Monday, June 8, 2009

Plunging In (Cigar Smoke 6-4-09)

I know I have been accused of being anally retentive. Many of you astute readers, and even some of you stute readers, have mentioned over the years that I have a tendency to discuss certain things that, shall we say, are south of the Mason Dixon Line.

Well, I have tried to stop doing this, because I want to be accepted by all you non anally retentive people and live in a world where the opposite of being anally-retentive is really cool and maybe we could have some ice tea and play Canasta.

But something happened last week. Something so embarrassing and humiliating that I have decided to never go to the bathroom again. Oh, sure, I’ll go Number One, but I will hold in all Number Two urges until I either explode or shoot a few nuns.

I was at my sister’s house in Colorado last week, and I was enjoying talking to Carol and her housemate, Brent. Then I made the fateful decision to go to the bathroom. Excuse the expression, but I did my duty, and then when I tried to flush the results of doing my duty, let’s just say that the flushing was not exactly complete. I looked around for a plunger. No luck. God can be a kidder.

So I go back out to the living room and say to Carol and Brent, “Uh, excuse me, but would you happen to have a plunger?” Brent says, after moistening the twinkle in his eye, “What do you need a plunger for?” I ask my sister why she hangs out with these kinds of people. Finally, Brent brings me a plunger and says, “Be sure to put the round rubber side down, and hold the thin wooden handle in your hands.”

I go back into the emergency area wondering if they have the death penalty for homicide in Colorado. The disaster is still there. It’s a color now I have never seen before. And it has teeth. I plunge my little plunging heart out. Plunge. Plunge. Plunge. But nothing moves. So I go to my extensive plunging background and experience, and I do a really high suction suck with the plunger where I keep making the plunger progressively suction like mad in ever increasing suction sucks so eventually I will be able to suck the enamel off the damn toilet bowl.

I mean, I am really plunge sucking, baby. And that disgusting giant toxic glob of semi-solid and semi-liquid, grossly colored mess just looked back at me. And laughed. A little No. 2 semi-solid waste laugh that I will never forget.

Then I hear Brent’s soothing voice, “You been in there a long time. You need some help?” I think this over. Do I need help? Probably. Will I open the door so he can come in the bathroom in his own house and see what has come out of my body and is now coiled in swirls of wrongly-colored revenge and poised and ready to cause emotional damage to the next person who sees it? Probably not.

But, of course, after a while, I had to open the door. Brent came in. He looked right at where I thought he would look first. He staggered a little. And then said, “Jesus, this would make Richard Pryor faint.”

Then Brent plunged for a while. He’s younger than I am so maybe he plunged a bit better, but the results were the same. Nothing had moved, except our stomachs. If a director had asked for a disgusting bathroom, and walked in on this, he would have said, “Perfect!”

We worked on it for 10 more minutes and then he yelled, “Carol, come on in here.” Jeez. I had tried to protect my sister all my life, and now this. Carol came in. She looked you-know-where and she grabbed the towel rack and took a few breaths to get some oxygen. When she was able to speak, she said, “Did we have the same parents?”

So there we were. Me and Brent and Carol and The Thing in the toilet bowl. I asked if maybe Carol could call a few of her neighbors over to look at what had come out of her brother’s body. She said something quite un-ladylike into the handkerchief she was holding up to her nose. I further inquired if maybe she could get her church pastor over here. (We still had some space in the bathroom.) Or maybe some Girl Scouts could squeeze into the shower. Hell, we could call 911. Let’s just see if the Colorado Cops could Protect and Serve that.

Oh, I guess it’s kind of funny now that it’s over. Sure, Carol and Brent looked at me like I had an alien coming out of my chest. A coyote-ugly non-green alien. Yes, it was embarrassing. And yes, I was humiliated. But I think in some weird way it brought us all closer together.

We laughed about it for a couple of days. We all wondered if Hallmark made a card for this. And then when I was driving out of Carol’s driveway, I could faintly hear Brent saying, “I don’t care if he is your brother. He does that again, I kill the sucker.”

Jim Laris is a former publisher and owner of the Weekly. Contact him at jimlaris@mac.com.