Volcano Peace Toilet

extinct volcano and Rio Grande gorge near Taos, NM

Yo, (extinct) volcano, yo. It’s peaceful. Toilet is below.

As I was settling in to write, perhaps about that extinct volcano and the Snowy Plains of Ishtar, I remembered I’d promised to call Gilbert the Plumber. Our landlady had given the go-ahead for him to replace the antiquated toilet with a new one, and we needed it—she actually said yes months ago, but we were on the road or it was winter or who knows. This is a much longer story than I’m going to tell, of course. That’s the way it is with Gilbert.

This is a guy who’s just a couple of years older than I am, but it almost feels like he could be my father. With all the life he has under his belt, no wonder. It’s like I just fell down the stairs or something. When he tells stories about his youth in this same neighborhood or tries to teach me Spanish, even more so. I feel like an imposter from another planet sometimes. The Planet of the Stupid People with Fake Things.

The old toilet wasn’t fake, though, and had probably been there 50 years. When you tried to flush it, the enormous tank would flood the foul encrusted bowl in lazy circles that drifted ’round and ’round, accompanied by deep gurgling sounds I took to be the plumbing gods debating. Occasionally when it seemed all hope was lost, the slow swirl would accelerate and create an actual whirlpool leading to a flush, followed by a coughing belch and an endless groaning tank fill. These were occasions of great triumph, even if another go-around was needed. Remember that trip to Iowa in May? At my sister-in-law’s house, you press the lever and the thing goes “foosh” and hisses 20 seconds and you’re done. Just like in a motel.

(Now what planet am I from?)

Gilbert came by in his antediluvian relic of a truck to check out the scene, said he’d pick up a toilet at the hardware store, and to look for him at 1:00 p.m. tomorrow. An hour later, he showed up with the toilet and jumped right in to work like it was pre-arranged. He started giving me orders and I hopped to it. We wrestled the old toilet onto a dolly and hauled it out through the back door, then around the building to the front.

“I have two dollies,” he said after we’d unloaded. “This one and another one at home. That one makes tortillas…”

There’s not too much to say about the new toilet except that someone in China left out a crucial seal and bolts to mount the tank. Gilbert found some substitutes in the thriving arcana behind his truck seat, however, and the show went on. I had to place a chunk of 2×6 behind the thing to prop it up—Gilbert says the original build-out wasn’t close enough to the wall—but we have a winner. It’s a cute little modern lo-flow. You press the lever and the thing goes “foosh” and hisses 20 seconds and you’re done. Just like in a motel!

Man.

If that was all I had to worry about, I’d probably be dead.

»Buy This Photo!«

Rock & Roll Animal

cat in a barrel

Golden road to unlimited devotion?

When I was in my last year of teaching junior college—meaning next year I’d be 26 and wouldn’t be drafted—I needed a strategy for getting through that last semester. Three years in the bizarro town 60 miles from the Gulf should have gotten me killed, beaten up, or at least arrested (and then beaten up). It’s not like people didn’t try.

Meanwhile, newly-divorced me absolutely couldn’t wait to jump into my hot-rod VW camper bus and take off for the Ozarks. My friends and I, five of us in all, had bought 170 acres east of Fayetteville for $10,000. No structures or electricity, but huge trees, streams, and waterfalls. (It must seem incredible that this could be enough. It wasn’t, of course, but maybe I came closest.) I was all set. I had my dog, my guitar, 50 pounds of brown rice, the Whole Earth Catalog, and a book by a yogi called “How to Know God” that I never did read. But you have to understand, I was going, and I was not the only one.

The pressure was crazy right up to the end. They opened my mail and didn’t hide the fact. The deputy sheriff watched the house from a squad car across the street. On my last week in town, a cheerleader supposedly wanting to buy something from my yard sale came by to entrap me: there were football players waiting outside to run in and “save” her and mess my shit up, as the saying goes. How in God’s name did I ever make it to class those last few months? There was no way to play hooky, either. I had to show up or the dean was going to have my occupational deferment pulled. Fortunately, I had a secret weapon:

CREEDENCE CLEARWATER REVIVAL!

Yup. Every morning before I headed out the door, I’d play “Up Around the Bend” on my stereo as loud as it would go. It’d be playing while I shaved or pulled my jeans on. While I counted off another day until I got my freedom. If you don’t know the song, I’m sorry you missed it. What a fine screaming hippie stomper with a great guitar hook! It pumped me up and set the necessary attitude. A tuning fork for revolution, as it were. Here’s John Fogerty performing live in 2005 (sans CCR). What you should really do is start the video and then re-read the whole piece:

There’s a place up ahead and I’m goin’
just as fast as my feet can fly
Come away, come away if you’re goin’
leave the sinkin’ ship behind.

