Everybody take a nice deep breath now. The one my wife always tells me to take and I tell her I can’t will do. There needs to be a demarcation. We are entering new territory, one with much more room.
For some reason late two nights ago, I decided to take a picture of this fine artifact from a now-defunct rock shop near the so-called “mobile home retirement community”—hey, they have a golf course and a swimming pool—that my long-gone parents and until six weeks ago my younger brother William G. called home. He who died, that is. Looking at the photo reminded me of days gone by. For a long half an hour I felt like writing about him, but only gruesome stuff came through for him and me. Lacking the courage to write it down, all I had was drivel when I staggered off to bed:
Five weeks after my brother died in the V.A. hospital in Tucson without a will, I’m finally wondering if I should do something. I dunno, maybe chase the squatters out of his trailer…
I meant that as black humor. There could easily be someone living there, but what did I know? My brother died without a will of any kind, and whatever happens out on Kinney Road is not my problem. [Not yet, anyway. See below.] It was once, until I got him to take it as most of his share of our mother’s estate, giving him a roof over his head and the rest of us more cash. He was quite pleased to be a homeowner, I think, even as his drawn-out doom descended. As stubborn as the rest of us, it never made a difference when I helped him, either. He’d wreck or break or lose whatever decent thing he had. Didn’t seem to mind, though, not even when the cancer grabbed him, as long as he could smoke that meth. At any rate, late Monday afternoon my phone rang. On the other end was a Pima County sheriff’s deputy… Oh my God, what’s wrong? No wait, Bill’s already dead. The subject? Real-life squatters in the goddamn trailer!
What bloody fucking idiots as well. They claimed to have permission from the dead but didn’t know when he died: “It could have been months, or weeks, or days ago,” one said, according to the deputy. “His sister Lisa told us we could stay,” another claimed, except her name is Mary and she didn’t.
The deputy and I had a nice long talk. It was different this time—there’d been others—because Bill doesn’t need protecting any more. The cops know what’s going on, but not enough to get a warrant, and they’d rather that the perps just vanish. The neighbors are upset because of strangers going in and out all night. The yard is full of trash, and it stinks around the premises. Not just of garbage, either, but addiction—when Bill was high, he smelled like ammonia and rotten meat.
Fast-forward to today: there’s a way to get control of without a probate court, if that’s the way to go, and supposedly one doesn’t need a lawyer. Six months from the date of death, I can file an affidavit for us siblings and just sell the thing. In the meantime maybe I can cut the power off, kill the water and the gas, and reassure the HOA. Familiar ground, at this point, mailing death certificates and talking law. I could use a breather, but I’m good.
I’ve only been outside my body once that I know of, and that was by accident. It happened around 3:00 a.m. when I was fast asleep at a sleazy motel in Fayetteville, Arkansas on a cold and rainy night. No really, that’s what it was. I was living in Austin, Texas at the time (early ’70s), so this must have had to do with selling my share of the 170 acres in Madison County and taking a last look or whatever. Plenty of stress to spare, in other words. That helps. All I can tell you is that at one point I realized I was simultaneously also standing naked outside the door to my room in the rain, fully aware that my body was back in the bed. To this day I can still see the red motel sign and the lights in the parking lot, glistening and wet, and have no idea how I got put back together. Maybe there’s a rubber band or something.
It might run in the family. I remember that our father, who didn’t believe a word of this stuff, was profoundly shocked during one of his chemo sessions in the last spring of his life when he found himself on the floor under the cot he was lying on at the very same time—over and under, as it were. It shook him to the core, never mind the obvious message that he had nothing to fear from death. My brother Rob told me once about floating up to the ceiling while his body was in the dentist’s chair. As for poor recently departed William G., our brother Bill, he may never have been in his body at all, which might explain a few things. Of my two sisters, Teresa who’s dead would have been totally cool with leaving her body, and in fact she did! Mary the nurse hasn’t weighed in on this yet and may be too grounded in gore (so to speak) to go playing with astral projections. She’s hip, though, so maybe.
The reason this came up is the sunset last night. You can’t see it in the photo above, but there was this perfectly round hole in the glowing overcast with clear sky above. I wanted to shoot through the hole and felt like I could—it was the strongest sensation and seemed so damn easy! I’d just make a big circle, there over the sunset, then come on back down through the hole and back into my body. No one would know if I did the thing fast enough, right? Leave the meat in the road, zip out and back in, but I was too scared and backed off. It was like turning away from a high-diving board, yet the board’s always there.
I did take a few jumps. Hops, really, on the balls of my feet, like a bird with new feathers and too many thoughts.
