Tuesday, November 20, 2007

A Magnetic Personality

Whatever other attributes I may possess, natural grace is not one of them, and it’s been that way since before I even entered the world.
My birth was the end result of my mother being in labor for 72 hours – despite this, my mom still wanted to have even more kids, but my dad was unwilling to let her go through that again – which was brought on by the fact that, without getting too much into the mechanics of it, I actually managed to hit my head and get stuck on the way out.
That inaugural blow to the head was the first of many I would suffer in the 35 years that followed. Honestly, the number of blows to the head I’ve suffered is truly Homeresque.
This is mostly due to the aforementioned lack of natural grace (and to not paying attention to my surroundings).
For example, in college I had a student job as a custodian, and one of the areas I had to clean was the woodshop where students pursuing certificates in woodworking took their classes. One night, after crouching down to sweep some sawdust into my dust pan, I stood straight up…directly under the arm of a radial arm saw.
To my recollection – which can’t be trusted, all things considered – this was the only time I managed to give myself a concussion.
Of course, my clumsiness has, over the years, led to increased wariness when there’s a chance I might hit my head against something, though said wariness has done little to prevent further blows.
Even if it did lead me to not bang my head against doors and other objects, I would still suffer a lot of blows to the head because my head is itself a magnet for hurled objects.
This is why it always made me nervous to sit in the spot at the bar near the dartboard in my drinking days.
I first confirmed my long-standing suspicions about my cranial magnetism one spring day in the mid-80s when I stepped out onto our front deck and cast a glance in the direction of my dad, who was mowing the lawn. I had turned my head just as the mower went over a rock, which, hurled by the whirling blades, flew several yards with unerring accuracy, and caught me right between the eyes knocking me flat on my back, and causing my dad to abandon the mower and rush over to check on me. I was fine, but the spot where I was hit was, naturally, quite tender.
(My dad also took this as an opportunity to give me yet another lecture about why it was so important to make sure that the yard was free of rocks.)
Later that same day I went to a friend’s birthday party and got clipped by a Frisbee in the exact same spot the rock had hit me.
That was when it hit me – literally and figuratively – and I realized that my head had some sort of pull that could influence the trajectory of any flying object. It explained so much: all the baseballs, soccer balls, rocks, snowballs, Frisbees, and any other flying object that was inexorably drawn toward my melon.
(When you combine my lack of grace with a general lack of athletic prowess and my unnamed but intuited understanding of the affect that my head apparently has on spacetime and the objects hurtling through it, you can see why I didn’t bother joining up for a second season of little league baseball.)
In any case, thoughts about my cranial magnetism came to me like a blow to the head the other morning as I was in my kitchen looking out the window and saw a leaf fall from a tree outside of my property fall, and then, seemingly against the laws of physics, veer sharply upward and drift determinedly over my fence and onto my patio. Apparently my patio is a magnet for fallen leaves, just as my head is a magnet for flying objects, and my attic is a magnet for squirrels, though the latter seems to squirrel-free at the moment.



My head emits powerful waves of some fundamental force that pulls any flying object towards it. Pilots flying overhead need to make major adjustments in order to stay on course and not crash into my head. My patio seems to have a similar effect on dead leaves.

3 comments:

Merlin T Wizard said...

I LOVE the graphic! The look of utter resignation on your face as the hurled objects swerve to their inevitable target is priceless. Sorry bout yer noggin' tho, dude.

Jon Maki said...

Thanks, on both points. I was kind of going for the look of those "Jimmy Olsen Must Die!" ads for Countdown.

lbugsh2 said...

Hmm sounds like myself except my legs attracted everything bruise's.