I have a bad attitude about things.
(As if revealing clues
had not seeped out over the years.)
But I have an even worse attitude about this.
Anything I drop on the floor, I am convinced, before even
looking, that I have no chance whatsoever of finding it.
That is just how it is.
A pill, a button, a cornflake – slips out of my hand, or escapes my
cushiony lips?
Gone.
Though I make a perceived effort to find it, deep down, I
know the fallen item has gone to a parallel universe and will never been seen
here again.
Except if someone else
finds it, which they often do, with minimal effort or delay, leaving me appreciative,
surprised, and yes, awkwardly ashamed.
It is not a directly visual
issue. My “Failure to Find” is due to a chronically
terrible attitude, my brain telling my eyes “It’s gone” and my eyes saying
“Okay.” I am not exaggerating for
stylistic intent. Over the years, things
drop to the floor, and I instantaneously disappear.
Recent simmering example:
I am standing in the bathroom, late at night, nobody else is
awake. I cup my hand underneath,
pointing my eye towards the middle of my palm. I make the appropriate tug. My released contact lens bounces off of my
hand, and
“Into The Void.”
Few things are sadder than watching a man with a terrible attitude,
searching for a thing he is thoroughly sure he is not going to find. I mean, you try… like a man who believes that he actually has a chance. But the salvaging attempt lacks… everything
that will help you ultimately succeed.
Dropping to my knees, I scour the bathroom floor, one
octagonal tile fragment after the other, watching my step, because recovering a
crushed lens is as bad as not recovering one at all. Maybe worse, because you were frustratingly
“that close.”
If appears that my lens is not on the floor. Nor is it on the two small mats, which I shake
vigorously, hoping the freed lens will “plink” happily onto the tile.
Trying to try, I expand the scope of my search, based on
this “Rule of Lost Things” I have established, which is,
“If something is not
where you think it is, look where you
think it isn’t.”
I check the sink, the toilet. I empty the wastebasket. Unlikely?
Of course. But when the entire
prospect is doomed and if my lens was not
where I thought it was, why not
check where it may have ricocheted crazily after “The Bounce”?
The lens is not there.
It is a powerless feeling.
Although you unequivocally know that, in the paraphrased words of the “busted”
philanderer in the old Myron Cohen joke, “Everything’s got to be someplace”, there I am standing in the bathroom, trusting that physical principle but,
due to my “downer” proclivity, unable to prove it correct.
Then, after fifteen minutes of going through the motions of searching,
surprising myself and the odds,
I discover my lost lens.
Perched on the mat in front of the bathtub.
(Which retroactively makes sense, as the errant lens made no
sound when it landed, which I had ascribed to its silent transition to “The Mysterious
Place That It Went.”)
I am happy, relieved, and most importantly, delighted I will
not have to confess to a beleaguered spouse that I had lost my lens. (Or even worse, having her find it later in ten seconds.)
Expanding the context beyond a guy who can’t find things
that fall down:
As eyes that believe they won’t see something won’t.
Minds that believe they can’t do something can’t.
Minds that believe they can’t do something
can’t.
(Or, more accurately, can,
but the onerous burden's considerably greater. Think of a ship, traveling with its anchor
still down. Think how much easier it
would be if it wasn’t.)
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Birthday Greetings to my brother. The funniest person I know, and that others know as well. Wishing you big laughs for years to come. Under "Funniest Guy Around", check out his picture in the Canadian dictionary.
Happy Birthday, Bro.
And many healthier more.
-----------------------------------------------------------
Birthday Greetings to my brother. The funniest person I know, and that others know as well. Wishing you big laughs for years to come. Under "Funniest Guy Around", check out his picture in the Canadian dictionary.
Happy Birthday, Bro.
And many healthier more.
1 comment:
I remember reading this on one of those "Murphy's Rules" lists:
"When you are working on your car, any tool or part dropped rolls to the exact geographic center of the car." and someone added, "Unless there is a floor drain."
Yes, things always roll or bounce farther than you ever think possible. But sometimes, it does seem like that Twilight Zone episode where the little girl disappears into another dimension.
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