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#my face reading this like i found the goddamn rosetta stone
marisatomay · 1 year
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tom cruise calling ‘eyes wide shut’ his ‘nebraska’ i need him in a jar for study so bad like you don’t understand
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allthejoeks · 6 years
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Laundry Day
Mason Pines considered himself to be somewhat of a genius. He had since the age of 12 been wrapped up in several government conspiracies, spoken to multiple Lovecraftian abominations, and fulfilled more than one ancient prophecy. He had dug up the remains of multiple ancient civilizations (some of them not even from Earth) and had spent the better part of his life ensuring that he could read any manuscript or ancient symbolism under the sun. So he never anticipated that he would be stumped standing in front of his washing machine. And yet, when faced with the absolute gibberish that stood before him, he had only one option.
“Paz, could you come in here for a sec?”
Pacifica Northwest peeked her head into the side hallway of their apartment. “What the fuck is this?” he asked, showing her the hauntingly unfathomable piece of fabric.
Pacifica raised a perfectly-manicured eyebrow. “Uh, my favorite sweater? You’ve seen me wear it a million times.”
“Right, should’ve been more clear. What the fuck is THIS?” He asked, pointing to the inside of the sweater, where what he could only assume to be the Rosetta Stone of laundry instructions was emblazoned onto it.
Pacifica’s eyebrow remained thoroughly judgemental. “Those would be laundry instructions, Dipper.”
Mason sighed. “Paz, have you ever seen laundry instructions that take up the entire back of the sweater?”
“Well, I’ve never lived anywhere without someone completely servile to me, so no, I actually haven’t seen laundry instructions of any sort.”
Ordinarily, Mason would take the bait her remark offered and the two would spend the afternoon happily shittalking but today he was simply too baffled by the sheer gap between the lives they had previously lead to engage her.
“I mean, Paz, the first line is ‘Rinse only in Argentinian water’. Right off the bat what does Argentina have to do with anything?!”
Pacifica shrugged her shoulders. “The minerals and chemicals in Argentinian soil is perfectly suited for its run-off to be used for ensuring perfect color and softness?” she offered.
Mason stared at her for a moment. “Right, ignoring that for now. It goes on to provide 14 steps for the washing process alone. Several of which involve taking it out of the washer to massage different parts of it.” He turned to his girlfriend. “I am not going to massage your goddamn sweater.”
Pacifica sighed in a perfect imitation of him. It frustrated him slightly good she was at mimicking his mannerisms. “Look, none of the staff at the mansion ever had a problem washing this sweater before, so I don’t know what to tell you.”
“Your dad was also weirdly comfortable with threatening to eat your staff if they ever stepped out of line, so I think that might have had something to do with it. However, your dad already hates me regardless, so I have no problem rinsing this sweater in blasphemous Palo Alto water.”
Pacifica strode towards him. “Dipper Mason Pines,” she growled. “That sweater costs more than you do, and it is one of my favorite articles of clothing. You will follow the exact process given by the sweater because if it comes out of this process looking any different from usual then I will personally assure that EVERY article of clothing you wear for the rest of your life will come out in the hottest shade of neon pink that you can imagine. Am I clear?”
Mason took a step back. Multiple Lovecraftian abominations didn’t have shit on a riled up Paz. “Crystal. Won’t wash the sweater. Roger that.”
Pacifica glared at him for a couple more seconds. Then, dominance asserted, she nodded and turned to the laundry basket. “Now since you are clearly incapable of doing my laundry yourself, I have to step in to make sure you don’t mess anything up. Be grateful.”
Mason was incredibly tempted to respond that the only reason he was doing her laundry in the first place was because she was actually incapable of it. He abstained, however, as he didn’t want to change her mind. Doing things with Paz was generally much more enjoyable than doing things without her. He elected for a different conversation.
“Frankly I’m just amazed you still remember my first name,” he mused. Paz had only learned his first name after they started dating. As such, she generally referred to him by his childhood nickname, which was much more familiar to her.
Pacifica tutted. “Of course I know your first name, stupid. I just don’t like acknowledging my boyfriend was named after a type of jar.”
