Writing about “Staffing Season” as I did recently reminds me
of the block of time immediately preceding
staffing season – “Hiatus.”
“Hiatus” refers to that period after production for one season is over and the beginning of
production for the following season begins.
After numerous months of fourteen-plus hour days’ exertion,
not surprisingly, during hiatus, your brain almost immediately turns to mush.
Once, during a hiatus period, I was talking with my boss,
explaining that, compared to during production when we crammed unimaginable
amounts of activity into a single day’s effort, that particular hiatus day the only task I had successful
accomplished was the acquisition of a replacement wastebasket, only to discover
that my brain was so “overtaxed” performing
that errand, I could not remember the word “wastebasket.”
“I spent the whole day buying a, uh … uh … a, uh…”
It was enormously embarrassing – I had just revealed to my
superior that I was functionally “brain dead.”
This was hardly a self-serving demonstration of seasonal effort – as in,
“Look how hard I worked last year” – I was simple unable to think anymore.
Hiatus was the time for your put-off dentist
appointment. Today, if I were still
working, it would be time for me dentist, primary care physician, eye doctor,
urologist, gastroenterologist, cardiologist and dermatologist
appointments. It’s not ageism that keeps
writers of my vintage from working. It’s
medical check-ups.
That’s a joke. It’s
ageism.
Hiatus is also the time for travel.
And here – finally – begins my “Holiday Happenstance.”
Kauai, a less frequented Hawaiian destination than Oahu or
Maui, is known as “The Garden Island.”
Accurate to its designation, Kauai is botanically spectacular. If they held an annual “Hawaiian Beauty
Contest For Islands”, Kauai would be victorious on every occasion. That is probably why they don’t have one.
Anyway, I was supposed to go there with somebody but it
didn’t work out. I am not being coy about
the matter. I simply no longer remember
why. (Look at that – a personal
grievance I have actually let go of.)
So I went to Kauai by myself, the dual problems being that I
was taking a romantic vacation alone, and I was missing a driver. I shall leave you to determine which liability was the more debilitating.
Relegated to taking the wheel, I rented a car at Lihue Airport and away I went.
The immediate difficulties being that I am – being
magnanimous – an uncertain driver, there are no illuminating streetlights, the
rain was coming down in sheets (you do not become “The Garden Island” without
torrential downpours), and I arrived on the island at night.
You can consider yourself lucky that you were not driving behind
me as I made my way tentatively to my hotel, situated on the other side of the
island.
The next day – which was at least periodically sunny – out of interested and so as not to let the
rented car I had paid dearly for go to waste, I took an extended drive around
the island. Feeling vacationally magnanimous,
I even picked up a couple of hitchhikers.
It turns out they hailed from a commune called “Taylor Camp”, pitched on
the northernmost corner of the island.
Retrospectively, my gesture was either friendly or foolhardy, or
both. My opening the car door to
strangers occurred not long after the Manson Family debacle.
RETROSPECTIVELY
IMAGINED HEADLINE:
“COMEDY WRITER HACKED
TO PIECES IN TROPICAL PARADISE”
That did not happen.
(Obviously.) Nor did being
invited to spend the night at the commune – another
tale of memorable debauchery I am unable to pass along.
The following, however, did
happen.
I am driving back to the hotel, circling the island on its only
highway. Suddenly, I catch sight of a roadside
standard featuring a painted picture of Hawaii’s historical King Kamehameha, which
I had already learned, designated points of particularly scenic
spectacularity.
Eager to check out the terrain, I parked my rental car by
the side of the road and got out, brandishing my camera.
The view was magnificent, all right. I stood quietly, silently luxuriating in the
splendiferousness before me. Then I lifted
the camera up to my eye to capture its enchantment for posterity…
… immediately dislodging my right contact lens, which
dropped noiselessly to the rubbly roadbed below.
Since I see very little out of my left eye, I was now
effectively sightless.
… in the middle of nowhere… totally alone… incapable of
driving... or, in fact, seeing six inches in front of my face.
As Chester A. Riley used to say on his 50’s sitcom…
“What a revoltin’ development this is!”
Having no options, other than to cry or flag down a passing
automobile to somehow assist me, I knelt down on the pebbly “shoulder” and, as
I had seen “blind people” do in movies – looking straight ahead because what’s
the point of looking down when you can’t see anything anyway – I felt around in
the cindery surface, searching for my departed contact lens, a one in a million
shot, but what choice did I have, and – swear to Gosh…
I found it!
(NOTE TO WRITERS:
I was originally thinking of calling this post, “A Holiday Miracle”, but
changed it to “A Holiday Happenstance” so as not to telegraph the ending. Steven Spielberg once called his two-season-long
television series, Steven Spielberg’s
Amazing Stories. I judiciously “went
to school” on that misjudgment.
Spielberg was tipping the resolution of every episode – it had no choice
but to be “amazing.” Similarly with the prognosticational
give-away, “miracle” – you eliminate all the surprise.)
I moistened my magically recovered contact lens, inserted it
back in my eye, and I drove back to the hotel, where I left my rental car
untouched for the remainder of the holiday, prudently, I believed, as it is egregiously
“piggy” to expect two miracles during a single vacation.
The following hiatus I went off to Tahiti, which I will tell
you about tomorrow.
The trip was a “once-in-a-lifetime” but don’t expect another
miracle. If they occurred on every
vacation they would no longer remain miraculous.
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