Sunday, March 21, 2010

Part and Whole (edit 1, erotic memoir)

I’m figuring today is a twenty-second day. Already, the tingling like an on-the-town fancy sweater, chenille sliding over my head, smoothing up my arms, behind my neck, grazing my chest, and in just a moment, silk panties. My skin shimmering in the sweater, I forget all about the silk underwear because that’s how I am, and today I’m taking it easy. Life’s been rushing me around lately, how I long for a lazy morning on my bathroom floor, wherever that may be—there having been so many bathroom floors in my life. I want to take my time with this tale, no ramming cock on this one.

Although Sharon was with me, I remember only myself, a country kid in the big city. Where are the elevators? What floor? No one is at the information desk in the main foyer. Students are checking out second-hand text books set out on long wood tables. Taped to the wall beside the elevators, set at the rear of the main entrance in a small foyer of their own, is a piece of white foolscap with Lifespace 504 written in red magic marker. At the second floor, the elevator doors open. I exit and rush back into the full elevator before the door slides shut. Cast out onto the fifth floor, I look ahead, right and left. On the wall is a sign with numbers and arrows. I follow and search for 504. There is no 504, not in this direction, nor in the opposite. I return to the numbers and arrows and see I was right the first time. I refuse the offer of a name tag.

Barbara Forest is a plain woman in polyester brown pants and an orange and brown rayon blouse. Her hair is to her chin, grey, and the ends brushing her cheeks have been set in kiss curls. For forty-seven minutes she talks about the separation of mind and body, the failure of traditional therapy, cherry picking, the felt sense, and takes sips of a viridian liquid. Everything revolves around the felt sense, she says. Sharon sits in front of me, looking at her watch, out the window, turns the pamphlet over, folding and unfolding it, taps her right foot, then her left, then both. There is a master’s degree affiliated with some university out east or a two-year certificate option, a practicum, and a five-page reading list. After the break, the woman, Barbara, will give a demo and are there any volunteers? Eyes shift down or to the side. “I’d love to,” I say, and rush out to call Garth during the break.

“I’m not sure about this, I don’t know why. I mean there’s Sharon fidgeting away because she can’t sit through a lecture and Barbara—”
“Who’s Barbara?”
“This scrawny woman, you’d call her ugly—you know how those witches look like they have no teeth so their mouth is just a slash?” Sometimes Garth is good to talk to, he just gets things. Descriptions really work with him. “Anyhow she’s got this quivery voice and huge seventies’ glasses, and she’s even more verbose than I am, if you can imagine that.”
“No. No, I can’t.”
“Well, it’s true. And get this, she’s so week she couldn’t even open her thermos, she had to get this guy sitting next to her to open it.”
“You mean she’s more pathetic than the women you train?”
“I didn’t think it was possible, but yes.”
“What about the course?”
“The course?”
“The one you’re there for.”
“It’s really spiritual, she talks about inner piece and finding god inside you, something about on this earth, but not of it. I told you about the creative visualization Caroline’s therapist did with me on Bluffwood Drive?”
“I think you should stay.”
“Really? But it’s all this hokey spiritual stuff. Wait! It’s like you, but you lift weights, so it’s different.”
“Look, you asked for my opinion and I gave it to you.”
“And Garth?”
“What is it now?”
“I volunteered to be her demo subject. She’s going to try it out on my, I don’t know why I did that.”
“Well, you better get going then.”
“But why did I do such a thing—offering myself like that?”
“You like to show off. And you want to try it first hand.”
“Like doing research you mean? Hey, that’s pretty smart of me.”
“So go.”
“You really think so, huh?”
“Why do you do this? Why do you ask for my opinion and then question me?”
I laugh because I don’t want to fight and he’s reached his limit although I’d like to ask him a few more times, with different wording, of course.
“Thanks Garth. I’ll go now. I just want to say thank you.”
“You’re welcome,” he says and hangs up.

Two metal chairs facing each other are set in the middle of a circle of orange plastic chairs. Barbara sits down and places her feet slightly apart. On her thighs, her palms sit like open oyster shells. Barbara’s a straight line of a woman, but if you look at her, really look, she fills out, you can see there’s a bend in the road, a curve here, an angle there.
“Shall we begin with a relaxation exercise, and if you don’t mind, the circle can experience this too, just as I think I will, and do every time. Does that feel right for you?”
“Absolutely,” I say.
“You can keep your eyes open, or closed, whatever feels right for you, so you know you can open or close your eyes as we go along.”

My eyes closed, she goes through the entire body: grazing the floor, soles grow stabilizing roots; she circles the ankles, spreading to calves, behind the knees—I’m wild about behind the knees. There was a girl at Camp Manitou-Wabing with a sensitive spot just below her right ear. Guys were always coming up, "hey June, wanna hear a secret?" and she’d flutter her eyelashes, “sure,” she’d say every time. It wasn’t because she was so gullible, she was just hot same as me. Naturally I’ve got that soft spot on the side of my neck, especially when I tilt to the side which is why I draw women with their heads in oblique angles, inviting. She skips the groin, but that’s alright, I’ve got it covered. By the time Barbara reaches the top of the skull, I’m radiating, flowing, simply glowing.

“Is it alright if I talk?” I say.
“Whatever is. Let it come.”
“I feel, a lightness. Radiating. So bright really. There’s a glowing.”
“A glowing. Radiating.”
“Yes . . . from the inside out. No, it’s inside to out, but inside—there’s no line. It’s amazing really. A part, yet part of.”
“Yes. Part and whole.”
A paper rustles, someone shifts in a chair, the legs scraping the floor. When I get home, I’m going to give Garth a blow job even Linda Lovelace would envy.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Cunt Full of Python (edit 1, erotic memoir)

There’s a Python Inside Me



Although I resisted, the spiky woman entered my life. What I did for her: created monthly training sessions with each week brand new yet still flowing into the whole, weeks two and four focusing on strength training and compound exercises—my old squat I’ve grown to love, bench, the deadlifts Sam the Israeli Olympian taught me at Energy Gym that summer we escaped to the townhouse in the Danforth, clean and press John taught me and Garth perfected; illustrated proper form and how to eat like a builder; slabbed mass onto her scrawny disproportionate form; took her to Strictly’s.

