a young writer. These authors signed their poetry chapbooks for me and discussed the challenges of writing. Poet Tim Seibles offered the best advice I ever received: "Keep writing from your bones, Dave."
I also learned how to "close read" a text, to underline and write ideas down in margins, to lick stories, poems, and essays clean for tasty meaning. I wrote an eight page paper on the theme of sin in Chekhov's “The Lady with the Dog” and felt like a Harvard scholar. Once again, I wasn't the best in this style of writing, but the competition was scarce.
I found one class particularly enlightening in terms of how one goes about interpreting literature. A Non-Traditional student in my introductory Shakespeare class had an interesting interpretation of a Shakespeare sonnet. She was the kind of woman who, in lieu of being like all the other students – i.e. young – started nearly every sentence with, “Well, I have kids, and…” somehow convinced her ability to produce and raise offspring warranted any inane statement she was about to make concerning Elizabethan literature. She was working on a "novel," as all recently divorcees seemingly are, a novel that will no doubt include pain, metaphors about wild horses, and an unconventional, Richard Gere-looking man arriving at a ho-hum town to show the locals how to live again.
Anyway, when our professor asked the class what we thought of “Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day,” she promptly raised her hand and said, “I…I think it’s about menopause.”
Our professor, being kind and open-minded, said, “Okay. Okay, why do you think that? What about the text gives you that idea?”
She explained, “You know, like, flowers?”
The professor was suddenly in a difficult position. He could either A) do what any logical person would do, which is point and laugh, or B) Try to create a positive, constructive discussion out of an aging woman’s post-menstrual woes, perhaps even discuss other Shakespeare subjects, such as the mind-bending Queen Mab speech being an analogy for hot flashes. I laughed off her interpretation as a one time thing; no one could so blatantly inject themselves into texts, could they?
***
I transferred to Coe College and majored in English and Creative Writing. In hindsight, these majors were a clever, intelligent way to say that I've never been good at doing actual, tangible things, like cooking or building stuff out of wood.
But I wanted to be a literary intellectual. I wanted this for two reasons:
1. I love the written word and always had since I was 13 when read the anonymous line, "My life is blue leaves." The power of image, however ambiguous, was intoxicating.
2. Not being an athlete, the "artist" thing was a means to get laid and rationalize personal morbidity and various drug habits.
Some male writers may claim other motives, which may be valid, but Reason #2 has universality with much supporting evidence in male literary history.
I wanted an open mind, as if such a kaleidoscopic term came in the form of a diploma. Liberal Arts colleges claim they teach students to think, to train them for nothing, but to prepare them for everything. But one could easily argue students leave college untrained, wishy-washy, way too into journaling, organic foods, and The Decemberists. In other words, there's a sameness in the open-mindedness students attain, but I didn't know that at the time. I thought my individualism unparalleled. My professors and peers at Coe would surely gasp upon hearing me speak and write, offering book deals and virgins. I found out that I wasn't the first smart ass, undergraduate stoner to attend a liberal arts school in the Midwest. In fact, I was the norm.
My first course was called "Current Literature." I read T.C. Boyle, Zadie Smith, Chuck Palanhiuk, and Haruki Murakami, all authors I had not previously read, a wake up call to my self-perceived well-read-ness. These contemporaries opened my eyes to what fiction could be and do.
The poetry section of this course was a bit shakier, as it consisted of reading wild, verbose stanzas by Black Mountain School poets in class, then sitting in silence, then our professor saying, "Yeah…yeah, that's seriously good. Damn."
My first attempts in this class with reading literary criticism ended fruitlessly, setting up a downward spiral for my attitude towards reading writing that's about others' writing. As most poetry anthologies do, each poet has a brief introductory essay by a distinguished English professor. These essays often say less about the poet and more about the professor and their ego-stroking admiration for the said poet. These essays are – let's face it – a sad attempt to ride the glorious coattails of literary giants. I was reading along until one such professor claimed Robert Creeley's poetry had a certain "anti-referential sensuousness." Really? As a reader, was I suppose to say, "Oh. Of course. Creeley is all about sensual details. And yet he's against referring to things"? Such masturbatory, semiotic phrases were utterly soul-sucking, as I had thought words were meant to communicate ideas clearly rather than cloud them with thesaurus-humping adjectives. So I did what every red-blooded American college student does when his or her textbooks become too unrelated and detached from real life: I threw the poetry anthology at my sleeping roommate, bought a sixer, and watched some Family Guy, a show that has sensory details and refers to things.
***
In the fall of 2007, I took a required Literary Analysis class for my English degree. The first class consisted of reading a syllabus that contained an excerpt from a letter written by John Keats: “…several things dovetailed in my mind, and at once it struck me; what quality went to form a Man of Achievement especially in Literature and which Shakespeare possessed so enormously – I mean Negative Capability, that is when man is capable of being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubts without any irritable reaching after fact and reason.”
This was written in 1817, a time when soft-focus, blemish-free portraits of white men sitting at lecterns were all the rage, as was randomly capitalizing words to signify the essential THE-ness of a given subject. This is no love, just Love, no mystery but Mystery. Language became essence-driven and individualized.
This was the Age of Enlightenment, where secular rationality grew with both scientific and artistic discoveries. Questions bloomed about God, free will, government; the nature of the individual vs. society, stuff spoken about in Parisian coffee shops and salons amongst artsy Men Who Had Great Hair and Dark Inner Lives.
But back to Keats. We can say the “Negative Capability” is being comfortable with ambiguity. In other words, Keats suggests those interested in the written word to be okay with the gray. I think Okay with the Gray is a far catchier, more succinct way of putting it, a simple slogan for the many confused English majors sadly wandering America’s campuses. And why “sadly”? Let’s face it: English majors are not a happy crew. You don't get into locking yourself in your room with hundreds of books because people like you. English majors don't have journals full of statements like, "This is great. I can’t wait to wake up tomorrow.” English majors question the black and white and subsequently become depressed and wordy about the wonders of ambiguity.
Our self-perceived misery, no matter how solipsistic and shallow, is self-fulfilling as a literary bonus, as great books are about bad things occurring and how people deal with it. Literature has to be that way. Smooth, easy lives are boring and difficult to relate to. The mere fact that we are cognitive, self-aware, mortal creatures is just really, really painful. Literature is questions about humanity, why we feel what we feel, and why we seem to fuck things up so often. The answers are never black and white. Hence, we need to be Okay with the Gray, which is hard because one has to be in a constant state of maybe-ism. That “irritable reaching after fact or reason” is kind of what sets apart from the animals, right? How does one stop “reaching” for logical answers?
