Showing posts with label health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health. Show all posts

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Episode 06 | The hospital and the mail box






As I sat there listening to my father, I kept adjusting my glasses. On the fourth or fifth time I did it, I finally realized why. Perfectly fancy, fitting Armani eye-wear, it occurred to me I was having trouble trying to adjust how I regarded my father.

And had to conclude how little did I know about him.


He had been not only distant, absent all those years. He had been a stranger to me. 

His peasant past was no surprise. I had visited the D'Allegro ancestral lands myself. I could recall my own humble childhood, and how he had tried to sustain our family on part-time jobs, hardly achieving it. But that he had starved in Paris? We had been close only during part of my childhood, when my mother had stepped aside. And my early teens. But all the rest of what I knew about him had come from my mother, filtered with resentment and prejudice -- that I could right now recognize rising inside me, maybe as my own.

I tried wholeheartedly to get rid of them, as I listened to Carlo.





Looking at him, grown old, with a saddened expression, I felt my heart softening. Would it have been less shocking, had I seen it happen gradually? He was slim, and had a vigorous, very fit body to be desired and envied. Muscles only, and nearly no fat, with a remarkably tanned and firm skin. I had inherited those features from him, that had me looking healthy even when I caught influenza. Twenty years ago, when he had left home, he had been an Italian hunk. There was an informal fan club constituted of teachers, mothers and even some of their teenage daughters, who had sighed for Carlo when he would pick me up at school, in his fast sports car. 

And that's how I still remembered him. I was trying to adjust to his graying hair and mustache. It had once been thick, coal black -- while I, instead, had my mother's fine blonde hair. A web of wrinkles wore his face down. His shoulders were bent as if under an invisible burden. Were the recollections of a tough past making his hands tremble, too? Or was it another sad sign of ageing?

The lenses of his glasses were much thicker than I remembered them. Had his sight been damaged by the years -- because, like Carlo had just mentioned, he preferred the night time to paint? In our house in rural France, I could recall saying good night to him, before going to bed, knowing he would go on painting. I had seen him in our garden in Punaouilo, painting under the starlight with a flickering, borrowed gas lamp. But all that had started at the abandoned factory, it seemed. Only later, would I learn he had been drawing in the dark as a child, already, by candlelight. Hiding behind his bed, fearing his grandfather would catch and punish him. 

Maybe it would take longer to forgive my father. But it wasn't that hard to feel compassionate towards the person in front of me, who had suffered so much chasing his ideal, trying to fulfill his heart's wishes to make a living as a painter.


*****




"One day I vomited so much--" Carlo had continued with his story without me having to ask for it, "Or not that much actually, since I had had just stale bread for breakfast. And canned soup, probably two evenings ago, for dinner... It was the force with which I expelled the food, not its amount--" Carlo closed his eyes for a moment, maybe recalling his agony, "I fainted."

I woke up many hours later. Enveloped by the wildest of winds,one that forecasted a storm, maybe snow. I was still leaning over the toilet, shivering with cold, and coughing. 

Asphyxiating with the bad smell of my own vomit, I felt I had to throw up again. But there was nothing left in my stomach. Nor on the shelves.





I understood I had to go to the hospital. While I still had the strength to walk.

My days of tranquil hermitage were over. Venturing into the world did not simply mean leaving the outskirts of Paris, to be again engulfed by the boisterous city center. That I had once adored, don't get me wrong, having experienced it in the company of my roommate. But it terrified me, once I was to brave it all on my own. In my mind, leaving the retreat I had built for myself at the abandoned factory meant the contrary in terms of my personal life, and mostly of my art career. I would be abandoning the tranquil center where I dwell in my ideals, to again face the outskirts of a material civilization I dreaded.





