The heat rose again this week, which made me happy. Still, I miss real “dog days” in August. Is it just the tendency of memory to idealize and amplify, or were summers longer and hotter when we were kids? In To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee appeals to our sense of nostalgia right from the get-go when she’s describing the hot summers of childhood — “It was hotter then.” I knew from that first page or two that I was going to love the book. Are there other books you know of that use summer heat well? This would be a good topic to discuss — anyone? From the novella In Evil Hour, by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, I remember the heat of the village, the dead animal on the riverbank that no one will take away, which continues to decompose and smell, and the ranking official’s unabating toothache . . . Marquez creates that atmosphere of a stagnant, miserable situation coming to a head, the tension building as human dramas unfold. I want to get back to Marquez. I just picked up a copy of his Strange Pilgrims at Half-Price Books. Have you heard the story of how he started writing One Hundred Years of Solitude? He was leaving on a vacation with his family; the car was all loaded; they were driving down the road. Marquez got this idea that wouldn’t let go of him . . . so he turned the car around, they all went home, and he started writing. Wouldn’t it be terrible to be married to (or the child of) a genius?
Anyway, I’m continuing to absorb everything I can from these waning days of summer. This past week, the early mornings have been foggy. When I wake up in the pre-dawn darkness, I always stand for a moment at the open door of my balcony and say good morning to the neighborhood. (It’s funny how the body clock works. Lately, I’ve been waking up about a minute before my alarm would ring. Isn’t that bizarre? That’s been my pattern throughout life, regardless of when I’m getting up or what job I’m doing. We’re “fearfully and wonderfully made.” Either the body has an internal clock that is extremely accurate, or else there are angels sitting beside us that shake us awake at the appointed time.) The sun rises as I get ready and leave the house.
But anyway, the fog. I drive through the Stowe Tunnel, emerge into the sunrise, turn left, and then when I cross the bridge onto Neville Island, there’s another misty island off to my right. Straight ahead, in the jumble of the industrial jungle, there’s a factory where a dancing flame perpetually jets and dances above a stack. One morning this week, it was so foggy that I could just barely see the flame. It was a faint glow through the vapor.
As I move along Neville Island, the Ohio River is to my left. Its far bank is a steep, wooded mountainside. The trees are uninterrupted, a vast stretch of them, from the bridge as far as I go and beyond. As I drive, I glance again and again at the misty trees, beyond the mist-wraiths rising from the river. I wish I could be among them with my Neo, working on The House of the Worm. But the trees are there, and they’re an inspiration. Summer is there, at the borders of our lives — the true Summer, the ideal Summer where stories and ideas dwell. It’s always within sight in the warm months. It’s there to inform and quicken our art.
So, the week at work went quite smoothly. Every day on our punch-cards, we’ve been racking up 7.5, 7.5 . . . Well, you know how Fridays are. The adventure struck at about 1:00 p.m. We were back from lunch, just started good on that final two-hour stretch. All day, the belt had been stopping momentarily, for which I’m always grateful. It gives us a chance to empty our trash bins and scoop the overflowed stuff off the floor back onto the belt. (If I were running the machines, I’d put in such stoppages on purpose. It increases the efficiency of the line workers.) The belt stopped, and Punkin’s radio crackled, and he told us that we were down. So I grabbed a push-broom, and downstairs we went for cleanup.
We scoured out the chamber below our deck, where the detritus falls. Ralph told me he’d heard a motor was broken, which probably meant we were down for the count. By his phone, it was 1:11. Not a good thing — the shift ends at about 2:50.
Ralph went out to the main floor to clean. He likes to keep an eye on the general movement of things. I knew I could find a better time with Gizmo. I reported to Gizmo, and he asked, “You wanna do something?” I said, “I do indeed, Sir.” He said, “Bring that broom. You’re gonna love this!” Gizmo knows me. He sent me up a ladder to a remote, lofty place in the innards of the beast where I’d never been before. This was up under the roof, where the heat was withering. Gizmo described the operation from the ground, showing me the rails of the catwalk that I had to reach. “See that?” he asked. “When you get up there, you’ll see a big hole. Just push all that from under the machine into the hole.”
It was a big, stubborn pile, and I had to crouch down to do it. But I saw what he meant. There was an inner pit of cans and bottles. I was supposed to shove all the cans and bottles from the catwalk into the pit. Nice, huh? Heat, railings, a precarious catwalk, shoving around with a broom in places you can’t exactly see, and the satisfying cascade of trash into the pit. I got the bulk of the pile cleared away. The catwalks weren’t done yet to my satisfaction when I saw Gizmo conferring with Spider, and he called me down. “They want everyone to sign out,” he told me. I passed the awesome line boss Dan, who said, “All right, baby, we’re out of here at 1:30.” Yes, he called me “baby”!
So yes, we got released at 1:30. Not quite a full week, but I was not complaining. I was ready for the weekend to begin.
Backing up a bit — today, Ralph and I were imagining what it would be like if trash-sorting were a sport, and if sportscasters were covering it. Ralph has me in stitches when he does his “white guy voice.” His white guys are always talking to someone named Bill. The day a lawnmower blade nearly took my nose off, Ralph did his impression of a guy changing the lawnmower blades: “Bill, I’m going to put new blades on this thing and throw the old ones away.” Well, today, he did a hilarious rendition of an excited sportscaster covering the paper line. “Oh, my ***! Did you see that sweep?!” He had the intonation perfect! “Durbin’s a good man on the cardboard. He has one of the longest reaches in the sport. How long is his reach, Bill?” — “Well, he can extend it by another meter with his lunge. You know, he actually cracked a rib at the beginning of the season diving after an egg carton. There was a question of whether he’d be able to sort or not, but he’s snapped back, and if today is any indication . . .” “Holy cow! Did you see that?! He gets in the can with both hands full! You know, Bill, what makes him one of the greats is that he can hit that can/bottle shaft without looking at it. It’s like he has sonar in that left hand . . .”
We have a good time.
Don’t let anyone tell you that the summer is over. August itself has another week to go. Then there’s a stretch until the equinox. So enjoy the Deep Summer while it’s here! Bake, bask, read, create, dream, imagine . . .