The class started with such questions and an airing of grievances, the only thing thicker than the bewilderment in our brows being the notes in the margins our literary criticism anthologies. Being more linguistically crude than many of my peers, my notes included questions like, "What the fuck is antifoundationalism?" The vulgarity, I believe, is apt, considering the verbose definitions of such abstract terms: "In its extreme forms, the poststructural claim is that the workings of language inescapably undermine meanings in the very process of making such meanings possible, or else that every mode of discourse "constructs," or constitutes, the very facts or truths or knowledge that it claims to discover." Crystal fucking clear. This definition is from the dryer-than-Sahara-Desert book A Glossary of Literary Terms by M.H. Abrams, a text in which I yellow-highlighted random paragraphs so, in class, when I had my book open, I looked like I had done something.
One question we had in class was blunt and perfect. We had been discussing the role of the author’s background in analyzing literature, if an author really “knows” what he or she writes in the context of their place and time. The question: “Does any writer really say what he or she really means?” A sentence was given as an example: “The boy chased the ball across the street. How many ways can such a straightforward message be construed?" I saw this as my opportunity to bullshit. And, oh, can I bullshit.
I used my first law of English-Professor-Speak (EPS): start every sentence with the word “Essentially.” Such a word denotes, of course, the essentials of a given subject while at the same time making the speaker exempt from enumerating the specifics, some of which may conflict with the speaker’s view of the Essential – capital “E.” Another aspect of EPS I implemented: adding the word "socio" to other words, since such a prefix can be used in any discussion when one is describing a situation in which a person or persons interact.
So I answered thusly about the boy chasing the ball across the street: “Essentially, the statement concerns a picaresque vignette, if you will. The ball, clearly a yonic symbol, denotes a Freudian envy of motherhood by oppressed boys due to the binding patriarchal society in which they grew up. The street symbolizes oncoming adulthood, plagued with the dangers of alienating modernity, personified by the traffic. The other side of the street is the great unknown: life, love, death, and the existential dread of knowing one's self in the context of the larger socio-political schema."
I looked about the classroom, hoping for laughs. When none came, I realized how diseased we all were, how blindly trapped we had become in over-digging the meaning out of everything, like the drunk who goes around at the end of the parties sucking on the near-empties. We want the last drops of analogies, and if they aren't there, lord knows we can shoulder in our own with vague jargon.
After all our questions concerning literary theory were answered with other questions, or simply the word "interesting," we'd discuss specific Emily Dickinson poems, looking for images, metaphors, and repetition. Again, these discussions were more like a series of questions:
"What do you think the snake symbolizes? Nature? Death?"
"Then there's the boy looking at the snake. Is this poem about a loss of innocence?"
"Is the bog image, like, um, an opposition to the grass image?"
"There's grass in bogs."
"Not really."
"What about swamps?"
"There aren't any swamps in this poem."
"But swamps have grass. And swamps are boggy, right?"
"But nature doesn't have those boundaries, those terms of 'bog' or 'swamp' or 'field.'"
"Maybe that's what she's getting at."
"She's always getting at that. Interconnectedness, one-ness and shit."
"Count the syllables. She's doing some emphasizing on adjectives pertaining to the bog."
"Yeah. I think I read somewhere that Dickinson lived near a swamp. Or a field."
"Right! Maybe this is some psychological stuff from childhood, how nature replaced religion."
We were never told as students whether we were right or wrong, for that would be too black and white for teachers. This was frustrating at first. It all felt random and forced.
I said, “So you’re saying this poem could mean this, or it could mean that, and if it doesn’t mean either of those, it could mean something completely different?”
"That's an interesting question, Dave."
"Thanks. Answer it."
“Dave, you’re getting caught up in the binaries.”
Though I knew the figurative meaning of this – that the easy right/wrong interpretation of literature doesn't exist – the statement conjured an image of zeros and ones tying me down and slicing up my eyes and ears with their sharp numerical edges.
“Yeah, but isn’t avoiding the binary its own binary, like binary vs. every else?”
“What do you mean?”
“Isn’t this just another brand of all-or-nothing thinking? Like of all-or-nothing vs. something else. Isn't the vastness of I'm-not-sure-ism its own convenient cop-out?"
"Interesting. So you're kind of a deconstructionist, Dave."
"I am?" I asked as if I had been accused of being an anti-Semite. A deconstructionist sounded like someone who methodically blew up buildings. I later read some work by one of the founders of deconstructionism: Jacques Derrida. He claimed words did not have a firm foundation or structure for interpretation, that the linguistic system lacked ubiquitous 'signifiers' that applied to both logocentric and phonocentric realms. A deconstructionist, then, is someone who looks to invert normal societal binaries in a text. This means two things: 1) Europeans must have a lot of time on their hands. 2.) Black and white is difficult to ascertain in the jumbled continuum of denotation and connotation, especially with the backdrop of a society, with ever-fluctuating values, in which the literature is written.
I wondered: If a text is so difficult to interpret, then why communicate with these sad, malleable words? And shouldn't there be other theories on how to read literary theories. I mean, these theorists and critics are using the same subjective terms as the writers they're interpreting, right? Maybe that's just the deconstructionist in me.
It’s no secret that English teachers and students have science envy. Words lack the solidity of numbers, the chartable method of experiments. We’d love to have spreadsheets and pie charts to quantify the nuances of meanings and symbols. To finally say, "the answer is this and not that because I carried the one, and there is no remainder." If nothing else, such quantitative charts would make budget rationing easier, as it's rare that academic administrators want to dish out dough to a clan of overly-well-read, aging hipsters in Tevas, pondering the rhyme schemes of John Donne. The market for literary smart asses may be at its all time low, but I lack the line graph on that presumption.
***
My Literary Analysis class morphed into a pseudo-philosophy class; our worldviews – feminist theory, multiculturalism, and the like – influenced our readings, like the woman who wanted menopause literature from Shakespeare. We finished the semester knick-picking the stanzas, developing into full-fledged word nerds, passionate about what we thought that particular tree metaphor meant. I guess you can't spell 'analysis' without 'anal'.
But we learned to laugh at our frustrations, and to despise Emily Dickinson, even though it wasn't her fault that mystery pervades all fine art. As writers, we learned how to defend our arguments for what a poem meant, refining and rethinking our theses. Now who would ever read such theses is beyond me.
Harper's magazine published an article by Chris Offutt titled "Words Into Hype." His definitions of Literary Essay and Academic Essay are accurate. Offutt claims a Literary Essay is "Akin to the personal essay, only with bigger words and more profound content intended to demonstrate that the essayist is smarter than all readers, writers, teachers, and Europeans." An Academic Essay is simply "an unread form required for tenure." Offutt cuts to the chase, something I thought writing was suppose to do until my deeper literary theory texts told me the "chase" was too ambiguous to even cut to. But author George Saunders can still get down to brass tacks. He wrote, "Working with language is a means by which we can identify the bullshit within ourselves (and others)." No gray area there, which leads me to believe there's some truth to it.
