Friday 3 October 2008

slumber.

I think everyone has partaken in the odd evening of hypothetical conversation, usually after an evening of wine (or any other preferred stimulant). Camaraderie is running high and all parties feel inclined to talk and hypothesize about themselves while striving to glean as much information as possible about their companions. Questions abound regarding who would pen your biography, what you would read on a desert island, and where you would go during your last week to live. What your choice between two equally unlikely Faustian situations would be, and who from history would receive an invitation to your dinner party are discussed at length.

Of course, these evenings are never complete until you’ve discussed your smoldering homestead. If your house was burning down, and all pets and loved ones (as well as liked ones, moderately disliked ones, and people you feel a general indifference towards) are already safe, what would you rescue from the inferno? Apparently the answer is supposed to reveal something about your values and what is important to you. Or rather it would, if everyone didn’t automatically reach for their laptop on the grounds that, in addition to being the most expensive and easy to carry thing in the apartment, frankly, it just plain holds the most stuff on it. Of course when the “and not your laptop” clause is added to the situation the responses expand to include pre-digital photographs, jewellery (at least one person is virtually required to cite their grandmother’s engagement ring), and maybe if they’re honest, the stash of post-op codeine pills with the unrenewable prescription. On the whole, it’s going to be some family jewellery, a grandfather’s war medal or some other trinket already prominently displayed in the apartment or on their person. Basically, you learn absolutely nothing new about your companions; just a rehashing of their pride and joy which they already take every chance to highlight.

I suppose this might take on a new degree of credibility or interest if you have actually found yourself in this situation and knew all occupants of your building were safe and a handsome fireman had your laptop tucked under his arm, leaving your hands free to collect one souvenir from your home moments before a smoky hellish ball of flames engulfs it all. However, fire standards being what they are today, the majority of people are fortunate enough to make it through their lives without experiencing this. Nonetheless, either in reality or in the realm of the hypothetical, it still seems a fairly useless indicator of a person’s character.

I found myself pondering this the other week when I discovered myself in a remotely similar situation. Similar, but much more commonplace and much more conducive to self-exploration. Also, much less life-threatening with less heroism involved, although it’s best not to dwell on that as it makes me look petty and small. This catalyst for introspection seems to be an inevitable point in most relationships and it caught me off-guard last week.

Dinner is winding down. It’s getting late and the sad realization that it’s a weeknight has presented itself. In the past, this hasn’t posed too much of an inconvenience for me; I get up and shower, then the Boy showers while I dry and straighten my hair and get dressed. We both leave the house by 7:30 and everyone gets to work on time. Well, if you want to be specific about it, I get to work on time, he loiters in a cafĂ© then presumably wanders the streets until it’s time for him to go to work, at which point he stills arrives before the rest of his office. As we sort out the tip and finish our wine, it happens. The dreaded question slips out of his mouth; can’t he stay in bed an extra hour after I’ve left? The flat door locks automatically when it’s shut. Only someone with mild paranoia with neuroses aplenty would have a problem with it after we’ve known each other this long, right? I open and close my mouth a few times. A sputtering noise may have unconsciously escaped, I can’t be sure. Deep inside my head a little man in a lab coat is yelling at his staff while beating a pointing stick against a formula-ridden chalk board and cursing an oversized hamster on the wheel to run faster and speed up the thought process. There must be some valid reason why he can’t stay that extra hour. The excuses ricochet off the walls of my skull and I grasp desperately for one with a shred of credibility. The bed is spring-loaded and automatically folds up into the wall at 7:35, and you might be hideously decapitated as a result. I need someone to escort me to the train station in case I lose my way. I treasure the extra minutes we have together as we walk out of the house together. I keep an ill-tempered cobra named Marcel in a basket in the closet and only I know the right song to play on my snake-charming pipe to pacify him. I look searchingly into his eyes and wonder if he’s dumb enough or drunk enough to believe any of these.

Apparently, sometimes honesty is the best policy. The hamster wipes his sweaty brow with his little paw and slows to a jog on the wheel. The man in the lab coat shrugs in defeat as my brain and mouth agree on a reply. “Of course that’s fine. But, no rummaging.” He laughs and kisses me on the forehead. “Seriously, I’ll know and I’ll be fucking pissed.” The smile fades from his face for a moment before I lightheartedly laugh and he joins in. “Seriously, though…I will harm you.”

* * *

Normally, when the alarm starts its hideous faux-cricket chirping at the crack of dawn I complain bitterly and ignore it for a few minutes before clumsily fumbling around and resetting it for later. Today I silence it after its first electronic chirp and am instantly wide awake. I gently stroke the Boy’s hair until he seems lulled back into a deep sleep. His lack of acknowledgment of my finger softly prodding between his vertebrae is encouraging. The clock tells me I have exactly ten minutes to perform my covert task before I start getting ready and the shower and various hair appliances inevitably compromise his slumber. Ten minutes to get the flat ready for any manner of potential rummaging.

