Dancer – Suburban Beach Gypsy

DancerShe was on the run. Traveling as fast as she could, she had taken a job on the other side of the country.  Two weeks from now (at forty-seven years old) she would start her new position as the VP of Science at a Biotech start up and planned to be busy forgetting everyone she used to know.  Not that she had much choice.  Six months earlier she had diagnosed herself with frontotemporal dementia.  Dr. Claudette Deering was on the run from herself.

Two years ago she had started to notice changes in her mood.   At first it seemed a euphoric second youth had taken her.  Everything was more intense.  Food had more flavor.  Music moved her like a school girl.  Even colors had more depth – like poetry.  However, the science part of her had started to calculate the changes and was busy translating the behavior in to symptoms – symptoms that were familiar to her as a doctor.  A small part of her brain had quietly started documenting her behavior flagging them for her conscience mind.  She started keeping a journal of her days, her interactions, and behaviors.

When she felt she had enough evidence, she had her suspicions confirmed by a colleague under the pretense of seeking advice for a patient. FTD, her friend, colleague, and fellow neurologist had confirmed.  “The last item you shared confirmed it for me.  I would have to see the patient for myself to make a formal diagnosis, but this clearly shows the patient’s lack of empathy and loss of interpersonal skills.”  The last item had also confirmed it for Claudette.  It was the recounting of a moment she had experienced with an employee of hers.  She had been talking to the employee and while they were speaking she had picked up a picture on the employees desk to examine it and then had started to poke holes in the faces with a pin she had freed the photograph from that had kept the picture attached to the employees pin board.

Later that day, while she was updating her journal, she had recalled the incident. While she was not upset by her behavior,  she did understand that this was proof she had been looking for.

There was no use seeking a second opinion formally and having herself subjected to a battery of tests. The doctor was sure to revoke her license immediately and start the process towards putting her on long term disability.  She would then be pressured to give power of attorney to her closest relative – in this case her daughter.  Her life as she knew it would be over.  As a neurologist she was well aware of the changes she was going to face and the loss of freedom that would come with them.  She was determined to make the most of the small time she had to still be her.

She had found a new job in a field unrelated to her expertise and had promptly moved across the country. No one would be able to track her decline.  No one would be able to call her out on loss of knowledge.  No one would be able to observe a dramatic change in behavior; because… no one would know her.

Tonight she was still free. She sat under the starry sky on the tailgate of her Chevrolet Suburban watching the fire she had made at her camp near Bodega Bay in California.  The beach was about 20 miles from Santa Rosa – the city of her new job.  Her condo didn’t close escrow until a week from now and her new career would start a week after.  For seven days she would enjoy the anonymousness of being a suburban beach gypsy.  For the first time in her life, she was unconcerned about what would happen next.  She did not have a daughter to raise, she did not have patients to attend to, she did not have a board to answer to.  Ironically, with everything going for her, she didn’t have much of a future.  She was living in the moment.  She spun around in glorious abandonment.

“Nice moves”, she heard from a voice in the dark. A young man entered the perimeter of her light with a banjo in hand.  “There is a drum circle tonight at the beach in celebration of Mistress Luna”, he said pointing at the full moon gracing the sky.   “Care to join me?”

Claudette briefly wondered how much of the night cover had disguised her age. But she felt young, impulsive, and carefree – all symptoms of her disease her mind amusedly reminded her.  “I would love to” she replied.

 

Linemen – Hand Up

Nick had been stuck in his truck all day. It had taken them three hours to drive to the job site. Upon arrival they had discovered that the materials had not arrived. The work would need to be postponed. The drive back had seemed to take even longer than the drive there adding to his general feeling of being stuck in a rut.

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As he was fairly fresh with no real work under his belt, his supervisor had offered him overtime to take care of some routine emergency when he arrived back at the yard. Routine Emergency – this routine emergency was a car hitting a pole and had hit it so hard it was sitting on its back bumper looking like it was trying to climb the pole.   In his line of work apparently this was routine he thought with fresh amusement at an old tag line.

The picture was impressive. Nick passed. As a single man working as a lineman he was making too much money to spend as it was. Also, he had plans for the night and it didn’t involve spending it with a bunch guys he had already spent too much time with today.

Nick had been taking a theater class at the local college at night. He was doing it to meet girls. He had always had a thing for the artsy types that were in drama. Tonight his professor was hosting an out of town dance troop. Part of his grade would be about watching this performance. Also, he was hoping to run into Nancy a girl he had been trying to chat up since the first day of class

When he got there, his professor was out of sorts. One of the volunteers to help the dancers change had flaked and they were trying to find a last minute replacement. Apparently this show had some quick costume changes

and a dresser was absolutely necessary. When the professor had asked him, Nick had flat out refused. No way was he going to help some grown dude get dressed.

“I can promise you at least a B in this class even if you cut for the rest of the year”, the professor had pleaded with the reserved dignity of academia.

Nick knew he needed some passing grades if he was going to keep going to this school and work often interfered with that. A solid B in his back pocket would certainly help.

This actually wasn’t that bad thought Nick as he helped the guy dress. Apparently there would be an after show party for the performers and crew and he was now invited. He had run into Nancy right before he headed back stage and they had made plans to do something after the show. Now they had something to do. He was pretty sure she was going to be impressed. Nick was helping the guy stick his foot in the leg of his jeans when he turned slightly to face one of the other dancers also getting help getting dressed.

He was in no way prepared to see a naked dancer’s swinging boobs as she leaned forward to fit them in her bra. The guy he was helping must have noticed because the next thing he heard was “Eyes on me! Focus! Hand up!” Nick looked down to and to his embarrassment found his hand resting on the poor guy’s naked ass. He had a feeling tonight was going to be quite a night.

Dancers – Don’t Sickle

68183c99-a2e5-43a6-9287-85bb2257068b.jpegThomas sat sewing the elastic straps to his technique shoes on the hard stage of the empty theater. The cold ran right from the floor through the thin fabric of his warm up clothing chilling his underweight body – even more than the morning air. Morning – if you could call 11:30 morning. Let’s face it. This town was just fucking cold he thought with resignation. He wasn’t even sure where he was. He hadn’t used his passport in a while so he assumed they were somewhere in the continental US. Tennessee? Alabama? He vaguely recalled someone calling this the red neck tour.

He hadn’t made any friends so he couldn’t be sure and he really couldn’t be bothered to ask anyone.  They were all uptight modern dancers in a touring show funded by some grant or other. Rehearsals had revealed he had the strongest technique of anyone in the company and this hadn’t endeared him to anyone. They were all wondering why he was slumming with them.

The reality was there weren’t a whole lot of offers waiting for him. He had an offer from a small  regional ballet, an off Broadway musical, and this.  He started dancing to see the world. The touring modern company had been the winner.

He was the first one ready for barre. There was no coffee and his GPS showed the closest café 3 miles away. He sat wondering how he was going to make it through warm up when a fellow dancer (he assumed due to the leotard he was wearing as he couldn’t recall ever seeing him before) sat next to him and handed him a cup. “Black right?”

“Thanks”, said a humbled Thomas. He sat there – adjusted his attitude, put his shoes aside, and walked to the center of the stage. “Any advice?” he asked looking back crouching in the ballet’s signature pose and pointing his foot.

“Don’t Sickle”