Nine Lives… part I

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 [August 21, 2001]

On Friday, June 13, 1980, at 9:11PM, in Wichita, KS, I was born. It was 110 degrees. And my parents misspelled my name. The fact that I’m still alive should be surprising to anyone who believes in bad luck. Or knows my parents.

Being born on a Friday the 13th is supposed to elicit some sort of black magic voodoo. Maybe it’s black magic voodoo that kept me kicking inside my mom for an extra two days past my due date of June 11; maybe if I’d been born any earlier or a few hours later, I would have succumbed to one of the several biological insults I’ve encountered in my 33, almost 34 years of life.

 

 

Of the members of the animal kingdom, cats are typically most associated with luck. Bad luck, that is. But in order to offset their inherent bad luck, the cosmos also blessed them with Nine Lives. I’m sure one of these lives is automatically deducted for having to survive in our world and the dangers we cause. This basically leaves them with eight lives to negotiate their own existence.

 

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The bad luck I was blessed/cursed to be born with would make me a logical choice to be a kindred spirit to cats. But I’m allergic to cats. Cats love to cause me allergic reactions. Kindred spirits we are not.

This being the case, I’m more of a dog person. I grew up with them in my house my entire life. But guess what, I’m even more allergic to their dander than cats’. Yet, it didn’t dissuade my parents from keeping them around. A lot of them.

So like the cats who dabble in bad luck, I’ve channeled my dark voodoo magic luck into Nine Lives. Let’s see where I stand…

 

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Life #1: Ended at age 4. Frolicking in Lake Michigan while pretending to be a pelican is a good way to have a bunch of microbe-infested lake water go pouring into your lungs. The next morning when I awoke with a death-rattle wheeze and sky-high temp, my parents rushed me to the nearest hospital. I spent 5 days living in a plastic bubble (yep, I was a bubble boy) while the doctors and nurses pumped me with antibiotics to crush the pneumonia that was trying to suffocate me.

 

 

During my hospital stay, I developed a disdain for Jell-O (it was the only thing I was allowed to eat), which grew exponentially by the day and has been maintained throughout my life. Thankfully though, this developing hatred was off-set by my introduction to video games, which I was allowed to play all day long.

Atari. Centipede. Bye Bye Pneumonia!

 

 

Life #2: Ended at age 12… when I had my last major asthma attack. Right around this time, I became sentient enough to realize the main cause of the nearly dozen Emergency Room visits and two hospitalizations I had sustained over the last 7 years were the dogs living in my house. I was constantly grabbing my inhaler, trying to breathe over the dander infesting every square inch of our home. My parents knew I was allergic, as I’d received numerous shots, been put on oral corticosteroids causing me to gain 20 pounds of fat in two months, and was constantly having fits of eczema, which left me physically scarred to this day. [I dare you to take a bath in betadine with open wounds all over your body… I was screaming for days.]

Before this time, I simply wasn’t smart enough to realize why every time I played with my dog I started itching, wheezing, and sneezing. Once I had this ah-ha! moment, I tried to be more cautious… but that was pretty much like running through a cabbage patch full of land mines when you have five dogs at home and one of them sleeps on your bed.

 

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[Note: I’m also allergic to horses. Maybe worse than dogs. Ok, definitely worse than dogs. But my parents made me go to horse shows and be around horses my entire childhood too. I’ve concluded they were trying to thin the herd in our household. Well guess what… survival of the fittest! All of those animals are d-e-a-d. And I’m not.]

 

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Life #3: Ended at age 20. I was on Christmas break from college and only two days away from attending the Debutante Ball with my good friend Katherine. I was in Lexington, staying the night at her parents home, when I started feeling like my allergies and asthma were acting up. I tried all of my normal tricks to make myself feel better: anti-histamines, albuterol inhaler, hot shower, fresh air, etc, etc. But I still felt my difficulty breathing increasing. I didn’t dare try to sleep. I simply sat up in bed, trying to gulp in air when possible, puffing on my inhaler every hour, but to no avail.