“Or I was named after the secret society that has alluded society for generations.”
“No, it was definitely the jar,” Pacifica said, tossing in the whites. “Asked your mom about it, actually. She wanted to make sure your name was as dumb and lame as she knew you were going to be once she saw your stupid baby face.”
“Alright, that one was actually kinda hurtful,” Mason admitted.
“Listen, if you want this vicious cycle to stop,” Paz continued, adding the detergent. “Just tell your parents to never name anything ever again because they are clearly awful at it. Speaking of cycles, delicates or normal?”
“Normal. And I feel like you’re the last person to give out name advice. Do you know how dumb I felt having to explain to my friends that my long-distance girlfriend from the Pacific Northwest was named Pacifica Northwest? One of the prime reasons I convinced you to move down here was just to prove to them that your name really was just that ridiculous.”
“And if I had known you were going to brutalize my sweaters like you were planning to, I would have stayed in Gravity Falls.” She made a face as the washing machine whirred to life. “Blech. I don’t even want to say that as a joke. I would have moved to Argentina. Saved on import costs.”
Mason elected to ignore Paz's clear disgust for her previous living arrangements for two reasons: 1) As far as he was concerned, hating Paz's parents was the litmus test for basic human empathy, and 2) Something much more interesting just happened. “You just did the laundry,” Mason observed. “Like, without anything exploding. How did you pull this off?”
Paz rolled her eyes. “Literally anyone can use a washing machine, Dipper. It’s not hard to grasp.”
Mason raised an eyebrow with Paz-like poise and precision. “Neither is cleaning a rug, and yet you still attempted to use my conditioner to clean it last week.”
“Your hair is shaggy, our rug is shaggy! It makes sense!”
Mason maintained his silent judgment. Eventually Pacifica broke. “Alright, fine. I got Mabel to teach me yesterday. I figured I should learn to do at least one chore without your help since you always nag me about the other ones.”
Mason was considerably moved that Pacifica “Get the butler’s butler to do it” Northwest would take the initiative on learning chores just to make his life easier. “Y'know if either of us was capable of expressing ourselves through anything other than sarcastic comments I feel like this would be really heartwarming.”
“Yeah, well, we aren’t,” Paz said. She paused, clearly deliberating saying more. “Butthat’swhatIloveaboutus,” she blurted out. She clapped her hands together. “Alright, that’s enough emotions for me for one day. Your name is stupid and you should feel bad about it. If you’ll excuse me, I have better things to do.”
“Yeah, like cleaning the dishes,” Mason said. “Feel free to use my shampoo. Oily plates are the same thing as oily hair, right?”
The last Mason saw of his girlfriend was her hand, firmly giving him the middle finger. He laughed. “Just kidding, I too love and appreciate you!”
“As previously stated, I am currently incapable of reciprocating those remarks!” Paz called back from their room.
“That’s fine, they’re all still true!” Mason yelled back. He picked up the now empty laundry basket and put it back in the closet, smiling to himself. Turns out, spending the better part of your life learning about cryptology makes you an incredibly unamusing person. Which is why he considered himself lucky to have found someone who made even laundry day enjoyable.
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literateape · 7 years
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This New Road Will Some Day Be the Old Road, Too
by Don Hall
There were many things I enjoyed about London but London was not one of them.
It was best in the earliest hours on either end of the day - before anyone has risen from sleep, as the streets are slightly abandoned or after most sensible people have retired for them night and the only folks out are the desperate or the lucky.  Even then, however, the place was too jammed in like an entire city population too fat for the skinny jeans they had been squeezed into.  And dirty.  Not dusty.  Wichita is dusty.  Sedona is dusty.  This was grimey as if a layer of greasy soot coated the cracks and spaces untouched and made your skin feel like you were being slightly prepped for sautéing.  
It was decades ago but the realization that I only love New York City for a maximum of two days in a row before I want nothing more than to leave solidified over several trips to The Big Apple.  To fully enjoy NYC, I need to not be staying in the city but just outside of it and for as few days as possible.
