This Is Not the Way Home

“Familiarity breeds contempt, while rarity wins admiration.”
–Apuleius (124 AD – 170 AD)

Last Thursday, on my way home from work, my train missed my stop. Now I could have expected to possibly miss my stop from train-induced slumber, but never have I been on a train that missed a stop.

To be clearer, the train performed its customary stop, but the doors on my car did not open. Unable to disembark, the train soon carried on its way, with us, the unwilling passengers who were unable to disembark, still jammed behind the train’s closed doors. Our station quickly passed behind us.

“Press the black button!” someone from our end of the car yelled to those imprisoned behind the doors at the far end of the car. A yelling chorus soon began. “Press the darn button!”

Someone finally pressed the button, apparently alerting the conductor to our unfortunate dilemma, and the train halted in the No Man’s Land that was neither my stop nor the next stop, but somewhere between. Outside, there were only scrub bushes and the gravelly bed of the train tracks.

Eventually, the voice of the conductor came over the intercom, explaining that we would back up to the wayward station we had passed. But there was no movement for five minutes. Finally, the voice on the intercom again: “We do not have permission to back up. We will continue on to the next stop.”

Mild panic spread through the still-standing passengers. How would they get to their awaiting autos, parked at the train station behind us, quickly receding from view? How long would it take to catch the next train going the opposite direction? With some of the women wearing tortuous high heels, would they be forced to walk back to our distant, intended station?

I decided not to wait to find out. When the train finally halted at the next station and disgorged us like confused tourists, I disembarked and guided a blind fellow traveler to the westward-bound boarding platform of this unfamiliar station. Then I started walking homeward.

Fortunately, this station and my usual station were equidistant to my home; I would later measure both routes homeward to be an identical 1.9 miles.

Like ants on auto-pilot returning to their mound, our well-traveled routes always seem shorter than less familiar ones. Today’s path forced me toward new decisions. The homeward hike seemed far longer because of the choices along the way. Which red light would offer me the shorter wait to cross the street? Would the sidewalk or bicycle path be the more direct route? With no experience to inform me, I followed my heart. A broad wooden bridge stretched before me on the bike path. In the growing dusk, I was all by myself, and I stopped.

Construction workers must have left this wooden bridge for my use alone, at this time, on this day, to service my displaced homeward hike.

To my left, I heard the distant sound of the freeway. To my right, a partially-occupied condo complex waited silently for the arrival of the inhabitants at the workday’s conclusion. In the distance, a train horn heralded the arrival of the westbound train that would return the displaced commuters to their familiar surroundings, ants returning to the mound.

A fallen leaf blowing along the wooden bridge reminded me that there are some choices in life that we are able to select, like a well-worn path home. And there are some that we don’t get to choose, like uncooperative train doors.

And sometimes, the only choice we really have is whether we make a graceful transition between the two.

Zombies in Hollywood

I first learned of the famed corner of Hollywood and Vine while reading a Dennis the Menace comic as a young boy. The famed Taft Building still stands here, once home to offices of the silent film era’s movers and shakers including Charlie Chaplin and Will Rogers. Nearby, of course, are other landmarks such as the Capitol Records Building, the Hollywood Walk of Fame, the Hollywood sign and Graumann’s Chinese Theater.

And then, there’s this. A few weeks before Halloween, these early celebrants paraded on this famous corner of Hollywood and Vine—in fact, the Zombies were on parade. They groaned, they grunted, they limped on wounded limbs. They stared their otherworldly, blank stare into my eyes. And then, to my relief, they moved on without capturing me to join in their ghoulish procession.

 

ER #16

On Monday night, I escorted my wife to the hospital. She had somehow acquired an extremely painful and potentially very dangerous abscess. The emergency room was loaded with a riot of bacterial- and viral-infested and otherwise-wounded victims. Some displayed hastily bandaged injuries still seeping blood. An elderly woman moaned in her wheelchair, clasping a cloth over her face as she rocked back and forth, while her husband, supporting himself in his own walker, stared blankly alternately at her and the wall. There was rare seating available for emergency room johnny-come-latelies. I estimated 75 people crammed into this bin of ailing people. “Golly,” I thought to myself. “If it’s this bad in America, what’s it like in Bangladesh?”

Eventually, after completing multiple copies of forms each repeating the same questions, my wife’s name was called. At least, we think it was called. With no speaker system in the room, the hoarse yells of the hospital staff were barely audible above the ruckus of shrieking babies, the generalized sniffling, sighing, and moaning of the occupants, and the horseplay of those who obviously only accompanied the core populous of the emergency room.

She disappeared behind curtained glass doors. I waiting for her to be processed—blood- and urine-sampled, fingerprinted, name-and-birthdate-verified, mother’s-maiden-name-queried and the like. I passed the time chatting with my high school-aged neighbor about the perils of football while examining his purpling right ankle. More than two hours later, when my wife had still not returned, I asked about her progress. I was informed that she had been admitted into an Emergency Room, and, yes, would I like to go in? I wondered how long that I, like a hound dog anticipating his master’s return, might have waited along with the huddled masses of our fellow sufferers.

I found my wife in a non-private group room, leaning over the frame of bed ER #25, experiencing frightful pain and nausea that made it impossible for her to lie down. Mercifully, shortly thereafter we were escorted to ER #16, where she lay down and stared at the ceiling. Eventually, a nurse popped her head in, and told us our wait for a room would not be long. Six hours later, I had memorized every inch of ER #16. I knew which medical products were in short supply and had retraced the trail of the curious dried blood drops on the floor.

