Close to
hyperventilation, you can mouth a few of the mantras you’ve developed until you
find one that seems to work. “All of my electronic devices have abnormally long
battery lives,” you might repeat, lips scraping the pillow. Other lapses in
composure require variations on the theme. “I’m a white man with a Nordic
complexion living in a state with harsher than average gun laws. I have better
medical coverage than the majority of nightlife industry workers. My frequent
customer card at the local deli is one hole-punch away from a sandwich valued
at up to $10. In the event of any significant hair loss my head is nicely
shaped and conducive to shaving.” The talismans that, with varying degrees of
success, hold back the dreams that are always about running, running that’s
never recreational.
At
28, you tell yourself in another black moment, your world is failing.
You’re
fucked.
But
you’ve got to remember, you’ve always been a headcase. There were the night
terrors that started at age four or five, when not being able to sleep meant
death was inevitable. The time when you puked Raisin Bran before school and for
the next three months, automatic reflex, you woke up around dawn and started
dry heaving, sometimes making it to the toilet but usually not, bile stains on
the hallway rug, a routine that was squelched by a prescription for what you
years later found out was high-end Pepto-Bismol that tasted like red velvet
cake. And even distant relatives still remind you about the time when you watched
a news story about a girl who underwent a tracheotomy to remove a nickel she’d
swallowed. You spent the next week choking yourself because you had just
upgraded your piggy bank and something could have slipped and who knows? You
had to be sure.
Now
it’s summer and you’ve just gone on a fishing trip back in Connecticut because
your old man’s retiring and he wants to see you more. Late afternoon, you’re
sitting in the garage, cleaning the fish you caught and swatting flies away
from your beers. You watch your old man examine your subpar work, the messy
fillets that are plentiful of bones and skin fragments, the perfectly good
chunks of flesh you accidentally flung into the blood-crusted bucket reserved
for organ gunk and skeletal remains. You brace for another lecture about
technique but your old man stays quiet, places a fillet knife on the cutting
board.
“When
I’m gone,” he says, “who’s going to show your kids? I won’t be here forever.”
At
night in your childhood bedroom in your parents’ house, you look at yearbook
pictures of someone you don’t recognize.
Now
you’re choking yourself again, saying the mantras.
It
doesn’t take much.
When
you return to the city where you live you make an appointment with a shrink
with an ethnically androgynous name whose mostly positive online reviews you’ve
been tracking for months, even though you couldn’t find any pictures of him/her,
but you’re cool with it because the office is one of only a few that take your
out-of-pocket plan. You sign in with the doorman in the lobby of a 70s-ish
concrete abortion that looks like every downtown building, read headlines on
the elevator flatscreen about a man falling 65 feet at a baseball game and the
Dalai Lama’s website inflicting viruses on its visitors. You get off on the
correct floor where you assume there will be an office with a comfortable couch
in a dimmed setting, a Morgan Freeman type with the gravitas and wisdom of two
centuries of psychoanalytic progress. You walk into a hospital-light cubicle.
Behind a purring desktop and a tissue box sits a mousey South Asian woman who can’t
be more than five or six years older than you.
“I’m
Dr. K—,” she says, standing up and extending a hand. “Have a seat and tell me
what’s going on.”
The
clinical florescence of the overhead light accentuates the shrink’s mottled, child-scar
complexion. Your chair is comfortable enough but you wouldn’t want to watch TV
in it. “I’ve been thinking a lot about dying,” you say, getting right into it
because you’re on the clock, eyeing the tissues. “Actually it’s pretty much all
I’ve ever fixated on. Not really my own death. I think about my parents getting
old, the elderly people I see limping alone down the street, fat kids snarfing Tropical
Skittles and Doctor Pepper. I guess it’s not that weird but for me it’s like,
palpable. I think I’m losing weight, circles under my eyes. My mother says
they’re hereditary but I never really noticed until recently.”
“Are
you religious?”
“No.
Spiritual maybe. I don’t know.”
“This
is something that people have been wrestling with since before the language
existed to express it. The ultimate hang-up. There aren’t any real answers, at
least none I’m qualified to provide.”
Morgan
Freeman’s voice wouldn’t have made it sting any less.
“Morgan
Freeman is a false god,” you whisper to no one.
She
asks you about your education, your hobbies, your sexual preferences. You
imagine that each of your thoughts about death has contributed one mile-per-hour
to the speed of a car you’re driving on a road with a singular destination, a
cliff of an unknown depth. “You’ve got to try to stay in the moment,” she says
at the end of the session, “in the present, stay busy. If the negative thoughts
start to creep in, think of something positive in your life. It’s much more
beneficial to be your own architect than to focus on things no one can
control.”
