The Earring
or
Piercing My Flesh to Support Friends and Spite Relatives
In 1982, men didn’t get piercings. Only girls did. Never mind that poking holes in your skin is otherwise kind of a tough-guy thing. Girls did it; therefore, guys didn't.
On my college campus, which was a few years ahead of other colleges in social trends, some gay men got earrings. A few extra-good-looking straight men got them, too. The straight men wore them differently and it was always just the one. I didn't belong in either camp, so I ignored the trend and concentrated on writing my term papers. (And I started considering tattoos.)
One day in the fall, a friend drove seven hours to my college dorm bearing what he called "mind-altering substances." He also had a request: that we go get our ears pierced. Now, you might ask yourself: "Why would someone drive four hundred miles to another state to get an earring?" This is an excellent question and it suggests you grew up in an era when people pierced things willy-nilly including the willy and probably a nilly or two but I don’t want to go on about that here.
I and my friend, who I will call "Adam" to protect his identity, did not grow up in such an era. We grew up in the "hey, that guy wants to kill you for being different" era. Wearing a collared shirt would get you in a fight in the parking lot. (Most of the fights were anticlimactic, fists only, weapons also being considered unmanly.)
"Come on," Adam explained. "You were already talking about it."
Adam's logic, as he revealed over the span of an hour or so, went like this:
1. He wanted an earring
2. He did not want it done in our hometown
3. Therefore, he had traveled far
4. But first, we needed to get extremely stoned
It made more sense after we had started on step four. I was not clear on whether the substances were meant to provide courage or whether he wanted to get stoned and having a stud pushed through his bloody earlobe was the excuse. Either way made sense after we repeated step four.
"Where can we go?" he asked.
"There's a place in the mall." Young college women had taken me to the mall in South Hadley. I'd even bought them earrings at two of the four jewelry stores there. That is, I'd spent money in the places a college student could afford.
"I don't think you should drive." He rose and tested his balance. His hand shot out to the doorframe. "I don't think I want to, either."
"We'll take the bus." My words sounded confident but I knew we'd have to find the bus stop. Plus we'd have to recognize when to leave the bus after we got on. That would be up to me. The world looked fuzzy, like it did when I was breathing laughing gas in a dentist's office. I wasn't sure I was competent to ride.
"How much?" He glared at me for a few seconds before I figured out he meant money.
"Buses around here are free," I pointed out. Part of me felt like pointing out I had already pointed this out. So I did.
"Oh, you goddamn hippies." He nodded, remembering. Then he had another smoke.
We staggered our way across campus with only a half-dozen stops along the way to lean against buildings. The path was a straight line I walked every morning but I managed to get us distracted and almost lost.
"Adam," I said when the bus arrived.
"What?"
"The world has flattened." The news irritated me to have to announce. It would have alarmed me more if I'd been capable of feeling a normal sense of alarm.
"What do you mean?"
"I mean, everything is two dimensional now." I'd always had perfect distance judgement before. Now, when I reached for the handle of the bus door, I missed.
"That's a new one," he said as he clambered on. In my stated of flattened reality, I closed one eye, figuring it would help, and managed to step aboard by ignoring what I saw and paying more attention to the pieces of bus I could feel.
To our fellow passengers, I imagine we resembled two people attempting to operate human bodies via remote control with a slight delay in the signal. Certainly, there was a young woman who expressed concern. Others expressed their amusement. Adam conducted a possibly coherent conversation with someone, a long-haired woman, I think. For my part, I concentrated on not minding my lack of depth perception. My sudden awareness of my brain bouncing in its cranial fluid made up for it anyway. That was a sensation I didn't normally have. Despite the distractions, I didn't forget to pull the rope for our stop. We reached our destination correctly and on time, an achievement on par for us with assembling IKEA furniture while wearing oven mitts.
Every few minutes, even as we got off the bus at the mall, I reminded myself we were going to the mall. Even with the doors of the mall in my sight, I needed the reminders.
Inside, we spent a lot of time looking at lava lamps, reading paperback books, and entertaining ourselves with window shopping. Eventually, we managed to find the kiosk in the center of the mall. The woman running it raised her eyebrows at hearing we wanted to get piercings. Adam asked sensible questions. I asked about putting in a safety pin instead of a gold post.
"I wouldn't advise that," she told me.
"Because it's not sanitary?" I guessed because I wanted the safety pin and wasn't worried about germs.
"Some people have metal allergies," she responded. "Let's make sure you don't have any before you go doing something like that, first."
The idea made me pause. My body responded to a lot of things with high-powered allergies. Maybe I should rely on an expert, or so I guessed, especially when I hadn't been bothered to acquire any information before this. The lady led Adam and I through our best choices from her shop. We picked out a pair of gold studs to split. We were cheap about it but the gold was affordable even for college students. They had been designed to be extra strong as starters. As I checked out even cheaper possibilities, Adam chatted up the shop lady about appointments.
"I didn't know we needed appointments," I remarked as I turned to them.
"You totally don't need appointments," the lady told us, speaking mostly to Adam.
"We're making them anyway," he insisted.
"Okay." She shrugged. "Tomorrow, one o'clock."