In a trance, I roamed through Paris in search of a public hospital. A crisscross route I'll never recall. Factories, houses, shops, all looked like pieces in a civilizatory puzzle I could no longer assemble. Confounded, after having crossed many squares and bridges, I forgot what I was searching for. At the sight of the frozen remains of a dead dog, I again threw up. But also recalled that I was seeking for help. My clothes barely protected me from the severe cold, so I jumped like a madman as I walked, trying to warm myself. Finally, both shoelaces broke, and I had to drag my shoes along for several blocks. Their soles were so thin that the pavement was irreversibly tearing them. But my feet couldn't be wetter nor colder than they had already been, for weeks. As I walked into the hospital, I fainted. A high fever ensued, and sucked me into a limbo that lasted for days. It took nurses and doctors long to realize I could speak French. Semi-conscious, I would babble in Italian, only.

Naively, I thought that at the hospital they would give me some kind of medicine and send me back home straight away. And what was home? But due to food poisoning, and a pneumonia that had not quite developed yet, they kept me in the infirmary for over a week. Even two, or perhaps more, since I completely lost track of time. I can only recall someone from another bed mentioning it had snowed.





All the time I stayed at the infirmary, I worried about the factory. Had it been invaded? What had happened to my easel, and especially to my paintings? I had locked it before leaving, but the windows were so wrecked that a single push would throw them to the floor. And there was even a hole in the ceiling. It wouldn't have been hard to break into my atelier... the factory.

When I was liberated from the hospital, again accustomed to being with other people, I decided to bravely venture the several neighborhoods that separated me from the post office. I wanted to check my postal box, hoping to find a letter from Tarso, my grandfather, who would once in a while send me money in Paris.

There was a letter from him, indeed. With a very modest sum of money in it. And even less words. Writing, he was more laconic than speaking. 'The crops haven't been good', he justified -- and I knew that was his way of asking 'when are you going to come back to help me?'. But I did not consider, ever, going back. Nevertheless, after I exchanged the money, he had sent more than enough to allow me to buy meat, and some fresh bread. And fix new glasses, too, with the updated prescription they had handed me at the hospital. 

It was my first proper meal in perhaps six months!







And there was a letter from my dear ex-roommate from the times at the École des Beaux-Arts,the noblest person I've ever met, Armand de Montbelle. 

I did not open it straight away because I knew it would be long lines of a poetical, intoxicating account of his travelling around the globe. And I wanted to savor it calmly, as my dessert.

He wrote at length about his many adventures in Asia. He spent Spring living in an improvised houseboat, that took him through the backwaters of Southern India. In Summer he had been trekking a valley covered with millions of colorful flowers in the Himalayas. He had survived the monsoon season and constant floods and blackouts in Nepal. He had been chased and had his food stolen by monkeys. Almost run over by a mad elephant, once, that destroyed his hut in Sri Lanka. He had meditated with the forest monks in Thailand, sleeping like them for weeks under a tree. To me, his words tasted to mangoes ripened under the sun. He could have been an accomplished writer, if he hadn't chosen to study Architecture.

But the astonishing news was that he was acquiring an island in the Indian Ocean.

"And I need your help to fix this place! Please say you can come! Will you?" 








Episode 05 | Enslaved by freedom






"For us artists there waits the joyous compromise through art with all that wounded or defeated us in daily life; in this way, not to evade destiny, as the ordinary people try to do, but to fulfill it in its true potential - the imagination."

Lawrence Durrell in Justine, 1957







Hunger? 

There is a difference -- when you want, need to eat, and you can't, that's painful. But once you volunteer to abstain from eating, the dizziness, the cramps, the shaking hands, the stomach ache, that same weakness becomes a trance. I felt I was made more alert, my senses heightened and refined, my ideal of becoming a professional artist strengthened -- because fasting is a depuration, and together with meditation, as my mind became clearer, I felt my spirit starting to rule over my body.

As I was becoming thinner and thinner, my private joke was that in the end I could always make money posing for Giacometti. Ha-ha! But there was no one but me to laugh at my jokes.

