Sunday, September 20, 2015

Cheers to Strangers Saving The Day (or not, but whatever)

It is 12:30 on a Saturday night and I’m sitting alone at a karaoke bar in New Bern, North Carolina. I’m sober driving for my best bud, Barry, who is drunker than fourteen dollars and smoking his twentieth cigarette in the parking lot, while inside a man in sweatpants takes a seat on the stage to holler out his cover of Clarence Carter’s Strokin’.  A couple is seated at the other end of the bar, the woman and I make eye contact and smile, but everyone’s attention is soon diverted to sweatpants guy on stage:                            

I stroke it to the east
And I stroke it to the west
And I stroke it to the woman that I love the best
I be strokin'

Barry returns from his cigarette to catch the majority of the performance, and  the crowd has started cheering and dancing. This is what I love about dive-bar karaoke: nobody gives a single shit. I’ve been to karaoke nights where it seems like everyone is trying desperately to live out their long dormant fantasies of Broadway stardom while simultaneously trying to one-up or act shitty to the other performers . . . like people were going to get paid at the end of the night; like it's American Effing Idol. Better are the karaoke nights in small bars, patronized mostly by locals of all ages, where you can hear Salt-n-Peppa’s Shoop and then Save a Horse, Ride a Cowboy, followed by Luck Be a Lady. The skill level varies from quite impressive (a matronly-looking lady rocked the shit out of When You’re Good to Mama) to so dreadful it loops around and boomerangs back to awesome somehow. When two tone deaf gals fumble through Don’t Stop Believin’ with unabashed bravado, you can’t help but root for them. Everyone is just there to have fun.

Barry sits next to me, quotes something from Strangers With Candy, tells me about some idea he has for a YouTube channel. I try to listen to what he’s saying, but a twenty-something kid in a bow tie is on stage belting out Hungry Eyes, and I really want to sing along, and I’m having trouble keeping up with both forms of entertainment. This is when I notice the couple at the end of the bar again, each separately peeking over their shoulders at me.

I drink another water, Barry orders another beer, someone sings Margaritaville.

“Does that couple at the end of the bar keep looking back at us?” Barry asks.

“Yes, I thought I was being paranoid, but they are,” I tell him.

Then the woman looks back again, turns toward us and approaches. She comes in close and I’m worried I should know her and know that I do not.

“Hey do you want to come do a shot?”

I tell her no, I’m not drinking, but thank her.

“Do you wanna come do a shot of water then?”

I think this is the weirdest request ever, but maybe this is a thing. Maybe people do shots of not-alcohol and I just didn’t know about it. I can hardly refuse, because to say no at this point would be just stand-offish and I don’t have enough friends in North Carolina to afford being a big B to anyone.
So I agree to the water shot, tell Barry to watch my purse, and walk down the length of the bar with this blonde woman I’ve never seen before. As we approach her husband, she leans in and asks me: 

“Hey are you ok? You looked like you needed to be rescued from that guy.”

Now the water shot makes sense, their concerned looks make sense. They first noticed me when I was sitting alone at the bar, and they saw Barry come in after a cigarette. They assumed he had just arrived and was now putting the moves on me. I was probably making confused and unpleasant faces because Barry’s drunk-talking and the karaoke music were both drowning one another out and this couple saw a woman, alone, who’s accidentally snagged an admirer who couldn’t stop talking her ear off.

I laugh and tell her the real story. Barry is my best friend in North Carolina, Barry is my neighbor and a friend of my husband, and Barry is very, very gay. His name is Barry Gay.  Despite my feminine wiles, I am definitely not Barry’s type. We have a chuckle over their misinterpretation and they buy Barry a Fireball shot.

As we’re leaving, once we exit the bar and start walking toward Barry’s Lincoln, I finally have the opportunity to explain the mishap.

“Those MOTHER FUCKERS!” Surprisingly enough, to me anyway, the assumption by the couple that Barry was creepin’ on some chick infuriates him.

I feel exactly the opposite. A little shred of my faith in humanity was restored by that couple’s decision to say something when a situation looked weird. They couldn’t know that Barry was Barry and not some rapey creepazoid. If more people behaved that way, if more people took the time to be observant, to not be afraid to interfere or risk offending someone, then maybe at least some actual scary, creepy, rapey situations could be avoided.