 

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Eventually, her father woke up the next morning at 5AM and between gasped breaths, I asked if he would mind taking me to the hospital. Obviously, he obliged.

In the Emergency Department, the doctor diagnosed me with… tracheitis… solving the mystery of why my inhaler and other tricks weren’t working. He pumped me full of antibiotics and inhaled steroids to decrease the swelling and discharged me by 11AM. I rested the entire day and made the Debutante Ball with no one the wiser.

 

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[Note: So by age 20, I’d had the alveoli (the little sacks at the furthest reaches of your lungs) get infected and inflamed causing my pneumonia. I’d had my bronchi (the muscular extensions branching off into the individual lungs) get consistently irritated from allergic insults and cause my horrific childhood asthma. And now my trachea (the air pipe that leads from your throat to the bronchi) get infected somehow and slowly close off my air passage… Friday. The 13th. In. Effect.]

 

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Life #4: Ended at age 21. Only nine months after surviving some bizarro bacterial infection that threatened to cut off my oxygen supply, I was driving east on US-70 outside of Kansas City when I was struck by a semi-tractor trailer traveling  35 mph. Luckily for my brother and I, we were encased in my 1983 Mercedes-Benz station wagon. [See image at the beginning of this post.]

We had left KC only 45 minutes earlier while a slow, misty rain was falling on the highway. My brother and I were heading back to Ohio, where we were about to begin school again after spending some time in Kansas visiting friends. He was sleeping in the passenger seat, his head resting on the frame of the door.

 

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As I drove along the two-lane highway, I could see traffic was stopped ahead of us and the right lane was clear because an ambulance had maneuvered its way to a small collision 300 yards in the distance. As I came to a stop in the left-hand lane, with the right lane completely devoid of any traffic, and with a red truck stopped only a half car-length ahead of us, I ever-so-slightly turned my steering wheel to the right… I reflexively peeked up into the rear-view mirror… only to see the grille of a semi smash into the back of my pseudo German tank. All hell broke loose.

 

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When all was said and done, my brother and I were alive… But the scene was chaos. The Ghetto Sled (as I affectionately termed my car) had jettisoned into the right-hand lane, barely clipping the red truck in front of us (rather than being smashed accordian-like into the bed of the truck). The front passenger-side of TGS smashed into the retaining wall of the overpass, spilling transmission fluid all over the road. (Yes, we were on an overpass… from which we could have flipped over and onto the traffic below.)

 

 

My brother, asleep at the time of the accident, had violently smashed his head into the frame of the car, causing him to seize, and me to believe, that he had died. (He had to be removed from TGS with the jaws-of-life and air-lifted to the nearest hospital.)

 

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I instinctively turned off the car, swung open the driver’s side door, and climbed out. My body was completely numb, but I simultaneously felt as if every bone in my body was broken as I stumbled towards the driver of the red pickup. I then looked at what was left of the TGS, my brother seizing in the passenger’s seat, and the smashed grill of the semi behind us.

Thankfully, the EMS responders who were tending to the minor fender-bender ahead of us had seen the entire accident unfold. They threw the ambulance in reverse, and due to a clear right-hand lane, were tending to my brother in a matter of seconds.

Somehow, I came away from the whole scene with only minor lower back musculoskeletal damage and some wicked whiplash. My brother spent the night in the hospital, was found to have no grave cranial or neurological damage, and was released the next day.

[Note: When we went to the junk yard to collect whatever was left of our belongings from TGS, I recovered a few meaningful mementos. But most importantly, in the pocket behind the driver’s seat was a picture of my second cousin Eddie, a dashing and handsome man, dressed in a tuxedo while flashing his million dollar smile. He had been killed at 31 years old when a semi-tractor trailer operated by an intoxicated driver barreled through a turn and demolished his car. I don’t believe in God. But I believe in Eddie.]

