Friday, May 9, 2008 | by nathan

“…and all the reindeer too!”

My first real job - besides mowing yards and walking dogs for my neighbors or doing chores around the house - was in a small telemarketing operation in south Oklahoma City during my senior year of high school. It paid the most of any of the local phone sales outfits - eight dollars an hour - and I’d just bought the only car I’ve ever financed. Seventeen though I was, I suddenly found myself saddled with a monthly car payment of $217.53, which I was all too happy to pay, and so I went out and got myself an honest-to-God job.

Telemarketing is quitely likely the single most degrading kind of work on the planet. Quite likely even more so than prostitution. We were given a normal looking little beige phone and a stack of index cards with phone numbers on them, and a big, long, color-coded script with questions and answers.

Part of the script was that we were told to ask for the woman of the house; the rules were strict that we must never give the pitch to a man.

The boss explained it this way: "Men aren’t going to buy anything from you. They have good business sense. It’s much easier to talk women into things."

I cringed at him; he handed me a bottle of Lysol to spray down the receiver of my phone.

The men, when they did answer, were often threatening, as we weren’t allowed to even tell them why we were calling, only that we needed to speak to Mrs. So-And-So, or, barring that, the "Woman of the House." I got more than my share of guys who thought I was some no-good suitor coming along to steal their wives out from under them.

As if, I always thought.

Even worse than the men, though, were the children. Have you ever seen a two-year-old answer the phone? One day, this happened (and yes, my handbasket is all ready to go; I am going to Hell):

"Hu-low?"

"Hi! Is your mommy there?"

"Mommy?"

"Is your mommy there?"

"Hu-low? Mommy? Mommy?"

"No, I’m not your Mommy. Is your Mommy at home?"

"Yes."

"Can I speak to her?"

"Hu-low?"

"May I speak to your Mommy? Can you go get your Mommy?"

"Mommy? Hu-Low?"

[gritting my teeth together now] "CAN.I.PLEASE.SPEAK.TO.YOUR.MOMMY?"

"Can I speak a Mommy?"

"YES! The lady! Mommy! The big lady who lives with you!"

"The Big Mommy?"

"Yes! To! Your! Mommy!"

"Mommy?"

"No, I called to talk to you! What’s your name?"

"[something indecipherable]"

"Well, I just called to tell you that Santa is dead! DEAD!"

The child immediately starts crying on the phone, wailing, "SANTA!" After a few seconds I hear another line pick up.

"Who the hell is this?" asks an angry woman’s voice.

My heart leaps into my throat and I immediately hang up the phone.

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Tuesday, April 15, 2008 | by nathan

Vignettes #2: Things That Happened To Me In 1990 and 1991

I get to take the day off of school because mom has to drive to Ft. Worth, to take her car back to the dealership to have some work done, and she doesn’t want to go alone. After waiting for hours in the show room we go to the mall, where I buy a cassette single of Janet Jackson’s song "Escapade" with the $5 she has given me to spend. We listen to that song almost the entire 3-hour drive back to Oklahoma, rewinding the tape over and over again and laughing at ourselves for having so much silly fun. She is my mother, and I am her child; everything is going to be okay.

In the week we’ve been in northern California visiting my uncle Bill, who manages this campground in the mountains, I’ve crossed the creek a hundred times via a fallen tree. I don’t expect this time to be any different; the process has become almost second-nature to me now, and the log is really wide enough for two of me to cross side-by-side, and anyway, I’m always climbing trees and walking along fences at home. My brother stays on the bank of the creek, ready to cross after I’m done. Halfway across, I’m not sure what happens; I feel the air go out of the world and the forest spinning around me before my body hits water. It’s freezing, but before I even have a conscious thought I’m swimming, struggling for the shore, trying to get my breath. I emerge from the water shaking and cold, but safe. When I turn to look behind me at the creek from which I’d just emerged I don’t see the tranquil mountain stream I had only moments before. Now it’s a river, and I see rocks, and currents, and, downstream, a waterfall. Suddenly the world is much more full of danger, but I am stronger than I knew.

