Category Archives: Memoirist BS


Friday Fourteen: fourteen homes

A revealing measure of my state of mind right now: I’m looking hard at that word, fourteen, wondering whether it’s spelled right.

Fourteen? Forteen? It’s forty, right? Or is it fourty?

Don’t worry. I’m not making too many more critical medical decisions today.

Below the cut, a theme I’ve robbed from Dean: fourteen places I’ve lived. Pix to follow when I get the chance.

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Eat it.

Between cases this morning, one of my circulating nurses caught me carefully nibbling my tuna salad-on-wheat away from the crust. “You weren’t one of those spoiled children whose mommy trimmed away the crust, were you?” she asked.

No, I was one of those spoiled kids who was forced to eat everything. Now I’m a spoiled adult who gets to eat or not eat whatever the hell I want.

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Are you my daddy?

Karen’s watching 60 Minutes, and they’re doing a story on a sperm bank which over-utilized one particular donor’s sperm. I gather the mothers are worried that their children might end up marrying a half-brother or half-sister. Interesting, don’t you think? You see, this donor’s profile was so attractive, LOTS of women decided they wanted him to be the father of their children.

I suspect most male medical students get the letters — you know, the ones that politely suggest you can earn money by jerking off. Not much money, but $40 a pop adds up after a while. And how many times had I thought, “If I had a nickle for every time . . .”

So I answered the letter. An attractive receptionist took a thorough medical history, and if I’m not mistaken, my blood was drawn as well. Last thing they want is an HIV positive sperm donor, and even waaaaay back then we had testing for carrier status on certain genetic diseases, like Tay-Sachs.

Once I made the first cut, I was told I would have to audition. Because, well, you know — they don’t want just any old sperm.

Auditioning is harder than you might think. They informed me that my “sample” (are you thinking about a supermarket deli yet?) could not be wrung from a condom, nor could my wife help in any way involving bodily fluids or lubricants. Nor could I use any bodily fluids or lubricant. It needs must, apparently, be the product of a dry hump.

You ladies: ask the man in your life, or affable male friend, how easy it is to ejaculate sans lube. NOT.

I was beginning to understand how I would have to earn my $40.

Remember, this was in the 80s, pre-YouPorn, pre-porn DVDs, pre- any porn whatsoever except for magazines, which have never done much for me. Oh, I suppose I might have gone to an X-rated movie theater, but folks got arrested for such behavior. No, I would have to do it the hard way.

Oh. And it had to be fresh.

Some time thereafter, the sperm bank called and requested my presence. What could be so important that I would have to meet with one of the supervising physicians? Were my little guys Super Spermatozoa, so viciously potent they would have to dilute my donations 1:10, such that each sample would garner me $400?

I wish.

Nope. The doc told me there were “too many aberrant forms.”

“I wouldn’t worry about it if I were you,” he said. “You’ll probably be able to father children. But we can’t use donors who provide too many aberrant forms.”

Some years later, when we were having fertility problems, I got myself checked out once again. This time around, everything was fine*, which leads me to ask: was it my spermatozoa who were aberrant, or was it me?

Don’t answer that.

D.

*Karen recalls: “They were better than okay. You had a very high sperm count, with excellent motility.”

So there.

Dream home

We’re getting closer and closer to completing starting two major bits of unfinished home remodeling business: the floors and the kitchen countertops. The wife and I kind of like this vinyl Konecto stuff, but there’s a problem. Supposedly, it’s easy as pie to install, so of course everyone seems to think I can install it.

Um. Right.

Whenever we futz with our house, I remember a For Sale By Owner home I viewed in San Antonio way back in ’97. What a place. I bet it’s still on the market.

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Men

In the June 11/18 issue of The New Yorker, Jeffrey Eugenides writes of his reaction to Nicolas Roeg’s 1971 film Walkabout:

Soon the Aborigine and the girl are cavorting naked in an oasis. Later, as they near civilization, the Aborigine performs a mating dance, to which the girl doesn’t respond, and the next morning she finds that he has hanged himself in a tree.

Two suicides. A lengthy montage of Edenic, but full frontal, nudity. And all without my mother putting her hand over my eyes. Beyond the wondrous excitement of all this was the message the film conveyed, and for which there existed no better recipient than a twelve-year-old growing up in the wake of the sixties: civilization was evil, technology deracinating, and the only solution a return to nature.

Through this whole piece, I was so with Eugenides . . . right up until that last sentence; because, at that point, I became convinced that during our most impressionable years, he and I had watched a different movie. He thought the message of Walkabout was that “civilization was evil, technology deracinating.” (Precocious twelve-year-old, eh?) For me, Walkabout confirmed something my nine-year-old brain had known for several years.

Girls will drive you fooking nuts.

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Ich möchte gern Jazzmusik.

Not my German teacher.

With regard to Karen & me: lots of big things bind us together, but lots of little things do, too. For example, the fact we both suffered through two quarters of German at Berkeley.

The College of Chemistry required us to learn things like Ich möchte gern Jazzmusik and Bringen Sie mir bitte Rotkohl dazu! I’ll never understand how red cabbage related to Germany’s domination of the 19th and early 20th Century organic chemistry literature; but in the minds of our profs, two quarters of German girded us for the Beilstein Handbuch, Zeitschriften, and Naturwissenschaften.

Yeah, I pulled those names outa my ass. Or outa my deepest darkest memory, which is much the same place.

I haven’t retained a hell of a lot of German — little more than a handful of inane lines. One (the title of this post) burst forth this evening when some silly commercial came on TV. Another tends to erupt at the most inopportune of moments.

Mid-sex, for example:

Das macht Grossmutter besonders freude!