Finally, the long-awaited curtain pullback from the emergency room doctor! He informed us that he would create an incision to relieve the pressure and blood from the offending abscess. Unfortunately, the procedure preceded the administration of a stiff painkiller; only a weakly numbing drug wound its way through the clear plastic tubing to the needle dripping in her arm.   

I’m glad I departed the room prior to the doctor’s medical procedure. Upon my return, my pale and trembling wife reported that the pain from the events–the slicing and enthusiastic squeezing of the barely-dulled abscess–rated right up there with childbirth. There were new trails of blood to track on the floor. I helped creatively arrange my wife on the gurney to best contain her newly inflicted pain.

Time passed slowly. The gurney was uncomfortable, not intended for extended lounging by the wounded. It was narrow and the plastic was slippery, contributing to the fall to the cold, tile floor that my wife incurred as she inaugurated a hazardous journey to the solitary men’s/women’s combo restroom. It was down the hall, hidden in the corner of the non-private patient emergency room receiving area, where patient beds lined the walls like fighter planes on the deck of a Navy aircraft carrier.

As the hours dragged on, we would each have opportunity to visit the restroom many times. I narrowly missed the pandemonium that ensued when one out-of-sorts patient yelled for help from within this restroom. He claimed he could not manage his quest for a successful “Number Two” experience alone; he needed assistance. When none came, his yelling continued until he finally exited the room, holding his prize feces aloft in his hand like a treasure-hound, for all of us to see. His triumph did not last long; nurses descended upon him from every corner, like—well—like flies on poop. I know this happened because my wounded wife witnessed it all during her long trek from said restroom back to ER #16.

The night lengthened, and I grew covetous of my wife’s little gurney and the brief naps it provided her. My chair’s legs protruded far enough that I could not place it close enough for the wall to support my head. I attempted several alternate variations. In one construction, I extended my buttocks nearly off the end of the seat so that my neck could barely catch the back of the chair. Another variant took the opposite approach, featuring the top of my head protruding over the top of the chair so my crown barely reached the support of the wall. The frailty of human anatomy proved both of these options unsatisfactory. I found myself fitfully alternating between one and the other, leaving precious little time for sleep.

ER #16 held us captive for nearly 30 hours. We greeted our first nightshift nurse for the second time at the beginning of her second night’s 12-hour shift. Doctors drifted in, all asking the same questions we had already provided the previous visiting M.D. My wife’s wound was un-bandaged, examined, and re-bandaged multiple times.

During all that time, I was preoccupied with sleep, until finally, regretfully too late, I figured out what should have been obvious. Borrowing a style from my fellow train-riding commuters, I decided to do the Train-Rider’s Head-Bob. I sat somewhat erect on the chair and allowed my chin to drift downward in slumber, risking a dangerous neck sprain should my head collapse to one side. But it didn’t. For 15 precious minutes that night, I slept; it was suddenly interrupted by the final doctor’s visit, telling us to prepare for surgery.

The purgatory of Emergency Room #16 finally concluded. Perhaps our release depended upon my eventual discovery of the successful, if brief, napping technique.

The doctor told me that my wife would be in surgery for an hour, and would I please stay in the surgery waiting room. Two and one-half hours later, in the middle of my second night without sleep, and with plenty of time for my sleep-deprived brain to conjure all sorts of visions of what was transpiring, I was informed that she was out of surgery and resting comfortably in her room, and would I like to see her. You bet.

Tonight we are home. We’ve been gone two days, which is 48 hours, or 2,880 minutes, and it felt every second of it.

Meanwhile, the waiting room at the hospital is likely still full.

The First and the Best

The passing of Apple founder and genius Steve Jobs leaves a cavernous hole in the unrelenting technological race to be the First and the Best. Pundits question whether Apple will be able to keep cranking out cutting edge creations that others seem only capable of feeble imitation. Time will tell.

Well-deserved accolades honoring Steve Jobs will go on and on.

The rest of us are not Steve Jobs. So how can we leave our own small mark on our world?

Each time I hike from Santa Monica to Venice Beach, I pass the very first Hot Dog on a Stick stand. In 1946, Dave Barham bought the concession stand for $400, money he borrowed from his older brother. He named his new enterprise Party Puffs. Having discovered there were no chain store distributors for corn dogs, he developed the now-famous corn dog, which could easily be eaten while walking the beach. He renamed his enterprise Hot Dog on a Stick around 1960. The unmistakable waitress costumes were designed to invoke familiarity; customers perceived a familiar person each time they were waited on. Their tall caps were meant to suggest Las Vegas showgirls. To push the scale further, his servers stood behind the counter on platforms to appear even taller. Barham died in 1991, at the age of 77, and Fredrica Thode succeeded him as the corporation’s president. Barham had hired her as a receptionist in 1980. Today, the company is an employee-owned corporation with more than 100 locations.

Barham’s governing principle was keeping things simple and making it all entertaining.

A corn dog is no Apple computer. And Dave Barham is no Steve Jobs. But keeping it simple and entertaining are values they both promoted.

When our world seems to become more complex and less fun, there’s probably a lesson there for each of us.