Pill Talk by Kenneth Weene
It wasn’t my
recent birthday that got to me; it was my checkup.
I have for some time decided
that I would measure my age not by years but by the number of pills I take each
day. That was the day that a cholesterol drug had to be added, which brought
the number to six including that daily vitamin pill. In a fit of childish
stubbornness, I refuse to include the antihistamines I take so often; they are
more like a life companion lurking about and awaiting contact with flowers, grass,
trees, or dust. Given that list those pink pills have become the uninvited
guest in my life.
Two years later a good friend
suggested I add a supplement, something to offset side effects of that “statin”
drug. I resisted, started, stopped the new pill, re-studied the issue, argued
with myself, and eventually raised the number to seven. I was seven pills old.
No, I wasn’t going to count the antacids that had joined those antihistamines.
Sure I took one every other day, but it was hardly a measure of my aging that
food was so often indigestible.
That was enough – seven pills
old. I counted myself lucky. Many of my friends were on far more. Better yet,
two of the seven were over-the-counter medications. Maybe they shouldn’t count
as full pills even if I did take them every morning. Still, seven was clearly
older than six. It had been a blow. But over time I had come to live with
reality. Seven pills it would be.
I should have known better. I
never schedule doctors’ appointments right around my birthday. My ego is
fragile enough. I look in the mirror each year and appraise the damage. That’s
when I count the pills and breathe a sigh of relief. Seven pills and no more.
But this year by a scheduling fluke I ended up in my doc’s office the day after
my birthday.
I made the best of it. I even
brought him a copy of my newest novel, Tales From the Dew Drop Inne. I was very
consciously saying, “See, my mind is still sharp. I’m just fine.”
After a bit of poking and
prodding, I obliged the customary urine sample and allowed the resident vampire
to suck a couple of vials of blood from my easily available veins. “Piece of
cake,” I thought as I headed home.
Two days later his assistant
called. “Ken, you’re low on vitamin D. He wants you to take 300 units a day.
We’ll draw your blood again in six weeks.”
The pills are tiny; yet they
carry so much weight. Vitamin D – isn’t that something you get from sunshine
and drinking milk? Isn’t that for strong bones and teeth? Good Lord, is my
skeleton melting away? Am I shrinking? Disappearing?
That's when it hit, the great
fear and trembling of aging. It isn’t that I have gone from being seven pills
old to eight but that I am terrified of disappearing in the sad way the elderly
have. It is a shrinking away – no one wants to hear you tell the old stories,
nobody want to walk slowly enough to keep you company. The grandchildren no
longer want you to play with them – only drop them off at the best hiding
trail. Your grown children come to visit and ask in a voice that suggests you
are no longer there what they can do for you – what you can no longer do for
yourself. You become irrelevant, unnoticed, a frail body propped on a bench
until the pigeons notice that you are gone and go elsewhere to look for bits of
bread.
No. NO! I cannot accept it. I
will do what I must. Not the gym – don’t be silly. I shall begin another book.
Until it comes out, I hope that doctor can refrain from adding number nine.
Some Questions for Ken
Ken and Sadie |
Your background of teaching, psychology, and
pastoral counseling, are all fields where you help others. Now that you're a writer,
do you feel a sense that your writing comes to your aid in that it provides you
a means to help cope with concerns?
I hope that my writing will help people to
understand what life can be like for those who aren’t quite so happily
situated. I write about widows, quadriplegics, infertile women, lonely men,
people dying of AIDS; and that’s just in Widow’s Walk. Hopefully, I am drawing
on my interpersonal sensibilities and knowledge to help readers get a deeper
understanding of what it means to cope.
You describe your writing
as "tragi-comedic" and leaning toward the dark side. Yet, I
wonder if a novel truly captures life if it can leave out both the tragic and
the comedic side of life? Any further thoughts about this? Who is your target
audience?
If we don’t appreciate the tragic-comedic, we
end up losing sight of what makes us all “more nearly human than otherwise.”
Life is very much like a baby first learning to walk, falling down, perhaps
crying for a bit, but then getting up and trying again. Each time that little
one lands on his/her bottom we tend to laugh. But, when the child tries again,
we cheer and applaud. My characters are very much like that kid. Hopefully
readers get that same sense of alternating sympathizing and chuckling. For example,
almost every chapter in Tales From the Dew Drop Inne tells us of human foibles
and also of the need for these characters, who are barely holding on in the
world, to connect to and care about one another.