I’ve forgotten my lunch ticket again, and, exasperated with me, the teacher on duty in the middle-school cafeteria won’t let me eat. "This is the fourth day in a row you’ve forgotten it," she barks at me, so all the kids can hear. Laughter follows me out the door, where I sit with my sketch pad and colored pencils and try to come up with something to draw. Uninspired, I flip through the drawings I’ve already done; in an instant the pad is wrenched from my hands and three boys stand around me. When I try to stand up to take my pad back, one of them pushes me back down. They start looking at what I’ve drawn, laughing themselves silly and refusing to let me stand up. I can’t help myself; I start crying and, embarassed, wedge myself into a tiny space between the outer wall of the cafeteria and a portable building. There are, as it turns out, advantages to being the smallest kid in school; the other boys can’t follow me in. After a few moments they toss the sketch pad into the gap with me and trot off to more worthwhile pursuits, and I stay there, wedged in the dark, the bricks cold on my back, until the lunch bell rings and I have to go to English class.

 

Once again I invite participation; what happened to you in 1990 & 1991?

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Thursday, March 27, 2008 | by nathan

Happy Birthday, Dr. Angelou

Dr. Angelou

This Tuesday, April 4, Dr. Maya Angelou will celebrate her 80th birthday. I’ve already shared on this blog a story of when I took a class from her at Wake Forest, when she was threatened by an ill-placed bumblebee. Almost anyone who has had that class, or who has met the woman, will tell you of her fantastic way of turning a phrase or shrugging off praise with a simple "Hm!"

That class came along at just the right time in my life - in the spring of 2001 I certainly needed some inspiration and confidence, and three weeks learning to perform poetry with Dr. Angelou gave me just the shot in the arm I needed to get through. She has a way of being in the world that makes you want to stand up straighter, speak more clearly and politely, and to practice kindness, good manners, and social justice. People hold their heads higher around her.

So happy birthday, Dr. Angelou, from me, a former student. Thanks for remembering my name a full year after I’d completed your class when we met up again. Thanks for reading my awful, awful 21-year-old poetry. Thank you for opening your home, life, and mind to a bunch of overeager college students. Thanks for letting me be the one to perform your poem "Bump d’Bump" on stage in front of you - on your 73rd birthday, no less, and for the way you grinned up at us the whole time. Happy Birthday to you (a bit early, because like always, I’m still a bit overeager, and I seem to remember you saying that’s not an awful thing to be).

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Thursday, March 20, 2008 | by nathan

Vignettes

What are the moments in your life that walk with you? The formative ones, the stories you’re always telling? In an effort to challenge myself to become a better writer I’m going to try to tell some of these stories, to share some of these moments as concisely as possible. Sarah Brown is the queen of this; definitely read her "Impressions" series, but as she’s a really, really hard act to follow, do me a favor and read mine first.

We’re sitting in her car, and she’s crying. I’ve cried over this stuff enough, though I’m just barely holding it together after she’s just told me that I’m going to be excommunicated for being gay. Honestly, if it wasn’t so deeply sad, if I wasn’t feeling so insanely guilty for hiding it from her all these years, I’d find it incredibly funny. We’re Protestants, I think to myself. We don’t excommunicate. Only it’s not funny - it’s the moment I’ve dreaded. She’s hurt because I didn’t tell her for all this time, and I’m hurt because she doesn’t realize that I knew all along that when I told her that this is how it would go down. It’s my worst fear come to life. Finally I tell her that we’re not going to solve anything like this, that there’s no point in talking right now because emotions are running way too high, and I get out of the car, feeling guilty and low. As I’m walking back to my apartment someone shouts my name; two of my friends have their heads out the window of their apartment, and when I look up they toss a water balloon at me. It’s just some harmless fun; any other day I’d find it hilarious. For now, I am defeated. When I get back to my room I don’t cry, but I wish I could.

I’m staring at a computer screen in Creative Writing class when I hear my name whispered somewhere behind me. If I was a dog, my ears would perk up; as it is, the activity on the screen freezes and I can’t help but listen; as is common in high school, people are talking behind my back without bothering to check whether or not I can hear them. "Constantly!" shouts the girl in the conversation, who I’d long considered a close friend. "He is constantly eavesdropping on me!" She has a point, I suppose; I was, except that her naturally-loud voice carries through the classroom. And despite the fact that I’d been putting a lot of distance between us for a long time, that she was the first person to teach me that friendship is so often one-sided, it hurts. Until I hear the teacher mutter under her breath, heard only by me, "It’s not eavesdropping if everyone in the goddamn room can hear you." Then, I feel better.

