Another Perfect Day In Paradise
prose
Certain things cannot be erased from
memory. My first trip to my new home at sunset. The car was rolling on a velvet-like
ribbon under a perfect blue sly. Palm trees on the right, multicolored flowers
bursting from bushes of an intense green, like a scream, like a violation of
the view. And the buildings – private banks and hotels – glass and steel,
sparkling in the dimming daylight. Peace. I had the feeling of tobogganing into
a fairyland with vacation homes, bushes and trees properly trimmed like
schoolboys hair on their first day of classes. Everything like a vividly
colored picture book, like a gift on one’s birthday.
My first unspoken question was: do they
die down here? I was actually so confused in asking it. Perhaps I should have
asked: people never die here, do they? The more we were advancing on the tiny
streets with fairylike houses and gardens, the more I was convinced that death
could not reach over here.
Then it started, an unavoidable process
of intoxication with perfection. The perfect home, in the perfect street, in
the perfect neighborhood with perfect lawns and a perfect park, and a perfect
heated pool, in a perfect town, from a perfect state(the Golden State), in the
most perfect country in the world as most people believe. Well, I don’t. That’s
exactly why I have chosen to live it.
How funny! A reality that is very much like a
hallucination. What would doctors say about that? They only know of
hallucinations which appear as reality. Well, gentlemen, this time I think I
have confused you. To me this elaborated reality, manufactured, transplanted
from other continents and seeded onto perfection here for the praise of
civilization and the spoiling of people, to me this reality does seem a farce.
Yes, folks, a farce of the end of the twentieth century.
And things are at the very beginning.
Only yesterday at the time of a perfect sunset on the Pacific we passed in our
car by these hills with houses under construction. I had just discovered that
the few villas on the hills were private property, perfect gated mansions.
Well, I said to myself: let them develop. Let more people enjoy the
peacefulness of a perfect life.
Actually my question uttered in loud
voice was: who inhabits up there, those houses perched on the hill? Rich
people, came the answer. How about a house on the beach with its perfect small garden,
and stairs with a gate and a lock, with the private boat moored at the private
pier always with a barbecue grill?
On the beach, just in front of the
perfect vacation homes, seagulls were flocking together to attack somebody’s
food basket.
Hungry sea gulls were fighting like
beggars for a bite of a sandwich, shrilling and flying over the ocean. Watching
their flight I couldn’t tell the seagull with the blood-red spot on its beak
from the private plane in its perfect flight for pleasure, business or school;
the seagull with the blood-red spot on its beak from the private boat on a
pleasure sail.
Wild waves rolling helter-skelter
children and adults made me think that the sand we were treading – people and
birds, was for all. The beach, no private property. The borderline between
dream and reality was there. Where ? Nowhere and everywhere. Where were we? On
the horizon, Santa Catalina Island at sunset. Unreal beauty. Hallucination of
the senses.
The sky stained with blood-red spots.
There does not exist any painter capable of painting this, I said to myself.
The new moon and the evening star competing with the last sunbeams of a late
November sunset on the Pacific.
From Aliso Pier we could watch the
seagulls rocking the waves like children in a swing. What a gratuitous job
painting !
A tall blond Scandinavian looking
homeless came to us stretching a begging hand forward: “Hi, folks, givah buck
to a poor…”
Perfect misery, you look very much like
life. Perfect life, you look very much like death.
By the end of a perfect day, like a
Japanese garden in Kyoto, in autumn – a private garden, twenty years old - the
night finally falls. Deep and dark like the sleep of death – macabre dance of
old faces and places which do not exist anymore but, very familiar to me, seem
real, have volume and color, come from everywhere, aggressing me, taking me
back…in time…in space, into night, into nightmarish sleep – spasmodic dance in
the dark.
“Deşteaptă-te,
române,
din somnul cel de moarte…”
The dream starts at daybreak.
Tuesday, December 1st, 1992
Perfect sunrise in the Santa Ana
mountains. The bedroom window, a
Hollywood scenery, of course.
We go downstairs to have breakfast.
Dining room with patio view. Glass window of color photo mural ?
