A Dangerous Coffee House

A coffee house is a dangerous place, at least for a writer. The two women at the table next to me are talking about their husbands. Both of their men are apparently evil, and that fact is not changed by the occasional “But he cuts the grass.” One of the brutes is addicted to sports and has no interest in romantic comedies, the current fashionable length of men’s shorts, or stars dancing.  The other woman’s orc likes movies but only the action ones where cars explode, guns blaze, women wear torn shirts and jeans, and men say things like, “Here’s a present for you” and then toss a hand grenade. This Neanderthal only wants to take her to movies that have a number in the title like “Death Wish 6,” and will not trade time with her for An Affair to Remember.  The wives’ conversation epitomizes one of the dangerous truths of a coffee house: Life is a struggle between the brutes and the civilized.

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Two men sitting at separate tables have the first requirement for entrance to a coffee house in Madison, a laptop, but both screens have only spreadsheets on them.  These men are not brutes; they are zombies, and their occasional pecking at the keyboard shows a shallow fascination with numbers amounting to nothing.  For a moment I thought of the possibility of describing them as T-shirted moguls moving millions of dollars with the flick of a finger and creating or gutting corporations based on the digital cell on an Excel file.  No, I can’t go there. They are boring serfs.

A young man with long blond hair and a bad beard just walked in wearing a black T-shirt that says “KNERD.” His thick, dark-framed glasses confirm his T-shirt. He orders two breakfast sandwiches, obviously not caring about his dietal health, and shares one with a young woman who joins him, her thick-rimmed glasses tagging her as another knerd. They may simply believe that the world will not last long enough for their dietary choices to matter. They are plotting a conspiracy, perhaps something that started years ago by downloading pirated music, but now has expanded to hacking NSA files and creating avatars to protect their own privacy while they expose national secrets, even though there are no national secrets anymore. Their current conspiracy is the result of a chance meeting with a fellow knerd, a biologist, who realized and now can prove that the demise of the honey bee population is not due to mites or weed killers as popularly thought, but rather is the result of recruitment of millions of bees by the CIA. These real killer bees are now equipped with tiny surveillance cameras and mini hypodermics.  They are training in a secret location near Death Valley where escape for them is impossible until their “orientation” is complete. The bees work in trios, two camera bees (stereo vision for depth perception back in Death Valley) that fly in formation with one hypodermic bee. Code: Ciel Team 3.

A young man with Knerd genes somewhere in his background is at a table about ten feet away.  He sits alone, but he is not alone.  On his table are an energy drink, a laptop, an iphone, a mini-tablet, and a portable hard drive. The mini-tablet has a Google view of Fort Knox on it.  He is obviously playing some kind of web-based game. Boring.

Oh no, the two women married to brutes just left, their smiles belying the fact that they are going back to lives of quiet desperation and the never-ending battle to raise the consciousness of the world’s lower life forms. Their smiles are enigmatic, as if just talking about their husbands’ shortcomings has made them feel better. I don’t understand. Now they are laughing. Their efforts are heroic.

In the corner is a bearded, middle-aged man whose eyes have the haunted look of a fugitive.  He is typing furiously, either because his UW dissertation is due tomorrow or because he is writing the Great American Novel.  I’m going to go with the Great American Novel. It is the story of (spoiler alert) Lee, a young man born into abject poverty in Tupelo, a lost child his father nicknamed “Hound” before leaving his mother. Hound left Tupelo and failed in several business ventures involving bees – no, involving suede shoes – until he was drafted into the army. Upon his discharge he became an American icon in the entertainment business, really the only business the United States now has, and then, well, his life ends tragically. Yes, it will be the Great American Novel.  His story is our story, minus the private aircraft, sexual encounters, and drugs. I wish this fellow writer well. If nothing else, he types with amazing speed and dexterity.

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Sitting near the window is another middle-aged man who has managed to sneak into the coffee house without a laptop. He has an old-fashioned book before him and a legal pad. He writes with a 1960’s Bic pen. His eyes hold the far-away look of a visionary, but one who has seen it all, and it is all bad.  No, he has seen it all, and he knows that it all passes, and the passing is good. He is writing a memoir, a single copy that cannot be emailed or e-booked, and he wants it in a form that reflects his character. His pad will become a manuscript, his handwriting a reflection of his personality and story.  How unique. It is the story of an observer, one who has lived through and studied four ages, the Age of Mass Production, the Age of Mass Media, the Age of Acceleration, and the Age of Everything Apple. He writes on a pad so that his identity/manuscript/ideas may not be stolen. He divides his pages into three piles, one kept in a bank safety deposit box, one kept under his mattress, and one kept in a backpack that goes with him everywhere. Every third page is kept in each safe place. What he sees is … oh no, he is looking at me, and he realizes I am a writer.  This is terrible.  I cannot bear such scrutiny. The observer cannot be observed or he is no longer the observer.   How can I make things up if…. I’m meltinggggggggggggg…….

