Sense memory

I hadn’t eaten meat or lifted weights in a year and then I started doing both again the same day. It was the Fourth of July and the smoked pork shoulder triggered me. Not the taste or the garishness of that cut, but the ceremony of soaking cherry wood and the smell, as the smoke curled out of the charcoal kettle.

I went to Costco on a Sunday afternoon and it was a mob scene. But I savored it: the droves of people with their kids and jam-packed carts, no one in masks, mobs of people mostly Americans gorging themselves on cheap shit. I had to laugh. I was American too, through and through. No one could take us down, not even Donald Trump. We were a sea of laughing, beautiful fools. And we had the best stores, even on a Sunday.

Burning fire wood in our backyard wasn’t the same since wildfires had ruined summer. No one seemed interested in my fires anyway, unless marshmallows were involved. But it was summer and a perfect sky so I set up the lawn sprinklers, scraped out the fire pit, and rubbed the chicken. I got a lemon seltzer and circled the house looking for dog poop. Sometimes I still thought about getting high. It seemed banal enough. I could let my brain get tugged in that direction but then I pulled it back.

I circled the house looking for poop and drank my La Croix. The neighbors had a grow light in their front window that burned pink-purple day and night, and you could imagine the furry red buds with their nappy tendrils in that queer light. That would be hard to smell. Maybe I was just a dog at heart, prone to consume anything, all scent-based thought, which is no thought at all.

I was out of work again too, and that was cause to celebrate. You could worry about these things (when would I work again?) or enjoy being off in summer. I would do that. And though I couldn’t drink or do drugs I could eat meat and do push ups right there in the grass. If ever there was a time for toxic masculinity it was now. And that was a response to something missing, a deficiency.

I would put on that AC/DC song and recall my youth, the spinning lights and blaring cords as I sped around the roller skate rink.

Life is so sweet. My dog’s face in the morning sniffing the air. The first morning birds and the last evening crickets. We are all sense and scents, and no sense at all.



Categories: writing

Tags:

15 replies

  1. Hey Bill, nice to catch a post of yours on the one day I actually decide to show up in blogland. Your writing is always so lovely!

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thanks Michelle it’s kismet ha! Happy Fourth and hope you’re well my friend. And I assume this is Michelle, it sounds like you Ms, Green…

      Like

  2. My two cents? Beautiful piece, Bill.

    Have a terrific day up your way, and I hope your locals are courteous and responsible with the fireworks. The doggos deserve some sensitivity!

    Liked by 1 person

    • Amen to the doggos good buddy and thanks for your “two cents” ha ha…well played Kevin. Be well and wishing you safe days ahead too. Fire wise and otherwise…

      Like

  3. Glad to see this and that you’re getting a breather and a breath of air. And not that thin, clear tasteless kind, but proper USA gas, full of dog scent, pork BBQ, pheromones, etc. It’s been the Endless Summer of Smoke around here, you gotta floss regularly to get the Canadian cinders outa yer teeth! Happy 4th man.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Happy Fourth to you too RP and thanks for the kind note. Sorry to hear about the smoke I know what a drag that can be. Just about to start up here too I hear. Right now it’s just charcoal smoke for me ha ha! Enjoy the holiday my friend.

      Like

  4. Happy Fourth.
    Sense and scents, and sense, plus the interplay of past and future tense make for an intriguing read, Bill.
    Cheers,
    DD

    Liked by 2 people

  5. Happy 16th of July! Close enough? Cravings come, cravings go. There’s a new song by Metric called “Just the Once,” and the key line is “until once becomes once in a while.” Bookend that with another new favourite song “Bad Thing” by Miya Folick: “I did a bad thing/
    Over and over and over again” and I think I may be working through some things…

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to Dave Ply Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.