I long for unexpected angles and curves, passages that take me to vistas unimagined. I want us to be a couple on a rue in Paris, a calle in Barcelona, an alley in Istanbul. Walking where feet have trod for hundreds and hundreds of years – not just a couple of centuries. I want to curl up with you in a glass igloo in Norway and watch the northern lights. I want to hold your hand in a bure in Fiji, the thatch rustling0 in the ocean breeze.
I want architecture that begs for our attention and the camera’s lens. Adobe, stucco, marble. People who walk differently and speak in a tongue I can’t understand. I want to eat food I’ve never had in Afghanistan, drink liqueurs with the locals in Greece, and witness the traumatic running of the bulls. I want to struggle with the language when asking a stranger to take our photo. Though we are disheveled and jet-lagged, you will put your arm around me and we will smile for the camera capturing our joy in the moment.
I realized there was something inherently strange about the way my mom’s brain works when she was about 35. Maybe 40. Someone told her a joke. The joke goes like this….
There was a statue of Adam and Eve in a public garden. They had stood there for a hundred years. Unable to speak. Unable to touch. Unable to keep one another warm in the snow. Year after year, they stood there. The snow came and went. The rain. The hot sun. Pigeons and squirrels. Mold and mildew.
By the time we get to the magical day, they were worn and pitted, spotted with pigeon shit, and generally in poor condition. A woodland fairy appears and tells them she is going to bring them to life for one day and for one day only. They can do anything they like. She gives them 24 hours to think about how they will spend their day.
At dawn, the following morning the fairy appears, says an incantation, waves her wand and the two statues come to life. Adam and Eve jump around in excitement, oblivious of their nakedness, and babble incoherently. Finally, they settle down and Adam says to Eve, “What shall we do? What have you most wanted all these years? Adam has a sly tone of voice and winks at Eve.
Eve says, “OK. Here’s the plan. You hold the pigeons and I’ll shit on them.”
Now I happened to be there when this joke was being told. I rolled my eyes. My mother laughed. And laughed. She spurts her coffee all over the diner table and nearly choked to death she laughed so hard. Tears coursed down her face, and she had to fan herself.
My mother’s reaction to the joke was far funnier than the joke itself.
Later that evening, we are sitting at the dinner table. My Dad asks how our day was. We all report on this and that. Eventually, Mom says, “Dean told a joke at lunch today. Wanna hear it?” My dad girded his loins. My mother’s inability to tell a joke without screwing up the punch line is legendary. In fact, I get my joke telling ability from her. I too tend to screw them up. Just typing the above joke was difficult.
Anyway.
My mother launches into the joke, looking at me now and again to check details. I am astonished, but she is doing a pretty good job. My dad is sort of puzzled. The joke does not seem to be the kind of joke my mom would normally enjoy. My mother is a Prude with a capital P in red glitter. She finally gets to the part where Adam is getting ready to say, “What shall we do?”
She starts to giggle. And then shake. Peas fall off her fork. She starts laughing in earnest. She is laughing so hard, she cannot finish. I start laughing at her trying to tell this joke. My father, a superb joke teller, is now all ears. He wants the punch line. He needs the punch line. He’s already making plans on who and when to tell the joke to.
By now, neither my mom nor I can breathe we are laughing so hard. I try to take a drink of water to sort myself out. I spew it all over the pork chops.
Mom can’t finish. Dad is amused, but impatient. “So, what’s the punch line?” My mom waves her arms and looks at me to deliver the last line. I still can’t breathe.
Finally, I manage to choke out, “You hold the pigeons and I’ll shit on them.” Only I said poop because at that age I would not have said shit in front of my parents.
My mother absolutely collapses in hysterics. For her, it’s even funnier the second time. My brother, who is just a kid, laughs.
My dad just looks at us. I try to explain that I didn’t think it funny either that I’m laughing at my mother, but by then, he’s laughing at the both of us.
I reminded my mother of this joke a while back. It took a while for her to dredge up the memory. And she almost had it, but couldn’t remember the joke or the punchline — she just remembered the two statues coming to life and how it was the funniest damn thing she’d ever heard.
So. I told her the joke. Without messing up the punchline.
She chortled. She howled. She had tears in her eyes and couldn’t breathe.
Again.
I laughed at her. I laughed with her. We both just laughed.
The Philistines are upon me. A great army across the valley taunting and tormenting my peaceful village. I am afraid. They are big, they are evil, and they want our peace of mind. Our happy spirits. They want to trample us in the mud and take our lives. To leave us as carrion on the valley floor.
Oh where is my David? Where is the sling and the five smooth stones? I need to triumph over the Philistines coming for me. Coming for us.
Their largest, Goliath, heaps insult upon me. His very presence is a storm cloud over me and my heart is heavy, my mind churning, and my body trembling. He can do so much damage to me and mine.
Deliver me from this Philistine.
Oh, Lord, hear my prayer.
I drop to my knees and see that the daffodils have buds. The wheel in the sky is turning. Spring comes. I feel hope in my chest flutter like an awakening bird. Not the peaceful dove, but the avenging hawk.
There is no David. There is no sling. There are no five smooth stones. There is just me and my travails. Just me and my scant courage. Oh Lord hear my prayer and give me the strength of the daffodils.
The strength to emerge victorious in frightening conditions. The strength to outlast adversity. The strength to blossom in deep snow. Do not let this be a false spring.
Bring me the peace of knowing that I am enough. That I can lead a victorious life. One that is free of the Philistines that would steal my tranquility and ravage my happy home.
If David can be unafraid and face the threat in the knowledge that he is enough, I can too.
I am David.
Goliath will not be my nemesis. I alone can defeat the peril with the sweet spirit of a shepherd protecting what they have been charged to watch over.
Oh Lord, hear my prayer. Shepherd me through this perilous time.