So, who are my target audience? First, since I love
the sound and feel of words, it is people who share that passion for poetic
writing. Second, because of my sense of what life is, it is people who feel the
“tears of the heart,” an emotional connection that is so uniquely human.
Here's pushing you a bit against the wall (hope
you're not flinching too much): want to share one of your favorite paragraphs
from your novels as an example of tragi-comedic?
That’s a bit hard since you really need the
entirety to capture the duality of emotion, but I’ll try—not with a single
paragraph but a short excerpt: the beginning of Chapter thirty-one from Memoirs
From the Asylum. I think it captures the balance between sorrow and comedy that
is so essential to life. In this chapter, the narrator, a patient in the
hospital, is… Perhaps it is enough to just say that he is. The Marilyn to whom
he refers is a catatonic patient whose hallucinatory world forms another of the
“memoirs” in this novel. Buford Abrose is the resident physician who treats
them both.
So let the madness begin:
“Sanctuary,” we
scream. “Sanctuary!” We, the new hunchbacks, the new deformed, we have founded
a new church, the cathedral of mental illness. Devoid of God, yet serviced by
chaplains – perhaps not chaplains as much as missionaries, missionaries sent by
make-believe-caring people who want no contact, caring people who do not care,
caring people who donate balaclavas in the heat of summer and shorts for us to
wear in winter.
“Do not release your huddled masses,”
they say, “but give them the leavings of our church bazaars that our
consciences might sleep more easily.”
“Give them the
unsolds of our stores that our tax deductions may show love.”
A violent death in
the midst of madness. “Keep them locked in. They’ll murder us in our sleep. And
here are woolen mittens to wear while they are locked in their secure
over-heated wards.”
It is cold –
unforgiving cold – the kind of cold that creeps around doors and through
windows. Unwelcome, unbidden, it chills not only the body but the spirit as
well. The winter rain lashes at the windows and pelts off with the crack of
whips. Rivers stream from leaders eroding the gravel and overflowing the
sewers. The hospital is under attack from the elements. It is as if the heavens
are trying to obliterate it – us. Flush madness into the sea, and what do you
have? A sea of madness, a sea in which we are adrift – as if we have ever been
safe at anchor.
It is during this
time of complete confinement created by the conspiracy between the particles of
death, law, politics, and weather that Allan
washes into our unhappy lives. Allan, the latest bit of detritus to find its
way onto our island of the mad, claims to be a philosopher, a searcher after
true knowledge. It had, he assured us, only been with that intent that he had
been watching through the windows of various women. “Knowledge requires
transparency,” he opines with a deferential smirk and a knowing nod, “which
means that windows are there for use in both directions.”
Allan takes up a
position outside Marilyn’s room, a position from which he can indulge his
endless obsession with watching while she lies in catatonic nothingness. It is
only with great effort that the aides can remove him from his sentry’s duty and
close him out from her care. When she is periodically folded into a geri-chair
and placed along the dirt stains of the dayroom wall, he stands by her, resting
against the wall witha look of extreme satisfaction. At some point he offers to
feed her, and, with no objection from the ever-silent Marilyn, Allan takes over
that duty – watching, ever watching as she slowly masticates and swallows.
“I am content,”
Allan tells Buford Abrose. “Demosthenes searched for a natural – an honest –
man, and I have found – in her most primitive – the natural woman. Marilyn is
total honesty. I am content.”
“But she’s
catatonic. What on earth is natural about that?”
“I am content,”
Allan repeats. “Let us talk about something else.”
“Well, what
brought you to the hospital?”
“The police car.”
And for fun: You're originally a New Englander
but now live in Arizona. Do you have any funny incident that shows you can't
take the New Englander out of you?
First, let me note that I have spent more of my
life in the mid-Atlantic states, New York and New Jersey, than I have in New
England. Still, I call myself a New Englander not only because of my accent,
which people catch almost at once, but also because of a certain sensibility —
a sense of roots.
Since there aren’t many “native” Arizonans
compared to the vast numbers of “new-comers,” especially not in the
Phoenix-Scottsdale area, I am always particularly glad to meet natives. They,
on the other hand, are less thrilled to meet me. I guess there’s a conflict for
them: on the one hand wanting the economic development that growth provides and
on the other wanting to hang on to a world of open spaces, horses, and
six-guns. They assume that I can’t imagine that world; after all I’m from the
East, the world of crowded cities.
