by Mykel Board
ENTRY TWENTY
[Recap:
From the start, it doesn't look good for this trip. Everything goes
right... always a bad sign... Nothing portends disaster like
everything going right.
Easy
subletter in New York... smooth flight to Miami... promises of “meet
you at the airport/seaport”... $10 a night accommodations in
Guyana, the rest free.
Uh
oh! Too good. The better the news early, the bigger the fall later.
And things get worse. (Better) Miami goes so smoothly you could cry.
The only problem is a lot of rain-- heavy rain. The streets are
rivers... waves in the pool. I get wet. Very wet.
Then
to Trinidad, where my friends pick me up at the airport and take me
drinkin'-- and more drinking. It doesn't rain so much in Trinidad.
Then
to Guyana.
In
Guyana, my facebook friends from KEEP
YOUR DAY JOB!
meet me at the airport. The
two weeks of my stay in Guyana are adventure-filled, and beer-dulled.
Most days, it rains. Sometimes for just an hour or two in the
afternoon. Sometimes all day.
“I
don't get it Mykel,” says my pal Jamal. “This isn't the rainy
season.”
“Rainman,”
I say.
He
still doesn't get it.
The
plan is to travel to Suriname with Keep Your Day Job! But, uh
oh... a drummer problem. Two drummers agreed to tour with us. One, a
close friend, the other, more PUNKROCK. They ditch the friend for the
punkrocker. He bails at the last minute. The now former-friend
doesn't answer emails. This cannot work out. We go to Suriname
anyway-- drummerless. It works out.
In
Suriname, I stay with Jose, a punkrock student and his super-generous
parents. They cook for me every day. I'm the guest of honor. It rains
a lot.
Then
it's on to French Guiana, where the brother of one of my top ten
pals, Simon,
lives with his
girlfriend Marie.
His
name is Florian.
I
take a small boat across the river that separates French Guiana from
Suriname. The captain lets me choose my port of entry: “legal or
backtrack?” I choose legal. At customs, I annoy the white
immigration officers by asking for a passport stamp. It's raining.
My
first days in French Guyana are distress free... unless you count the
bottom paddling I get from my friends' spare bicycle. I have one of
the best days of the entire trip: canoeing through the Amazon with
Florian as my French guide. Chased by dogs, paddle-blistered hands,
bitten by mosquitoes, stuck in the roots of swamp trees... it's
wonderful.
The
only thing better, I'm told, will be THE CARNIVAL... an all night
festival my hosts and their friends have been working on for months.
Nope.
It
rains... pours... torrents of rain... non-stop. A field of dreams
turned to mud. I'm outta there the next day. After a banana boat
ride back to Suriname, I again find myself back at Jose's. It's
monkey meat and gamelon--- probably less of a strange combination
than it seems. Then, back to Guyana.
This
time, I'm staying a couple of days with Peeps. The IT guy you met the
last time I blogged about the country. ]
This
will be the last entry in the Caribbean blog. I want to write about
Detroit, but that was months ago and I've already forgotten. Maybe I
can dig up my notes.
Right
now, let's go to Ryon's (Peep's) place where I've got the front
room... full of windows... with my own bed and a fan that blows just
right in the sultry air.
(I stole this one from
his Facebook Page)
|
Ryon
(pronounced Rye-On, with an emphasis on the ON, to distinguish him
from Ryan.. pronounced Rye-In) is the IT guy. Ryan
is in Keep Your Day Job Exclamation Mark guy. My other friends call
Ryon PEEPS, because of his thick glasses. And, he's one of those
people who is cool enough not to care about nicknames. (Unlike me,
who is easily irritated by shorty, baldy, or gramps.)
Besides
me, Uncle Kennard is also staying at Peep's place. Skinnier than An
Intellectual History of American Football,
Kennard's not his real name. I can't remember what it is... and the
internet
tells
me Kennard
is
the number one boy's name in Guyana. Unlike most Kennards, this guy
is... let me rephrase that, unlike most of the humans on earth, this
guy is...
“Yeah
Mykel,” he says, sitting on the couch next to me, wearing only a
stained pair of boxer shorts. “Did I ever tell you about how we
were poaching fish from Suriname. Always one step ahead of the
cops... weird... catching fish on an empty stomach... you know
meth...” he waves his hands in the air as if dispersing smoke.
“Well, you don't feel like eating... so... where was I... the
cops... they were after us... POW! POW! I don't know if they were
trying to scare us with the guns or... look at this...” He shows me
a round scar on his shoulder, “that there's a bullet hole... not
from that time... from some other time... Anyway... we were hauling
in the fish... no visas, of course.”
“I
didn't think fish needed visas,” I say.
He
looks at me and squints.
