Tuesday, September 09, 2008

The Channel Hat

And we did it just like that.
When we want something,
We don't want to pay for it.

- Jane’s Addiction

The retro 70’s nylon mesh hat has been the bane of my headwear existence since resurfacing lo these past few years. I remember wearing a black and orange Stihl chainsaw hat to parties in the late 90’s for the pure ridiculousness of the thing.

By no means am I anti-fashion. But as I’ve always told my lawyer, the circumstances for me to actually “rock” one of these things would have to be exceptional.

With a long awaited bump in the south swell and with the surfers tearing their fingernails out over a dire summer of wind-blown monotonous flatness it seems like outrigger canoes may be taking the heat off standup paddlers, at least in the case of the breaks outlying the greater Outrigger/Kaimana Beach area. These things explode off the line up with all the grace and control of a ’67 Cadillac barreling down a groomed ski run. Simple math will tell any monkey that a 30-foot boat dropping in on a 10-foot wave face may result in trauma at the bottom.

Getting caught in a decent set is already like being in a washing machine, but add 200 pounds of composite polymer spiraling out of control and it becomes more like a blender. The experienced will relieve themselves prior to venturing out into a break occupied by one of these things.

The hit came furiously, dashing the white boat and all three occupants in a hellish avalanche of whitewater, paddles and terrified yelping. The woman was held under long enough to come up raving about black leprechauns in the coral heads and pulled the hair out of anyone dumb enough to come near her for the first 20 minutes as the lifeguards viewed the whole horrible episode 250 yards away from the binoculars, laughing smugly at the spectacle of it all undoubtedly stoned and eyeing the jellyfish signs greedily like packrats hording useless mothballs.

The flotsam of the impact zone surged and subsided like the stomach of a great whale making ready to vomit and had the eerie feel of a Cessna water landing gone the way that water landings usually go. I picked up a huge red bucket, looking over a guy treading water naked and gripping a pair paddles with the anesthetized look of a man who has just been raped by a herd of rabid buffalo.

“This your bucket?”

“Hold on to it! I’m making a break for the boat! Can you see it?”

The boat rested comfortably on the reef a good 50 yards in just off the channel where the swimmers make the 200m pull to the new windsock. I offered to take his paddles but he was beyond reason and kicked off into the reef, overshooting the stranded canoe by 100 yards. He was not seen again.

The old steersman made it to the wreckage first coughing up seaweed and swearing incessantly as a waterman on a 14-foot rescue board swooped in to ferry the woman to shore. I fired the red bucket at the old man as another set crested and the waterman shouted at her to lean into the wave. Making it barely over the lip, the wind tore off his camouflage retro Bintang Beer hat. He had time to look back and see me swipe it off the surface as the next wave kicked them toward the beach. The look of exasperation said that this was indeed an integral part of his wardrobe, but the possibility of nailing the distraught woman bit him hard in the instincts and he dug hard for the shore, crossing his fingers that fate would put it back on his head.

Unfortunately, it was a perfect fit. And it goes without saying that as one should never look a gift horse in the mouth, the same goes for someone with my head looking a gift hat in the bill. I lost him somewhere in the mosaic of humanity littering the beach like plastic and knew it was mine. Another clean take, and completely absolved, I marched into the shower like any sun-blackened fool stepping like a camo-crowned stone pimp straight out of 1970.

To celebrate my bravery, I headed to Times Supermarket, the Friday night 6 pack brand decision already handed to me by furious tides of fortune.


Friday, September 05, 2008

Hangover

I set up these two friends of mine from high school who both live—unbeknownst to each other—in Manhattan now, both happily married and long removed from our days of pulling over to the side of the road during a disagreement and settling it with a beauty bark wrestling match at twilight in front of the junior high school or pitching cans of ravioli down 14 stories to the street late night at the Art Institute on the Seattle waterfront.


I sent them each other’s phone numbers, encouraging them to catch up. With a 15-year gap separating their last meeting they agreed to meet for a drink somewhere in Harlem like the respectable husbands that life has molded them into.

The first call came at 4pm HST from Dale Pittman, co-founder of the Mukilteo, WA fight club circa 1990, the only member of his family to escape the clutches of the Pacific Northwest now firmly entrenched like a root weevil teaching in the Bronx. I screened him without a second thought to catch the new south swell. But the voicemail was from Mark Rhonemus former bassist for our high school band Pure Tons of Love who had once woken me in the Royal Kuhio room 1221 from a solid coma with repeated blows to the face at the request of Michelle Murray, a strange Chinese girl who I blamed entirely for the bruising and never spoke to again.

His message was calm and collected. “Dale and I are having a beer. Looking forward to seeing you out here…”

Three hours later at sunset, the text messages had started to pile up:

MARK: Left you a VM. We know you are screening. Please send bail money.
MARK: Tell me something. How can Dale take a piss so fast? I’ll hold.
ME: He has an inhumanly wide urethra
MARK: He should be in labor
DALE: Holy shit that boy can party need backup to continue assault on ronomus(sic)
ME: Stop being a pussy. Or do some kegel exercises.
DALE: Going to hard liquor I am taking ronomos down

The last message came roughly after 1am and I’ve heard nothing from either of them since.

But fifteen years of memory lane is a hard surface to just casually skip down on a Thursday with a mixed belly of alcohol. Especially for a pair of small-town boys on the horrible precipice of middle age, bound to the grave reality of the 5am alarm clock. I’m sure this morning they regret not only answering their own respective phone calls, but most likely any and all circumstances leading up to their ever meeting in the first place. Though time heals all things...