Thursday, May 29, 2008

My first shot at a short story

Distractions

By Craig Decker

The explosion sent the terrified woman flying into a pile of rubble. Flames began licking at the walls, and from the smoke a she heard someone say her name. The woman scrambled for the door like a trapped mouse. She couldn’t open it. She screamed out for help. Out of the darkness she him staring at her from across the room. His eyes flickered orange and red as they reflected the leaping flames. The maniac stepped forward and showed his teeth in a deformed, sadistic smile. In his right hand he gripped a chain saw. In one swift motion, the machine growled to life. The screaming roar of the chainsaw ripped the air, hungry. The woman shrieked and blood splattered across the walls as the chainsaw shredded her body.

Ben looked away from the television screen and began to breathe again. The long, hot hours of the journey had filled the bus with stale air and body odor so thick he could cut it. As his eyes adjusted to the darkness again, he took inventory of the situation. Down the aisle several dozen faces were illuminated with a comical mixture of wide-eyed fascination and disgust carefully deciphered the Spanish subtitles. The line of small, flashing televisions hanging from the ceiling of the bus swayed in unison as the old Argentine tour bus sped down a dark canyon road. The dim yellow reading light shone done on his open scriptures, deserted midsentence.

Ben felt his face flush. He reached instinctively for the black name tag that lay over his heart, and cradled it in his hand, fingers caressing the badge, feeling the cut grooves of two inscribed names -- his own, and the name, ”Jesucristo.”

He sighed.

This wasn’t good. As a missionary, he had promised to live as a disciple of Christ so that he could help people to change their lives, and that included avoiding filth and violence. Memories from the day washed over his mind like cool water. He had been working with prisoners. He reminded them to fill their lives with good, pure things, and they would be filled with peace and power to truly change. And it was true. He had felt it.

Why had he watched the movie for so long when I knew it was the opposite of everything he stood for? How long had it been? Half an hour. His eyes seemed to have a will of their own, and had been drawn into the movie like a moth seduced into the flame of a burning candle, coming to a startlingly painful understanding of reality a moment too late.

Another string of vulgarities resounded through the dimly lit bus, and he glanced up curiously in time to see the subtitles dancing merrily across the bottom of the screen. Ben chuckled. The translation was never right. The Spanish subtitles were completely inaccurate. Of all the passengers, he alone could fully appreciate the colorful dialogue. The movie progressed in a slow crescendo of vulgarity until the screaming chainsaw ripped apart another woman and the killer raped his bloody victim.

A white-hot flash of light tore Ben’s mind. He blinked reality back into existence. Why had he l watched again? He squeezed his eyes closed, trying to rid his mind of the images he had just seen. It was no use. They played out again under his eyelids. He leaned forward and rested his head on his fists.

“Okay.” He said aloud to himself, trying to gain some sense of dignity.

The word disappeared into the air.

“Okay,” he said again.

He had to ignore the movie. He looked down and studied the dirty black floor. Not very exciting. He carefully turned his head to look out the window. A massive black void stared back at him. His traveling companion dozed quietly below the window. He envied his astonishing ability to stay asleep despite the noise and movement of the bus. A distant reflection on the window caught his attention. What was it? He curiously studied the glowing image for a few moments, and then jumped as he realized that he had been watching the reflection of the movie. He slowly closed his eyes in a desperate effort to think of something besides the movie, but the images of carnage flooded his mind. He urgently searched for a safe place to look. His eyes were pulled to the screen almost magnetically.

Earlier that day he promised a struggling man that there was no temptation that he couldn't overcome. Now those words echoed in his mind, mocking him. There had to be a solution. While thought about it, his eyes drifted back to the movie again. He leaned back into the orange and blue overstuffed seat that held him prisoner, defeated. Almost as an afterthought, he sighed again. It was a soft prayer for divine intervention.

Doughnuts The word wandered into his mind. Doughnuts.

That afternoon he had bought a dozen hot, glazed doughnuts at a little tourist shop. Doughnuts were a rare American delicacy in Argentina. Their chewy warmth and the sweet glaze melting in his mouth was like seeing an old friend. He had eaten until the glazed sugar stuck to his hands, lips, and chin, and his stomach bulged. The remaining doughnuts were carefully placed in a brown paper sack to take on the long trip. He pulled the sack out from under his seat and looked inside. There were a few left. He took one from the sack and bit into it.