***
Literary theory discussion always reminds me of football announcers. The game itself is three hours, but the announcers can speak for six hours pre and post game, over-interpreting fairly simple actions. You have the structuralist, usually someone like Mike Ditka, saying, "If the Raiders wanna win today, Gene, they're gonna hafta move the ball down the field and score some points against the opposing team." Makes sense. Then there's the new historicist announcer: "But the Lions have good shot at winning today. The Raiders are 0-7 when playing in the second week of October when it’s under 20 degrees. Just something to think about in cold Detriot today.” Others look at the biography of the player (writer) to extract meaning from the game (poem, novel, etc.): "Linebacker James Carlson is returning to his hometown of Detroit for the first time since his crime-plagued youth. This could have a socio-emotional effect on his play today, guys." Obviously, the analogy ends when the binary of win/lose comes into play, although critics and best-seller lists can indicate success. It could also be argued a literary piece being included the modern canon is the victory, the defeat being tossed into the shameful sea of pulp fiction.
The main similarity is the throwing out of data that neither player nor writer is aware of. They (writers and players), as the Nike slogan tells us, Just Do It, as the critics and theorists sit with Why Did They Do It That Way? At best, it's an intelligent guess. Read the book, watch the game, apply meaning, and repeat. It's all a way to mitigate the gray of actions, and a writer's actions are his or her words. At least ESPN has the certainty of stats. English majors just have Harold Bloom.
My hands-on experience with criticism was working on the Coe Review, our college's literary magazine. I quickly learned a few things, like how all aspiring young freshman poets really dig snide poems about relationships, lengthy poems about autumn, or any poems about cancer and hospitals. I argued with them weekly over their tastes, how poetry was suppose to surprise and punch us as readers rather than extract pity via tired images and language. I knew I had my own biases. I drifted towards poems about food and nighttime.
I also came up with something I call the CCPP theory, which is any piece of writing, no matter how well-written or enjoyable, can be discarded if one claims the writing is either Contrite, Conceited, Preachy, or Pretentious. These adjectives negate argument because the arguer is quickly accused of being one of the CCPPs. It's a handy tool.
Speaking of hands, I learned another EPS technique in my later literature courses. I call it simply, Hand Things (HT). When one is speaking about two or more conflicting concepts, the hands must reflect these concepts in a juggling-like fashion, as if one is weighing two heavily sagging breasts. One must furrow one's brow to convey conceptual tension. Academics use the following words when doing this Hand Thing: "dualism," "dichotomy," "paradoxical transgression," or "bi-conceptual existence." Example sentence: “Essentially, we must consider Cordelia's internal struggle with the dualism (HT here) of being both daughter to King Lear but husband to the King of France, which brings about questions of socio-political loyalty.”
The converse Hand Thing concerns the coming together of the hands, with interlocked fingers, to express harmony or commonality. This is often supplemented with a slightly scrunched up face, one of contorted concern, a look not dissimilar to Woody Allen squeezing out a fart. Words to use with this HT: "interconnectedness," "interdependence," "diverse implications," or "binding characteristics." Side note: "Interconnectedness" and "diversity" are liberal arts professors' favorite two words of all time. This I can prove with a pie chart.
I’ve spent most of college career wondering what professors would do if they had to wear mittens or strait-jackets in class. Or how a one-armed teacher would enhance their teachings of "dualistic" concepts. Perhaps he or she would just cup his or her stump and squint thoughtfully upwards.
I learned my glasses provided yet another useful prop in my blossoming EPS techniques. It is Essential to remove one’s glasses at the apex of literary discussion to denote worldly thoughtfulness. Brief nibbling on the frame is a bonus, for now the mental tension appears too extreme to remain inside, so it is externalized in the form of a mental-dental dance.
I spent so much time picking up on mannerisms and jargon; it's a miracle I even graduated. My personal relationships with the professors helped. I knew two soft spots, easy topics of digression, all English professors have: jazz and Coen Brothers films.
***
College taught me most things worth knowing cannot be taught. In Herman Hesse’s Siddharta, a loose retelling of the story of Buddha, the protagonist explains: “In every truth the opposite is equally true. Truth can only be expressed and enveloped in words if it is one-sided. Everything that is thought and expressed in words is one-sided, only half the truth; it all lacks totality, completeness, unity.” Though "half the truth" suggests a clean-cut 50/50, these concrete fractions scatter in the realms of truth when applied to human experience.
None of my life-affirming moments in literature have come from those who write about literature. Czech author Milan Kundera summed up the human condition perfectly: "We can never know what to want, because, living only one life, we can neither compare it with our previous lives nor perfect it in our lives to come." Exactly. Indecisiveness is painfully logical. But in the same page, he writes, "If we have only one life to live, we might as well not have lived at all." That’s the spirit! Did I mention English majors are unhappy? Our intellectual gray often overlaps with our emotional gray. Those dealing in art often kill themselves. Essentially (that's right, it's Essential), we studier of words are just a big sad cloud.
The opposite of this often-morbid Okay with the Gray – which, I know, is whole other binary – is the Ignorance is Bliss thinking. Could you live a happy life without reading literature? Probably. I’ve met many joyful people who simply don’t read. However, they strike me as limited creatures, like scatter-brained tadpoles unable to sprout legs to hop on the dense land of meta-cognition. As Ludwig Wittgenstein wrote, "The limits of my language stand for the limits of my world." Non-readers don’t even know to ask questions because they don’t see the Gray, their limited scope conveniently so black and white.
It just never crossed my mind to not read and think about what I’ve read. So many writers have so accurately described all this, and I'd be a fool not to read them, to consider as many perspectives on this Mystery as I can. But the beauty of writing lies not in its categorical theories, the jockeying for higher standing in academia. It lies in the brevity of refined language applied honestly to life.
But no matter how open-minded you are, your mind is always in your mind, a place thick with biases and irrationality. Note that Keats said those having Negative Capability did not look for "fact or reason" to berid themselves of the Mystery, that a "Man of Achievement" must not have an "irritable reaching" towards fact or reason. That's the problem. It’s hard to believe we can’t answer everything with fact or reason. But all that is unknown is such fertile ground for imaginative writing.
Life reflects art and vice versa, so we must remember to live and then write that down. And if literature – all that has been written down – is sometimes beautiful but mysterious, it's because life is beautiful but mysterious. The two are symbiotic. Between the binary of life/death lies the most beautiful gray we could imagine.
Maybe the artsy, rainbow girl at that party so many years back was onto something: “The best gray is most vibrant.”
But so was the green headband stoner when he said, "Fuck."
Look around you. Fuck.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Controlled by a Scruffy Little Animal: Notes on the Rocks

