Although I had never considered it as anything other than the
site for sex and sleep, when I separated from my wife I not only entered into
an intimate relationship with my bed, it became the center of my existence.
My wife and I slept on a futon for the last dozen or so of
our twenty-three years together. After only a week or so sleeping there I had
to admit (to myself, not to her) that I didn’t really like the futon at all. The
beds we had before were nothing memorable but they squeaked occasionally and I
liked that. Our futon was so firm it never squeaked. As firm as it was, however,
over the years a hump began to emerge in the middle as we each gravitated to
our own side. When the hump eventually became a mound we separated.
I spent the first night of the separation in a chintzy bed in
a tiny room with paper-thin walls in a local hotel that usually charged by the
hour. It was the first time I had ever stayed the night in a hotel in Mexico
City and, although hundreds of couples had rolled around in it over the years,
it was probably the first time someone had spent the night alone in that bed.
For the next three weeks I stayed in the house of a recently
divorced friend and slept in his son’s room, surrounded by children’s books and
toys, on a bed in which my feet jutted out beyond the mattress.
One day I saw a For-Rent sign hanging in the lobby of a
building in my neighborhood. I was the first one to inquire and clinched the
deal. I signed the lease, the only legal, permanent real estate arrangement
I’ve ever had, in the most uncertain moment of my life.
For the first month or so, splitting the week according to
our post-marital arrangement, I slept with one of my twin sons on an old mattress
I brought from his room in my ex-house. My older son slept in another bedroom
with the other twin on a single bed where their nanny used to sleep years
before.
After a few months of living like this, my son’s guitar
teacher told me he was upgrading his daughter’s bed and was going to throw the
old one out. I arranged for a truck to bring it to me all the way from the
south of the city and installed it in my bedroom, at which time my sons each
got to sleep in their own bed.
The bed is an Intermezzo, which translates as interlude, perhaps
underlying its function as the transitional object it has become for me. I
doubt it was anything special when it was first christened, but after having to
support so much dead weight for so many years the mattress seems to have entirely
given up its struggle against gravity. When I sit in bed for long stretches of
time, which I’ve been doing a lot since my separation, my butt sinks deep into
the mattress and it becomes harder each time to extricate myself.
A couple of weeks after my separation a tenacious flu made
me take to bed for a whole week. Sickness brings people closer to their bed and
it made it acceptable to spend more time there, even after I had recovered.
Never before have I spent so much time in bed, and never
before have I slept so little. At first, the shock of the separation kept me
too agitated to sleep. Having to wake up at 5:30am to get my kids off to school
a couple of times a week also screwed with my sleep cycle. In addition, mosquitoes
zoomed overhead and my cat strolled across my chest.
In addition to insects and animals, humans also disrupt my
sleep. Car alarms, police sirens and groups of drunken revelers pass by my
bedroom window on the first floor of a building in the middle of a ‘trendy’
neighborhood. The restaurant directly below the window of my bedroom and a
music studio in the apartment directly above me, however, are responsible for
the majority of the noise. I can pull a pillow over my head or turn on a cheap
plastic floor fan, but it’s impossible to drown out the vibration from the bass
lines that rattle my bed. I often can’t sleep until the wee hours of the night only
to be woken up scant hours later by the early rumblings of the city.
Sleep deprivation produces odd effects, including brain
tremors, increased mood swings and a feeling of emotional brittleness, all of
which makes it even harder to sleep gently in the dark night. It would be wrong
to assume, however, judging only from the amount of time I spend there and the
problems I have trying to sleep, that my prolonged time in bed reveals merely insomnia,
depression and loneliness.
Since my love’s bed smashed against the daily grind I often
felt I‘d been set adrift in the world. At those times my bed became a life raft
to which I clung to ride out waves of grief and despair, but it has also felt
like a ship sailing towards self-fulfillment. I can feel more alone in my bed than
anywhere else on earth, but it is where I’ve had the most intimate contact and
experienced the most intense pleasure, as well.
Due to the forces of entropy and gravity, sex in a marriage can
wind up restricted to a single bed and inevitably sags in frequency and
intensity. Sleeping around was not only about having sex with other women and
increasing the frequency, but also about freeing sex up from the stultifying stuffiness
of my marriage bed.
It’s curious, then, how the sex I’ve had with women since my
separation has usually taken place in my own bed. Although the location has
been exactly the same, each woman has brought a whole new world with her into
my bed and lovemaking once again feels like an adventure. The fact that my
current mattress has become concave physically reflects the difference between
married and bachelor life.
When there is no woman in bed with me I jerk off
occasionally. My ex-wife once caught me jerking off in our marriage bed. Instead
of doing what any loving partner should do, that is, lend a hand, she got
disgusted and thought I was weird. Being that most people masturbate for the first time in their
own bed and continue to do so throughout their lives (most of the porn they
jerk off to takes place in bed, as well), it’s all quite normal and natural,
especially when one is forced to handle their own pleasure.
