Friday, February 5, 2010

for lack of a better word...

I'm not going to get much editing done on my novel tonight, I can already tell. I've gotten through Chapter 6, and I'm pleased to report that (to my eyes) Chapters 2 and 3 look largely all right. Chapter 4 might need a little maturation, like bourbon in a cask, plus some trimming and cleaning, like an oil lamp. Chapters 5 and 6 are holding my interest nicely. Perhaps I need to make the foreshadowing and inferences within them a tad more subtle. We'll see what that nice editor says. Like I said, I'm scared of that manuscript. It's like a hedge animal in a topiary that's still a bit rough around the edges, and I'm the gardener. Only the hedge animal is alive, like in The Shining. If I do it wrong, it'll tear me to pieces. Maybe I'll get to it after I finish this post. Yeah, maybe. Anyway, on with my story: I would not hesitate to assert that my brain is my most precious possession. Why, I couldn't do a thing without it. I've painstakingly trained it over the past 23 years to recognize obscure words, create fictive universes out of thin air, process abstract thought, make complex plans (and duly disregard them), precisely order my every thought and action, and conjure up vivid images of naked women at my command. However, I've lately become concerned that my vaunted mind has reached the peak of its performance, and is beginning to backslide. It appears, due to some disturbingly frequent occurrences, that my brain is no longer developing or smartening. Quite the opposite, in fact. One of these disquieting phenomena is my increasing inability to remember an appropriate word. When I'm speaking in an erudite manner (as I usually do), I will suddenly discover that the ten-dollar word I desperately need to bring the whole thing off eludes me. I've come up against these situations before, and my mind has never failed to supply me with a suitable and almost-as-erudite substitute. These days, I'm afraid, my brain merely fills the verbal gap with the first word to come to mind. And that word, usually, is anything but suitable. Consider the following example. Some months ago, before I left Korea, I was over at my friends' apartment. Adam and Elaine were my two English coworkers, and we'd often get together after work for dinner and a beer. I readily admit to being a little buzzed that evening. Somehow or other, we got to talking about plant sex. That is, botanical reproduction. Specifically, flowers. (I must've introduced this topic by saying something like 'You know why [wind-pollinated] flowers are so cool? Because they reproduce by spraying their genetic material all over creation.') Having successfully tripped through an entire lecture on anthers, and stamens, and sporangia, and pistils, and all that horticultural pornography, I was nearing the climax. I was in fine form, too. "So the male flowers open up, and if the wind is right, then all of the—" It was at this point that my mind failed me. I faltered suddenly. I couldn't remember the word "pollen." It utterly escaped me. This was infuriating. I desperately needed that word to finish what I was saying. But that mattered little to my stumbling synapses. So while my brain was fumbling with an ulterior way of expressing the idea of male genetic material, my mouth prudently opened and said "—jizz—" Two things happened in the next split-second which I don't need to tell you about. A & E burst out laughing and I, though chuckling good-naturedly, went red. I'd never said the word "jizz" before in my life. I hated it. As a rule, I dislike any crass slang term for biological processes or material. (Watch, everybody's going to post one in the comment box now.) Sometimes I have difficulty saying the word "sperm," even as it relates to whales. So to up and say a word like that, out of the blue, when my brain knew at least five other ways to say it which were more intelligent and highbrow...that was disconcerting. This happens to me more frequently than I care to admit. I'm not sure what I can attribute it to. It's a bit early for Alzheimer's to be setting in, and I wouldn't have thought the relatively small amount of drunkenness I've dabbled in would do the trick. It's exasperating, whatever the reason. And puzzling. Dumbfounding. Nonplussing. Bemusing. Befuddling. Confusing. Confounding, even. Well, maybe I haven't lost the synonym game yet.

9 comments:

Tess Kincaid said...

Yup, I'd say it's a bit early for Alzheimer's to set in! Enjoyed browsing your blog. In addition to witty writing, I've gotta say you've got the biggest blog header pick in the whole wide blogosphere!