“Barry, doesn’t it make you feel comforted in knowing that there are people out there who, if I were actually in that situation, would come to my rescue?”

“No, actually it doesn’t make me feel better. They had me tried and convicted before they even met me.”

I told him that at least their intentions were good, that he might be taking it personally. He pouted the whole way home.

I want to say thank you, strange couple at the bar, that had no vested interest in my well-being other than I looked like a gal in an uncomfortable situation. I wish everyone was like you.

And for guys who might be reading this . . . I imagine it has to be difficult for men to toe the line between meeting girls and coming across like a Creepy McGee. It sucks that there has to be an active awareness of potential dangers to women’s safety. It sucks that even a gay guy can look like he’s ready to slip a roofie into a gal’s drink. It sucks for men, but to be fair, that environment exists because of men. The most noble way, I think, of someone doing their part to rectify a sense of human decency is looking out for strangers. When men, like the husband of the couple, choose to intervene, even though it’s none of their business, even though he could be so wrong, it does a little bit to diminish the rape culture that permeates American society. It tells a stranger that there are good people, good men out there. It makes a woman who has spent a lot of time thinking about patriarchy feel hope for humankind.

Thank you, again, Mara and Justin Something-or-Other. I appreciate you.

Barry, however, is still pissed.


Saturday, September 12, 2015

A Value Tale: The Story of Nukky

I spent the first three to four years of my life deeply in love with my pacifier. Yes, I was one of those children who held firmly to that natural comfort of a nipple in my mouth for long after it was appropriate. In retrospect, it doesn’t seem all that strange. There are a great many adults who still, either subconsciously or consciously, walk around looking for nipples to put in their mouths, so the few years that I was overdue for a weaning don’t seem so serious anymore.

But damn . . . was it serious back then.

I have memories reaching as far back as my second year of life, the first clear, brilliant recollection being a moment when my mom sat my tiny toddler body on our classically 1970’s orange kitchen counter top, her standing closely by, as we watched the gold-domed popcorn-maker stir its long metal arm in a circle until the kernels inside began to explode into white puffs. I remember laughing hysterically at this. Had I been born in 2007 instead of 1977, it was a scene that my parents may have recorded with their smartphones and posted to YouTube. You’ve seen them—clips of dads and moms repeatedly doing something like making a fart noises with their lips and the young toddler belly-laughing uncontrollably and then waiting in anticipation for the noise to come again. This is a testament to how little I must have been, small enough to roar in comedic delight at the popping of corn kernels. I asked my mother once, many years later if she recalled this event. And while I don’t think she remembered it happening, I saw her eyes widen in disbelief and shock that my memories extended so far and with such exquisite detail. She claims I couldn’t have been more than two years old, and that seems about right to me. I thought the subject might make her feel nostalgic, but the astonishment on her face seemed less like reflective musing and more like grave concern. It suggested my mother was thinking, “If she remembers THAT, what else does she remember?”

I remember everything I’ve chosen to remember. And my memory is long.

My parents hated that pacifier. I loved my Nukky. I loved it so much. I loved gently biting it and shifting my teeth around to make squeaky sounds of rubber-on-rubber. Nukky made me feel happy when I was sad. Nukky served as the calmer of my frustrations, the crutch to my shyness, and I wasn’t the only kid who had a ‘thing’ they carried with them all the time. No one got mad at my best bud, Tonya, when she took her blankie everywhere. And while I was admittedly too old for something most certainly intended for infants, I didn’t understand why everyone was so pissed off about it. I just knew that they were.

At home, Nukky was more of a tolerated annoyance. He’d occasionally be put in Nukky jail if I got in trouble or if I left him unattended somewhere, but I’d always find him, pop him back into my mouth, and go on with whatever kid-plans I had for the day.

A spirited debate about Nukky would most often occur when we were going somewhere and I insisted on taking him along. Nukky in public was the thing that drove them over the edge. See, it wasn’t so much that I loved and wanted Nukky all the time, it was the notion of people in town catching sight of a three-year-old marching confidently down the grocery aisle, pacifier planted firmly between her lips, which dripped deep humiliation into my parents. I suspect my mother imagined the entire township of Plattsburg whispering behind their hands: “Is that Franz and Patti’s kid? Isn’t she too old for that? How strange. Why don’t they just take it away from her?”

