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Chinook
by George Hosier II - May 7, 2008
Breaking Up
Ah, Breakup! My favorite season of Alaska’s year. How oft during
the tedious months of winter have I pined for these halcyon days?
Now the time has come for long lost treasures to be relinquished
from the icy talons of winter’s merciless grasp. Viruses, long
dormant, can now be released into my bronchial passages to test
the mettle of my immune system. The unyielding ground, softening
beneath my feet, tenderly draws my finest dress shoes into its
embrace until I find them enveloped in an undulating ocean of
glistening mire, sloshing and gurgling in rapturous celebration of
its emancipation.
My yard blossoms luxuriously with toilet paper tubes, discarded
Kleenexes and utility bill stubs that had been sown to the arctic
wind by a frostbitten raven rummaging for a snack in my burn
barrel. These assorted relics of a bygone season had been
imprisoned for five interminable months in the snowdrift that
entombed them. As they unfurl to greet me now, I experience an
unexpected surge of nostalgia. I look fondly down with a tremulous
smile of reminiscence, my feet softly making rude noises in the
goop of my yard.
That crumpled Kleenex represents the sinus infection that kept me
in bed on Christmas Eve, trembling with the desire to throw a
pillow at my guests whose boisterous guffaws around a game of
Balderdash were robbing me of much-needed sleep. Yon Q-tip with
the lingering orange-ish residue still discernible upon one
cotton-swathed end had formerly daubed the cat scratches on my arm
with Mercurochrome after Fluffy expressed her reluctance to be
shaved into a Mohawk for her You Tube debut.
There’s the empty bubble card that I bought at the airport shop.
It had contained two of the finest Ibuprofen tablets that $6.95
can buy. They had been imbibed in an oblation of appeasement to an
airplane seat, who, angered that my somnolent drooling had stained
its upholstery, had retaliated by using my neck as its own
personal wad of Play-Doh. Ah, here’s an IGA receipt with blue
plumber’s goop on it. That was the only scrap of paper I could
find on which to wipe up my smears while attempting to restore
burst water lines to functional status at –50o F.
Affectionately, I stoop to touch these mementos from the past. It
troubles me that the sanctity of their funeral pyre had been so
callously disturbed, but now I can give them a more appropriate
farewell. They shall be borne back to the burn barrel to be
cremated with great pomp and ceremony at the appointed time. But
wait! It is not destined to be. Not yet. A Kleenex, saturated by
breakup mud, smears into slime under my fingers. A packing peanut,
degraded by Spring’s ultraviolet sunbeams, crumbles into grainy
crumbs. The toilet paper tube rips soddenly as I tug on it. With
its bottom side still frozen into a slab of ice, I am only able to
retrieve a tiny flake that dangles moist and flaccid, pinched
between my thumb and forefinger.
I am not disheartened. Breakup is upon me and the invigorating
smell of Spring wafts joyfully into my flared nostrils. It smells
like seven months worth of dog, horse, goat, and moose turds
beginning to ripen upon exposure to the balmy air. It smells like
the vast bog of accumulated motor oil, power steering fluid and
radiator fluid that has formed in my parking spot, since being
released from their cover of snow and ice. It smells like the
revived decomposition of freshly thawed moose offal and fish guts
and every small animal that died on my property during the long
winter.
A pair of birds flies by, warbling a love song in two part
harmony. They land on a birch branch and begin preening each
other. Their courtship ritual fans a romantic ember in my breast.
Their music reminds me of the lyrical melody of my own wife’s
voice. I must go to the house and find my sweet, gentle spouse. I
must bring her out here, and we must share this time together.
Hand in hand we must slosh through the muck. We must inhale the
pungent air and shiver enraptured under the spell of Breakup. Yes,
I must Breakup with my wife, and I must do it now.
I turn toward the house to fetch her, but my way is barred by a
puddle formed by run-off from the pasture. There is so much horse
urine and goat berry tea in it that the nitrogen and phosphorus
content is probably high enough to turn my forty acres into a
smoking crater if somebody were to set off a blasting cap in that
puddle. I chortle in anticipation of the lush dark green grass
that will flourish on the site in a few weeks.
