The Refectory Manager

The refectory . . . A place to nourish the soul. A place to share the savory comestibles, the sweet confections, the salty condiments of the things that matter. A place to ruminate the cud of politics. A place to rant on the railings of religion. A place to arrange the flowers of sanguine beauty. A place to pause in the repose of shelter. Welcome, my friend. The Refectory Manager

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Location: College Place, Washington, United States

Friday, September 23, 2011

The Note

That killer smile. Oh so embellished with that little dimple on the olive-tinged left cheek. That grin that simply radiated through the near blackness of his eyes. There was even the tinge of the soul-mate fire that was fueling his very being. He read the note one more time. Held it tightly against himself. Then folded it, and carefully stuffed it into the right pocket of his antelope-shade cargo pants. As he looked down, fumbling with the Velcro® pocket flap, he could see his antelope-tanned shapely toes each tipped with a mocha-milk nail, embedded in the so-well-worn Panama Jack leather thong sandals all peeking out from under the cuffs of his long-legged pants. It felt so damn good to mercifully, accept one's self. He thought of the content of the note again. Yes, he had waited a long, long time for this meeting. It had to go well.


Two years ago, the meeting could never, ever have happened. But something had changed. He wasn’t certain as to what, but the shifted placement on the Continuum of Affirmation was perceptible.


Throughout his high school years, it was the taunting of his perceived lack of manliness. The cajoling criticism. His fashions. The way he held his legs when seated. The way he walked. The piling-on of expectations. The resultant mountain of things impossible. Oh, he listened to the sermons. He observed the nattering disgust of his aunts. He felt the distance between himself and his father. He sensed that his mother tried to understand. But for him, it was the anguish of inevitable failure and the resultant rejection. Even worse, he was adopted.


Secretly, he had scoured the Internet looking for acceptance. He entered into chats he later regretted. He discovered a plethora of view points, rabid on both sides of the issue. Through all of that, with all of that, besides all of that, he slowly began to accept himself as the man with compassion and integrity that he couldn't help but be.


When he “graduated” from his home-school high school, his family's point of reference on the Affirmation Continuum was planted firmly in the negative on the x-axis. Denial of Recognition. Yes, his family had perceived something was different with him. But whatever it was, he would simply grow out of it.


His Freshman year at Whitman was his awakening. For the first time he was immersed with other students. Being home-schooled, he grew up in relative social isolation except for the small church group in his rural community. Now, he was living in the midst of open sin.


That bashful smile, the preppy clip of his hair, the natural gracefulness of his under-developed gymnastic prowess, the innocence and perceived vulnerability of his persona … all placed him under the protective wings of well-meaning functional mothering hens.


He remembers precisely the situation of meeting Jordan. But little did he realize the subsequent impact of that meeting on the unfolding of his life. Jordan was to be his godsend. As evidenced by the note.


As difficult as it was for him, he did his best to keep his family informed of his school life and the things he was learning. He discovered, and shared, viewpoints in science, in sociology, in history, in literature, that were antithetical to the text books of his preparatory school years. He tried to keep a healthful relationship with his family, sharing with them his new understandings and the reasons behind them. The feedback resistance was palpable. For it was threatening to his parent's understanding of salvation. Yet, it was his parents that were supporting him in this respected liberal arts college.


He shared with his parents about his experiences and observations about diversity. Discovering students, like himself, from religiously fundamental homes, to students who were dogmatic atheists, and the realization that most of the students were some benign point in-between. He discovered that there were openly gay men and lesbian woman on campus, in his classes, living in his dormitory, and nothing made of it. He listened to the bragging about the sexual conquests and who the chicks were that would and wouldn't, who was hot and who was not. He was titillated with liberation listening to Dan Savage answer questions one night in Maxey Auditorium, and astounded at the nature of the questions submitted on those 4x6 inch cards. Matters he hardly dared to even envision.


Gradually it spilled over in his conversations with home, unintentionally, but nevertheless, it did. He would make off-hand remarks about his social activities. Names were never mentioned. Gender was ignored.


But what had happened, by destiny, happened.


