Words I could not
imagine ever coming out of my mouth.
Bacterial visitors have triggered an assiduous campaign, denying
them the nutrients that permit them to proliferate. The plan is the opposite of a successful
dinner engagement: “Find out what they
like to eat and make it.” Instead, it’s
“Find out what they like to eat and deny its availability until they’re
dead.” That second dinner party: You’re
invited – you don’t go. For any reason.
“I’ve got shingles.”
“When?”
“They’re not here yet but I’ve got them.”
The problem with this limited diet: You deny the bacterial visitors – you deny
the host.
The next line you expect
being,
“And I really like asparagus.”
(A now prohibited comestible.)
The truth is, I like a lot of things better than asparagus,
which are now also off the menu, like
ice cream and cashews and apples and bread… oh bread, with its crunchy crust
and that sourdough-flavored softness – I want bread! I want bread!
Why can’t I have bread! How I
really want brea-hea-hea-hea-head…”
“Stop it! You are lacrimating on the keyboard!”
Sorry. But I want
bread.
“We get it. You want bread.”
I do! The trouble is,
the bacterial visitors want it too. Why
couldn’t they like things that I hate, like liver or okra or loquats or
persimmons… ?
“Do you eat foods you don’t like?”
“No.”
“Neither do the bacterial
visitors.”
Reasonable, but annoying.
It seems odd that the proscription against asparagus disturbs
me so much. I never grew up eating
asparagus. I grew up eating peas. Green
Giant. Or, when in an extravagant
proclivity, Le Sieur – the Russian caviar
of processed peas.
Unlike other vegetables,
asparagus bears the additional burden
of olfactory after-effects.
I recall once, entering the Mens’ Room of a luxury hotel in
Hawaii and finding a disconsolate Japanese gentlemen finishing up at the
urinal, apologizing profusely for the telltale aroma, and then explaining, with
the aura of abject shame only some
cultures can successfully pull off,
“I have just eaten asparagus!”
Wait till you hear this! “Asparagus” is not entirely off the menu. The “Official Guidelines” prescribe,
“One spear.”
Is that Machiavellian, or what? I imagine nutritional scientists, cackling in
the lab:
“No asparagus!”
“No wait. One spear.”
“Better.”
It’s just crazy. You
slip the allowed one asparagus spear into a pot of boiling water, the boiling
water goes, “Are you kidding me? We’re
going two-twelve Fahrenheit for this?”
“Only one asparagus spear” is like “only one potato
chip.” One long, green, tuberous and, if
overcooked, mushy potato chip.
That makes your urine smell funny.
So why does its near-total exclusion upset me?
It’s – I finally realized – because of the rules.
Somebody else is imposing
the parameters – including the insane “one asparagus spear” rule – and if I
want my bacterial visitors to vamoose, I am dutifully obligated to adhere to
them.
My resistance is not to the asparagus deprivation but to the
control. You know why kids are picky
eaters? (Opines a formerly long-time
picky eater.) It’s the one thing kids
are permitted to decide. I’m not a kid
anymore, but I still like to decide what goes into my mouth.
And now I can’t.
Which has seriously altered my demeanor. I don’t love Mexican food. But now that it’s prohibited – “No beans” – I
suddenly tear up passing Tacos Por Favor.
I perceive this phenomenon is an ominous portent – one irreversible
step, diminishing my personal freedom one soul-sucking asparagus spear at a
time.
This looks to me like big trouble.
If I am deprived of food I don't really care about…
What’s next?
Now you've piqued my medical curiosity.
ReplyDeletewg
I don't understand the shingles reference. Are you hoping that by not eating asparagus (and bread etc.) that the shingles that is alrady in you will not "bloom"? Shingles is a virus, not a bacteria. So you must not be referring to that. Or are you hoping to keep down the population of bacteria that the shingles virus feeds on?
ReplyDeleteLike Wendy, I'd like to hear more about this.
It seems like something got lost between the time you were thinking about it and when you were writing about it.
ReplyDelete