He has found a pad on which I’ve written an entire treatise, a letter to myself saying, basically, "Nathan, you’re gay, and can you not see that Jesus is so totally okay with you?" I felt better after writing it; so cleansed and refreshed, in fact, that I’d left it behind in the room where our fellowship group had gathered. A day later he shows up at my room, the pad in his hand, saying, "I think we should talk, because I found this, and I didn’t really mean to read it, it’s just I was trying to figure out who it belonged to. Anyway, let’s take a walk." I’m dreading it, but I trust him. We take off down through Reynolda Gardens and he tells me that he’s been dealing with the same thing, but no one can ever know. I promise to keep his secret. We walk through the thick, humid spring air, magnolias and crocuses blooming all around us, the trails quiet. When we take a break and sit, he pulls a pack of cigarettes out of his bag. I smile and say, "I’m just learning all sorts of things about you today."

Like any writing project, this one turned out very differently than I anticipated. I didn’t mean for any of these to necessarily be sad; I just thought of three tiny little stories and told them in the order they came to me. What are some of the moments that have shaped you?

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Thursday, February 28, 2008 | by nathan

The Girl I Slugged

I want to tell you about the one time in my life I’ve ever punched a girl in the mouth.

It’s actually not as bad as it sounds.

I went to sixth grade at Weatherford Middle School, where I was the shortest, smallest boy in school. I was picked on constantly, by teachers as well as students. People would always walk up to me and ask me, "What’s wrong with you? Why are you so short? What’s the matter with you? What’s wrong with you? Why are you so short?"

Like, what am I supposed to do - grow?

So that was my life, and it was miserable. I was that kid, you know the one - that small, sensitive kid who seems to have a target painted on him? Basically I was Milhouse Van Houten, though I didn’t really care about being liked; I really just wanted to be left alone. I never, ever got my wish.

One of the worst bullies I had was this girl named Kara. In high school Kara went on to be an All-American girls’ basketball player; where I was the shortest, smallest kid in school, she was one of the tallest, taller even than most of the boys. She had fiery red hair, aggressive freckles. You know who she looked like, actually? She looked like a female version of Scott Farkas from A Christmas Story. Which is fitting, considering what happened to him.

So one day I’m standing outside after eating my lunch, kind of huddled into a corner because then maybe no one would see me. Kara and her cronies - the girls who, six years later, would form a state championship girls’ basketball team - crowded around me and started shoving.

"Why are you so short? What’s wrong with you? What’s the matter with you? Why are you so short?"

"You think just because you’re taller than me that makes you better than me?" I spat angrily.

"Yeah."

No arguing with the logic of an angry, hormonal, gigantic, red-headed sixth-grade girl, I suppose. They kept shoving me, and poking me, and pulling my hair.

It should be mentioned here that my parents were well aware that I was being bullied at school, and they assured me that I was allowed to fight back, that, should the need arise, they’d go to bat for me, but that it was important that I learn to stick up for myself. I wouldn’t be in trouble at home if I fought back against a bully.

So, outnumbered six-to-one by the future girls’ ballers, I did just that: I fought back. I socked Kara right in the mouth, though she was so tall, and I so short, that my fist only kinda barely got her. I think I busted her lip, but that was probably about it.

It was all over within seconds; a teacher happened by just as the whole brawl started and broke it up. Problem was that it was a teacher who happened to hate me, who encouraged the other students in their mockery and bullying - yeah, she was a bitch, I have stories - and she carted me off to the counselor’s office, asking me how dare I hit a girl, we don’t do that, you’ll be suspended, how dare you hit a girl, that’s awful, you don’t hit girls.

She did not really have a response when I pointed out that the girl in question was a foot taller than me, and that there had been six of them. I had to call my mom at work and, sobbing, told her the whole story.

"Put the counselor on the phone," was all she said.

I was sent back to class with a tiny little lecture about fighting. The other kids didn’t leave me alone after that, not by any means, and after that year was over we moved. But no one ever said anything about it to me again.

It also bears mentioning that the week that this happened was the week that we were doing standardized testing, and that despite this incident I tested into the top 99th percentile nationally. Kara, as far as I know, had her moment of glory on the girls’ basketball team, but I have no idea if she went to college or what. At any rate, I hope there are no hard feelings.

Still, to this day, when I see that scene in A Christmas Story where Ralphie completely comes unspooled and starts wailing on Scott Farkas, I think about Kara, and I get a teeny bit riled up and start grinding my teeth together.