The
pep talk is beyond hackneyed, but you’ve always been susceptible to
encouragement. It’s why you got good grades. When you leave the office and
watch the video streaming in the elevator about a circus bear in Azerbaijan who
has learned to ride a motorcycle, your hands stop shaking.
In
terms of demographics, pigment, and the geography of your birth, you are lucky.
You
stop smoking weed every day, lift free weights a few times a week, have coffee
with friends you haven’t seen in a while who you consider “optimistic” and not
“coke-jaded.” You initiate conversations with women at the restaurant where you’re
a manager and at the bars where you drink and these encounters are occasionally
successful, i.e. frictional. You re-read the Eastern philosophy textbooks that you
were drawn to as an undergrad and that now make the tattoos that say “BE HERE
NOW” in Sanskrit on your hip and the Chinese character the guy in the shop said
means “Tao” on your back a little less like Phish-related mistakes and more like
the fulfillment of a promise you made without knowing it. If everything exists
in one moment, before might be
irrelevant, and more importantly, maybe there won’t be an after.
One
night you burrow deep in a Wikipedia hole that ends with dozens of open tabs
related either generally or explicitly to transhumanism, which, you read, is “a
class of philosophies that seek to guide us towards a posthuman condition,
including radical life extension to the point of biological immortality,
fostering a respect for reason and science, a commitment to progress, and a
valuing of human (or transhuman) existence in this life.” The idea that you
might, in the tangible future, be able to overcome physical limitations through
radical technologies that are already being funded, to diffuse the death
switch.
You
love this shit.
“You
crazy fuck,” you say to yourself, giggling, but for the better part of a week you
surge through websites that extol the possibilities of nanomedicine, mind
uploading, postgenderism, cyborgization, artificial wombs, chemical brain
preservation. You skim through the less interesting rebuttals from neo-Luddite
haters bitching about the trivialization of human identity, hubris, coercive
eugenicism, and dozens of other killjoy buzzwords.
Your
parents are probably screwed, but you will still be middle aged in 2045, the
estimated year of the Singularity, when things are supposed to really start
going down, transcendentally speaking, when negligible senescence won’t be
limited to lobsters and jellyfish. You join Beta Race, an organization that
publishes a monthly e-mag aimed “to
deeply influence a new generation of thinkers who dare to envision humanity's
next steps” and begin following the group’s transhumanist lifestyle
recommendations. You practice caloric restriction and supplement your mostly
raw and vegan diet with up to 50 daily supplements that increase mental
clarity, reduce cortisol release, and promote optimal health and energy in
convenient, antioxidant-rich doses. Your coworkers start calling you PT, short
for Purple Teeth, for the red wine you consume daily (one per meal and another
after an acceptable cardio session) in order to maximize your resveratrol
intake, and you ask them what you should wear at their funerals, when your Body
Mass Index will still be at an optimal 18.5 to 20. They can’t tell you to go
fuck yourself because you’re their manager but you know they want to. You
couldn’t care less about hurting the feelings of weaklings who have already
given in to self-immolation. You learn to use group collaboration tools on
your phone and visit personal networking sites to meet and communicate with
other proto-posthumans. You download an app that turns your phone into a device
to supplement your memories, constantly recording conversations and other
audible events. You purchase better insurance that’s more than you can
realistically afford but ensures that
the co-pay will be low enough for the regular examinations and blood tests you will
have to undergo ad nauseum.
Your stomach might convulse sometimes at work or when
you pass a pub, anticipating the succulence of animal fat, the release of hard
liquor, but these are necessary casualties of the focus on everlasting
survival, and denial is an essential quality for success in the cyborg nirvana you
are destined to inhabit.
One
afternoon you’re jogging in a park on a trail that’s almost the exact distance,
if run every day, that will lower your blood pressure to an optimal level in
only a few weeks. You avoid eye contact with the idle dying you pass – an
liver-spot scarecrow reading a newspaper to a neck-lolling woman in a
wheelchair, a trio of shagged-out kids smoking cloves, an otherwise
hale-looking guy wearing a Ballpark Franks tee shirt thereby declaring his
affinity for nitrate-induced gastrointestinal carnage. Close to a personal best
time, you build up speed for the last few hundred yards, glancing at the
occasional female runner heading in the opposite direction. One girl slows down
as she passes, eyes wide, points at your midsection, sort of trying to hold
back a laugh but also sort of concerned, and resumes her original pace. It’s
humid, you’ve sweated through your shirt and there are probably some serious
swamp ass issues going on, but you are
exercising outdoors during an abnormally warm autumn.
