The young man was beautiful. Simply beautiful. Sandy red
hair, just a light gold-dusting of freckles, and a graceful body he carried in
a sort of princely manner. This belied the fact that he had already attempted
suicide four times.
His parents hustled him to a psychiatrist, which is what you
did when your child went off the rails. Nobody talked about it, but everyone
knew he had to go. It was torture for him because it reminded him of the fact
that he could not seem to get his life together, though he was already
twenty-three.
The
waiting room smelled almost as bad as a dentist’s, though at least he couldn’t
hear the sound of drills. He had half-expected wails and screams, like in The Snake Pit, but so far there were
none. This was 1956, after all, and he suspected such scenarios were out of date.
“Nigel.” The nurse or receptionist or nun or
whatever-she-was announced his name. His number was up. He was reminded of the
Negro spiritual, “There’s a man goin’ round takin’ names”. Someone had taken
his name already.
The psychiatrist sat behind a huge, monolithic desk, and
Nigel was just as glad, because he only had to look at half of him. He was not
required to lie on a couch, although a couch was provided.
“Nigel.” The psychiatrist, Dr. March, had all the requisite
diplomas on the wall. A spider appended from one of them. He opened a folder
which had already been prepared for him. What could be in it?
“Your parents believe you’d benefit from some counselling,
psychoanalysis perhaps.” He peered at Nigel over glasses that slid down his
nose.
“I guess they think so.”
“Well, what do YOU think?”
“I’m not sure. I think I could do without it.”
“So just what sort of problems are you having?” Dr. March
probably knew.
“Oh, a few problems at the university – post-graduate, you
know – “
“Your parents tell me you want to go to Europe.”
“Well, see, it’s my last chance to have a few adventures
before I – “
“Before you what?”
He was stumped by that one.
“Before you take up a respectable life. So you want to sow
your wild oats.”
He wasn’t familiar with the expression. “Yes, sir. I mean,
yes, doctor. I think so.”
“What do you plan to do in Europe?”
“I’d like to get a motorbike – “
“Motorbike?”
“Yes. It’s a – “
“I know what a motorbike is. I am curious as to why you would want to get one.”
“Can get around faster, that’s all.”
“Get around.”
“See the sights.”
“What sort of sights are you interested in?”
“Oh, Paris, Rome,
that sort of – “
“What sort of companions might you have on this trip? Have
you thought about that?”
“Companions.”
“This is what your parents are so concerned about. The people whose company you
keep.”
This was such a convoluted way of putting it that Nigel was
momentarily confused.
“Oh. You mean – like, fellow travellers and – “
“Yes. Fellow travellers.”
“Oh well. I wouldn’t know that until I got there.” Nigel
shifted uncomfortably in his chair. He had to use the washroom, but wouldn’t
ask, didn’t want to show that kind of weakness on the first appointment.
“Just where do you think you might meet these fellow
travellers? Your parents have been concerned about the company you have been
keeping.”
There was that novelist at the university, a dazzler really, and Nigel had been so
in love with him that his teeth ached. And the prof, simply brilliant, but even
worse because he was so completely unattainable. There had also been a couple
of covert meetings in bars, their locations by necessity conveyed in a sort of secret code.
“I’ve got friends. I mean – “
“What sort of friends?”
“We have similar interests.”
“Nigel, I will not beat about the bush here. Your parents
have sent you here because they have seen evidence that you might possibly have
homosexual tendencies. This is a serious mental disorder which should be addressed
while you are still in your young manhood, so that there is a greater chance it can
be arrested.”
“Arrested.”
“Yes. Though we used to believe it could be eradicated, the measures required
were drastic, often involving castration and the use of hormones. This was, of
course, only used in criminal cases.”
Nigel could feel his balls contract. He was pushed against
the wall. Don’t be a homosexual, don’t.
“Thus a trip to
Europe is not a
desirable possibility at this moment, when you are just beginning to experience
this impulse and might be tempted to act upon it.”
“I haven’t acted upon it,” he lied, putting a sweet
expression on his face, an expression that had been plastered on there for a
long time.
“Good! Good! That is a very good sign, and indicates you are
motivated to resist your feelings and thus take the first steps toward mental
health.”
If his reaction to his lie was “good, good!”, then obviously
his reaction to the truth would be “bad, bad!” or some variation thereof.
“But doctor, you know, I know some people who – that is,
they’ve made the adjustment – “
“These people live outside of society. They are on the
fringes of acceptability.”
“I know a poet. Met him through somebody at the university.”
“Exactly right.”
“His name is Allen. Allen Ginsberg. He wrote this poem that
– “
“Exactly right! One must contemplate the level of income one can expect from a
poem.”
“It’s called Howl.”
“Strange name for a poem. Not exactly Wordsworth, is it?”
“No.” He shifted in his chair, his need to void his bladder
really bad now, but he had to hold out.
“Your parents believe it would be in your best interests to
spend the summer with your grandparents in
Connecticut.
Lots of odd jobs you can do there. Meet people your own age, that sort of
thing.”
Young men? Nigel thought. No, he couldn’t mean that.
“I’m not much interested in Connecticut,
doctor.”
“It’s not a question of what you are interested in, Nigel. Quite the opposite.
Your parents believe, and my professional opinion is in agreement, that your
priority should be suppressing these alarming impulses you have been having
before they rise up and assume a life of their own.”
“And this will happen in Connecticut.”
“More likely there than buzzing around on a motorcycle in Paris
and Rome.”
“So I’ll end up marrying a nice girl?”
“There’s a greater chance of it, if we start now. We’ve had lots of success
stories. Men have learned to quell these impulses and keep them under control
for a lifetime.”
“But what sort of effort does it take?”
“Effort? Of course it takes effort. It takes ongoing effort to overcome any
major psychiatric disorder. Most men have controlled it through constant
vigilance.”
“Vigilance.” Sounded like a very romantic term. Lying next to a
woman he didn’t love, sneaking out after she had gone to sleep.
“I am going to put you on some medication to help calm you
and get these impulses under control. It is only then that we can begin this
work, which I warn you will be long and difficult.”
“What about Connecticut? Will I
be ready for Connecticut?”
The doctor, dense as he was, picked up the merest thread of sarcasm, even
satire, and didn’t like it.
“Connecticut
will be dealt with when the time is right.”
Right. He had the prescription now, and a plan. He realized
that it was necessary, if one was to be successful, to commit suicide twice.
Slash your wrists, then hang yourself.
Take the pills, then jump off the bridge.
Shoot yourself in the head just as the train bears down on the
tracks.
He could mix and match any way he wanted. It was the only
safe way to do it, guaranteeing success. You would never pull through.
It would solve the problem neatly and elegantly. You can’t
know poets like that, for heaven’s sake, and get married and pretend. The
possibilities were too horrendous.
He wanted to make his parents sorry. But his parents would
not be sorry. They would be full of pity and reassured only that their son had
been intractably mentally ill, and that there was nothing anyone could have
done.
He jumped on the bus, walked to the back, juggling
possibilities. Take pills, jump off, shoot yourself. Slash, hang, train. It was
like a Chinese restaurant, elegantly simple, one from column a, one from column b.
All he had to do was pick two.
"You had me at hello"
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