The bond had no defined beginning. It never amounted to a date, per se. Gravitation being more apropos. The sharing of a class, the invite to the study group. Routine meeting in Prentiss Dining Hall or Cafe 66 to commiserate over victuals. The increasing frequency of texting. Trust. Building. The "I'll tell you if you'll tell me." The walks to the Coffee Perk and back. Over the course of two years, the evolution of something Thomas Moore in his book Soul Mates called, “conversation is the sex act of the soul."1


By the end of his Freshman year, his understanding of himself was coalescing. His family had moved from the point of negative Denial to the small positive step of “Recognition” on that Affirmation continuum. Fortunately, his parents were not like some, who would rip up their child’s birth certificate and mail it to them in a plain white envelope.


By the end of his Sophomore year, he knew who he was. The progression of his family had moved further into the positive. Now past the point of "Recognition" to that of "Toleration." There was the hope they would find “Acceptance.” Unbeknownst to the son, something his parents had heard at a PFLAG meeting in Salem was sinking in. "You might love someone you hate." The parents were now in that liberating struggle from "We hate him in our loving Christian way" to the realization that their son was still going to be their son, no matter what he was destined to be.


Now, this, the start of his Junior year. His parents making a trip from their small farm west of Salem, OR to Minneapolis, MN. Their route could take them through Walla Walla, over to Lewiston, up and over Lolo Pass into Montana and out onto the vastness of the prairies. His parents had been on the Whitman College campus before. This time, it was to be different. They were forewarned there would be a surprise for them.


He told his parents he wanted them to meet someone. Someone experienced in the nuance of Thomas Moore’s book. Someone with whom the attachment meant bonding. Someone central in his life. Someone so significant as to think in terms of "significant other."


He took strength from those hours and hours shared with Jordan. Those conversations. The intimacies of their soul-matter talk. The back rubs. The massaging of feet. The warmth of the hugs. The reassurance of worth and value.


He was confident now in his anticipation for this meeting of introduction with his parents. Above all, he wanted his family’s affirmation. The meeting would happen over dinner at Jacobi's Cafe. He would meet his parents there and bring the excited love of his life with him. Somehow, the security of an old railroad dining car promoted his nostalgia for things that might be. He couldn’t imagine that anything now would or could go wrong. He just knew that his parents would be able, now, finally, to understand, to recognize, to tolerate, to accept him with the love of his life, and to affirm the two of them with their blessing.


His astronomy class met late in the afternoon on Thursday. He rushed down the corridor in the Hall of Science to avoid being late. One more time he reached into those antelope cargo pants and pulled out the note. He simply had to read it again. It re-fueled him with the passion of his so anticipated imminent meeting where he felt he could now safely reveal his reason for living. While still pacing quickly, he fumbled with the Velcro® flap to stuff the note back into the cargo pants pocket for safe keeping. At least that is what he thought he had done. The note fell to the floor.


* * * * *


The arthritis, in his feet, was killin’ him. And it was so damn hard to bend over to pick something up from off the floor. Nevertheless, there it was. A folded up piece of paper, smack in the middle of the manicured hallway in the Hall of Science, sticking itself up from the reddish carpet as some one's inconsiderate slap-down in disrespect of the environment. Kids. Damn ungrateful, snotty-nosed rich kids, thinking the world owes them everything and "the help" or somebody else can pick up their trash.


The moment of debate raged within his conscience. Just look up, keep walking, nobody around, nobody will notice, nobody to think it was him, for heaven’s sake, who was the flagrant litterer. Now maybe a hundred and fifty years ago when Whitman was established as a Congregational Church seminary, there would be a notion that Jesus was watching or something. But not now. Listening to the rhetoric of certain Tea Partiers, the Jews will convert to be Christians, there will be a mushroom cloud over Jerusalem, the saints will be raptured and the dominionized planet let loose to burn. So what the hell with a measly piece of trash.


To hell with the Tea Party.


He sucked in his gut, creaked his knees, and hauled up the unsightly debris.


