Read Tasteful Nudes: ...and Other Misguided Attempts at Personal Growth and Validation Online
Authors: Dave Hill
Despite all this, when it comes to exuding sheer, unbridled machismo, the kind that cannot be tamed by bullets, prison bars, or even some of the most insensitive name-calling you’ve ever heard, I do have one considerable edge over most other men: a jagged scar running down my left cheek subtle enough so as not to send small children and house pets screaming into the night, yet rugged enough to let anyone who comes in for a closer look know that something really, really bad must have happened to me at some point. It’s something I use to my advantage whenever possible. As any decent crime, gangster, and/or action film will tell you, the guy with the scar is probably not to be messed with. And I don’t care if you are only in the sixth grade, you see a goddamn scar and you back the fuck off unless you’re hell-bent on waking up dead.
This is me somewhere around the age of five, being really manly without even trying. That’s my grandfather behind me. He used to make very large, sharp knives for fun. Manliness runs in our family.
Unlike most other traditional cultural signifiers of masculinity—alcohol, tobacco, and firearms, for example—a scar isn’t something you can just go trying on for size one day when you’re at the mall like a damn woman. Generally speaking, it has to happen to you. And once it does, a scar lets those around you know that you have come face-to-face with adversity—a pair of wayward scissors, an aggressive patch of shrubbery, or a box cutter–wielding member of a secret underground society of mole people easily given to handing out their own swift brand of justice—and managed to rise above it. Regardless, you’ll definitely have a story to tell. Though, to be fair, you should probably never tell that story because, just as with sausage, drastically reduced consumer electronics, or motel carpet stains, you are almost always better off leaving others to speculate on its origin.
Scar or not, I realize at this point in my book there’s probably no question in your mind as to whether or not I’m one of the biggest badasses that ever walked the face of the planet.
2
But as long as I’m on the topic, here’s what happened to me.
I was eleven years old and was staying up late to watch a Beatles movie on television after the rest of my family had gone to bed. I had seen it a year or two before, so I already knew that Stu Sutcliffe—the fifth, sixth, or seventh Beatle depending on whom you ask—would be dead by the next commercial break. Then they’d all get better haircuts and the rest would be history, so I figured I might as well pack it in for the night. I had a hockey game in the morning and wanted to be well rested so I’d be better equipped to handle the inevitable loss. I got up from my dad’s Barcalounger, clicked off the television, and headed for the family room door. In the doorway was Blazer, our ninety-five-pound golden retriever, sleeping peacefully, presumably dreaming about chasing some smaller living thing or licking his privates without interruption.
As I did most nights before bed, I got down on my knees to plant a great big, yet entirely masculine, kiss on Blazer’s snout. I can’t remember if my lips ever actually made contact with his fur, but I do remember Blazer quickly jerking his head and growling like one of those giant black and really pissed off bears I had seen on public television. His fangs tore through my left cheek like it was squirrel meat as my lips remained puckered and about as adorable as an eleven-year-old boy’s can—pretty adorable I imagine, even under the circumstances—sending me reeling backward onto the carpet as I howled in a mixture of pain, confusion, and general holyfuckingshitness. Blazer, for his part, now entirely awake and also in a state of general holyfuckingshitness, scurried off to the kitchen, maybe to build an alibi for himself but probably just to get the hell away from a screaming child.
Up until that fateful night, I had always thought the expression, “Let sleeping dogs lie” was just something people said when they wanted someone else to stop whining. But as I lay there on the floor, my tears mixing with my blood to form a warm puddle on the carpet that would take a team of professionals to properly clean up, I got it. I totally, totally got it.
As is often the case when a human is attacked by an animal nearly twice his size, Blazer’s strategic hit earned me a trip to the hospital, where I expected to be quickly stitched up by the nearest doctor and sent home. Instead, my mother—perhaps knowing I’d one day wind up on basic cable—held out for the man suggested to be the best plastic surgeon in the hospital’s Rolodex,
3
a French doctor with a mustache and, presumably, a taste for serious carnage.
By morning I was all sewn up and sleeping off the anesthesia in a hospital room I was forced to share with some kid who got his head stuck in an escalator at the local mall.
“I got my scalp ripped off on my way up to menswear,” he explained. “What happened to you?”
“My dog tried to rip my face off.”
“Oh.”
By that point in my life, I just assumed that escalators and most other machines existed to mangle, disfigure, or at least fall on top of children whenever possible, so—since I was the one who had suffered actual heartache by being maimed by my best friend—I figured I’d gotten it much worse.
The French doctor ended up going to work on my cheek once a year for the next three years like I was some sort of modern art project.
“Today, we’re just going to apply an electric sander to your face to help smooth things out a bit more,” he’d say before jabbing me in the cheek with a giant needle.
“What?” I’d reply.
After the second round of surgery, I was no longer marked by the Beast, but instead looked more like an exceptionally young villain from a James Bond movie. After the third, I looked like I might be that villain’s sidekick or something. And after the fourth, I looked like I might just answer the phone at the villain’s office. Still, despite the French doctor’s best efforts, it was hard not to notice the rather large, pitchfork-shaped scar on my face, something most kids at my school simply didn’t have. Not wanting to put the blame on Blazer (whom, for the record, I never saw again), I usually made things up whenever anyone would ask about it, thus adding to my mystique and overall street credibility in the process.
“Oh, that.” I’d laugh. “You ever do that thing where you fall down a flight of stairs and end up catching your face on a rusty nail on the way down? It sucks, right?”
“What?”