What she did: revamped her brush cut hair color from bright red to faded yellow; giggled her way past the guard at the gatehouse and knocked on my condo door; charmed Garth with cheesecake; propositioned him and then me; brought the Soaps into Strictly; swiped my erstwhile training partner; wiped his sweat off his forehead with the flat of her hand as I watched; brought him bottled water; sent him sexy emails; chaperoned him around town in her BMW.

She sends me emails. She loves her biceps and bought a webcam to show off for her Australian cyber-lover. Every three hours she eats low glycemic food. She overdoses on protein. Lately she’s taken to giggling when she trains, which I bring home to Garth. “There’s something odd about her giggle,” I say. “It makes me uneasy.” Which makes Garth laugh and I love that, making him laugh. Laughing and music make me hot and we don’t listen to music all that much. Sometimes he calls me over to his computer. There’s a Garth Brooks song he likes and also ‟No Woman, No Cry,” a song he says most don’t get, but he does, and I believe him. One day he’ll email a tango to me that will just send me. I’ll stand beside him as he sits at his computer and my heart and cunt will wing out of my body, landing on him and smothering him with kisses deep and otherwise. I wish for laughter and music in my life.

“She’s gay,” he says.
“What are you saying?” I can’t hold back a smile, not that I want the woman, shit, but I’ve got him for this moment and we’re back at Nina Street, home on our stolen mattress and I’m reaching up under him, “I belong to you,” I say.
“Gay? Is not.”
“Let’s ask Talon.”
“That’s not going to work. You’ll coach him.”
“We’ll pick you up after one of your training sessions.” And that`s how Garth meets Sharon.
“So?” I say, buckling myself into the silver Stratus.
“Gay,” Garth says.
“Talon?”
“Way gay,” he says from the back.

I sit in the front seat when the three of us are in the car. As soon as I exit, Talon’s out of the back in a flash and into the front passenger seat. Before he gets in, Garth slides the passenger seat toward the back and shifts it back full tilt so the son is in line with the father who positions his seat to afford his massive height and girth.

Every once in a while, Garth decides to clean up his diet. He’s going to become a bodybuilder, he says. I get eight hours sleep. I eat every two-and-a-half hours. Once I refused a trip to Geneva with Abie, I was either bulking up or getting ready for a show that never happened. Abie smirked when I refused, since he knew I’d refuse anyhow and he was on his way to visit Petra in Germany. He slept on the pull-out in the living room, he said, Petra’s Italian husband and blond twin sons occupying the bedroom.

After a week on his clean diet, Garth asks me if I see a difference. “Not that you’d look or notice anyway,” he adds. Half an inch on a body that has to lose a hundred pounds is like removing a bucket of pebbles from a mile-long beach. “I’m clearing the beach, turning it into one of those sparkling sand places like Florida or Tahiti, it’s supposed to look like paradise in Tahiti.” And you point to the midday sun and your pail of pebbles. My new silver Sirrus is my guideline: when he sits behind the steering wheel, where on his chest does his mountain of a belly begin its ascent, and at its peak, how close to the steering wheel?

Every month I pay three hundred and twenty-five dollars for the Sirrus which we bought from a sales lot that had taken over a scrap of Scarborough farm land. “We accept bad or no credit,” the billboard advertised. Garth says this is how I can build up my credit. “But I have no credit, except Abie`s mess,” I say. “If you would only listen,” he says, and I say, “I am. I’m listening.” I want to be legitimate even though I don’t pay taxes. Every day I’m afraid until the mail arrives or when the phone rings. People depend on me.

Sharon brings homemade cheesecake and gives it to Garth. He smiles at her as he accepts it and cuts himself a massive slice. Smiles. Comments on how delicious the cake. Says she is always welcome if she brings this cake with her and forgets to mention his diet.

The proposition: she worries about me, says my happiness is everything to her which is why she accepted Garth’s offer to go out, maybe she could find out how he was thinking, which is why she accepted. “He says you’re a naysayer, a nitpicker, you’re like a top dizzy from overanalyzing,” she writes in a late night email. “He inquired about the seven-year itch, told me how he’d once gotten drunk and had mind-blowing sex.” She’s going to get him drunk and find out when and where and get back to me.

It was with me, you skinny shit. In the Comfort Inn on Finch Avenue West.

Then she suggests a threesome, not to worry she’s not going to touch me, Garth told her I’m the most homophobic person he’s ever met, think about it. She tells me I have no sense of adventure, that Garth says I’m no fun anymore and she believes him. It’s just a suggestion, mind you, but maybe it’s just what he might be needing. She gets that feeling anyway.

I push back the desk chair, walk over to the living room and stand in front of the television, a Springer show with fat arms waving and loud voices. “Sharon wants to fuck you and she wants me to watch,” I say. He doesn’t say anything and I wonder whether he’s turned on, whether his porn sites turned him on, the strippers in the bars he bounced in, why he told me to take off my panties that time we walked into a strip joint in Mississauga—I was wearing a spaghetti strap sparking dress—‟wear something that shows off your muscles,” he’d said, and I thought I’d buy a dress and surprise him so I bought a dress studded with stars.

Jealousy is a python coiling inside me, top to bottom, once, then reversing, and tightening. I want to know if I detest him as I do, why the python moves in? When he trains her, I drive by Strictly. I watch for body language when they finish training and walk to her car. I flaunt my two-hundred-and-seventy-five pound squats and two-hundred-and-twenty-five deads. Builders come by and chat with me. I watch Sharon’s right knee invert as she settles into a squat and shake my head.

I’m lying under the vertical leg press with three plates aside when Garth walks in. “Garth,” I say, after I rack the weight and put the safeties in place—when the gym first opened a guy bashed his skull in so now there’s a sign, ‟put your safeties in place.” I was once fucking an Amercian, some writer, and just as he was about ram his indigo prick up my cunt I said, ‟oh, you gotta wear a safe,” and he just looked at me. “What?” “A safe,” I said. “You know.” And then he laughed. “Oh! You mean a rubber!” When he went back to the States, he told all his friends about the difference between Canadians and Americans, used it as some kind of anecdote, which made me pissing mad because it was private, I told him. I’ve changed since then. I tell all my anecdotes and every one else’s.