The old man made a cursory glance to make certain there was nothing toxic or sticky on it, and noticed that it was a note of some kind. He wanted to stop and to read it. Curious. Kind of that titillating voyeurism thing. Instead, he stuffed it into his shirt pocket deciding he would read it in the privacy of the auditorium where he was headed for a lecture on predatory wolves and climate change.


1 Soul Mates, Thomas Moore. "Conversation is the sex act of the soul, and as such it is supremely conducive to the cultivation of intimacy." Page 124.



The Refectory Manager


(His first attempt at writing fiction)

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Thursday, September 15, 2011

Fin...

I was just about to write my thoughts on your previous two letters when
I saw a somber subject line.

Life is so full of disappointments and shattered expectations. Moments
in time that tear at your soul and destroy a fragile part of you that
you placed so much joy and hope in.

That stinging, raw pain. Like a scraped knee that screams at you every
day, reminding you of the disaster from whence it came.

Lost companionship and the hurt hearts of man and animal..

It is a truly saddening thing. I am sorry, my friend.

Maybe these turns of events will lead to a greater outcome still, one
filled with happiness and love after all.

Keep your furry friend in your prayers. He has a lot ahead of him.

Hugs,

Equator

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Tuesday, September 13, 2011

If you don't want to break a friend's heart...

I feel as retched as a pile of horse shit. I knew last night I would have to do it.

Return the little dog to the shelter.

Yet even last night, he was starting to warm to me. This morning, he would come running to me, tail wagging high in the air. Demanding to be touched. And I couldn't rub him, massage him, scratch him enough.

But there are others in my world.

My mother. Last night she was raising all the reasons he could not live here. It was more about the cat. And the lack of access through the pet door for the cat. And the inability to have a fenced, secure, outside area where the dog could have ad hoc access.

This is her house. I am a guest here.

Rusty let me pick him up and cradle him in my arms. He sensed that something was amiss. When I set him on the car seat, he started to panic.

Eventually we arrived at the Animal Shelter. I explained what had happened. I had prepared a page of observations of his behavior, his fear of men, his acceptance of elderly woman, his lack of bad habits.

We went back to the cacophonous room. I was choking the tears as I placed him back into a cage.

Rusty didn't bark.

He just looked at me.

Those eyes.

Did I ever say that he stares?

"I trusted you."

Those rejected eyes. "Why?"

I had to turn and to leave quickly.

**********

I had gone to the shelter in the first place, seeking a companion. Something to love. To hold. To touch. To be touched by.

As is so frequently the case. Now two hearts are broken.


The Refectory Manager

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If you want a friend, get a dog.

There was a moment of quiet in the horrible room. Just us. The caged. Why bother to bark. No one there to bark at.

What nonsense of that old statement attributed to Who Knows Who, "If you want a friend, get a man."

But the door opened. And another one of those gawkers made a hesitating entrance.

The cacophony immediately erupted. Even for me it was deafening. I just wanted to die.

The gawker gawked. Then moved on, somewhere behind where I could see. I could hear the ruckus in that other area.

I am still haunted by what happened. I try to forget. And I do. Until that gawker showed up.

The escape. Mercifully. The escape.

The running. And running. Running in places I had never been. Yet it all still looked so familiar. Rows of big things. Doors. And shinny things arranged outside.

I could hear my kind. But I ignored them. I needed to get away.

I don't know how it happened. Trapped I guess, because I didn't know the terrain. Scooped up. I didn't bite. That is not me. He didn't hurt me. Biting him would only make it worse.

"Drop Off." I suppose that is what it said on the door. I was carried through it. The smells. The sounds. The bright lights. The confusion. I had no inkling as to what was happening. I was incapable of thinking of what would come next.

These past two weeks were horrible. Yes. I was "safe." I had chow. I had water. Somebody took me out on a leash. I peed on bushes. What was I supposed to do.

Then that day. I have no idea what happened. But when I groggily awakened, I ached and felt sick. I squirreled around to lick where it hurt. Stiff pieces of something sticking out of me. Going through me. And a pain I have never felt before. Somehow I sensed that I had been changed.

Dogs arrived.

Dogs left.

I am alone in a maze of confusion.