“Where
was I...,” he continues. “Oh yeah, the cops were shooting at us,
so we had to go inland... follow a stream... just a little biddy
thing... mostly mud... but it went through... far enough away... I
mean the cops were afraid of going in there... caymans and howlers...
I donno... but we got away... then we realized we didn't know where
we were or even how to get out... so we stopped to do some more
fishing...”
And
it goes on like this for some time. Most of the stories have left my
head in fits of senility over the last year, but this guy was
absolutely the most interesting person I met on the entire trip...
and he cooked me French toast for breakfast. I wish I had a picture. (I'm going to have to steal a lot from the internet for this blog!)
I'm only in town for a couple days. So Gavin, Ryan, and Ryon arrange my farewell party at Peeps' place. We meet early and go to the local SURVIVAL supermarket, just around the corner. We pick up some BANKS for the party. I enter the store and see a big sign: WEDNESDAYS SENIOR DISCOUNT-- 62 or older.
Oh yeah, in case you forgot, BANKS BEER (actually headquartered in Barbados) is the main beer in Guyana. Here is a fine (internet) picture of the beer.
"Hey, I can save us money” I say, turning to look for my fellow shoppers. They're gone. I'm an escaped toddler in the Christmas rush... A lost puppy fallen from the box... I'm... where are they?
I'm only in town for a couple days. So Gavin, Ryan, and Ryon arrange my farewell party at Peeps' place. We meet early and go to the local SURVIVAL supermarket, just around the corner. We pick up some BANKS for the party. I enter the store and see a big sign: WEDNESDAYS SENIOR DISCOUNT-- 62 or older.
Oh yeah, in case you forgot, BANKS BEER (actually headquartered in Barbados) is the main beer in Guyana. Here is a fine (internet) picture of the beer.
"Hey, I can save us money” I say, turning to look for my fellow shoppers. They're gone. I'm an escaped toddler in the Christmas rush... A lost puppy fallen from the box... I'm... where are they?
I
walk around the store looking for my friends. Not here. There's no
way in hell I can find my way back. I'll be spending my last night in
Guyana... on the floor of the supermarket. I'm done for. Serves me
right for so much good luck!
I
leave the store.
Ryan
stands outside looking worried. “Where were you Mykel?” he asks.
We're gonna bring all this beer home.
“I
coulda got you a discount,” I whine. “I'm old.”
“Oh
that Senior Day thing?” he asks.
I
nod.
“It's
no good for booze,” he shakes his head. “They don't think old
people should be drinking.”
SHIFT
TO RYON'S HOUSE, the front room... “my room.” It's a party... my
party... a ton of people... all my favorite Guyanese. Gavin and Ryan
and Jamal and Addevi and people I don't know, and their friends. Only
Uncle Kennard isn't there.
And
the beer starts... then a bottle of Jack Daniels KYDJ! brought back
from Suriname... duty free.... then a bottle of Jim Beame I brought
back from Suriname... duty free... ... then the weed... It's coming
on 9 o'clock.
NINE
PEE EM and the party is ALREADY in full swing. I'm beat, the trip has
caught up with me. In New York, I'd be just starting at Nine. They're
here for me and I want to go to sleep. I try to be nice, but my eyes
close. I feel my head wobble on my neck.
“My”
bed is full... packed. People lying and drinking and smoking... a
couple I don't know makes out at the edge. I can barely keep my
assload of real estate. I can't stand... I don't have to... someone
shoves another Banks into my hand.
I
need to sleep... I'm going back to Trinidad tomorrow. The music is
loud... mostly hip hop. Somehow I slip deeper into that assspace. I
sleep, an old man falling asleep at his own farewell party. I can't
help it... I...
BANG!
The silence wakes me up. I open my eyes, but the rest of me is
paralyzed. I hear a shuffling around the room. All I can see is
directly in front of me... empty beer bottles... cigarette butts...
roach ends... empty scotch bottles... cigarettes butts in empty beer
bottles. There's more shuffling... I think it's Ryon... I have no
strength to move my eyeballs to check.
Into
my field of view moves Peeps. He's wearing pajamas or loose sweat
pants or something. I want to look up, smile, let him know I'm awake,
but it's like a dream. I can't move.
He's
cleaning up. Moving the ashes from one beer bottle to another.
Shuffling left-over contraband and heavy things I can't see. My eyes
are locked-- like the rest of me... unable to move in their sockets.
Then I notice it. His pants... pajamas... I don't know... they're
sticking out in front... just a bit... poking up like happens to guys
in the morning... a little tent. I shouldn't be staring at this. I
shouldn't even be noticing. I can't help it. I can't do anything...
turn away, even close my eyes... This cannot come to anything good.
He's gonna look down... see me staring... then I'm in trouble...