So I rack up the safeties. “Garth!” He’s walking out, doesn’t turn round.
“Garth!” Louder this time.
“What do you want?” he says, his face darkening.
“I just want to talk to you.”
“You’ve embarrassed me in my own gym.”
I can feel the python waking up inside me.
“I’m sorry, it’s just that I’m working so hard and Caroline—” and then the damn breaks.
“I’ll see you at home,” he says and walks out.

I know everyone must be watching but I can’t see them. It’s like being on stage with the stage lights full on, you can’t see who’s in the audience but you know they’re there. Sharon’s car is not in the parking lot.


Lifespace Institute of Transformational Psychotherapy


She belts herself into the leg extension and places her feet under its turquoise pads.
“Did I tell you I’m going to an orientation session this Saturday?”
I hate when clients talk in the middle of a set. It’s like talking with your mouth full. In my Nautilus days with Bernie, you weren’t allowed to tense any other body parts except the one working. You did the work, no grimaces, no complaints. I’m better at the gym than at home. Still, I can’t look at Garth’s calves when I’m angry, their sheer size is a thing of beauty and the play of the sun on his red hairs, his height, the very girth of him—and although his cock is thick and a good length, it’s suits him. He doesn’t have an off-the-rack cock.
“Janice! I did tell you, didn’t I?”
“Maybe you were thinking of telling me.”
They’re always telling me their shit. If it’s good, I’ll bring it home and lay it out before Garth or I’ll write about it.
“No, no, you didn’t tell me. So, you have an orientation, huh? And how do you feel about it?” Dr. Stern used to use that line. I use it and even throw in supportive body language, leaning ever so slightly in with my upper torso and tilting my head to the side, nothing dramatic which Lisa would say goes against my grain. My grain, so parched and searching for a gentle breeze.

Sharon runs a successful nanny agency, matching profiles of nannies hungry for Canadian soil with women who must shop, must meet for coffee, do lunch, streak and straighten their hair, attend to their French tips, wax armpits and bikini lines. She has the idea she’s empathetic and wants to get out of the nanny business. People open up to her she says, so when she saw an ad in NOW about Lifespace Institute of Transformational Psychotherapy, she made inquiries. Now she’s having second thoughts.

‟Take your muscles with you, they’ll keep you company and protect you.”
She giggles.
‟I’ll go with you,” I say, feeling a heaviness pull at me. I’d have to cancel the Greek dental assistant whom I have on a pre-contest double-double split, although she’s not entering a contest, but splitting from her husband, an event requiring her to be in the best shape of her life. ‟Give up your beer,” I told her. I can’t understand spilling your guts in the gym and filling them with froth later, although the smell of beer is like jasmine, I can keep my nose in the froth indefinitely; at supper my father would drink, in a shapely tall glass, one golden beer, its thick tender froth skimming on top. I worshiped my father.

I cancel Christine who says she`s not really up to training anyway, she’d gone bar-hopping on Friday night and her head was really jazzy buzzing. ‟Things have a way of working out,” I tell Garth. I’m trying to look on the brighter side of life since I`ve been doing the silly walk for decades now, intentionally and not. So I’m looking on the brighter side of life whenever I can, even though I sometimes I forget or plain don’t want to. I see the brighter side beckoning me enthusiastically, then impatiently, throwing open his trench coat, and I turn away.

Monday, March 8, 2010

In My Fucking Prime & Guilt (2 chapters - erotic memoir)

In My Fucking Prime

It’s not that summer grew tired of her fragrant clothes, went off in a snit and returned rebelliously without color, head to toe, a winter nun. A serious stoic. I’m sure there were fazes in between—like that decadent one when she shed all her clothes, all, and became autumn. And later mourned; maybe she had gone too far taking those blunt scissors to her hair to compliment her nakedness, crying for her bareness including her hair. Like late autumn, when it rains and rains and the dank wetness penetrates your bones, she cried like that. And then she grew cold, after all those tears, yes, there are always clues, turning rain to snow the way it does every year and did with Garth and me. Except we still have those glorious winter days like the ones in St. Agathe when my grandfather in his shirt sleeves sat on those metal and royal blue striped canvas folding chairs on the veranda overlooking his vast snowed-in garden and the lake, the sun bathing his skin, transforming it to ruddy brown, that sweet shade I have grown to love.

I was going to write about not knowing when things started to go really wrong with Garth and me. I was going to slide in leaving the girls to shack up with him and how his young son with the curly auburn hair called me Mama. And now his young son is overweight and has his head shaved which Garth says is Talon’s mother’s doing since she thinks it looks both neat and black which I don’t understand with his glow-in-the-dark tight curls. “She’s gay,” Garth offers, and he and Talon grin at each other.

Garth works at Main Street Investment with other brokers whom he says are a waste of skin, yet still goes out with every Friday night, which has something to do office politics and playing the game. “Why don’t you take me anywhere anymore?” I say and then wince. “I’m a builder, damn it—in my fucking prime.” He says I look down on him, that I don’t like his TV shows, sneer at his comics and his playing Duke Nukem with Talon. “But I watch Spawn, and that other guy, you know on Saturday morning, the one with the gargoyles, and that other one with extraterrestrials and good graphics, what’s the one?”
“Goliath to the first one,” he says in his flat voice, “and Reboot to the second.”

Every morning Garth phones Diamond cab.
“Why don’t you take the bus like most people? Who takes a cab every morning?” I plant myself in front of him, my arms across my chest.
“You asking my son to wake up at 6:30 and stand in a packed subway?” he says, a dark cloud crossing his face. My heart aches to kiss him under the sheets; in my head, I’m slamming the door on his cocksure face. What if he leaves now? What’s stopping him from leaving now?
“No—it’s just that it’s so much money, so much money going out, don’t you think?”
“You’re asking me to wake my seven-year-old son up at six-thirty so he has the pleasure of experiencing rush hour.”
“No. I’m not saying that.”
“So what are you saying?”
“I’m not saying anything. Nothing at all.”
“No. You did say something. And I want to hear it.”
“Listen, I’m going to be late. They don’t like when I’m late and I always am. And Lynette’s waiting.”
“You wouldn’t want to keep Lynette waiting.”
“No, no I wouldn’t.”
“You shouldn’t leave and let this fester.”
“Can’t we talk about it later? I’ve got to go, really, these are my steadies.”
“You asked me to tell you. I’m telling you, it’s not a good idea what you’re doing.”
“Fuck you both, fuck you fuck you, someone’s got to pay the bills,” I say on the other side of the door as I sling my gym bag over my shoulder. Even though I’m mud-slinging pissed off, I’ve got this springy step. Different from my builder’s strut, this one is flexed and tightly coiled.