 

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If you think a semi is my last brush with death… you ain’t heard nothing yet… If you’re feeling lucky, come back for Nine Lives… part II.

 

That Afternoon in Dumbo

that afternoon in dumbo

[Dumbo is an acronym for Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass.]

I think most people would prefer to fall in love only once in their life. It starts with meeting the man/woman of your dreams and ends with spending the rest of your life happily ever after. At least, I suppose that is how it works for some people.

I would argue that it is probably the best way to do it.

When you fall in love, you feel as if that person completes your life, gives it new meaning, makes you feel on top of the world, and you can’t imagine your life, as you know it, continuing on without them. From there, you build a life together; your lives overlap upon the same track until “death do us part.” Your life revolves around common beliefs, life goals, parenting desires, monetary expenditures, etc. Soon enough, your life would not be YOUR life without that person.

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There is plenty of sociological research to show that besides being the lead-in to the romanticized version of the “American Dream”, the path I outlined is the most likely to result in the success of you, your significant other, your children, your extended family, and your friends.

It is not only a romantic version of events, it is reality.

But what if your replace “death” with “You know what, you are great and all, but I think we’re done.” Such a change might signify that love never was the binding measure involved in the relationship. Maybe it was lust, which is a more transient feeling and can last for long periods of time, but is subject to the whims of “you got fat”, “you family pisses me off”, or “damn, is that good-looking girl/guy over there checking me out?”

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I would suggest that in those cases, it was likely lust, not love, that led you to spend so much time with someone, maybe start a family, get a pet, or pool your resources and get a place together.

However, if you replace “death” with “something has changed”, it most likely means that your reciprocal love, the one thing that bound you together, has ended.

“Something” could be anything. Maybe it’s an identifiable entity like, “I decided I don’t want children”. Or a power-hungry grab resulting in, “my job means more to me than you do”. Or the abysmal and wishy-washy, “I love you, but I’m not IN love with you.”

Another replacement for “death” could be the painful recognition that the love you felt, which you could never truly qualify, isn’t there anymore. And when you go searching for it, trying to think back to what it was, identify it, and re-infuse it into your life, you can’t seem to catch it. The spark of lightning that started the whole thing is gone.

—–

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Deep thoughts, I know.

On an afternoon in Dumbo, a cozy neighborhood on one side of the Brooklyn bridge, I fell in love for the third time in my life.

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If you are fortunate/unfortunate enough to fall in love multiple times in your life, you know love when it hits you again. You feel different. Your outlook on life is different. Your willingness to sacrifice is different. You are again able to share the things that you held as your own (your deepest thoughts, dreams, and desires) with this person.

Unlike the first time I fell in love, I didn’t fall in love with AB the first time we met, but she was beyond intriguing to me. I couldn’t quite capture my feelings for her on that day, but I knew she was different from any other woman I had ever met. She was immediately the person I wanted to spend as much time with as possible, a fact that could certainly not be said for every woman I have ever dated.

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In retrospect, it had only held true for the two loves before her.

But that afternoon in Dumbo, between scoops of Peaches and Cream on a calm Sunday, we looked out upon the greatest city in the world, shared our hopes for each other, exchanged longing glances and affectionate kisses, and talked about how we should progress in our relationship.

Almost four years had passed since the most meaningful relationship in my life had ended, but by the end of that afternoon, I was thankful for not throwing myself into any of the other possibilities that had arisen since that time.

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During those four years, I hadn’t lived a celibate life, but I had been careful to not mistake my lust for love. There had been two other women enter my life during that time whom I thought I could love, but neither of those materialized into any sort of relationship. Even so, I was grateful for fate intervening in those instances and allowing me to have that afternoon in Dumbo.

The end to my most meaningful relationship, with the woman I considered to be my wife, and the future mother of my children, was beyond painful. It came during a period of my life already teeming with enough uncertainty that even the best of my coping mechanisms were battered beyond belief when all was said and done. It haunted me for years, even though I was outwardly moving on with my life. She had been the second love of my life.

