Sunday, June 25, 2006

The Day Of

When I arrived home I noticed that the grass needed to be cut and the trash cans needed to be brought inside. I changed into shorts and took care of these domestic rituals. It’s rare that I’m home on a Thursday, a little after 12, with time on my hands to do such things. There’s the pressing need of the suicide matter, of course, but there’s civility as well. I can’t have the neighbors saying things like “his lawn was a mess,” and “the trash cans were still outside!” No wonder he killed himself. I even say hello to Lisa who lives across the street. She calls me over while I’m cutting the grass in my shorts. She tells me that she quit her job in order to stay home to help Timothy who is having difficulties at school. It’s either Timothy or her other son, Jonathan; I’m not sure which. I’m not listening to anything she says, but I smile. She’s checking out my hairy legs.

I put the lawn mower back in the garage, next to the trash cans. I strip of my sweaty shorts as I go upstairs to shower. I don’t know whether to use deodorant after I get cleaned up, but I definitely know that I should brush my teeth and put gel in my hair. My wiry mane is unruly without gel. I imagine there’s a right way and a wrong way to do this, but no one seems to have left any clues. For a few days now, I have searched the internet for suicide etiquette but most sites are devoted to suicides Do-Not’s, as in: “Don’t do it, you’ll regret it;” “Don’t do this to your family, they’ll never forgive you;” or (my favorite) “Don’t let this ruin your life.” How do you tell these internet sites that for the person who wants to kill himself, the last thing he cares about is how this will affect the rest of his life? Gentlemen, get a clue.

Since there’s no guidance on line, I develop my own plan of action. I sort all my keys and put them in plastic bags with labels. There are the keys to the front door and keys to the back door (because the contractor messed up and did not key all the doors to the same lock). There are two sets of keys to the new automatic garage door I had installed six months ago, when I was still optimistic that someday I would meet someone to share my home with and that he would need his own key to park his car in the garage. There are keys to my parents’ house which I never used but they entrusted me with in case anything should happen to them. Ironically, they don’t have a key to my house. There are keys to Anne’s house (of course), and keys to Mark’s apartment which I never returned to him when we broke up. He asked for them back but I told him I lost them. I was hoping that maybe we would get back together again, so I held on to them, secretively. He told me later that he changed his lock. Now the keys are useless to me or anyone else, so I trash them.

I lay out all the keys on the kitchen counter, clearly labeled as to source and function. They’ll find my body upstairs, but surely someone will check out the kitchen. I imagine a cop or a detective, or maybe even a snoopy neighbor (most probably Lisa), will open the refrigerator to get some water. They’ll place the water jug on the counter and they’ll notice the keys in their plastic bags. “Hey, here’s the keys!,” someone will say. “Problem solved!” They found the keys. Now they can sell the house and drive the car off the driveway. Make everything neat and tidy for the next owner.

Anne will probably be the first one here, but she only has the keys to the back door. I don’t want her to come around the back in search of me. I just cut the grass, and if it rains tonight the clippings will get wet and stick to her shoes. I don’t want her tracking grass clippings all over the house. My son Joey knows the combination to the automatic garage door, but maybe in a panic he’ll forget the numbers or the door opener will malfunction (as things always do when they need to work). I decide to leave the front door unlocked. My ex-wife lives in fear of open doors, and is always locking up locks and admonishing everyone to check theirs bolts and latches. She’ll be horrified that I left the door open all night, but I really have nothing to worry about. What’s the worst that could happen to me? Someone could come in and murder me.

Upstairs I sit at my computer, to write the infamous suicide note and make some final banking arrangements. It’s amazing how many bills are on automatic pay. It will take months for Anne to figure out that if I’m dead I no longer need cable, or cell phone, or even electricity or water for that matter. I stop automatic billing for all non-essentials, and I leave instructions in my “suicide note” as to the account number for utilities, mortgage and other essentials that either Anne or a prospective buyer for this house will need.

