The Joy of Self-Recogniton

During college, there were a couple of occasions when I learned that parties I’d attended had turned into orgies after I’d gone home. Maybe they weren’t real orgies – they were more like spontaneous adjournments to the shower – but I think I would have enjoyed them. Over decades of regretful recollection, I blamed my early bedtime: Ten thirty or eleven was when I was ready to head back to the dorm to go night-night – just at the time a party starts to get interesting. Curse my body clock!

More recent ruminations, however, have convinced me that blaming my body clock is overly generous. It’s not that the parties turned into orgies after I left: The parties turned into orgies because I left. That’s how orgies work, with the real swingers lurking in the shadows, waiting for the shmendricks like me to clear out. My departure is a signal for the real party to get started.

When I lived in New York, I was typically isolated. If by some miracle I ever found myself having lunch with someone, man or woman, I would be overcome with gratitude and begin enthusing along the lines of “Wow, I’m really glad I met up with you. I don’t get out very often,” to which my lunchmate would invariably respond with a “Whoa,” sometimes accentuated by a raised pointer finger. “This lunch is a one-off,” he’d inform me. “I don’t usually have time to get together like this. Besides, we’re not friends or anything.” Mulling over such experiences, I concluded that I was coming on too strong for New York. You could get away with the presumption of companionship in a low-stakes environment like Baltimore, but not in the Big Apple, where space and time are at a premium. My roommate once told me, “I don’t have time to be your friend,” to drive home the point.

It has finally occurred to me, now in advanced middle age, that the problem was neither space nor time but hierarchy, which, as I failed to recognize when I resided in Gotham, is the governing principle of life there. Hierarchy, alas, holds few advantages for me, so of course I never had a chance. The message had always been clear enough: “I don’t usually have time to get together like this” meant “I don’t usually have time to get together like this with someone like you”; “I don’t have time to be your friend” meant “I don’t have time to be your friend.” Now I get it.

While doing research in Beijing, I once visited a dance club near the University. The music was playing, and the beat was heavy, but the floor remained open, for all of the copious young people in attendance stood lingering at the periphery, watching and waiting. My assessment of the situation was perchance a bit racist: “Chinese people are too shy to have a good time. Good thing Captain America is here to break the ice. Leave it to me.” I strode to the center of the space and commenced gyrating and frugging in my inimitable manner, expecting to trigger a like motion from the natives. But the song ended with no dance support. Another number went by, and then another. I was twisting all alone, with none of Beijing’s youth inspired to join me. After fifteen or twenty minutes of flying solo, I gave up in disgust. “You people are hopeless. What more can I do for you?” I sat down on a bar stool, at which the entire body of clubgoers promptly swarmed onto the floor and began dancing individually, in couples, and in merry clusters. It was one of the most humiliating occurrences of my life, and I slunk out of the club and trudged home in disgrace, too defeated to retrieve my bicycle.

Apparently, I’m a schmuck in Beijing too. 

Tales of Old Beijing: The Modern Plaza Incident of 1999

The Modern Plaza sits across the street from People’s University and is accessible from it by footbridge. Its most significant architectural feature (for our purposes) is the fact that its second floor is bigger than its ground floor, creating a covered area in which temporary sales or exhibition tables may be placed.

One day (August 9, 1999) I left campus, crossed the footbridge, and made for the Modern Plaza, to pick up a few sundries. As I neared the entrance, I noticed that a special sale was indeed in progress under the overhang. About twenty high school girls were engaged in the campaign. They wore identical corporate t-shirts and were hawking what appeared to be cosmetics. The energetic young ladies beckoned me over, but I held up my index finger, signifying that I wished to complete my indoor shopping first but would be right back.

When I reemerged with newly-purchased sundries in hand, I dutifully returned to the little bazaar, to see what the ladies were selling. It turned out to be a sort of eye-relaxing gel in little blue tubes. The merchandise had obviously been acquired in bulk and was now being unloaded at a bargain discount. Moreover, an enticing promotion was in effect: If you bought even one tube of gel, you would be given a free “eye massage machine,” while supplies lasted. Apparently, the gel worked best in combination with the machine. Although I had never heard of either product, I found myself that afternoon with not much else to do, and come to think of it, a little something for tired eyes just might be the ticket. I volunteered for a demonstration.