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My first love defined my ability to love. What I mean by “ability to love” is that I discovered “love” by meeting her. Everything else I had ever experienced with other women was immediately demoted to something less than what I felt for her.

I felt compelled to protect her, to make her feel special, and I wanted to be with her. But I didn’t know it was  “love” when it happened. It appeared so incredibly out-of-the-blue that I couldn’t understand it. Instead, I waded into it cautiously and confusedly, eventually leaving only a longing, sometimes standoff-ish friendship. By the time I realized what I had done and told her how I felt, it was too late. She put up her own defenses, an act of self-preservation, and told me she no longer felt that way about me.

Yet, she became the blue print for all of my future relationships. I knew I wanted to feel such strong emotions for the woman I spent the rest of my life with; this kept me from lying to myself about my feelings for other women I dated. So when three years later I met the second love of my life, I knew exactly who I had standing in front of me.

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That afternoon in Dumbo hadn’t swept across me like the night I met my first love or the afternoon I met my second, but my feelings were unmistakable. I had been waiting for them to return, like a switch begging to be flipped. When she grabbed me by the shirt, stood up on her tippy toes, and pulled me close to her lips, I knew she felt the same way.

But when you are fortunate/unfortunate enough to have fallen in love more than once, you know that it could end. You don’t want it to, but in the back of your mind, in the depths of your sub-conscious, you know that it can.

Perhaps it is this knowing that makes it possible for the love to end in the first place. If it never enters your mind that it could possibly end, then what sense does it make for it to end.

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It’s kind of like having a favorite book, but the author comes out with a revised edition a couple of years later and adds another chapter that changes the entire point of the book; the plot has changed, the characters have a different context, and the ending no longer seems to fit the story. If you don’t bother reading the revised edition, then it is still your favorite book of all-time.

But if you get curious one day and step into a bookstore, pick up that revised edition, with its new glossy cover and updated photo of the author, and start reading the new chapter, by the time you finish, you promise to throw away the copy at home and find a new favorite book.

The end of my relationship with AB didn’t come with a “death do us part”, as both she and I are alive and well. Surprisingly, it came not long after that afternoon in Dumbo. Yet, its length doesn’t dismiss its reality. It simply reminded me of love’s delicacy.

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Thankfully, having been in love before, I know that it can happen again; At the most unlikely of times. Maybe with the most unlikely of people. And perhaps, with the most unlikely of outcomes.

Life on the Amazon

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“Welcome to the Jungle

We’ve got fun and ‘n’ games

We got everything you want

Honey, we know the names

We are the people that can find

Whatever you may need

If you got the money, honey

We got your disease”

 

 

Axl Rose’s voice roared over the loudspeaker as I sang along with a bar code scanner doubling as my microphone. “Welcome to the Jungle” seemed quite the appropriate theme song for where I found myself at 3AM on a recent Wednesday morning: an enormous warehouse on the outskirts of Lexington, KY.

But how the hell did I get there?

One day in July 2013, while on a month-long break from medical school, I found myself dreaming about what I would do during the 8-month break I would soon have between finishing medical school and starting Residency.

During that day-dream, I found myself:

a) in the outback of Australia, rough-housing with cuddly koalas and lacing it up with rambunctious kangaroos

b) providing medical care to the indigent people in Chennai, India with an old friend

c) attending evening lectures at Harvard and mingling with Nobel laureates

d) indulging at Carnival in Rio de Janeiro

 

 

Each of these seemed as likely as the next. My mind wandered and the possibilities seemed endless. Approaching the end of my journey to becoming a physician, I was feeling a bit grandiose. My delusions of grandeur had me feeling like the memories I would create by gallivanting around on such ridiculous journeys would serve as a buffer for the long nights and difficult times I would likely face in Residency.

