I had a family visitor from out of town this week. We had planned to meet up and play golf, which I never do except with this person because golf courses in the Land of Perpetual Drought feels like an environmental crime. Plus there's a 100% chance you're going to come into contact with Actual Golfers, the meanest, measly-est, most-exactly-like-what-you-think-they-probably-are-like demographic subgroup in the world. And these are on public courses, so for the low, low price range of like 50 to 200 dollars, you get the same swaggering societal-rules-incurious air of superiority you'd find at a country club, but from people driving Kia Sorentos or Ford F150s. They want, more than anything, a space to be haughty and dismissive of societal ills or the existence of struggling people. And they bring the assumption that you (me), another middle-aged white man, want that too, so you (I) learn to keep the conversation on the flight of the ball or the conditions of the course. You know you're only one or two wayward or indisciplined questions away from having to hear about crypto or vaccines or some aspects of Great Replacement Theory, all in some way misunderstood or misapplied.
I was OK with my visitor having injured himself in the median time between booking the tee time several weeks ago and his actual trip out, leading us to cancel the golf outing. Instead we just hung out here at my place and we had a real dude's morning on Mother's Day, meaning I made apple cinnamon crepes and blueberry lemon scones and we talked about our feelings.
Well, we talked about our feelings secondarily, that is. Whether he'd been slightly injured or not, we are middle aged, so like all middle aged people, the first thing you are socially obligated to get out of the way is your litany of hobblings and ailments and all the poultices and tinctures you regularly ingest to thwart them. It's essentially a magic spell you chant-cast in tandem to wish for quality of life and to stave off the increasingly alarming imminency of death. In practical terms, it works exactly as well as all spells do, meaning we both have pending doctor's appointments and procedures on the books. You say the words, but you also have to do the work. Maybe more elaborate spells with some physical components might be more efficacious, but I don't have the wherewithal or frankly the interest to source some eye of newt or, like, sacrifice a chicken. I'm pretty sure the second one would be a violation of my HOA rules.
Like a good host, I pretended to listen as my guest listed the things hurt, broken or in need of medical intervention until he stopped talking so I could get to my stuff. I'm not sure at what point in one's life it becomes the most satisfying thing to rattle off your weaknesses to another person. I make my kids sit through it, but I pretend it's for their own good. It's not 100% pretending as it is polite to apologize to your children for their genetic lot when fully half of it is your fault. Letting them know that, at some point in their future, their feet will just start hurting for no reason feels like good manners. But also it's a good set-up for when you need a ride to an outpatient procedure requiring anesthesia. You have to plant those guilt seeds so they'll save the space to spring up like weeds in their schedules some time in the future.
Do I enjoy comparing myself to an invasive, unwanted weed in someone else's life? Honestly, sure. I think all of this is working toward a pretty traditional Catholic life trajectory into narcisstic self-pity dressed up as martyrdom. Is it great that I have to schedule things like an endoscopy to deal with acid reflux at this stage in my life? Of course not. But if that scope going down my throat taking a biopsy of my stomach lining leaves behind just a little more potency for my future of supercharged weapons-grade passive-aggression, maybe all these petty nags and this slow-motion implosion I'm experiencing will all have been worth it.
This is me being positive. This is what that sounds like.