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The Physics of Sorrow

Page 10

by Georgi Gospodinov, Translated from the Bulgarian by Angela Rodel

Auntie Fannie, 70, from the Youth 1 neighborhood, requested a stomach X-ray at the local polyclinic because of the free oatmeal they gave out before the exam.

  The cold and the power outages during the ’90s. The dark foyer of the Globus movie theater, strangers’ blind breathing backs . . .

  Meetings across dark Sofia, as I make the rounds as a freelance nighttime reporter for some newspaper. A bear-trainer without his bear, wandering through the city. Some newly minted Mafiosi had rolled up in an SUV, asked him how much the bear cost, he had stood his ground, telling them it wasn’t for sale, they whacked him over the neck, grabbed the bear’s chain and tied it to the back of the SUV. They needed it, they said, to train their pit-bulls. They tossed fifty leva at him, and the bear went running off after the SUV, roaring. These little things don’t even make it into the black chronicles of the ’90s.

  The story of Blind Tony, who is trying to find himself a wife on the bus to Students’ Town with a single, endless recitative:

  Yes, Tony am I, I’m a one-in-a-million guy,

  I’m looking for a wife, with whom to share my life . . .

  This is followed by an epic, adventure-filled tale about who he is and where he is going, how he has struggled to make a life for himself in the big city, a story about the future young family he’ll found, plans for children and a peaceful old age . . . At the end, in the same rhythm and in rhyme, Blind Tony gives his exact address and telephone number.

  The story of a college classmate of mine, who would spend several hours every day in the noisiest café near the university, desperately hoping to find someone to marry her before she went back to her hometown of B. There, her father would scream at her from the doorstep: “Did you get married yet, girl? What did we waste all that money on for these five years, only to have you come back an old maid? There’s no man for you here!”

  She would sit there, slowly sipping the biggest coffee in the world, waiting. Her secret desire for marriage was already painfully obvious. All the men avoided that table. Once she called me up in a panic, saying that she was in a very tight spot, her father was really sick and she wanted to bring home some man before he passed away. Just this once, she assured me. I agreed, we went to her hometown. They had laid out a huge table under the trellis, around which her closest aunts and uncles and a few neighbors were sitting in gloomy silence. They carried out her father, he looked like a very ill local Don Corleone. I went up to him, he looked at me for a full minute, tried to say something, coughed, and they carried him back inside.

  Years later, I happened to end up at the bus station in the same town. An old woman peered at me and cried: “Hey, there’s the boy! The same one who lied to our girl and left her at the altar, why didn’t you get married, my boy . . .”

  Books with their old socialist price tags from bookstores on the brink of going out of business, which we would sell in the courtyard of the university. Zoo, or Letters Not about Love by Shklovsky, a collection of Kafka’s letters entitled I Was Born To Live in Solitude, all pocket editions, and Joyce’s Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, in hardcover, for a whopping 4.18 leva, but nobody bought it. Once upon a time and a very good time it was there was a moocow coming down along the road and this moocow that was coming down along the road met a nicens little boy named baby tuckoo . . .

  These are just the little things that will fall by the wayside, everything else is there in the newspapers from that time. Yet despite everything, the ’90s was the most lively, the best decade in which everything could have happened. We were young for the last time then. It was then that Gaustine appeared, a philosophy drop-out, with his ingenious projects (and flops), which occupy a whole separate notebook.

  Why does Gaustine continue to be important to me? I’ve rarely had friends. Empathy predisposes you to closeness with people, but not in my case, when the weight of others’ sorrows pressed down on me like a sickness. No women, no relationships, no friendships. But Gaustine seemed to be made of a different time and different matter. I don’t know anyone like him—translucent, yet simultaneously opaque. I would pass through him like thin air or run into a glass wall. But despite this, or perhaps precisely because of it, he was the only one I could call a friend.