Outings were the catalyst for all-out Nukky battles, which most often ended in the terrifying threat that Nukky would meet his end soon, and most often that end was death by toilet flush.

That was when true distress would set in. I knew that things that went down the toilet never, ever, EVER came back again. It served me to allow the parents to put Nukky in hiding, in Nukky-jail, where I knew I could stealthily retrieve him later. They weren’t very creative about his imprisonment, and for the most part, I could find him in one of about four places, most often the cabinet nearest the entrance to the kitchen from the living room. And if that earliest childhood memory of the popping corn taught me anything, it was that interesting shit happened on the kitchen counter, and so I had since learned to climb up there myself.

“I’m gonna flush that Nukky down the toilet!” I still see my mother’s furrowed brow, eyes piercing through me, her lips tight in condescension, her finger pointed at Nukky clenched tightly between my teeth.

Don’t worry, Nukky. I got you. They can’t get you out of my mouth if I bite really, really hard. No one will take you away from me.

Around this same time, I developed a deep interest in a series of books someone had gifted me. They were called Value Tales, by Value Communications Publishers in LaJolla, California. This was the height of the Time Life series days, when people bought sets of books about World War II or the animals of the earth or the Old West, before the internet dropped everything we would ever want to know about anything into our magic boxes.

 The Value Tales were children’s books which depicted a biographical sketch of a famous person while focusing on some moral or value exemplified by that historical figure’s life. Helen Keller’s story was The Value of Determination. The Value of Leadership told the tale of Winston Churchill. But my favorite of the series was The Value of Believing in Yourself: The Story of Louis Pasteur.

The fact that this was my favorite, as a look back with my adult(-ish) brain, highlights something specifically peculiar about my personality. I absolutely adore being terrified. I’ve been exposed to some of the most sophisticated writing in history, but when it comes time for me to read something for sheer delight, or if I have a long road trip requiring an audiobook for entertainment, Stephen King is my author of choice. I have always been the one to vote to watch the horror movie over the romantic comedy, and always been the one who laid in bed later that night, startling at every creak of the floor board or howl of the wind outside. And the Louis Pasteur story was DARK. I don’t know if it was a reflection of the sullen, jaded, psychedelic hangover that was the 1970’s, the kind of winsome charm with a sleeping creeping sensation just beneath the surface that movies like Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory exemplified. I have always liked scary things, and this was the first thing that genuinely whipped up the heebie-jeebies in me.

The French chemist Louis Pasteur is best known for his development of the Pasteurization process of milk and wine, prohibiting bacterial contamination. But the Value Tale focused primarily on his development of the cure for rabies. Now because things like microscopic germs were entirely subjective to the minds of the children reading this Value Tale, the ‘invisible enemy’ of the rabies germ is illustrated thusly:



As a child listening to my parents read this story, as the pages turned one by one, my heart would quicken, knowing that the Rabies were coming.  With each turn of those pages, I was getting closer and closer to the moment when I would come face to face with the demons that would haunt me long after I’d been tucked in and the light was turned out. And yet, I selected this title over and over again. Tossing aside the books featuring the biographies of Nelly Bly and Johnny Appleseed, I would go back to one title that would keep me nicely chilled for a long night in a dark room.

I never got desensitized to the Rabies. I always knew they were coming and I always knew what they looked like, but each time was like the first time. I couldn’t look, and then I couldn’t look away. The closer they came, the harder sucked on my Nukky, biting down on him, squeaking him between my teeth.  In fact, the only reason I could make it through the book each time was knowing that I had Nukky there with me. I knew I’d be scared, and that I would kinda like it, and it was alright because Nukky was there.

Having grown more and more careless of his whereabouts, my parents had more frequent opportunities to lock Nukky away somewhere. If it took me longer than a few minutes to find him, a dread would set in, an ever-creeping fear that she’d DONE it, she’d finally gone and done IT, she’d flushed Nukky down the toilet and I’d never, ever see him again! The more panicked I became, the more adrenaline pumped into my little child body, and the more I wanted him there between my teeth to squeaky-squeaky-squeak and tell me everything was ok. When I would find him, the relief would be tenfold when I would pop him in my mouth . . . oh, Nukky I thought you were lost forever.

