The other requisite baby photo

Notice the look of keen intelligence on my face:

Click to enlarge.

I’m about to make either an earth-shaking discovery or a momentous poopie. One of the two.

D.

New toy!

Maybe it’s seasonal affective disorder, our interminable rain, overwork, not enough sleep, lack of exercise, or crappy diet, but I needed a new toy to cheer me up, so I bought myself a scanner. We had a scanner, a decrepit creature abandoned by its maker (we couldn’t find a driver for Windows XP). But this new puppy is state of the art: an HP Scanjet 4850. Not top o’ the line, but more scanner than I need.

I debated with myself what to give you first. A photo of my dad’s parents dancing cheek to cheek? Perhaps a photo of my parents at half my present age, sitting next to one another on the beach? Maybe I should put up the photo of my mom’s dad in a Nazi uniform. (Nope. Gonna save that story for another day.)

No, I decided to post clear-cut evidence of my early attempts to ruin my son’s liver.

Be honest. You have a picture of your son or daughter like this, don’t you? It’s one of those irresistible photo opportunities.

That’s Carta Blanca, by the way — damn near unavailable in Northern California, but it’s our favorite beer. And Jake’s, too, by the look on his face.

Disclaimer for the humor-impaired, the gullible, and the meddlesome: the bottle was empty.

Nearly.

D.

Nose to the electron gun

I had hopes that yesterday’s post would vault my hits into, if not four-digit territory, at least above-250-hits-a-day territory, but no, I gave you Alan Rickman, and what do you do? You stay away from your computers. You spend time with your families. The nerve.

Mind you, the post itself was a shmata, chazzerai, but the comments . . . oy! To die for.

I spent the day catching up on my Tangent assignment. With the way my work days have been, I knew that if I didn’t post my review today, I wouldn’t finish it until next weekend. I’m already late on it, but Eugie is such a sweetie, she hasn’t even griped.

I can’t believe tomorrow is already Monday. I am so not into this work thing.

D.

A singular lack of faith

Here’s how my mind works.

I’m thinking about all the various spoof blogs I know: Madonna’s Personal Blog, Harriet Miers’s Blog!!!, and Mel’s Musings (Mel Gibson’s Blog), and I’m wondering, what other famous people have fake blogs in their honor?

If anyone deserves a Harriet Miers-style blog, it’s George W. Bush. Google George Bush’s Blog and you’ll get this defunct site (last update, June 6, 2001). Then there’s Bush Blog!, which at least updates a bit more regularly (last entry, December 17, 2005). GOP.com, the Republican National Committee’s official blog, is the funniest of the three. With a headline like Economy Continues to Thrive, you know they have writers who will give The Daily Show a run for its money.

After that, I get the bright idea of looking for God’s blog. Turns out, He has several, like this one, or this one, which I rather like. Maybe I just dig the idea of God singing a Barry Manilow song for Jesus’ birthday.

“His name was Rico
He wore a diamond
He was escorted to his chair
He saw Lola dancing there . . .”

But what really gets me is this one, called Godblog. On June 3, 2002, someone named Steve Jones set up Godblog on Blogspot. His tag reads,

Some of the amazing stories that people have told me or I have experienced about God doing stuff.

and his one and only entry reads,

Some stories of God’s amazingness

No link. Nada. Talk about a let-down.

So, Steve? Put up or shut up. If you don’t want to run Godblog, that’s cool. It’s easy as pie to destroy your blog — believe me, I know. But leaving up a blog that reads

Some stories of God’s amazingness

with nothing else to back it up depresses the hell out of me, and I’m agnostic.

Anyway, what we really need is for one of the God’s Blog guys to start leaving entries on George Bush’s blog. You know, to mess with his mind.

GEORGE

(the Lord, like Death in Terry Pratchett’s novels, should always write in caps)

YOU’VE DONE QUITE ENOUGH, GEORGE. TIME TO STEP DOWN NOW, BEFORE LUCIFER AND I ARE FORCED TO FIGURE OUT SOMETHING WORSE THAN HELL.

J.

Yeah, something like that.

D.

I love Jeff Corwin

. . . with a quiet, manly kind of love. You know, the way John Ireland loved Montgomery Clift in Red River — no, wait, that’s not quite right. I dig Corwin the way Sal Mineo dug Jimmy Dean in Rebel Without a Cause . . . no, no, no, that’s not it either.

Maybe I love him the way Claude Rains loves Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca — hey, wait, you mean that’s gay, too? (See David Thomson’s essay, Film Studies: Gay films? Well there’s ‘Raging Bull’ and ‘The Godfather’ for starters…)

Well, I certainly don’t love him the way Laurence Olivier loves Tony Curtis in Spartacus, or the way Jake Gyllenhaal loves Heath Ledger in Brokeback Mountain. Damn it all, aren’t there any role models in Hollywood for good, beefy, MASCULINE love?

