Am I the only one who's sick of the multiverse as a plot device?
I can’t speak to the actual physical concept of the
multiverse. I don’t know enough about it, or enough about its viability versus
that of the Copenhagen interpretation in explaining our world, I barely even
know how to use these concepts correctly. And yet I’m sure that many of the screenwriters
out there have even less of a grasp. But I get their perspective, truly, as hack
writers – it’s an easy premise for them to play with, like Groundhog Day but
with a veneer of scientific credibility. And, like Groundhog Day, it appeals to
an inner desire we all have.
We want to know what the person did who had made the other decision. Somewhere you did it differently, and ideally did it right. You did get into Dartmouth, you did complete that touchdown pass junior year and a scout was in the audience, he finally proposed to you and you said yes.
And therefore, it was all I could think about when I walked
through the streets of a West Coast city I used to call home, where I misspent
my youth, and thought about that person I might be. And to find those little
points at which my life and his life would have been one and the same.
What were they? Looking back, they dance across my visual cortex like the flashing images of a magic lantern.
In the South End, old wooden bungalows still sigh on
overgrown lawns, threatening to be strangled by the blackberry bushes, stoops
decorated with blue-robed virgins with arms outstretched and whimsical metal
folk art and Tibetan prayer flags. They had once been the homes of union men
and their families, airplane mechanics and longshoremen and shipyard welders.
How many of them had stayed on? Their little bungalows, with their warm old
wooden fixtures were selling for north of $750,000 now.
The slightly rundown streets of White Center still held their familiarity – the Salvadorean bakery, the pizza place, the bikini baristas in their little plywood shacks, the cardboard boxes of jackfruit outside the grocery stores with Khmer signage, the metal clang of machine shops, a woman smoking a cig and scrolling through her phone on the passenger side of a parked Ford Ranger outside. A blue-haired women in Marvel sweatpants and a mobility scooter rolls past, inclusive pride flag – one of many variations of the inclusive pride flag I was to see over the coming days, like those of marginally different statelets in the Holy Roman Empire – fluttering in the cool breeze.
Cresting a nearby hill, Mount Rainier stood there, as
jawdropping as it was the day I first saw her, bright and distant in the sunlight,
a nearer and somehow reassuring presence in the 10:00 p.m. twilight reflecting
off the glaciers, lights on at the high school baseball stadium, teenagers in
hoodies coming home late from band practice, squealing as they jumped on one
another’s backs.
I stayed at the cheapest spot I could get that looked like it wouldn’t be a stop on a human trafficking circuit, which I remembered from years ago as douchey in a very specifically ugly, very specifically late ‘00s kind of way – a mix of hard-rawk grunge-era memorabilia, a logo that uses the Brazzers font, and once-sleek black and red furnishings just starting to show their wear and tear. The walls are thin, there’s a woman in Harry Potter pajama pants on the edge of tears in the lobby, but there is something about crumbling downtown hotels, those that have survived in any meaningful capacity, that still resonates with me. Some adolescent fantasy of hopeless mid-century adultery and highways as escape routes to the liberation of a coastal city, no matter how many times those themes have been retread.
The late sunsets are still fucking with me. I think it must
still be early, we can’t have been drinking for long, my eyes and body to used to
the steady diurnal cycles of the tropics. The wine is sneaking up on me – it’s
a natural Austrian red served chilled, because this will be thought of as the era
of the chilled natural Austrian red. The only time I can remember eating bacon
ice cream was back in Obama’s first term, down the street from here, and I knew
then that that time would be thought of as the era of bacon ice cream. Some of
the same people were there that day as were here this evening. Everyone was
prettier than I remembered.
In the market, the street preachers and the napping junkies and crowds of Asian tourists gathering around the original Starbucks were still there, and somehow I’m glad of it – I even recognized a homeless man from years earlier, actually looking a bit more trim and healthy. The little shop where I had first haphazardly tried to write something daring and long-form was still there too, and I stopped in and drank tea and remembered what it was like to have a whole life of writing ahead of me. The overenthusiastic Millennial theater kids had grown up and were replaced with corseted femboys. The corseted femboys on both sides of the cashier’s counter talked about what time they would be at the party that night, the same way we had when we had stood on both sides of the cashier’s counter.
Bacon ice cream. Chilled natural Austrian red.
And that night, they went to their party. And I went and danced and sang with some of those people who were prettier than I remembered, as I celebrated the nuptials of two of the sweetest people I know, and they too were prettier than I remembered, as they had their first marital kiss on a boat with a gorgeous view of the skyline, and the rain turned to a perfect clear sunset after.
