This is her prompt question. The shrinks always have one prompt question. I’ve had ones that said “What’s up?” “How are we?” and even “What’s happening in the world of Craig?” They never change. It’s like their jingle.
“I didn’t wake up well today.”
“Did you sleep well?”
“I slept okay.”
She looks completely stone, staring ahead. I don’t know how they do this: the psych-poker face. Psychologists should play poker. Maybe they do. Maybe they’re the ones who win all the money on TV. Then they have the gall to charge my mom $120/hour. They’re very greedy.
“What happened when you woke up?”
“I was having a dream. I don’t know what it was, but when I woke up, I had this awful realization that I was awake. It hit me like a brick in the groin.”
“Like a brick in the groin, I see.”
“I didn’t want to wake up. I was having a much better time asleep. And that’s really sad. It was almost like a reverse nightmare, like when you wake up from a nightmare you’re so relieved. I woke up
“And what is that nightmare, Craig?”
“Life.”
“Life is a nightmare.”
“Yes.”
We stop. Cosmic moment, I guess.
“What did you do when you realized you were awake?”
“I lay in bed.” There were more things to tell her, things I held back: like the fact that I was
I rolled over on my stomach and balled my fists and held them against my gut like I was praying. The fists pushed my stomach against itself and fooled it into thinking it was full. I held this position, warm, my brain rotating, the seconds whirring by. Only the pure urge, the one thing that never let me down, got me out of bed fifty minutes later.
“I got up when I had to piss.”
“I see.”
“That was great.”
“You like peeing. You’ve mentioned this before.”
“Yeah. It’s simple.”
“You like simple.”
“Doesn’t everybody?”
“Some people thrive on complexity, Craig.”
“Well, not me. As I was walking over here, I was thinking . . . I have this fantasy of being a bike messenger.”
“Ah.”
“It would be so simple, and direct, and I would get paid for it. It would be an Anchor.”
“What about school, Craig? You have school for an Anchor.”
“School is too all over the place. It spirals out into a million different things.”
“Your Tentacles.”
I have to hand it to her; Dr. Minerva picked up on my lingo pretty quickly.
The opposite of the Tentacles are the Anchors. The Anchors are things that occupy my mind and make me feel good temporarily. Riding my bike is an Anchor. Doing flash cards is an Anchor. Watching people play video games at Aaron’s is an Anchor. The answers are simple and sequential. There aren’t any decisions. There aren’t any Tentacles. There’s just a stack of tasks that you tackle. You don’t have to deal with other people.
“There are a lot of Tentacles,” I admit. “But I should be able to handle them. The problem is that I’m so lazy.”
“How are you lazy, Craig?”