POKEMON
(A Proleptic Phenomenology
of Affective Navigation)
Everything seemed to be made mostly of voids and gaps, spanned by the thinnest
of membranes, things composed of nothings...but iridescent and seductive
for all that. Like soap bubbles maybe.
and just so it seemed to him as if the skin of the world was getting slipperier
and thinner almost day by day. Certainly week by week. The translucency
of oil rubbed on paper maybe, the imperceptible made conceivable.
It had been almost two years since the breakup but she was
still carried inside like a wound, constant, superating, drained one day
only to find itself painful and tender the next, throbbing in the night
heat. There were no doctors to complain about thin veneers, slippage, wounds.
No amount of fatigue seemed to lessen its grip, ease his slip into sleep.
But she just seemed like an excuse now, a demonic tonality that enabled
the ringing of changes; the wound seemed to be having a life of its own,
its own seasons, its own moods, some of which he didn't seem politely invited
to but rather violently abducted, swept along. The only thing he could do
then was attempt a temporary exorcism by writing to himself as he walked,
composing an illusory story, even if allusively, acting like a bug-zapper
of the soul, putting out an eerie purple light to attract the demons enough
to momentarily zap them, at least make them talk, give them tongue, even
make them visible. Sometimes it worked. Sometimes it didn't. Mostly it didn't.
In his nightly walks around the block the infernal zotting of the real insect
zappers combined with a gauze-like claustrophobia that threatened to turn
him into a homicidal manic any minute he felt. The air had to be forcibly
ripped away as he moved through it, creating nothing but tattered remnants
of his movements, a momentary parting and then shutting right behind him.
The 'burbs were the perfect place for him now, almost completely alienated
(such a quaint old word now; and what would it be to be completely alienated?
Dead?), moved back into a childhood home (the basement no less) where he
first felt the stirrings of a certain world-weariness (like all the other
frustrated 14 year olds surrounding him then). And here he was 36 years
later. In the same house. Could anyone have a better excuse for going crazy?
Maybe it was time for that road trip after all. He needed other realities
and he needed it bad. Otherwise the approaching figure with the big knife
could spell trouble.
He felt sure that smells were linked to prophecy in some cavernose underground way. There
were many times within the past three years that smell had become an all-consuming
'thought' (well, not exactly a thought. more like a mood maybe, a not-fully-filled-out
mood; maybe like a nervous system with a direction or vector.) After all,
what WAS prophecy? Wasn't it something like divination? He had often felt
an uncanny collapse of possibility into actuality but, as it often seemed
now with even the idea of a 'future', with disastrous consequences. It was
as if his 'antennae' for moving ahead were bent or blunted in some way.
He had taken to consulting all manner of ancient 'scrying' devices in an
attempt to glimpse past what seemed an immense, flat and opaque yet shimmering
screen which began at his temporal nose. He occasionally could seem to make
out a pattern in the shimmering (or was it through the flickering
constraints?) but it always moved away as he approached it, like trying
to touch mercury on a table top.
He realized that he had been driving through pine tree farms for the past
20 minutes. He hadn't seen another vehicle, car or pulp-wood truck in at
least that long. Rolling along at ninety miles an hour he briefly wondered
what would happen if a tire were to pop. Or if he hit a turtle. Certainly
a hole in the shimmering. He slowed slightly to fumble in the passenger
side for a cassette and stuck 'Music for Eighteen Musicians' by Reich
in the dash and then sped up.
The classic minimalism began to hum, twist and mutate like a giant engine
room of some starship as it hit warp speed, delicate but containing vast
energies continually in negotiation with each other. The trees in their
regular rows seemed to click clack by with the music, an organic metronome.
The sun was down far enough to throw occasional shadows across the roadway,
now stretching ahead farther than he could see. With the passing of the
hottest part of the day, not even the fata morgana of water on the road
ahead appeared where a car's lights would appear to be floating mysteriously
above the surface of a flooded roadway. The road just stretched out endlessly
flat. The combination of the music and the long stretch ahead made him feel
giddy. He sped up to ninety five. He felt like he was in some movie, that
he was about to take off. or be abducted by aliens. He had the feeling that
something was going to happen soon. Very soon.
