Well, the air is full of allergens and woke up with a head full of em. They're pouring out on their own, though, so I don't have to go in there with a bucket and a straw.
Y'all hear that Nina Simone died yesterday? I heard that. I didn't know who she was by name, but when I heard her voice I knew: she was that great vocal master that dies every week on NPR but you never heard of, except Simone truly *was* great by the sound of her. Why do they keep Matchbox 20 and Weezer in endless rotation when Nina Simone has been out there all this time? *Sigh*. Its probably Clearchannel's fault somehow. Anyway, I heard her singing the obligatory Dylan cover and *damn* it was sweet. Why is it that everybody can do Dylan better than Dylan? Don't get me wrong -- I love the guy. Not loving Dylan is a bit like not loving yourself, 'cuz we all got a little bit of Blackjack Davey in us. I'm just saying that he gets on my nerves at times and his voice sometimes needs Jesus more than he does. Anyway.
So yesterday I'm told I pulled a "George Castanza". Apparently he's that short fat guy on the chicken commercial with Evan from Joe Millionaire. Here's the scene last night at school:
I'm in class, the sun is setting. Yellow buds drift by outside the window. Beautiful women all around. It might be a moment for nostalgia and reflection, but instead I have to listen to my colleagues discuss their projects: child labor in Baltimore, antebellum black elections in Rhode Island, Nixon's Civil Rights record... The prof is a tough, rolly-polly New Yorker named Kraut who likes to say things like "Once in a conversation with the late Stephen Ambrose, I said..." etc. (He hardly needs to drop names: he's a CNN star and one of the finest historians I've ever encountered.) Anyway, folks are droning on. I'm droning on. Everybody' is droning on. We make a beehive sound like a bunch of nursury school kids singing "God Bless America." Everybody's bored. I'm getting hungry. I'm dreaming about all yellow jujubees stuck beneath the change dispenser in my car. (I hate yellow jujubees. Even though I love the color yellow and I love lemons. I hate yellow candy, period. Fuck yellow candy. Yellow candy it gets culled and stuck to things.) Anyway, break time comes. Five minutes of freedom. I think I can make it to my car in time. I start hurrying out the door, but out of the corner of I my eye I see it...
It.
Golden.
Sublime.
Relatively uneaten.
Snugly secured in a box.
A DONUT box.
Resting on the top layer of the trashcan.
A DONUT.
A single, unfrosted cake donut.
My favorite.
I simply could not *believe* my good fortune. Of all the types of culinary baked goods eaten in in the world, unfrosted, unpretentious cake donuts are among my favorite. No gritty atomic cinnamon to overwealm me or sickly sweet FD&C # 40 red syrup -- just sugar and baked, brown dough. Furthermore, of all the entire universe of boxes out there: refrigerator boxes, cable boxes, boxcars, there are very few I would ever contemplate eating out of, but a donut box happens to be one of them.
Without calculating the odds of catching SARS, lockjaw, E. Coli or all the other possible illnesses one can acquire eating garbage, I stealthily ambled up to the trashcan, flipped the lid of the box and snagged that winsome, forlorn O-of-pure-good-fortune and devoured it on the way out the door. Note: the trashcan was about 3 feet from the door but the donut was gone before I even reached the hallway. I ate it so fast bacteria on it didn't have time to metastasize. It hit my belly quicker than a carton of Egg Fu Yung at a frat party. But not before being noticed by, of all people, Ann.
Let me just say a few words about Ann. There are few keener-eyed people in this world than Ann. She is intensely observant, and is not prone to keeping things to herself. Fortunately, she also possesses an acute sense of humor, is fun, and likes to drink beer.
"Did you just pull a George Castanza?" Ann said, laughing.
"MM?" (mouthfull)
She explained the whole scenario. A danish on top of the trashcan. George eating it, etc. Seinfeld whining. A perfect analogy. I allowed the possibility that I had pulled a George Castanza. She shook her head and walked away. (If you ask me, she was just jealous that I had gotten there first)
A few minutes later I sat down in my chair again and prepared to listen to more of my colleagues discuss their projects, when Cindy leaned over in her chair -- [note to the world: Cindy is the type of individual who, regardless of the health of your self-esteem and the satisfaction you may feel in every other aspect of love, life and existence, you cannot help, upon finding yourself in her company, that you possess some charismatic trait that, however fleeting, will inspire her to flash a smile or say a few words. But I digress.] -- Cindy leans over in the chair and says,
"Did you pull a George Castanza?"
[*Doh!*]
I wasn't sure if she had actually witnessed my depravity, or merely overheard my conversation with Ann. Perhaps I had crumbs on my face. Fortunately, she was smiling as she spoke, but I definitely detected a glimmer of disgust in her voice reminiscent of the tone my sisters used to use when they'd catch me munching on a 9 inch long, two-part, bloody, hairy booger.
I considered delivering a witty response, or rather I considered how much I *wished* I could think of a witty response to dispel the look I was *sure* she was giving me, but truth be told I wasn't sure what look she had on her face because at that moment I happened to glance at the trashcan (perhaps in the hope that *it* might contain my witty response) and lo! What was that? Something I'd missed on my previous pass? Indeed, it appeared to be just that:
Within that selfsame box of baked deliciousness, obscured by the misty sheen of transuded vestigal moisture from its previous contents, was yet *another* member -- or the better portion thereof -- of that exclusive fraternity of moist, cakely, (unfrosted) donutkind...
Suddenly, all thoughts of reputation, mouth crumbs, and grandstanding, fled. Myopic eye-narrowing set in. The yellow buds and the sunset dimmed beyond all sight.
"Excuse me," I muttered hastily to whoever might have been listening, slipping out of my chair, and ambling discreetly toward the trashcan...