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Showing posts with label goingtopurgatory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label goingtopurgatory. Show all posts

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Heathcliff

Heathcliff is the friend you have that’s completely a genius but also completely lacks common sense. Every group of friends has a Heathcliff. If you think yours does not, it is because you are the Heathcliff. This isn’t a bad thing. Heathcliff is also really friendly and helpful and good at cheering you up even when he’s not doing hilarious antics.

But the hilarious antics are probably one of the best parts of being friends with Heathcliff. Over the course of knowing him I’ve managed to convince him that “coming-out parties” are about being gay. I’ve also discovered that by the time he was a high-school freshman, he didn’t know that y was sometimes a vowel or that employers could make employees work on Sundays. But these are my two favorite adventures with Heathcliff.

For this first story, it is important for you to understand the layout of the first story of my house. For interpreting this diagram, please keep in mind that dark brown signifies a door, tan signifies an open entryway, and black signifies walls/other impassable areas.

I know, I know. I should just become an architect right now.

The idea you should be getting from this picture is that the first story of my house is “circular” in that it is possible to walk all the way around it and arrive in the place you started without having to open or close any doors. This will be important later.

Because we’re theatre geeks, Heathcliff, our friend Roxanne, and I were in the living room practicing a scene. After about two disastrous hours of this, we decided it was time for a break. We went into the “More Kitchen” area to get sodas (“pop”, to my Midwestern readers). After merely a few seconds, Heathcliff set down his soda and announced that he was going to the bathroom. Roxanne and I told him not to fall in, and waited for the bathroom door to close before turning to one another and speaking in unison.

Me and Roxanne: Let’s hide.

Immediately, I went for the coat closet, which is quite roomy and allowed me to stand among musty old coats (kind of like the wardrobe to Narnia, except less magical and with less snow) while sipping my ginger ale. The inhumanly flat Roxanne (who has about the physical dimensions of Flat Stanley) concealed herself in the toy closet on the other side of the house.

As I was clambering into the closet, my mother came down the stairs. She noticed me climbing in but didn’t think much of it, because even though my friends and I are around sixteen years old at this point, we still play hide-and-seek for fun. She went into the kitchen and started making herself some lunch when Heathcliff exited the bathroom. He went to the living room via the kitchen, exchanging a hello with my mom on the way.

Then he stopped.

There was an audible pause as he reached the doorway of the living room and realized that Roxanne and I were not there. I can only imagine his thought process here as he tried to work out what to do.

Heathcliff proceeded to walk all the way around the circle of the house, through the billiards room and the foyer. He came to the kitchen and then did another lap for good measure. When he got back to the kitchen he said to my mom, with complete seriousness yet sounding rather upset:

“Roxanne and Marina are gone.”

He didn’t say “I can’t find Roxanne and Marina”, or “Do you know where the girls went?” We are just gone. For all he knows, we have vanished off the face of the Earth.

My mother knows very well exactly where I am, and can probably guess that Roxanne is in the same place or somewhere similar. However, do you recall how maternal my mother is from her response to my having a fainting/seizure combo on an airplane? She said “Ugh.” So this is what she told Heathcliff, in the face of his almost tangible distress:

Yep. I probably have the best mom ever.

Instead of realizing that my mom was totally messing with him, Heathcliff promptly responded, “I’ll go check there.”

He ascended two flights of stairs to our (furnished) attic, presumably looked around, and came back down two flights of stairs to give the report. Roxanne’s experience of all this must have been very boring, but I could hear everything from my vantage point near the kitchen.

Heathcliff: They’re not there either.

My mother: Well, did you look in Marina’s room? Maybe they went up to get something.

Heathcliff obligingly and unquestioningly trotted up the stairs to check in my room, despite the fact that he had to pass my room to get to the attic, and probably would have noticed if Roxanne and I were in there. He returned moments later to say that we weren’t there, either. Now trying to get him to leave the house, my mother suggested, “Well, maybe Roxanne had to go home and Marina walked her there? Since Roxanne’s house isn’t that far away.” Heathcliff, however, was not buying this one.