He pushed the dual controls and rolled down the driver's window and the
passenger's window and then turned the stereo up until the sound from the
speakers began to break up, then he backed off the volume slightly. It had
been above a hundred degrees down here for the last few days. The heat felt
like it had been waiting for him, saving up to burst through the windows.
The little two door sport coupe felt like a blast furnace. Occasionally
there would be a slight gust of cool air, impossible for it to be cold anymore,
from the now completely overpowered air conditioner.
Whisk whisk went the trees outside, a noisy counterpoint to music, green
galaxies and stars rushing past, the sounds of millions of high-pitched
demented violinists pouring through one window then the other then both.
The trees themselves seemed to be scraping, singing, sighing. He took it
on faith that the insane chorale was composed of thousands of insects, frogs
and god knows what else in the duskening green. But he had never actually
SEEN one of the things make any sounds. And besides it pleased him to think
that the trees were communicating in an angelic cacophony, heralding his
arrival in their midst, the Thrones, Principalities, Archangels, Seraphim
and the rest marveling to the point of hysteria at the shiny projectile
moving, actually able to uproot and move, through their divine midst. Hosannas!!
Halleleuyah!! It moves!! He imagined they communicated it instantaneously
all along the length of the road way, still announcing their joys even as
he had passed them and up ahead the vast choruses bursting into praise,
awaiting his arrival.
And then the thought occurred to him (it wasn't really a thought. maybe
a foreboding; the intensity of the moment, the speed--he was not quite at
a hundred--precluded any thought, only resolute attention and intention;
every sense seemed to be wide open and extended, to the point of a feverish
merger with the furthest point visible on the road ahead, a constantly renewing
point on the perfectly realized Euclidian roadway, and with the green sound
thrusting and parrying with the inside of the car, trying to come to terms
with this human thing. Was it trying to communicate? The invisible tree-sound-pseudopodia
twisted and writhed inside the compartment, trying to come to terms with
its new found particle, spat from one of the great collider cities...):
perhaps these were merely the lieutenants of some Greater Green God, far
from these loudly inarticulate and marginal observers of passing bits of
metal rubber flesh trails of carbon monoxide moving through the cloud chamber
heart of the sweltering summer gloom, visible only from some higher plane,
some other vantage point....
His skin began to crawl as he scared himself, deliciously, of some monstrous
green Baphomet deep in the forest, far from the roadway hosannas, watching,
brooding on his passing, indeed not singing his arrival at all. Perhaps
even plotting his downfall, his eventual embedding in a thick sheet of saturnine
lead.
He slowed down to seventy five as lights appeared in the now almost complete
dark, the crack between the worlds beginning to close. The music still twitched
and thrummed, moving to a different key. He flicked the lights on and reached
into the ashtray for the butt of a joint. He lit it, took a few puffs until
his fingers began to burn then threw it out the window. Like some version
of Xeno's Paradox, the lights far ahead kept approaching. It seemed impossible
to guess their distance.
And then there was the smell. It seemed to whip in one window and out the
other. But he never knew if it was really outside him or somehow HE was
generating the scent. At times it seemed like an admonition, other times
like a premonition, a reptilian, hind brain foreboding that 'knew' far more
than he did but that was also slightly insane. The tree farms had disappeared
and hulking kudzu monsters now whicked by on the margins of his headlights,
a vast green slosh poured out from the darkness, punctuated occasionally
by a small wood frame building surrounded by a small neat yard always on
the verge of being overwhelmed by the surf of green searching tendrils.
The legacy of the New Consciousness of the sixties and the seventies didn't
mingle well with the transams and pickups of what was to become the New
South. The twisted brambles of the unconscious southern undergrowth seemed
to either thicken the quagmire at the bottom or lead to the new boomer consumer
consciousness of places like Atlanta. Basically gnostic he thought, this
consciousness shone like some radiant tropical flower here in the deep south
and yet never quite seemed to blend into the rest of the southern garden,
becoming instead a thing of some deep fear. Maybe the true denizens of the
south had an almost primal knowledge of the introduction of Kudzu in the
thirties, a foreigner which had basically taken over the landscape of the
south, helping, it seemed to him, to give overt shape to the gothic draconian
southern undercurrent. An externalization of some smothering dread lay in
almost every southerner he knew, a dread of biblical proportions. Of course.