When 7:28 arrives I’m dressed, made-up and perched on the edge of the bed in shoes and trenchcoat. He awakes sleepily as I say goodbye. “You’re sure it’s alright if I stay?” I kiss my finger and place it on the tip of his nose, “Of course, take all the time you need.” He slides deeper beneath the covers with a contented smile gracing his lips as I confidently stride out the door.

* * *

That’s it. Those precious Proustian minutes between sleep and wake. What are you so desperate to hide and keep revealed from prying eyes. What do you already keep hidden in your flat that you feel the need to hide even more deeply in case someone does a little investigative journalism in your absence? That’s what reveals most about you, not some trinket you display in a case, a frame, or on a delicate chain around your neck. In some ways, it’s even more pressing than the fire question. If you make the wrong choice in the hypothetical fire, all your rejected choices go up in flames and can’t return to haunt you. Here, your rejected choices risk public disclosure, the very thing you are most desperate to avoid.

So, what is it? What do you slide into an envelope and push to the centre of the space under the bed with a broom handle (before snapping the broom handle and making a mental note to buy a new one on the way home from work)? What do you stuff into your well-chosen oversized tote and take with you to the office that day? An assortment of pay stubs? A file with cut outs from bridal magazines, colour swatches and sketches of wedding dresses? Your most scandalous lingerie that you save for Mr. Little-Something-Something-On-The-Side? Your fat pants or skinny jeans? Very recent cards from ex-boyfriends whom you’ve sworn you were out of contact with? Invoices from your cosmetic surgeon? The latest, and already affectionately well read, Tiffany’s catalogue with post-it flags marking pages with your choice cuts of diamond engagement rings? Spare me knowing that you aspire to write a book, want to go back in time to ancient Egypt, and that your dream job is to be a screenwriter. I have no doubt that you do want to go to Australia before you die, invite Oscar Wilde to your dinner party, and interview Jesus while he hangs like a limp haddock on the cross. I want to know what you’re hiding in your apartment that you don’t want your date or anyone else to find.

As for me, I’ll never tell. However, I will say that when I returned that evening before I had a chance to look for hints of rummaging I found my wall clock lying on the floor with one hand slightly bent. As an apology later revealed, sometimes you also need to be concerned that someone will attempt to put a battery in your forever-motionless clock and it will inadvertently slide off the hook on the wall when the front door is closed. I thought had prepared the place for everything, but hadn’t anticipated that.

13 comments:

Allison said...

Well actually, my answer remains the same, my laptop. As you know, I'm somewhat territorial over the sleek puppy. No one is getting free reign over that.

p.s. I totally know what you're hiding. ;)

Strawberry Blondie said...

Allison -- To be fair, I would stash my laptop away from prying eyes as well if it worked properly. As is, you have to know exactly what angle to plug the power cable in and perform a series of other rituals just to turn it on. It's kind of like coaxing a genie out of lamp.

If you could hide your sleek puppy and one other thing...I'm sure you could come up with something!

P.S. I'm curious to here your thoughts on this. Perhaps in a less public venue. ;)

Anonymous said...

OK. So I'm not going to tell you mine.

Instead I'm going to run through possible scenario's for what exactly is in that mysterious closet of yours and potential outcomes.

Items in Strawberry Blondie's closet:

1. 6 kids from a previous relationship - After you leave I feed little Pepe while the other 5 go out and pickpocket for me Oliver Twist style!

2. Heavily built stockbroker type with a name like "Hoyt" - Spend an hour consolling him after receving his new found job seekers allowance and console myself with the fact that his name is f**king Hoyt and he probably spends more time at the shrink than I do.

3. Heavily built silverback gorilla named Rambo - Your tendancy towards animal loving is bordering on ridiculous but at least he cleans up after himself

4. Entire back catalogue of "Foot Fetish Weekly" - You didn't seriously think that I wasn't going to mention this at some point did you ?

5. Entire back catalogue of "Disco Boogie" 1973-1983 - Don't call, Don't write, Don't Fax, Don't telagram !

6. Eddie Murphy's talent - Well it must be somewhere???

7. Robert Downey Jnr - OK. but only if we can get one of those Robert Redford Indecent Proposal type deals going.

8. Love Letters from old flames - Don't they know you shouldn't sign off love letters "yours sincerely"? Standards Honey Princess, Standards!

9. Any sort of bill for comestic surgery - I knew your eyes were Green when I first met you.

10. My balls since the night I called your "Sweet" blog entry underwhelming - I want them back someday. p.s this entry was great. Pullitzer in the post any day now :P

In conclusion - I'm not worried what skeletons are in your closet as long as the gorilla doesn't come out and bite me. Was this whole post idea really because of shoddy DIY work?