Heathcliff: No, Roxanne’s dad is going to come pick her up. We already discussed this.

My mother: Oh. Well… maybe they went to rehearse in the basement?

Heathcliff: I was just about to check there.

Realizing that my mom was probably running out of places to send Heathcliff, I came out of the closet (pun intended) as soon as I heard him open the basement door. I skirted through the kitchen, flashing my very amused mother a thumbs-up, and reentered the living room. Trying to look nonchalant, I sat on the sofa along the right wall of the living room, picked up my script, and started perusing it as I continued to sip my ginger ale. I could hear Heathcliff’s anxious return to the kitchen.

Heathcliff: They’re not downstairs either.

My mother: Well, Heathcliff, I don’t know what to tell you. I don’t know where else they could be.

Heathcliff: I think I’ll just go to the living room and wait for them.

Heathcliff walked through the kitchen and then into the living room. I dutifully focused on my script and tried not to laugh. There was another audible beat.

I am trying so hard not to laugh here.

* * *

In our sophomore year, Heathcliff took Chemistry. Being primarily lazy, Casper and I decided to wait until junior year to do this, but we got to hear Heathcliff’s stories about the class. After a presumably very upsetting Chemistry lab, Heathcliff charged into the lunchroom like an angry soccer mom and put his binder and bagged lunch on our table.

Without giving either of us any time to react, Heathcliff—all in one breath—said, “Today in Chemistry we were working with chemicals and I know I didn’t get any chemicals on me or on the equipment but I think that the person who used the equipment before me might have gotten some chemicals on it so I’m going to go wash my hands now.”

This did not strike me and Casper as odd, because Heathcliff always washes his hands before lunch—unlike the rest of us, who use hand sanitizer and/or take our chances with dangerous chemicals. When Heathcliff returned to the table, looking even more distressed, we couldn’t help but joke about it. I said, “Hey Heathcliff, did you get the chemicals off?”

With complete seriousness and a hint of outrage, Heathcliff said, “No! I couldn’t wash my hands. There weren’t any paper towels.

For a moment, neither Casper nor I could speak.

Then Casper said tactfully “Have you ever heard of this?” and imitated shaking water off his hands.

“Or, y’know, wiping them on your pants?” I added, demonstrating in case Heathcliff wouldn’t be sure what I meant.

Heathcliff did the thing he does when you catch him doing something utterly senseless; he indignantly said, “Whatever. I don’t know! Whatever.” He then proceeded to eat his lunch, very carefully holding his sandwich through the plastic bag his mother had lovingly packed it in.

After a few moments, Heathcliff knocked over his water bottle. The water spilled on Heathcliff’s binder, all over the table, and on Casper. Very slowly, deliberately, and unamusedly, Casper shook the water off his hands. Heathcliff make a sound kind of like “ERK!”, which is Heathcliff’s distress call. It sounds kind of like a cross between a car horn honking, the noise made by an enraged and startled wildebeest, and a swear word used by Martians.

He whipped a napkin out of his lunchbag (which begs the question: why did he not use the napkin instead of a paper towel?), wiped up the table, wiped the water off his binder. He then wiped off the mouth of his water bottle and took a drink.

If you’re reading this in stunned silence thinking, “But… wait…”, then you are seeing exactly what my brain saw.

I do not own these images. Thank you for the pictures, MS Word.

Me: Heathcliff…

Heathcliff: What?

Me: I, um… okay, wait, follow along with me here. You carried the binder from Chemistry to here. So the chemicals that were on your hands from the chemical-y equipment in Chemistry are on the binder. Then you wiped the binder with a wet napkin, so the chemicals are on the napkin now—right?

Casper: Yeah.

Me: Okay, right. So then you wiped the napkin on the mouth of your water bottle and you took a drink so now the chemicals are INSIDE you!

Heathcliff: … O_O ERK!!!!!!

Monday, September 5, 2011

Episcopal Alien


Or doing all three at once. Perhaps you remember me being…extremely talented?

I was raised Catholic, which has its pros and cons.