Great hulking masses of greenery, almost like a single organic machine covering
every conceivable surface if it stands still look enough. Not that that
could ever be the case with Jesse. He almost involuntarily powered down
the window, took a deep breath, then rolled it back up. There were places
he just couldn't go, his sense making ability just ... gone.
.................................
I liked to garden, a fixation I suppose
I acquired from my grandparents, poor dirt farmers who raised their own
food for the most part and sold a little grain in town. I remembered seeing
my first truly exotic plant, an Erythrina crista-galli, with bright red
drooping parrot-beak looking flowers. I stopped and asked the old couple
on the front porch of the tiny asphalt sided house what it was. They recollected
that they didn't know but reckoned that 'hippies used it'. I knew they
meant made some kind of drug potion out of it. After all, of what other
possible use could such exotic-ness be for? And I gathered that they had
been approached often by good-old boy hippies at one time, maybe even in
the dead of night, stripping its flowers. I asked them if I could dig up
a portion of it and they reckoned that I could have all of it since they
wanted to get rid of it, the coveralled old man said turning to his wife
with a slight grin. I came back later that afternoon with a pick and shovel
to pull off a sprig. The root itself seemed to be like a giant carrot,
shooting downward with no taper. After almost an hour of digging in the
sweltering late afternoon sun, with the old man, his wife and two neighbors
from next door sitting and watching me and appreciating my work, I finally
took the pick axe and whacked off a chunk. I apologized to the old man
for not being able to clear it out for him and he just chuckled and said
that was all right, it wasn't the first time they had tried to get rid
of it. I found out later that it was a native Australian plant and was
extremely drought resistant, hence its root system. I remembered much later
also seeing a beautiful tree variety of Erythrina outside a hippie house
in California in the Oliver Stone film on The Doors, signifying an hallucinatory
otherness (and thinking briefly of how I had secretly made fun of the old
paranoid couple. Perhaps they really DID know something in some obscure
allegorical way). To no avail I fantasized THIS plant colonizing the south
wholesale, its daemonic psychedelia colliding with the the old testament
wrath of the Kudzu. Not possible, I thought...but if it COULD happen I
knew which would win.
There was a kind of fate and feeling of fatality running in almost all
southern families that, like the Kudzu, seemed almost impossible to eradicate.
It clung to its members like the scent of mildew and like that smell it
only became apparent when it was taken out into the open air and examined.
By that time it was too late, the rot had already set in. Illuminated by
a black sun, it still fluoresced under certain circumstances even in these
latter days, barely into the new millennium. Maybe the exotic flower HAD
won out in the south; the flower was obvious but he wondered what the tap
root had descended to this time. He grinned to himself: the True Shape of
the Cross: the lateral movement of Kudzu with the vertical of the exotic.
Out of the blue he thought: evidence needs witnesses, symptoms need victims.
---------------------
The night had deepened and a dry sort of cocoon had enveloped the interior
of the car, giving him that same muffled feeling, oddly enough, as in the
winter, when snow covered the whole car. He supposed it was a combination
of sensory deprivation AND sensory overload.
He was a deeply unhappy man and he couldn't quite figure out why. Nothing
really made any sense anymore. Or maybe it was just the case that the sense
that was there seemed profoundly banal, uninteresting, a world made up of
almost nothing but strip shopping centers, McDonald's and cookie cutter
brick houses. He divorced at the age of fifty after being married for 25
years. And none of that made any sense either, even after two years, either
the marriage part or the divorce part. There were times when everything
seemed completely blank, void. Was this the heritage of being southern?
Maybe melancholia was the only thing the south had to offer any more. The
south's contribution to 'being modern' seemed to be the blues, rock and
roll, grits, and a kind of rolling heaviness of loss, almost impossible
to combat (this rock and roll combination of fate and Dionysian revel now
seemed deeply suspicious to him. At one time it seemed that the exotic bloom
could win out, crowd out the suffocating, continual rolling of thunder in
the distance, dispel the approaching storm clouds; instead the bloom itself
had become the color of a bruise, thunderous, poisonous). He used to wake
up with an impending sense of doom, a black sense of hopeless that didn't
seem to be tied to any particular facet of anything. It just was. And it
seemed to be at complete odds with the energy and efflorescence of the New
South, which, let's face it, seemed to have mostly to do with expressways,
fast food, and a certain tawdry nostalgia for the melancholia it thought
it had lost.