Maybe it was the albacore tuna from Cid’s. My stomach swelled up so big with gas, I could hardly breathe. You can guess what happened in the bathroom at least twenty times. There is nothing like being choked by your own body, however, and that was much worse. I had to stay up most of last night, belching and farting and using up toilet paper. Until a few hours ago, all day today I had virtually nothing to eat. Breathing easily now though, and looking for food.
It’s almost midnight as I write, and the front door is open—in just a few weeks, that won’t be the case. The screen door fits poorly with a wide gap at the bottom. On Friday a chipmunk came in through the hole and ran right into the cat! Cue loud weird damn noises. She had his ass nailed in about fifteen seconds. My wife managed to run to the bathroom and slam the door shut in less time than that, so she missed me picking him up by the tail and tossing the trembling poor bastard out in the weeds.
Saturday was the reading. That went well enough. I got to say fuck a lot over a nice loud PA (see here, for example)—which pleased me no end—and met two of my fans. One was a lady who said my writing was “honest” and “fearless,” and that made my day. By all means take the time to read all about it, but this part is nice (thank you, Bill Whaley):
“Each in their own way, John Farr, Kika Vargas, Richard Trujillo, Anne MacNaughton, and Fred Dillen portrayed the results of a serious writer at work, each of whom is working out an individual vision.”
I’ll take that, I will. It’s amazing what can happen when I just get off my butt and join the real world. What else was there to do, anyway, except drive to Albuquerque two days before to see Lalo Alcaraz and Gustavo Arellano? If you don’t know their work, please google ’em up, and be sure to watch Lalo’s New York Times video interview.
Along with their host from the National Hispanic Cultural Center, the two of them actually met us for breakfast at Barela’s. I was like a starstruck kid—a real cartoonist!—but what a hoot. Just thinking about it makes me grin, and I can use some more of that for damned sure.
Here’s your chance to see me in person! I’ll be reading a few killer selections of my work at the above event from 4:00 to 4:15 p.m. on Saturday, July 25, with a short question-and-answer session afterwards. Expect the timing to be somewhat improvised. Note that the theme is Taos itself, which raises certain dangers. The tension may be fun, though.
I’ve appended an ever-changing preliminary schedule below that tells you who else will be reading and when. Some of them are heavy hitters, and all are worth your time, but afficionados of a particular segment of the “old guard” in Taos are advised to catch John Nichols’ opening talk on Friday night and pretty much everything Saturday after me, especially Saturday night. There are many tribes here, and this is one of them. (I’m from a different branch but just as old and look the part, so I can fake it.) There will be name-dropping like crazy going on all weekend. Come have a listen and meet some folks!
Schedule (subject to change)
July 24, Friday Night:
Open 6:00 pm: Brodsky Bookshop will have Nichols’ books for sale
7:00 PM: John Nichols’ Keynote AddressJuly 25, Saturday
10 am-12 pm: Booksellers Set Up
12:00 noon: Book Fair Opens
12:30 pm: Fabi Romero
1:00 pm: Martha Grossman
1:30 pm: Elizabeth Cunningham
2:00 pm: Julian Romero
2:30 pm: Cindy Brown
3:00 pm: Steve Tapia
3:30 pm: Bob Silver
4:00 pm: John Farr: “Another Day in Paradise”
4:30 pm: Kika Vargas
5:00 pm: Steve Fox
5:30 pm: John Suazo: “The Man Who Really Killed the Deer”
6:00 pm: Richard Trujillo: “From the Tia Zuco Tales”
6:30 pm: Taylor Streit
7:00 pm: Jim Wagner
7:30 pm: Paul O’Connor/Rick Richards
8:00 pm: Bill Whaley: “Tribute to Ruthie”July 26, Sunday
12 Noon: Book Fair Opens
12:30 pm: Bob Romero
1:00 pm: Trudy Healy
1:30 pm: Jonathan WarmDay Coming
2: 00: Debra Villalobos-Whaley
2:30: Linda Fair
3:00: Kelly Pasholk/Catherine Naylor
3:30 pm: Lynn Robinson
4:00 pm: Debra Diamond
4:30 pm: Anne MacNaughton: “Kali”
5:00 pm: Meier/Fair5:30 pm: Phaedra Greenwood
6:00 pm: Fred Dillen
6:30 pm: Kay Matthews
7:00 pm: Sylvia Rodriguez
7:30 pm: Q&A Authors Present
Sponsored by Taos County Art and Artifacts Review Committee, Taos Council of the Arts, SOMOS, Nighthawk Press, Wink Visual Arts, and Taos Friction.