Pros:

  • Our music is fantastic.
  • We get a workout during Mass because of the amount of times we have to sit, stand, and kneel. It’s like we’re being trained by Billy Blanks right there in church.
  • We always put on awesome pageants and I played Mary a lot, which is kind of like playing Donna in Mamma Mia! but holier.
  • The presence in the Eucharist thing is admittedly kind of cool.
  • Rosaries. I freakin’ love rosaries. They are probably my favorite part of Catholicism that actually has to do with belief.
  • Pope John Paul II was kind of a BAMF, but not literally.
  • We’re one of the biggest Christian denominations.
  • I got to pick a Saint name when I got confirmed. I cheated and picked Kateri Tekakwitha, who has only been Beatified (but that’s two-thirds of being a saint, so technically she’s a saint if you round up) and is the patron saint of the environment, orphans, and misfits (like Captain Planet plus Oliver Twist). Also she’s the only Native American saint/almost-saint and her name means “she who bumps into things”.
  • Catholic organizations contribute tons of money to worthy causes like reconstruction in Haiti and battered women’s shelters.
  • Catholics have a really strong sense of community and it’s sometimes really special to feel like a part of that.

Cons:

  • Catholics are conservative. Marina is liberal.
  • Catholic Youth Groups repeatedly harass me to join fun organized events that are about Jesus. I like Jesus and all but I can’t imagine that He wants me to watch Juno and then talk about how it made me feel.
  • Catholic organizations also contribute a lot of money to support causes that I am 100% morally opposed to.
  • Sometimes when I’m in my church I find antiabortion pamphlets with pictures of dead fetuses on them and I’m not really sure what to think except “Ew. Children at this church could see this and be scarred for life! I’m scarred for life after seeing this.” It doesn’t really make me have sudden opinions about how horrific abortion is (because seriously have you seen a picture of a placenta? It’s just as bad. Like a bloody veiny octopus pancake). It makes me want to hit someone in the face with a hymnal for putting this pamphlet here.
  • Sometimes people at the church assume that I have the same views as the church does and then they’re like, “Hey, you should go to this pep rally to oppose teaching about birth control in public school!” or something equally inane and then I have to stand there and figure out how to tactfully say “Actually, I support teaching birth control in public school” without untactfully saying “You’re a moron. We need to teach birth control in public schools. Seriously.”
  • Sometimes I feel like the Catholic church is just really judge-y and pretentious. This is not true of all Catholics or all Catholic churches or all Catholic priests, but certain individuals who I have associated with the church give off that air.
  • This one totally isn’t the church’s fault, but my priest back home gave really long sermons (twenty minutes, maybe?) despite the fact that he came to several good stopping places along the way. Although I never got to really play it, I totally invented a drinking game for Mass: you take a shot every time he plows right on through what would—for people who do not want to be in Mass for ninety minutes—be a spectacular concluding phrase.
But my mom is Catholic so I’ve spent all of my years going to Catholic church and actually helping teach CCD (religious education) to grade school students. I’m not sure why the church wanted me to teach for more than one year, but I did it anyway. I like to think that I planted a little seed of rebellious conscientiousness in them, but mostly all I did was teach them how to go to confession by introducing myself as Father Remus Lupin and having them say the Act of Contrition (the “sorry, God, I kinda messed up. Please still love me” prayer). I also got to sing solos at the church a lot and be in all the pageants. The church is sexist and they wouldn’t let me play the lead role in the Living Stations of the Cross even though I’ve always wanted to wear the fake blood makeup, but I got to play the lead female role so it was okay.

And yet… something was missing. Going to Mass made me feel kind of like a misfit, as if everyone totally noticed when I didn’t say all the petitions because I don’t share all your worldviews, Catholic church. It was like I was at a vegetarian convention but I’d snuck in a rack of ribs in my purse because ribs are so damn delicious and then every so often the vegetarians would look around and go “What the hell? Why do I smell barbecue sauce?” and I would be like “Haha, what? Don’t be ridiculous. There’s no barbecue sauce here, or a rack of ribs. And I especially didn’t bring them in so they’re definitely not in my purse.” And then all the vegetarians would look at me judgingly.