Ben casually began watching the movie again as he chewed. Ahead of him and across the aisle a young boy was playing with an action figure of a super hero. He was completely indifferent to the screens flooding the aisle with pale light and the roar of the chainsaw. He looked at the boy, then back to the movie. The boy caught his glance, and looked back. Ben looked back down at the boy. He wasn’t moving. He was staring at the doughnut, his mouth slightly ajar. Ben offered it to him, and he took it eagerly. As he shoved it into his mouth, Ben turned back to the movie. He couldn't stop.

“Vos sos Americano?” asked the boy.

“Yeah, I’m American,” Ben turned back to the boy.

Que copado!” he said, Che, Vos queres ser mi amigo?”

“Do I want to be your friend? Sure, kid.”

Estas mirando la pelicula?”

“Yeah, I’m watching it, but I don’t like it.”

“A mi no me gusta tampoco. Es muy aburrido.”

He smiled and laughed at the irony. The boy laughed too, not knowing why.

“You’re right. It is boring.”

“Vos queres escuchar un chiste?” The boy’s eyes shone. “wanna’ hear a joke?”

“Sure,”Ben said.

He took another doughnut from the sack and gave it to the boy. Ben listened to his joke, then told him one of his own. They laughed until the other passengers bombarded them with “shhhh’s” of annoyance—to which they chuckled defiantly.

They cleaned out the sack and licked off their glazed fingers. Ben glanced at the seething television screen. Suddenly it was all that the boy had said – boring. It was hollow and ugly. His sigh of relief made the boy pause in the middle of his newest story.

“thank you,” Ben whispered.

Como?”

“Nothing.” Ben smiled and nodded for him to continue.

My original poetry- What do you think?

Pedestrian


I take a step into the street

as cars whiz by.

And I should look before I cross

but I’m not going to

until after I step.


Then

at my steely glare

the cars slow

and stop at my feet

like trembling iron monsters

forced to make

an embarrassing submission.


Five deliberate steps

and pause

at the double yellow lines.


A thundering red mountain of existence

accelerates

and passes inches before my face


If I reach out

I could caress death

with my fingertips.


I step again

before the thing has passed.

and a new line of cars

cowers at my presence.


I shudder,

and revel in primal ecstasy

like my ancestors

after killing

the mammoth.


-Craig Decker ‘08







Ode to a Grilled-Cheese Sandwich


As cold rain pours outside

kindergarten to college

You fill my soul

with warm cheesy goodness.










Lint

Pocket Lint

Blissful, Heavenly Fluff

Comforting, Soft, and Gray

How Did You Get

Way Down Inside

My Pocket,

Lint?

Friday, May 23, 2008

Gotta try this

I found a fascinating game on onemorelevel.com it's called "Magic pen" and actually requires some creative thinking and engineering skills to get through. (watch out! It is addicting.) This is a game that I would let my kids play if I had kids!

Monday, May 19, 2008

Spring singing

I just got a copy of last year's Spring University Choir performance. The music was incredible and affected me profoundly.
Here are a few of my favorites:
Praised be the Lord
My Song in the Night
Sure on this Shining Night
Now Glad of Heart
Letatus Sum

Friday, April 25, 2008

One handed typing options.

7 lessons from a firework (written 2-07)

I haven’t always been left handed. In fact, I still get weirded out when I look down at the stub where my right hand used to be! Christmas vacation this year took me on a road trip to Mexico. Question: Where can you buy better quality fireworks than in Mexico? (Answer: anywhere.) On New Year’s Eve I lit a harmless looking firework at midnight, and a moment later I looked down and realized that my hand took the early bus back to heaven!

All joking aside, I have learned some powerful lessons through that experience. (Surprisingly, most of them have very little to do with firework safety!) Although what occurred was tragic, I believe what I have learned has made me a better person and will continue to bless the lives of many individuals.

1. Don’t buy fireworks in Mexico!

2. There are some things in life that we simply cannot control. (If I hadn’t blown off my hand, some other poor person would have.) It’s okay. As we let go of those things quickly and completely, we become free.

3. “Men are that they might have joy”! Life is good. Laughter heals. Life is funny. There are funny things that happen every day even in the worst of situations. Bad days make good stories. There is a time to laugh and a time to cry. It’s funny that laughter and tears come together so easily.

4. The atonement of Christ brings peace and healing “that surpass all understanding”. We come to know ourselves and we come to know God through our trials. We are surrounded by miracles. When we trade self pity for humility, our eyes are opened to see them.