Dark days don’t often start so dark, and I remember feeling happy, not-yet frenzied in my Nukky hunt. I hadn’t seen him in some time. While I recall these events with sparkling clarity, I have trouble determining time in measurements, because an hour to a child feels like years, and a year feels like decades. So while I feel like I hadn’t seen Nukky in a few days, it could have been as little as a few hours. I’d checked obvious places . . . Dad’s bathroom shaving drawer was the easiest cell to spring Nukky from, but he wasn’t there. I walked into the kitchen, to the cabinet that Nukky had to go to when Mom and Dad were super pissed at me, because of the effort involved in the jail break.
Sun shone through the kitchen windows, the afternoon still blooming with promise of some adventure for me to embark on, just as soon as I found Nukky. I could go out and play under the weeping willow, or watch the horses in the pasture from the backyard, or jump on my bed and dance and listen to Paul Revere and the Raiders, for whom I’d developed an intense liking. 

My confidence soared when I started to pull the kitchen chair from its place at the table over to the counter, because the ruckus it made usually drew attention to my illicit activity. Sometimes my plans to bust Nukky outta jail were foiled by the downfalls of being a tiny human, having to bang things around and exert effort that wouldn’t be necessary if I were just a little bit taller, just a little bit bigger. But Dad was right there in the living room, balls deep into some western on one of the three channels we had way back then.

He can’t hear me. Ha ha ha. Nukky, I’m coming to save you and then we’ll spend the whole day together.

I climbed from the floor to the seat of the chair, from the seat of the chair to that orange countertop where I’d had my first belly laugh at the popping popcorn, so proud no one had caught me getting Nukky, so happy that the moment was almost here. My fingers gripped the round, brass handle on the cabinet and I slowly pulled it toward me, inching open the door as a shaft of light peeked through and illuminated the dishes inside. I looked around, making sure no one was coming, then swung the door wide. I saw Nukky, tucked into the corner. But standing in front of him, guarding him from our reunion, was a giant RABIES demon.



I screamed, nearly falling from the counter, I screamed. I screamed and didn’t stop and then my world turned hazy and black. Behind my screams was the disbelief that my one true terror had somehow leapt from the pages of that book, conspired with my parents to take Nukky away from me, another true terror. The only thing worse than Nukky being flushed down the toilet was Nukky in jail with one of the rabies. That hideous thing was standing there so far from the world it belonged in, invaded my house, and was keeping Nukky prisoner.  While I’m sure I didn’t actually faint, my soul darkened for a time and I felt nothing but terror, and the events of the rest of the day—until later that evening—are a bleak fog. I retreated somewhere to cope with the distressing and ghastly events that had befallen me.

It couldn’t be possible, you’re thinking to yourself, right? These are the nightmarish machinations of a child doing something wrong and manifesting an imaginary bad guy to scare her out of committing the infraction of reclaiming Nukky, you think? No. That monstrous representation of a once incurable disease, that caricature that I simply called ‘Rabie’, was real.

Rabie entering my three-dimensional world demonstrates the difference between my mother and my father. My mother yelled and shamed and tried to humiliate me away from Nukky, and when none of that worked, threatened to flush Nukky down the toilet. My father’s approach was quiet, deliberate, a scheming saved for a high reward—a shock-and-awe style of parenting that would have made Dick Cheney proud. My father hand-sketched an oversized duplicate of that Rabie. He took time to shadow lines beneath its eyes, sharpened the Rabie’s teeth into fine, razor points; he narrowed Rabie’s fingers into claws. A man who preferred the sciences to the arts, a man who, to the best of my knowledge, never drew anything before or since, focused immense artistic energy and pizazz into a drawing intended to scare the ever-loving shit out of his kid.

Sometime in the post-terror darkness, I realized he must have heard me from the living room as I was making my approach. My father must have heard me dragging the chair across the kitchen, heard the clamoring of my efforts to climb onto the counter. He knew my clandestine adventure would end as soon as I opened that cabinet door. I thought that the cowboys on television had distracted him enough for me to make my move, but he knew the whole time what was in store for me. Did Mom know, too? Did they plan this together? How long did they know before it happened, and why on earth would they scare me like that?

My parents delighted in the series of events. I heard my mother recounting the afternoon to someone on the phone, laughing at Franz’s clever plot, snickering at my despair. At some point, they must have felt guilty because they gave Nukky back to me and stopped talking about it. Or at least, stopped talking about it with such gusto.