Controlled by a Scruffy Little Animal:

Notes on the Rocks

We knew the rain was coming. Or, at least, we should have known.

When the canoe left our spacious campsite of towering red pines and old green tents on a peninsula on Fourtown Lake, we, four college students, noticed the western horizon. Bloated clouds like marshmallows expanding in heat were a stripe of impending precipitation. But the sun, and the blue sky it punched through to brown our shoulders, made rain seem unlikely. Having been rainless for five days, we were accustomed and expectant of Pleasantville weather. We were excited to have a picnic a lake away in the sun.

The paddle from Fourtown Lake to Moosecamp Lake in the BWCA involves a currentless mucky river with no name. It was like an aimless, bastard oil slick. There were more plants than water: Swamp buttercups, water lilies (both fragrant and bullhead), and Joe-Pye weed pulled at our paddles. The river bent back on itself in ninety degree turns, indecisive in its real direction. We ploughed into the shoreline grasses often during these sharp turns, the thick vegetation higher than our heads.

Small beaver dam segmented the river. Every hundred yards or so, a mound of mud and sticks met the nose of our canoe. All four of us had to get out, go knee-deep in hungry, sulfuric-smelling mud, and use push-grunts to the canoe over the fulcrum of packed earth. Reentering the canoe was equally exhilarating, for our collective shifting weight jostled the already unsteady craft. Our soggy footwear spooned in dark warm marsh water each time. That, coupled with the musk of four unwashed bodies, gave our journey an aromatic aura comparable to a sweaty toilet.

Hearing thunder under a blue sky was nearly charming, like seeing a young child in a scary mask at your door. We laughed out “uh-ohs” and continued, trying our best not to notice the drop in temperature and the shore grasses bent in a newly shifted wind.

Our instructor, known as Dr. Bob – a writing professor who often spoke of his home state of Kansas and his home boy of Wordsworth the way some speak of ancient landscapes and gods – had asked us before we left if we were going to bring our raingear. We, the young and fearless students, smirked and said, “No.” Dr. Bob also smirked, a more bemused and wise version, before saying, “Oh. Okay.” We figured if it did rain, it would feel great on our skin due to the recent hot weather.

I thought of this brief conversation after we ascended a four-foot by twenty-foot beaver dam when the first drops fell. We cheered like children playing in the rain with no grown-ups around. After all, our swimsuits were on, and we had Ziploc bags in which to put our belongings.

Five minutes later, it was pouring. Fat rain, frigid loogies, slapped the river. I sat in the duffer’s position (the non-paddler in the center of the canoe) and felt my prior exuberance wash away. I was cold. I was miserable. I was sitting in funky brown water. I had no raincoat to stay dry, no knife to cut firewood, no lighter to start a fire, no way to remedy my discomfort. The dark gray sky was throwing down all it had, and I had to take it. All of us were quiet; some of us shivered, then a few of us cursed. Moosecamp Lake was still a ways away – “a ways” being the accurate and universal unit of measure when the traveling is unpleasant – but we paddled on.

My lack of preparation was stupid, I knew, but somewhat thrilling in the powerlessness it created. I had written in my journal a few days prior about how I wanted Nature to debase me, to put in my place as a small struggling creature; to give me the fierce backhand of a storm, a twisted ankle from her gnarled roots. I wanted Nature to make me hate Her so I could understand Her enough to truly lover Her. These almost masochistic longings were received.

I could not better the situation, so I smiled at the violent weather – so tangible and biting – and took my dirty baptism of humbleness.

Letting go of the illusion of control is difficult, especially if the situation can me semi-controlled. For example, if hypothermia had set in on me, I sure as hell would have done all in my power to warm up and survive. I’d bind myself with the thick life jackets, find a granite nook to ball up in, and breathe dry my wet body. For to let go of control is not to let got of the struggling.

According to John Ayto, author of Dictionary of Word Origins, the word “control” comes from the Old English contra-rotating, which was a medieval method used in checking accounts where two people were registered in a dual account. So by its very nature, controlling is monitoring two separate things. This makes sense in terms of the inner landscape of humans. Contentment slow dances with frustration, tranquility flirts with turbulence. It’s like an open invitation party at the end of the year, and everyone’s trying to hook up, just for the hell of it, just because life can let such dichotomies play and propagate. What’s frightening isn’t the closeness of opposites but rather how little we can do to purify, safeguard, and control the ones we like.

I half remember an old Ghanan legend I once read about bickering siblings in heaven before light existed. One sibling wanted light for the world and its creatures. The other wanted the darkness to remain. So the siblings fought, and are still fighting today, alternating victories and losses with days and nights. I enjoy this story for its non-totality, of its beneficial balance through struggle. Day is day when night can’t fight and vice versa.

Three days prior to this trip to Moosecamp Lake, I was four miles west on Basswood Lake, strolling the rocky shore, skipping stones and thinking. I came upon an inhabited, pinkie knuckle-sized snail shell. I held it my hands like an aged coin and traced its contours with my wet fingers. My identification was touching another’s. I pressed the shell to test its hardness. It exploded. Two drops of snail blood – blood as red as my own – landed on my bare chest. The crushed thing in my hand was a new jagged ruin. I tossed the pieces of my victim back in the water, trying to tell myself it would be eaten by a loon, or would decay, or something ecological-sounding to mitigate my guilt. I let the two drops of blood on my chest mix with my sweat until it trickled in pink down my body, back into the lake.

Later, I watched a lengthy summer sunset. The clouds were wispy, spread sparsely in the rich, warm paints of dusk. These clouds could have been spirits, or paintings, or paintings of spirits. They were heaven smoke, I realized, a loose haze from the tired ember of the sun. The slivers of orange clouds nearest the horizon were lined like eyelashes or ribs.

As the sun approached the white pine horizon, it became swallowed in its own smoke. One sibling had lost so the other could win control of the sky. It was a graceful and easy defeat, like musical chairs with only one chair.

On the last beaver dam before Moosecamp Lake, I slipped on a wet log, took two or three backward steps in a frantic attempt to balance myself, and then fell into a piss-warm pond. My peers laughed at me.

“This water’s warmer than the air,” I said, as if my dive was of calculated, thermal purposes.

“But it smells horrible,” someone reasoned.

“Yeah, well…” I started, knowing I couldn’t argue.

The canoe made a scraping sound up the incline, and the leveled with a plop. The water from the sky was almost icy, resoaking my shirt with its coldness.

“I’m cold.”