Every once in a while I would startle to some noise -- I was afraid of invasions, for there used to be a few homeless people in the neighborhood, some of them violent and dangerous and more desperate than me -- but usually it were only rats or bats or cats in their errands. Only people who needed to hide would venture all the way from Paris downtown to such a faraway district, and it was not very attractive for the homeless, since the chances of survival were rather limited there. I wasn't a burglar, I wasn't a drug dealer, but just the same I wanted to hide from the world. 










And so I painted, day and night, night and day, as if my life depended on that, and not on food.

Actually, painting was more nourishing to me than the canned soup and the stale bread.






Painting was like a prayer. It was similar to my meditation, where I was praying for the well being of all forms of life.

That was so beautifully nourishing, too. I felt thoroughly at peace and fulfilled,
even when my pockets and my stomach were empty.






Sleeping seemed to me like a waste of time, a waste of the precious and fragile freedom I had just acquired -- and in time it became a problem too, as Summer gave way to Autumn.






A cold and rainy season started, and I could not go outdoors daily anymore.

Of course, it rained inside the factory. Rain leaked from the ceiling. I had to move my bed away from the walls, where mold -- and even some lichens that I recall being very pretty -- had started growing. I walked avoiding the puddles. On the way to the toilet some of them were so big that I had to place boards to cross them. Like if I were flying, or sitting on top of a high mountain, I could imagine them being lakes on a prairie. Poetical. But the fact is my feet were always wet. A chilly wind hissed through the room, so that there was no shelter from it indoors anymore. Through the broken windows came a vicious smell of old burned wood and wet tires.

I could be hungry, but on top of that, being cold started to weaken me.

Food poisoning became constant, and I realized I was getting seriously sick. 

I had eaten too often from rusted cans. I kept saying to myself there wasn't any real problem. Not to mention the moldy bread that had been my sole starter for so many months. I had been careless. And now I had to face the effects of my self-neglect.

Not just thinning, I was debilitated.

The romantic days of breathing and eating Painting were over. 

But I still just didn't want to give them up! Returning to my former peasantry in the Apennines did not seem only like defeat -- abandoning my Art had seemed like death to me.

But I was facing real death.





In my meditation sessions, that I had to bring indoors, I started praying not only for the happiness of all beings, but for a miracle that would change my situation.

Even if I calmed my mind and heart, my head and stomach were constantly aching. And so were my lungs. Concentrating on my in-breaths and out-breaths was not pleasant anymore, because it meant paying attention to the gasping, coarse sounds that my breathing had become. It was the sound of my own agony.

I started seeing bellow the calm waters of my still life, seeing that it hadn't remained still at all. The muck had surfaced.

You can't imagine the things I did to remain free, Laurent. 

To stick to my idea of freedom. 

Because I didn't want to work in the atelier of some famous painter as a helper -- that might have diverted me from my own expressive ways, which I had just started exploring. I had had enough of teachers and academic, formal training -- once I was all on my own, anything but sticking to my independence seemed like I'd retrogress. And I did not consider looking for a job in a factory, nor in a shop. Nor did I want to go back to painting walls of cafés and shops, like I had often done during the École to earn some money.






I didn't realize it then, but I had been enslaved by my freedom.

Trying to attain a way of living that had never been sustainable.

That was the terrible truth I had to face.

In bed, before I dozed into sleep, I secretly indulged in fantasies where a marchand would get lost in town, wander all the way to the suburbs and bump into the factory and discover my work...

I did not want nor long for the contact with other human beings, but I did fantasize about the art dealers. I wished they'd visit the atelier. You know, over time that abandoned factory had become my atelier... But how could they? Apart from rats, cats and bats, nobody knew where I was. I hadn't seen another person in months.






With winter approaching, I knew it was more than time to face the world outside. 

Better not wait until the streets are covered with snow, I pondered, to get a life -- a job, a home, whatever -- and my health back. Or even a train, back to Italy.









Author's note: having been imported from a former version of the story, some of the comments below are dated previous to this post. Once the plot has not been altered, just the pagination, I am keeping them since they are very dear and precious to me.