Monday, May 21, 2012
Is there a problem?
I have participated in what you could generously call "fistfights" on two occasions in my life. The first time I was riding my bike home from 4th grade with a friend when a bully out of central casting (I think his name was Kim, like a girl, which is probably why he was a bully, like the Johnny Cash song) growled some kind of bully growl (the details escape me) and I stepped in to object. The Boy Named Kim responded to my chivalry by tossing my bike into the middle of the street, and in an unprecedented burst of bravery I punched him, aiming I'm sure for his big fat face but instead landing a glancing blow on his...shoulder. Yeah, his shoulder. He paused briefly, and then socked me square in the mouth. My braces cut my bottom lip wide open, creating a geyser of blood that quickly ran down my jaw and stained my Star Wars shirt, the sight of which seemed to freak Kim out (he didn't mean to kill me, after all) and sent him running back home. I retrieved my bike, wiped my mouth on Han Solo's face, and claimed victory.
The second, more recent brawl took place over two decades ago in Mrs. Miller's 7th grade reading class, when my friend Gregory Corso pushed me because I accidentally stepped on his black karate-shoe-clad feet with my clunky Reebok high-tops. I reflexively punched him in the nose and knocked him back into the pencil sharpener, giving him both a bloody nose and a nasty bump on the back of his head. I received Saturday School and a huge heaping of guilt in return, and vowed never to use those lethal weapons called fists again.
And yet for some reason I've come dangerously close to fisticuffs on two separate occasions in the last week, and I can't quite figure out why. I'm a grumpy, quick-tempered, moody fuck to be sure, but my volatility traditionally manifests itself through sarcastic quips, obscene rants, self-loathing and screaming tantrums, not physical violence. But something inside me is hankering for a fight, it seems, and I'm going to have to show some uncharacteristically strong self-control if I want to keep from knocking a bitch out, or more likely getting my own punk-ass knocked out, or stabbed or hauled to jail or whatever the hell would happen if I actually gave in to my impulses. Which I won't, I'm pretty sure, so don't worry or call me or recommend yoga or anything. That would just piss me off more, anyway, thereby quickening my descent into barbarism. And you don't want that kind of blood on your hands.
The first near-fight was last Thursday on the trolley, of all places. I don't take the trolley, normally, so I don't know what line to catch from the train station to my office, and the only reason I wasn't walking the fairly short 10 minute walk to my office is a recent flare-up of what I have google-diagnosed as metatarsalgia, a fairly common runner's injury that is in effect a bruising of the ball of the foot and middle toes that comes from overuse or ill-fitting shoes. (I don't run unless someone is chasing me, but I do go for a rigorous walk most days at lunch). So I wanted to take the trolley, but I either got on the wrong one or missed my stop and somehow ended up at the trolley transfer station, which is twice as far as the train station from my office, in the other direction.
I was about to take my earbuds out and investigate the situation when a trolley-worker (porter? conductor? troll?) burst into the car (empty except for me) and loudly, rudely, informed me that the train was out of service and I needed to exit immediately. I got up and tried to leave but...let's just say that I tend to, as the Robert Downey Jr. character in "Tropic Thunder" put it, "go full retard" (no offense intended) in certain stressful situations. My brain just shuts down and my motor skills (admittedly limited to begin with) completely abandon me. And I just could not figure out how the fuck to open the godamn trolley door, no matter how long I stared at it. So, in desperation, I called out to to the trolley-worker seeking assistance. He was displeased, to say the least. Dude was clearly having a bad morning, and he yelled back something like "push the fucking button!!" The only button I saw was a big red one above the door, so I pushed it. It was the wrong button, turns out, as the attending alarm made clear, and this is where it starts to get interesting.
The guy came barreling out of whatever little trolley closet he was working in and loudly said "Not that fucking button!!" before shutting off the alarm and hitting the proper button, the one just to the left of the door. "How did you get on in the first place?," he said, and that's when, for some reason, I finally lost it. Lost it, completely. "I walked through an opening fucking door, that's how I got on, you fucking asshole!!!", or words to that effect. He told me to "pull the fucking headphones out of my ears and pay attention" and I got right up in his face and yelled, creatively, "FUCK YOU! You're an asshole!!!" I was ready to punch the dude, I swear to God, I was gone, and looking back I think his response is the only thing that stopped me. "So are you!!!" So are you. He didn't deny he was an asshole, he didn't question my parentage or threaten me, he just told me I was an asshole too. And he was right. And the door opened and I walked off the trolley, just in time to see three transit cops drinking coffee and eyeballing me suspiciously. And I just hobbled off on my fucked-up foot, stewing in anger, shame and aggression all the (needlessly long) way to work.
And then on Saturday, at a pool with my kids, I noticed a group of teenage boys, the kind of whitebread, date-rapey, football team, privileged fucking shitheads that nearly ruined my own high school years, chilling out in a private cabana paid for by one of their plastic cougar moms. On our way out of the pool, my two young sons and wife right me, I was carrying a load of wet towels, my whale-like flesh unmercifully exposed far more than usual, and I turned and saw one of the kids look at me, then say something to his friend, who then looked at me, and then they both burst into laughter. I've been a fat kid my whole life, and I damn well fucking know when people are laughing at me, and that was this, for sure. And I stopped, and fixed my gaze at shithead #1, and when his eye caught mine again I held the gaze and said, loudly: "Is there a problem?" And, like the little bitch he was, he said "no" and looked down quickly. And then and only then did I keep walking. I would have jumped into that cabana like the fucking Hulk, I swear to god, and pretty quickly gotten my ass kicked by the La Costa Canyon varsity offensive line no doubt, if I hadn't gotten the response I wanted.
So the question remains: what the fuck is wrong with me? I don't know, exactly, but I have a few ideas. The reason I was on the train on Thursday to begin with, the reason I didn't drive to work like usual, is because it was the second anniversary of my father's death, and my wife and mother and kids were picking me up later in the day to visit my father's grave site. So yeah, that might have something to do with my pent up rage, I suppose. Or maybe, as my wife suggested, on some level I'm too comfortable and feel the need to shake things up. Or maybe I'm just turning into a fucking idiot as I get older. I don't know. But I do know this--if you see me coming your way anytime soon, it's probably best not to piss me off. You wouldn't like me when I'm angry.
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I think you should have punched that train dude for sure. If it were India....
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DeleteGet a dog
ReplyDeleteFurther to Aparna's comment on India, it seems like airing out one's grievances via yelling is fairly acceptable in most Asian cultures. People yell at each other all the time without expecting a punch in the face. It usually ends with a couple of shoves. That sort of ongoing "authentic" communication seems pretty healthy to me. I feel like I need to yell at someone now...
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