“Me too.”

“Me three.”

“My nipples are like BBs.”

We complained and pushed on, hungry for lunch at Moosecamp.

My wet, mud-streaked legs reminded me of the pictographs near Lower Basswood Falls, those pinkish, burgundy-brown images on the canvas of granite cliffs towering the lake’s edge. More specifically, I recalled the one of the moose with accentuated male genitals. It smoked a pipe, too. No doubt this pictograph had significant meaning in terms of fertility. But a well-endowed moose puffing away is still worthy of a grin.

On the same panel of rocks, a couple of feet upwards to the right, was the image of a pelican sporting horns on its head. I later learned the horns were associated with Missepishu (The Great Lynx), an Ojibwa god known for his mischievous, disruptive pranks. When things went wrong on a hunt, when rain did not come, when canoes were tipped, it was said to be the work of Missepishu. However, the god was not seen in contempt. Missepishu was merely a jokester who controlled small misfortunes, and he was accepted as so. But why his horns would be on a pelican is unclear.

It’s also unclear when these pictographs were created. Most specialists believe they were done between 300 and 500 years ago. The mixture of fish oil, animal fats, and local iron oxides used to create these images has held up nearly perfectly with minimal fading. Of course, the Ojibwa did not think of them as “pictographs.” According to Michael Furtman, author of Magic on the Rocks, the drawings were called muzzinabikon, meaning “marks on the rocks.” However, in the Ojibwa language, the word gikinowin means “map, message, or record in picture.” I think gikinowin is the more suitable word for what I saw on those rocks, for such a word encompasses the larger scope of place and meaning. There are no myths, peoples, or animals without a place, a map of stories.

Most gikinowin stem from myths. These myths usually concern a struggle for control, and what transpired from that struggle, to explain why things are the way they are. Every culture has creation myths, but how nature casts those characters is intriguing. David Rains Wallace writes, “Older myths generally placed humans on a scale midway between animals and gods. This position had a comfortable stability. It gave people something to look down on and something to look up to.” Indeed, we are not rabbits or Allahs, and we often curse that we can’t step up or down on this ladder in order to become more oblivious or omniscient. So what do we do? We create. We create stories, songs, paintings, sculpture, things created to have control over something extracted from a world we cannot.

Many could argue God (of the many forms) was the only true creator. This I cannot prove or disprove. But going out into the wilderness certainly provokes spiritual thoughts. Being suddenly surrounded by beautiful land and sky is like opening a door to something. God is the ultimate knock-knock joke, really. I mean, who is there? We turn the knob and push only to find nothing but everything that was already there. It’s a deliciously funny mad-lib, a cruel fill-in-the-blank.

I agree with science fiction writer Ursula La Guin on her views on God: “Obviously, we need a trickster, a creator who made the world all wrong. We need the idea of a God who makes mistakes, gets into trouble, and who is identified with a scruffy little animal.” We need a Missepishu.

Days earlier on the Horse River, Dr. Bob had decided a portage around some rapids was “for sissies.” I was in the bow of his canoe, not steering, so I was at his mercy. The three students in the other canoe took the portage of about 70 rods.

“You sure?” I asked my gung-ho professor.

“Why not? We’re young,” he said.

Our combined age of 83 did not exactly sound puppyish, but the adventure was a departure from the paddle-portage-paddle-portage routine.

The first rapids came against us trickling – low water, several rocks – and it was easy to step out and gently guide the canoe upstream. We waded comfortably, cooling our ankles before jumping back in to paddle to deeper waters.

“I never was a wet-footer,” he said. “But I thought today was the day.” He nodded at his blue Keen water shoes, happy to put them to use.

The next set of rapids were a longer stretch but still weak. No footing was easy, for glacier-munched rocks shifted under weight. The current picked up near the end of these rapids. I could feel it on my shins, looking down to see overturned parentheses cupping my pant legs. Dr. Bob pushed from the back of the canoe, steadying it over the swiveling current. I took one last lunging step, hoping to give us some momentum, before jumping back on, and abruptly fell chest-deep in water.

“Does it get deep there?” He laughed.

“A little bit.”

I clutched a short length of rope that was tied to the bow, while my other hand stabilized the bow itself. I kept dragging, thinking of this self-inflicted struggle we were putting ourselves through for a few laughs.

These new rapids before me had something to prove; there was much more whitewater in them. They were not much to the eye unless that eye was in the head and body that had to go against the current, pulling a sixty pound canoe and a hundred pounds of gear. Dr. Bob jumped out again. Things got serious. It suddenly occurred to me we had no idea what we were doing. The current now hugged our hips, unseen sticks poked our shins, and river bottom rocks kept our stances unbalanced. We stumbled like drunkards.

With my back toward him, I was setting the pace. I tugged and kept tugging until I heard a moan. He was bent over favoring his left ankle, muttering under his breath.

“Ankle?”

“Yep.”

“You okay?”

“Um…yeah.”

I got the sense that it wasn’t okay. I thought this small injury would send us back, but Dr. Bob straightened himself and said, “Try to go to the right of that boulder up there. It’ll be easier.” He boosted the stern upstream with a full arm push. He was sweating and smiling like a child.

A part of me thought, What is this old man doing to himself? I hope he doesn’t think I’m gonna carry him back if he drops. One tends to believe, or wants to believe, that leaders, professors, people who teach things, have methods to their madnesses. I had supposed he had done this before, and I was growing unsure about this supposition.

The canoe became a creature unto itself in the faster waters. It was a green clumsy beast that insisted the river’s current was the right way to go, regardless of its master’s commands. Boulders turned from foe to friend as they became steady anchors to lean the beast against. On one such mid-river boulder, we ditched the Duluth bag to make the load lighter, and rested. I asked Dr. Bob if he had ever gone this way before. He said, “No,” and laughed. “No, I’ve never gone this way before.” And then he turned his face towards the sky to laugh some more. He looked suddenly young and playful, like an otter in the afternoon sun. I realized he was just a boy from Kansas playing in the river, no more a professor than any other curious creature doing curious things. Sweat dripped from the white hair on his chin, and river water dripped from his fingers.

Twenty yards ahead of us, the others were waiting, dry and unspent. They waved.

“What…what happened to you guys? Did you fall in?” They asked.

“Yeah. Yeah, we fell in.”

We emptied our canoe and carried the gear on a small, overgrown path near the shore to calmer waters. Then we carried the canoe together: I at the bow, Dr. Bob at the stern.

We had gone maybe a total of one hundred yards on those rapids, but when the surface one navigates is a treadmill of moving water, the energy expelled is the more important measurement. Before reboarding, I took a look back at the rapids. It was beautiful. Some green paint from our canoe had rubbed off on a string of rock corners, and these specks glittered in the sun, getting smaller in the distance.