TheBoy

Todd said...

hehe - yay for a new post! Hmm... The old skeletons in the closet question - I think that is much more effective than what to gran before running out of your burning building. Mine of course would be the computer, and my mobile... I'm not sure what else I would grab.

Oh, I do know - three things: a tiny marble elephant; a small scented candle with no wick; a wooden mask that hangs on my wall.

I am very curious about that you're hiding. MY guess is a secret room [a la Bat Cave] filled up with shoes from around the world, and those worn by the rich and famous. Just a guess.

Strawberry Blondie said...

Boy --
1. Well, Fagan, I shall expect a cut of the profits my illegitimate brood are earning you.

2. I’m glad you’re taking good care of my fallen City boy. Maybe he could give you some of his now superfluous Armani suits.

3. Animal loving never borders on the ridiculousness, the name “Rambo” however…

4. & 5. Don’t forget the entire back catalogue of Disco Foot Weekly. Nothing’s sexier than a foot in a sparkly platform shoe.

6. I refuse to take responsibility for this. Someone else must be holding it hostage.

7. Yep, yep. I am absolutely fine with this. Better than fine, in fact.

8. Also various poems and sonnets. All ending with “yours sincerely”.

9. Or, maybe just a huge stash of blue contact lenses.

10. Underwhelming and pretentious, to be exact.

Keep the list replies coming. Me likey.


Todd – You have no idea how much cooler I would feel having a bat cave with a shoe collection! The BATA cave, perhaps? ;-)

An elephant, a candle, and a mask, huh? Yours are all so tasteful and dignified! I’m slightly disappointed Toddy Boy; I would have hoped for something scandalous and exotic. This makes me miss our drinks and ‘would you rather’ nights at Queen’s!

Anonymous said...

Come to think of it, the Bat Cave in your closet would be kind of cool.... Or Narnia !!! Man, if I wake up one night and Mr Tumnus is there I'm going to cut back on the pills.

It would kind of remind me of the first episode of Futurama where Bender invites Fry back to his place to stay and it's a tiny box. After a very uncomfortable night Fry discovers that what Bender calls his "closet" is in fact an enormous penthouse!

Barbara Bruederlin said...

Now I am trying to wrangle an invitation to your flat so that I can rummage through your bathroom cabinets under the pretext of having to tinkle.

I really cannot think of anything I would need to grab if my laptop was already safe. I own nothing but crap anyway.

Strawberry Blondie said...

Barb -- I think I'm feeding curiousity to a dangerous level. I may have to ban all house guests from tinkling whilst at my flat. I'm already a pretty terrible host, so chasing guests away from the washroom probably wouldn't raise many eyebrows.

I love the assertion that everything you own is crap apart from your laptop. I so don't believe you. In fact, it's making me think your house is gorgeous with many an object d'art. It also kind of makes me want to rummage... ;)

Allison said...

I can't be the only one here who knows what she's hiding, can I? :)

To The Boy -

Numbers 1 & 2 had me in stitches, and made me wonder if Blondie has mentioned any of her favourite names to you? ;)

p.s. I wouldn't be surprised if she was hiding Number 5 though.

Strawberry Blondie said...

TheBoy -- That's the difference between you and I: you'll cut back on the pills to make the faun go away, and I will increase the pills to keep the faun around and get him to do my laundy regularly.

I never got into Futurama, but I appreciate anything in which a closet opens up into a penthouse.

Allison -- Honestly, you just know too much, that's the trouble with you! Can't keep any secrets from you…

To Allison & the Boy -- Number 5 should not have to hide! Disco will make a comeback someday, mark my sequined and flare-bottomed words, it WILL come back.

Unknown said...

My teddy bear. I've lost a laptop before, but that bear has been with me for much, much, much longer than any computer ever has or ever will.

Secondary to that is the journal that no one knows I keep. Third is my father's guitar because it's old and in good shape and not actually mine.

P.S. am I ever going to hear from you again?

Unknown said...

Oh, and I certainly hope you trust me not to rummage, because there's no way in hell I'm leaving your flat at 7:30 when I'm on vacation in the spring.

Strawberry Blondie said...

Maggie -- Aww, your teddy bear would definitely be irreplaceable as would your dad's guitar! Sometimes it's nice to have an excuse to buy a pretty new piece of technology, like a laptop, but objects of sentiment never need upgrading!

A journal is definitely a good one, too. I have a notebook that is pretty top secret -- it's nowhere near as coherent enough to be called a journal, more randomn snippets, but I still guard it quite fanatically. No worries; I'll be a good host and not try to boot you out at 7:30am during your visit.

You shall hear from me soon…I know my correspondence has been lacking (read: non-existent) but an email will be with you soon as will a small parcel. :-)