[CHORUS:]
Come on the risin’ wind
we’re goin’ up around the bend…

OH yeah. (And that first verse is probably just as relevant as it ever was.) At any rate, it has come to my attention, belatedly as usual, that in approaching this writing life—besides not actually, uh, writing very much—I have also neglected vast areas of experience which once brought me great joy. Do not follow in these footsteps! It is all of a piece. All I’m getting at here is to bring the whole person to the battle, whatever it is. Don’t leave your passions in the closet in an effort to be sensible or serious.

I may do one thing now, but I am calling in the army.

»Buy This Photo!«

4th of July (Video)

Aother one of “those” videos. Forgive me, I was into Andy Warhol once—but this one’s only half a minute long! (Be sure to set this thing to play at 720p, by the way.) It should be titled “Wind and Trees,” but since today is the 4th of July, that’s what you get. It very much portrays the kind of day we had, in which I seem inclined to just be quiet.

My wife was at her studio. I pulled a few weeds and raked some sticks. The town is full of tourists and all the restaurants are packed, so after she came home, we split a solitary leftover Guinness from the back of the fridge and made a couple of killer bacon-lettuce-tomato sandwiches. The town is going ahead with its fireworks display (never mind the fires), and when that starts we’ll walk 100 yards down the gravel road where we can look down into town and watch a few ka-booms!

More Bighorns

bighorn ewes at Taos Valley Overlook

Comin’ through!

There’s the second one (in front)! I’m still reeling from the experience I had Monday, when I was able to sit down and be a part of this scene. There’s so much that’s right about this, I hardly know where to start. First, that it happened at all. Second, that it happened to me: a matter of being in the right place at the right time, and let’s think years, not minutes. Validation of the highest order.

Be that as it may, it’s such a privilege, both to see the bighorn ewes and also feel I was accepted in their presence, two miles down a lonely trail with no one else around for miles. The quality of this experience can’t be conveyed in words. I hope you have a similar story to remember when the collective comes to call and tries to stuff you in a box.

(And people wonder why I don’t bother with TV. It is to laugh.)

Dances with Bighorns

Bighorn ewe at Taos Valley Overlook

How old is the feeling, how old?

At the turnaround point of a walk in the terrible high desert, with the sun in my face and the air blowing cool in a great soaring sky, I lifted my water bottle to take a drink. It had already been an astonishing day. My eyes made a casual sweep of the small valley beyond and stopped cold: a scary white skull-face was staring at me!

The world stopped completely and nobody moved. We were locked. There was only the One. Then slowly I realized I was looking at sunlight reflecting on the face of a beast. Just what kind, I wasn’t sure. Obviously wild but not running away. Wait a minute. What, bighorn sheep? I’d never seen one before but surely it was. And then there was another! Ewes, obviously. This one still grazing, moving off toward the gorge. Then the sentinel lost interest and went back to eating the tenderest tips of whatever there was: sagebrush, small bushes, dried grass… Just imagine a gig where you enjoy eating sagebrush—if you live here, what a benevolent God.

bighorn sheep near Taos, NM

White face a-looking at me

We had somehow established an instant relationship. I began walking after them. The trail I was on followed the slope of the valley and brought me much closer. At the sound of the camera or my foot scuffing on the rocks, they’d stop for a moment and stare like before, then go back to their foraging. When they decided to stay in the same general spot, I sat down on the trail and just watched for a long time. Whenever I shifted my legs or took a drink of water, they’d look up a bit, but by now we were almost a team. They even started moving toward me and came very close, maybe 100 feet. I even thought I’d have to get out of their way!

It must have been a good 15 minutes with me sitting in the dirt, the sheep eating away right in front of me. They were close enough that I could hear them stripping leaves off the branches and chewing the grass. When they finally turned and began ambling away, I decided the visit was over and stood up. Surely now they’ll start running, I thought, but they didn’t, not even when I picked up my camera and left. A 10-second stare, and then never you mind, and maybe we’ll see you again. At a rise in the trail, I looked back over my shoulder:

They were still there, just grazing along.

»Buy This Photo!«

Browse ARCHIVES

Browse CATEGORIES

Latest Posts