The weather cleared up on Moosecamp Lake. A light mist moved between the leaves and needles of shoreline trees. There’s nothing like the quite lull after a rain in the middle of nowhere. The air seemed to wait for new whispers, but we waited for nothing, paddling quickly to shore to devour our lunch of wet tortilla flaps, wet cheese, wet sausage, semi-dry peanut butter, jam, wet chocolate, and dried fruit that wasn’t so dry. We chewed and grunted happily in the simple pleasure of eating outside when one in hungry:

“Mm. Hell yeah.”

A smacking of lips, some sipping of water.

“This is so friggin’ good.”

“Oh. I know. Just heaven.”

“Pass the peanut butter and tortillas. This party’s just getting started.”

We reclined on moist rocks and looked to a newly sunny sky. One would think such a quick transition from rain to shine would render a rainbow, but the sky was blue and empty. We talked. We laughed at the wildly unprepared voyage we had taken. We balled up our shirts and twisted out gray water. We ate our fill and rested, chocolate and jam drying on our palms.

Three-fourths of the way back, we realized we had left the map at our picnic spot. It was no bother. We knew the way. I love the image of that map, full of boundaries and miles, eventually being absorbed by the very landscape it claimed to convey.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Stopping at Barns

Stopping at Barns

By: Dave Woehrle

My father worked second shift at Hertz at O’Hare airport in Chicago, which meant my brother and me had the mornings to play with Dad, or as he put it, “dick around for a few hours.” His jovial demeanor, keg-like German belly, and his cookie-duster mustache make him easily comparable to a cartoon walrus mayor.

Each morning started with oatmeal, apple juice, Gumby, and the Dukes of Hazzard, all four of which shaped my psyche more than I’d care to admit. Gumby aired after The Andy Griffith Show, and we only caught the famous, happily-whistled exit music. My father would whistle along, amazing me in his tonal dexterity, considering, to this day, I cannot whistle. For years I thought the Andy Griffith outro music was actually the intro music for Gumby. The non sequitur nature of this segue did not bother me; the screen that once held a strolling man and his son with a fishing pole on a gray gravel road, now displayed my main man Gumby and his trusty stead Pokey over gallivanting hills of colored clay. The residual Pavlovian effect exist to this day, so much that any whistling whatsoever makes me think of green clay.

The Dukes of Hazzard came on after Gumby. All I remember of the show was the fat sheriff constantly falling into brown creeks, later emerging to sadly empty his cowboy hat of water, whilst looking comically jilted. I know not what my father – or anyone, for that matter – got out of that show.

My brother and I spent the rest of each morning playing with plastic He-Man or Ghostbusters toys in the living room, while our father made us PBJs in the kitchen. He'd often call our Dalmatian into the room to tongue up the globs of grape jam that made their way to the floor. My father was no chef. His peanut butter / jam ratio grossly favored the latter. Eating his sandwiches was like puncturing a blister highly pressurized with purple puss. Our dog got fat.

The remaining hour before elementary school was up for grabs. Mostly, we drove around suburban Chicago, looking for abandoned factories, barns, or other buildings that looked cool, or were covered in weeds. My father would often take us to parks, as well, leading us through forests as my brother and me fought with sticks, and climbed trees. There were times where we were more a pack of silver-back gorillas than suburbanite family: we'd grunt, laugh, throw stuff at each other, and chase squirrels.

The drive to wherever we were going created suspense like I've never since experienced. We'd get in the old black Chevy Suburban, with its gnarled gray seats reeking of dog hair, car oil, and melted fruit snacks, an aroma I associated with adventure. In my seven-year old mind, my father could be taking us to Mars, or the playroom at McDonalds. And either way, I'd leave sweaty and missing a shoe. My brother climbed into the backseat and traded guesses with me about our potential destination.

"Spaceship park?"

"Maybe. Bowling alley?"

"No. Went last week. Mickey D's?"

"Dave, don't call it Mickey D's. No one calls it Mickey D's anymore."

I learned, and continued to learn, that my older brother was the knowledgeable vortex of slang, fashion, music, and recess social codes. He always told me new curse words and what sneakers I should get to maintain the right kind of coolness.

Some days we'd go to flea markets and browse the dirty booths, observe sad men in folding chairs, fingering greasy dollar bills in gray metal cash boxes. Some sold Star Wars figures in their original packages; some sold vinyl records; some sold stolen telephones probably ripped off cheap motel walls. And there was always a man selling hundreds of knives, the blades fanned out on a large card table like a metal flower. No one stopped to ask how or why the knife man did this, and only now does it seem strange.

I also inherited an affinity for buying used books from these flea market days. It was an art to be crafted. You had to bargain down from 50 cents; you had to leave with an armful; you had to open the book and smell it to calibrate its aroma in the New Book / Old Book smell spectrum. I still practice to this day, collecting words others grew tired of, pages tinged with attic, yellowed with time.

One place my father favored was an abandoned fairground off Lake Street near the town of Addison. It was the site of an amusement park called Adventure Land, where, in its heyday, a quarter could buy you a hot dog, a funnel cake, and two rounds on the Ferris Wheel. However, like all older, semi-dreamy people, my father has a tendency to romanticize the past, dress it in the soft focus lens of perfection.

"It was great," he explained as we approached what appeared to be only a forest. "They had these slides. Huge friggin' bumpy slides. You know, the ones where they give a green Army blanket and you climb stairs to the top? We would just haul."

"Haul?" I asked, perplexed by such vocabulary.

"Haul. You know, like, to move, or to move real quickly. As in 'to haul ass' or 'haul furniture.'"

"Okay," I said, considering how I could use 'haul' in my recess talk, perhaps in the context of Tag.

We parked and went into the forest. The Midwestern trees looked haunted and happy. The oaks, maples, and willows hovered over us like strange-haired relatives over a crib. It was fairy tale-ish, as most days were back then. My brother and I hit each other with sticks and laughed. My father never told us to knock it off, as he knew it was probably healthy and organic for brothers to spend time in the woods hitting each other with sticks.

Suddenly, we came to a fence with a posted NO TRESPASSING sign. Of course, we climbed the fence. This was standard operating procedure for my father. He was convinced his goodwill would be adequate in defending himself in the face of law. "We're just exploring," he reasoned. "We're not doin' nothing wrong, so the feds can kiss my ass. The worst they can do is ask us to leave." My brother and I cheered at our dad's defiance; we were, and always will be, delighted by his badassery. At the time, I had no idea what the word "trespassing" meant. I said the word nightly in my "Our Father" prayer, but, like God, I couldn't wrap my head around the word’s definition.