I wanted someone to take care of me, which I didn’t know the moment I saw him and my cunt shimmied across the floor and landed at his feet. I was a serious builder in those days. There were other big guys working out that night, some I knew from my days at hardcore gyms, others from The Workout, Gold’s on Yonge, Worlds, Fitness Connection on Don Mills. Every day he breaks my heart.

He says I’ve become mean. I come home, walk into the bedroom, and shut the door.
He says I don’t listen to him anymore. I interrupt him as soon as he starts talking.
He says we don’t talk anymore.
I say why doesn’t he get a job. I’m dying I say.
He just sits and doesn’t say anything.
Don’t you hear me? I say. I’m falling. Can’t you see I’m falling?
Yes, I see, he says.
You’re a young man. I can’t take care of you this way.
I looked, he says. Dishwasher, gas attendant. They say they don’t need anyone.
Why didn’t you tell me?
That I couldn’t get a job as a dishwasher?
I kiss him. What has happened to us? I say.
Come, I say, and taking his hand, lead him into the bedroom.
The next time I don’t kiss him or lead him into the bedroom. Sometimes I sleep on the sofa. I used to sleep on the couch to get away from Abie.

One night I lie face down on the grey carpet. I stay there for a long time and weep on and off. Like a ghost through a wall, white arms and hands reach into my back.
“Garth!” I say, standing up now. “Garth!”
He is beside me in an instant.
“An angel came to help me. I felt an angel dipping into my back, so I could stand up. And when I did, it had passed, all that made me so sad—I was in a Greek tragedy, like Odysseus’s wife wailing with piercing cries. Did I tell you I played the Chorus in Antigone?”
“Yes,” he says, “you told me.”
“I love you Garth.” I say, leaning my head on his warm chest.
“Oh Janice, you just don’t get it, do you? I never stopped loving you.”

On Nina Street I asked Garth how many years he gave us. Five years, he said. It’s four now and already he’s talking of leaving. “Five months,” he says. Until he saves some money. And then five months pass and he says, “Five months, until I save some money.”

I learned about money on Bluffwood Drive when the chair I was sitting on, a sturdy ladder-back chair relocated from the St. Agathe country house, was yanked out from under me. Still more lessons rained down on me until I had nothing sparkling left to lure men with. It was on a slushy sidewalk outside the Deloraine house that I remembered my soul. I hadn’t realized cash had sweet-talked its way into the cartilage between my vertebrae.

All those years I’d spent nourishing that soul of mine, art, music, words, the works, until I didn’t have to feed it anymore. I could go anywhere and that soul would seek out and suck in. The ladies at gym set aside empathetic moments—“How are you? How’s your daughter?” one would say. “What a fine soul you are. This has got to be the most caring place.”I’d say while searching my pockets for a hug, like used gum with the flavor still intact. And they’d smile, I was their mitzvah. I never knew those words before Abie and his family and then the ladies entered my life. “And yet, you stay smiling, you’re always smiling.” “I have a rich soul,” I’d say.
Given the choice of money or soul, Garth would say money, every time. He says he’d rather his impoverished soul hang out in decent surroundings than on some street corner. I tell him I’m going for both. “Sure,” he says. “Why not?”

I know how to work the floor. My end-of-the-month write-up of accounts consumes a night. The accounts confuse me. Sometimes I make mistakes and my cheque rings in at one or two or even three hundred dollars less. And other times I invoice again since I have a stash of copies to back me up. All month I add up training fees. I need to know where I stand. The gym has two or three master trainers and I’m one, having the look as I do. Also I’ve been a trainer on and off since I was thirty-eight at the Inn on the Park gym where I also looked the part though not the way I do now. Abie talked me into rowing so I took those learn-to-row classes at the Argonaut club until I heard about Hanlon. I was bow seat on an eight, although I also rowed fours, pairs, and doubles. My second year, I got it into my head that I’d like to single so Michelle, our coach who by the way had the hots for her coach and married him, much as I fell in love with all my coaches and some of them with me, taught me first on a Paluski touring single scull and then on a traditional single Hudson. Rowing is something else. I loved rowing though not as much as building, I guess having started out with building, strayed into rowing, and came back to my first love with as much longing and lust as I’d had in our beginning.

The head nurse with the oily streaked hair and soothing smile tells me Caroline is going on a medication holiday. “A holiday—I can’t imagine,” I say. “The last time we went on a holiday was fifteen years ago, in Hawaii. It’s not that sort is it?”
In the early months, I’d phone in. “I’m thinking of coming in today,” I’d say and the nurse would answer, “I’ll go and ask her.” Sometimes she’d say, “Yes, she will see you,” and other times, less often now than at the beginning, I’d wait until she returned with “maybe today is not such a good idea.” There was a Sawtooth Oak in my Gossamer garden, its limbs so high and wide and open; could I not lie on the earth and open myself to something sweet and metaphysical?

Inside, dogs guard me. I cannot remember when I last walked about without them in the shadows. I’m like that Billy Holiday song, “You’ve Changed.” I’ve become a ghost town, my eyelids like roller shades pulled down low.

Caroline is walking with me. It’s spring now. She stops and says something causing me to turn to her and wrap my arms full around her.
I’m in her tiny hospital room, emptying the contents of drawers and one metal locker onto her cot.
She sits in the passenger side of the front seat, her head against the glass as she watches the passing of shapes and colors, some of which she recognizes. I am inside her eyes.