 

 

But none of those things will happen during this 8-month break. No koalas. No Jared Diamond lectures. No flights to Chennai. No beads at Carnival.

Instead, I’ve been spending an enormous amount of time on the Amazon.

No, not the Amazon River. Though I’m surprised it didn’t ever arise as a possibility during my day-dreaming sessions.

The Amazon I’m referring to is the Amazon processing line. The Amazon that services your on-line orders for ginkgo biloba, Lego’s, the King James Bible, cans of corn, defective remote-controlled helicopters, and a new door handle.

 

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Yeah, you ordered all of those things from one website. In five minutes. And it cost you $107.18 and was delivered in two business days. I remember your order. Creepy, I know.

So where did my day dreams go so wrong?

The end of my nearly nine year sojourn to becoming a physician ended with a month of Trauma Surgery, not exactly the typical elective for a a future Family Medicine doc. I felt like an incredible weight had been briefly lifted from my shoulders when I walked out of that hospital for the last time as a student. Now I wanted to regain some semblance of self, or at least reflect on whom I had become… even if it included moving somewhere I hadn’t lived in nearly 15 years.

Upon arriving in Lexington, I was in need of some serious mental and physical recuperation. I promised to give myself the month of November to basically cram whatever meaningless and mind-numbing things I could into my life before starting to be a productive member of society again.

 

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As November was coming to a close, the stark reality that money no longer grows on trees began to reflect in my bank account. So I began researching possible job opportunities at the local universities, considered private tutoring, and investigated becoming a Craigslist gigolo.

 

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I quickly realized that I was either severely over-qualified or unlikely to get anything worth my Bachelor’s degree when potential employers realized I was in Lexington only temporarily. Except for the gigolo position, you can never be too qualified for that. But you can be too out-of-shape.

And then, in a stroke of holiday magic, I flipped open the newspaper on an early December morning to see a booming full-page ad for “Temporary Work! Great Wage! Happy Holidays!” placed by Amazon and the agency that fulfills its temporary staffing needs for the holiday season.

I could hear the Bezos Dollars cha-chinging in my ears.

 

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So I bundled my pride up in a knapsack, which I had obviously ordered from Amazon, drove it to the Kentucky state line, and tossed it into the Ohio River.

Then I drove to the staffing agency that handles temporary hires for Amazon, parked my Benz as far away as possible, and walked in head held high, unsure of what I was getting myself into.

Before I could muster a word, the young blonde at the front desk blurted out, “We are only hiring for night shift. It’s 6:30P to 5A. Are you still interested?”

“That’s perfect!”

 

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She was only momentarily stunned by my enthusiasm and proceeded to quickly detail what lay in store for me… in the next three hours I would have to maneuver my way through a series of computer terminals, video presentations, and drug tests before an impromptu interview where I might still be told I wasn’t quite Amazon material.

Medical school doesn’t allow time for part-time money-making endeavors, so I thought, “Three hours? I’ve held retractors longer than that!”

 

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By the time I reached the second of three computer terminals, I was beginning to wonder how much my professional reputation could be impacted in twenty years if it came out I was a gigolo between medical school and Residency.

At this computer, I was welcomed by a flashing screen. It warned me that if I was unable to score a 90% on the following exam, I would immediately be removed from the applicant pool and would have to return in 30 days for further consideration. My palms began sweating. These people were not screwing around.

Thankfully, I nailed all 20 of the picture matching questions.

 

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Cha-ching!

After fist-bumping the guy at the station next to me, I said a quick prayer thanking the Medical Licensing Examination Gods for preparing me for such a rigorous test of my mental faculties.

A short hour later, after watching a video about how awesome it was going to be working in a warehouse overnight, I was beckoned to a makeshift interview area.

 

 

A pleasant woman pulled up my on-line application and asked, “So you have a college degree, that’s great! Any other education?”

“Uh, yes. I do, but I don’t think it’s relevant.”