  GAUSTINE’S PROJECTS

  All the ways of earning money honestly had slowly evaporated. One day, we were hanging around the movie theater to see which new films were out. The tickets were unattainably expensive, we just gaped at the poster and a few photos in the display window. Then Gaustine had an ingenious idea: we would retell movies. A detailed retelling over the course of thirty minutes for a minimal fee. His “Movies for the Poor” Project. Complete dumping of the film industry. And he got really worked up. Can you imagine what a move this is, what a historical reversal from the visual back toward the narrative? You stand in front of the movie theater, mingling with those folks hanging around outside, and strike up a casual conversation, saying how amazing the film was, but these movie theater types are motherfucking bloodsuckers for charging those prices; however, you’ve seen it already and would be happy to retell it to them in detail in exchange for an absolutely negligible 700 leva. Tickets cost ten times that amount. We gather up a group of fifteen or so and we’re good to go.

  Wait, wait, I interrupt him, when are we going to watch the movie?

  We’ll watch it afterward, after we get the money, Gaustine replies.

  But then what will we tell them?

  We’ll make it up, he replies innocently. How hard could it be, you’re a writer, right? You’ve got a title, a few lines from the poster and a couple photos in the display window. What more could you want?

  He was something else. He wasn’t even kidding. He had absolutely no sense of humor. Like all obsessed people. Like those who are off the beaten track, as my grandma would say. Like revolutionaries and women—according to Nietzsche.

  Movies for the Poor. Like those Tamagotchi for the poor from that old joke. Tamagotchi, if anyone still remembers, were those pager-like (perhaps I need to explain what a pager is, too?) gadgets on which you could take care of your electronic pet, feed it at certain times, give it water, and play with it when it whined. And when you got sick of it, you’d ditch it for a few days, until it starved to death. Where have all those Tamagotchi gone? To all the old pagers. A person has no idea how much death he is capable of generating.

  I know I’m getting sidetracked, but let’s have a minute of silence for the souls of:

  The pagers of yore

  Tamagotchi

  Videocassettes and the VCR

  Cassette-tape players,

  which buried eight-tracks,

  which buried record-players,

  Audiocassettes

  Telegrams, with their whole accompanying ritual

  Typewriters (allow me to add a personal farewell to my Maritsa, filled with cigarette ashes and coffee from the ’90s.) Writing on a typewriter required physical exertion, a different type of movement, if you recall.

  OK, the minute’s over. What were we talking about? Movies for the Poor, yes, but first let me finish the joke. Since Tamagotchi also cost money, Tamagotchi for the poor also cropped up. And you know what they were? A cockroach in a matchbox. That’s it. It may not be funny anymore, but I insist upon gathering up these odds and ends, all the things that have already passed away, they’re gone, dead. Which I guess is the opposite of what is written: “to carry them through the flood alive and to go forth and multiply again” . . . I’ve gotten completely turned around. I don’t know whether the things I’ve now chaotically and slightly hysterically saved from my own flood will be able to live, let alone go forth and multiply. I know that the past is as fruitless as a barren mare. But that makes it all the more dear to me.

  That idea about movies for the poor didn’t bear any fruit, either. Let me just say that we barely escaped unscathed after I tried to tell the first group the story of a film I hadn’t seen.

  The “Personal Poem” project also met a similar end.<
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  There’s no such thing as shameful work, Gaustine repeated this old chestnut one morning. You’ll sit there like those street artists who draw people for money, you’ll hold a pencil and paper, saying: Would you like me to write a poem for you? Every pretty girl has the right to a poem. (I think that was a quote). It’ll only take ten minutes.

