I've got to get this down. I'm really not entirely sure what to do, and I certainly don't want to show anyone this, but I think I just need to get my thoughts straight. I'm using pen and paper because of some paranoia about this ever sitting on an internet-capable device. My handwriting is crap, so I hope I can make this out later. Ok, I might as well start
Let's set the context. So I grew up in a household where we weren't rich, but never had to go without anything important, we went on vacations, though they were often camping trips, but we occasionally went to disneyland or hawaii. The trips aren't important, what's important is that we were fairly simple people, my parents don't have college degrees, we didn't have great art as part of our environment growing up.
I was a bit of a striver though and was perpetually curious about the best or most special, superlative, whatever, of any given realm. For me as a kid the relevant realms were books and music and movies. For books, I tried to read what I thought were the pinnacles or outer-reaches of the form at every age, usually aiming too high and not understanding them. I remember reading Dracula in fifth grade. I read every word of that book, but only really understood bits and pieces of it, usually the sexy or gory parts. I don't think this is actually all that different from having highschoolers read the Great Gatsby though. Before you've gone out on your own and really experienced into the world, how could you possibly really get that book? I re-read it a few years ago and it was much more impactful.
For movies, I generally watched action and sci-fi stuff communally with my friends and family, but alone I would try to enlighten myself with some stuff that would stretch my mind. I remember renting Vertigo, Eyes Wide Shut, Being John Malkovich, etc for instance, or then-contemporary to-my-mind outre stuff like that Nicolas Cage 8mm film. I also developed an aspiration to the sort of casual intellectual allusion-filled banter that I was mesmerized by in Annie Hall and Manhattan.
I guess I'm trying to use these as quick proxies for where my head was at. Sure, looking back on that now, it was all pretty solidly middlebrow, but I felt this other world of artistic refinement and achievement that went beyond what my parents were interested in. I was eager to get away, so applied to some of the fancier east coast colleges and actually got into one. Upon acceptance, I thought my life was set on this secure ever-upward track, or at least permanently altered in a good way. I still think it was permanently altered, but now I have no idea how.
My college experience is probably a lot like others in that it's too vast and multivaried to really sum up succinctly. But important for what I'm trying to get down is my relationship with Perce. I'm not sure of his full name, but his last name was Isigny. We lived on the same floor freshman year and he caught me one day in a common area reading a book for class. I remember the book exactly, that Horkheimer and Adorno stuff. I was not exactly really understanding the book, but I was reading every word diligently. He asked whether I was liking the book and I lied and said yes, hoping he wouldn't ask any follow-up questions. He didn't, but that was enough the break the ice for us and we became friendly from there on out.
Perce seemed exceptionally worldly and well-read. He already knew about the books I was reading and had derisive things to say about movies I talked about it. This didn't really get me down or anything, I just recalibrated my aspirations and modeled what I thought of as erudition and smarts based on what he exemplified. We'd watch a load of foreign films, far beyond the Bergman's and Kurosawa's I considered the apex of sophistication, but whenever I suggested a movie he seemed physically repulsed. More than that, I felt like he was trying to keep me from watching certain things, like I distinctly remember wanting to watch the Nicolas Roeg David Bowie The Man Who Fell to Earth movie, and he reacted nearly violently, telling me to stay away from that trash, Roeg's and Bowie's. The next day he apologized and explained that I could watch it if I wanted, but that their work was beneath me.
It's not that I aspired to be only like Perce, there were plenty of others at that school who's family backgrounds gave them this cosmopolitan air and comfort. Perce was clearly from a rich family, but nearly everyone here was. These kids were the result of years of after-dinner discussions of art and politics and philosophy. And when we sometimes compared our elementary through high school assignments, it was basically always the case that stuff I was doing in high school they were doing in middle school. This all gave me a chip on my shoulder, but I valued what they knew, and was fine playing catch-up. But it was Perce who was probably my closest friend, and if I was being really cynical, I kinda saw his attention as an avenue to bootstrap my way into another world or at least up a few levels.