After almost two years, I am driving her away from this place she has renamed Camp Fazeka. She says it had a gun room. “It was a frightening place,” I say because I know not to argue the finer points. I have a book. But she says, “It’s true, there’s a gun room in there. I saw it.” I tell her Passover is around the bend, what a celebration we shall have. “I’m not Jewish. My mother and father were Christian atheists. Hail Hitler!” she spit out, her voice scaling the window. I pull into the emergency lane. A police car pulls up behind me and a cop with a buzz cut walks up to my car.
“Anything wrong?” she says.
“No officer, I’m just taking my daughter home. From Whitby Mental—”
“They burned it down. It’s burned down,” Caroline says in her new shrill voice.
“Hail Hitler!”
“You sure you’re OK?” the officer says.
“I’ll manage,” I say. “It’s just the first day.”
“How old is she?”
I hate talking about Caroline in front of her back.
“The officer wants to know how old you are honey.”
I have to repeat this with a touch on Caroline’s forearm which I figure might ground her.
“I’m one week old, zero pounds, zero feet.”
“She’s twenty-three, officer.”
“They’re lying!” Caroline casts out, her voice zinging out the car into the middle of the 01.
“Well, good luck. I could accompany you back if that’s what you need.”
“We’re be alright, won’t we Caroline?” I say, placing my arm on her forearm which she shakes off.
“We’ll be alright. It’s just a matter of time.”
“Good luck, then.”
“Thank you, officer,” I say and pull out, carefully merging traffic already on its way and going fast.

I am making a single bed in a room with two single beds and a bureau—where is the bureau? Not between the twin beds or under the tilted Venetians missing every third slot—the room is in her father’s third floor walk-up apartment on Weston Road. Cayne’s Appliance Warehouse lures men and women who park gingerly on the street, checking once, twice their foreign cars are indeed locked. Beside Cayne’s, a sandwich shop with bars on its windows and doors sits empty. A used-car lot stakes its land claim beside Abie’s building and after that a street-corner Pentecostal Church with a sign “Non-Worshipers Welcome.” When we drive up, I point to the library, a brown brick building across from the used-car lot.
Abie has set up his office near the TV in half of the living room. The other half holds a chrome and arborite kitchen table and four beige leatherette chairs. In the kitchen, grime has invaded all available crevices. The freezer is half full with frozen dinners and there’s a tin of Campbell’s beef stew on the counter. Whenever he answers the phone in the living room, he waves us away with his hands like a wild Baba, gai avek, gai avek. I talk to Caroline in a low voice. “Quiet! I’m talking to Germany!” he hisses. “All of Germany, you say?” I say, and Caroline smiles which gives me hope. “He sure puts a lot of energy into waving that arm of his at us,” I say to Caroline. “Let’s go in your room.”

We sit on her bed. “Oh my darling,” I say, patting her hair. “Come put your head on my lap,” it’s been so long, honey. Rest now.” And she does. At first a bit stiffly, but soon her fear, that thick fog inside her, lifts and for now, we have peace. My grandmother, my Bobi on my mother’s side, used to rub my scalp. I sit with my lost daughter on her cot that reminds me of another mattress in a glass room as I massage her head and forehead until the right arm, wrist and hand ache, but I don’t stop until her thin lids close. And still I continue.


Guilt

Standing in front of the picture window, I wrap my arm around my daughter’s shoulder. A full moon graces the sky above the plain brick Salvation Army building next door.
“It was like a concentration camp.”
“What, honey?”
“Camp Fazeka. It was like a concentration camp.”
“I know, my honey. I’m so sorry.” I say and put my head on her shoulder which amazes me, that she’s so tall and that I’m so short. And that we are in the world, side by side, with a movie moon overhead.
Now that she’s free, she’s in another hell, here on Weston Road in a third floor walk-up with a pot-bellied middle-aged man who sits and works on an eight-year-old computer as he rubs shoulders with deal makers across the ocean. What must she think of me? And who would have thought Abie would be the one to free her?

The social worker, a skinny nervous guy, his face and neck pockmarked with acne scars, sat me down in his office one spring afternoon. They’d done all they could for her, he said, advising that she be placed in a group home, there was one with an opening, three women, one in her forties, the other in her seventies, the other—well, the other had just died the week before which was the reason for the spare bed. I phoned Abie who said no way was he going to have his daughter sleep in a bed someone had just croaked in. “We’re taking her home,” he said. I think she was happy because she held my hand for the whole ride to Abie’s place, sometimes squeezing my hand, other times resting her partly open hand like the wing of a wounded bird on top of mine.
“Does she have to go?” Caroline says.
I look up at Abie.
“She has to work, honey,” he says.
“I’ll be quiet,” she says, getting up and going to the closet. “I’ll stay with you and I’ll be quiet.”
“You’d be home alone,” he says and tells her to give me a hug good-bye, I’d be back the next day. “I will, tomorrow, same time, and we’ll go out,” I say but her eyes are already vacant.

I hold onto life’s ledge as people walk by and step on my fingers. It’s not they mean to, I know that, but I’m losing my grip. And here I am complaining like an old hooker, which I know is tedious, with my oh-so-sad tits and worn-out ass. Abie’s been evicted two times since he left Indian Road, first from Teddington and then his apartment hotel in Forest Hill. He asks me for cash which I give him even though I received only a leased red Neon when he hit the jackpot with his two-and-a-half million bank-trading deal. I pay for the deposit and first month for his cracked white brick apartment hotel, also his cell phone. He’s going to take care of all of us, he says, and I’m sabotaging the girls’ future if I hold back. He says he has no money for food so I give him that too. His deal is closing Monday or Tuesday. On Wednesday he says there’s been a glitch and looks forward to Thursday or Friday. On Friday he says everyone’s left early for the weekend, which is what they do, with their chateaux in the mountains and island retreats.
“You can afford it,” he says, knowing I’m taking home six thousand a month which I told him in a moment of weakness after one of Garth’s hammering sessions.
“I have to pay for the rent, food, Internet, cable, my car—”
“Yeah, yeah, so what about Garth?”
“So what about you?” I say, picturing the old ringer machine in the screened-in summer porch in the Lake Alverna house and the hands of two men, one familiar, giant and golden brown, and the other pasty white with sparse hairs impotently playing around its knuckles, feeding into the rotating rubber rollers.