And then we danced and the Fernet flowed and we sang karaoke
in the same Korean-style noraebang that we used to sneak liquor into in
our early twenties. Coming back from the bathroom, I saw a solo couple through
the slit in the door, his cock in her hand, and somehow I could only think…
good for them.
The next morning, I drank the free coffee in the lobby, because of course they proudly advertise their complementary Stumptown. My old high school buddy picked me up and we walked around the Ballard Locks, and around my old neighborhood, and the cemetery where Bruce Lee is buried. We still talked with the same dorky passion we did in high school, about satellite photography and cooking techniques, about the assorted insanities of the world we’d inherited. He didn’t have time to play music as much anymore, I didn’t have time to bake bread like I used to. In the evening, the lights of downtown seemed colder than ever. The cold light emanates forth from the not-quite-geodesic domes on Lenora Street, in what I had remembered as a neighborhood of old shipping warehouses just starting to be replaced with noodle bars and hot yoga studios, made all the more hideous by their being not quite geodesic. An architecture that feigns the organic. “Look, Daddy’s balls.” We bro-hug and I wave him goodnight. I do my best to turn my eyes away from the cold fluorescent lights above, the ugly glass-box bars with ESPN playing silently with closed captions, with business Americans getting schnockered on IPA.
And yet I couldn’t avoid them, at least not fully. I tried
to give each of the devils their due. I tried to listen to and empathize with
the loudmouthed tech bro, before he referred to his “vibe tribe” (I researched
that to see if that was an actual thing, and it’s also the name of an Israeli
psy-trance DJ, natch). I tried to smile and nod along to the conversation of a
wealthy Harley-Davidson collector from the Midwest, before he began verging
into QAnon territory and his wife pulled him back – “honey, not everyone
believes the same things you do.” I couldn’t help but prod the wine bar
day-drunk businesswoman as she talked about fucking her way around The
Villages, Florida (yep, the giant retirement community) and loudly accusing me
of being judgmental in my silence – a reminder that women are the only ones who
still try to imitate the cast of Mad Men, that particular boys’ club having
long devolved into a bunch of cargo-shorts douchebags, gamers, and Wall Street
man-children. All three, really, seemed to be chasing a vision of America – a hippie
utopia, a white picket fence and crewcut 1950s suburb, Don Draper in a suit –
that had long since dissolved.
“The grotesques were not all horrible. Some were amusing, some almost beautiful, and one, a woman all drawn out of shape, hurt the old man by her grotesqueness. When she passed he made a noise like a small dog whimpering. Had you come into the room you might have supposed the old man had unpleasant dreams or perhaps indigestion.
For an hour the procession of grotesques passed before the eyes of the old man, and then, although it was a painful thing to do, he crept out of bed and began to write. Some one of the grotesques had made a deep impression on his mind and he wanted to describe it…
That in the beginning when the world was young there were a great many thoughts but no such thing as a truth. Man made the truths himself and each truth was a composite of a great many vague thoughts.
All about in the world were the truths and they were all beautiful.
The old man had listed hundreds of the truths in his book. I will not try to tell you of all of them. There was the truth of virginity and the truth of passion, the truth of wealth and of poverty, of thrift and of profligacy, of carelessness and abandon. Hundreds and hundreds were the truths and they were all beautiful.
And then the people came along. Each as he appeared snatched up one of the truths and some who were quite strong snatched up a dozen of them.
It was the truths that made the people grotesques. The old man had quite an elaborate theory concerning the matter. It was his notion that the moment one of the people took one of the truths to himself, called it his truth, and tried to live his life by it, he became a grotesque and the truth he embraced became a falsehood.”
-- Sherwood Anderson, Winesburg, Ohio, who himself abandoned his family and walked down the railroad track in the midst of a psychotic break, not long before penning those words.
But even in a world of grotesques you find that true beauty.
You wind up moving past them, and in the dive bar with your old friend, seeing
more people, all of them pretty in their own weird way, Italian and Filipino,
Ethiopian and Lao, dancing over the sticky floors. You chase your dirt-cheap
Rainier with Chartreuse Verte. Around the corner, there are brass bands playing
and the local Bandidos chapter is parked out front, and they seem, strangely,
to be vibing just like everyone else. You meet another writer, maybe a decade
or so older, and she tells you about trying to express yourself in the
fundamentally uncaring world in which we find ourselves.
And in this moment, there we were. Me and my other self. Our paths met, crossed.
Before diverging in new directions again.
And not long after I poured the last of my American change in a coffee stand tip cup at Seatac. And I was back over the ocean again, neatly tucked into the path that I had chosen.