Water
transfer isn’t just normal, it’s necessary.
“Uninformed
bitch,” you whisper.
You
pull off your ear buds, turn to flag her down or at least pretend she’s the
reason you stopped and not because you’re totally winded. You feel an unnatural
squishing between your sock and cross trainer. You look down at the athletic
shorts that were Carolina blue but are now crotch-covered in brownish stains,
at the thin red stream that’s coursing down your right leg, congealing, pooling
under the tongue of your shoe.
An
alert beeps and blinks on the activity tracker attached to your wrist. Your
heart beats per minute have tripled.
*
Your
grandmother had been afflicted by hemorrhoids for most of her later years,
referring to them as her “piles.” You’d always been careful to avoid the
slime-capped Preparation H tubes and stool softener bottles that resided openly
in her bathroom.
What’s
currently sticking out of your ass isn’t like the gargantuan protrusions you’d
seen in waking nightmares while listening to her graphic complaints, a relief
that does nothing to ease the throbbing that makes it impossible to sit down.
Curled
on your side in bed, tablet-addled, you learn that fifty percent of Americans
will suffer swollen veins in the anal canal at some point in their lives, usually
after age 30 and usually due to the strain of soft bowel movements,
constipation, obesity, or pregnancy. Though initially painful, the prognosis is
rarely serious, and can usually be corrected by a combination of increased
fiber, drinking more water, drinking less alcohol and caffeine, exercising
frequently, and applying an over-the-counter ointment when necessary. Except you
can’t be certain that what you have is actually a hemorrhoid. You’re too young,
you don’t drink coffee, you’ve been laying off the booze for the most part, and
your diet has been endorsed after years of studies by Beta Race’s team of
board-certified nutritionists.
The
bleeding might also be caused by a similarly shaped polyp, tumor, or abscess.
You analyze the risk factors for each. Until recently and for as far back as
you can remember, you’ve been a happy guzzler of red meats, processed cheeses,
over-proof spirits. Roughly seventy percent of your penetrative experiences
have been sans condom, meaning that HPV is more a certainty than a possibility.
The human papillomavirus accounts for approximately ninety percent of anal
cancer diagnoses, and the three dozen or so partners you can remember make this
risk exponential.
Your
activity tracker starts blinking. You remove it.
You
look up Google reviews of the primary care physicians in your neighborhood.
You’re about to schedule an appointment when you remember hemorrhoidal Nana
telling you in a brief moment of opiate-free clarity before she succumbed to
the tumors that had spread to her marrow, to “never go to a doctor. I didn’t
for twenty-three years and it wasn’t for lack of aches, there were plenty of
those. It was because I knew, deep down, that the second they started prodding
around they’d find something. You can’t find anything if you don’t look for it.
Here I am, a few months past eighty, feeling okay, and I have the nerve to
listen to your goddamn mother. A simple check-up. It’ll take a load off
everyone’s minds, she says. Now look at me. Fucked. Take Advil, get enough
sleep, don’t get married and you’ll be fine.”
She
died two hours later.
You
don’t want to be fucked. You want to be a sentient machine.
So
you’ll wait. Say the mantras, wait.
But
every morning there’s the same blood-streaked shit, the same WebMD links. One
day you notice two identical lumps behind your ribs on both sides. Cancer
already spreading from your lymph nodes? Maybe they aren’t lumps, but areas of
organ-related swelling. Early onset kidney failure is a possibility. Nausea in
the mornings, your skin crackled at the joints, a bit of fatigue. You begin
documenting the frequency of bathroom visitations, checking each urine deposit
for color, opaqueness, bubbles, activating the stopwatch app on your phone to
get an accurate measurement of its duration. You check your semen for blood and
other potential abnormalities with the thoroughness of a tea-leaf reader,
cupping it in your hands, sniffing. While pressing your fingers to your jugular
to confirm suspicions of an abnormal heart rhythm, you press on something like
a growth that clicks when you move it – a clear indication of a thyroid
disorder that might lead to hyperactivity, irritability, memory problems,
psychosis, and paranoia. Brief episodes of dizziness: fluid on the brain. A
shoulder ache is an aneurysm in-waiting. You keep clicking the links. Sleep is occasionally
possible, but only after the forced repetition of the glass-half-full self-talk
that you haven’t really believed in a long time.
You
can’t find anything if you don’t look for it.
You
stop looking.
