Some days I wake up, and I am dumb. Who wrote Margot at the Wedding?
What’s the word for an erection lasting longer than four hours? What’s
my roommate’s boyfriend’s name? I used to know this information, but
it’s floated away, drifted into the ether to join all my other lost
knowledge like the name of Jabba the Hutt’s father, the color of polar
bear skin, and how electricity works (if the government revealed that
electricity is actually magic, I would absolutely believe them). And
it’s happened so fast, happened overnight. My God, I’ve spontaneously
developed late-stage Alzheimer’s. One day, I am unspeakably impossibly
brilliant, and the next, my brain’s delicate mechanisms are clogged with
glue and gak. It’s as if while I was sleeping, my brain rotted like
meat left in the sun for too long, as if someone started it in safe
mode, as if a small child has been monkeying around with the buttons and
levers. Lost in a mental fog, I stare at a Comcast pamphlet for five
minutes. Eye amoebas drift across my vision. Somewhere nearby, William
Shatner’s voice issues from a television. I think, ‘I am so dumb right
now, I can hardly summon the mental energy to keep breathing.’
I find myself standing in the dark bathroom, staring into the mirror.
What if I’ve always been this way, and I just never noticed before?
What if this is actually a Smart Day, and I’ve suddenly become cognizant
of my lack of cognition? Maybe this is the first day of the rest of my
dumb life as a dumb man, thinking dumb thoughts and writing dumb things,
only dumb things. ‘Everyone’s always known you were a dummy,’ I think
to myself. ‘They were just too nice to tell you.’ But I can’t be dumb; I
used the word cognizant and sometimes I use semicolons. ‘Dumb people
use semicolons all the time,’ I think. ‘And using “pertinacious” in a
sentence only means you know a word.’ But what if I use an em dash? —
‘No.’
A friend calls me, and I’m intensely aware of how dumb I sound. It’s
as if I have nothing to say for myself, like I don’t have a thought in
my head. I say “yeah” a lot. Then I find myself saying “it’s fine” over
and over like someone on the verge of a mental break. I say “like, you
know…” and then I keep starting every sentence with the word
“apparently.” ‘Say something interesting! Something witty!’ I think to
myself. I say, “I feel like I’m getting dumber and less interesting the
older I get.” He says, “You are. Ha! Just kidding.” There’s a long
pause. I can’t think of anything else to say, and then I drop a fork on
the floor. “What was that,” he asks. “I dropped a fork,” I say. “Oh.”
Another long pause. “Well, I’ve gotta go,” he says.
The Dumb Day seems to stretch on and on. I forget where I set down my
phone, and when I find it, I can’t remember who I wanted to call. My
roommate asks me why the oven is on, and I realize I forgot to turn it
off after baking mozzarella marinara chicken patties. I keep knocking
over cups and boxes. I forget where I left my keys, then forget why I
wanted to go out in the first place. It’s got to be brain chemistry,
some random combination of foods, beverages, sleep cycles, UV light
exposure, and humidity that has crippled cognitive function. Maybe if I
drink coffee, chew gum, and complete a crossword, I might reverse the
descent into dumbness, but I doubt it.
Disillusioned, I turn on Horizon, a science documentary
series on the BBC, and suddenly, I’m not just dumb, I’m a Neanderthal, a
primate when compared to a scientist constructing mathematical theories
about gravitons and dark matter, a physicist working on a particle
accelerator, or a neurologist who can induce creativity via radio waves.
Their eyes glitter with secret knowledge held only by the supergenius,
the unfathomably colossal intellect. I watch a physicist present mind
blowing ideas about the make-up of the quantum world using fruit — this
pear is a proton, this grape is a top quark, this squash is a graviton —
and I think, ‘I am so dumb, the only way he can make me understand
these concepts is via a fruit analogy.’
This happens to me about once every couple weeks — The Dumb Day, the
day when my self-esteem drops to its lowest, when I realize I can’t
think of anything to say to justify my existence on this planet, and I
must resign myself to a life spent in a career like “cashier” or “data
entry.” At least, I think it’s once every couple weeks. It’s hard to
tell whether it’s a day or my whole life because my memories of the Dumb
Days are so vivid, they overshadow all the days I wasn’t dumb. Oh, the
horror of having a perfect eidetic memory, but only for all the times I
said or did something monumentally stupid.
http://thoughtcatalog.com/2012/the-dumb-day/
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