Coronavirus, Limp Fish, and the Feasting of the Rabid Horde

I did an open mic a couple weeks ago, after the COVID-19 stuff started but before it became a full-on pandemic.  Saw a bunch of folks I hadn’t seen in a while, and was happy to see them. Lots of handshakes and hugs all around, and the whole time I was thinking, should we be doing this? But I did it. 

Next day I had a meeting and we all pointedly DIDN’T shake hands, and were totally self-conscious about it. Heh heh, wouldn’t want to kill you, wouldn’t want you to kill me, heh heh.

Then, the day after that, I had lunch with a friend I hadn’t seen in a while (by the way one thing I notice in all this is I have no friends I actually see enough of – do you?), and we shook and hugged, despite my misgivings, and then when we were parting he saw my hesitance and said “if you really don’t want to—“ so I felt compelled. We shook. Hugged.

I’ve been alone in my apartment for four days. I’ve been thinking about handshakes. Supposedly they started a long time ago, as a way of demonstrating that neither person had a weapon (at least not in one hand, I guess?). And then it just became custom. Like primogeniture, or shoes.

My father’s father taught me to throw punches, and my mother’s mother taught me to shake hands. The second skill has proven far more valuable to me than the first over the last half-century. Had I chosen a life of vicious pugilism I might feel differently, and there have definitely been moments where I wished I had paid closer attention to my grandfather and done a better job of honing the skills he tried to give me, but I have, for better or for worse lived a primarily friendly life.

 However, I can’t help but hear my grandmother when I meet people and shake their hands for the first time, She let me know there was a great deal you could tell about somebody by the way they shook hands. A man of good character shakes firmly, but not too firmly (the implication being that should I wish people to perceive me this way, that’s what I should do). To drive the point home, she demonstrated, her charm bracelet jangling as we firmly, formally squeezed each other’s hand. Then she showed me what not to do.  I was  7 or 8 years old, and my grandmother Wilson ( we always called our grandparents by their last names)  loosely cocked her wrist and dangled her cool, leathery hand into my palm. Fucking weird. She described it (as everyone does, though I didn’t know that at the time) as a “limp fish.” That type of shake was a clear indication that this was a person with whom you should not consort. If a man, he was most likely rude, petty, mean, impious, lacking in integrity, and and quite possible a drunkard or a degenerate gambler (or both!); if a woman, she possessed loose moral character, was probably a floozy, possibly even a harlot. It was a very uncomfortable moment for me. I’ve never forgotten it, so I guess it was effective. But I wonder if, at the time, I was struck by the strangeness of the term- “limp fish.” Should a fish not be limp? What, then? Firm?  The fish itself is still firm. It’s just behaving limply. What has made the fish behave limply? Fish don’t limp. They can’t.

 I try not to let her lessons affect the way I feel about people when I meet them. But I can’t swear I’m always successful.  Maybe I’m not trying hard enough.

 Then there are the people who overdo it. To them, a handshake is a demonstration of machismo (these people can be women too, by the way). They’re making a point of showing that they are not just people of good character, but could probably take you in a fight, and certainly will never back down from you. You know the feeling- you start to shake hands with somebody and suddenly they are a beat cop and your hand is Radio Raheem. 

There’s a guy I knew, who had figured out a way to reach out for your hand in just such a way that he would grab your four fingers firmly and thumb-lock you in, so he had the front of your hand pinned and you couldn’t reach with your thumb to grip, preventing you from engaging in a normal handshake. He’d have engulfed your whole hand, but you would only be gripping his with those few fingers. It  felt like a mistake, like he had grabbed wrong. I only saw him a few times a year, but eventually I realized he did it every time. A handshake was a battle to him, and he was fucking winning every time. Even though it made me realize there must be something wrong with him that made him act that way, it also, when he did it, felt vaguely emasculating, and I realized I would not be satisfied unless I started winning. So the next time he did it I watched very carefully, and realized that if I just swooped my hand in a little lower at the last second I could—yes! Got him! Normal handshake. The look of shock and disappointment  on his face at being defeated in a game he thought he was the only one playing was so—well, let’s just say my entire rabid horde sang as they feasted that night. No utensils. 

Once, drunk, I saw, across the bar, a friend on the verge of fisticuffs with the leader of a crew of hooligans with whom we’d been verbally sparring.  My friend and he were nose to nose, the point of no return was imminent, but I thought I could save things, so I waded in heroically and offered the boss hooligan my hand. Pax tecum. He accepted the proffered hand, and I tried to talk things out. Nobody wanted any trouble, of course, I explained confidently, lucidly, leaning in close, not my friend not them, not me, none of us. And it wasn’t too late to avoid it, if we all just- as I talked, I could feel that he wasn’t letting go, and not only was the guy shaking my hand, he was slowly tightening his grip, as if his hand were a starving anaconda and mine were a succulent capybara.

Fisticuffs were not avoided.

 ALl that said, I like handshakes. Especially when I see people I haven’t seen in a while, which is everyone, I guess. And it seems like they may be going away foe the foreseeable future. If that’s the case, I don’t know that I’ll miss them. Or at least, I won’t miss thinking about them.

