Category: TARC

I had two fears come true in the last twenty-four hours. This morning, I wasn’t looking, and for the first time ever I got on the wrong bus for work. It took me another three hours just to get back to where I started. I don’t know how late I’ll be here tonight.

And last night my fish finally winged his way to The Land Where Fish Are Eternally Blessed. I don’t really know why–this was about the best his life has ever been. I’ve been changing his water regularly, feeding him once a day, and he hasn’t been moved in weeks.

When he first started acting oddly, Maria and I googled frantically for betta diseases, and checked him for all the symptoms. There was a little while when we thought he had a fungal infection, but we proved ourselves wrong. For all appearances, he was a perfectly healthy fish, except didn’t swim around–he just hovered at the top or sank to the bottom of the bowl. He was still breathing when I left for work yesterday morning, and he wasn’t when I got home.

I never liked the idea of flushing fish, so we gave him a burial, in a small cardboard box lined with paper towels. Maria suggested putting some of his things in with him, which we did: some of the red glass stones from the bottom of his bowl, and the little ceramic tank goblin.

We closed the box, said thank you and goodbye, and slid him into the trash chute. I think it came open on the way down, because it made a lot of noise, like stones hitting the walls. I was proud of this; he went out like a rock star.

He was only a fish, but since I’m a human, I ascribed to him more importance than fish usually get. He was a constant in almost-a-year of rapidly changing roommates. He was a dependent at a time when I very much needed to take care of something, as a means of being okay again myself. This was something Amanda knew, magically, empathically. In three years of gifts, he was the best she ever gave to me. I very nearly named him Hope.

I might get another betta eventually, but not until I have a bigger tank, a heater and a water filter. Some of the stuff I read while I was looking for symptoms the other night made me wonder how he lived this long at all (but then again, I’ve wondered how he lived through a lot of things).

He only started really flaring at a mirror a week and a half ago: he was learning to stand up for himself. When I had loud music on near him, he’d dance to it, out of time. He was quite a lot like me, or what I’d like to be: shy, red, beautiful, effortlessly able to forget.

No presentation this morning–the CEO had appendicitis this weekend! (And I got a hernia!) He’s fine, though, so it’s just rescheduled for a week later.

I bought a TV yesterday, although I ended up choosing brand reliability over a flat screen and got a Phillips. We still don’t have cable at home, but I do have an XBox and a brand-new high-definition AV pack, and now–no offense, TARC–me and S-Video are best friends.

Speaking of TARC, the same bus I’d been taking from the old apartment actually comes right by the new apartment, which is convenient to the point of suspicion. I have to get up earlier, but I also get to nap on the bus now. Coming soon: sleepy Brendan misses his stop and ends up hitching back from Indiana.

6.16.03 1731 hrs: I’m standing here at the pseudo-bus stop nearest my job (1944 Goldsmith) and whoop, the bus came. On cue.

6.16.03 1745 hrs and Bus 21 has hit the end of its route. The kindly tired driver is taking a three-minute cigarette break and then telling me I should take 23, not 17, to get home.

6.16.03 1759 hrs at the stop in front of Taco Bell. This is rapidly degenerating into the kind of minute-by-minute narratives I would write about every six months in grade school, when I got a diary for my birthday or Christmas and get inspired, sometimes for a whole day.

As pulling out the notepad has failed to magically produce a bus this time, I can talk about my situation a bit. I ride the bus now, or I say I do, since it’s my first day doing it and I’m not even home yet. As someone who’s depended on the kindness of strangers for transportation his whole life, though, I kind of like it. The buses are clean and, so far, uncrowded, and they have a neat acronym. TARC. It makes me want to rename this thing TARCblog (Ken gets that).

6.16.03 1808 hrs and I’m on 17. What the hell, it got here first.

So this is how I go from place to place now, here, being someone who lives on Bardstown Road. I’ve plunged into this and I’m glad, because I LIKE it. I am infatuated with Louisville. I want to understand the Highlands. I want to grok TARC.

6.16.03 1919 hrs: home, showered, redressed, finally posting again. And here’s this: I MADE IT THROUGH MY FIRST DAY.

Talk about the last week point five (a million years) soon enough. For now I have to get back out and do things, here, in this bright green shoppy place where I am. I have a boss and a cubicle. I have a kitchen stuffed with food. I have the interweb on cable. I can walk to the ice cream store and the comic book store and the CD store, and I have friends and a phone and summer.

I am unjustifiably lighthearted. I can’t believe how good it is to have this, my big new happy perfectly ordinary life.