Having done quite a bit of my own growing up in
small town environments, I am aware of a very different distinction. In New
England we assumed that there was a shared, community basis for life. Decisions
were made at town meetings and while sitting around the soda fountain. In
Arizona I find much more emphasis on the individual, on an attitude of “I’ll do
what I damn well please.”
Given that libertarian bent — some might call
it more an oppositional turn of mind — it seems inevitable that people here
will simply ignore rules. Every summer we have a period of short, heavy
rainstorms. Gullies turn into raging torrents and dry riverbeds become floods.
And every year vehicles get washed down stream. Who is driving those cars and
pickups — especially pickups? Not the unsuspecting tourist, not the new comer,
no it is the native.
I guess their sense of liberty means you are
free to make a fool of yourself. We New Englanders would never set ourselves up
to be laughed at.
Ken looks forward to hearing from you, especially on your take about revenging the aging process.
Author Bio:
Life itches and torments Kenneth Weene like pesky flies. Annoyed, he picks up a pile of paper to slap at the buzzing and often whacks himself on the head. Each whack is another story. At least having half-blinded himself, he has learned to not wave the pencil.
A New Englander by upbringing and inclination, Kenneth Weene is a teacher, psychologist and pastoral counselor by education. He is a writer by passion.
Ken’s short stories and poetry have appeared in numerous publications including Sol, Spirits, Palo Verde Pages, Vox Poetica, Clutching at Straws, The Word Place, Legendary, The New Flesh Magazine, The Santa Fe Literary Review, Bewildering Stories, A Word With You Press, Mirror Dance, The Aurorean, Stymie, and Empirical. Ken’s novels, Widow’s Walk and Memoirs From the Asylum, and Tales From the Dew Drop Inne, are published by All Things That Matter Press.
To learn more about Ken’s writing visit: http://www.authorkenweene.com
You can also find Ken at:
And, if you'd like to listen to Ken read one of his short stories:
Very nice blog, Ken. I thoroughly enjoyed it. Kudos to you!
ReplyDeleteCynthia A
Cynthia, welcome to Everyone's Story, a place where you're always welcomed!
ReplyDeleteHi Elaine, nice blog.
ReplyDeleteKen, Great info as always. I lived in Arizona and loved it there, and plan to get back. Those people who don't care what people think of them are the ones who inspired me to write about rednecks -- they are just so in touch with who they are, and the more they can buck the system the better.
Hi Trish, and thanks for visiting Everyone's Story.
DeleteGreat interview Cynthia! Great aging story Ken! I hate my array of side effect causing yuk pills also...but you do have an advantage if your veins are easily assessable...mine have always been tiny and roll and they almost never get the bat food they want with just one poke.
ReplyDeleteAnna Maria, so glad of your visit. And thanks for becoming a Follower of this bog--that means a lot to me! I empathize with your tiny & rolling veins... the last procedure I had done I showed up late to the surgery suite because the nurses (yes, plural) took a half hour to find my veins. No exaggeration. Sigh.
DeleteI got your name wrong Elaine...sorry. I know well the "can't find the vein" problem and usually come home from the lab black and blue on both arms.
DeleteOh, I got it, Anna Maria. No problem :) I'm collapsing after a week of work to nurse a cold but plan on checking out your blog tomorrow.
DeleteI have a story planned. One that included a recent conversation with my caring, but naive son who wants me to retire to a community near him. He wants me to slow down because he thinks I'm too old for the pace I keep. I love that I'm cared about, but here's the punch line: I'm 48!
ReplyDeleteIf that doesn't cause some laughter, I don't know what will!
Angela, it's wonderful seeing you here again :) That is horribly funny! I'd love to know his perspective when he reaches the ripe "old age of 48." LOL.
DeleteMy 70-year-old father--who reads my blog--sent me an email to say "Seems like once you reach the age of double nickel all we do is take one pill after another. But the good news is we are here to take them." I thought this was very well said, especially from a man who has been in the ICU far too many times.
I will only share an anecdote -- and that in response to Angela's comment -- our son has reassured us that we will both be welcome in his home when we need to live with him ---- even if he does have to change our diapers. Got to love him.
ReplyDeleteThanks on and all for sharing your comments. Ken
Ken, that is hysterical!
DeleteKen, thanks for guesting this past week on Everyone's Story. You brought a good dosage of levity into the offering--something that we can all use! May you always be blessed with a smile on your face and in your heart.
ReplyDelete