The Contortionist

When I was little, I used to be a serious “Star Search” fan. I remember watching the erstwhile 80s television show in the afternoons (or was it early evening?) while seated criss-cross-applesauce on the living room floor. I felt great fondness for its affable host, Ed McMahon, and great awe for the daily parade of talent to which it made me feel uniquely privy. My seven-or-eight-year-old self relished the neatly demarcated categories–modeling; stand-up comedy; singing and dancing, be it group, junior, or adult–eagerly anticipating each like the courses of an elaborate meal. Though a harbinger of the many noxious “reality” competitions that followed in its wake, “Star Search” still seems like a more innocent, less exploitive iteration of the variety show genre (think “Lawrence Welk” or “Soul Train”). Or maybe it’s just that I was more innocent. At any rate, as I’ve continued to weather the strange, slow slog of this pandemic, one “Star Search,” in particular, keeps coming vividly to mind.

I remember an episode that featured a contortionist in what must have been a category all its own. A surprisingly tall, lean, youngish man walked out onstage, clad in only a Speedo. His oddly hirsute swimmer’s build was accentuated not only by a deep tan, but what must have been body oil. This, alone, set my second-or-third-grade jaw agape. Next to him stood a clear glass cube, maybe about 3 x 3 X 3 ft. large. McMahon explained that said Adonis would be ensconcing himself entirely in said cube in under one minute. My incredulous response: NO. WAY. (Mind you, this was long before Cirque du Soleil, with its panoply of Twizzlerlike performers.)

Cue the suspenseful, reverb-laden music and the stop-clock. Utterly mesmerized, I watched as this man carefully folded himself into the cube like a piece of human origami, one lengthy, greasy limb at a time. First, a foot and leg outstretched, then awkwardly angled and bent into the box, like an insect’s. Tail and torso were next, followed by an arm that snaked around the opposite leg and, finally, the contortionist’s head, which he tucked into his armpit like a sleeping swan. It was like witnessing a breech birth in reverse. Once he was completely inside, a sequin-spangled assistant closed the side door of the cube and the man’s flesh pooled against the glass to which it was pressed. His entire body became a clenched fist, the clear glass around him suddenly clouding with the vapor from his breath. The assistant slowly spun the box on its rotating pedestal while I watched, unblinking, in horror and fascination.

Why does this image return to me so forcefully now? The answer seems fairly obvious: is this not how we’ve all been living, to some degree or another, for nearly a year? Surely I can’t be alone in marveling at the sudden contraction of our lives as a result of COVID. And, with vaccines and something like hope on the horizon, I realize I’ve forgotten something rather crucial about that episode–namely, how the contortionist got back out of the box. No doubt this required just as much time, torque, and flexibility as getting into it, if not more.

Last Days

I can manage if I pretend these are my last days. As such, I scale back any and all expectations. I shift from waiting to living, from living to being. What would I do with my last days? Precisely what I am doing. I would write. I would take a walk, slowing my pace considerably and lengthening my loop. I would talk to my mother on the phone. I would make something in the kitchen. I would ride bikes with my daughter. I would read a bit, listen to music, and watch late night television curled on the couch next to my husband. I would take note of the day’s shifting sunlight, the birds at our feeder. I would pet the cat and dump the compost. I would have a glass of wine with dinner, and draw my daughter’s bath. I would call a friend. 

What is missing from this list are the things that have been missing from my life for the past nine months (incidentally, the gestation period for a whole new human). Some, I have happily gone without: dental appointments, buying stuff, attending children’s birthday parties nearly every weekend, troubleshooting the copy machine at work (ok, that’s a lie. I always rope someone else into fixing it), using public restrooms. Others, I miss so much it craters me: actually seeing friends and family, hugging them, and sharing a meal. Or, barring that, knowing when I will be able to again. Moving through densely peopled places without anxiety. Overhearing my daughter play with a friend in her room or watching them collide gleefully on the playground. Helping others in ways that are familiar to me. Attending a yoga class in the studio or visiting the library. Accompanying my parents to mass. Shaking a stranger’s hand. Believing tomorrow might be better.

And then I course correct–remind myself that tomorrow is irrelevant. There is only today, and it is good.