5. There is so much life to live! Why waste time worrying and stressing about inconsequential things? Spend time doing what matters most—the things that bring the most light and joy to life. Enjoy the ride.

6. Challenges make us stronger and better. With creativity and patience, we are capable of much more than we ever imagined. Our perspective determines our reality. (There is nothing that quite compares with the feeling of accomplishment gained from flossing with one hand for the first time!)

7. We can always lift others, no matter how bad of a situation we are in. It is a divine gift. The only true and lasting joy comes from forgetting ourselves and lifting those around us through love and service.

I would never wish another person to lose their hand. But I hope my experiences and lessons make a difference in your life. Wahoo for the resurrection!!

How I became one handed. (Including pictures)

January 1, 2007 12:01 a.m. (age 24) A large Roman candle firework acquired in Tijuana approximately 3 days earlier malfunctioned and exploded in my right hand, effectively ruining a New Year's Eve party and blowing my hands to smithereens. Approximately 3- half metacarpals remained attached to the
1. wrist bones. (see attached photo if you have the stomach for it.)

When I looked down at my hand, it didn't seem real. My hand felt tingly, but it certainly didn't feel like it looked. I yelled out for someone to call 911, and upon realizing that my fingers were gone, asked my friends if they would look around to see if they could find them. There is no way to ask this question without laughing. It's just not a phrase that you ever expect to use in your lifetime.

The adrenaline and shock were kind to me. I didn't feel very much pain at all, and I found myself thinking extremely clearly. I started asking specific people to do specific things. We made a tourniquet out of the belt, made sure everyone else was alright, looked for fingers, called my parents, and had my friend start her car to take me to the ER. Time seemed to slow down for me, and everything was clear. I felt very levelheaded.

Once we were in the ER, I was absolutely amazed at the raw inefficiency of the hospital. After they made sure that I wasn't bleeding profusely, they gave me a Tylenol and had me fill out paperwork and wait for the next hour and a half. I figured that the better it that I cooperated, the faster we would go, and the better chances of saving my hand we would have.

The other effect of the adrenaline and shock were that I became much more funny than normal. I was joking with my family and friends as well as the doctors and nurses from the moment we entered the hospital. The medical report from the ER actually says, “Mr. Decker is a very pleasant young man who has recently blown up his hand with a firework. He appears fairly atraumatic, considering the circumstances.”

They eventually gave me a large dose of morphine, and offered me as much more as I wanted. It was still painful, but less painful than a toothache I had earlier that month. They told me that I didn't have to be brave, and I responded that I wasn't brave. I eventually consented so they would stop bothering me!

I began trying to make sense of everything that had happened during a 45 minute ambulance ride to a larger hospital. I kept on thinking, “things are really going to be different... but how?" And the episode of “Ripley's believe it or not” with a guy called "Lobster Man" kept popping into my head. After losing both his hands, he opted for a surgery or his forearms were each separated to make two large fingers on each arm. Was I going to be a lobster Man? I wasn't sure that I wanted to be a lobster man. The morphine was definitely taking its effect.

I met my parents at the larger hospital and after making sure I was okay, they asked if they could see my hand, which was covered by a towel at the time. I didn't want to gross them out, but I think that it was important for them to see exactly how bad it was rather then to leave it up to their imaginations.

They asked me if they should cancel my classes at college, (since they would be beginning in three days) and at that moment, something in my head clicked. I made a spur of the moment decision that no matter what happened I would never let myself become a victim. “Of course not,” I responded and smiled. “Why would you cancel my classes?” That was the best decision I've ever made in my life. At that moment I gained an incredible sense of peace, and I knew that whether or not they could save my hand, that everything would be okay.

After consulting briefly with the surgeon, they prepped me for surgery. I was astounded that it had taken almost 6 hours before I was in the operating room, and annoyed that because it had taken so long, that I might lose more of my hand.

When I woke up the next morning, I learned that the entire surgery had taken a mere 1 1/2 hours. They had decided that the hand was not salvageable, but took extreme care to reconstruct the residual limb as carefully as possible. It's still felt as though my hand were attached to the end of my arm, and it was tingling all the time as though it were deeply asleep.