Leading up to our third wedding anniversary, DMJ and I decided at first we wanted to go to Edinburgh, Scotland for the Edinburgh Festival Fringe but decided that August was a bit too early for the trip and we didn't want to be landlocked to the non-stop activity that takes over Edinburgh that time of year.  We talked it over and decided it would be London in September with a day trip to Scotland if we wanted to in the moment.
I perused the Priceline deals and things went from a $4800 trip to a $2600 trip and we nailed down flights (the cheap tickets included a seven hour layover in Detroit going there) and our modest hotel and we were set.  Travel guides were read, plans were planned and discarded and planned again.  Ten days in London, England.  Rock On. 
CHAPTER ONE: NAKED TV and PLUSH PLAGUE RATS
We stayed in a small 3-star hotel on Bayswater (a few blocks from Hyde Park and the Paddington Station hub for trains and the Tube.)  The room was tiny but the bed was adequate.  The bathroom, however, was so Lilliputian that I could rest my chin on the sink while dropping a deuce (seated sideways because of spacial constraints...) 
The first night found us watching British television.  We landed on a strange dating show called "Naked Attraction."  Like any other dating show except that the choser gets to see the six possible dates naked before he/she chooses, starting with the feet and working up.  Obviously, it's the genitals that get the most on-air attention.  And, of course, we were fascinated.
This show set a stage for some fairly bizarre stuff we encountered on our stay.  
The documentary on penis size.  I mean, a whole documentary about guys with giant dicks.  DMJ loved it.
The random Persian guy who was suddenly very friendly, who thought he'd ingratiate himself to us by telling us how much he loved Trump, who tried to get us to hang out with him by quoting his father "Where there is a contact, there is a contract." Insisting that we have coffee with him.  He was holding a book - “From MTV to Mecca” - and insisted that the author was his girlfriend but the book seemed brand new, she hadn’t signed it and maybe the Trump-love colored my perceptions but he seemed off.  I'd watched enough Better Call Saul to know where that was going so we got away from him and felt certain at coffee there would arrive a friend of his and the task of separating our money from our persons would be in play.
And, at the Globe, in the gift shop, the plush toy Plague Rats.  Seriously.  Someone thought in a store filled with reminders of Shakespeare, a cuddly stuffed rat that had brought the bubonic plaque to England was a real seller.
CHAPTER TWO: Finding Wonder in a World of the Driven
DMJ and I always have a specific source of dissonance when we go on holiday: she prefers to avoid anything touristy and enjoys walking about the place discovering things that make her smile while I prefer to immerse myself into those historic and/or gaudy places that give me a sense of the history of the city.  In other words, DMJ is all about the present as discovered in the now and I am all about the past as discovered by paying a serious fee to enter and avoid being sold plastic bullshit along with the history.
There were many things we both loved about London but London itself was not among these things.  The city felt like New York City 200 years after the Empire had fallen - the Center of the Universe, the Hotbed of Commerce and International Focus Left Behind.  The sense of seas of unhappy faces streaming into the Tube or along the streets to their jobs, dressed for business rather than comfort, the rat race embodied, was far more standard than my expectation of Europe.
On the other hand, amidst the hustle of the business class swarming the city in search of pounds, we discovered or paid for a series of lovely experiences in London.
Madame Tussauds was the London version of the place and sort of like Wax Museum Central worldwide.  For some unexplained reason, I LOVE wax museums.  So, of course, we had to go.  DMJ had never been to one and now can say she's been to the best, therefore she never has to go to one with me again.  This one provided one of my favorite photo ops of the entire trip:
Sir John Soane's House was one of DMJ's planned outings.  An architect and collector, his house was three floors and a basement of the most meticulous hoarder or architectural ephemera imaginable (including a sarcophagus.)
The British Museum was one that DMJ passed on but I had to go experience.  One of the oldest museums in the world and free at that, this place could've taken me two days to truly explore but I managed to get a solid visit in under four hours and was amply blown away by the sight of ancient shit, mostly taken legally, from all over the known world.  Mummies, busts, the Rosetta Stone, a clock made by Copernicus.
