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 Texas : Features : Humor / Column : "Stumbling Forward"
Itchy Problem
by John Gosselink

Alfred. E. Newmanlink
While growing up, I was that kid you could dare to touch anything. A river bloated cow, someone’s Grandma’s dentures, both in glass of water or in napping mouth, strange growth on the mutt living behind the grocery store, I was the kid the other kids made touch it.

How they got me to touch weird and/or disgusting things was my ignorance to the dare penal code, not knowing when refusing a dare crossed the misdemeanor to felony line. Double-dare? Double-dog-dare? Triple-black-dog-dare? Who knew? I was just sure I didn’t want anything on my record showing up years later that would embarrass me in a press conference during a presidential bid.

“Is it true, Governor Gosselink, that in 1975, you feloniously refused a double-dog-dare-to-infinity to touch an ossified dog dropping issued by a Mr. Jack-Jack McCoy?” I was a pretty politically savvy 8 year old and wasn’t taking any chances.

But just like any addiction, what started off as satisfying peer pressure evolved into recreational touching of stuff, to daily touching of stuff, to ultimately a life centered on finding the next thing to touch. Telling the wife that I was golfing, I’d spend whole Saturdays wandering landfills, swamps, and the Neverland Ranch looking for strange things to touch. It’s sad, but it’s who I am.

This proclivity for tactile adventure does have its downside, especially if one has a violent reaction to plants producing the oil urushiol. In other words, itchy poison ivy folk. I just happen to be the official, and itchy, spokesman for said group.

We’ve learned the hard dark side of a seemingly innocuous touch of a pretty leaf can have long and life changing effects. And don’t believe those older kids who try to tell you nothing can happen the first time you do it, or that if you jump up and down and drink a coke with an aspirin in it afterwards, you’ll be safe. These myths are allowed to persist due to the woefully inaccurate and naïve health class curriculum mandated by the state education agency. And like the plague of touching things, it’s time we were honest with and about our kids about poison ivy.

Maybe my story can prevent others from following the same path to itchy and scratchy destruction. (Please insert your favorite after-school special music, circa 1981, and imagine me being played by an older, fatter, harrier Robbie Benson, with a special appearance by Barry Bostwick as the knowing and wise “Uncle Jimmy”).

Through my years of touching stuff, I had had the usual, almost cliché, experiences with poison ivy, oak, sumac, and the sort. A rash here, an irritation there, nothing I couldn’t handle and never really gave it much thought. But a few weeks ago I was out in the yard doing some landscaping and touching the occasional Houston Toad with a tumor hopping by when it happened.

I was trying to put some flowers around the base of a Pecan tree, but these vines creeping up the side of it kept getting in the way. So I thought, “I shall touch these strange vines, because that is the way I am, and then rip them from this tree with verve and manliness, celebrating my virile success by rubbing my eyes vigorously.” You can probably see the flaw in this plan.

The next day is a Sunday, and at church my eyes were bit poofy and watery, but nothing I couldn’t handle. I went home and spent the afternoon doing more things with verve, manliness, and touching because, as I’ve said, that’s the kind of guy I am.

Wake up Monday morning, or at least I think I wake up. It’s incredible dark. First reaction “Oh my gosh, I’ve gone blind overnight!! How can that be, I haven’t done anything that the coach who taught health warned against since I was a teenager!”

Second reaction, touch a crusty residue being issued from the corner of the eye (at least I get the comfort of touching something weird) and stumble to the bathroom. My right eye is swollen completely shut, but I can see through a little sliver in my left. You add swollen to big and hairy, and it’s not a good look.

Swollen and itchy is no way to go through life, so I ignored my usual aversion to going to the doctor and made an appointment. Looking like a bus had repeatedly backed over my face, the receptionist asked, with air quotes and all, if I had “walked into a door” and starting calling the spousal abuse hot-line. After assuring the authorities this was just a touching stuff accident, I got some help.

My treatment included some steroids, but not the cool kind. I was greatly disappointed. After the sumac swelling went down, there wasn’t any swelling anywhere else, especially not in the bicep area. Again, my dreams of playing left field for the San Francisco Giants were dashed.

After my eyes opened, I made the mistake of trying to shave. That really gets the swelling going and my face blew up round as a beach-ball. I looked like Charlie Brown and Lyndie England’s love child. Kids, no matter what you do, it is impossible to look cool when you get sumac in your face. After a few more days and skin sloughing, lots and lots of sloughing, I finally returned to life of seeming normalcy.

So that’s my story. Hopefully someone who reads this will learn from the mistakes I’ve made and not suffer the devastating effects of reckless touching stuff. Next week, a very special episode of SF when I learn the hard lesson of drinking milk without smelling it first.
© John Gosselink
"Stumbling Forward"
June 16, 2005 column
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