Friday, February 24, 2012

Who?

‘It was,’ I thought, ‘living in a state of fear.’
That amused me, so I played with it. Was it a fly-over state? If so, were there people who simply don’t fly over it—who never know fear? Do some people come—maybe to go to the University of Fear—and then go off somewhere else?
Don’t know. What I do know is that yesterday, I visited it. And what a subtle place it was: things appearing that I’d not seen, sizes of objects changing around, interactions skewing slightly.
I came home and wrote about it, and felt a little better. I sent it to Taí, who politely said it was disjointed. I worked hard—doing a post, then rewriting a section of Iguanas. The Zanas were giving me problems—what to do with them? 
The trouble was I wanted to put in more pictures of them than I had of other friends—just as dear, just as devoted. And Franny wouldn’t have liked that. Well, I solved it, but it took me two hours.
Let me state it simply—my abstract from the thesis of UF:
I feared I was losing my mind again, and that I would become a chronic nutcase, always moving in and out of insanity.
And it did look to be the case. Even the things that could be explained were inexplicable. The post I had written, that disjointed thing? Somehow, it had been sent without the ending. 
Speaking of deletions, I did something in a document, and poof—it was gone. I panic and call Taí, who tells there is an “undo” button I click. 
And how many times have I clicked the “undo” button in my life?
My finding in the thesis: my fear was making everything worse.
Well, I’m going out on a limb today, and let the gods be tempted.
I graduated.
And have just done—actually for the first time in my life—commencement.
The first step came at the supermarket, where I stood with my good recyclable bag. The nice cashier, with whom I always speak Spanish, sees my bag, looks away, and then puts an item in a plastic bag.
“I’m crazy,” he says.
In English.
“No, you’re not,” I say.
I don’t have to explain, do I?
Half an hour later, the sun is setting, and illuminates a quite dead bougainvillea. Rather, it irradiates it, and it is now gold. 
I mean real gold. 
Think wedding bands.
And I do not think this is crazy. I know other people do. I know that I can live in their world.
I just have another passport.
Or diploma?
I smile and play Sudoku. And I decide to cheat—which is possible, electronically. The Sudoku is on my iPad, and any wrong number is immediately rejected. The device makes a disgusted sound, and the wrong is counted against you. It adds a new dimension to the game. Oh, you get a score, too.
Well, that’s useful, because I have been testing my mind. Can I still think? Is the logical component still there?
First cheat—and the number sits placidly on the screen. Second cheat—the same. I cheat four times, and yes…
‘Ah, the Puerto Rican God,’ I think. ‘She’s not subtle….’
Nor was she today, at commencement.
Starting my walk, I realize: I’m tired of chamber music, and am definitely not into lieder. I play the only symphony on my iPod.
And as much as people sniff at it, I love it. More, it has come into my life always at crucial moments. 
So we’re off, Beethoven and I, and we’re walking by the sea. And the Puerto Rican God has provided quite a nice setting. The sky is dark, there is a storm at sea, the waves are high.
Contrasting nicely with the tenderness of the work. Because it is tender. Wistful. Wondering…
And it begins to rain and I am getting wet and I return home.
And the third movement is ending, and I think of the story, probably untrue, of the little boy.
He’s hearing that moment at a concert, and turns to an old man and says “I’m afraid.” The old man takes his hand.
And then the fourth movement crashes in and I step from the area of partial visibility of the sea to open visibility and…
(I can barely go on…)
There is an enormous wave assaulting the stone wall of the fortress that guards the city. And I say…
“STOP IT!”
To the Puerto Rican God.
I walk home, the music joyful until at last I am yards from the entrance to the city. I glance to my right, and see a sturdy wooden door. ‘I’ve not touched the door,’ I think (my homage to Franny)—and dismiss the idea as ridiculous. But I do, anyway.
And somebody gives me the diploma.
Who?  

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