Thomas Sullivan: LION LUNGS, DEMENTIA DOG & THE KILLER GARAGE DOOR
Maybe I’ll write humor today, you decide.
It is 4:41 AM and your sawdust-for-brains next door neighbor has just “unleashed” Lion Lungs – the hyper barking pooch – for his pre-dawn serenade. Your spouse slumbers next to you, and if you move to the computer downstairs, there is a good chance you’ll wake the baby. Better to just lie here trying to make light of it by writing the funniest story ever in your head:
Q: “So, what does your dad do for a living, little boy?”
A: “He doesn’t do anything. He’s a writer.”
Dumb. Even your two grade-schoolers would think that was juvenile. Humor is tough this early. Especially if you are awakened before First Light by First Dog. But at 6:35 AM, when an exhausted Lion Lungs is replaced by Dementia Dog, the wind-up yapper, Second Dog is no better. You switch genres:
Maybe I’ll write a cutesy animal story today.
So now you start to fantasize a mama eagle arcing above the houses. This bird not only has keen eyes, she has keen ears (picture Mouseketeer ears like radar domes) that register every yap from Dementia Dog (yap, yap! – translation: here I am, here I am!). Suddenly mama eagle banks, swoops and picks up Dementia Dog, who continues yapping mindlessly in a cross-eyed frenzy as he is carried off to a duo of ravenous eaglets awaiting breakfast 316 miles away. Oh, this is good! You’ve really got it this time. You are just getting into some seriously sociopathic stuff – donating Dementia Dog to McDonald’s pooched egg menu for eagles – when a pair of elfin bare feet hit the floor boards in the next room, followed moments later by another pair.
A war story would be good: “The paratroops landed running, their boots hitting the ground one after another…”
…begin REALITY, the 8-hour inconvenience to your writing career a.k.a. “gainful employment.” This is where your long-suffering spouse mans the trenches elbow to elbow with Dr. Seuss while you rush out into the rat race of 9-to-5 stiffs in order to earn filthy lucre selling shoes at The Wild Pair. By 10 AM you are struggling with depression.
…maybe I’ll write an “Oh-Yeah” satire today. (“Hey lady, you’ve tried on every shoe in the store, why don’t you just wear the shoeboxes home?”)
And when your 8 hours end, you return to Happy Valley where luckily you find a place to park in your driveway right behind the roof repair truck and several vans. But inside the House of Chaos you discover remnants of three projects, two committees, a charity drive, and half a dozen mothers bartering their children into pools. Everyone is late for something, and expressions of dismay over where the day has flown fill the air. Somehow your arrival seems to settle arrangements, as all vehicles except the roofer’s truck quickly disappear from the drive. Alas. Of the children who yet remain, you recognize less than half the human menagerie waiting to use the bathroom.
Note to self: write a medical drama about a writer who dies of uremic poisoning in his own living room.
On it goes, another precious hour of writing time slipping away. But while the minutes winnow down, the children you do not recognize and may not be related to also winnow down, because now their Mazey Bird mothers begin to trickle back in their vans to pick them up. Your muse stumbles back on stage…
Maybe I’ll write a story about a heroic father who rescues children wandering lost in the jungle/arctic/desert…
And that is when you begin to recognize subtle signs of stress in your spouse.
Attention children: Do not look at that woman who-is-not-your-mother curled in a fetal position on the basement floor, surrounded by razor blades, rope, and a mega-size bottle of aspirins! Bike ride, bike ride, time for a bike ride! See Daddy do his famous killer garage door trick as you wait on your bikes in the drive.
The kids love it when you push the inside switch to start the garage door down and take two quick strides, stopping right under it. You wait until the descending panels are a hair’s breadth from guillotining you, then suavely rotate your neck so that your head passes just under it. Only this time the door practically cracks your skull open, and you are left grinning idiotically. The “roof repair” man standing by his truck is not grinning. He is shaking his head. Ah. You see it now. The lettering on the truck: Roof & GARAGE DOOR REPAIR. Yes, a new motor on the garage door will definitely throw the ol’ timing off in your act. “Daddy, you look like a bobble head,” your youngest informs you.
The bobble-brained author. How wonderfully tragic! It’s been done successfully before. Faulkner. A tale told by an idiot. Keyes. “Flowers for Algernon.” Attention, Muse, this will be the shortest bike ride ever.
But the caravan turns into a demolition derby of skinned knees, jammed chains, loose handlebars and a flat tire. Everyone is unhappy. Everyone whines. Everyone has to go to the bathroom. Check that. One unhappy camper no longer needs to go to the bathroom… Maybe I’ll write a prisoner-of-war story, you decide, announcing in your best Nazi voice: “Everyone WILL now have fun. Anyone caught not having fun will go to bed at exactly 5:17 PM with asparagus up their nose.”
Elder daughter rolls eyes. Youngest pouts. Even the dog, who is eating grass, looks stupefied. A leering child you do not recognize pulls two leaves off a farkleberry bush and shoves one in each nostril.
…Definite cue for a horror story: Children of the Wild Asparagus. Yes, you are losing it.
Back at the house, things have improved. Your spouse looks surreally animated, dinner is only slightly burned, and the baby’s sprue seems to have abated – or perhaps migrated to the dog, who is now throwing up as you drag him toward the door. Losing it, losing it, losing it…
Maybe I’ll write a funny horror satire about a heroic father in a dysfunctional family who saves his baby by casting a magical trans-possession spell that transfers a fatal infection to a dangerous dog who is then carried off by an eagle… (Going, going, gone!)
Pssst! This is how it is. For all of us. A day in the life of… Hope I’ve cheered all you struggling authors out there. YOU ARE NOT ALONE.
Your thoughts are welcome, your attention valued.
Thomas “Sully” Sullivan
http://www.thomassullivanauthor.com






