  So there I was on a bench, in the park in front of Café Crystal downtown, with a few sheets of paper, a pencil, and a discreet sign in front of me offering “personal poem” services. Toward the end of the second uneventful hour, a woman of around fifty came up to me. This wasn’t the way we’d imagined it. For some reason, we’d imagined all of our clients being twenty-year-old girls. She was plump and looked like a bad guy from a Soviet cartoon. She asked for her personal poem. The designated ten minutes passed. Nothing. My head was empty and hollow, like a basement in which you can hear only the minutes dripping and trickling away. I started feeling worse and worse for both of us. She started sweating, took out a tissue, can I move, yes, of course, I’m not drawing you, after all. Where should I look? It doesn’t matter, slightly off to the side, you don’t need to look at me, it’s a bit distracting. She was either romantic or nouveau riche. And with every passing minute echoing in the void, my failure gleamed ever brighter. Finally, I decided to grab the bull by the horns. I raised my head, looked her straight in the eye and said: “Actually, you have such a strong aura today that it’s very difficult for me to concentrate. Would you mind stopping by some other time?”

  At that time, all the newspapers were writing about auras and aliens. And it worked, the woman, instead of slapping me across the face, beamed. She said I was a true poet, and that she had immediately recognized this. Only a natural born poet could catch auras. (As if auras were carp.) She announced that she lived nearby and invited me to her place for a glass of wine. I agreed mostly out of a sense of guilt. It turned out that she lived alone. She took out the bottle, sat down quite close to me on the couch, despite the abundance of open seats, and pressed her body up against me. I beg your pardon, I’m a poet, I shot out, quickly standing up. As if wanting to remind her that I work mainly with auras and that bodies do not enter into my sphere of competence.

  Sssssmaaack! Her slap quickly sent that project, too, into the heap of Gaustine’s great and misunderstood ideas.

  He took the lead in the “Condom Catwalk” project himself.

  All he needed to do was go to the people with the cash and explain what a goldmine he was offering. He came back crestfallen. We sat down, poured ourselves green cows (crème de menthe with milk) and he described in detail how as soon as he set foot in that obscenely rich agency, he knew that they wouldn’t appreciate the idea.

  A fashion revue for rubbers. A revolution, Gaustine was getting enthused.

  A revue-lution, I chimed in.

  That’s good, remember it, he noted in passing before going on. No one has ever done that kind of fashion show, know what I mean? They’ve put everything imaginable on the catwalk, but never this accessory, Gaustine was getting worked up. Total minimalism. Condom producers will pour crazy cash into it. But they were like—how would the whole catwalk with condom-wearing models work? First, the state would slap them with a huge fine for pornography, second, no TV station would broadcast that kind of fashion show. Or if they did, they would have to put little black squares right over the most central part of the event.

  And lastly, heh heh heh, they were just rolling with laughter, who’s gonna guarantee non-stop erections backstage, huh? Who? Do you have any idea what a huge job that’d be? Like changing tires in a Formula 1 pit stop. Ha ha ha . . .We’re talking serious pumping!

  Gaustine waited for the jokes to die down and told them coldly: Come on, take your wangs out of your mouths nice and slowly. In fact, the show won’t involve live models.

  What do you mean, the agency guys gaped at him.

  To avoid all those problems, Gaustine said, we’ll use African ritual figures. They all have large phalluses.

  Large what? the dudes asked, confused.

  Large, erect phalluses, Gaustine repeated calmly.

  Cocks, the boss explained.

  That way we’ll add some art to the whole business, since only then is an erect phallus not pornography, Gaustine concluded his presentation.

  They made him wait outside while they made their decision. They called him back in an hour later and turned him down. Because of the art thing. Who’s gonna want to look at some African statues with boners? They had nothing against art (or porn either, probably), but in this case neither was worth their while.

  So this idea, too, was sent to the repository of failures. Fine, put it down in the notebook, Gaustine said. Clearly we’re ahead of our time. Some day they’ll be fighting each other tooth-and-nail for that idea. And so he piled up his treasures in the future. I was merely the treasurer. In the end, writing, too, is the preservation of failures. Now that would really make him mad. Something that hasn’t happened yet is not a failure, I can hear him saying.

  I believe that somewhere else, in some other time and place, he is an ingenious and successful inventor or a great swindler.

  Here, in the brown notebook of failures, also rest Gaustine’s other unrealized projects:

  Vault for personal stories. We would hear out, preserve, and keep stories in full confidence for a certain period of time. If the client so desired, after his death, his story could be willed to his heirs.