My heart is like black Pluto’s, our round-headed lab from the Old Forest Road house. Every time the doorbell rang he was there, inching his way in and out. He needed to run free. So I’d hold my Caroline on my ready left hip and grab Pluto’s collar as I opened the screen door. Garth advices me not to say anything about the twenty-thousand in my Bank of Montreal savings account. I was raised in a fifties’ household by a university graduate stay-at-home housewife who taught me about the spiritual side of fucking but didn’t prepare me for the workforce and now like a proud parent, I’m watching my sweet cash stash grow. But I’m wearing out, holding up four people, sometimes five. Muscles need time to recuperate, and I’m over-training and hitting the wall.

“You’re living with your mother,” I say to Garth who is playing solitaire on his computer.
“My mother never gave a damn about me.”
“So you’ve recreated your childhood through me. You’re fucking your mother.”
“I didn’t choose you because of your age.”
“Hey, you’re the one who told me you like older women. Remember when you were eighteen and had an affair with a thirty-eight-year-old?”
He lines up the solitaire cards on the computer screen and I stare at the fatty mass of his trap below his neck. I once asked him about it. “How come you have this?” I said, poking at the lump. He says he has over-developed traps, always did, even when he leaned right out that year he walked everywhere in Guelph. I wanted to tell him he was fat, that old trap just fat like the layer of gelled chicken soup.

Mark says I’m one of the highest paid trainers in Toronto which is a fucking joke because I’m a builder pure and simple. Last month I screeched out of my parking space behind the Promenade and bashed into a taxi which didn’t bother me much since I was driving a rental, my car being repaired at a Maaco’s collision shop on Finch Avenue West. And yesterday as I flung open my driver’s side door, I nicked the shiny exterior of a red convertible belonging to the Greek hairdresser who works at the Hair Connection across from the Women’s Gym. That same morning I was summoned on the loud speaker to reception where an official mall security officer was waiting for me. I had damaged the rear of the hairdresser’s car, there were witnesses, he said. Impossible, I said straightening myself up, both cars having been parked facing due north. I could see he was juiced up. John used to shake his head just to make his water-retaining cheeks wobble for me. I phoned Garth from the back room.
“Garth,” I said, my voice quavering, “they’re going to issue a restraining order to prevent me from coming into the mall. Where I conduct my business.”
“Phone the cops,” he said which pissed me off even more, because what’s the use of living with an ex-bouncer when he won’t get off his ass to protect you?

I wish he would massage my ankles. These ten-hour days make me feel like I’m walking on stumps. Phantom limbs aren’t even an issue.
The hairdresser phoned Mark who called me into his office. He couldn’t have the hairdresser bad-mouthing his gym, he said, but he’d cover my back and would I make just a token payment, possibly two hundred dollars.

Two days later a new client lay on a flat bench in the free weight room and sat up. Going from flat to sitting caused her to wrench her back necessitating the mall’s male emergency crew to enter the women’s gym, which was announced over the loudspeaker system so the orthodox women could scurry out of view into the changing room, leaving only the modern orthodox, conservative, and reform women to stand by and watch. “None of my legs behind-the-head fucking for their puny boxes,” I told Garth. The woman was so incapacitated she needed a bedpan and couldn’t take care of her seventh child, a two-and-a-half year old she was still breastfeeding as she told Mark who then relayed the story to me. The thing was I had interviewed Rivke the way I did all the women I trained, sitting them down and getting them to take me all the way back to their early childhood—I’d go over the whole body top to bottom, a total life inventory.

Mark offered her a year free. She refused. Five hundred. Same. One thousand. She waited a full minutes before accepting although it wasn’t about the money, she said. The money was just a token. It was about her quality of life and being robbed of her maternal abilities. I stood in front of his heavy desk, zipping and unzipping my red fleecy vest that I truly despise although I have five hanging in my condo entrance way closet. The rule is no trainer is allowed on the floor without her red fleecy with Women’s Clubs of Canada embossed across the back. Living my life as I do in the fast lane, I’m always forgetting mine, so I pinch them. Trainers dash about making frenzied inquiries and I always help out. When the time comes for me to leave the gym, which Mark says I never will, “accept it, you’re a personal trainer,” he says, “and one of the best in the business although it was a hell of a job polishing you,” I’m going to burn these hateful vests in the kitchen sink since we don’t have an incinerator like we had in the Montreal apartments. I liked the incinerators, except when Abie threw the green garbage bag with dead baby rabbits down one.

I don’t give a damn about the ladies. I don’t give a fuck if they get sick or injured or if they’re not getting results because they’re gorging in their walk-in closets. And yet every week I give Jeanette who weighs over three hundred pounds a fourth free session even though she despises training. She’s had a tough time—one morning she went to bathroom to take a piss and found her husband dead and hanging. I tried to explain this to Garth, but couldn’t get past the dead and hanging part. “Hanging from what?” he said. “The shower rod?” Every time I see Jeanette I want to ask her so I can go home and tell Garth.

I can’t say I want my old life back. I’m filled with yearning for a refrain I once heard, but when I revisit it, the song turns ugly or mean, and I wander around until I come upon another freshly spun song. It’s not that I mind minor keys, and discords thrill me. “What was I like before Whitby?” I ask Garth who has an eye for detail. “You’re more removed,” he says, “you forget things—summing it all up, you’ve become a zombie.” I tell him his comics have gone to his head, but he’s right. I remember sucking him off in the country—I had a van, I think, something with room to put his seat back and for me to crouch under the glove compartment. I was so glad for his cock in my mouth that I couldn’t breathe, I’d gasp and catch my breath. And once, in one of those gathering moments, I looked out the window. “Look at all those stars!” I said. These days I can’t find the stars when I suck on Garth’s cock. I don’t even look for them.

There are certain things I want in my life again: I want a clothes line; I want to play Sonny Rollins, Edith Piaf, Oscar Brown, Al Jarreau, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Thelonius Monk, Nina Simone, Leonard Cohen, Pete Seeger, Mississippi John Hurt, Elizabeth Cotton, Ravi Shankar, Marvin Gaye, Keith Jarrett, Paul Robeson, Billie Holiday, Fela Kuti, Bach, Mahler, Rachmaninoff, my sweet Chopin nocturnes, Albinoni, Al Green, Seu George, Philip Glass, Mose Allison, Toots and the Maytals, Rev. Gary Davis, Roland Kirk, and Omar Sosa full blast like the biggest brightest come in the world. (In another house, years later, Lisa and I talk about her dancing and my music. “The truth is,” she says, “given the choice of dancing or sex, I’d have to choose dancing.” “You would?” I say, “Because that how I feel about music.” And Lisa adores sex, yelling “yes!” every time she comes, which I know because of that certain house, the one like a husband to me.) And in case God is listening to this anxious atheist, if you could add a house by the water, nothing big or fancy, just something I could settle in and call my own, and a garden. And my girls.