Shakespeare's Globe Theatre was kind of amazing.
Hyde Park/Kensington Gardens.  DMJ loves to be outside in the sun among green stuff and people.  Therefore, we toured almost every park and every garden (including an incredible little Oriental Garden in the center of Holland Park) in London but the biggest and best was the giant park just blocks from our hotel.  The Kensington Palace, tributes to Diana, an Italian Gardens, the Serpentine Gallery with an extraordinary exhibit on the nature of being black by Arthur Jafa.  We also managed to run into Robert Neuhaus and his wife Amy - we agreed that after me leaving "Wait Wait...Don't Tell Me!" it was far more likely to hang out in London than in Chicago.
Covent Garden Market was one of several open-air marketplaces in the city that we visited.  This included a woman singing opera in the courtyard, some of the best gelato ever, and a Moomin store.  I had never heard of Moomin but DMJ went apeshit when she saw there was a store.  Of course, we bought things there.
Of course there were more minuscule and grandiose pockets of extraordinary places we encountered.  Buckingham Palace, the Tower Bridge, the Tower of London, and the Leighton House Gallery with a unique Alma-Tadema exhibit that DMJ had a Moomin-like reaction to as well.
And fucking Abbey Road.
CHAPTER THREE: Wherein I Realize That, While I Am in Relatively Good Shape, My Body is as Fragile as a Fucking Faberge Egg
Sunday afternoon, after a quick nap from walking all creation and back, I get up, bend over to put on my shoes and my lower back goes into a spasm that is an eight on the OMG Pain Scale.  Later, my mother tells me that, in her opinion, these back spasms hurt worse than childbirth.  Having never given birth, I can't corroborate but it fucking hurt in a huge WTF?! surprise that left my brain spinning and my body immobile.
DMJ went out and bought me heat packs, ibuprofen, and made a makeshift cold pack.  I lay on my back with my legs elevated.  I slept on the floor in agony that night.  The next morning, I was in pain but could get up.  We went out but I realized pretty shortly that , while I could walk, I couldn't sit down for more than 20 seconds before a shooting pain went from my back down my legs and up again.
I felt like I was suddenly 94 years old.
We ate in a restaurant on Portobello Road called The Distillery.  The food was maybe the best meal we had the whole time and they were gracious enough to allow me to stand at the bar to eat instead of stand at a table like a bizarre jackass.
I was just a walking ache but managed to muscle through it for the most part.  I mean, what the fuck are you gonna do?  Stay in your hotel room, lying on the goddamn floor, 6,000 miles from home?  Nah.
The worst I had it was three days after.  The pain was rough and I had eaten something odd the night before.  We were walking around downtown London, checking things out, when I was suddenly hit with some intestinal distress.  Like most major cities, there are no public toilets in London.  DMJ suggested a church.
Which is how I found myself dropping a massive deuce in 15-second increments because it hurt so much to sit down and shit that I had to keep standing up in the bathroom of a 500-year old place of worship and stretch my back.
Back in the States, I've mostly recovered with the exception that the skin on my right thigh up to the right half of my crotch is numb.  Which is weird.
CHAPTER FOUR: Scotland Makes Me Wish I Had Been Born There
The afternoon three days before we were to head back to Chicago, London had begun to take her toll.  DMJ had wanted to go to Somerset House and, while it was fine, between her missing home and/or Paris and me feeling like I was being twisted in half 65% of the time from the waist down, we were both feeling less than upbeat.
I decided to head off on my own to the British Museum, she decided to go back to the hotel.  I did go to the museum and loved it, she instead drank red wine for a few hours.  When she came back to the room she was a bit lit and in a rotten mood.
"Let's go to Edinburgh tomorrow.  Anyplace but here!"
So I booked our high-speed rail tickets and splurged on a $400 a night hotel room smack dab in the center of the city.  The next morning, we packed for an overnight stay and headed to Scotland.
I had been to Edinburgh for a month in 1995 when I took two shows to the Fringe and had maintained a sense that Scotland was magical.  I frequently told people that Edinburgh was the one other place on the planet I could live outside of Chicago.  As we trained our way across the beautiful, green countryside, I wondered how much of my love for the place was an exaggerated thing exacerbated by the distance of 22 years.