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Monday, February 18, 2008 | by nathan

The Ants and St. Francis

St. Frank

I became a St. Francis enthusiast first because of Rich Mullins. I liked him so much that I asked the Catholic student minister at Wake Forest, who was a Franciscan, to have lunch with me to explain more about what St. Francis was about. I’m absolutely positive he thought I had lost my mind. But I would not be deterred. I devoured the Little Flowers and talked endlessly to my non-Catholic Catholic buddy Jack about him.

When I got to Italy the first thing I wanted to do was to visit Assisi. I wanted to go on a pilgrimage. I’d never been on a one of those before, but I figured it was mostly going to a place, seeing things and praying a lot. I had probably $50 and a rail pass with which to take this entire trip.

The Let’s Go! Guide recommended a few nice hostels; I chose the cheapest one. Francis, I figured, had devoted his life to a vow of poverty - how could I pilgrimage in a plush hostel room? I got out my rail pass, looked at train routes, packed my yellow duffel bag with two changes of clothes, my Bible, and my journal, and boarded the train in Venice. First stop: Florence.

Bologna is along the route between Venice and Florence. Just outside Bologna, the train came to a dead halt. This is not an unusual occurrence in European rail travel, so I kept reading whatever book I was reading and writing in my journal.

The train lurched forward again three and a half hours later; about an hour into our delay, a thin Italian man straight out of a Rowan Atkinson portrayal came into my compartment and started chain smoking. Lovely. We arrived in Florence after my train to my next connection - Terontola-Cortona - had already departed. The next train wouldn’t leave for two hours. Every fiber in my being screamed in protest as I seated myself at the McDonald’s in the Florence train station.

It was late, late afternoon by the time the train to Terontola-Cortona finally arrived, and even later before it departed. I was trying to be saintly, patient, but inside I was boiling with panic; being late is one of the things that freaks me out the most. Being late in a foreign country whose language I have not yet mastered is worse.

The train station at Terontola-Cortona is not a nice one. There was no board announcing arrivals and departures. Like an inner-city bus stop, you pretty much just had to know which train to get on and at what time before you arrived there. Knowing that the connection I’d meant to catch had left already, I seated myself on my yellow duffel bag and thought for awhile.

I could wait patiently for a train here, or I could walk into town and get a room. I wasn’t sure a train would even come, so I prayed. "Please help me know what to do."

Some Italians walked by behind me. I heard them talking about Assisi; my Italian was just good enough that I heard one of them tell the other that the last train for Assisi would come shortly, arriving at my destination around 9 p.m. I had my answer; keep going. I waited; the sun went down.

The train rolled up, and by the looks of the sparse crowd on the platform, it was the last one of the night. I got on, worrying less because look! God had provided me a train! Neat. We left the station, my mood higher than it had ever been.

We rolled up to Assisi precisely at 9 p.m. - my first on-time arrival all day. Excitedly, I grabbed my little yellow duffel and exited the train. My mind boggled at what I saw next.

Assisi, it turns out, IS ON TOP OF A MOUNTAIN. And the Assisi train station? AT THE BOTTOM OF THAT MOUNTAIN. Just as I was worrying what I was going to do - climb a mountain in complete darkness? Find a place to stay at the bottom of the mountain and hike up the next morning? Get back on the train to Venice, go pack my things, and hop the first flight back to America? I heard two people speaking American English. Normally I avoided other Yanks like the plague, but this was a welcome sign, a signal, the next right step.

They were loading luggage into the trunk of a taxi.

"Do you mind if I split this cab with you?" I asked.

They were a New England couple who couldn’t be bothered with a poor college kid, but they begrudgingly said yes. I thanked them profusely, threw my yellow duffel into the boot, and off we went.

That stupid cab ride - for which I paid half - cost me at least a tenth of my budget for the weekend, which wasn’t much, but still. The cab dropped us off at the old couple’s posh hotel near the city centre. I thanked them for letting me share the ride, and pulled out my guide. Where was my hostel?

On a map of the town, an arrow pointed out the northeast corner of the town gate. I glanced at this, put the guide away, then began walking. I’m good with maps and directions, and I figured if I went in that direction, I’d see what I was looking for. But when I got the town gate, I saw nothing resembling a cheapy hostel. I pulled out the guide again.

Somehow, in all my planning, it had escaped my notice until RIGHT THAT MINUTE that my hostel was 1 km out of town, on the side of the mountain. The road led through the gate and into the darkness. It was approaching 10 p.m.; I’d be lucky to get a room at the place I’d booked, and I for sure wasn’t getting anywhere else in town to let me stay, not this late. A kilometer isn’t that far; I set off into the darkness, walking.