Monday, March 1, 2010

In My Fucking Prime (first edit! erotic memoir)

It’s not that summer grew tired of her fragrant clothes, went off in a snit and returned rebelliously without color, head to toe, a winter nun. A serious stoic. I’m sure there were fazes in between—like that decadent one when she shed all her clothes, all, and became autumn. And later mourned; maybe she had gone too far taking those blunt scissors to her hair to compliment her nakedness, crying for her bareness including her hair. Like late autumn, when it rains and rains and the dank wetness penetrates your bones, she cried like that. And then she grew cold, after all those tears, yes, there are always clues, turning rain to snow the way it does every year and did with Garth and me. Except we still have those glorious winter days like the ones in St. Agathe when my grandfather in his shirt sleeves sat on those metal and royal blue striped canvas folding chairs on the veranda overlooking his vast snowed-in garden and the lake, the sun bathing his skin, transforming it to ruddy brown, that sweet shade I have grown to love.

I was going to write about not knowing when things started to go really wrong with Garth and me. I was going to slide in leaving the girls to shack up with him and how his young son with the curly auburn hair called me Mama. And now his young son is overweight and has his head shaved which Garth says is Talon’s mother’s doing since she thinks it looks both neat and black which I don’t understand with his glow-in-the-dark tight curls. “She’s gay,” Garth offers, and he and Talon grin at each other.

Garth works at Main Street Investment with other brokers whom he says are a waste of skin, yet still goes out with every Friday night, which has something to do office politics and playing the game. “Why don’t you take me anywhere anymore?” I say and then wince. “I’m a builder, damn it—in my fucking prime.” He says I look down on him, that I don’t like his TV shows, sneer at his comics and his playing Duke Nukem with Talon. “But I watch Spawn, and that other guy, you know on Saturday morning, the one with the gargoyles, and that other one with extraterrestrials and good graphics, what’s the one?”
“Goliath to the first one,” he says in his flat voice, “and Reboot to the second.”

Every morning Garth phones Diamond cab.
“Why don’t you take the bus like most people? Who takes a cab every morning?” I plant myself in front of him, my arms across my chest.
“You asking my son to wake up at 6:30 and stand in a packed subway?” he says, a dark cloud crossing his face. My heart aches to kiss him under the sheets; in my head, I’m slamming the door on his cocksure face. What if he leaves now? What’s stopping him from leaving now?
“No—it’s just that it’s so much money, so much money going out, don’t you think?”
“You’re asking me to wake my seven-year-old son up at six-thirty so he has the pleasure of experiencing rush hour.”
“No. I’m not saying that.”
“So what are you saying?”
“I’m not saying anything. Nothing at all.”
“No. You did say something. And I want to hear it.”
“Listen, I’m going to be late. They don’t like when I’m late and I always am. And Lynette’s waiting.”
“You wouldn’t want to keep Lynette waiting.”
“No, no I wouldn’t.”
“You shouldn’t leave and let this fester.”
“Can’t we talk about it later? I’ve got to go, really, these are my steadies.”
“You asked me to tell you. I’m telling you, it’s not a good idea what you’re doing.”
“Fuck you both, fuck you fuck you, someone’s got to pay the bills,” I say on the other side of the door as I sling my gum bag over my shoulder. Even though I’m mud-slinging pissed off, I’ve got this springy step. Different from my builder’s strut, this one is flexed and tightly coiled.

I wanted someone to take care of me, which I didn’t know the moment I saw him and my cunt shimmied across the floor and landed at his feet. I was a serious builder in those days. There were other big guys working out that night, some I knew from my days at hardcore gyms, others from The Workout, Gold’s on Yonge, Worlds, Fitness Connection on Don Mills. Every day he breaks my heart.

He says I’ve become mean. I come home, walk into the bedroom, and shut the door.
He says I don’t listen to him anymore. I interrupt him as soon as he starts talking.
He says we don’t talk anymore.
I say why doesn’t he get a job. I’m dying I say.
He just sits and doesn’t say anything.
Don’t you hear me? I say. I’m falling. Can’t you see I’m falling?
Yes, I see, he says.
You’re a young man. I can’t take care of you this way.
I looked, he says. Dishwasher, gas attendant. They say they don’t need anyone.
Why didn’t you tell me?
That I couldn’t get a job as a dishwasher?
I kiss him. What has happened to us? I say.
Come, I say, and taking his hand, lead him into the bedroom.
The next time I don’t kiss him or lead him into the bedroom. Sometimes I sleep on the sofa. I used to sleep on the couch to get away from Abie.

One night I lie face down on the gray carpet. I stay there for a long time and weep on and off. Like a ghost through a wall, white arms and hands reach into my back.
“Garth!” I say, standing up now. “Garth!”
He is beside me in an instant.
“An angel came to help me. I felt an angel dipping into my back, so I could stand up. And when I did, it had passed, all that made me so sad—I was in a Greek tragedy, like Odysseus’s wife wailing with piercing cries. Did I tell you I played the Chorus in Antigone?”
“Yes,” he says, “you told me.”
“I love you Garth.” I say, leaning my head on his warm chest.
“Oh Janice, you just don’t get it, do you? I never stopped loving you.”

On Nina Street I asked Garth how many years he gave us. Five years, he said. It’s four now and already he’s talking of leaving. “Five months,” he says. Until he saves some money. And then five months pass and he says, “Five months, until I save some money.” I learned about money on Bluffwood Drive when the chair I was sitting on, a sturdy ladder-back chair relocated from the St. Agathe country house, was yanked out from under me. Still more lessons rained down on me until I had nothing sparkling left to lure men with. It was on a slushy sidewalk outside the Deloraine house that I remembered my soul. I hadn’t realized cash had sweet-talked its way into the cartilage between my vertebrae.