The bottom of the puddle is obscured. This is partly due to the
murky brownish-amber contents. It is also due to the ammonia
vapors rising from its surface which are burning my eyes.
Undaunted, I respond to Love’s summons. I step carefully into it
and begin my wade.
I had not anticipated that the bottom was still a sheet of ice!
Suddenly, I become a cartoon character. My legs are churning madly
as I sprint in place, futilely attempting to maintain my balance.
My arms flail like windmill blades to no avail. I feel myself
tipping backwards, yielding reluctantly to the demands of gravity.
I throw myself sideways toward a small tree that stands barely
within reach. My left hand closes around a branch just as the rest
of my body does a spectacular triple backwards summersault.
My humerus head becomes a pestle, grinding my supraspinatus muscle
into hamburger against the mortar of my scapula. That vivid moment
of sensory input is enhanced by three or four audible reports,
like rifle shots, each followed by a fading thrumming sound. It is
the unmistakable sound of shoulder ligaments snapping in quick
succession. Eager to put my college anatomy class to practical
application, I identify the severed ligaments as corocoacromial,
acromioclavicular, and glenohumeral respectively. My rotator cuff
feels like a truck tire looks after a blowout on the Dalton
Highway.
I decide to stop holding onto the branch. It doesn’t seem to be
worth the effort somehow. The timing could have been planned more
carefully. I happen to be in the phase of my summersault cycle in
which my body is inverted in relation to its natural orientation.
In short, I am upside down. The angle of landing strikes me as
less than optimal. With cat-like reflexes I spin in midair so that
I gracefully land on my face instead of the top of my head. The
viscous puddle splashes spectacularly with my impact, and then
falls back, molasses-like, to engulf my prostrate form.
If I had to break my nose, I am grateful to be able to do so on a
slab of ice that therapeutically begins reducing swelling at the
moment of impact. Many unfortunate people have to waste precious
moments running all the way to their freezer to retrieve an ice
pack for the same purpose. The downside, of course, is that the
ice slab is submerged. Goat berry tea, while extremely healthful
to plants, is not formulated to deliver nutrients effectively to a
human when administered nasally. It also interferes with one’s
airway, rendering it difficult to maintain one’s normal
respiration process.
I decide that a brief application of ice is sufficient for the
moment, and that I should perhaps move on to the next phase of
trauma care, namely, elevation of the injured body part—at least
above the surface of the water level. Precious air whooshes into
my lungs.
My abrupt wheezing, whistling, screeching intake of this
underappreciated commodity startles a flock of swans whose
northward course happens to have brought them directly above my
location at this precise moment. Like a squadron of Heinkel He117
Greifs over London, the swans release their payloads. The ammonia
level of the puddle instantly spikes by 450%, and I begin to feel
like a giant cupcake frosted by a diabolical 3-year-old with a
slingshot and a bad case of attention deficit disorder. The
frosting smells overpoweringly of extra-concentrated Spring!
By now there is nearly more magic in the Spring air than even I
can stand. I drag myself to the edge of the puddle using my right
hand and knees, my limp left arm trailing limply in my wake. Safe
at last, on relatively dry land, I lay upon the squishy sod
panting from the effort. Vaguely, I hear my son calling me.
“Hey, Dad! Catching some rays, huh? Look what I found. It’s left
over from our New Year’s party.”
Ratcheting my wobbly head toward him, I attempt to focus on what
he is brandishing. I’m not sure, but it appears to be a long
skinny lollypop of some sort. “Watch this!” he whoops. A spark
gives birth to a spurt of flame. Then a little string near the
base of the lollipop begins to sputter with a hissing orange glow.
“I didn’t know we had any bottle rockets left.”
In slow motion I watch the hand with the match in it flick upward
in a backhanded toss. The still burning match traces a trajectory
over his shoulder and begins its descent toward the high octane
puddle. As I will my mouth to work, a deep reverbrating bass tone,
like a whale’s call oozes imperceptibly from my mouth.
“NNNNNNOOOooooooooooo...”
...Ah, Heaven! My favorite destination. How oft during the tedious
years of life have I pined for this halcyon place...
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