She looked at me quizzically. “Will you have a problem standing for 10 hours straight?”

“That shouldn’t be a problem.”

“Then get a copy of your high school transcript. That way you won’t get fired in the first week.” I humbly nodded my head and wondered again what the hell I had gotten myself into.

That was over two months ago. I can’t say processing customer returns in a warehouse overnight has been a “come to Jesus” moment, but if I needed one, it would suffice.

 

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On a recent night, while parked in the snow-covered lot outside the warehouse, waiting to begin my shift, I answered a phone call from one of my aunts. She had heard what I was doing and chatted me up about it for a minute or two.

As the conversation began to wind down, she asked, “So… you are going to be a doctor, right?

“Yes. I am. I swear. But if I ever needed a reason to go to college, which I already did, this would be it.”

She laughed. In my head, I reflexively wondered, “I am going to be a doctor, right?”

As I stood at my desk that same night, the conveyor pumping boxes alongside me, the overhead radio station blared ’80’s rock and I sang along as if I was competing for a place on the The Voice.

Axl Rose screeched, “You know where you are, you’re in the jungle, baby!”

I turned to the woman at the desk behind me and said, “More like, you’re in the Amazon!”

She giggled; I again wondered what the hell I was doing in a warehouse at 3AM, when I could be in the actual Amazon. Shooting blow darts at ravenous crocs. Or learning how to carve a canoe out of a tree with a toothpick.

I suppose that’s why they are called day-dreams.

 

“Welcome to the Jungle

We’ve got fun and ‘n’ games

We got everything you want

Honey, we know the names

We are the people that can find

Whatever you may need

If you got the money, honey

We got your disease”

welcome to the jungle

Fan Belt

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Working at the gym in grad school always had its charms. Not that I particularly enjoyed seeing people running around sweating or rhythmically gyrating on the elliptical machines or dropping barbells on their necks (yep, saw it with my own eyes, on my first day, no less). But the opportunity to meet all sorts of random people I wouldn’t have come across while strolling through campus made it worthwhile.

I also enjoyed the occasional “guy takes a racquet to the back of the head because his buddy didn’t use the wrist strap and now he’s bleeding profusely” moments that I was able to witness. Unfortunately, those were few and far between.

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The monotony of sitting behind a desk, swiping ID cards and passing out crisply folded towels came with the territory of being a gym desk jockey. Never one to make things boring, I decided to spruce up my days by being extra annoyingly cheery to everyone who crossed my path, no matter their demeanor.

This probably led to many people thinking “that guy is insane” or “he’s drunk”, and I wish I could say the latter wasn’t true a few times, but it was.

During the summer of 2003 I was enrolled in graduate school in the comfortable college town of Oxford, OH. My courses were in the afternoon, which was perfect for either staying out until 2AM boozing, or in my case, working the opening shift to make some extra money.

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However, occasionally I managed to booze until 2AM and still open the gym at 5:30A because I was often scheduled to open on the weekends. I always felt a little better when I’d be out drinking until all hours of the night with other colleagues who were also supposed to be there at 5:30AM.

But for some reason, I was always the only one to actually show up on time, if at all. For the most part, I was still able to function above “black out drunk” at 23 years old, even on 2-3 hours of sleep. Not that I look back on those mornings fondly, but I suppose they served a purpose. I’ll let you know when I figure out that purpose.

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The open shifts during the week were a different story. I’d roll out of bed at 4:30AM, jump in the shower, pack my bag for school, and hop on the Huffy I’d borrowed from a friend to turn the 25 minute walk into a five minute ride to work.

The streets were always eerily quiet, especially considering that only a few hours earlier college students, especially during the summer, had been stumbling down these same streets. The ride was almost always uneventful, save the time a Semi Tractor Trailer, making its early morning cut through Oxford, disregarded the big red stop light at the corner of Talawanda and Spring.