The
glass of the bottles clinks as he goes on his way, clearing,
cleaning, he and his hard-on... still right in front of me... turning
this way and that... I shouldn't be seeing this... I am seeing
this... I should close my eyes... I can't close my eyes... I can
close my eyes... I wake up and the room is empty.
I
forget how I reach the airport that day. Probably the KYDJ! guys
drive me. In Trinidad, Randy's brother Real picks me up at the
airport. I'm staying with Randy at his parent's house. There is some
tension in the air. I dunno. I get the feeling they're not happy to
see me. Randy and his brothers are fine. But mom and dad... I don't
know.
I'm
only here a few days. Randy has scheduled some studio time. I was
supposed to have written the words to a few songs. I had the MP3s in
my computer--- the whole trip. More than a month to work on lyrics. I
fucked up... forgot.
It's
all last minute, and the words don't quite fit the tunes... or they
do, but I didn't rehearse them
enough. One song that Randy called PENN STATE, I rename I'M A
PERVERT.
The next day of my short stay it's off to the hummingbird sanctuary with Randy's mom. Also joining us is the mother of Bryan, the singer in ANTI-EVERYTHING and one of my recording sponsors.
The
birds are amazing, fascinating, I took a ton of pictures-- and I
can't find any of them. They're gone from my hard drive... from the
camera... from the back-up. Disappeared like my memories... sad...
but real. So here's a picture I got off the internet:
I
love to release the feces and grease of a brown one
I
love to splatter dung matter as I down one
Off
your ivory tower my friend
A
nice brown shower my friend
CHORUS
I'm
just a pervert. You know I'm just a pervert
I'm
glad to be a pervert... a pervert for you.
I
love to explode just off the commode and then eat it
All
the whole while releasing my fly so I can beat it.
You
think I'm reckless my friend?
Want
a pearl necklace my friend?
CHORUS
I
love to sit close to the toes of my host and to taste them
I
love to sniff deep and they call me a creep when I embrace them
I
won't be saved by you
I'm
depraved by you...
I'm a
pervert. I'm just a pervert
Here
I am in the studio... a fancy place... a relic in this age of home
recording... a professional place... people who know a Sennheiser
from a Shure... A real recording room... I can see the engineer and
Randy on the other side of the window that looks into the control
room. It's a chorus of eye-rolling.
All
on Randy's (and Bryan's) dime... and I'm just fucking up... one tune
after another. I can't make it work. My voice won't go the same way
as the music. I have no control... like my eyes at Peeps' place.
I'm
just a Pervert! I'm just a Pervert!
I
sing/shout... missing the beat every time. The harder I try, the more
I fuck up. Eventually, we give up.
“Good
job, Mykel,” Randy says to me the same way you might tell a
toilet-training toddler “Good job,” when he just about hits the
bowl.
The next day of my short stay it's off to the hummingbird sanctuary with Randy's mom. Also joining us is the mother of Bryan, the singer in ANTI-EVERYTHING and one of my recording sponsors.
Bryan's
mom, a school-teacher in Port of Spain, greets me with “Mykel! I've
heard so much about you. I've wanted to meet you for a long time.”
What
a switch! Usually people who've heard so much about me... run like
hell when they get a chance to meet me.
On
the way to the car, I dump the lyrics to I'M A PERVERT and the other
sick songs in a garbage can near the street. Then I get in the car...
and we're off.
Randy's
mom drives us to the sanctuary. Up in the mountains, through dirt
roads that run along the sides of cliffs. My ears pop. The roads
become narrower. The scenery becomes more... er... rustic. If they
threw me out of the car and raced off, I'd have no idea where to
begin. They don't.
Finally,
we park... not in a lot... but in a precarious space at the edge of a
cliff. One false move and it's Thelma and Louise! No false moves.
We
get out of the car and walk up a steep hill to a closed gate in front
of a massive house. Randy's mom rings a bell, and the gate swings
open by itself. It could be the entrance to Dracula's castle. On the
other side of the gate is another steep climb to the bird sanctuary
where the birdman of Trinidad has thousands of hummingbirds...
different colors... sizes from bumble bee to a Peeps-size erection.
The
first thing I notice is the hum. I don't hear it. They're hum-fucking
birds and there's no hum.
“Why
do they call them humming birds?” I whisper to Bryan's mom.
We
sit on what looks like a large porch outside a country house. There's
going to be a lecture, and then a tour of the sanctuary. There are
chairs and space for about three dozen people.
“You
don't hear it?” she asks.
The
sanctuary head, an elderly colored gentleman, looks at me and smiles.
“Some
people can't hear it,” he says. “I'm not sure what it is. But for
some people, humming birds don't hum.”