Fast forward to today. My college experience surely opened a few doors for me, but I still feel like one of those people who, if they compare their life to their parents', are just kinda skimming along expectations-wise. I'm back on the west coast, living in San Francisco and making OK money. The bumps along the way, plus a bout of unemployment for about six months a few years ago, have made me less enthralled by what passes for elite art and understanding. The people in charge seem like coddled idiots, true middlebrows coercing the rest of us to praise them. Though I still watch a ton of movies, I mostly watch them just for the visuals, or my own weed-induced galaxy brain takes. Again, dunno why I keep coming back to movies, they just serve as a good proxy, I think.
Anyway, I guess that's enough background. I kinda spewed that out in a rush, but I'm really just trying to give the rough dynamics of my relationship with Perce.
So last week I drove down to LA to visit some old friends from high school. I was staying with one of them in East Hollywood. She sort of aggravates me, but is very nice and we have a history together including dating each other for like a month in high school, lol. Anyway, one of the things that aggravates me about her is that she's one of those people who are weirdly into Disney stuff and generally stuff I consider more appropriate for kids. Related to this, she's a big Anne Hathaway fan, from The Princess Diaries and Les Miserables. Anyway, there was this new movie with her in it, some dorky kids movie called The Witches and she was dying to see it. Not wanting to be a bad sport I said I'd go with her.
After the movie, we saw it in some needlessly expensive theater near Rodeo Drive, we were walking around looking for an ice cream or gelato place. Stopped on a corner at a crossing, out of nowhere, someone walks up from behind and turns to face us and it's Perce.
I was shocked from not having seen him for years and for the way he approached us from the dark, but his demeanor was the same as ever and we fell right back into chatting. He offered us a ride back to East Hollywood and soon we were walking to towards his car. It was a few blocks walk down the deserted Beverly Hills streets before we came upon his car. The car itself was not totally remarkable, it was a convertible, but not flashy. What was strange was that the top was down and the car was idling with the keys in the ignition. Had he just left it running? I have to admit the idea of a car just idling for who knows how long made me wince, thinking about the environment, but I was mostly concerned with the fact that he would leave the car in such a vulnerable state. I asked him about this and he said he wasn't worried about it.
He dropped us off and gave me his number, telling me to give him a call while I'm in town.
So I text him the following day, thanking him again, and he invites me over to his place to catch up, just me and him. He picks me up around 8 and we drive off into the hills. I'm honestly grateful to get a little break from my host and even more curious about what his place will be like. Back in the day, I think my excitement would have been centered around this hope of social inclusion into his sphere, but I'm a little wiser now and am mostly hoping for an interesting story, with a sliver of my being thinking about whether anything lucrative could come out of this rekindling of our connection, a networking opporunity, a job, who knows.
So everything from here on out is what I'm actually trying to get down. And everything from here starts feeling a little uncomfortable for me. I think I might ramble but I can come back and edit later.
First, by 'his place' he must have meant his parents' place because this is a full mansion and he introduces me to his sister, his mom and dad, and his uncle who also happened to be visiting. I wasn't expecting to have to be this social and meet new people, especially really rich people who I generally feel I have to act a certain, respectable way around. I hadn't had to play this sort of game since college. But that's the price of admission, I reason to myself, and glad-hand around and talk admiringly of the house and the neighborhood and LA.
The father says now that everyone's here, let's get down to eating. We make our way into the dining room and I of course don't say anything about how I didn't know we would be having a meal or anything about having already eaten. I can also make room to smooth over social awkwardness.
The table set-up was pretty sleek and modern, chrome and white leather with some pale pink accents. It felt a little sterile, but the food was great, some sort of quasi-Indian vegetarian slop (that sounds bad, but I love that sort of thing), bread, wine. I had a few glasses, but not enough to really impair me.
After dinner we did a 'retire to the parlour' sort of thing that was so forced and formal that it felt like some corny bad television thing. We chatted more about my time since college in the sitting room, which wasn't that interesting, at least to me. What was more interesting, was the seating arrangements. We sat sort of distributed around the perimeter of the room, each with little table for our drink next to our stuffed chairs. Perce was sitting in his dad's lap for some reason (there were other places to sit in the room) and his sister was sort of straddling the arm of the chair her uncle was sitting in, with her arm around his shoulder. Perce's mom on a sort of loveseat thing directly across from me. It all seemed sort of posed, like that's how this class of people learn to sit in this sort of setting, I'm not sure. But I did get weird, I guess, sexual vibes from the siblings' interactions with the person they were sitting with. But other than that, the scene was otherwise normal. The conversation was mostly about my time since college, me and Perce's time in college, etc. None of us seemed to be getting drunk, and I could sense it was just about time to say our farewells for the evening.