It was not overblown.  From the second we pulled into the station, I felt a unique calm and delight.  I felt like I was home again.  The hills.  The green.  The castle turrets.  The craggy rocks.  The brick streets.  The sights and sounds.  The smell.  And DMJ felt it, too.  Suddenly, the trip took on the wonder of traveling someplace amazing that we had hoped we'd experience in London.
It was lovely.  We went and toured Edinburgh Castle.  We had whisky and I had a deconstructed haggis that was outstanding.  We walked through cemeteries and up hills and drank and talked about the things we loved about London.  It turned out we had enjoyed ourselves more than the last few days seemed.
And then again, back to our little hotel room and out the next day to fly ten hours home.
EPILOGUE
The most important thing on this entire trip was that we flew out to the United Kingdom to celebrate our third anniversary and we did.  The night of September 12, we walked a few blocks to a traditional pub called "The Swan," went upstairs, ordered drinks and food and dessert and toasted our good fortune at finding one another.
In Edinburgh, in a quaint courtyard square that housed the Writer's Museum, there were engraved stones peppered about on the walkway.  One of them nailed exactly how I was feeling:
"And yet - And yet, this New Road will some day be the Old Road, too." - Neil Munro (1863-1930)
My life with DMJ is just that - a series of New Roads that quickly become Old Roads (or at least roads we have travelled upon together) - and in my imagination of what has come before and what new roads and adventures lay ahead, it is the together part that makes it worth doing.
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theliterateape · 7 years
Text
This New Road Will Some Day Be the Old Road, Too
by Don Hall
There were many things I enjoyed about London but London was not one of them.
It was best in the earliest hours on either end of the day - before anyone has risen from sleep, as the streets are slightly abandoned or after most sensible people have retired for them night and the only folks out are the desperate or the lucky.  Even then, however, the place was too jammed in like an entire city population too fat for the skinny jeans they had been squeezed into.  And dirty.  Not dusty.  Wichita is dusty.  Sedona is dusty.  This was grimey as if a layer of greasy soot coated the cracks and spaces untouched and made your skin feel like you were being slightly prepped for sautéing.  
It was decades ago but the realization that I only love New York City for a maximum of two days in a row before I want nothing more than to leave solidified over several trips to The Big Apple.  To fully enjoy NYC, I need to not be staying in the city but just outside of it and for as few days as possible.
Leading up to our third wedding anniversary, DMJ and I decided at first we wanted to go to Edinburgh, Scotland for the Edinburgh Festival Fringe but decided that August was a bit too early for the trip and we didn't want to be landlocked to the non-stop activity that takes over Edinburgh that time of year.  We talked it over and decided it would be London in September with a day trip to Scotland if we wanted to in the moment.
I perused the Priceline deals and things went from a $4800 trip to a $2600 trip and we nailed down flights (the cheap tickets included a seven hour layover in Detroit going there) and our modest hotel and we were set.  Travel guides were read, plans were planned and discarded and planned again.  Ten days in London, England.  Rock On. 
CHAPTER ONE: NAKED TV and PLUSH PLAGUE RATS
We stayed in a small 3-star hotel on Bayswater (a few blocks from Hyde Park and the Paddington Station hub for trains and the Tube.)  The room was tiny but the bed was adequate.  The bathroom, however, was so Lilliputian that I could rest my chin on the sink while dropping a deuce (seated sideways because of spacial constraints...) 
The first night found us watching British television.  We landed on a strange dating show called "Naked Attraction."  Like any other dating show except that the choser gets to see the six possible dates naked before he/she chooses, starting with the feet and working up.  Obviously, it's the genitals that get the most on-air attention.  And, of course, we were fascinated.
This show set a stage for some fairly bizarre stuff we encountered on our stay.  
The documentary on penis size.  I mean, a whole documentary about guys with giant dicks.  DMJ loved it.