Time itself seemed to stretch to an infinity then abruptly snap back, leaving
bruises, textured infinity in the here and now, continually throbbing and
decaying whatever tried to stand. No, it wasn't pleasant. How could it be?
Everything continually fell apart. There were times that was acceptable.
And if it could just be accelerated, he once thought, why then, you could
dig down to the real stuff. He didn't think he believed that anymore...hell,
he wasn't even sure that there WAS any real stuff anymore.
He spent endless hours at night in front of the TV, clicking aimless from
channel to channel, five seconds of interest here, 3 minutes there, occasionally
ten minutes watching an octopus change color, then a car chase, then a bank
robbery, then a business report, then an infomercial selling exercise gear
another infomercial selling yet another type of exercise gear, the partially
decoded signal of a porno station, an occasional breast or abdomen swelling
thorough the distorted colors. At those moments, the walls began to writhe
and close in and he wished deeply for an apocalypse to blow it all up, for
something, ANYTHING, real to happen. But it never seemed to. And when it
did it was never quite as real in retrospect as it had first seemed, but
rather always someone else's imaginary byproduct, stuffed with more ersatz
products, just like a hot dog. Not even death seemed particularly real anymore,
just a blip on the screen. Time to switch the channel.
--------
It was the middle of January in 1994 on
the Yucatan peninsula when I first noticed the smell.. Wandering through
the vendors booths, mingling with the tourists, picking up pseudo-Mayan
junk with my then-wife, I attributed it to the peculiar exotic atmosphere.
It seemed like a peculiar combination of curdled milk and cooking oil.
It became an ever present accompaniment. I remembered that an early psychoanalyst
Wilhelm Fliess was convinced that the cause of sexual dysfunction
was located in the noise and even managed to convince his friend Freud
of nasal operations to correct the problems. Fliess was a kook but ...
this smell thing really bothered me and I made a mental note to look up
Fliess when I got back home.
---
He began terraforming the backyard with
a passion, trying to escape from the box-like nature of his surroundings.
He borrowed his brother's pickup truck and brought in loads of rock unearthed
from a nearby construction project, trying to recreate also his previous
house that he had built himself but had to sell because of the divorce.
He was in the midst of building a five foot high set of concentric walls
to separate himself from the next door neighbors.
Barbara from next door couldn't stand it
any longer and had to investigate. She was short and pudgy but with the
pleasant neighbor demeanor which he supposed was a necessity in the suburbs.
He was stripped to the waist, lifting twenty pound rocks into place. She
also brought a friend who had moved out of the neighborhood. Barbara looked
to be in her late thirties and Sarah in her late forties..
"Wow, this is great! I keep telling
Jim I wish he would get off his butt and do something like this!"
Barbara looked slyly around at the stacks
of one inch rebar, concrete, and rock. (How to possibly tell them that the
rocks, the walls were both a discipline and a meditation, both an escape
from and to a void, escape from failures of all kinds, none of which seemed
capable of being rectified, that the walls couldn't possibly be high enough
or thick enough; that, yes, they were to keep them and their manicured lawns
out, the stultifying sameness but also to contain a ravenous and raging
thing, a thing harder than the rocks, a thing that was nothing but teeth
and hunger and that paced, paced, paced behind the eyes, a thing that stood
on the edge of a void, finely balanced, quivering, but joyless, dark, a
thing that didn't even feel human, rather crystalline, all jagged edged,
a thing never satisfied, never finished. A thing that could only glare at
them from behind the eye.)
"and would you look at all these plants!
Why, this is great!"
She was looking at a Japanese anemone.
I told her what it was and the plant next to it.
"Why, I don't think I could ever remember
all these plant names...you know the names of all of them?"
"Well, I try to know them...part of
the fun you know....