I suppose That makes Grandmother especially happy beats screaming out the name of an old boyfriend or girlfriend, but it’s a buzz kill just the same.

What a weird, warped textbook. The one chapter Karen and I talk about more than any other concerned the Gastarbeiter, the guestworkers brought in from Southern and Eastern European countries to fuel Germany’s burgeoning industrial sector. This chapter fairly dripped with racism, and included the memorable line*

Die Gastarbeiter haben vielen Krankheiten.

The guestworkers have many illnesses.

Many illnesses, dirty, uneducated, don’t blend in well with others — it appalled us, reading crap like this here in the bastion of Liberal America. The book was written by the Departmental Chair, a guy we never saw nor heard from. I wonder how many years they used that textbook before someone squawked?

I like the fact that Karen and I have 25 years of common memories. I like the fact I can blurt Ich möchte gern Jazzmusik and the woman doesn’t look at me like I’m a freak.

No, that’s my son’s job.

D.

*My memory is not necessarily grammatically accurate.

At the rep

Rialto Theater, South Pasadena, California

For the first 21 years of my life, I had a repertory theater close at hand. I grew up less than ten miles from the Rialto Theater, a lovely old place with neat architecture which I was about to call “art deco” until I read this:

Construction of the Rialto Theatre began in 1924 featuring the Spanish Baroque architectural style with Egyptian touches by noted Theatre designer L.A. Smith. Note the Batchelder tiles drinking fountain in the lobby, complete with picture tiles. The Auditorium features plaster ornaments, colorful stenciling, organ screens supported by harpies (half woman, half vulture) and a glaring mythological gargoyle with red eyes staring down from the proscenium arch.

You probably know the Rialto. Remember The Player? Tim Robbins kills that dude in the back of the Rialto. Remember Kentucky Fried Movie? The “Feel-A-Round” skit was filmed inside the Rialto.

At the Rialto, I saw Polanski’s Macbeth, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, and the 1973 Christopher Lee version of The Wicker Man. Can’t remember what else I saw, sadly enough.

I went to college at 17. Berkeley had the UC Theater:

How sad — they’re not showing movies at the UC anymore.

At the UC Theater, I saw Pink Floyd’s two films, More and La Vallée (you younguns: yes, Pink Floyd made more movies than just The Wall), Lawrence of Arabia, The Rocky Horror Picture Show, Paul Scofield’s King Lear (sublime), and Lawrence Olivier’s Hamlet (trash). My girlfriend & soon-to-be fiance accompanied me to Labor of Love, a hilarious documentary about the making of an X-rated movie.

I think we had a repertory theater when I was in med school, but they never had anything good. French films without subtitles, I’ll bet. So I guess I got out of the habit. But really, where better to watch an old Bogart and Bacall film? And what can be better than an all-day festival of Hammer horror films or Ray Harryhausen’s stop-action mythological beasties?

Yeah, I miss those theaters. Last 20 years of my life have been a spirit-sapping procession of multiplexes.

If I get rich, I’m opening a rep.

You may regale me with repertory theater memories now.

D.

Altered States

Ken Russell’s movie Altered States came out in 1980. I saw it the following year at the UC Theater, a repertory moviehouse a stone’s throw from the Berkeley campus. What must have been serious, sensitive stuff most anywhere else in the nation was, for us, high camp. Best part came soon after the protagonist (William Hurt playing a scientist and doing a laughably unconvincing job of it) has, in short order, dropped some hallucinogens, placed himself in a sensory deprivation chamber, and regressed to an ape man of Falwellian paleolithicness.

Hurt’s research associate (Charles Haid), upon discovering Hurt’s miraculous transformation from suave-witty martini-sipping academician to grunting zoo-sleeping feces-flinger, declares — paraphrasing here: “This is the breakthrough of the decade! We have to study this further. I know, we’ll advertise in the Student Union!”

Whereupon all us college kids burst out laughing. To this day, I wonder if the line was intended as comic relief. Kinda like that scene in Terminator II when Linda Hamilton dreams of the Los Angeles skyline dissolving behind a mushroom cloud. How come no one else in the theater was laughing?

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Eight steps

Sam tagged me.

Here are the rules:

1.Each player starts with eight random facts/habits about themselves.

2. People who are tagged need to write their own blog about their eight things and post these rules.

3. At the end of your blog, you need to choose eight people to get tagged and list their names.

4. Don’t forget to leave them a comment telling them they’re tagged, and to read your blog.

But this would be too easy. To make it more of a challenge, I’m going to begin at age 5 and share some memories in eight easy steps, five years at a time. Sound like fun? I think so. See me under the covers.

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Chihuahuas

My parents’ 60th wedding anniversary is coming up next January, and for the occasion, my sister wants to put together some sort of scrap book. My sister, my brother, and I each have our own collection of photos. It’s always something of a shock when we compare photos. For example, my sis had never seen this photo of my grandfather.

My brother turned up a few black-and-white photos of our chihuahuas, Chi Chi and Perrita. That’s Chi Chi on the right. I’ve told you about her before — my canine sibling rival. My mother still blames my father for Chi Chi’s failed pregnancy. As far as my dad was concerned, a dog ought to be able to deliver her puppies without assistance. My mom wanted to let the vet deliver the litter. Chi Chi gave birth to live pups, but somehow, she smothered them within the day.

I suspect every family has stories like that one — something which, on the face of things, isn’t all that big a deal, yet it becomes emblematic for so much of the deeper pathology of the marriage.

I’m not sure what happened to Chico, Chi Chi’s mate. I remember him vaguely as a hyper hairless who wouldn’t leave Chi Chi alone. I also remember being very disturbed by his bright red penis, and by the way he would get twisted around (tail-facing-tail) when mating with Chi Chi. We didn’t have him for long.

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