There’s
no point in continuing a transhumanist regimen if you aren’t even going to be
around for the next upgrade of your phone.
WebMD
can fist itself.
You
bury most of your electronic devices in your closet. You stop responding to what
few texts you still get from long-estranged friends. Afternoons: bong rips,
HBO, Thai lunch specials. Nights, you drink with a fervor. More often than not,
your super, who also occasionally sells you Percocet and mushrooms, knocks on
your door to tell you about the previous night, how he stopped you from
flinging a slice of take-out pizza at a passing bicyclist after another
sidewalk puke session outside your building. You give him money, change the
channel. Mornings don’t exist. Your cross trainers are ashtrays. You get all
your shifts covered at the restaurant.
At least you’re sleeping.
You’re
out alone one night and you meet a girl whose face you won’t remember and who’s
almost as toasted as you are, but who sobers up fast a few hours later at your
apartment when you ask her if she won’t mind biting a mole off your back that
you assume is malignant. You wake up alone in piss-heavy boxers, roll off the
bed onto the floor, a howling emanating from your balloon-swollen abdomen.
Your
time has come.
*
The clinic’s
waiting area is well-lit, featuring plush couches, a silent BBC news broadcast,
an impressive selection of gender-neutral magazines. The only noise as you fill
out your insurance information comes from the ambient nature sounds pumping
from invisible speakers and a little kid making fun of his brother for coloring
an eagle green and orange in a book in the children’s play area. A nurse enters
from a side door and pronounces your name wrong. You take a last breath of
willful ignorance and follow her into the examination room.
You
don’t remember the questions she asks you, and you don’t remember your shorter
answers.
She
tells you to sit down, wraps a blood pressure machine around your arm and slips
a thermometer under your tongue. “Ninety-eight-point-three,” she says. “Very
good.” She frowns a little as the blood pressure machine relaxes from your arm.
“BP’s high.”
“I’m
always nervous,” you say.
She
nods, jots something on a clipboard, tells you to roll up your sleeve. You
watch the plastic pouch expand with truth juice. The nurse divides the blood
into vials with different color caps, slapping stickers on each. As she flicks
her gloves into the hazardous waste bin, you imagine being sucked down with
them, crushed against the loose needles and emptied piss cups, pierced and
filth-bathed into a strangely melodic silence, a soft gray place where you have
no concept of gravity and the squirm of your days.
The
nurse tells you to strip, walks out of the room, not making eye contact.
The
man who enters a few minutes later is tall, thick with the traces of what must
have once been an impressive musculature, with an unassuming salt-and-pepper
beard and a dignified hairline. He introduces himself with a deliberate, Julep-swilled
drawl and a mitt-shake that’s rigid but oddly pacifying. He motions for you to
have a seat on the examination table and flips through the papers on the
clipboard that the nurse gave him.
He
looks up. “You decide to request all these tests yourself?” he asks. “Seems a
little unnecessary for someone your age without a history of,” he looks down at
the clipboard, “anything.”
But
you know that’s not how it works.
You
know there has to be a first time.
“I’ve
done a lot of research, and given my distinct set of possibilities, yes I need
them.”
The
doctor shakes his head, reaches for a box of latex gloves in a nearby cabinet.
“Well all right then,” he says. “Hopefully your insurance isn’t going to murder
you for this.”
“I have better medical coverage than the
majority of nightlife industry workers. I have –”
“Uh, ok. So which one of these
possibilities will we be starting with?”
You
guide the doctor’s hands toward every abnormality and inflammation, watching
for a glitch in his serene face, the flowering of concern, but nothing changes.
He asks you to flip over and assume a position normally reserved for canine
submissives so he can get a look at the scabbed-over flap whose throbbing
existence can’t be denied by even the most untrained eye.
“Yup,
that’s a real big one,” the doctor says, almost chuckling. “This looks pretty
straightforward, but I’m going to digitally examine your rectum for any
irregularities, polyps, et cetera. This might be uncomfortable.”
You
realize he doesn’t mean “digitally” in the technological sense.
You
clench at the release of pressure and the snap of glove removal.
“Everything
appears to be fine internally,” the doctor says, marking something on the
clipboard. “You’re probably going to want to get the hemorrhoid removed for
hygiene purposes. Shouldn’t be too painful since it’s mostly external. In the
meantime, make sure you’re eating vegetables and drinking lots of water. Easy
on the alcohol.”
The
doctor tells you to put your clothes on. They’ll have to wait for the blood
work results, but all of your vitals seem well within the healthy range for
someone your age, with the exception of your blood pressure, which he’ll chalk
up to a natural aversion to clinical settings. No need for a prescription.