The look of horror on people’s faces never got old. Other times I’d say I’d gone skiing and accidentally stuck a pole in my cheek while doing a sweet jump. Or tell them I’d simply been attacked by a pack of wild animals (which, given Blazer’s lack of formal training, was kind of true, I guess). I tried to make the explanations as gruesome as possible so my classmates wouldn’t have the stomach to investigate further and find out my own sweet Blazer was the culprit. But eventually the questions died down and I simply became known as “that one kid with the crazy scar on his face that no one wants to sit with at lunch.”
All these years later, my scar still earns me plenty of tough guy points, especially under the right light, but rather than rest on my laurels, I’ve tried to declare my manliness through other, non-maiming-related means. The problem is, I’m generally pretty bad at it. I don’t play in any recreational basketball leagues, I’m often accused of being too knowledgeable or (even worse) enthusiastic about women’s handbags, and I’m the last guy any of my friends or family would call for advice on cars, lawnmowers, or anything else one might store in a garage.
More recently, I’m ashamed to admit that my manliness is rather frequently and directly called into question, specifically in the form of people actually mistaking me for a woman. I don’t know if it’s because of my delicate features, my penchant for wearing really fun, floral patterns, or because I have what some might categorize as “mom hair” (longish without being truly long, wispy, and generally well-suited for the on-the-go lifestyle). Whatever the reason, it happens every couple of months or so, often when I’m out to dinner with one of my sisters, a female friend, or even a romantic date (who is also a woman).
“Can I get you ladies anything to drink?” the waiter will ask.
Or I might be at a grocery store and, as I approach checkout counter, the cashier will ask, “Did you find everything you were looking for ma’am?”
In either case, the person making the mistake quickly catches themselves once they get a better look at me.
“Um … sir?” he or she will say.
There’s no apology, though. They just call me “sir” as if I somehow hadn’t noticed that up until a second ago, they were under the impression that I live my life as a woman. And to be honest, it’s fine—I’m not mad. It doesn’t hurt my feelings or anything. But I do feel sorry for the woman they imagine me to be—this lonely, dateless woman. Check out my photo on the jacket of this book and imagine I’m a woman who lives on your street or in your apartment building. Maybe my name is Peg or Jan or something equally unglamorous.
4
“Hi, Peg,” you say to me as I shuffle toward my door, juggling my keys and take-out as some old sugar and ketchup packets I carry with me at all times for some reason spill out of my bag onto the floor.
“Oh, hi,” I mumble back to you as I slowly push open my creaky apartment door, a fog of cat piss practically tackling you to the ground.
Any way you slice it the female me is destined to die alone.
The case of my mistaken sexual identity came to a head recently when I found myself in Washington, D.C., and craving a bit of Chinese food. So I headed to D.C.’s Chinatown, which seemed like a perfectly reasonable plan.
Located near a bus depot and the Verizon Center, Chinatown is often populated by drifters, vagrants, and other people who really seem to like hanging out and drinking in the streets for weeks and weeks at a time. And this time around, I had the Kung Pao chicken but for whatever reason couldn’t finish it. So I asked the waiter to wrap my leftovers so I could give them to someone in need of a meal.
“This will be my good deed for the day,” I thought. “Gosh, I’m a decent person.”
Once I got outside of the restaurant, the first person I saw was a fortyish woman with a tallboy of Budweiser in one hand and an orange traffic cone in the other. She was dancing in place, cackling hysterically to herself, and seemingly having a really nice time.
“We have a winner,” I thought.
“Excuse me, ma’am. Would you like some Chinese food?” I asked.
“Yes, I would like some Chinese food,” she answered, momentarily taking a break from the action.
“Wow, this is working out great,” I thought.
I began walking toward the woman while holding the bag of Chinese food out for the handoff. She, in turn, began walking toward me with her hand out, seemingly about to grab it. Then just as we were about to complete the transaction, the lady lunged at me with her other hand and tried to stab me in the chest with the traffic cone. Exceptionally lithe and catlike in nature, I quickly jumped out of the way.
“Hey!” I yelled at her. “Do you want the Chinese food or not?”
“Yeah, I want the Chinese food,” she said as if she thought I had some serious hang-ups.
I decided to try giving her the Chinese food again, and again she approached me with her hand outstretched. And then, just as I totally swore I was about to make a successful handover, she lunged at me again, trying a second time to stab me with the traffic cone. Needless to say, it was all starting to seem a bit weird. I guess the thing to do then would have been to just give my leftover Kung Pao chicken to someone else, someone more grateful, someone who might not try to stab me. But this woman was really pissing me off so I decided I was going to make her take my Chinese food, just to teach her a lesson. So, for what felt like the remainder of the afternoon, we continued our bizarre tango. I held out the food, she reached for it with one hand while trying to stab me with the other. On one side of our bodies, we were working as a team. On the other, I was under attack. Then finally, on my eighth or ninth attempt, the woman graciously and surprisingly accepted the Chinese food.
“Thank you, nice man,” she said.
“You’re welcome, nice lady,” I replied, happy to finally be able to get on with my day.
I started to walk away as if nothing had happened, but I only got about ten feet before I looked over my shoulder to discover the woman was suddenly chasing after me.
“I’m a grown man,” I thought. “I don’t need to run from this woman.”
Even so, she was coming at me pretty quickly, so I figured I should probably start running just to be safe. And before long, I found myself running as fast as I could. Even though the lady was carrying a tallboy of Bud, an orange traffic cone, and my Chinese food, she still caught up to me pretty easily. I made one last gasp at an escape, but it was too late; she drew back the orange traffic cone like it was a medieval sword and lunged at me once more, this time fully connecting with what I guess would technically be known as my anus.
“Ow!” I screamed (because it really, really hurt). “Why’d you do that?”