"And what's THIS! "
She was pointing to a cleome. But I know
she thought it looked like a marijuana leaf, which it in fact did. I told
her the name just to be safe. and even though it was blooming.
"And you should see this little house
he built!"
I had built a studio in
the woods with a connecting bridge to the garden. They went down and looked
inside at the sculpture sitting there on bicycle wheels. It would have been
impossible to try to talk to them about it so I just told them what kind
of wood it was made of. They didn't act at all perplexed. and for all that
matter not entirely curious. It was just another thing to be politely examined
and admired.
Back in the garden: "How can you think
of all these things?"
"Well, obsession can be like that."
Silence as they looked around. I quickly added my standard hook, "You'll
have to come back when I get the UFO landing pad in." At that they
began to get excited. Sarah related her UFO experience back in 1973...talk
of X-Files which seemed to be their bench mark for such things.
Nobody really believed in anything anymore.
Not art. Not government. Not God. Not UFOs really. But I realized then that
the suburbs were where a certain developing embryo was germinating. Out
of the blankness of missing time, that infinity-hunger that seems scooped
into everything now, was slowly invading again. and not so slowly sometimes
since television was filled with visions of the uncanny as were the movies.
It seemed to be an escape clause for a lot of folks, a door left slightly,
hopefully, ajar. The garden and the rocks weren't important, it was the
vision they inspired of an idea that things could be different.
-----
He slowly pulled into the driveway of the old home place. No lights on,
just the street light on the other side of side of the road. He turned the
engine off and sat listening to the abrupt silence and the ticking of the
engine as it cooled.
Some memories seem supersaturated -- perhaps the further back
they are, the more sodden. They come unbidden, heavy, dripping with a context
and circumstance that seem entirely other, even alien at times. And yet
-- one knows, somehow, that what is being remembered ... literally arms,
legs, head being put back on a torso, stitched together with the sheerest
of threads, a length formed of nothing BUT length, delay: the time between
Now and Then--somehow the realization: I MUST have been there, given the
impact of this sudden bloody tissue of recollection. The people are gone.
The landscape has shifted, grown up (and over), an archaic, tangled, skeined
palimpsest, laying bare yet covering over at the same time a curving weave
of faces, gestures, events, circumstances. Almost like the memories and
the landscape are hooked together in some inexorable backward pull, a confusion
of causalities, a tug always from a faceless (or perhaps the potential uncanniness
of a 'face' under a mask), enfeebled present, back toward something darker,
more primeval, something always lurking just beyond the bright threshold
of Now, threatening an alien whirlpool of etheric (because remembered) arc
of flesh, a jigsaw of pieces that have apparently been put together--always
just now--and yet a step back and it dissolves into oddly shaped lumps.
Two weeks 'ago' and they still have a reassuring familiarity; thirty years
back and a disorienting disequilibrium sets in.
This landscape is continually trying to reclaim this inchoate, dimly-lit
interior space of remembrance--in stark contrast to technology which is
continually trying to efface memory --in the guise of enhancing it-- to
not only dis-remember but to dismember generally (and here tech's affective
convergence with capitalism: capital's only use for memory is in a 'weak'
sense as nostalgia which can be formalized and looped in the repetitive
structures of advertising and marketing. Strong memory most often forms
up either trauma or an otherness so strong (in its uncanny familiarity)
and distant (and close--pace Walter Benjamin's aura definition) that it
functions as a form of group memory or allegorical narrative ( Egypt, Mayan,
Aztec, Amerindian, even 'godless'--because 'landscapeless'--robotic aliens
from some group home around Alpha Centaurae for god's sake, always a foreign
enticingly inaccessable tribal otherness). The landscape of technology is
dominated by the bulldozer.
---everyone stays indoors here now, after the widespread acceptance and
use of domestic air conditioning. Even when its nice weather outside, very
few open windows. Always air conditioning inside and constant (constancy,
contrary to expectations, is a bulldozer of memory). But the more we isolate
ourselves, the less prepared we are for the shock of 'landscape memory,'
tirelessly waiting outside the entrance way, the door, the exit lies another
exit and entrance becoming invisible by the day it seemed. There, itself,
waits a trauma, a lag, a wound so fresh that scar tissue has not yet formed
historically. A 'thing' not yet named, perhaps not even nameable.