Thanks for the delightful comment at WM today.

Susan Carpenter Sims said...

willow, you should have seen the pic he had before!

I've been wondering, Postie, the same thing about myself. I find my grammar slipping. Sshh - don't tell my students. Actually, they already know. The FIRST friggin day of class I misspelled a word on the board! How humiliating!

I NEVER EVER used to misspell words. Ever. Now I find myself doing atrocious things like using the wrong "your/you're" or "their/there/they're." I'm utterly horrified. Maybe it's the aliens taking over the planet through electronic mediums. Maybe I shouldn't spend so much time on this computer. Maybe all that LSD is finally catching up with me.

Anyway - there, their, they're - you're not alone.

Incidentally, yesterday in class we were discussing the difference between big sweeping stories and small ones. Lord of the Rings was given as an example of a big story, but when I asked for a small example, the room was silent for a moment, until someone finally suggested The Shining. I thought that was a brilliant example.

Entrepreneur Chick said...

Postie, you said "jizz"?! I laughed OUT LOUD for a very long time and woke Eliot up from his nap in his stroller.

I did that at my doctor's office last week. I was looking for some simple word and it just escaped me. I hate that too.

Polly, hi!

A.T. Post said...

Well now, this brings up an interesting point. Is that picture I've got up there TOO big? All I know is how it looks on my laptop's (wide) screen. (It's 1280X800.) It sticks a little lower down on the screen than I'd like, too. Should I make it narrower? Shorter? Can you all see the whole thing from your browser windows?

Willow: Thank you as well for stopping by, and the kind words!

Polly: I knew it. It's those dingblasted aliens again. They stole my work ethic, too. So good to know I'm not alone, though!

"The Shining" is a rather good example! That's a claustrophobic book. Whole thing takes place in a hotel, practically. Dostoevsky's "Notes from Underground" would be a good one, too. That's just six characters and a few apartments in St. Petersburg.

EC: Yep, I said it. [blush] Glad I made you laugh, though.

Sometimes I think there's an evil little gremlin up there in my brain and he's fooling around with the switchboard.
"Whoa, we got a ten-dollar word heading for the mouth hell bent for leather, huh? Nah, I don't think so. Shut the floodgates!"
BAM.
Dang it.

Jerry said...

Stumbling Synapses. That would be a nifty name for a blog, or for a rock band for that matter.

Believe it or not, this is a universal problem. And the more you pay attention to it the more likely it is to occur. Don't sweat it. I doubt that Alzheimers or Dementia is attacking yet. Just pay attention to the simple act of communicating....and soon you will the spewing at the absolutely perfect words like.....dare I say it? Jizz!

CATE said...

Wait until you get to my age (which will, for now, remain unrevealed, secret, hidden, undisclosed, concealed, clandestine, private) and you may not even be able to think of the word 'jizz'. It will become 'thingy'.
Eventually everything does.
Nice to meet you too, my fellow sunset-loving Libran :)
And yes, I cheated. I used a thesaurus. I'm old.

A.T. Post said...

Jerry: Stumbling Synapses. I'll have to wait on that until things REALLY get bad, and then I can blog all of them. Good idea! Good to know I'm by no means alone.

Cate: Heh heh. 'Thingy.' I wish wish wish that my brain had supplied me with THAT word instead.

Nothing wrong with thesauruses (thesauri? Blogger recognizes both).

Thanks for commenting, you two!

Delwyn said...

I have tell you I have never heard of that little jizz word.
You sound utterly discombobulated...
A serious dialect disorder...

A.T. Post said...

Delwyn! Hi there! I see your comments on Polly's blog all the time. Thanks for stopping in. Yeah, "jizz" is one of those rather crass words that my generation is intimately familiar with.

I must confess. I had to look up the word "discombobulated." I USED to know what it meant...that dialect disorder is getting worse every day...