“On
a one-to-ten, how confident are you?” you ask. “I mean, I’ve read that
misdiagnosis rates can be as high as forty-seven percent in a preliminary
examination like this.”
The
doctor sighs, stares at the phone you’ve taken out of your pocket. “This is the
golden age of hypochondria,” he says. “You should get back into a more
consistent workout routine and maybe find a couple hobbies that will keep you
off WebMD. Make an appointment with a rectal surgeon to get that hemorrhoid
removed. Otherwise, keep doing what you’re doing.”
You
leave the office as you entered it, trailed by a rotting, skeletal version of
your dead grandmother’s face mouthing the word fucked on constant repeat. Three days later, sleeplessly camping on
the couch amidst untouched plates of disintegrating drunken noodles, you get
the call.
The
bird-pitched, Mouseketeer twang belongs to someone who introduces herself as
Holly from Clinical Imaging & Diagnostics who sounds like she’s barely
qualified to read lottery numbers, but at least she’s bubbly. That might be the
point.
Syphilis
with a smile!
“So,
um, I’m going to read you the blood work results from your recent visit with
Dr. E—? Please let me finish before you ask any questions, but honestly honey
you’re not going to freak. All the blood cell counts are great! Liver, thyroid,
and kidney function are good…”
She
reads off every result and she’s right. You know because you’ve already checked
what the numbers should be. She’s “super jealous of your cholesterol?” and your
STD panel is “totally negatory!”
You
hang up, scoop solidified chunks of MSG into the garbage, and go into your room
to find your cross trainers.
The
next day you call your boss and tell him you won’t be coming to the restaurant
that night, or ever. You’re going to look for a job where you can utilize your
philosophy degree: arts conservatories, historical organizations, cultural
think tanks. You run a little every morning because it feels good to be outside
and moving. When you get tired you stop. You shave every day and dabble in some
of the facial products that had been lying dormant on your dresser since before
your thesis defense. You buy groceries at a store that doesn’t sell kombucha or
wild broccoli and supplement your non-organic vegetables with ground beef or
boneless pork chops or whatever you feel like cooking. Your phone resides in closet
purgatory when the retro flip model you purchased on Amazon arrives in the mail.
Whether
everything is one big moment whose meaning shines perpetually or a collection
of seconds adding to nothing, you don’t care.
You’re not fucked.
You’re
alive.
One
afternoon you’re getting ready for happy hour drinks with an environmental
lawyer whose pictures are all taken from questionable angles and no full-body
shots but who comes across in her profile as “relaxed” and “balanced.” The
phone rings, unknown number, but you’re expecting a follow-up from the
interview you had the day before for an archivist position at an online
Nietzschean database. Or it might be the lawyer, XOXO-Jennie88, calling because
she has to work late or something.
“Hello,
is this J—?”
Monotone,
rehearsed.
Telemarketer
scum.
“Mm-hm?”
Your thumb slides along your well-moisturized cheek toward the hang-up icon.
“J—
this is Holly from Clinical Imaging & Diagnostics. I’m calling again in
regards to some blood work you recently had done.”
The
twang is gone. The harmless questioning cadence replaced by stoic certainty,
the weight of bad news.
Your
thumb slides back, gripping.
You
hear your grandmother’s chalk-scraped cackling. You feel the soft gray place
spiraling farther away into the bowels of a basket you’ll never grasp.
“I’m
glad I was able to reach you. I’ve been trying to get in touch for the past
week but your inbox is full.”
“Uh-huh.”
“Well,
I’d like to apologize for the inconvenience but there was a mix-up in the lab
regarding the samples we received. An obviously undesirable administrative
error. These things are rare but they do happen, and we make it our primary
responsibility to notify those affected as quickly as possible. There’s
probably no need to be super concerned just yet – your cholesterol is still
excellent – but there were minor incongruities in a few of the readings and
we’d like you to make another appointment to draw more samples and to discuss
with your primary care doctor the possibility of –”
“I
have surprisingly good credit for someone my age and it increases with every
punctual student loan payment I make.”
“I’m
sorry but that doesn’t have anything to do with –”
“In
the event of a natural disaster my apartment is ideally situated along a major
evacuation route.”
“Um,
congratulations?”
“I
have three point five times as many Twitter followers as the global average.
The shoe store on West Broadway is finally having its annual end-of-summer
clearance next week and the mid-cut suede boots that match most of my collared
shirts and a fair number of my jeans will be sixty to seventy percent lower
than their current value. My cholesterol is still excellent…”