The random Persian guy who was suddenly very friendly, who thought he'd ingratiate himself to us by telling us how much he loved Trump, who tried to get us to hang out with him by quoting his father "Where there is a contact, there is a contract." Insisting that we have coffee with him.  He was holding a book - “From MTV to Mecca” - and insisted that the author was his girlfriend but the book seemed brand new, she hadn’t signed it and maybe the Trump-love colored my perceptions but he seemed off.  I'd watched enough Better Call Saul to know where that was going so we got away from him and felt certain at coffee there would arrive a friend of his and the task of separating our money from our persons would be in play.
And, at the Globe, in the gift shop, the plush toy Plague Rats.  Seriously.  Someone thought in a store filled with reminders of Shakespeare, a cuddly stuffed rat that had brought the bubonic plaque to England was a real seller.
CHAPTER TWO: Finding Wonder in a World of the Driven
DMJ and I always have a specific source of dissonance when we go on holiday: she prefers to avoid anything touristy and enjoys walking about the place discovering things that make her smile while I prefer to immerse myself into those historic and/or gaudy places that give me a sense of the history of the city.  In other words, DMJ is all about the present as discovered in the now and I am all about the past as discovered by paying a serious fee to enter and avoid being sold plastic bullshit along with the history.
There were many things we both loved about London but London itself was not among these things.  The city felt like New York City 200 years after the Empire had fallen - the Center of the Universe, the Hotbed of Commerce and International Focus Left Behind.  The sense of seas of unhappy faces streaming into the Tube or along the streets to their jobs, dressed for business rather than comfort, the rat race embodied, was far more standard than my expectation of Europe.
On the other hand, amidst the hustle of the business class swarming the city in search of pounds, we discovered or paid for a series of lovely experiences in London.
Madame Tussauds was the London version of the place and sort of like Wax Museum Central worldwide.  For some unexplained reason, I LOVE wax museums.  So, of course, we had to go.  DMJ had never been to one and now can say she's been to the best, therefore she never has to go to one with me again.  This one provided one of my favorite photo ops of the entire trip:
Sir John Soane's House was one of DMJ's planned outings.  An architect and collector, his house was three floors and a basement of the most meticulous hoarder or architectural ephemera imaginable (including a sarcophagus.)
The British Museum was one that DMJ passed on but I had to go experience.  One of the oldest museums in the world and free at that, this place could've taken me two days to truly explore but I managed to get a solid visit in under four hours and was amply blown away by the sight of ancient shit, mostly taken legally, from all over the known world.  Mummies, busts, the Rosetta Stone, a clock made by Copernicus.
Shakespeare's Globe Theatre was kind of amazing.
Hyde Park/Kensington Gardens.  DMJ loves to be outside in the sun among green stuff and people.  Therefore, we toured almost every park and every garden (including an incredible little Oriental Garden in the center of Holland Park) in London but the biggest and best was the giant park just blocks from our hotel.  The Kensington Palace, tributes to Diana, an Italian Gardens, the Serpentine Gallery with an extraordinary exhibit on the nature of being black by Arthur Jafa.  We also managed to run into Robert Neuhaus and his wife Amy - we agreed that after me leaving "Wait Wait...Don't Tell Me!" it was far more likely to hang out in London than in Chicago.
Covent Garden Market was one of several open-air marketplaces in the city that we visited.  This included a woman singing opera in the courtyard, some of the best gelato ever, and a Moomin store.  I had never heard of Moomin but DMJ went apeshit when she saw there was a store.  Of course, we bought things there.
Of course there were more minuscule and grandiose pockets of extraordinary places we encountered.  Buckingham Palace, the Tower Bridge, the Tower of London, and the Leighton House Gallery with a unique Alma-Tadema exhibit that DMJ had a Moomin-like reaction to as well.
And fucking Abbey Road.
CHAPTER THREE: Wherein I Realize That, While I Am in Relatively Good Shape, My Body is as Fragile as a Fucking Faberge Egg
Sunday afternoon, after a quick nap from walking all creation and back, I get up, bend over to put on my shoes and my lower back goes into a spasm that is an eight on the OMG Pain Scale.  Later, my mother tells me that, in her opinion, these back spasms hurt worse than childbirth.  Having never given birth, I can't corroborate but it fucking hurt in a huge WTF?! surprise that left my brain spinning and my body immobile.
