Monday, November 19, 2012

Caution: Liz-aster Area


            There is nothing that makes quite as harsh a start to the morning as waking up and re-reading your post-midnight texts and tweets from the night before. I know I get punchy and yappy when I’m overtired, but somehow last night while tweeting with my friend Vera at 3AM local time, I went from a joke about how I’ve got to stop proposing marriage to buskers (perfectly reasonable and I stand by that assessment in the unforgiving light of day) to visualizing a man playing the ukulele while gripping my still-beating heart in his teeth while it pumps my blood all down his front. Um. What?

            I so wish I could introduce all of you to my friend Maz. She’s lovely. She’s gorgeous and clever and is possessed of a bone-dry sense of humor, and she also has some of the most eloquent gestures I’ve ever seen. She has one in particular that means “surely I must have misheard you, because no one could possibly be dumb enough to say what I think you just said.” (She’s German. They’re a succinct people.) If you know Maz, you know exactly the gesture I mean. It’s a little stiff-armed shrug combined with a side-eye, and I’ve seen it stop stampeding morons in their tracks. Somehow the critic who lives in my head has picked up the Maz gesture, and she uses it on me often. When I start talking about ukulele players and my ripped-out heart and fountains of my blood, my inner critic does the Maz at me pretty hard.

            Freya and I went to see a one-off performance of Tommy last week. We both went in completely blind – as far as I was concerned, David Hunter from the reality show Superstar was in it. He was the cute one who made me cry a lot, and I quite wanted to see him perform live.  I’m not even going to try to summarize Tommy here but if you’ve never seen it: paedophilia, pinball, Christ figure, early retirement. Yeah, it makes about that much sense onstage, too. After the end of the show, Freya and I went around back to say a genial “well done, sir” to Mr. Hunter.

            At this point, anyone who has met me ever is rehearsing the Maz gesture to perform it along with my inner critic, because you see where this is going.

            As per all expectations, I was the world’s most socially graceless little badger. I said “fuck” about fifteen times to poor Mr. Hunter, and “jizz” once, and then I accidentally punched him. It was maybe not my finest hour. Would we go so far as to call it a “Liz-aster”? I think we can. (I am totally making “Liz-aster” happen, you guys. It’s not like I don’t have enough events that need that descriptor.) Much to the gentleman’s credit, he was properly lovely to me. Of course he was! He’s a retired rock star. He’s probably dealt with weirder shit than blue-haired sweary American bitches. He really is gorgeous, though, and Freya and I spent the entire train ride home gently smacking each other in a blind fog of lust and crooning “Why couldn’t he be awful so we’d have an excuse to not fancy him?”

            If my inner critic doesn’t stop doing the Maz gesture at me, she’s totally going to get a repetitive strain injury in her shoulders.