Saturday, August 13, 2011

On therapy

Dr. Scalioni looked at me through a layer of skin that barely disgusied his contempt.  I was convinced, and am still convinced to this day, that Dr. Scalioni held all of his patients in contempt. 

I went to see Dr. Scalioni on Tuesdays.  His office was in a brownstone on a tree-lined street, and in the winter, the sky shone in a deep red behind the houses as the city of New Haven slumped into twilight.

I began to see Dr. Scalioni because I learned that the Universe would someday become inhospitable to life.  This was a traumatic moment for me. 

My first meeting with Scalioni went something like this:

“So, Mr. Fishman, what brings you here?”
“Well, as I understand it, the Universe is getting colder, which means someday we’re all going to freeze to death.”
Scalioni’s eyes brightened in a manner designed to signify “encouragement.” “Really?” he said, leaning closer to examine his subject, “tell me about that.”

It was pretty much downhill from there.  Over time, Scalioni and I grew to hate each other – I hated him because he could not stop the Universe from freezing, and he hated me because I exposed him as a fraud. 

The universe is expanding, and the molecules that make up the universe are stretching further and further apart.  The amount of energy in the universe is winding down, like a clock that has unwound, but there is no one to wind it up again.  This means that the universe is getting colder. Someday, the universe will be nothing more than a sea of dead atoms shooting further and further into the black.  Life of any kind, even the most extreme kind, will no longer exist.  When life is no more, no one will be lef to marvel at the universe. 

Needless to say, I was disturbed by this.  This is how my first meeting with Dr. Scalioni began:

“So,” said Scalioni, “what brings you here?”
“I know the universe will end and I’m scared.”
“I see.”
“I’m really flipping out.”
“Tell me about that.”



Dr. Scalioni had thick belly and a scragly white beard.  He looked like Santa Clause, if Santa Clause were a sex offender, or perhaps just a dirty old man. I was sitting in Sr. Scalioni’s chair now, talking about my problems.  I did this every Tuesday at 4:00. 

Scalioni’s office was in a brownstone not far from campus.  Inside it was full of books and a strange yellow light that filled the room and made the doctor look even creepier than he already was.  Behind his head was a large clock that was there to remind you how much time you had left.  This much I’ll give Scalioni: he always called time, but he never seemed comfortable with it. 

The beginning of my sessions with Scalioni always begin this way: I would sit down in the leather chair in his study, and he would sit in a chair directly across from me.  Before he sat down, he would grab his foot and pull it under his rear-end so that when he sat down, he was sitting on one leg and it looked like a foot was growing out of his butt.  It was one of Scalioni’s many eccentricities. 

On this particular day, Scalioni was looking at me reproachfully.  He didn’t look reproachful often – I think they are taught not to look that was in psychology school – but it happened on occasion. 

“I havn’t seen you in a while,” said Scalioni. 
“I know,” I said.  It was true.  “I went to see the Pope.”

This is true.  Over spring break I’d gone to see the Pope.  He lives in Kansas with his mother, Fran, in a small town called [] which is [xxy] miled away from Wichita.  [

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

On violence: Part I


The other day I was talking to a kid who was recently married and had just had a baby.  He was short and stocky and, like many Colombians, wore braces on his teeth.  The one thing I noticed about him was his eyes: they were blank, almost unseeing, even though he was staring right at me, as if I was not entirely there.  He ran a restaurant in Cali with his brother and was in the middle of making plans to go to Disney World. 

At some point while we were talking, it came out that his father was Henry Loaiza-Ceballos, a/k/a "The Scorpion," a/k/a the Cali Cartel's "Minister of War."  In an incredibly relative way, the Cali Cartel was a less violent organization than the one based in Medellin, which is astounding to think about when you consider Loaiza's crimes. 

Loaiza's signature achievement was probably the Trujillo massacre, which was actually a series of killings that took place between 1988 and 1994 in the town of Trujillo, in southwestern Colombia.  While no one was ever officially charged with the murders, it is believed that Loaiza, along with a Colombian paramilitary organization, organized the murders some 245 and 342 people, many of whom were cut up with chainsaws.  When a local priest tried to alert the authorities, his decapitated body was found floating in the Cacua river the next day.

Monday, July 11, 2011

On hitting

"A fighter's appetite and tolerance for hitting is elemental…Mastering the craft means fashioning a style that takes maximum advantage of one's root capacity for hitting and minimizing one's root capacity for being hit." Carlo Rotella, Cut Time

Embracing pain, for a flabby veal-chop like myself, has not been easy.  Truthfully, I hate it.  

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Pooping


I poop some five times a day and wonder whether this is normal. I think not, this pooping, inasmuch as it takes an aweful amount of time.  I cannot imagine our ancestors getting on with so much defecation: such time spent would have left us vulnerable to wild animals and opportunistic enemies.  And yet here I am.  Pooping.  

Friday, July 8, 2011

Hit man


If boxing is about anything, it is about pain; both the intentional infliction of pain upon another human being, and the self-imposed pain that boxers must bear in order to mete out punishment on others.  



"The primacy of hurt supercharges even the smallest detail…and produces the distinctive ozone crackle of bad intentions that attracts some people to boxing and repels many others." Carlo Rotella, Cut Time