Warm with associations and as anchoring
as Linus’ security blanket, Christmas traditions fit like stockings “hung by
the chimney with care.” Pleases me, therefore, that this end-of-year Sullygram
has become a kind of tradition over the years. It’s also my holiday card to the
thousands of fans, friends and readers who see it every December.
Christmas cuts like a knife sometimes. Sometimes
that takes the form of self-pity, sometimes as charity to others, and sometimes
we are too busy celebrating to notice what’s right before our eyes. When I was
a young man there was a Christmas that delivered all three. That was the
Christmas I wrapped up a box of hate and gave it to myself, only to open it and
find love.
It was a bitterly cold Christmas, and I was
living in an old men’s hotel filled with human wrecks. I was 19. The Lawndale
was $7 a week my first year there (no, not during the Civil War, though the
hotel did burn down eventually). Could’ve fled back to the ‘burbs of
Detroit for the holidays, could’ve found a home-cooked meal. But being
proud, stupid, and a little too martyred holed up in that horrid coffin of a
room, I did not. Doing selfless things gratis for others elsewhere seemed to
justify it; and I was a bit of a maverick, not succeeding where everyone said I
was supposed to succeed, nor given to letting my emotions show over the
failures. The camera was stuck in the wrong direction. It was pointed at me. I
think a lot of writers start out like that.
When I returned to my room at the end of each
day – four walls I could almost touch all at the same time – I tried to go
numb. Do you know anything as seething with emotion as trying to go
numb? I hated the Lawndale with such passion that I walled off the human misery
and loneliness there. Though in this case, the walls were paper thin, and
you could hear the moans and the groans of the dying and the drunk. There was
an unwritten code peculiar to the Lawndale. If someone came in beat up and
bleeding, you might hear every drop of blood dripping on the vinyl runner over
the creaking and snapping floorboards in the hall, but if you opened your door,
the gasping stopped. In that mistrustful place, you didn’t flinch before a
tiger. No quarter asked, none given. Fine with me. The people I cared for
didn’t live at the Lawndale. The place and its cast-offs made my skin crawl.
Above all, I hated the man across the hall.
As I said, the rooms were tiny, but
unbelievably the man across from me had a roommate. I never saw the roommate,
never wanted to, but it wasn’t hard to picture a pathetically submissive
creature completely enslaved by that tyrant. The brute would come in, drunk and
wheezing, and thirty seconds after his door clicked shut the vilest verbal
abuse you might imagine would begin. Sometimes it went beyond that to
cringe-worthy blows. But I never quite had the guts to stop it.
A new Christmas morning came that year, and with
it the hollow feeling that I was, in fact, truly alone. I know now that this is
absurd. The biggest club in the world is the one teeming with emotionally
isolated people. But when you are young, there is nothing worse than the
suspicion that your self-pity is justified. There was less than $10 in my
pocket that morning when I set out in my wreck of a car, the “Grey Ghost,” to a
local White Tower, a.k.a. the Porcelain Room, for a “scudburger” Christmas
meal.
I don’t remember if there were any other
customers at the counter, but I vividly remember the white-haired old lady
scraping the grill. She was celebrating, you see. Not sitting at the counter
waiting to be served, celebrating. It took me a few minutes to catch the irony.
I had to quit staring at my reflection in the glass opposite and realize that
all the photos strung along a green ribbon on one wall were probably her
grandkids. She shuffled back and forth on fallen arches, and, damn, if she
wasn’t singing. And she had on a silly Santa hat. And there was red and green
bric-a-brac and fake snow and angel hair all over the place. A wrapped present,
too, though you could see it was just stuffed with more paper. I was having a
little trouble swallowing at that point, because if an arthritic grandmother could
shuffle around singing while she served a young martyr on Christmas day, what
did that say about me? Suddenly the scudburger became memorable cuisine. It
knocked my $10 almost in half; but I added the remaining fin as a tip and got
the hell out of there.
It was compulsive, and by no means
charitable, but I felt better cranking the Grey Ghost to life and starting up
Livernois toward Vernor Highway. I had just awakened it seemed to the world
around me, and so life took on a clarity that moved me suddenly into the
present tense:
Hoarfrost is on the inside glass of the White
Tower, but out here it is arctic, and as I’m approaching the railroad tracks, I
see a man in a cardboard box. His head is cut and swollen, blood frozen in his
hair, and he is barefoot. Lawndale codes do not apply in train yards, and the
poor bastard – who it turns out has just crawled out of a freight car – is
going to freeze very quickly, so I stop. He mumbles the old story through
chattering teeth of how he got drunk, rolled, left to fate. What strikes me is
he is naked inside the cardboard box. I mean, the rollers took everything, as
if out of malice to let him die. You can’t imagine the blubbering gratitude of
a Tennessee man up to visit his sister at Wayne State, who just about becomes a
vice-icle when his binge turns bad. It takes us a couple of hours to find his
sister’s apartment, because he doesn’t have a clue except by scrutinizing every
neighborhood as we inch up and down narrow streets off Woodward and the Cass
corridor. Merry Christmas.
So now I’m feeling pretty good, except that I
have to return to the old men’s burial ground. I’ve been good for a few hours,
and learned something, but like a movie, it is over. Fade to black, and I go
back to the past tense:
The Lawndale ate me up as I climbed to the
second floor and the last room in the line – 210 – which was odd, because later
in college I would be in room 210, and again, teaching at Fordson High in
Dearborn, 210. Anyway, now that I was back in you know where, you know who came
in on my heels and started you know what. He was on a tear this time. Drunk,
vile, violent. I stood it as long as I could, longer than I should have by
months. Then I went out into the hall to do whatever it took to end his rampage
against another human being.
Thought I was going to have to fist his door
a couple of good ones, but as it happens it was slightly ajar. The smack of
flesh on flesh was rending as he berated his roommate in terms unfit to write
of here. So I took two steps toward the wedge of light…and then I saw it all.
The mirror. The face in the mirror. The whole room behind him in the mirror.
The marks from the fists were clear on the cheek above the stubble as I saw the
last blow land. But the testosterone boiling in me suddenly went as flat as
water. Because he didn’t have a roommate.
He was beating himself. Berating himself.
Calling himself everything but a child of God. Nothing I had felt or thought
about him all those months could approach the depths of his own self-hate. How
could I have been so wrong? An epiphany moment for me? Yeah, you could say.
Damn my soul if I ever underestimate any human being that badly again. Though,
I’m sorry to admit, I’ve been over the line too many times since. My
self-loathing neighbor slammed the door when he became aware of me, but he
opened another to my future as a writer.
I’m not a soft touch. I believe in human
excellence, if only we can get outside of whatever boxes imprison our thinking.
Low expectations cripple people, and are really a vote of no-confidence. It
doesn’t matter what that man at the Lawndale lacked. What mattered was what he
had, which was a mirror filled with more self-honesty than most of us can
stand. He knew who he was. What he was. And at that moment I knew what he could
be. To this day I can’t hear Kris Kristofferson sing “Lord help me, Jesus, I’ve
wasted it all, help me, Jesus, I know what I am…” without seeing that man’s
haunted face.
I can’t tell you what truths you’ve
discovered about yourself or about the human condition, but I know that they
will come out in your life one way or another. Of course, you may have to look
outside the box to find them. “…angels unaware.” They may not be who you think.
Since
this is my Christmas card to you, I’m including a dozen of my fav memories in
the photos below that I’ve used for cards in previous years, plus two bonus
photos: one of me and one taken by my friend Emma on her college campus in
upstate New York. Merry, merry, and the happiest of holidays to you.
Thomas "Sully" Sullivan