Down the mountain, in the Umbrian valley, the lights of little towns twinkled. I could see a million stars above me, but there was no moon. I kept walking, hoping to God I wasn’t wrong, and that I wouldn’t need to pull out my guide again, because there was no way I could read in this light. The wind kicked up my shoulder-length, hippie-kid hair. A horse whinnied just off the road. In the darkness I could make out a few cows; nothing to fear. "Nothing but the murderers," I chuckled to myself. I kept putting one foot in front of the other, moving forward, praying with every step.

Later, when I would read the E.L. Doctorow quote that writing a novel is like driving a car at night - "you can only see as far in front of you as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way" - I would think of this walk, this night in Assisi, and how that’s pretty much what life is like too.

I walked as quickly as I dared, and after awhile there was a light in front of me; I’d reached my hostel. I quickly found the main building and walked in.

In broken Italian I explained to the desk clerk that my train had been delayed, that I’d just made it to town, that I’d WALKED - he took all this in with an air of bored bemusement, then informed me that they’d assumed I was a no-show and given my room away. "Still," he said in English, like my Italian was so laughably bad that he’d do me a favor and speak my guttural native tongue, "I have a caravan. You can have that."

The price was lower than what my room would’ve been, and after that expensive cab ride I was keen to save a few lire. I paid him for two nights, took the key, and walked along a path he showed me on a map.

My caravan was a tiny little trailer that had been manufactured in the 50’s or 60’s. It was tiny and austere, but, I figured, perfect for me. It had light and a bed; what else did a pilgrim need? I opened the door.

The first thing I saw - the VERY FIRST THING I SAW - was a huge, hairy spider waiting for me inches inside the door. I’m horribly arachnophobic; I can’t even get close enough to a spider to squash it. But after the day I’d had, I was too emotionally worn-out to be afraid. I simply looked at the spider, and he at me, as if he’d been expecting me.

"Well," I said to him, out loud, "one of us is going to have to die here tonight before the other gets any sleep." And I skooshed him. I threw my yellow duffel bag on the bed and went to sleep.

I had the kind of sleep where you wake up in the morning feeling like you’ve only just gone to bed 20 minutes before. I was tired and out of it. The hostel offered a free breakfast of bread, jam, and warm milk. I availed myself of this and walked into town, my spirits lifting as I looked out over the valley, realizing that Assisi, its place on the mountain, its heavenly views, are like fertilizer for sainthood, a breeding ground for righteous men. How could one not feel close to God in a place that high-up and beautiful?

I spent the day at the basilica, which had been destroyed by an earthquake 3 years previously, the beautiful frescoes by Giotto almost completely erased. I spent hours praying there before finding a 2,000 lire ($1) lunch of pizza sauce on dry bread and sparkling water. I sat on the steps of the Temple of Minerva and wrote a letter to my friend Summer. I prayed outside the Basilica di Santa Chiara, which was still closed due to its rebuilding after the quake.

I was on a pilgrimage but not feeling particularly spiritual or uplifted. Mostly I was tired, and hot, and worried about money. I stubbornly sat in a park and read the entire book of Acts, the spiritual equivalent of stamping my foot and crying out to God for some kind of revelation, dammit, because here I was having all this trouble and the least He could do is give me some freaking inner peace. "Like it’s so much skin off Your nose."

Nothing. Still, the town and the day were beautiful and I walked back to my caravan as the sun was setting over the valley. I picked up some food on the way out of town, figuring I’d have a light dinner, read until bedtime, then get up in the morning and get the hell out of this town. I’d made sure to check the train schedules and to plan to get down the mountain in time for the very first departure, lest I not make it back to Venice at all.

I walked down to the communal bathroom and washed my face and hands, then headed back up to the trailer. I opened the door and experienced the greatest shock of all: the walls were crawling.

Ants. Millions and millions - okay, hundreds and hundreds - of large black ants were living inside my caravan. Maybe I’d made a mistake killing that spider. Maybe I’d earned this. They were all over the floor, the walls - but nowhere near the bed. I looked over at my yellow duffel bag, wondering if I could grab it, get back to town, and grab a last train out. That was no option - I’d end up in some other town and have to get a room, and I was almost out of money.