So now that I’m in college I decided to go to an Episcopalian church. I’ve heard that Episcopalians are “pretty much just like Catholics, but liberal”, which sounded totally like what I need. They let women be priests and they even had an openly gay bishop for a while. Also I was semi-drafted by my enthusiastic Episcopalian friend Lydia a few years ago:

Me: So I think I might be secretly Episcopalian.

Lydia: DO IT!

Me: …do what? There wasn’t an action verb in that sentence.

Lydia: DO EPISCOPALIAN!

Since there’s a four-hundred-year-old Episcopalian church right by my campus, I went on a Sunday evening. No matter what denomination you are, Sunday evening services are for students and people who are too lazy to get up for an earlier one.

By the way, the first font I used here is called “Catholic Schoolgirl”. Irony.

I know this isn’t true of all Episcopalian churches, but at this one, all the pews have names of famous people who used to go to the church. So I can sit there and think, “Oh my God, maybe I am sitting next to the ghost of Thomas Jefferson” during Mass.

Or service. “Mass” is just some way of putting it that Catholics totally made up just to mess with the other religions, I think.

Then Mass service started and I learned a few things about the music. For example, it’s totally the same as Catholic music. Except with different tunes. And the songs have different titles because sometimes Episcopalians think “Hymn 130” is catchier than the Catholic name for the song, “And He Will Raise You Up”.

Okay, maybe Catholics got that one right.

I had some fun adventures making up a new tune for the Gloria (Catholics sing it. Episcopalians kind of chant it to a tune with some music in the background) and not knowing all the words to their version of the Nicene Creed. Then the pastor (priest? Father? I’m not sure what he’s called in this case. Since apparently it’s not even a Mass anymore) started talking and he was British.

This is almost as good as the time we got a cute young Eastern European priest at my church. Except this time instead of pretending that I’m getting the sermon from Chekov, I can pretend it’s Sir Ian McKellan.

Everything else was pretty normal—readings and hymns and petitions, the usual—until we got to Communion. At Communion I would’ve been totally lost if I wasn’t sitting with a gang of Episopalian pals from my dorm. I just followed them.

Instead of going up to get Communion from Eucharistic ministers in an orderly and continuous line, we went up in bunches and knelt at an altar to get Communion from the priest. I’m really glad I had my Episco-Pals with me, because I totally would have just eaten the wafer when I got it otherwise. But since I was totally lost, I just watched them. They didn’t eat their bread. They just knelt there contemplating it like they could actually see Jesus’ face in it or something.

Mine totally didn’t look like this.

Then the girl came up with the wine and everyone dipped their bread in the wine.

Oh. My. God.

If you belong to a religion that regularly dips the bread in the wine, you cannot understand how cool this is. For me it was extremely cool. The girl giving the wine probably thought I was crazy, because when I got to dip the bread I was practically doing this.

Then we went back to the pews and no one else knelt for prayer. That made me feel all weird inside because of how well the Catholic church has trained me, so I knelt anyway and closed my eyes so that I couldn’t see my EpiscoPals looking confusedly at me. The Episcopalians didn’t kneel at any point during the service, so I can only conclude this is a Catholic thing and they were all wondering what the hell I was doing on the ground. No one else genuflected, either. It felt kind of like I’d been invited to dinner and then there weren’t any napkins—not really necessary to the dining experience, but most people are supposed to have those, really.

Still, it was a pretty good service and everything. As the processional was heading out, just when I thought it couldn’t get any better, the priest stopped and said, “Oh, by the way. There’s a free dinner for you guys right now. Come along to the parish building.”

The EpiscoPals and I quickly decided that yes we definitely want free food please, and skipped merrily along to a lovely dinner of pasta and marinara sauce and salad and delicious bread that was probably baked by angels. Then they served us an M&M tart. (Yeah. That’s dessert made out of candy.) Also they told me I could join the choir or volunteer to read whenever I want. And then they gave me a free shirt and told me that they’re going to give me free dinners every Sunday for the rest of forever.

Their Jedi mind tricks totally work on me.

So it looks like I’m Episcopalian now.