Written at Rancho La
Puerta, October the Fourth, 2018.
I practice the piano with four eyes.
One eye on sheet music.
One eye, focused on my hands.
One eye, fixed to the piano keys.
And one eye, looking for the arrival of someone who will make
me stop playing the piano.
No wonder I am making all kinds of mistakes. I am (at least) two eyes in arrears, my
attention perilously divided.
Though, at my request, bordering on insistence, I have
received permission to continue practicing on the Oaktree Pavilion Steinway, despite laminated instructions
for guests not performing in evening concerts not to, I fear the on-duty concierge
who countermanded the prohibiting ordinance was not authorized to do so.
Although I acted like she was.
While reacting internally like she wasn’t.
It was not just my natural infuriation to the interdicting
“You can’t.” – “But I want to!” Clearly, I do not appreciate when that
happens. It triggers an “Entitled
Princeling” response, “His Royal Loftiness”, coldly rebuffed in his intentions. Heads will definitely roll!
But beyond me, the Ranch has a longstanding philosophy,
which is about nothing if not spiritual harmony and personal wellbeing, a
nourishing oasis from outside intervention, reconnecting us with our deeper,
more spiritual selves. No TV’s in the
room – it fits. No phones in the Dining
Hall – of course.
“The Steinway’s
not intended for visiting guests”?
What’s that?
“Jarringly inconsistent”, is what that is. Incongruently discriminatory. Come on!
Are we not equal here at the Ranch, that welcome haven against hierarchy
and status? Consistent with that
leveling philosophy, should we not all enjoy equal access to tinkling the Steinway’s elevating ivories?
A sour note resounded at the Ranch.
And, this time, it was not delivered by me.
“An unfortunate happenstance”, I concedingly allow.
And then, this
happened.
It started with a call to our room from a different concierge. (The Ranch originally did not have phones in
the room. Was their subsequent addition,
retrospectively, the “Beginning of the End”?)
The call proceeded, formally but politely:
“Mr. Pomerantz?”
“Yes?”
“It has come to our
attention by some of your neighbors that they have smelled cigarette smoke
coming from your patio. We are not sure
if you are aware, that the Ranch is a smoke-free environment and we ask our
guests not to smoke anywhere on the property.”
(Note: It sounded like he was reading from some
official “Form Letter.” Stay tuned for
validating confirmation.)
I immediately assured him I don’t smoke.
“And your partner?”
“She doesn’t smoke either.”
The concierge appeared sufficiently persuaded on that
account. But the next day, we found a
letter in our “mailbox”, that began:
“Dear Guest,
It has been brought to
our attention by some of your neighbors that they have smelled cigarette smoke
coming from your patio…”
You see? That guy was reading. The complaint had now apparently moved up the
authoritarial “Chain of Command”, the arriving letter, signed by the “Director
of Guest Relations and Programming.”
A “Director”, no less.
That guy was big.
So here we are, visiting what, for us, is the proverbial
“Heaven on Earth”, ordered to stay away from the Steinway, and accused of illicit cigarette smoking on the patio.
How did that unfair “outing” eventualize?
We are staying in casita
“Flores – 26.”
Apparently, the people in Flores – 27” ratted us out.
Inaccurately, because neither of us smokes.
I thought I was just being silly the day before when a
passing guest, preambling a compliment, said,
“I heard you playing the piano in Oaktree Pavilion”, and my
joking reaction was,
“Shhhh.”
But who knows? Maybe
it wasn’t a compliment, but was,
instead, a threatening warning?
(ACCUSATORILY) “I heard you playing the piano in Oaktree
Pavilion.”
You see how different it sounds that way? You know, the 1984 version?
I knew I had to be careful.
My credibility was hanging by a thread.
I mean if a man can use a piano he has been specifically told not to, surely he can lie about smoking
cigarettes on the patio.
Or cover malevolently for his wife.
The place had definitely changed.
We were unquestionably “marked” Ranch guests.
In a Nirvana,
seeping with treachery.
Maybe a member of the mariachi band is a smoker.
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