After staring forlornly at my bag, sitting on the ant-free bed for awhile, I decided I’d make a leap. I jumped to the bed, clutched my bag to my chest, and watched the ants moving around, living where I was living. On the ceiling, on the walls, but nowhere near me. I was in a safe zone, on my bed, and as the night fell the ants went to sleep, disappearing into the cracks in the walls and under the door. They were gone at last, and after hours of racking my brain as to what I’d do, I fell asleep there in the safe zone.

First thing in the morning I was up like a shot - before the ants could stir - and out the door. I hit the breakfast, where I wrapped ten pieces of bread up in a napkin to take with me on the train, and hiked back to town. I caught the first cab I could find - that was the very last of my money - and hopped the trains back to Venice.

Years later, I can still see those ants, that living wall, and still not be completely sure what I learned on my one and only pilgrimage, except perhaps that I’m a tad braver than I once thought.

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Friday, January 4, 2008 | by nathan

What, Indeed?

I walked to Buy For Less yesterday to get a couple bananas, because, though I brought my lunch with me to work, I neglected to bring anything to snack on. The store’s only a block or so away, and it’s my favorite kind of weather outside: sunny and cold. I bundled up and went out.

I walked in the store just as the strains of one of my favorite songs came over the loudspeakers. I started grooving along, singing to myself inside my own head.

I looked up from my preoccupation with choosing decent bananas to see two elderly men enter the store. Both looked to be in their late sixties, but were clearly severe biker Nazis: the sides of their head were shaved, but in the back long, braided ponytails fell past their shoulders. The shaved sides of their heads sported severe tribal and angry-looking tattoos. Not the kind of people you’d want to piss off, clearly.

Except they were in their sixties, ravaged by age, and one of them, I noticed, was walking with a cane. The other, a faithful friend, was helping him to walk, as even with the cane he was having a great deal of trouble. And I watched as between these two biker Nazis there was exhibited a very tender kind of care and reliance, almost sweet and touching. It was so out of place, so against my stereotypes and preconceptions. It was like watching two pigs dance the Polka.

What’s love got to do with it, indeed.

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Sunday, December 23, 2007 | by nathan

Little Boxes on the Hillside, Little Boxes Made of Evil-Tacky

Little Boxes On The Hillside

Okay, so here’s the deal:

The city of Edmond, Oklahoma, is, without a doubt, my least favorite place on the entire planet. I hate it more than Houston, which is the ugliest, most unpleasant city on Earth; more than Brindisi, Italy, where I was scammed out of a whole bunch of money by merchants who feed on people traveling to Greece by boat; and more than Padua, Italy, where I was accosted by African hookers.

I hate Edmond, Oklahoma, and when I was there today, doing some Christmas shopping at Target, the following happened. It’s a perfect picture of why I hate that town, and everything it represents, so very, very much:

Brian and I pulled up to a parking space in Target after swinging by his office for a second, to grab something we needed. Target is around the corner and so we went to try to find a certain present for my dad. We pulled into a space, and when I got out of the car I noticed that there was an unattended shopping cart full of food - and a case of Miller High Life - sitting behind the car next to ours.

I was looking around for the person who may have left this cart, and I saw her: a middle-aged woman with a bitter look on her face, yelling, "Excuse me!" and pushing a cart between our two cars. Also, full to the brim with groceries. Fine, whatever, it’s Christmas. The place is open tomorrow and the 26th, is all I’m sayin’.

"I have to squeeze through here because people park too damn close!" she screeched at her friend that was with her. You know, that thing where someone’s trying to make a point but doesn’t have the stones to actually say it to you, so they say it loudly to the person they’re with? That thing. That lame, chickenshit thing.

Brian and I heard, and stopped.

"Happy Birthday Jesus!" I said loudly, bitterly.

"Merry Christmas!" he said, simultaneously.

And sure, we were parked close to her, but we were in the lines, completely legal, and frankly, had she asked nicely, I’d have been more than happy to move the car over a few inches. Instead, I kept walking into the store.

*****

So we go in the store, do our shopping, and are standing in line, waiting for the person in front of us to complete her $640 transaction of nothing but toys. The register is near the photo center, which is being manned by a teenager in a red Target polo. As he stands there, he is approached by a beautiful, obviously-rich teenage girl, who obviously knows him. Her expression is pure derision; she’s looking at him like she would look at her shoe after stepping in pig crap.

"Oh my God," she says, her voice rife with disgust, "you have a job?"