I have no expectations. That is something beyond my capability. I have only fears. I don't want to be hurt again.

It is quiet again where I am. Yet I hear the barking from somewhere behind me. I try to forget the past. To forget the present. The future I know nothing about.

The gawker returns. The yapping starts all over again. I can't see any of them. Just hear them. Hear their frustration. I understand their language.

And then.

The gawker stares at me. That stare. Those eyes.

Why does he look at me like that.

I have seen that image before. I was hurt by that image.

Don't look at me.

Don't come to me.

I must ignore him. Make myself invisible to him. No matter what, I can't deal with that part of my past all over again.

The gawker leaves. The quiet returns.

In a few minutes, a volunteer returns. Opens my cage. Pulls me out. Takes me down a hallway. Sets my on a counter.

The gawker is there. He stares at me. Leans over and whispers to me.

I fear him. But not enough to bite. He hasn't hurt me. Yet.

He holds me. Rubs my jowls with the back of his hand. It doesn't hurt.

In a few minutes he picks me up and takes me outside. Places me in this hot confined space. I make a dash for the back, to get as far from him as possible.

I have been in a car before. It has always involved anguish.

When it stops, the gawker opens the rear door. I cower away from him, but he reaches me and picks me up. But he touches that sensitive place with the stiff things sticking out. I yelp, squirrel around to get his hand away from me. I don't want to hurt him. But I don't want to be hurt either.

The gawker realizes for the first time, the incision from his loss of doghood.

He sets me on the ground. I start to run. But there is a rose bush right there. I stop. Lift my leg. Mark the spot. And soak it.

The next thing I know I am taken into a room. I want to hide. There is a chair. I cower there. Must survey the area. What all is there that will hurt me.

Then the old lady sees me. Loud words about something. But her voice is one I can trust. I have heard that kind of voice before. I felt safe with that voice.

In time the old lady sat down. In desperation for security I run, climb into her lap. She holds me. Her hands are cold, but soft.

The next hours are chaotic. I escape. Want to run as far and as fast as I can. But three people are cornering me. The old woman stomps on my trailing leash.

The chow is good. I had heard stories about that Beneful stuff...how good it was, and good for me. The water was good too. The cat just stared at me, then ignored me. I have had my run-ins with cats. I know my place.

I spend the night curled up in what smells like the cat's bed on the old woman's bed. I feel safe.

But the gawker, I still don't trust. Yes, he touches me. He whispers to me. He holds me. I don't fight him, but I run from him if he gets up. He calls for me, but I refuse to go to him. I have been hurt before.

The old woman left this afternoon. I was left alone with the gawker. He gave me a rawhide chew. And a little snuggly toy. I know what to do with those.

I jumped up on the end of the sofa to see out the window. Where did the old woman go? And the gawker came and sat beside me.

He coaxed me into his lap. I let him.

He touched me. Firm, soft, gentle, soothing. And he whispered to me. Asked me about what had happened. I can't tell him. How could he understand? But he didn't hurt me. Maybe...he won't hurt me.

We both dropped off into a nap.

Then some time together outside. They have a nice creek beside the house. It seems safe. I lie in the grass.

After awhile he leads me back into the house. I now readily follow. There is slack in the leash.

The gawker sits at his desk. I hear repetitive noises . I have no idea what a keyboard is.

But I do lie down in the well of his desk. I can stare up at him. He reaches down and massages my ears. Then my neck. Then my shoulders.

I don't run from him with my tail between my legs like yesterday.

His touch. His voice. He is not going to hurt me.

I will let him believe that old statement attributed to Who Knows Who, "If you want a friend, get a dog."

The Refectory Manager's Dog




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Saturday, September 10, 2011

"If you want a friend, get a man."

I knew that I should have never let the notion even enter into my head. But I did. I couldn't help it.

Something about connection. That old statement attributed to Who Knows Who, "If you want a friend, get a dog."

The rate I'm goin', a dog it will have to be.

The Native Plant Society has a demonstration garden on the grounds of the Walla Walla Humane Society. I am a member of the NPS, but have never visited the demonstration garden. I found myself in that part of town.