Having your life flash before your eyes before the sun has even dared to get itself out of bed is a great way to reconnect with Jesus. But I managed to slip by the truck’s cab before he could clip my back wheel and send me hurtling down Talawanda Avenue. I’m sure they would have been able to open the gym without me that morning, even if word had spread that I was in critical care at McCullough-Hyde. Yes, even the towel guy is replaceable.

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One Wednesday morning that summer was one for the ages though.

Every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday morning a well-known faculty member of the Communications department, Professor Bedrosian, would waddle to the check-in counter, stroll through the turnstile, grab two towels, and begin his descent to the pool. On this morning, his routine was no different.

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I had never personally witnessed him swimming, but stories abounded that his technique was more of a wading in the pool for an hour; nothing resembling a breast stroke or even a doggy-paddle had been seen.

On shifts that I was not behind the desk and was free to roam the halls and make the always terrifying stroll through the men’s locker room to make sure no one was masturbating in the shower, I had seen Professor Bedrosian in his bathing suit.

Based on the man’s physique, I could surmise that his “swimming” involved as little physical activity as possible. Or that he immediately followed it up by stopping by the UDP Dairy Shop and scarfing down about 20 doughnuts.

—–

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His massive belly was supported by his trunks being pulled above his umbilicus and he was always dripping wet as he made his way back to the locker room. No sign of towel in hand, I was left to believe that he’d been raised by wolves.

This particular morning, as every morning, Professor Bedrosian’s entrance to the gym was followed 10 minutes later by his wife, another esteemed faculty member of the Communications department. I always found her tardiness to be odd. It was as if she waited in the car until she knew he’d been inside long enough that even she wouldn’t run the risk of seeing him in his bathing suit.

I would have believed she’d never seen him in his birthday suit, but I’d heard their daughter (biological in nature), was quite the bitch. “Do you know who I am? I’m the daughter of Professors Bedrosian. I don’t care if I don’t have an ID, I’m coming in!” was her most common refrain.

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At 10:15AM, Professor Bedrosian made his way up the stairs from the locker room and into the main lobby, freshly changed into his street clothes and refreshed from his “swim”.

From 10 feet away, he launched his two towels, balled into a wet mess, towards the bin for dirty towels. I had witnessed this behavior several times before and knew that he’d become alarmingly proficient at giving his projectile the necessary arc to enter the clown’s mouth-sized hole in the counter that hid the towel bin. Sometimes it entered as a perfect swish, the sign of a true marksman. Today was one of those times.

—–

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But rather than veer to the right, towards the exit, he continued his waddle towards the counter, as if he was expecting the towels to miss their intended target.

I sat on my stool behind the counter unsure as to why he continued in my direction. He approached slowly, peering at me through his massive lenses until he reached the counter.

He stared directly at the name badge attached to my rumpled, red polo shirt and exclaimed, “Fan Belt!”

I’ve been called many things in my life, had my name misspelled since birth, but never had I been mistaken for “Fan Belt.” In a state of utter disbelief, I quickly grasped my shirt with my left hand and my name badge with my right and expected to see “Fan Belt”, an obvious typo that had been overlooked for months by me and every other person who knew my name. Professor Bedrosian’s certainty with which he spoke caused me a moment’s pause when I recognized the correct spelling.

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“Ean Bett,” I quickly replied to his now obvious mistake.

“Yes! Is that a family name?”, he countered as he turned his body towards the exit.

“Bett is my last name. So yes, that is my family name. Or were you talking about Ean?”

Professor Bedrosian, now moving towards the exit turnstile, slowed his step. And in a brief pause, he let out the most electric words I’ve had the privilege of hearing.

“Eonnnn Brett! Eeeeven Better!”

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As he continued his waddle through the turnstile and turned the corner out of my sight, I stood up, in utter disbelief. I managed to look down at my name badge again, but “Ean Bett”, a name I’d carried for 23 years, was still there.