*****

Last year my friend Jon Warren wrote a wonderful, beautiful, insightful and intelligent post about why the suburbs suck, and I think everyone should read it RIGHT THIS VERY MINUTE. In it he expresses my own thoughts on suburban life more eloquently than I ever could.

Also, I was raised in the ‘burbs on the south side of Oklahoma City, and I have a bunch of friends who grew up there with me, many of whom still live there, happy, fulfilling lives with beautiful homes and children. But also, these are people who would not curse loudly at a stranger in a parking lot TWO DAYS BEFORE CELEBRATING THE BIRTH OF THEIR PERSONAL SAVIOR.

It’s just not the life for me, what with no children and a desire to eat food that was actually prepared AT the restaurant where I’m eating, not in a warehouse in Omaha, then frozen in giant blocks and delivered to the local Olive Garden, where people delude themselves into thinking they’re having an "authentic" Italian meal prepared by a chef. Dooce has a wonderful rant about Olive Garden that I ALSO think you should read.

The point is, I’m pretty sour on the ‘burbs today, but four hours of battling holiday traffic will do that to a person. I swear to God, I’m SO tempted to burn all my presents and make my family spend the holiday keying Hummers and then volunteering at a homeless shelter, not out of the goodness of our hearts, but to see the horrified looks on the faces of evil suburbanites when we tell them.

And that’s probably not a good reason to do it.

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Monday, December 17, 2007 | by nathan

The Enemy of the Electronic Media

Webs and Nets

This sign is posted on the door of one of my favorite professors from college, Dr. Lewis. I took his intro Philosophy class because everyone kept telling me, "Don’t take Dr. Lewis. He’s too hard. You’ll fail." So I took it, and I got an A-minus. More importantly, I loved the crap out of everything we studied and discussed in the class. I sat on the front row, because no one sits on the front row, as you might occasionally get asked things - gasp! - and have to answer.

It turned out that most of the people who didn’t like Dr. Lewis didn’t like him because they resented that they had to take Philosophy 111. They resented that they paid obscene amounts of money to attend college and then weren’t permitted to skate through classes they didn’t care about.

Also, his exams were a bitch: six hours of writing, divided into 3 sections: short essay, long essay, and dialogue. He’d give you three or four philosophers and you’d have to write a dialogue between them. It was hard as hell to think about, but if you studied and understood, it was insanely fun once you got started. After earning my A-minus in his intro course I decided I’d minor in philosophy, and I took two more courses with Dr. Lewis: Philosophy of Religion and Hegel, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche (commonly abbreviated HKN). They both kicked my ass; every class session was to my brain what a hard-core workout with a personal trainer would’ve been to my body. I got A-minuses in both classes, and for my entire life I will always be proud of that.

There was a cadre of good friends of mine who loved Dr. Lewis’ classes, took all of them, and, in the case of my friend Matt, stayed an extra year at Wake to get a philosophy major. When we had to take courses with other professors we were almost always disappointed. After lectures we’d spend an hour in his office, talking over minor points of the lecture or reading. I was raised by college professors, and Dr. Lewis reminds me a lot of them. When I came out, Dr. Lewis called me into his office and told me he was behind me 100%, because as he’d thought and read about it, he’d decided that the church should adopt gay-friendly theology. I’d have cried, except you don’t cry in The Office.

Two weeks ago today Brian and I were walking around Wake’s campus, and I was knocking on doors, seeing professors and people to whom I hadn’t spoken in quite awhile. I wanted to introduce people to Brian, and show him the faces I’d been talking about for so long.

But when we got to Dr. Lewis’ door, I said, "Can I do this one alone?" I wasn’t sure why, except I just wanted to talk to him alone for a minute.

When I entered, there was a student in there. Dr. Lewis greeted me warmly and asked me to wait a moment while they finished talking; I gladly did so. The student was explaining his idea for his Philosophy of Religion paper, the topic of which, I quickly realized, was remarkably similar to the one I’d done my senior year on the theodicy of John Hick.

Yes, I’m linking to a Wikipedia article about John Hick in a post about Dr. Lewis. His students will know why I feel a bit dirty doing that. I highly recommend that you go get an actual book and read the actual words with an actual page. Be careful; you may get something called a "paper cut."

The student left and I took his seat, and Dr. Lewis and I started talking. I quickly caught him up on my life - that I’d dropped out of Yale (the school he’d encouraged me to attend and for which he’d written my recommendation letter), moved home, and decided to become this writer. I explained that I’m working on a novel about the end of the world, only it’s not the end of the world, see, and there’s all this subtle political and spiritual commentary, and as I explained it I started to feel like a giant hack, so I asked him how he’s been doing.