Hmm. Maybe I love him the way Jake Barnes loves his fishin’ buddy Bill Gorton in The Sun Also Rises. I can always count on Papa Hemingway for confidently heterosexual male-male bonding, right? Right.

Anyway, I owe this gush of enthusiasm for Jeff Corwin to my son, who found this repository of Jeff Corwin video clips. They’re all great, but we especially enjoyed Jeff’s “Never before seen movie segments!”

So, Jeff, I love ya ‘cuz your heart is in the right place, you care about animals, you’re a ham like me, and you’re funny as hell.

That and the fact you’re so damned hawt.

Jeff, I wish I knew how to quit you.

D.

P.S.: If you want a serious treatment of the history of gay themes in Hollywood cinema, you can do no better than The Celluloid Closet, 1995. Great stuff.

A fun meme (for a change)

From Maureen:

“In lieu of an actual post, I stole this meme from Miss Snark’s Blog this morning.

1. Grab the nearest book.
2. Open the book to page 123.
3. Find the fifth sentence.
4. Post the text of the sentence in your journal along with these instructions.
5. Don’t search around and look for the “coolest” book you can find. Do what’s actually next to you.”

I’m having Jake read The Golden Compass, and it really is right next to me. Here’s the sentence:

But her mind was on John Faa and the parley room, and before long she slipped away up the cobbles again to the Zaal.

Beneath that book, I have Jorge Luis Borges Collected Fictions. Page 123 puts us smack dab inside “The Garden of Forking Paths,” one of my favorite fantasy short stories. Sentence five:

That was why unconsciously I had fully given myself over to it.

Fun and easy. I’d do Strunk and White, too, but there’s no page 123.

I tag the first five people who read this post ;o)

D.

Closeness

We held the interview in a small conference room in the administrative wing of the hospital’s locked psych ward. I remember a sunny day, and a warm roomer that would soon feel much warmer. My mentor, a psychiatrist in his late 40s, wore an ill-fitting brown sports jacket. He sat to one side, as invisible as he could manage to be, and never once interrupted me or my subject.

She was fifteen or sixteen, a kid who had bought herself a psych eval by attempting suicide. (It disturbs me how we punish failed suicides, but that’s another story.) I had a certain amount of ground to cover and I had fifty minutes to do it. Psych histories are precise things, as precise as anything can be in psychiatry, so by the end of my fifty minute hour my success or failure would be obvious to me and my mentor.

Any medical history is a Rashomon-like experience, psychiatric histories most of all. There is no truth, only the patient’s understanding of the truth. (One of my wife’s neurologists once told his students, “You should never forget that when you are talking to your patient, you are speaking to a sick brain.”) Bottom line, even though I was only a first year medical student, I grasped this idea — I inhabited this idea.

For me, a merely adequate history would have meant failure. I wanted this girl’s version of the truth.

I established rapport gradually, effortlessly. Before ten minutes had passed, we were no longer med student and patient; we were patient and fellow patient. We were in this together.

***

After watching The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Karen said to me, “You know what your problem is? You know how to talk to women, but you don’t know how to seduce them.”

Damn it. Like usual, she was right. I’ve never seduced anyone, not even accidentally. Karen, I overwhelmed with my cooking ability and my stories, badgered her with the wonder of me so that she never had a chance. This was not seduction, but an effective propaganda campaign.

J in the dorms — the one who fell for Tall Blond Blue-Eyed Jesus — bought me little gifts, left me notes, and laughed at my jokes, but when it came to physical contact, I was Quasimodo.

D stayed up late with me working on Physics 5 homework, and the way she bitched me out reminded me of GFv1.0. Surely, she would be interested? No, she only had eyes for some guy from the soccer team, who only liked her as a fellow soccer player, and not that way.

Carmela — and I know I’ve told this story before, but that’s how much I love it — Carmela told me on our first date that her father the longshoreman would kill her if she married a non-Catholic, or got pregnant, or, I imagine, came home smelling like lox and cream cheese. I couldn’t even steal a kiss from Carmela, that’s how frightened she was.

By the end of college, I had become used to the idea that women don’t see me that way, and it wouldn’t have surprised me one bit if they’d refused to associate with me altogether. But I have had a different fate. Women like me. They pour out their hearts; they volunteer their sexual histories whether I want them to or not.

At first, this was a cool power, like Superman’s X-ray vision. I learned in my twenties how to minimize myself, appear receptive, and ask the right kind of questions. I say “learned,” but all of this seemed to happen without any effort on my part. Eventually, it started annoying the hell out of me when women I didn’t like coughed up their deepest-darkests.

