“If I were given a choice to have any car in this lot, which
one would I choose?” I would ask myself,
walking through a parking lot.
Or….
If I could choose any man to be with, who would I choose, I
would think as I sat in a restaurant with a first date that would never
escalate into a second.
Or….
If I could look like anyone, who would I choose, I would
fantasize as I watched “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.” No decision was necessary as the answer was
right there on the screen.
Or….
If I could be wearing any outfit in the room, which would I
choose, I would think with envy as I mentally stripped the wearer bare.
As an adult I continue playing that game. But now I do it to avoid real decisions. Decisions to be made as part of real life with
real risks.
I now find myself asking myself, “Self, if you had to decide
on losing one sense, which one would it be?”
We have five. I had
to look that up. And for those who need
to be reminded: Hearing, smelling,
tasting, feeling and sight. For some
reason I thought thinking was a sense.
Foolish me. But then as I look
around, I am reminded that had it been a sense, it was lost long ago by a whole
species.
I think about losing the sense of hearing. Being a sufferer of a non-fatal but
enormously irritating and angst producing condition called Tinnitus, the
reality of my hearing being compromised is very real and has already taken
somewhat of a minimal toll. Its loss is the never
hearing one’s own breath and other sounds, both natural and manmade, that give
us a sense that we’re not alone. I think
of never being able to hear them and my breath doesn’t come.
I think about losing the sense of smell. Well, allergies and accompanying congestion
have introduced me to that reality.
Then, oddly, I think of the cat litter box and when last I cleaned it. And I think of the fragrance of flowers and
the Night Blooming Cereus that blooms ever so infrequently on my side porch,
sending out a whispering scent that sweetens my world. I think of the smell of pizza crisping in the
oven and the smell of new books opened for the first time. I think of the smell I so adored of my horse breathing
softly into my face, a mix of cut grass and bundled hay. And I think of hygiene and all the showers
I’ve taken and all the products I’ve used to make sure I never fouled my
surroundings. And then I think of all
the odors the body emits and I put smell in its own category.
I think about losing the sense of taste. It brings to mind a wonderful and talented
actor friend of mine, Phil Bruns. We did
the debut of an off-Broadway play together called Spitting Image. Oh, too many
years ago - 1960 something. During
rehearsals, we’d break for dinner and fall into a local Mexican restaurant,
ordering Margaritas upon hitting the chairs.
He’d order something stronger having drunk with the likes of Richard
Burton, Peter O’Toole, Richard Harris and who knows who else. He then ordered a side of red hot chili
peppers. He chose a big, shiny one and
delivered it to his mouth, chewed down on it with a grin and swallowed it. The three of us – Sam Waterston, Barbara
Cason and Walter McGinn – stared in disbelief.
“How did you do that,” I asked, open jawed. His answer: “I smoke too much; I drink too
much and I can’t taste a damn thing.” He
smiled and continued to drain his drink and eat his peppers. It didn’t seem like he missed taste at
all. I ordered my Chicken in Mole and
knew I’d miss the taste of that.
I think about losing the sense of feel and realize how
tactile I am. How I drew my hand across the
outer wall at the Petit Trianon to get historical vibes Marie Antoinette might
have left behind had they existed. And
how addicted I am to the feel of my
cat’s soft fur; and how I feel comforted by the feel of a hot shower raining on
my face and body on a chilly morning; and how I love the familiarity of flannel
on a cold night; and how I love the texture of sand under my feet; and the feel
of velvety petals of a rose gently touched; and the feel as the tips of my
fingers tap the keyboard and wonder how I would do without it and how
impossible it would be. And how I have
felt the slicing of my finger with a sharp knife and the searing heat that produces
a blister and realize there is reward and risk to feeling.
Then I realize, in my avoidance, that I have left to last
the sense I would never want to lose.
I think about losing my sense of sight, a fear that once translated into
a nightmare. Fortunately, I don’t
remember nightmares, or dreams for that matter.
But I did remember this one. It
was the fear of not being able to escape darkness and feeling closed in, a
prisoner in my own head. Terrified, I
awoke into another darkness, this one the darkness of night. I remember wiping the moisture from the back
of my neck as I recognized the stream of moonlight coming in through my
window. I find myself even now having
trepidation as I write this in the glare of a November afternoon.
Sight! The window,
portal, gateway through which images, real or imagined, enter our brain. It seeds our cognitive
ability to recognize colors, hues and light and darkness. We see and make judgments about who to and
who not to love and what to and what not to include in our often carefully
created space. I think about those
who’ve never had sight and want to know their thoughts about how they’ve lived
without it. And then I remember trying
to explain the color red to an acquaintance who had been blind from birth. I couldn’t.
The memory startled me. To never know red. Or to go blind and forget red. I can feel the emotions well up as I type
this. To never again see the candlelit
faces of Carravagio or the brilliant thick swirls of Van Gogh blues and
yellows. To only feel the sun and not
see how it changes the world around us.
To never see a smile only hear a laugh.
To never know how I look to myself or others. To fricken not recognize a typo or where I am
on the page. To be lost and have to be
found - kind of like Hide and Seek but
now called Blind and be Sought.
Then I realize that
this decision game of Sense Ditching is an activity of such nonsense that there
isn’t even an app for it. And there’s an
app for everything. And I realize that
as I’ve lived this long without making decisions, I can make it the rest of the
way. That's just my decision.
4 comments:
Thanksgiving...a perfect time to be grateful for all the senses we do have.
www.DavidSGeorge.com
Oh, yeah? Not the turkey who ended up on the platter. But then we can assume that the turkey who's still gobbling is as grateful as can be. Assuming he's free range.
Wow, did this make me think! At least I'm still capable of that, sort of. I enjoyed this, Mad, as I enjoy everything you write.
Sher, thank you so much for your comment. Thank you for letting me know that I'm not just writing for myself. It gives me reason to write more.
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