I sat down on a little stool, and a slightly more mature  young lady (college age?), who, I hoped, had taken the five-minute course on how to apply the stuff, sat likewise on a stool, directly in front of me and actually between my legs. She directed me to close my eyes, and after my lids were shut, she began to apply the gel with her fingers to the outsides. The substance did have a cooling effect, and the overall experience was quite relaxing and a little hypnotic. Then the young optomasseuse announced that it was time for the machine. Her fingers withdrew from my eye sockets, and I heard her flip a switch. A little motor began buzzing, and then I felt a pulsating plastic globe gently kneading in a circular motion upon my closed eyes. I wasn’t sure whether I enjoyed it or not; I liked her fingers better. At any rate, she kept it up for only a few minutes, and then the buzzing stopped, signaling the end of the demonstration. She wiped the residual gel off my eyelashes with a Kleenex. Of course, I bought a tube of the gel and took possession also of the “eye massage machine,” which the optomasseuse showed me before putting into its box. It was a five-inch wand, battery powered, with about four or five interchangeable heads, such as smooth, rough, and ribbed. For some reason, it had a Playboy bunny symbol etched on its surface.

I thanked the optomasseuse for everything and rose to leave, but at that moment the sky opened up and it began pouring, very heavily for Beijing. There was nothing to do but to wait under the overhang, and the little sale area became an even friendlier island of refuge in the storm, as nothing brings strangers together better than a little shower. The gaggle of high school girls became especially peppy, and one of them sidled over to me. We exchanged pleasantries, but almost immediately, she began telling me about her boyfriend. I was not unprepared for this sudden revelation, for one of the graver responsibilities of an American man in China is to serve as impromptu confidante, counselor, and confessor for Chinese womanhood.

“Do you love him?” I asked, cutting to the heart of the matter. It seems I was always asking women “Do you love him?” back then.

Naturally, the girl didn’t know. I studied her carefully. She was no dope, bright and venturesome (she had, after all, come right over to me), just inexperienced.

Suddenly, I wanted to be in a French New Wave movie. “You see that white van in the parking lot?” I asked her. “Let’s run out, touch it, and run back.”

I’m sure she had never received such a proposal before. She beamed at the novelty but wanted to make certain what I was asking. “You mean that white van?” she pointed. “You want to race me through the rain, touch the van, and run back here?” She used a different word for “touch” from what I had. I’d said peng (碰); she said mo (摸), which sounded to me more like “stroke.”

“Yes,” I said. “Let’s run out and stroke the van and run back.”

Without another word, she screamed and took off into the deluge, and I followed. It was like a whirlwind, sprinting with the rain flying off our faces and pelting my freshly-massaged eyes, nearly slamming into the van, stroking its slippery surface, then stomping through lake-like puddles and back up the steps to the Modern Plaza, where everyone was cheering (if this happened today, all phones would have been on us) and marveling at the American graduate student and his dashing ideas. The girl and I were both soaked, her corporate t-shirt most of all, and people gave us towels.

We dried off, still panting; but there was a certain let-down of excitement, after our little race in the rain. The other stranded shoppers turned away, and the distance reestablished itself between me and my running mate. The downpour soon passed, and I bade her safe travels, took up my shopping bags, and returned to normal life.

For the next week or so, I continued to use the relaxing gel and the “eye massage machine,” before I realized that it was a vibrator (duh) and felt silly prodding my eyes every evening with a vibrator. I don’t think any of the high school girls at Modern Plaza that day knew what they were pushing, and their ignorance contributed to my obtuseness, for, since no one was behaving as though they were trafficking vibrators, I never saw that they were. If I were to chance upon a group of people talking into bananas, I would assume that they were telephones.

I donated the “eye massage machine” to a female friend who could make better use of it. I kept the gel…and the memories.

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China Journal: A Barren Source of Amusement

This diary entry is from my second excursion to Asia, in 1998-1999, for the purpose of conducting research for my dissertation. Unlike my first visit, this time, the internet was available, and I sometimes used it to combat loneliness, with mixed results.

Sunday, August 29, 1999 – Beijing

The computer has been a barren source of amusement lately. I’d been frequenting the chat rooms and had actually managed to have a friendly chat once in a while. Very recently, though, the chat rooms were transformed by avatars, little pictures designed to represent each chatter in a glitzy environment; and now all anyone ever talks about are the stupid I.D. pictures. I began to fear that nobody would notice me at all without an avatar; so I dutifully downloaded the new software. I find the chat room’s revised look to be as conformist as it is distracting, the women having all chosen similar “naughty” representations of themselves, and the men, likewise, having selected boilerplate, shirtless hunks.

I spent the entire morning in an unsuccessful attempt to download a photo of Richard Nixon (the Norman Rockwell painting from the Portrait Gallery) to use as my avatar, before I decided that I’d passed an invisible line separating passing the time and wasting time. I went out on my bike all day.

1968 - Pres. Nixon - by Norman Rockwell by x-ray delta one, via Flickr