BECKY HAGENSTON
How to Keep Busy While Your Fiancé Climbs
Mount Everest
You're not someone who does this kind of thing, but
here you are, doing it.
Say, "I've never done this before," to the
man beside you, the one with his legs flung wider than a cheerleader's.
Then feel embarrassed, as if you've just propositioned him. But it's only
yoga. Celebrities do it. The bandy-legged man beside you, reaching for
his yellow toenails, does it. The chubby leotarded lady in front of you
does it. Now you do it.
Roll out your mat and try to look limber. You bought
the mat at Walmart yesterday and it has a pleasant rubbery smell that
reminds you of kindergarten, of sit-upons and Fisher Price. There are
other people here who look less limber than you, and you concentrate on
themthe leotarded lady, a stocky man in blue jeans, and there are
a couple of middle-aged women sitting stiffly, as if they're shellacked
from the neck down. You are the youngest person in the class, except for
one pony-tailed twenty-something girl who is wearing a tank top and biking
shorts and is just lying there on the mat with her chest forward, flat
against her thighs. Decide to hate her. You need a little more hate in
your life. You sometimes hate your fiancé, for going off and climbing
Mount Everest and leaving you alone in this dinky New Mexico town, but
mainly you just think he's being a jerk. Mainly you just feel a little
sad.
Last week he'd said, on the phone from Kathmandu,
"You should sign up for something."
"For what?" you'd asked, bewildered, walking
the front porch with your cordless phone.
"Something to keep you busy," he said. "While
I'm away." Because you teach high school English, and aren't a computer
savvy techno-head like him, he thinks you are never truly busy. "Take
a class or something."
"I teach classes, I don't take them," you
reminded him. You wondered, not for the first or the last time, why you
agreed to marry this person, somewhere a zillion miles away. But then
later you were looking in the paper and saw an ad for yoga classes, and
you thought what the heck, you'd try something new and interesting and
strange. You had hoped and expected that everyone would look like swamis
and smell of jasmine. But the only swami-type person is the instructor,
who is oldseventy? But so bendy!and wrinkled and bearded.
His toenails are thick and yellow as Legos. The whole room smells like
feet.
The classes are held in a nursing home, in a big room
with a TV and microwave and tables and a play pen. Families probably sit
in here and visit their dying mothers and fathers, while the grandkids
play in the play pen. It's depressing.
Feel depressed.
Halfway through the class, when everyone is on all
fours and roaring like lions (what kind of yoga is this?), an elderly
woman from the nursing home shuffles into the room in her pink nightgown
and yellow slippers and just sits there, watching. Wonder what she must
think. You can't tell by her face, which is blank as a hardboiled egg.
The instructor instructs everyone to lie down and
then flip their butts backwards over their heads. He demonstrates. Flip
your butt over your head. In the back of the room, someone farts.
To finish the class, the instructor turns out the
lights and tells everyone to lie down on their mats and take deep, cleansing
breaths. Nap time, you think, gratefully. You need a nap.
When the lights come back on, the old woman is still
sitting there.
~
Your answering machine is blinking red, red, frantically,
dramatically. There's a message from your fiancé, who has called
you from Kathmandu again just to make sure you aren't mad at him for spending
his life savings to climb Mount Everest. "Tomorrow we head for Base
Camp," he says, in a voice as measured as a PBS narrator. "I
won't be able to call for a while. Well, I wish you were home."
He wishes you'd been home so you could reassure him,
as you've been reassuring him ever since he came up with this stupid,
childish, irresponsible idea, that you're fine with it. (If you told him
the truth, that you think he's being an asshole, he'll resent you later
for stomping on his dream, and it'll cause strain in the marriage. What
you're realizing now, and haven't told him, is that you don't even want
the marriage. Or do you? You have no idea.)
~
When your fiancé proposed to you, six months
ago on a safe, sturdy outcropping barely twenty feet up the Organ Mountains,
he'd plopped onto one knee and you'd thought he'd sprained his ankle.
You'd helped him to his feet, stared at his sweet, dirt-glommed face,
and told him to be careful.
And when he produced the ring from his backpack, you
had imagined picnics and children and long, careful hikes, a long and
careful life.
~
The old woman shows up again the next week, in the
same pink nightgown and yellow slippers. The instructor is talking about
out of body experiences and how once when he was in high school he was
tackled in a football game and felt his soul leave his body. Even though
it turned out he only had a broken nose. Now, he says, he can go out of
his body whenever he wants, just by breathing a certain way.
"Have any of you had out of body experiences?"
he asks. No one has. He turns to the old woman. "Have you ever had
an out of body experience?" he asks her kindly.
She narrows her eyes and shakes her head.
"Well, don't worry," he says, "if you
stick around here long enough, you will!"
Yeah, you think, she's going to die. Think,
as you have not thought since seventh grade: One day, I'm going to die.
One day also, your fiancé will die.
Feel worried.
~
At home, in the bedroom you share with your fiancé,
take a deep, cleansing breath and then hold it, hold it, hold ituntil
you're light headed, hallucinating sherpas in a storm.
~
Read a best seller about climbing Mount Everest. The
Hillary Step sounds like a square dance. Base Camp sounds like a pizza
party. Try to skip the sections of the book describing how climbers eventually
perished, but you find yourself reading about a man who died while talking
on a cell phone to his wife at home in New Zealand. They picked out their
unborn child's name and then the phone went dead, and so did he.
You don't want your fiancé to call you from
the mountain if and when he's dying. You don't want to think about anything,
about love or mountains or danger or anything at all. Throw the book against
the wall. Rent as many stupid, brainless movies as you can find, and watch
them all night, and cry.
~
You've started taking yoga twice a week now, Wednesday
and Friday, not because you like it, but because you can't stand to be
in your house, grading papers and listening to the phone not ring.
Think about having an affair with the bandy-legged
man, even though he's smaller than you and flamingly gay.
Think about how stupid your fiancé is for risking
his entire future, and yours, to climb a 29,000-foot rock. You've known
him for five years, and if he dies you'll never marry anyone, ever, you
won't even have a date, ever! If he lives long enough for you to break
up with him, you might have half a chance.
~
Take off your engagement ring but then think, psychotically,
What if this causes an avalanche? and put it back on, almost shaking.
Breathe and pray.
~
The old woman is gone the following Wednesday, and
you know she's dead and you also knoware you insane?that your
fiancé is dead. Think of him frozen on the Hillary Step, his eyelashes
full of ice. Think of his blue eyes open and staring, and his hands caked
and brittle as glass. He was the best thing that ever happened to you.
~
But then on Friday the old woman is back, and you
pull your mat closer to her chair, until you can smell something sour
and floral. Her expression never changes, nothing flickers across her
face, but her eyes move slowly from person to person, as if trying to
register someone not there, someone long gone. When her eyes light upon
youyou're half-heartedly trying to hoist yourself into a backbendsmile
and wave. Her eyes travel slowly on.
Make up a history for her. Her name is Olga and she
was born in Russia. She used to dance in the Bolshoi Ballet, until she
met her husband, an American soldier who whisked her away to New Mexico.
He died. She has no children. Feel sorry for her, and for yourself. Feel
sorry for your fiancé, who is climbing vertical granite, picturing
your face in the blinding ice.
You're so preoccupied feeling sorry that when class
is over you forget your keys and have to go back for them.
There you find the instructor squatting barefoot by
the old woman, stroking her hand, murmuring. On the way home, shaking
in your car, you wonder if he was really saying what you thought you heard
"My love, my poor love"or if you just made that up.
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