A coffee house is a dangerous place.

Two Birds with One Stone

I have a brother-in-law who’s a really smart guy, a PhD in chemical engineering, a guy who thought our boat house and its porch up in the Northwoods ought to have refrigeration, ceiling fans, recharging outlets and lights, so he built his own solar panels and wired the boathouse for all of the above. Yeah, one of those guys. Anyway, one of his best sayings is, “The trick is to make your dysfunction function for you.” I see evidence of this all around. Look at almost any Olympic athlete. These are crazy people, the physical outliers who have small torsos but long legs, so they can swim like mer-people. Then there are the obsessed children who can flex like slinkies so they become gymnasts until their careers are over at seventeen years old. Yeah, those people.

I think people can use their dysfunctions (special talents, obsessions, physical traits, or just weird quirks) to much greater advantage. For example, what if a person has some tendency for things I just don’t understand; let’s say he likes to do math stuff like adding numbers all day. He could work happily to catch the cheaters in Las Vegas or work in a toll booth. Think of the fun with odds, numbers, license plates, and states. And all he would have to say is number words all day. That would be hell for me, but for a person who can actually add and subtract in his head – wow, what an opportunity.

My kind of dysfunction would tend to other areas. I think writers ought to be the guys who work the night desk at hotels. They should have laptops next to the hotel registry from midnight till dawn (perfect for dysfunctional insomniacs) and work on great American novels. Any weird people who check in after midnight could become another Gatsby or Silas Marner.

Artists should take over for window cleaners and instead of cleaning windows that are dirty by the time they finish, they should paint murals on them, and then hose them off and re-paint them a couple of times a year. They could do tunnels to heaven and other perspective drawings like those guys who do the sidewalk chalk art that shows up on the internet twice a year.

Musicians, most of whom need a day job to survive anyway, should be nannies and baby-sitters, as should those who are bilingual. Think of the possibilities. Babysitters shouldn’t be plunking kids in front of a TV or pushing strollers to the park. They should be talking to little kids in Spanish or Polish and playing music to them.

People who are overweight should be personal trainers. All day long they could be telling clients, “No, do your arm curls slowly – here, let me show you. Joey, that’s not how you do a squat-thrust. Do it like this.” Then when they get too conditioned and toned up to be personal trainers, they could become waiters and waitresses where they eat enough to qualify as personal trainers again. In some cases they might eat themselves silly for a while and then get sick of that restaurant’s food like the kids who work in ice cream shops, and then they could become cooks.

Here’s one of my favorite dysfunctions. You know those people who post all that intense political stuff on the internet and never factcheck anything and think Snopes is a family in a William Faukner novel – those people should work for the IRS.

Here are two real cases. I know of an oral surgeon who also ties fishing flies, and his bug creations are so realistic that they scare people. His nickname is “Doc,” as it should be. If I needed an oral surgeon, he’d be the one I wanted. When I found out I needed cataract surgery I had a recommendation on an eye doctor from my father-in-law, but I was still worried since I’d never been in a hospital except to see babies. In the pre-op interview he asked all kinds of questions about my eyes to see what kind of lens he should put in. When I said, “I read a lot and tie flies,” his eyes lit up. “You’re a fly fisherman?” “Yes.” “That’s great. That means if you tie flies, you need a focal point of 14 inches, so I know what lens to put in.” “You tie flies?” I asked him. “Yes.” That’s all I needed to quit worrying about the surgery. If you ever need cataract surgery, get a doctor who can tie a tiny midge on a size 22 hook. No problem.

Golf courses are a dysfunctional use of land. You can’t farm on them, park cars on them or even picnic on them unless you can dodge little dangerous flying objects. I think we should make the dysfunction work for us by combining golf courses and cemeteries. Instead of a tombstone for a person who moved on, we could put in a little name stone angled toward the green, and then if a ball hit it, the ball would bounce perfectly toward the hole just like the advantage of hitting a golf cart path and getting a kicker. You could call it a “Namestone shot,” a lucky thing and as you pass, you could say a blessing on “John Schlemiel, 1927 to 2011.” If I were a golfer, I think I would like that. It would be killing two birdies…. okay, that was uncalled for, I know.

Think of some of the other possibilities. If you’re a high school kid who is failing math, you should be paired up with a fifth grader to teach that fifth grader easier math and then move along with him through sixth grade and so on until you both graduate – and can do math. If you’re afraid of flying, you’d be the best, the most reassuring pilot in the world. No one could be a better janitor than someone who is obsessive/compulsive. Wow, what a clean school you have here, Mr. Tenbroomholder! The possibilities are endless.

If you’re obsessed with movies, you could work for Nielson.
If you’re a gambler….
If you’re a clutterbug….
If you’re a birdwatcher….
If you can’t help blogging, you could, um, blog. Okay, that was uncalled for, I know.

Dysfunction is such a wonderful thing. Heck, I could have been five or six successful things.