I remember seeing Perce's sister whisper something in her uncle's ear, then some more time passed. An awkward pause lingered up to the edge of my comfort and just as I was about to say that I ought to be going, the uncle says: it's time for the puppet show
This sort of kills the hope in me of an immediate end to this kinda weird and tedious night, but I hide my disappointment and gird myself so some more pleasantries. A puppet show sounds really cringe-inducing or at least sleep-inducing, but the uncle announced it in such a way that it felt unavoidable, inevitable. The rest of a the family nods and murmurs approvingly and we leave the parlour and head back into the dining room. The table has been cleared and there's a small sort of stage set in a recessed part of the wall, maybe 6 feet wide and 10 feet tall.
The uncle climbs up what I assume is some ladder obscured by some curtains along the side of the stage. The lights dim and reveal the reflected light of some small candles in the front of the stage. There is a small painted set depicting some mountain scene, alpine maybe? with a few cutouts of trees and a boulder, very desaturated colors, nearly black and white. It seemed a little rinky-dink and stodgy. I could dimly make out the uncles face above the stage, not so much his head, but his face shrouded in black. His eyes were looking down with concentration as some music swelled, old-timey classical stuff, I didn't pay much attention to it.
But this is what I want to get down, the only thing that really matters. In this darkened room and on the small stage slides a person. He is facing out to us, the audience, with his hands raised, elbows at right angles, I guess held up by strings, though I can't exactly see them. His feet and legs don't move, he just sort of smoothly slides sideways from stage right. He's about a foot tall I'm guessing and dressed like some kind of court-jester or something, green tights, silly shoes, and different color feathers dangling from a tunic-like thing, similarly desaturated, nearly grayscale. But he looks REAL, like he has real material heft, there are subtle but obvious twitches in his limbs as he hangs from the strings. And his face. His eyes are not dead painted-on things, but really real and glistening. He looks extremely uncomfortable and afraid. He's clearly crying.
I flinch and Perce puts his hand on my shoulder. The music changes and the puppet man starts singing. The voice is not what you would expect from a human shrunk down that small, but sounds like a full grown person standing right in front of you. His face contorts in barely perceptible winces and grimaces as his tiny lips sync up perfectly with the singing. He looks to be otherwise in the bloom of youth, mid twenties with lightly rosy cheeks. He reminds me so much of my old roommate from freshman year it's uncanny, just weirdly made up with red lips and arched eyebrows. Just as I think this, Perce's mom whispers in my ear: "He wants a bride" This, I guess, as some translation of the song and scene that I'm viewing.
The song continues. The puppet seems to be staring straight at me, right into my eyes. I find this unnerving and look away. In an effort to keep my eyes from the puppet they land upon Perce's uncle, up behind the stage, his hands busy, his gaze fixed down at the puppet. I start to worry that if I keep staring at the uncle, he might look back, so I try to rest my eyes, unfocused, on the mountain backdrop and it fades to black and the show ends.
We applaud as a bashful uncle emerges from the curtain, waving off the family's praise. I clap and try to maintain a pleased look, but I'm so tired and weirded out and done with this this stuff, I don't know how well I did.
It's clear now that the evening is over and we're making the sort of nearly scripted small talk you make when a social event is winding down. I get some multi-handed handshakes and lingering sincere eye-contact from each of the people I met tonight and Perce walks me out to a car and thanks me again for coming. There's a driver in it who ferries me home.
I'm really weirded out by it all, but mostly that puppet show. Thinking about it makes me want to cry and I feel this sharp pain in my lower stomach. A few more days pass in East Hollywood and things fall back into a normal vacation routine. I have some sporadic texts with Perce and then yesterday he invites me back to his house, saying that my old college roommate Rory is there and that he wants to see me.
I don't really know what to do. I'm getting more afraid of that place and that unnerving puppet show and the Rory look-alike and now him up there. I don't really know what to do. At least I wrote this down.