Climbing over the fence meant ripped jeans, which, in turn, meant lies to tell our mother. "Tell her you fell off your bike or something." My brother and I nodded and looked at the denim flaps at our knees, our secret trophies.

Walking on, the forest floor went from dirt to concrete. Broken black wires snaked through our footing, each wire tip plumed out in copper flowers. There were cinder blocks in shrubs, plastic bags caught on branches. We came upon four rectangular slabs of cement. Our father informed us the slabs had once supported the Ferris Wheel. We each climbed up on a separate block and looked around. My father pointed at the most center point between us.

"I wonder what's under there," he said.

We jumped off our blocks. My father knelt down and flipped a gray metal lid. The rust crackled off in red flakes, exposing a large hole in the dirt. My father put his head in the hole, looked left, then right, and jumped in.

"Boys…"

"What?"

"I think this is the bowels of the Ferris Wheel, where they had all the gadgets and stuff. It’s like a bunker or somethin’.”

My brother monkied down, swinging on a black cable with the grace of a ninja. I opted to jump down, landing square on my chubby little boy ass in a puddle of something. I stood and tripped on cement broken jaggedly upwards by roots. It smelled of mold, metal, and time, like a shrine where only mildew worshipped.

We stood in a rectangle of light, kicking moss and old popcorn bags. Darkness extended in either direction. My father led us one way, hit a wall of dirt, then went the other, and hit a wall of dirt. The tight soil was laced with beige roots and bugs. He touched it and said, "Well…I guess that's all she wrote, boys." He sighed. "I guess they paid some poor schmuck to work down here. How wouldja like that job, huh? Underground like a mole, messing with gears and levers like a carnie Quasimodo.” My brother and I looked at him ponder his imagined poor schmuck. He said, “Shit. What a world,” and climbed out.

We walked back from Adventure Land through the same forest, yet the trees seemed different, as if we or they were guards or intruders. We were on land once used for human entertainment, ways to thrill and dazzle teenagers on summer nights. But the trees reclaimed their clout, swallowing not only a cheap amusement park, but our fleeting concepts of time and space.

Back in the car, my father cranked Creedence Clearwater Revival, a band of flannelled, bearded men who, like my father, knew all of about six chords on the guitar. We drove home, my mind flooded with images of ghostly slides and Ferris Wheels disappearing in forests. John Fogerty asked, “Who’ll Stop the Rain?”

I think now of the rusty wires in the dirt. I wonder, "Geez…who can stop anything?"

***

Our explorations crossed state lines. The Midwest has a large amount of melancholic remnants on its flat lands, like scraps left on an old dining room table.

One such place was an abandoned shack a half acre away from our family cabin in northern Minnesota. It was a small single room cabin, about the size of ¼ tennis court. A cinder block under each of the four corners gave the shack an elevation of six inches to protect it from floods, since the shack was about twenty feet from the lake.

An old fisherman once lived there, a drunk with no family. I never met him, but I heard stories. How he kept to himself and only nodded solemnly at others to communicate; how he paddled the bay and fished for sunfish from a small green canoe; how he stopped showing up one summer, his shack left to nature.

The lock on the front door had long been busted when our father first took us inside. The floor noticeably slanted to the left, so one had to lean to keep balance like a funhouse. The fridge and oven were rounded, capsule-like, something considered modern in the 50s. The flour and sugar tins were still full albeit chunky-sounding to the shake, my irreverent touching of everything never being frowned upon. The red and green flannel sheets were sun-bleached on the single made bed in the corner. I'll always remember the single, varnished spoon on the table in the center of the room. I could never bring myself to touch it. It was one of the few I've seen in life that looked at home in its aloneness. On the rare occasions my father moved an object – an ashtray, a Field and Stream issue peeled and molded over – he made sure to put it back where he found it, as if the ghost would return and tally the locales of his possessions.

My father pointed to the broken windows and sighed. "Why do people gotta do that?" My brother and I never told him we had done the window-breaking with our BB guns last summer. We had done it for the same reason every male breaks things: it looked and felt cool.

Someone from the county eventually took the cabin down, burning the piled wood for a whole day. All that was left were charred cinder blocks, which wolf spiders took over with their thick webs.

***

Three years later, we moved to a more western suburb of Chicago. The neighborhood was clean and new, smelling like mall and clean laundry. I didn't like it. The town lacked the modern decay we had explored earlier in our lives.

But my father quickly discovered the local forest preserves to explore. And, of course, he wasted no time in finding new relics to “dick around in.”

I’m not sure how my dad found the farmhouse. For all I know he had a map of abandoned houses in the greater Chicagoland area in the glove compartment. My father’s boyish sense of adventure never wavered. He was a modern day Huck Finn, minus the slim physique and corncob pipe.

The white farmhouse was on a thin state highway near a cornfield. Half the roof had clasped, like a ghost with a broken shoulder.

We approached the farmhouse like hunters on a wounded animal.

“You gotta be careful,” my father said. “Some hobo could come out screaming, wielding a knife or somthin’.” He yelled loudly at the house, apparently to spook away potential squatters. When neither sound nor man came out of the house, he said, “Well…I guess the coast is clear.”

On the rickety front porch, my brother’s leg disappeared with a cracking sound into the rotted wood, to which my father said, “Oop. Careful.” Now this may sound like child endangerment, but it’s not. My father was merely installing a tough, find-out-for-yourself curiosity. Coupled with my mother’s thriftiness and medical knowledge – she holds the belief that most ailments can be mitigated, if not cured, by ibuprofen, ice, a makeshift splint and nap – my upbringing rendered my brother and me self-reliant with a tinge of smart ass.

The front door fell off its one hinge when my father pushed the door. On the inside doorway rug a dead mouse the size of a baby’s fist was being eaten by dozens of bugs. “Circle of life, boys,” my father said. Instead of being grossed out, we knelt to observe the decay, the several scavengers nibbling another scavenger. The gray fur along the ribcage moved like a finger moving behind a drape.

Since these semi-legal explorations coincided with my extensive reading of the R.L Stine’s series, Goosebumps, my imagination ran wild when we entered the creaky attic. My father tiptoed on the weak lattice of fifty-year-old insulation and papery two-by-fours, crouching down to a black chest that, to me, just had to contain pirate bones or rubies. Instead we found thousands of checks dating back to the 1910s. As my father and brother kneeled down under the pallid light from a yellowed window, I stood on edge, darting my eyes to corners and sounds.

“You guys hear that?” I asked skittishly.

“Raccoon, probably,” said Dad.

“Yeah, Dave. Duh,” my brother explained.

My father brought out armfuls of checks, which looked like papyrus.