---
Sitting in dark in the yard 'out back'. No one home, lights out, door locked.
Still stiff from driving. There, etched by moonlight, edge of woods, beyond
which the 'ancestral shack' as he had always affectionately called it, of
his grandparents--a small white asbestos sided 2-story house with two small
gables in front and back, stairs. A bannister. At the top of which as a
kid he watched, uncomprehending, family dramas and squabbles unfolding...
Cousins, aunts, uncles, moved on, died. And now it was filled with an unspeakable
event, Something which made its presence known even through the copse of
trees, vague glimmer shifting past the window he could barely make out.
And that smell again.
But now, a strident, stritchy thing in the oak tree to his right pulling
regularly on some demented violin, rising to a crescendo then sawing down
to a rasping stop. Then the response from things in the other trees...silence...then
sawing in the far distance, then building again nearby. Some crazy sonata
by Xenakis maybe, called 'Chorae'. But contained in that seasonal, rasping
echoing call-and-response spoke the whole history of a world, constant and
consistent in its choral inevitability and commentary on the doings down
below, the tablature of the trees providing the appropriate genealogy: a
few pin oaks but mostly pines. pine trees. The other signature effect (and
affect is the landscaped truth if it could be told which it can't only alluded
to) vertical lines for the cleft and treble, wind soughing, giving way to
stritching bugs. A life lived--did everyone here not see it, hear it??!
--in an electric soup of communicating trees, insects, and wind. (and god
knows what else. Maybe it wasn't all a one-way street, nothing but
bulldozers, pulpwood trucks, mowers at dusk. Maybe these things, this landscape,
was orchestrating it, flowing, seeping into the unconscious, pullulating
thoughts, like those large white eyeless grubs hidden in the old rotten
tree he saw yesterday, blindly pawing through the soft fibrous wood till
the Energies overcame them and they began to stiffen, harden, darken, becoming
other than what they now were, becoming another life connected by only the
slenderest thread of DNA to life in the dark. A new creature. Maybe there
was such a beckoning here (and not only here): human grub embedded in a
giant fallen log, etheric signals passing wraith-like through the great
Body of the world, into the flesh, time spans measured in millennia condensing
in the DNA, precipitate of falls and pupae of catastrophes, signals passing
though the amber of flesh, dammed (maybe even damned) at the flesh for a
spell in the wood, then gushing forth--O great glamour of spells cast! Cast
in resin, bug spit long since hardened (stritching passing over how many
millions of years?) then bursting free, frothy expirations condensing yet
again for another ride through time: worlds composed of nothing but condensations
and explosions falling as debris on the great Plain of the Now and suckered
through with runners --kudzu like--penetrating it with this cosmic collapse,
this darkness at noon, unceasing, against which the Machine toils endlessly,
itself not capable of being so penetrated being rather nothing BUT this
penetration, the pure form of the wood grub, the grubbing of the grub minus
the grub.
Nothing but burrowing through the debris, grub turned to angel flapping
furiously, backward ...
------------
Most mornings he woke up as a twisted bramble of wreckage, a crumpled mesh
tailor's dummy which had to be patiently straightened, every kink disentangled,
each streak of pain surrounded with pills and nostrums and ritual and made
to submit to the greater good. One day there would be a Gordian knot that
couldn't be undone. And there would only be one way to cut through the red
haze of ache, a final dehiscence.
It didn't help that he also woke up haunted, in a fog of remembrance that oscillated with
remonstrance, the two cycling so rapidly sometimes that the pains of the
psyche merged with the aches of the flesh leaving him swimming in a vertiginous
gray mass of the half-light of morning, waiting, waiting as the gradual
monstrous landscapes of sleep gave way to the barely manageable terrain
of the real. Gradually, oh so gradually, he was granted absolution for the
flesh and given pardon by the demons...at least for eighteen hours.
At these moments he wasn't sure whether to take heart from the ancient Hasidic
notion of life after redemption / apocalypse / salvation: everything is
exactly the same except for a small difference, an almost imperceptible
displacement that yet makes all the difference. Perhaps the same could be
said of hell.
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