Saturday, January 19, 2008

Chew your food

The quest for pinball filled my day. And my yesterday. Wandering into pool halls and bowling allies looking for pinball machines is a stupid way to waste a day, but of late I have had no capacity to concentrate. I consider it time well wandered.

Last week I bit the inside of my mouth. It did not seem to hurt so much when it happened but the cut seemed to grow. I have bit into the inside of my cheek before. It is hard to tell exactly what is happening in there, as it starts to hurt so bad you'd think the whole tooth was knocked off, but in fact it's just a little cut.

That has improved greatly, but for a few days I did not chew all my food quite so thoroughly. As obvious as it seems to me now I did not know that this would aggravate my esophagitis problem. That was less and less of a problem of late, but I guess sending half-chewed food into the esophagal sphincter (love that term) is not so smart when the lining there is scratched and not primed for double duty.

So I've been feeling like a bucket of fuck again. Boo-hoo.

Today's pinball search sent me to Queens Boulevard, where I stepped in to a few billiards halls. No pinball there, but I found a table at a place on 48th Street in Sunnyside. Joy.

I had a strange thought today. I was in a bathroom at a diner on Queens Boulevard when it occured to me that nobody could see me. Nobody. It is hard to think of very many places where *nobody* can see you at all.

I imagine motel rooms as anonymous passageways, not for the present occupant but for the disconnected mysteries of the paths that cross through at room out of sequence.

It sounds like Arthur Miller: "The Motel Room." Each night a new occupant, each night a new drama from the world of transience.

One night a businessman, the next night an up-and-coming starlet, the next night a wife who just left her husband. In sequence they make their desperate and not-so-desperate phone calls from the motel room bed.

I thought of these sort of things when I drove from Florida to New York in 2005. In Norfolk, Virginia, the pouring rain and dark of night forced me to get a room at the first motel in sight. This happened to be a Motel 6, a chain I have always avoided in any of my travels.

The stay was miserable and uncomfortable in that uniquely Motel 6 way, but what overcame me as I swiped the key through the motel room door was how, as a child, I believed that some doors were magic. I believed that opening a door at my grade school would send me not to the school cafeteria but to another country. I further believed that some keys were magic, and that using a magic key on the lock of any door in the world would turn that door into a magic door, granting passage to another planet or at least another world.

I wanted that motel room door to be a magic door. I was driving my father's car 2 months after his death, and as I got closer to New York the meaning of that trip piled up in my mind. Through Georgia and the Carolinas I simply drove the car and tried to think about anything but my father, whose hands so proudly clutched the very steering wheel I now controlled.

I can still feel that motel room door opening. Like many things in my life, I remember the sound. It made a thrush of a sound, the insulation around the door frame creating what sounded like a large refrigerator or freezer door opening.

The walls of the room were barren where my mind was not. My thoughts splattered onto the walls like a disaster. I wished that I had just walked through a magic door, and maybe I had. As I pushed the door open I recalled that child hood memory and clearly said to myself "I believe that some doors are magic." But the blank, dismal interior of that motel room was a sour alert that magic was dead.

Why do I not feel like finishing this story. I am tired, sad and depressed and might need to shutup soon.

Chew your food, You and your esophagal sphincter will be glad you did.

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