DMJ went out and bought me heat packs, ibuprofen, and made a makeshift cold pack.  I lay on my back with my legs elevated.  I slept on the floor in agony that night.  The next morning, I was in pain but could get up.  We went out but I realized pretty shortly that , while I could walk, I couldn't sit down for more than 20 seconds before a shooting pain went from my back down my legs and up again.
I felt like I was suddenly 94 years old.
We ate in a restaurant on Portobello Road called The Distillery.  The food was maybe the best meal we had the whole time and they were gracious enough to allow me to stand at the bar to eat instead of stand at a table like a bizarre jackass.
I was just a walking ache but managed to muscle through it for the most part.  I mean, what the fuck are you gonna do?  Stay in your hotel room, lying on the goddamn floor, 6,000 miles from home?  Nah.
The worst I had it was three days after.  The pain was rough and I had eaten something odd the night before.  We were walking around downtown London, checking things out, when I was suddenly hit with some intestinal distress.  Like most major cities, there are no public toilets in London.  DMJ suggested a church.
Which is how I found myself dropping a massive deuce in 15-second increments because it hurt so much to sit down and shit that I had to keep standing up in the bathroom of a 500-year old place of worship and stretch my back.
Back in the States, I've mostly recovered with the exception that the skin on my right thigh up to the right half of my crotch is numb.  Which is weird.
CHAPTER FOUR: Scotland Makes Me Wish I Had Been Born There
The afternoon three days before we were to head back to Chicago, London had begun to take her toll.  DMJ had wanted to go to Somerset House and, while it was fine, between her missing home and/or Paris and me feeling like I was being twisted in half 65% of the time from the waist down, we were both feeling less than upbeat.
I decided to head off on my own to the British Museum, she decided to go back to the hotel.  I did go to the museum and loved it, she instead drank red wine for a few hours.  When she came back to the room she was a bit lit and in a rotten mood.
"Let's go to Edinburgh tomorrow.  Anyplace but here!"
So I booked our high-speed rail tickets and splurged on a $400 a night hotel room smack dab in the center of the city.  The next morning, we packed for an overnight stay and headed to Scotland.
I had been to Edinburgh for a month in 1995 when I took two shows to the Fringe and had maintained a sense that Scotland was magical.  I frequently told people that Edinburgh was the one other place on the planet I could live outside of Chicago.  As we trained our way across the beautiful, green countryside, I wondered how much of my love for the place was an exaggerated thing exacerbated by the distance of 22 years.
It was not overblown.  From the second we pulled into the station, I felt a unique calm and delight.  I felt like I was home again.  The hills.  The green.  The castle turrets.  The craggy rocks.  The brick streets.  The sights and sounds.  The smell.  And DMJ felt it, too.  Suddenly, the trip took on the wonder of traveling someplace amazing that we had hoped we'd experience in London.
It was lovely.  We went and toured Edinburgh Castle.  We had whisky and I had a deconstructed haggis that was outstanding.  We walked through cemeteries and up hills and drank and talked about the things we loved about London.  It turned out we had enjoyed ourselves more than the last few days seemed.
And then again, back to our little hotel room and out the next day to fly ten hours home.
EPILOGUE
The most important thing on this entire trip was that we flew out to the United Kingdom to celebrate our third anniversary and we did.  The night of September 12, we walked a few blocks to a traditional pub called "The Swan," went upstairs, ordered drinks and food and dessert and toasted our good fortune at finding one another.
In Edinburgh, in a quaint courtyard square that housed the Writer's Museum, there were engraved stones peppered about on the walkway.  One of them nailed exactly how I was feeling:
"And yet - And yet, this New Road will some day be the Old Road, too." - Neil Munro (1863-1930)
My life with DMJ is just that - a series of New Roads that quickly become Old Roads (or at least roads we have travelled upon together) - and in my imagination of what has come before and what new roads and adventures lay ahead, it is the together part that makes it worth doing.
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