Wake up, throw up. For as long as he could remember, that was what he did every morning. That was his ritual. Of course, it was nothing so material.
His bed was a futon laid flat on a makeshift wooden frame. He had pieced it together quickly in his spare time when he first moved in. It hadn’t been changed since. It was waist level; slightly higher than traditional box-spring, metal framed beds. He had nailed it into the wall, opposite the east-facing window. It was sturdier that way.
Every morning when he woke, either by alarm or by dream, he would swing one leg around and let it dangle. The air was always cool. This was because, when he remembered, he would open the window a crack before bed. Otherwise the room would get stuffy from the dawn’s sun heating the old dingy carpet. When he finally came to rise completely – as would happen only after some thought – he would linger upright with both feet swinging over the bow. One leg, already cooled, would long for the warmth of his bed. The other, still warm from the cocoon of his down-filled blanket, would long for the refreshment of the air, and the cool tile that awaited in the kitchen. Rarely did he return to the warmth. But every time, he thought about it.
Wake up.
His place was the bottom floor of a house built against the sharp incline of a large hill. It was three small rooms and a washroom. Every room faced away from the hill and towards the ocean, with giant windows. Even the bathroom, which occupied a small space between the bedroom and the all-in-one kitchen/dining room/coat-room/main entrance, had a window where the mirror should be. And once his morning toes had touched the warmed carpet of the bedroom, he started his absentminded round. He stumbled to the main room, and if the day was warm, opened the glass sliding door to the outside world. Then, he would carry on to the third room which he dubiously dubbed a “study.” Though it did contain a number of books on the back wall, none of them had been opened in quite some time. The room had an old couch, a TV, and again, a single large window facing the ocean. Having visited every room and assessed that everything was, indeed, exactly how he had left it the night before, he returned to the main room and filled a kettle with water.
While waiting for the water to boil, he would go to his bathroom and fill the sink with water. The countertop was long and broad, spanning the entire length of the ocean-facing wall. His things, the accumulation of male bachelorhood, littered it haphazardly. Once the sink was full, he would turn off the tap and look out the window at the scenery below: a road winding around the bend of the incline, further down still a handful of houses surrounded by trees, and then finally, a very long but very narrow beach divided midway by a long pier.
Children often played on the pier. It was one of those old wooden ones that jutted onto the ocean defiantly. It had a couple of off-ramps that led to smaller platforms where little boats were tied. They wooshed and wobbled with the water. The older kids would jump off the very end of the pier, despite all of the clearly marked “at your own risk” signs. It was hundreds of meters away, perhaps even a kilometre, but the sounds of their laughter and happy screams always carried right up the hillside.
Wake up.
The water was always a shock. Even if he turned on the hot tap, it took a while to warm up, so the first sink-full was always cold. As he splashed his face, his mind would wake up, and his stumbling disappeared. He became aware of himself and his surroundings. The kettle was often boiling.
He would then empty the sink and return to the main room to stop the whistling. Reflexively, he emptied the brown teapot and put in a fresh teabag. When he poured the water into the pot, he would lift the kettle high in the air, and watch in silent wonder at the waterfall. He didn’t have a tea-cozy, and so he took a hand-towel and wrapped it around the pot.
While he waited for his morning drink to brew, he would go into his bedroom and turn on his laptop. He wouldn’t check anything yet, not before his tea was poured, but it was old and needed a while to turn on. He’d unplug it and bring it into the main room – there was a table and 3 chairs that he would sit at, and start up a little morning music. He usually used an internet radio station, unless it was one of the rare rainy days. In that case he would welcome it with some soft classical music from his archives.
Somewhere, between his one leg dangling and the bottom of his first cup of tea, he would wake up. Sometimes it was the laughter from early morning-ers on the pier. Often it was an email waiting in his inbox, or a story on the internet radio. Once in a while, it was just the view from his bathroom window. But slowly, his eyes would open, and he would start to realize just how far he was from the going’s on outside his little glass house. To an outside observer, he was sure to appear just like everyone else. But he could not help but feel this tremendous, invisible barrier blocking him. He was somehow disconnected from the world. How easy it was, for the birds to fly, for the sun to rise, and for children to laugh. How easy it seemed, for people to buy houses and build businesses and for the traffic to get backed up. Everything in the world seemed at ease in its place. And, though not everything went as planned, everything went.
It came as questions. That’s why it was “waking up.” He started feeling for the walls of his cage; feeling for the restraints that bound his awareness. How did people do that? How had they survived, day by day, paying off that mortgage. How do those two love one another, in a world of political inequality and sexual discord? How did people work and play together all the while secretly hating each other? How did his plumber swallow being a plumber in a world of dentists and lawyers and doctors? How could his doctor work with such fervour, knowing that all his patients would die? When did the past 4 years go by? What was it that made life so bearable for these people? Why didn’t people cave under the fragility of it all? How on earth did millions of people wake up every morning, walk down their silly little streets with their fake little smiles, and convince themselves that they were happy?
Throw up.
Wasn’t there something more real than this? There was a quote from a movie that he saw once, that he just couldn’t get out of his head. “What if this is as good as it gets?” This one didn’t come to him as a question. It came to him has a statement and a queasy stomach. People cheating on their significant others, that’s as good as it gets. People losing everything in their investments in a freak market tragedy, that’s as good as it gets. People getting mugged at gunpoint, shot in gang shootings, starving and freezing: good as it gets.
If there wasn’t, if this was all there is, then people really did manage to survive, he would wonder. People really were happy pulling teeth or litigating divorces. People survived by cleaning up other people’s shit, and populated the world doing it. And each time, they managed to pass on the lie to their children so convincingly that they would, in turn, go out and actually spawn another generation. What better depiction of Hell was there?
Throw up.
He was never lied to by his parents. He was a strong enough actor that his teachers and his friends’ parents never thought they needed to lie in their stead. In fact, he readily spoke the lie before any of his friends, and was a regular supporter of the happiness of others. But it wasn’t until college that rest of the world started lying to him, and by then it was too late. He saw through the lie. The glass wall was built. Why hadn’t they lied?
Every 5 minutes, someone around the world got cancer. But the sun was always shining. The sun thought it was easy to shine. He didn’t know what to do. He didn’t know how to shine, and he was so tired of the directionless questions dancing in his head.
At some point, between the end of the first cup of tea and the completion of his commute to work, he would break down. Sometimes it was on the ferry into the city, watching the waves go by and hearing all the morning mumblings and seeing the newspapers. Often, it was right before his daily shower. And on the rainy days, it was always during the classical music. On every occasion, he would give in to his heavy heart, look into the distance and silently admit: “I just can’t do it.”
And then, he would.
Business 101
15 years ago