Monday, October 17, 2022

15,711. THE DESIGNATED RAMBLER, #6

THE DESIGNATED RAMBLER, #6
Long after the train wreck  -  it took a
lot of healing and it took a lot of work  - 
I finally got back to some semblance of
personhood. Whatever 'personhood' can
be at age 9 and after a piecemeal recovery
centered on everything and nothing all the
same. I was always screwed up, after this
point I sensed my personal logic was soon
to be a lot different from that of others.
-
One memory was that, when I was still
in that hospital bed, interminably, it seemed,
I had a male nurse, not a nurse I guess, more
just an orderly. He wore blue scrubs, and was
a Filipino. He'd come around to check my
casts and suspensions and all that, and, most
annoyingly, it was his job to change the sheets
on the bed. Remember, I was in casts, and
suspended, in traction. The whole thing was
a minimal of comfort as it was, but this guy
would - in order to change the sheets - just
sort of manhandle me and without regard to 
any pain and anguish caused. He'd 'lift' me
up to get under me and pull out the sheets,
and slide new ones in. He'd think nothing of
twisting me some, or pulling, to get into the
sheet-changing positions he needed. It was
pretty gruesome and I really ended up to
dislike this fellow. I didn't like his ways,
not his handling. He was like the first
'foreigner'  -  as it goes  -  that I'd dealt
with. It was a funny, bad, impression.
-
Another memory, equally weird and shaded,
was my 'homecoming.' I guess it was a
Saturday, since there were people all around,
aunts and uncles had come, neighbors and
kids. I was driven up in a car, and  -  with
my crutches  -  let out of the car at the curb
and front lawn of the house I lived in. It
was nearly embarrassing, as I had to trundle
along with the crutches, people were happy,
saying hi, even clapping. When I did get into
the house (up the front steps, a real feat on
new crutches), I walked into a room  -  the
same, small, living room I'd grown up in -
that appeared totally different, out of place,
unworldly. It was difficult for me to again
realize the needed 'fit' to get back into
that same old mode of existence. Yet, I
realized it had to be done. The same old,
small, metal box TV (1959) was there
but on it, miraculously to me, my Uncle
Joe and my father had put in place an
aquarium. It was for me  -  angel fish,
tiger fish, and an assortment of others.
I was pretty stunned, having never before
had anything 'particular' like that before.
It was an immediate change for me.
-
My mouth, upon homecoming, was
still wired shut, for about 2 more weeks.
The talk and joke around the table was
of the great, big, sirloin steak they'd give
me once I could eat again. I mentioned
this before, how the entire idea of wires
shutting my mouth so my jawbone
could heal  -  and for that long a time -
would now drive me insane, like being
buried alive , but during this entire time
I really thought little of it. Curious. I
can only think that, when young, those
sorts of things do not predominate. 
-
I think, from this point on, actually, my 
entire was ruined. I can't really put a
finger on the evidences of what I'm
saying, but the everyday matter of life,
after my re-entry to it, was undermined
and way different. It was from that time
on that nothing really gelled. I was an
outsider, somehow, to everything.
-
Within, I guess, the next year, I got
another piano teacher. This guys name
was Frank Novak, from Woodbridge. 
My father at met him at a local Knights
of Columbus dance, or some Elks function
or VFW, where he and my mother had
gone, dinner and dance and all. This 
piano guy, Frank, fronted the little dance
band, and my father somehow chatted
him up...about piano lessons. Which he
'just happened' to give. His house was
up at the corner of Lockwood and
Ridgedale Aves., of Rahway Avenue.
He had a very nice, stone, house, in
the English-cottage style, and off to
the side of the property was a garage,
his, which he'd converted from garage
use into his CPA tax and accounting
office. Along one side of the leathery
office was a piano against the wall,
where he gave lessons and played. I
never saw another person there except
me, but whatever. It was pretty cozy,
and I liked it a lot. The one drawback,
and it was killer, was that Mr. Novak
smoked cigars, large, serious, ones,
and all the time. The place reeked,
and in fact, everything was coated 
in cigar grime and odor. No avoiding
that. Even the white piano keys were
dingy, with that yellowed pallor of
cigar smoke exposures. Bad news.
-
Other than that, it was OK. He'd 
start each lesson with the small talk  
- baseball, boys stuff, how was 
school? How's Dad?, etc. The he'd
review the lesson I'd had for practicing
all week, and then he'd play it, and
then have me play it; usually mangling
most everything. Then he'd discuss my
errors, have me try the right way, and
again he'd play it. No big shakes, but
there was never any 'music theory' or
music history involved. It was the
most basic practice-to-play stuff.
The hour went fast enough, and I'd
leave. I bicycled there (about 20
minutes) and back, in most of the
good weather. The funny thing was
that to get there, bicycle, or car,
I'd have to cross those same RR
tracks where I'd gotten creamed. I
really thought little of it. I was in
control of my own activities, and
it surely wasn't going to happen
twice. The only real problem I
ever had was in turning up to 
Lockwood, there was always a 
few kids who would start to 
pepper with small stones and
pebbles. I happened a lot, and I
really hated those kids but I went
through it each time, figuring I'd
not give them the satisfaction of
being bothered. I never met the 
kids, just saw them from where 
they huddled and hid at one of
the houses
-
Those piano lessons went on until 
I was 12 or13  -  at which point, 
when leaving for the seminary, I 
just dropped  the entire idea, and 
even there never partook of any 
music instruction or band courses 
offered. I'd been musically 'saturated,' 
and just wanted a break.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I’m with ya Gar!

Anonymous said...

Michael