“It's
35 years of punkrock,” I don't tell him. “Waddaya expect?”
The
presentation is fascinating. All the while this guy is telling us the
history of the place, these tiny birds are flitting around him and
the feeders hanging around the porch.
[Aside:
Bird-watching is something I've changed my opinion about. I had this
image of bird-watchers as nerdy old people in the park-- with
binoculars. Hah! David Klauber, the only friend I have left from high
school, is a bird-watcher. He's also my only friend who's gone to
more countries than I have. He's visited Port Moresby, the highest
crime city in the world. You can't walk on the street after 5 o'clock
because some guy with a bone in his nose is gonna come up behind you
and cut off your head... and shrink it. He went there to see this
special bird you can't see anywhere else in the world. So don't tell
me bird-watchers are wimps... They follow their passion... danger be
damned... more than any other group I know... including bungee
jumpers-- or punk rockers.]
Back
at the bird sanctuary, I lean over and whisper in Randy's mom's ear.
“This is terrific. Thanks for taking me. I wonder how they can
maintain all this for free.
“It's
not free,” she says. “It's expensive.”
They
paid for me! And a lot... wow.I had no idea.
“Tell
me how much it was,” I don't say. “I'll be happy to pay my
share.”
I
still feel a bit guilty about not paying anything. Such a good time
on someone else's dime... er... dollar. I should have taken them
out... but there was the feeling... the strange unwelcomed feeling I
was getting from Randy's mother. Nothing overt, but just a cold
feeling... very noticeable among these warmest Caribbean people.
It's
my last day in Trinidad. Randy's mom won't even
talk to me. Her only words: “I'm so busy, I just don't have time to
talk.”
I'm
worried. What's up? What happened? Maybe she found my PERVERT lyrics
in the trashcan. I dunno...
It's
leaving time. Rael's driving me to the airport. Mom's upstairs doing
something with the laundry. Sorting or bagging or something... bent
over a suitcase. I walk over to thank her... say good bye...
“I'm
leaving now,” I tell her.
“All
right,” she says.
“Thanks
for everything,” I say, walking towards her. I reach out to give
her a hug. She pushes her hand in my chest... completely repulsed.. a
DON'T TOUCH ME gesture. I don't get it. Had she walked in on me when
I was... er... doing something private? I didn't use the sheets as a
tissue. What's the problem? Guests aren't supposed to do that? I
don't know the etiquette here. But I bet I'm not a guest again. Had
she seen me through the window? Heard the rumors? Read the book? I
don't know, but it's very sad... for me.
[OH NO! A long time ago, I complained to a friend of mine that she seemed annoyed. I asked her what I'd done. "It's not just about YOU, Mykel." she said. I thought it would be cool to make her an IT'S NOT JUST ABOUT YOU, MYKEL t-shirt to wear around New York. I never did it though.
Now, after trashing Randy's mom, (She and Dad were so GREAT to me the first time I was in Trinidad), I find out that there was all kinds of background stuff I wasn't aware of. Personal problems, health problems, troubles that had NOTHING to do with me. I need to make an IT'S NOT JUST ABOUT YOU, MYKEL t-shirt for HER to wear! I feel better now, knowing that it WASN'T me. But I also feel guilty about complaining about her hospitality.
Have I learned my lesson? Somehow, I doubt it.]
[OH NO! A long time ago, I complained to a friend of mine that she seemed annoyed. I asked her what I'd done. "It's not just about YOU, Mykel." she said. I thought it would be cool to make her an IT'S NOT JUST ABOUT YOU, MYKEL t-shirt to wear around New York. I never did it though.
Now, after trashing Randy's mom, (She and Dad were so GREAT to me the first time I was in Trinidad), I find out that there was all kinds of background stuff I wasn't aware of. Personal problems, health problems, troubles that had NOTHING to do with me. I need to make an IT'S NOT JUST ABOUT YOU, MYKEL t-shirt for HER to wear! I feel better now, knowing that it WASN'T me. But I also feel guilty about complaining about her hospitality.
Have I learned my lesson? Somehow, I doubt it.]
At
the airport, I buy Rael some Royal Crown chicken and we share a
farewell meal. My last taste of the greatest fast food chicken on the
planet.
From
Trinidad, it's on to Miami, a night with Alan and Sharon, then back to
New York. When I arrive, it's not raining.
My
apartment looks different. My subletter has returned to Australia. In
her wake, the bathtub is white. 30 years of soapscum have been
removed from the sink. I can see the grain in the wood floor. I can
run my hand along a shelf without the need to wash immediately after.
All the lightbulbs work. There is no garbage in the kitchen bin. The
refrigerator smells like... like... nothing.
It'll
be a week or so before I feel that I'm really home.
-end-
============
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