After darkness fell (and in my memory it seems like the same evening, but it may have been a few days later . . . again, child sense of time is strange) I found myself curled on my bed, Nukky in my mouth, a squeak and a squeak and a squeak between my teeth, and I knew what to do.
Heartbroken, I walked to the bathroom.

I loved Nukky. No part of me wanted to do what I had to do, but Mom and Dad would never stop trying to take him away from me. At such a tender age, I learned what happened when two horrifying, but seemingly separate fears suddenly collided, inciting a despair too big for me to handle. I never wanted to lose Nukky, but if they would put him in the cabinet with that Rabie, what would they do next? How would they try to scare me away from him? They’d already manifested the most terrifying thing my child mind could imagine; what horrors await me if I keep him?

I remembered a story my uncles, who were teenagers at the time, told about flushing a baby alligator down the toilet and it turning into a giant alligator. This oddly gave me hope. If an alligator can go down the toilet and grow up and live, maybe Nukky can go out to the water where the toilet water ends up. Maybe Nukky can find me, or some other kid to comfort . . . but hopefully me. If he stays here, I don’t know what will happen. Maybe some time when I’m down by the lake next to our house, my Nukky will come floating up to me, my lost friend who would certainly come back to me if he could.

My brain holds this memory in vibrant Technicolor—my standing next to the toilet, my little feet shoulder-width apart, my palm stretched flat, and in the center was my Nukky. He was yellow, his plastic roughened by too many years of providing security I so needed, his orange-brown nipple pocked with tiny teeth marks. I gazed down at him, overcome by sorrow. I felt fat tears growing on my lids, and I feel silly that thirty years later, I feel those same tears welling up for a little girl who just loved something, was brought peace by something silly and infantile, but who would have likely grown out of it in her own time.

I dropped Nukky into the toilet and flushed. I watched him circle the bowl with the tornado of water, a clockwise waving of goodbye to a girl who loved him so much. I told myself I was a big girl. That Nukkys were for babies. That I couldn’t take Nukky to kindergarten with me when I went. That my new baby sister couldn’t learn how to be a big girl if I were still a baby myself with a stupid baby Nukky. I wiped tears from my face and walked to the living room.

“Mom, Dad. I’m a big girl. I’m not going to use my Nukky anymore.”

They looked pleased for one second, my mother relieved that the battles were finally over, my father justified that his very elaborate scheme had worked. I realized this was who I was in this family. That they would be nicer to me if I just did what they said.

“I did it. I flushed him down the toilet.”

Their parental pride evaporated.

My mother’s mouth dropped open, releasing a “WHAT?!?!?” that was more of an exclamation than a question. My father flew up from his chair and ran to the bathroom, and I could hear him making sucking noises and splashing the toilet water, saying the f-word and the s-word back and forth.

“Why ON EARTH did you flush him down the toilet, Jackee?” Mom asked.

“That’s what you told me you were going to do.” And so that’s what I did. That’s what grownups do, I imagined. They flush shit they can’t use anymore down the toilet.

“Ok, well from now on don’t flush anything except peepee and poopoo down the toilet.”

I sulked back to my room, despaired over my lost Nukky, disillusioned that the one thing I thought I could do that would make my parents proud resulted in more frustration and annoyance, and I think maybe a call to a plumber, but definitely a few rounds of hearty plunger uses.

If this were my Value Tale, it would be called “The Value of Thinking of Your Children as Human Beings with Their Own Wants, Needs, and Emotional Guidance Systems: The Jackee Marceau Story”. I don’t think I ever fully trusted either of my parents after the Nukky incident. It’s a cautionary value tale. The things you think aren’t important, the forgettable daily events and irritations and annoyances that children conjure in their parents aren’t so forgettable for the children who have yet to learn to navigate the absolute weirdness of our world. Children remember, even if you don’t. It’s a lesson in learning to acknowledge the needs of people who don’t have a say in the decisions made for them. It applies to people who aren’t parents, but who have to deal with people that may have a very different perspective from you.

Or maybe I just wanted to holler my parents out for scaring the shit out of me. The Value of Telling an Entertaining Story That Might Demonstrate Something or Other.

R.I.P. Nukky

1977-1980somethingorother