That’s me. Somehow I manage to do
the impossible, without even trying. When I was only 20 years old, I did
something no cripple had ever done before. I got kicked out of the Jerry Lewis
summer camp.
For a cripple, it’s nearly impossible
to get kicked out of Jerry Lewis summer camp. It’s as hard as getting
kicked out of heaven. Except it’s a whole lot harder to get into heaven. To get
into heaven you have to be righteous, virtuous, humble, charitable, thrifty,
brave, clean and reverent. To get into Jerry Lewis summer camp you just had to
be one of Jerry’s kids. You didn’t even have to be a kid. There were crippled
campers in their 60s. Once a Jerry’s kid, always a Jerry’s kid.
And because some of the operators of
Jerry Lewis summer camp saw their mission as bringing one week of happiness and
light into the otherwise sad and dark lives of cripples, a crippled camper
could get away with just about any behavior. You could be the most demanding
tyrant in the western hemisphere and they’d humor you because this was your one
special week.
So naturally, I took this as a
challenge. I aspired to be the first cripple to be kicked out of Jerry Lewis
summer camp for the same reason other determined men have aspired to climb Mt. Everest:
because it’s there.
But when it really happened, I wasn’t
even trying to get kicked out. All I did was get caught drinking with the other
crippled guys in my cabin. Somebody smuggled in a six pack. The only cold and
concealed place we could store it was in the lake, tied to a leg of the pier.
We broke it out on the last night. One of the tight ass camp staff caught us.
We were banned the next year.
And this is why I’m especially
terrified of ending up in a nursing home. Because I know I’ll accidentally do
the impossible there, too. I’ll be banned from the TV room. It seems to me
like getting kicked out of the TV room is almost as hard to accomplish as
getting kicked out of Jerry Lewis summer camp. The TV room is the room of last
resort. It’s where they put the inmates who are most out of it. Sad and
slumped, they huddle around reruns of Columbo.
Survival in this environment shouldn’t
be difficult. All one has to do is shut up and watch Columbo. But I couldn’t do
it. I have this bad habit. Television is so ridiculous that before long I
heckle it. Especially commercials. I can’t help it. I just blurt shit out
without thinking. It’s like Tourette’s. Like for instance, let’s say there’s a
commercial for Swedish Formula 29 men’s hair dye. And there’s a guy about my
age proudly proclaiming that when he got rid of his gray, young women flocked
to him in droves. “I’m sure glad I tried Sweedish Formula 29!” he says. And I say, “Yeah,
or you could try dating women who aren’t so GODDAM SHALLOW!”
Such outbursts cannot be tolerated
in the serenity of the TV room. So I’ll be exiled. And if there’s a political
campaign going on, oh Lord, they’ll probably sedate me as well. Campaign
commercials set me off worst of all. There’s a dumbass republican saying, “Government
doesn’t create jobs.” And I shout back, “Oh no? Well then why the hell are you
running for a government-created job, you certified moron?!”
If there’s a campaign going on,
sedation might not even be enough. They might lobotomize me.
I find it interesting that as I read your blog, I was distracted by the sidebar advertisements for Marchesa Parfum (including woman with lots of make up and closed eyelids) and a bible trivia website. :)
ReplyDeleteI would definitely be kicked out of camp, the TV room at a NH....you bet.
ReplyDeleteFabulous!