A wave of disappointment swept over me, as if somehow Professor Bedrosian had looked straight through the name badge and deep into my soul. And once there, he revealed my true name to be Eonnnn Brett. But it was not to be. I wasn’t even Fan Belt, much less Eonnnn Brett.

When my co-worker Kim returned from her break, I quickly told her the case of mistaken identity. She responded with raucous laughter and near tears, she doubled over to the floor. She too knew Professor Bedrosian and could easily imagine the exchange.

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When I returned home later in the afternoon, the story was still percolating in my brain, so I shared it with my roommates Juice and Jinx.  A fellow employee at the gym, Juice nearly spit out his Miller Lite all over the flat screen TV when I belted out “Eonnnn Brett! Eeeeven Better!”

Jinx, on the other hand, was laughing so hard that he actually sprayed Miller Lite all over the TV.

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Days passed and I couldn’t help but to be drawn back to that bizarre moment in time; the instant when Professor Bedrosian had made me believe, if only for a second, that I’d been misnamed, and possibly miscast in the story of my life.

What could have been, if I’d been born “Fan Belt”. Or “Eonnn Brett?” Eeeeven better!

So when I was working the same shift a week later and saw Professor Bedrosian turn the corner to approach the entrance to the gym, I was filled with an indescribable joy. I could hear the words “Eeeeven Better!” reverberating through the high arching ceilings of the entrance. He made his way past the turnstile, grabbed his two towels, gave a pleasant smile, and proceeded downstairs without saying a word

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For the next hour I went about my usual greetings and salutations as the rest of the gym regulars, including the other Professor Bedrosian, made their way in and out. But when Professor Bedrosian reappeared at the top of the stairs and headed towards the counter, time had a small hiccup.

I watched as his right arm, holding his two wet towels balled into one, begin its slow ascent through the air. He released the projectile as his arm came parallel to the ground and the towels seemed to float towards the counter. I could see his continued approach from one eye as the other focused on his projectile and its perfect passage through the hole in the counter.

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http://skeptics.stackexchange.com/questions/2982/how-does-deja-vu-work

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He stopped, stared right at my name badge, and exclaimed, “Fan Belt!”

I grasped my name badge as he positioned his movements away from the counter. I responded almost instantaneously, “Ean Bett?” I felt a wave of awe come over me.

“Yes! Is that a family name?”, was his curious reply.

Several thoughts flooded my mind simultaneously. “Am I drunk?” “Is this man clinically insane?” “Am I having déjà déjà vu?”

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If I’d been filled at the time with all of the medical knowledge I now possess, I would have thought I’d just had a seizure, possibly a stroke, and would be crashing to the floor in an instant. Hopefully my face wouldn’t be smashed as it struck the stool on which I was currently seated.

But I didn’t have a seizure. Or a stroke.

I responded, “Bett is my last name. So yes, that is my family name. Or were you talking about Ean?”

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I waited for what seemed like an eternity, but was probably only a millisecond. And then, he released in his boisterous tone, “Eonnnn Brett! Eeeeven Better!”

He continued his waddle through the exit and turned the corner.

I stayed seated on the stool for a moment, deep in thought. My eyes darted back and forth, looking to see if anyone else had witnessed the impossible. I wondered if Professor Bedrosian was quick-witted enough to have intentionally pulled off what I had just experienced.

Or, was it possible that my mind had been so blown by his words, as to have not only created the déjà vu moment, but to have generated the memories of me telling the story to other people over the previous week. Is that even possible? Had I attained a level of sub-consciousness that allowed me to attain such great heights?

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I’m not sure what happened that day.

I’m uncertain if Professor Bedrosian has any idea that we had the identical exchange one week apart.

The conclusion I’ve reached is that Fan Belt, the happy, go-lucky towel guy, was mistaken for Eonnn Brett two times in his life.

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And that is a case of mistaken identity, if you listen closely, that can still be heard echoing through those same vaulted ceilings at 10:15AM every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.