“Apparently…” my father started, raising the check up to the weak light, “James Schwartz’s check-writing days are over, ay, boys?” He chuckled and dug his arm back into the chest, searching. My brother handed me a check. The names and numbers were written in that cursive hand I’m convinced went extinct after World War II: slanted, consistent, elegant.

Those checks are the only things we ever took from that house, but we went back several times. Each time was less scary. It was like visiting a relative that couldn’t talk because of a terminal disease, a presence of death breathing. There was only silence, objects, and space. And I found it comforting for the first time. I realized the lack of life was its own life, and I had my first cravings for that doppelganger, the shadow body left to rot.

The house was bulldozed a year later. The whole family drove by after dinner one evening, my father vaguely pissed off yet unable to articulate why, exactly, it was a loss.

“It was just a neat house. A bit of history,” he sighed. “The bastards will probably put up another friggin’ Circuit City.”

“Honey,” my mom started. “Don’t talk like that.” She gave my brother and me a concerned glace, worried as all mothers are by their children’s intake of dirty words and disgruntlement.

“Ah…they’re still bastards,” my father said, shaking his head, looking our his window at the pile of shady white wood scraps that were once a house, next to freshly overturned Illinois soil.

***

A few months before I left for college, I drove out to a campground to meet my father for a weekend of eating and walking in the woods. It was dusk, a time when the rural Midwest turns briefly orange and angelic. I listened to CCR with the window down, smelling leaves burning on the wind.

I turned on the road to the campground and noticed a gray barn a couple hundred yards to my right. It looked like the shed of a god in the day’s waning light. Its gravel driveway was bifurcated in the center with knee-high tan grass. I drove slowly up to the barn to explore.

I had sprained my ankle a few days prior, so I limped about in the darkening bowels of the barn, looking through the stables. The air was heavy yet cool inside the barn, smelling of animal and rain. Brittle hay lay in loose, slouching bales amongst pellets of deer and raccoon turds. The roof was gouged in several places, the light purple sky patchy and dispersed in the gray roof like mellow, scabby stars. A rusted out combine held a collection of brown rain water. Glass Pepsi bottles were lined at the base of one wall, target practice for the local kids with BB guns or sling shots. I moved through a few smaller rooms, finding a few ripped plaid shirts and a teal kitchen chair with its dark yellow stuffing ripped out of the seat. I explored for an hour, hearing only my disjointed footsteps and slow breathing in the cool Midwestern evening.

I drove the rest of the way to the campsite in the dark, contemplating my father, his life and love of history. I parked my car and walked up to the site.

“What’s going on, Peg Leg Pete?” my dad asked, sitting by the fire, scratching himself. Peg Leg Pete was my current alias due to my injury.

“Not much. What’re we eating?”

“I got some dogs boiling. Should be done in a few.”

I pulled a lawn chair up to the fire. We sat silently, swatting mosquitoes.

“How’s the foot?”

“Tender. But better.”

“Good. Ma said you should ice it tonight. Take some ibuprofen. You know the drill.”

“Yeah. I know the drill.”

We sat awhile longer. He prodded at the hot dogs in a pot over the fire. “Almost there,” he said. “How was the drive?”

“Pretty.”

“Yeah. It’s awful pretty this time of year, ain’t it? This Indian summer is great. A bit of nip in the air, you know? A little frost on the pumpkin, as they say. But it’s nice. Real nice.”

“Yeah, it is.” We both smiled up at the dark sky and sighed through our noses.

Later in the evening, eating hot dogs and drinking diet cola, he said, “On the way here, I stopped at this old barn just across the way.” He gestured in the direction of the woods. “South of here, I guess.”

“I stopped there, too,” I said.

“Really?”

“The gray one, right? All falling apart and shit?”

“Yeah. I walked in and heard this nasty hiss, and then this spooked raccoon ran out. It scared the hell out of me. Then the coon just kind of looked at me for a few seconds. It didn’t know whether to shit or go blind. Geez. What do you think goes on in their heads?”

“In a raccoon’s head?” I asked, with a mouthful of hot dog.

“Yeah. I mean, when they see humans, what does your average coon think?”

“I never thought of it. Maybe they’re thinking, ‘what do humans think when they see us’, you know?”

“I don’t think we’re that far from coons, evolutionarily speaking. We both try to get grub and have sex and stuff. I think I read somewhere that raccoons have elaborate social hierarchies. Like they have an alpha male and an alpha female. They’re smart little buggers.”

My father nodded and sipped his cola, thinking himself a biologist. My father, like myself, gathers knowledge based not on the reliability of the source in which he found it, but on how interesting he finds the “facts.”

“Yeah. Mammals are good,” I said.

“Anyway, we should check out that barn again tomorrow. Together.”

“Sure.”

We sat and gorged, each of us having four dogs a piece. My father put another log on the fire.

He sat back down, belched, and said “I wonder where they went, you know?”

“Who?”

“Whoever owned that barn. I wonder why they left. There’s gotta be a story there.”

I nodded and looked that fire, the bottom logs becoming as flameless and black as the night. I went inside the tent, iced my ankle, and fell asleep.

We went back to the barn the next morning after a breakfast of oatmeal and apple juice my mother had packed. My father whistled Gordon Lightfoot tunes all morning, happy and husky in the sun.

Both of us were silent in the barn, the morning light giving the barn a spiritual aura, like we were Amish pilgrims finding home. We split up and wandered the barn like old times, and left without speaking.

This was all my father said that day: “It’s something else. It’s really something else.”

In that moment, I realized I was my father’s son. The idea of seeing a gray dilapidated barn and having to stop to explore – both us of thinking, “how could I not stop?” – revealed my acquired curiosity. Perhaps it’s our mutual pessimism of life; we feel the whole world is doomed to decay, but the light at the end of the tunnel is how beautiful that decay can be. It’s morbid, yes, but what’s left behind in the wakes of our lives is the crux of human history: the stories of people on land. It’s the wonder of what happened.

My father and I both like the idea of not being around people, but rather where people once were, their lives suddenly void of the false veil of themselves. Artifacts lack that respite of façade. Our dwellings and tools for living are left naked and unexplained for explorers, but there is a shortage of explorers. Many of us forget the impermanence of things, that these shacks and barns are neglected suburban archeological sites that need a thorough going over. Modernity tricks us into thinking that the future is now, our physical reality solid and endless. But our buildings and lives will be gone to nature once again.

This is all just AdventureLand. This Ferris Wheel will stop turning, and we will all leave this temporary carnival. I just hope there will be creatures around curious enough to sift through our debris, that the NO TRESSPASSING signs render inquiry and not fear.

That’s why I’ll never stop “dicking around” on this planet, for it’s the most human thing to do. And I know it makes my father proud.