girls” even though she was mostly into guys.
“Is that a Suzi Quatro–Joan Jett kind of thing?” I said. She had no idea what I was talking about, but I had a feeling she didn’t really care what I had to say on that or any other matter. It was just part of her general method of trying to overwhelm me with confusing data and erratic moods and to keep me just a little off-kilter at all times. It was working, too.
I never had any idea what she was thinking, whether she was glad to hear from me, whether she had lost interest in me, or anything. The Fog of Deanna was exhausting.
The coming Thursday was Thanksgiving, and I knew I couldn’t call or visit on that day, which worried me a little.
How was I going to make it through a whole week without any contact? I was already walking around with that punched-in-the-stomach feeling almost all the time, unable to eat or do much of anything, and I knew it would only get worse.
Then something happened that made even the Fog of Deanna look comparatively easy to navigate.
P OI NT-B LAN K AT YOU R OWN R I S K
It was my fourth session with Dr. Hexstrom, the day after my second Deanna Schumacher experience.
I have to admit, my interest in
more to life than fast times and goes into a monastery. Plus, there’s this part where he starts heaping praise on the
But maybe there was more to that guy than
Anderson investigation, band practices, learning to mispronounce vocabulary words from
Now, as much as I enjoyed discussing slans and monks and drugs with Dr. Hexstrom, I wanted to try to steer things in a different direction for this session. Basically, I just decided to point-blank her on some questions I was tired of wondering when we were going to get to. And because I knew that 231
a Hexstrom could be kind of hard to steer sometimes, I wrote them down on a sheet of paper and handed it to her when I walked in.
a) When are you going to get it over
with and put me on medication so that my brain chemistry will match everybody
else’s brain chemistry and there will be no reason for further strife and
unpleasantness and we can all die happy?
b) Why do you think my mom freaked out
over my song about how Yasmynne Schmick
hadn’t decided whether to commit suicide just yet? When are we going to get
around to discussing that? And what did
you think of the song? Not bad, huh?
c) Do they have to put a notice in the
paper when someone dies, or is it
optional?
I hadn’t meant to put (c) there, but I wrote it without thinking and decided in the end not to cross it out. I almost added another question, too, for my own personal information, about what base oral sex counts as, but thought it might be better not to get into it. As for (c), though, maybe Dr.
Hexstrom would have some ideas.
She did, though she gave me a funny, Jimenez-Macanally–esque look and wanted to know why I was asking. I showed her the Timothy J. Anderson card and told her how we couldn’t find any funeral notice in the paper on or around that date.
232
“I don’t think you
“So if you didn’t list it in the paper, it would be because you didn’t want anyone to know it was happening and