As with sex, pornography and masturbation, many people’s
first contact with literature also begins in bed. Kids are usually introduced
to books by their parents who read them bedtime stories, which tends to give
rise to the fantasy aspect to the act of reading. Much of the attraction of
reading comes from an emotional regression to childhood and its slumberland of
imagination, as can be seen in the way some people curl up with a book in bed.
Like young children, many adults can’t go to sleep at night without
the ritual of reading in bed. My ex-wife’s literary consumption was almost
completely restricted to the few paragraphs of popular literature she read in
bed to help her fall asleep at night (although the book clutched in her hand often
seemed more like a defense against any unwanted advances on my part). The fact
that she never read anything I wrote used to bother me, although perhaps I
should be grateful she never used my writing as a soporific.
Since the separation I’ve begun reading once again,
something I had practically given up years ago. I’ve even started to read in
bed, something I never did before, though it doesn’t seem to help me fall
asleep at all (masturbation is more effective).
Books and beds are quite natural bedfellows. White sheets
resemble nothing so much as a sheet of blank paper, and the key moments in the
life of a person (birth, childhood, sex, procreation, disease and death), like
the keys moments in novels, tend to occur between covers.
Besides prostitutes, writers are among the few professionals
who can actually work in bed. Although I had never written a word in bed
before, nor had I ever kept a diary, I began to write about my life that night in
the cheap love hotel, banging away on my laptop in an attempt to figure out how
I had wound up alone in that bed, and I continued to write all the way until
the divorce had been finalized months later.
The 400, single-spaced pages I accumulated document this
period from the perspective of my new bed. I never would have considered writing
about my life while lying next to my ex-wife in our marriage bed, her back to
me always, snoring, and instead wasted all those late night hours gazing
helplessly around the room and wondering what I was doing there.
As one of my only contributions to our home’s décor, I had
hung upon the wall facing our marriage bed a framed piece of art in which a man
who looked much like me lay in bed staring back at me with his eyes open. My
wife, sick of having another unshaven, emaciated and depressed man hanging
around her bedroom, eventually asked me to take the work down from the wall, a clear
foreshadowing of our separation (that is, had I been able to read the writing
on the wall).
The work of art that hung on the wall is a lithographic
reproduction of an Egon Schiele self-portrait, painted in prison during a
three-week stay for abducting, showing pornographic material to and having sex
with one of his underage models (whom he often painted naked in bed while
standing above them on a ladder).
The text accompanying Schiele’s self-portrait reads
“Hindering the artist is a crime, it’s murdering life in the bud.” (I often
wondered if the last word wasn’t a typo.) It took getting divorced to awaken me
from my dogmatic slumber and to realize that, by limiting the use of my bed
almost exclusively to sleep, my life as an artist was being hindered by such a
routine lifestyle.
Egon’s self-portrait currently sits in a box in my new
apartment, the walls of my bedroom currently being covered with much larger,
colorful photos of love motels in the Dominican Republic. I took the photos
just before and exhibited them in two art museums in Mexico just after my
separation. To accompany the photos, I had a large bed brought into each museum,
in which visitors were encouraged to sit and view the work, and complimented
this with a large overhead mirror, towels folded in the shape of a swan and a
bowl full of condoms.
This same series of large photos was also shown in the Hotel
Oslo, one of the most traditional love hotels in Mexico City, where the owner
gave me the use without charge of four rooms plus a suite (with a Jacuzzi) in
which to hang my photographs.
At the opening I took portraits of people in different beds
in different rooms in front of different photographs of mine. While doing so, I
noticed how certain attractive women responded to having their picture taken by
me in bed. A couple of these same women passed through my own bed, where I continued
to take photographs of them. Photographing attractive women in bed, my own and
in hotels around the city and in other cities in other countries, has since opened
up a new line of work for me while at the same time enriching my personal life.
Although I’m enjoying the time I spend in bed with women these
days, in the not-so-distant future I will get probably sick and be taken to bed
to await death. During the first month or so after my separation, late at
night, alone, racked with insomnia, I sometimes imagined myself sinking so deep
into my mattress it eventually engulfed me and became my tomb.
Regardless of its inevitability, I’m not ready to rest in
peace quite yet, and thus before death do we part. We are still on good terms
and I make a point of visiting at least once a day, more often when I’m with
company, but I no longer look to it as either a transitional object or the base
of my existence. Even if we no longer have such an intimate relationship, I still
dedicate this text, of which it is the protagonist and the place where I wrote every
word of it, to my bed.
1 comment:
Please tell the NY story of waking up with a rat on your chest
Post a Comment