We talked about the state of college students today. Dr. Lewis said it was discouraging to feel that the students were learning more from the electronic media than from their classes, that between digital cable (now standard in every Wake dorm room) and the internet, the students were seeing college as less about learning and more about being handed the world, digitally. Wake students are no longer required to take Basic Problems of Philosophy, a policy change I’m going to vehemently disagree with here, on this website. (Yes, I see the irony).

"They are learning everything they think they need to know from the electronic media," he said, "and I’m the enemy of the electronic media."

I grinned wide and thought, briefly, about shutting down this website. I’m not going to, but I understood what he was talking about; people are being taught from an early age that the internet and technology can take the place of human interaction, that reading a website is as good as reading a book, that if students don’t want to have to take a class, they just shouldn’t, because they’re paying.

Dr. Lewis taught me better than that. He taught me to challenge what my culture is handing me. That television really is, for most people, the same as the shadow puppets in Plato’s cave, and that Eminem is jello and Mozart is creme brulee.

Also, how to think. The man, more than anyone else, ever, taught me how to think.

After half an hour of talking, I had to leave, and he said it was very good to see me again, and we shook hands, and I left. I felt good, and unsettled, like the mud at the bottom of the river had been stirred up and was not going to settle back down for a bit. Which is always how I felt in his classes.

Thanks, Dr. Lewis. I know you’ll never read this - or the e-mail I sent you in January 2000 saying I was sick as a dog and wasn’t going to make it to class that day (this was before I understood that you have never checked e-mail) - but thanks. The Owl of Minerva is taking flight.

Also, you’ll notice that this week’s reading is Frederick Copleston’s History of Philosophy, Vol. 1; all of Father Copleston’s volumes were much-beloved, much-required, wouldn’t-have-graduated-college-without-them texts from Lewis’ classes. Definitely recommended, and affordable.

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Monday, November 26, 2007 | by nathan

How My Dad Went to College

Dad & Clara Mae

My dad and my grandmother, Clara Mae, in the late 1970’s.

My dad was born and raised in Hackett, Arkansas, a small burg twenty miles south of Ft. Smith, in 1935. His family were hard-working farmers. He graduated high school in 1953 and late that summer was hanging out in town with his best friend. Bereft of anything better to do, they decided they’d sneak in the back of the high school gymnasium and hear the principal’s yearly address to the student body. They had, after all, heard it every year for over a decade. "Why don’t we see if it’s changed at all?" they asked themselves.

It hadn’t, of course, and the two found themselves almost able to recite the thing verbatim. As the speech wound down, the principal pointed at the two of them in the back of the gymnasium and said, "I want to see you two in my office right now."

Thinking themselves caught and in trouble, they proceeded to the principal’s office, where they expected a lecture on finding better things to do with their time than intrude on the assemblies of a school they no longer attended.

Instead, the principal looked at them and said, "If I could get the two of you into college, all expenses paid except your own personal spending money, would you go?"

They looked at one another and thought, "Ah, what the hell?" So they said yes.

"Okay," said the principal. "Go home and pack. You need to be back here by 5 p.m."

Dad and his friend raced to their own homes. Dad started to tell his mother, Clara, about the proposition. She handed him a cardboard suitcase packed with all his best clothes and all the money she had. She already knew of the plan; the principal had been to see her.

The principal, it turned out, had a contact at the College of the Ozarks, and was able to wrangle a spot in the freshman class for the two of them. Clara waved goodbye to her son and dad and his friend were back in town by 5 p.m., as per their principal’s orders.

So that was how my dad got to go to college. He didn’t wake up that morning expecting anything of the sort.

He went on to study chemistry, and to earn a master’s degree in nuclear physics at Vanderbilt and his Ph.D. at Arkansas. He taught at a small college in southwestern Oklahoma for 30 years, which is where he met my mother, which is how I came to be.

He was one of the greatest lecturers ever there was. His voice could be heard echoing down the halls, and he engaged people with the subject matter in a way that few people could. He advised pre-pharmacy freshmen, of which there were many, and I was often told by his students how much they enjoyed his class.

There’s currently a scholarship in his name for freshman chemistry students at that university. One of my long-term financial goals is to permanently endow that fund, so that the legacy of his teaching can remain there for as long as that institution stands.

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