And by God I was going to eat ALL of it. Every bit. I’d eat as long as it tasted good. Who cares if it’s supposedly too much? Orangutans find a tree of ripe durian and eat themselves silly, gorge till they fall asleep under the tree, still chewing. Why not? Mom and Dad could have all the stories about it they wanted to: I was just going to eat.
I don’t know when the Kid showed up. [ The Kid is the public persona who originally called himself the Captain: the Lieutenant always calls him the Kid ]. I don’t remember us really being at loggerheads early on. He had his domain and I had mine. He ran the show in public, among adults, around my parents. I ran the show in private.
I already knew that there was no way I was going to fit in the world. The food was just one thing. I wasn’t like other kids. I knew precisely where the Marshall Islands were, but I couldn’t learn to tie my shoes. I could solve quadratic equations in my head, but I never did grasp the rules of baseball. I spooked my peers and annoyed them. (I was an insufferable know-it-all, as I realize now, among other socially unpleasant things: totally self-absorbed and arrogant. That probably had more to do with my unpopularity than my intelligence.) But anyway, I struck the other kids as weird, and I took it on as my identity. “I’m here, I’m queer, get used to it”: that sort of thing.
Halfway through the year, in third grade, I got called out of class and into the counselor’s office. I wasn’t in trouble, as it turned out. He wanted me to take some tests. He took out some blocks. “Oh, the Stanford-Binet! I like this one,” I said. My mom’s friends were all grad students in psychology, and they had always needed kids to practice on: giving kids intelligence tests was all the rage, in those days. He pulled out another, looking for one that I didn’t already know, but I knew all of them. Eventually he found one unfamiliar to me, that was basically just a vocabulary test. Well, that could only go one way. I read all the time: I was already in the process of reading everything on the science fiction shelves at the public library. I knew all the words, up through the college levels. So he told me I was going to get moved up to the fourth grade.
I have a hard time, now, believing this is what actually happened – weren’t there consultations with my parents? Didn’t anyone talk to me first, consult me about my preferences? All I remember is sliding back into my seat and whispering the news to my friend, who looked wise and said, “I thought that might be it.” And the next day I was a fourth-grader.
Weirder than ever, less physically competent that ever, but by God I was smart. Smart and weird. Look out for me: I’m little and wimpy, but I’ve got a wicked gift for inventing nasty nicknames that will stick. Leave me the fuck alone.
Well: and then, a couple years later, puberty hit. I was eleven years old, I had no chance of being seen as a viable boyfriend by anyone in the world (my then known world, at any rate) and I adored girls intensely. I had always adored girls: but this overbalanced me completely. I was kind of a wreck. I spied shamelessly, desperately, hoping for a glimpse up a skirt or down a blouse. My autism had already supplied me with the identity of “a spy in the land of the living”: now it was intensified. Fashion magazines and Sears catalogs with lingerie sections got my absorbed, painstaking attention. The years from eleven to fifteen were disastrously formative. Nothing but eros, in intense, absolutely unreachable images, really absorbed my attention. Now, at the age of 68, I still drop easily into that state: I can find myself watching fashion videos on YouTube, rapt, on the off chance of a momentary slip of a half-buttoned blouse. An hour later I’ll come to my senses and ask myself, “what on earth are you doing?” Embarrassed, chagrined; but it still is a wrench to tear myself away.
(A spy in the land of the living. The line is Edna St Vincent Millay’s, from a poem spoken by a conscientious objector to WW I: “Am I a spy in the land of the living, that I should deliver men to death?” Not a bad poem. A little too easy and pat, maybe, like a lot of her stuff, but she’s as underrated these days as she was overrated in her glory days.)
Anyway, the point is that bifurcation into two personas, one who was public and behaved acceptably, (especially under the eyes of scholastic authority, who actually might lavish praise upon me), and one who was utterly unacceptable and who was devoted to unscrupulously serving his appetites, was reinforced: to reappear and reverberate the rest of my life.