9:00 a.m. Breakfast with milk and
cereals, orange juice and newspapers. ORANGE COUNTY, Los Angeles Times:
The A to Z’s of Sleep Study: “For so
long people have slept with so many problems, they don’t think it is
physiological when it is. This is really interesting because the brain is talking
to you.”
A humming bird is buzzing as we enter into the real again.
Nothing spoils the scenery of this
perfect morning.
California - another perfect day in
paradise.
x x
x
10:00 a.m. Long distance call.
Everything is fine back home.
11:00 a.m. A bit late at Melvyl training
session.
12:00 noon. Coffee and a chocolate chip at
the Cornerstone Café.
Finished reading chapter from Umberto
Eco’s Name of the Rose. First Day, Terce: “Divine Providence has ordered that
the universal government , which at the beginning of the world was in the East,
should gradually, as the time was nearing fulfillment, move westward to warn us
that the end of the world is approaching, because the course of events has
already reached the confines of the universe.”
1:00 p.m. Lunch at home. After lunch
went to the pool for a change.
4:00 p.m. On campus. Social Sciences
Hall, room 101. Contemporary moral problems – discussions.
5:00 p.m. Humanities Hall, room 100.
Theory and Literary Criticism. Lecture. The professor seemed to me exhibiting
himself as a jester. He was jumping all the time in his Nike shoes trying
desperately to be popular with his students. Use and abuse of slang: “Aristotle
was a smart Greek who was making a lot of dough with his Lyceum.”
I found this goofy if not embarrassing
for someone holding a PhD.
6:00 p.m. Buy one, get one free.
Satisfaction guaranted or your money back. News and commercials on TV.
Hot chocolate in the patio.
7:00 p.m. At my desk with a very smart
friend, my personal word processor.
Option 1. Create, edit or view document.
CV. Curriculum vitae. I wanted to erase
it and my computer asked me: Are you sure? NO.
I tried. I really tried twice but I
failed. Certain things just cannot be erased from memory. It’s better to view
or add than to erase.
Option 2. ERASE the document in memory
to create a new document.
Does not T.S.Eliot tell the same in “The
Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock ”? There
will be time to murder and create.
How strange it seems to me that live
should emerge from death, from sacrifice.
8:30 p.m. Dinner for two. Beef roast and
potatoes, lettuce salad and fruit. Beef, red meat.
Suddenly it came back that feeling of
fainting, of not accepting life anymore. The burden of eating and sleeping day
after day, night after night. The food, daily sacrifice. And the memory of every
Easter holiday with Pascal lamb and eggs dyed red like stains on retina. Every
gesture at those holy meals like a Christian initiation into a ritual, like the
sacrilege of eating flesh. My hands vacillating in using the knife and the
fork. Mamma took the knife off my hand very scared. I just couldn’t chew my
food. They had their hands blood-red from the eggs they touched. Those stains
last.
Certain things cannot be erased from
memory.
I remember my younger sister one Easter
week. When she opened the refrigerator and saw the head of the lamb with those
reproachful eyes wide open, she screamed. Mamma came in a hurry.
My sister was trembling and mumbling:
“He, he was looking at me…”
I saw mamma splitting the head of the lamb
with an ax and taking out the brains. She cooked them in a soup and served it
very warm. She said to me: “Don’t let your soup get cold”. I was eating my
tears with a soupspoon, horrified and obedient, my whole body and soul refusing
the idea of that abject meal. The brains of the sacrificial lamb like poison in
my mouth.
Thank God there exists salvation.
9:00 p.m.Music therapy.”Luciano Pavarotti. Hits
from the Lincoln Center.” Greatness, magnificence, perfection.
10:00 p.m. Bed time.
Another perfect day in paradise.
_________________________________________________
*Wake up, Romanian, from the sleep of
death
(National Anthem of Romania, author's translation;
**Eco,Umberto,"The Name of the Rose",1983,p.35; Harcourt Brace
Jovanovitch Publishers, New York;
translated from the Italian by William Weaver;
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©Elena Malec, California, December 1992.
All rights reserved.