 

Namaste.

Sean Conroy Comment
The Choir Trip, part 2: There is the Potential for Disaster

(See part 1 here)

Friday, 8:36 AM, Somewhere in Southern New Jersey (or South Jersey)

I’m on a bus. Been here before. I’m with a bunch of junior high school kids, but it’s not a school bus, what the kids would call a cheese bus.  It’s a step up from that, probably Peter Pan Bus lines (I say that because that’s the one I remember, there were probably others). I don’t remember for sure and I didn’t right it down, but I was probably slightly overcaffeinated, a little sleepy, and deeply nervous. Not just because of the caffeine, but because I was one of the 6 or 7  “responsible adults” on this trip, and that probably felt like a lot.

Oh by the way it’s May 19, 1995. I’m younger. More naive? Less aware of my shortcomings? Not sure. I do know that if somebody asked me to do something like this now I would most likely decline immediately. Back then? Happy to!

Even though I’m well aware even then (now?) that things can instantly go sideways when you’re out in the world with a bunch of kids (your own, probably- other people’s definitely). 

Like the time I took kids on a trip and two of them got in a fistfight on the street, and one of the two JUST WOULD NOT STOP going after the other one. Screaming, spluttering, howling with rage, me wrapped around her keeping her from attacking this other kid, her relentless, like the fucking Terminator, not stopping, not stopping, wait, maybe- nope, still not stopping- and by the way it doesn’t look cool when you are out on the street in New York City and you are wrapped around and restraining a screaming swearing spitting little girl to whom you have no immediately evident connection (and to be clear “student and homeroom teacher” is not immediately evident). And what were the chances, if something like this happened again, that it would be resolved the way it was that time, by having a riderless, bridleless white horse gallop by just then, up 7th Avenue and then west along 59thStreet next to Central Park, top speed, full gallop, like Seabiscuit  at Pimlico, stunning everyone, even the Terminator, into silence, wonder, awe, and then normalcy?  Not high. Low?

I just heard a story the other day about somebody’s great-grandfather, a World War II veteran, who survived two plane crashes during the war, and that wasn’t even counting the time he was on his way home after the war was over and the emergency exit door next to him popped off the plane and his legs were suddenly dangling out into the open air, and as he struggled to keep from being completely sucked out, seatbelt loosening, another vet sitting behind him, a double amputee, crawled forward and pulled him back in. So yeah, two full-on crashes, and then whatever the fuck that was, all happened to the same guy. A kid in Iowa later found his wallet in a cornfield and mailed it back to him

So something like that could happen again. But not likely. The ending would probably be worse. 

Or there was also the time I took some kids to see a play about Frederick Douglas, and the actor playing the horribly racist white overseer was so good (and, let’s be honest, the part he was playing was less than sympathetic to begin with) that when he came out for a curtain call, one of my students spat on him. That’s a pretty awkward post-show backstage apology conversation.

Or the time I took my students to Dorney Park (a theme park and a water park in Pennsylvania that we went to at the end of every school year, because what could be more fun and less nerve-wracking than making sure you’re watching everybody in the wave pool at once?) and security came to get me because one of my kids had tried to walk out of the gift shop with a bunch of sweatshirts under her sweatshirt. Weirdly, she had no idea how they got there. And it puts you in this weird position where part of you is like “Stealing is wrong, and against the law,” and part of you is like, “This is my kid and she was just stealing sweatshirts, so what? Everybody take a breath.”

Or the time I told my boss that I was gonna go check out the brand new Liberty Science Center in New Jersey, across the Hudson River, and she suggested I open the trip up to any kids who wanted to go, during non-school time, which is how I ended up on a Sunday (a goddam Sunday, for shit’s sake- my day off) taking the ferry over there with about seven 8th grade girls who were clearly nerdy enough to wanna do something like that on a Sunday, and we all had a lovely time at the exhibits, and wandering around all day, learning about science and stuff, and getting lunch, and then finally on the ferry ride home they couldn’t help but give away that one of the girls (the one who I would least have expected it from- the nerdiest, but of course that’s why she did it) had gotten her lunch tray together in the cafeteria and then walked out without paying for anything. And now we were on our way home and there wasn’t really a lot I could do- what, turn the boat around? I could scold her, and make her feel bad, which I did. And of course that’s very effective with a kid like that. But that’s exactly what makes it unsatisfying. 

Or the time I took a bunch of kids over to the park by the river, just a nice afternoon of running around in the spring because why not, and as we were walking back to school a guy on a motorcycle rode by in the other direction, and then I heard the motorcycle get louder again and the guy skidded to a stop in front of me and ripped his helmet off and angrily demanded that action be taken against the kid who had, unbeknownst to me, picked up a chunk of asphalt and thrown it at the guy as he rode by. Didn’t hit him, thank  goodness, so I was able to talk him down and promise repercussions. But...

I’m sure this trip is going to be great! Especially given the kids I’m responsible for. I mean, I’m responsible for all of them, that’s the nature of chaperone- cy? - but I’ve been told to pay particular attention to...

NEXT TIME:

I’ve Got My Eye On YOU

Sean ConroyComment