I take it that it is a common frailty of mankind. Purposefully doing something you know you should not do. Not because it is wrong, or anything like that. But the interconnectedness that results in obligations. In responsibilities. In commitment. In sacrifice. In why in the hell am I doing this. Perhaps it is like having sex without protection. No way. Not me. It will never happen.

There are two doors on the front of the Shelter. The door on the right for "Drop Offs." The door on the left for "Adoptions." Into Adoptions I entered. I swore under my breath that I should not be doing this. I have never entered the door of a gay bar. I suspect I would have the exact same feelings.

Inside, a front counter. Computer monitors protruding upward like a row of Stonehenge relics. People perched behind monitors. People standing at the counter. I notice a rack, on an adjacent wall, full of pamphlets. Dog-eared pamphlets at that. There was another door down a little hall. I interrupted the computer person and asked if I could just go in. "Certainly," was her response.

So I did.

First room on the right had two cages. Rabbits. Quiet.

Room on the left, lots of cages. Cats. Quiet.

Down the passage, into a small room, a dozen or so small cages. Small dogs.

Instantly the room came alive with ruckus animation. I suppose dancing captives were all quick to learn from the old-timers, get the sucker's attention, hold it, if you expect to be adopted.

So I was targeted. Radiated by pleading eyes. Deafened by ear-splitting, attention-grabbing barking. Begging to sniff a finger by the wet little nose peeking through a wire mesh. Why didn't the architect think about sound-absorbing material on the cinderblock walls. Eight little dogs. Why were they there? What bad things had they done to deserve the "Drop Off" fate? Did they know it was inevitably either adoption or doggie heaven? Had the old-timers told the newcomers that? Or was this more like the Holocaust. Innocent of their fate. Had these dogs learned, by the school of hard knocks, how to present their resume, how to put their best paw forward, how to melt the heart of some gawking sucker? And what it also meant to them if they didn't? Couldn't? Wouldn't?

I observed them all. Wondered? Why for? How come? What about those soft brown eyes? What about the touch? Their warmth? Their trust? Their devotion? Their faithfulness? Their ability to be a partner? Their inevitable history? Their nature? Their nurture? Or lack thereof? What about the baggage they inevitably bring with them?

In the back of my mind, I was thinking along the lines of Labrador, or Golden Retriever. A big, gentle, dog. More like a man. Thinking of those surrogate situations of three-dog-night intimacy. (Cold enough it takes three dogs in bed with you to keep from freezing to death.)

I passed through the door marked "Large Dogs."

Big room. Big kennels. Lower in frequency but markedly louder in decibels.

Big dogs. Scruffy dogs. The resume of one big black Heinz 57 stating he was a "prison trained dog, ask about this." Another missing his front right leg.

I simply had to concede my nights would never be three-dog cold. I returned to the small dog room.

Bottom row, far right cage.

Those eyes. Unblinking. Staring.

No barking. None. Whatsoever. Wouldn't even stand up. No extending the nose to sniff. Just staring.

A larger Chihuahua. Rusty red, reasonably short hair.

That coconut face. Perfect equilateral triangle of dark eyes and dark nose. And that stare. Did I mention that stare? So different from the yappers in the other cages. But why? Just a well behaved, loveable little dog, or was his mind racing, "But for the love of Dog, don't pick me."

I returned to the front desk, asked if someone could tell me the story of the little dog in the bottom right cage.

Of course they could.

He was found as a stray in one of the city parks two weeks ago by a police officer. Brought in. Just getting ready to be registered it in the computer system as a for-adoption dog. Male. Approximately three years old. Known history negative. Now neutered, vaccinated. Ready for adoption. There is a three-day trial period. I can bring him back, no problem, if he doesn't work out.

It is Friday. The trial-period agreement gives me until 5 P.M. Monday. What the hell. Those eyes. That unflappable manner in the midst of cacophony. And did I mention that intensely penetrating stare? My heart is tearing itself out.

