Playing the one-eyed jack
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In a coincidence of bad timing, my monthly poker game came up on the
same day I was scheduled to get a new right eye.
This conflict posed certain questions that took quite different
directions between my wife and me. My question was whether I would be
able to read the cards 10 hours after eye surgery. Her question was
whether I had completely taken leave of my senses by even considering
playing poker under such circumstances.
In an effort to compromise, I agreed to wait and see how I was
feeling Friday night before making a decision. She brushed off this
rational position by saying that if I contin- ued to consider this
insanity, I should recognize that it would be both unreasonable and
unfair not to tell the other players I wouldn’t be there, so they
would have time to replace me. So I did that under some duress, and
on this uneasy note, we drove at 6:30 Friday morning to the Hoag
outpatient clinic in Newport Center where the cataract surgery was to
be performed.
All of this was taking place because of two eyesight failures
serious enough to require immediate attention. First, I was no longer
able to read the scoreboard at Angel Stadium, making it impossible
for me to follow other games in progress while watching the Angels.
And, second, I flunked my eye test when I had to renew my driver’s
license.
I apparently misread the eye chart so spectacularly that the lady
giving it to me sought out higher authority. He wondered why I had
checked “none” after a question about vision problems, and didn’t
seem satisfied when I told him I didn’t think my scoreboard
difficulties were relevant to this question.
He was mollified, however, when I explained I was scheduled for
eye surgery and gave me a provisional license on the basis of my
better eye.
So, there was a lot at stake when I was rolled into the surgery. I
found it fitting that my right eye was the one causing the most
trouble. I was still seeing matters much more clearly in my left eye.
I am still astonished at the bustling efficiency with which the
surgery was accomplished. The nurses were relaxed and answered
questions cheerfully. So did the anesthesiologist.
And so did the surgeon, Dwayne Logan, who made it sound quick and
easy -- and it was. I was half asleep but not out, heard the talk
during the process of scraping out my cataracts and inserting a new
lens in my eye, and felt nothing. After a half-hour to recuperate
from the drug that had put me to half-sleep, we were on our way home.
We had to report to Dr. Logan that afternoon for an inspection.
When he told us everything had come off successfully, I was able to
get home in time to watch the Angels game on television. Poker was
not discussed while the Angels raised my spirits by winning. Because
the Angels were playing in Chicago, the game was over about the time
poker was convened. I was mindful of that but decided to quit while I
was ahead.
That’s when Sherry came home from her evening walk to tell me she
had run into a group of poker players en route to the game -- and
found out there was still a seat open. So she admitted to me that I
was a lot perkier than she had expected, and if I wanted to be stupid
enough to play poker instead of watching a TV movie with her, it was
my call and she wouldn’t fuss about it. So at 9 o’clock, I appeared
at the poker game.
For about three minutes, I was a mild diversion while they asked
about my day. Then attention returned to poker. It took me about an
hour to admit this was a bad idea. I couldn’t see the cards across
the table and had to ask their identity. The pizza on the sideboard
was mildly repellent to me, and I didn’t want anything to drink. Most
talk was a slurry of sound. And I was losing.
The first real concern the other players showed was when they
found I had driven over (Sherry didn’t know). Although it was just a
couple of blocks, that was a bad idea too. But by 10:30, I was home
safely and ready to crash.
I’m not sure of the moral of this story -- except, perhaps, that
stupidity isn’t always punished. If you perceive something better,
let me know.
Meanwhile, as I write this I’m looking into our backyard, which is
greener than I’ve seen it for a long time. And I never realized how
blue the cushions on our lawn chairs are. Or how crisp everything in
my vision is when the sun shines on it.
I can hardly wait to test my new eye on the Angels scoreboard next
week.
*
One of the few joyous developments to show up in print in these
days and weeks and months of war and floods and corruption and
general disaster is the re-appearance in the Los Angeles Times of
Calvin and Hobbes. Those of you who don’t know these people -- and
never have they been needed more -- can get in at the beginning.
And those of you who number them among your closest friends can
rejoice along with me.
For the uninitiated, Calvin is a kid of maybe 5 or 6 with firm
convictions and a diabolical mind. Hobbes is a stuffed tiger to
everyone but Calvin. To Calvin, Hobbes is a pragmatic, irreverent
realist off whom Calvin can bounce ideas.
During the 10 years or so they were part of my life, Calvin and
Hobbes provided more refrigerator pin-ups than all other sources put
together. Calvin quickly evolved from a mean little kid with smarts
to a keen philosopher with an ideal foil in his tiger.
Their creator, Bill Watterson, quit drawing the strip abruptly a
few years ago, apparently a victim of burn-out. Like Peanuts, what
we’re seeing now are reruns. But unlike Charles Schultz, Watterson is
very much alive.
Maybe Calvin can persuade him to get back in the fray. Meanwhile,
if you haven’t met Calvin, I urge you to check him out.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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