I imagine that most suicide notes are grandiose and moving. They are supposed to explain everything and make everyone feel sorry for the one who killed himself. I don’t intend to go this route. In the end, all my suicide note consists of are instructions to Anne and to my boss, Ronald, because even though he’s a prick he has a good heart and I know he’ll help out Anne. I tell them where my money is, what numbers to contact, where my important papers can be found. As to the rest, the reason why, I figure they already know. I messed up. I messed up everything I had because I needed to come out to the world as gay man. I knew nothing about being gay, had no idea what this really meant, but I thought that coming out and becoming gay (yes, becoming gay) would be what would make me happy. I had become straight to please my parents and society. I had become a father (twice) to please my wife. I had become a successful lawyer to please my employers. So when would I become what I want to be? I envisioned that other sensitive men, so alluring and attractive, would welcome me with open arms and make everything alright. But nothing has really changed. Now that I have become gay (as I always was, as I always will be), I realize that I am still not the man I ought to be. Instead I continue to be a frightened curly haired twelve year old boy who was beaten to a pulp by his parents and had the will to live struck out of him.

I go through the checklist one more time. Yes, I made a checklist for this event. Change clothes, turn off lights, pay bills, write suicide note. Done, done, done. I decide I should send Anne a payment from my checking account. I have about $20,000. I figure $15,000 should help her out while my estate is being probated. I send her an electronic payment from the handy bill payment service that my bank offers on line.

Back to the checklist. Cancel internet chat. Good thing I remember this. I have to cancel the subscription to all my dating services and my gay “cruising” sites. I have not used these in months. I would be mortified if anyone found these on my credit card statements. They appear discreetly as “Buddy Services” or “Talk 800”. You have to call the 800 number posted next to the name to find out what the service is for. When you call, you get a telephone operator that proudly announces that this is either “Sex-Man,” “Macho-hunt,” or some other equally provocative tell all name. Not the way I want my surviving friends and relatives to remember me.

I’ve marked everything off on my checklist, and I’m growing weary. The euphoria of the decision has almost warn off. I’m starting to have second thoughts. I won’t allow this. I open up my stash of sleeping pills and thoughtlessly put them all in my mouth to swallow in one gulp. Ninety pills. Fortunately they are very small. I run to the bathroom to drink water to chase the pills. I swallow hard. The pills are in my stomach. Now it is done. Now I have committed suicide.

I lay down in my bed. All I want to do these days is sleep. Sleep is my biggest comfort. I yearn for sleep. I fall asleep.

4 comments:

Bigg said...

I am glad that you didn't go through with this. Just reading about it is harrowing.
I have felt this same compulsion, and so I know a little bit of how you feel.
Please keep posting. Believe it or not, it helps to share.
Be well.

A Troll At Sea said...

ER:

while you have landed in the place I dread most -- gay and too old and too what not for the "scene" -- you are OBVIOUSLY a unique and worthwhile human being. Anglo- Danish- Spanish- Argentine? Can there possibly be TWO of you?

While this is advice I would bridle at receiving myself, I would say: drive pack down the Clara Barton Pkwy and look at those trees. Watch a movie that makes you laugh. Sit in the sun. Think up federal regulations to follow your sudden naming as Secretary of Homosexual Affairs in the Bush Administration. [Talk about trench warfare!]

Keep posting.
But try to find a silver lining in SOMEthing.
Your
Troll at Sea

Frank said...

Simply riveting.

I'm so glad that you didn't do yourself in. Your children need you.

I live in Alexandria and know the Clara Barton Parkway well. Take Troll's advice...and enjoy the trees!

bear said...

Wow, nicely written. I remember days like this in High School, although it was because I didn't want to be gay - it was so carefully planned out. I remember having a strange mechanically detached feeling you capture so well. In retrospect, I didn't feel that I would be missed, or that I would hurt anyone if I was gone like my mother or sisters or friends. I was convinced that they probably didn't want to know anyways (that I was gay) so it was for the best that I didn't explain why. My death looked to be a win-win...
BUT in the middle of just getting ready to go to "sleep" I had a change of plans, I didn't want my mother to find me dead in bed, I figured I'd die for a CAUSE at least. So, I joined the Army...(needless to say I must have seemed pretty brave considering I wasn't afraid to suffer or die.) AND I remember at times laying out there in the woods, looking at the trees, trees no one ever saw and was amazed about life. I realized another CAUSE would also be to help others especially when everyone is suffering out there in the field and their happiness seemed to rub off. For me, I put my energy in other purposes. My purpose became to ease the suffering in the world (and there is plenty!) I am able where others are clearly not...I may be unhappy, but I can make happiness for others...and once in a while, I find that I am happy to help them too. I have become to think to myself: "How selfish of me to not at least stick around to help out the rest... or to at least see the sights!" Please try to stay.