A volunteer brings the dog out to me. Sets it on the counter. I sign the papers. They loan me a leash. The lady behind the computer places a Humane Society tag on his collar, just in case it escapes from me. I cradle his head in my hands. Place my nose next to his. Stare into his eyes. Whisper.

The lady is holding his leash. I say that she can lay it down.

I rub the dog's face. He makes no move. At all. Why is he so passive? Is he ill? They assure me he is a healthy dog. For several minutes I attempt to establish "the bond."

In time, I take him to the minivan. Immediately he jumps into the back seats. He cowers away from me. Simply will not come to me.

We get home. I have to physically lift him from the car, and as soon as he is set on the ground, he wants to run. But stops to pee first.

I enter the kitchen door. The dog immediately hides under my office chair. My mother doesn't notice. At first. Then. "What. Have. You. Done!"

I recite the facts as I know them.

"What about the cat?"

What about the cat?

The cat has been around dogs before. The cat is the boss. The cat knows that. A far cry from the stereotype of things worldly when I was but a little boy . . . families were of the kind where the dog was the father and the cat was the mother. That is the way my Dick and Jane primer learned me.

After standing around, observing the behavior of this new intrusion into the household, his trying to hide himself under the table-cloth draped dining room table, my mother went to her big chair in the living room to sit down. The dog made a bee-line for her and snuggled in her lap.

The dog is afraid of me. Afraid of old scruffy-looking men. Perhaps there is a reason he was caught as a stray . . . running for his life. Perhaps there is a reason no one inquired of the Shelter for a specific missing dog.

Perhaps the reason for that stare, for the no barking, for the total lack of his sales pitch to entice me to select him over all others in that small dual purpose shelter-marketing room...the fear. That angst that he would be hurt again.

The cat. The cat door. We had closed it to what we thought the cat could still get through but the dog couldn't. We were wrong. Like a shot, that dog was out the door. Leash, fortunately, still attached and trailing behind.

The dog runs from me. I can't get anywhere near him. The man in the single-wide behind us had a letter to the editor published last Sunday about his hatred for dogs. His last sentence was that people should put a cork up the dog's behind before they take their dog out for a walk. How often I have wanted to tell him to stuff his own cigarette butts up his own butt as instead of flicking them onto the ground and the ambient wind then blowing them into our yard.

And of course, the dog runs into his yard.

I make a cut, the dog turns, runs back into our yard. Around the house. Again. My mother is now out there. He makes a shot for the street over to Wal-Mart. Some kind soul intercedes and heads him back our way. I yell at Mom to step on his leash. The dog lets her do it. I pick him up. Cuddle him. Rub his cheek with the back of my fingers. Massage his shoulders. Press my face against his. Whisper to him. Assure him he doesn't need to be afraid. I won't hurt him. He doesn't fight me. Just freezes motionless. Back in the house I set him down. He runs away from me. Takes refuge with my Mother.

After awhile, I intercede again. Hold him. Cradle him. Cuddle him. Touch him. There is no resistance. No response. I whisper to him again. Over and over and over. "Can I be your friend? Will you let me?" I think of a puppy my daughter found in the dumpster out behind the Subway store she was closing one night so many years ago now. Of course she brought that dog home. It was terrified of men wearing a baseball cap. Terrified of anything that looked like a broom. That dog bonded with my daughter. I wondered who could beat a dog with a broom? Why?

And now this one. The Shelter people were calling him "Reginald," but of course, they assured me, I could call him anything I wanted. "Rusty" was the name that was now sticking.

I held Rusty for a long time. He didn't fight me. I whispered to him. Asked him over and over again what had happened. For him to tell me what had happened. I want to make it right with him. He should not know that kind of fear.

Rusty is asleep now on my Mother's bed. I will rouse him just before I retire. Take him out for his business. Put him back on his makeshift bed where he seems to recognize it as a place of safety.

I knew that I should have never let the notion even enter into my head. But I did. I couldn't help it.

Something about connection. That old statement attributed to Who Knows Who, "If you want a friend, get a dog."

Monday, 5 P.M. It is still more than two days off.

Is there time for Rusty? "If you want a friend, get a man."


The Refectory Manager

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