All those years I’d spent nourishing that soul of mine, art, music, words, the works, until I didn’t have to feed it anymore. I could go anywhere and that soul would seek out and suck in. The ladies at gym set aside empathetic moments—“How are you? How’s your daughter?” one would say. “What a fine soul you are. This has got to be the most caring place.”I’d say while searching my pockets for a hug, like used gum, with the flavor still intact. And they’d smile, I was their mitzvah. I never knew those words before Abie and his family and then the ladies entered my life. “And yet, you stay smiling, you’re always smiling.” “I have a rich soul,” I’d say.
Given the choice of money or soul, Garth would say money, every time. He says he’d rather his impoverished soul hang out in decent surroundings than on some street corner. I tell him I’m going for both. “Sure,” he says. “Why not?”

I know how to work the floor. My end-of-the-month write-up of accounts consumes a night. The accounts confuse me. I have to match payment receipts with workout times I’ve logged on my client sheets and that been recorded in the training binder. Sometimes I make mistakes and my cheque rings in at one or two or even three hundred dollars less. And other times I invoice again since I have a stash of copies to back me up. All month I add up training fees. I need to know where I stand. The gym has two or three master trainers and I’m one, having the look as I do. Also I’ve been a trainer on and off since I was thirty-eight at the Inn on the Park gym where I also looked the part though not the way I do now. Abie talked me into rowing so I took those learn-to-row classes at the Argonaut club until I heard about Hanlon. I was bow seat on an eight, although I also rowed fours, pairs, and doubles. My second year, I got it into my head that I’d like to single so Michelle, our coach who by the way had the hots for her coach and married him, much as I fell in love with all my coaches and some of them with me, taught me first on a Paluski touring single scull and then on a traditional single Hudson. Rowing is something else. I loved rowing though not as much as building, I guess having started out with building, strayed into rowing, and came back to my first love with as much longing and lust as I’d had in our beginning.

The head nurse with the oily streaked hair and soothing smile tells me Caroline is going on a medication holiday. “A holiday—I can’t imagine,” I say. “The last time we went on a holiday was fifteen years ago, in Hawaii. It’s not that sort is it?”
Before I’d come in, I’d phone, “I’m thinking of coming in today,” I’d say and the nurse would answer, “I’ll go and ask her.” Sometimes she’d say, “Yes, she will see you,” and other times, less often now than at the beginning, I’d wait until she returned with “maybe today is not such a good idea.” There is a Sawtooth Oak in my Gossamer garden, its limbs so high and wide and open; could I not lie on the earth and open myself to something sweet and metaphysical? But inside, dogs guard me. I cannot remember when I last walked about without them in the shadows. I’m like that Billy Holiday song, “You’ve Changed.” I’ve become a ghost town, my eyelids like roller shades pulled down low.

Caroline is walking with me. It’s spring now. She stops and says something that causes me to turn to her and wrap my arms full around her.

I’m in her tiny hospital room, emptying the contents of drawers and one metal locker onto her cot.

She sits in the passenger side of the front seat, her head against the glass as she watches the passing of shapes and colors, some of which she recognizes. I am with her inside her eyes.

After almost two years, I am driving her away from this place she has renamed Camp Fazeka. She says it had a gun room. I tell her I know it was a frightening place and she says, “It’s true, there’s a gun room in there. I saw it.” I tell her Passover is around the bend, what a celebration we shall have and she spits out “I’m not Jewish. My mother and father were Christian athiests. Hail Hitler!” she says, her voice scaling the window. I pull into the emergency lane. A police car pulls up behind me and a cop with a buzz cut walks up to my car.
“Anything wrong?” she says.
“No officer, I’m just taking my daughter home. From Whitby Mental—”
“They burned it down. It’s burned down,” Caroline says in her new shrill voice.
“Hail Hitler!”
“You sure you’re OK?” the officer says.
“I’ll manage,” I say, “it’s just the first day.”
“How old is she?”
I hate talking about Caroline in front of her back.
“The officer wants to know how old you are honey.”
I have to repeat this with a touch on Caroline’s forearm which I figure might ground her.
“I’m one week old, zero pounds, zero feet.”
“She’s twenty-three, officer.”
“They’re lying!” Caroline casts out, her voice zinging out the car into the middle of the 401.
“Well, good luck. I could accompany you back if that’s what you need.”
“We’re be alright, won’t we Caroline?” I say, placing my arm on her forearm which she shakes off.
“We’ll be alright. It’s just a matter of time.”
“Good luck, then.”
“Thank you, officer,” I say and pull out, carefully merging traffic already on its way and going fast.

I am making a single bed in a room with two single beds and a bureau—where is the bureau? Not between the twin beds or under the tilted venetians missing every third slot—the room is in her father’s third floor walk-up apartment on Weston Road. Cayne’s Appliance Warehouse lures men and women who park gingerly on the street, checking once, twice their foreign cars are indeed locked. Beside Cayne’s, a sandwich shop with bars on its windows and doors sits empty. A used-car lot stakes its land claim beside Abie’s building and after that a street-corner Pentecostal Church with a sign “Nonworhippers Welcome.” When we drive up, I point to the library, an old brick building across from the used-car lot.

Abie has set up his office in the living room, part of which serves as a dining room. In the kitchen, grime has invaded all available crevices. His freezer is half full with frozen dinners and there’s a tin of Campbell’s beef stew on the counter. Whenever he answers the phone in the living room, he motions us away with his hands like a dog desperate to get in. I talk to Caroline in a low voice. “Quiet! I’m talking to Germany!” he hisses. “All of Germany, you say?” and Caroline smiles which gives me hope. “He sure puts a lot of energy into waving that arm of his at us,” I say to Caroline. “Let’s go in your room.”

We sit on her bed.
“Oh my darling,” I say, patting her hair. “Come put your head on my lap,” it’s been so long, honey. Rest now.” And she does. At first a bit stiffly, but soon her fear, that thick fog inside her, lifts and for now, we have peace. My grandmother, my Bobi on my mother’s side, used to rub my scalp. I sit with my lost daughter on her cot that reminds me of another mattress in a glass room as I massage her head and forehead until the right arm, wrist and hand ache, but I don’t stop until her thin lids close. And still I continue.