  Projections on the sky. (One of his most monumental projects.) An ultra-powerful apparatus would project upon the whole “screen” of the sky. In the beginning, he didn’t have a clear idea of what exactly would be projected, yet the idea of that celestial open-air cinema filled him with excitement. Such a huge space can’t just sit there empty and unused. Just imagine the whole hemisphere craning their necks and looking up at the same moment.

  A month later the project had taken on much more concrete parameters. Let’s project clouds on the clouds themselves, best of all when there’s low, dense cloud cover.

  And what will you project onto them?

  Clouds, for example, for a start.

  Clouds?

  Clouds on clouds. Let’s see how nature reacts to the duplication, to the tautology. And it’ll be best if we project rain. Just imagine—cinematic rain from real clouds. At first, the audience will scatter, frightened. Like in The Arrival of a Train in La Ciotat Station in 1896. At the beginning and end of cinema stands a natural scare. There’s more . . . Garden of Novels. Classic novels will be planted in rich soil, watered and fertilized with manure to see which of them will bear fruit. A project for reestablishing balance—what is made of wood should once again return to the earth.

  The project “A la Minute Architecture” is also here. Small wire sculptures recreating several seconds or a minute from the flight of the ordinary housefly; the wire should accurately reproduce all the twists and turns of the flight.

  And the photo exhibition “Skies over various cities, photographed at three in the afternoon.” And Lord knows what else . . .

  Gaustine. His only successful project was his own disappearance. One evening he came to say goodbye, I asked where he was going, sure that he had come up with some new scheme. To 1937, he said simply. I took it as a joke. Drop me a line, I said. At that time the ’90s were in full swing, the most interesting of times, but he disappeared. I had no idea (and still don’t) what he had come up with. But when I got the first letter followed by two or three postcards, written in the old handwriting from the 1930s—yes, I think every decade has its own hand—I realized that this time, unlike all the others, he had managed to pull it off.

  (I’ve told more about this in some “And Other Stories.”)

  I saw him one winter afternoon years later at a café in the London airport, holding a magazine in his hand and looking worried, as far as I could tell from a distance. My plane was about to take off, I just ran over to say “hi,” I almost threw myself down on his table.
He looked at me coldly, I noticed his white turtleneck sweater, of the type that had long since gone out of style, Are the gentleman and I acquainted? I stood there stunned for a few seconds, heard my name on the last call for my flight and dashed back to the gate. I had noticed that the magazine he was reading was Time from 1968, opened up to an article on the war in Vietnam. It was January 2007.

  A late text message at 3 A.M. years later.

  I found out that cat urine glows in the dark. I thought that might interest you.

  There was no name, but it could only be from one person. At least now he was in some closer year (unless he was already a cat).

  Recently the London Times mentioned a new invention designed for rich yet harried businessmen with a taste for pinching pennies (or leading double lives)—a tourist agency for virtual tourism. The agency also supplies souvenirs from the untaken trip. You receive all the material evidence of a journey, including stamps in your passport, photos, ticket stubs from the Louvre, for example, or shells from the Cote d’Azure. (Maybe even sandwiches from the Sandwich Islands.) They tell you how your very own vacation went, outfit you with a whole set of memories. It’s enough to make you yourself believe that you’ve taken the trip. For a moment it crossed my mind that Gaustine was giving me a sign.

  IV.

  TIME BOMB (TO BE OPENED AFTER THE END OF THE WORLD)

  THE AGING OF AN EMPATH

  Once I could be in everything, be everything. Now, in the ineptness of my mature years, I wanted to gather up everything, as a small compensation for that which I had lost.

  The aging of an empath is a strange and painful process. The corridors toward others and their stories, which once were open, now turn out to be walled up. House arrest in your own body.

  Earlier, I would at times feel the need to shut myself up in the dark, letting nothing awaken the empathy, to just sit like that in the healing darkness of the nothingness. To keep myself from scattering, to stop the influxes of other people’s sorrows and stories.

 

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