Anything Is Possible (Blog #407)

Well hell’s bells. It’s four in the morning, and I’m just now sitting down at the kitchen table to write. How did this happen?

With nothing officially on my calendar, I slept in then used today to do everything I didn’t emotionally want to do. I called my insurance company, emailed my doctor’s office, cleaned out my email inbox, left a message for the insurance company of the guy who knocked the ever-loving shit out of me last July while I was simply driving along, minding my business (then out of an orange-colored sky–). (They didn’t answer or call me back, despite their voicemail message that said, “I’m committed to returning you call by the end of the business day.” Committed, my ass.) In other words, I spent the day being an adult, hating every minute of it.

Then I took a nap.

This evening I went to my friend Bonnie’s house to pick up some stuff and ended up staying awhile. She and her husband (Todd) have this gorgeous, wraparound porch where we like to sit and watch the sun go down. It’s the kind of place where the rest of the world disappears. It’s like you sit down in one of the chairs, and it kind of sucks you in. Whatever stressful thing you did earlier in the day simply falls away. You look at the trees in the yard, trees that have been there longer than you’ve been on the planet, trees that have seen it all come and go, and suddenly your problems seem smaller. You think, What was that thing I was so worried about?

Everyone should have such a place.

After hanging out on the porch for a bit, Bonnie and I headed to downtown Fort Smith, on foot, to see a rockabilly band. By the time we got to the venue, the band was almost done with their last set, but we still got a few dances in. Honestly, it was the weirdest thing, this little dive bar with Jimi Hendrix painted on the wall, this band giving it all they’ve got, a dozen people scattered about the room, just two dancers getting with it. In my mind it was the last place you’d find something beautiful, like joy on the dance floor or a turquoise bass being strummed like nobody’s business. But there it was if you could see it.

When the band finished, Bonnie and I left, and I broke all my Autoimmune Paleo rules. “Let’s go down the street and eat a pizza,” I said. So that’s what we did. Y’all, the pizza was delicious. I don’t know why anyone would give up carbs. (Actually I do, but for a night, they were nice.) Walking home, we stopped in front of Fort Smith’s one and only gay bar, Kinkead’s, then went inside.

Y’all, for the longest time, I was in the closet, at least in Fort Smith. At least in my head. But the point is, I’ve intentionally never gone to Kinkead’s. First out of fear, then out of principle. Like, I’ve never been and I’ll never go. But tonight I figured that needed to change. (Everyone should, at some point, break their own rules.) So just as they were closing, Bonnie and I went inside. Ten feet into the door, I saw an old roommate, then an old boyfriend. God, this town is so small, I thought. But it was truly good to see them, and it was good to meet some new faces, which I did. Hell, I even saw two sets of breasts–well, one and a half sets (on drunk females)–so that’s something.

To be perfectly clear, I didn’t ask to see these bare-chested ladies and am rather traumatized that I did. Highly traumatized, actually. (I’m a homosexual.) That being said, it was more entertaining than staying home and watching soap operas with Mom and Dad. (Sorry, Mom and Dad.) At the very least, it’s a better story to tell.

And then she pulled down her shirt in a gay bar. (Wrong audience, honey. Wrong audience.)

Anything is possible.

Now I’m home and ready to pass out. I’ve been thinking, Life is so random. One minute you’re home wrapped up in “adulting,” forcing yourself to take care of business. Then the next you’re out dancing, enjoying yourself in the strangest of places. It really is odd. So much of me has wanted to leave this town for so long. And not that I want to stay, but I’m here now, and I’m finding that you can have fun anywhere. It really is about what you bring to the place, not what the place brings to you. And at least if you’re open to it, perhaps life can surprise you, take your ho-hum day and turn it right around, leave you thinking, Shit, I guess anything–anything–is possible.

But seriously, life, enough with the bare-chested ladies.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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You can’t change what happened, but you can change the story you tell yourself about it.

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Carbohydrates and Bald Eagles (Blog #379)

Y’all, today was another great day. Well, except for the fact that I had to wake up at six-fifteen. In the morning. But really–and I wouldn’t want this information to get around–I can actually function at early hours. Who knew? The sunrise doesn’t kill me. Like, I didn’t turn to stone, melt, or anything. I just dragged my luggage downstairs, hopped in a car, and off we went–out of Memphis and into the heart of Western Tennessee. (This press tour is all over the map.) Our first stop, about an hour outside of Memphis, was Brownsville, the home of the Delta Heritage Center and Tina Turner Museum. (Tina was born nearby.) It was great. Again, this is such a cool gig–they had donuts and coffee waiting for us.

I’m getting so fat.

Leaving Brownsville, we drove another hour or so to Union City, home to Discovery Park of America, basically a hands-on science museum for kids, but so much more. There’s a collection of arrow heads and old cars, a Japanese garden, and even an earthquake simulator. The park was started by the founder of Kirkland’s, the home goods store. (He was born in Union City and donated a hundred million dollars to the museum in order to give back to his community.) After eating lunch at the museum, we only had an hour or so to look around, but it really was a treat. A new friend of mine took the above photo of me with the Buddha, and later we both went down the world’s second-fastest slide, which was cleverly disguised as a giant metal man. (See the picture below. You enter just below his neck on the third floor and exit out his left leg on the second.)

Whoosh!

When we left Discovery Park, we went to Reelfoot Lake–uh–somewhere not too far away from Union City. (I wasn’t driving.) Reelfoot used to be only swamplands, but turned into a fourteen-thousand-acre lake about two hundred years ago after a series of earthquakes changed the topography of the land and the flow of the Mississippi River. Anyway, we spent the rest of the afternoon there, riding around on a pontoon boat, checking out the cypress trees and various birds. Notice in the picture below that the cypress tress spread out at the bottom and even grow their roots ABOVE the water in order to survive in such wet conditions.

We even got to see a few bald eagles, which the park rangers had in captivity because they were injured. Here’s a picture of one. Notice that it only has one foot. (That’s how they found it.) Another fun fact–bald eagles have a pretty wimpy, squeaky-toy-like screech. Not scary at all. For this reason, many movies that feature bald eagles dub over the cry of a red-tailed hawk, since it’s much more bitchin’ and intimidating.

For dinner we drove into Jackson, Tennessee, and ate at Rock N Dough Pizza and Brewery. It was awesome–cool atmosphere, a great staff. But OMG, I had so many carbs–salad, bread sticks, pizza, some donut thing for dessert, and beer. (I’ve got to get a grip.) Still, it was FRICKIN’ delicious. Plus, I DID have the flu for three weeks, so I figure this is all about balance. I can afford to indulge for a week.

Now we’re all settled into our respective hotel rooms (in Jackson), and I for one am ready to pass out. This trip is amazing, but it’s go-go-go, and tomorrow will be another full day. In other words, Daddy needs to wrap this up and get a solid-night’s rest. But seriously–it’s ten at night and I’m getting ready to go to bed? What has happened to me? (The sunrise–that’s what has happened to me.) Okay, I’m off to brush my teeth. May all your best memories involve carbohydrates and bald eagles.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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It takes forty years in the desert for seas to part.

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