I learned how to turn it off in residency. By then, I had become too tired, too busy, and too emotionally drained to hear this stuff. Heaven only knows how many great stories I forfeited. Oh, I hadn’t lost it; I remember a phone conversation in which I teased out sexual kinks from J (you know who you are, you beer-swiggin’ vixen) she didn’t even know she had. Most of the time, though, I kept my li’l empathy feelers safely tucked away.

Back in my first year of med school, however, I was still flushed with The Power. I figured I was a natural born psychiatrist.

***

I did it to my mother once.

No, no, no, not the sexual history stuff. Eeew. Here’s how it played out: one evening, my mother, my father, and I drove down I-5 from the Bay Area to Los Angeles. My father slept in the back while I drove. Later, I found out from him that he’d only pretended to be asleep. I think I got bits of history out of my mom that even he didn’t know.

It was a creepy experience, equal parts exhilarating and disturbing. I wouldn’t recommend it.

***

My subject realized before I did that our fifty-minute hour was coming to a close. She had been animated, pleasant, generous with information. Now, as they say in the biz, she’d clammed up. By the end of our time together, she answered my questions with “yes” and “no,” nothing more. She wouldn’t shake my hand at the end, wouldn’t even look at me as she left the room.

“What was that all about?” I asked my mentor. “We were getting along great!”

“Don’t you understand what happened?”

“No.”

“She just said, ‘Fuck you.'”

“Huh?”

“You got too close. You’re nothing to her — you’re not family, you’re not a friend. You’re not even her doctor. Here you are, you’re with her for less than an hour. After that, you’ll never see her again. You’re nothing to her, and yet she let you in.” He shrugged. “It pisses her off.”

“You’re good, though,” he said.

***

If I’d gone into psychiatry, that man might have been Yoda to my Luke Skywalker. He had all kinds of cute, pithy phrases, like, “That’s logical, but it’s not psychological.” He seemed thoroughly comfortable and secure in a profession that attracted the unsettled and the disturbed.

It took me a few years, but eventually I figured out psychiatry wasn’t good for me. It’s a problem with boundaries. Okay, if I’m not careful, I’m going to get all Jane Fonda on you, but here it is. I’m good at crossing over the boundaries between people because my own boundaries are tissue-thin. In a perfect world, I would soothe the troubled soul like ice on a burn. In reality, I knew I would be like that empathy chick on the old Star Trek. She can heal others, but only by absorbing their damage.

Hey, I’m burning out on snot and ear wax. How do you think I’d handle an office full of folks with major depression?

D.

2006 Bloggie Nominations are open

Nominate your favorites here.

Did I nominate myself? You betcha. As I have pointed out previously, I play the lottery, too.

***

My parents’ reaction to Brokeback Mountain was disappointingly tame. “It was too long,” my dad said. “So these two cowboys love each other. They needed over two hours to show me two cowboys in love with each other?”

My mom said, “Feh,” or words to that effect.

Back to work.

D.

This should be good.

My 80-year-old dad and my 77-year-old mom went to see Brokeback Mountain the other day.

They thought they were going to see a traditional Hollywood Western.

I’ve been too busy to call them, but when I do, I’ll say, “So. How was the movie?”

***

Here’s how today went:

Up at 6:30 AM.

Operating from 7:30 AM to 3:30 PM.

Catching up on office work, surfing, and blogging: 3:30 to 6:00.

Hospital committee meeting: 6:00 to 8:00.

Home at about 8:20.

Chess with Jake until 10:00.

I’m going to type up Jake’s homework for tomorrow, and then I’m going to crash. G’night, moon.

D.

Help me earn that blogwhore of the year award!

Jona nominated me for Blogwhore of the Year over at The Best of Blogs, so I thought, weeell, hell, I’d better do me some good whoring.

The real reason for this post: lately, several new names and faces have shown up in the comments. Some of you don’t even want to rip me a new one. Anyway, if you’d like to do some reciprocal blogrolling, let me know. You need only ask. And if you’re a lurker, it wouldn’t kill you to say hi.

By the way: I only drop people from my blogroll for two reasons. One, they haven’t updated in forever; two, they say something hateful or racist in their blog. (I don’t think I’ve dropped anyone for that reason, but it did keep me from listing someone.) If I’ve dropped you by accident, let me know.

***

Waking up from anesthesia, one of my patients today said, “Who are you?”

“I’m your doctor.”

“You’re full of shit.”

You know the best thing about these conversations? Repeating them back to the patient days later. It’s so tasty.

***

If you haven’t seen it yet, One Good Move has the video of O’Falafel’s interview with Dave Letterman. I love it when O’Falafel drinks his coffee ;o)

***

The General puts a human face on our government’s civil rights abuses. I feel so much safer now.

D.