I felt great, and wanted to leave that day, but they insisted that I stay for two more days to make sure that there were no complications. I had friends and family visit me throughout the day and everyone was still laughing and joking. My brother brought me a gift of Handburger helper, a golfer's glove, and left-handed scissors. That night after visiting hours were over and I found myself alone,it hit me that my hand was really gone, and would be for the rest of my life. I bawled like a baby for about five minutes to mourn my lost hand, then took a deep breath and laid back down to sleep. For a second time, I felt that profound sense of peace… knowing that everything would be okay, and at this time it stayed. That is the only time that I have ever cried about my hand.

The next few days I found myself constantly surrounded by people that I loved. Everyone who came into my hospital room left laughing. I built my repertoire of one-handed jokes, and we decided what cool attachments I should get. The consensus was that a laser gun would be pretty neat. They all complimented me on what a good attitude I had. I am a believer in the power of God and the power of prayer. I don't know how to describe it, but I knew that all of those people who had visited me and many others had been praying for me, and I felt physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually lifted up by those prayers. I have never felt anything like it in my life. It was a very real force.

I was right-handed before my accident. But I realized pretty quickly that I would have to become ambidextrous… fast! My junior year of college started the next day! Writing was incredibly slow. In some of my classes I arranged to have other people take notes for me, until I realized that when other people took notes that I never read them. I forced myself to write as much as possible each day, and did exercises with a squishy ball to strengthen my fingers and hand. I think that progress with my handwriting was approximately 1 year of elementary school per month.

Set in some ways I really enjoyed the challenge. I enrolled in a beginning tennis course to help my coordination on my left side. I sucked at it, but by the end of semester I was no longer the worst person in the class! Now, a year and a half later, I still throw like a pansy, but my handwriting is fast and mostly legible. J

My surgery was very straightforward. Before the surgery, the surgeon discussed a few options with me depending on what he found, but as an experienced hand surgeon I ultimately left the decision in his best judgment. He told me about the option of keeping a small flap of skin or whatever fingers remained that might be partially functional or having an actual hand transplant, which has been done a few times. He recommended against the hand transplant because of the very low success rate and complications for successful hand transplants including continual pain and/or lack of function and sensation. The last option was to prepare the arm to receive a prosthetic device. The hand was deemed unsalvageable by Dr. Alan Groebs, MD, reconstructive surgeon specializing in hands, and so they amputated the entire wrist so that a prosthetic device would fit.

This one may surprise you. Social hurdles. I didn't really feel like there were very many social challenge is for me. Three days after my accident I moved into a very social apartment complex and became known very quickly as “that guy who just blew his hand off”. Everyone was curious about my story, and by this time I had an amazing repertoire of jokes. I was an instant hit. I'm just an average middle-class white guy, but after losing my hand, I became very recognizable. I don't feel like people treat me any differently.

I discovered that things are only as awkward as you make them. People were way cool about it when they realized that I was comfortable with myself. It's like the fat comedian who tells fat jokes. Since he's the first one to bring it up, suddenly it's no big deal. Every once awhile I would catch people staring, but I don't blame them. I found myself staring at my arm! It's not something you see every day! The funny thing is, more often than staring I would catch people intentionally looking anywhere but my arm. .. or they accidentally look at it, but then look back up at me embarrassed and sheepish. It cracks me up every time.

I actually enjoy the honesty of little kids the most. They come right up to me and ask, “where's your hand?” Sometimes I ask them to help me look for it! Kids are genuinely as curious as anybody else, but are actually willing to ask. When they find out the answer, they treat me like anyone else. The funniest thing is when I catch little kids saying to their mom, “look! he doesn't have a hand”” where is it?” And the mom getting really embarrassed because she thinks I might have heard. If the kids are staring at me without saying anything and their parents are looking, I'll open and close my hook or act like a pirate. I get a kick out of seeing their eyes go really wide and then watching them pretend to have their own hook.

On the day I got my first hook I had a big pirate party with everyone I knew. If life gives you lemons, make lemonade. If life gives you a hook, become a pirate enthusiast!

I haven't noticed any difference in my dating life. If anything, girls seem impressed by my attitude and are more eager to date me. Seriously. No complaints here.




Monday, April 21, 2008

I have always been a fan of YouTube for source of funny videos. I have a collection of favorite videos that I am proud of. Recently I decided to post a few of my own videos. I decided to do a few videos on tips for being one-handed. A friend of mine in Pennsylvania who I met through YouTube, Sean (theguywiththehook), has a series of these instructional videos, and they were incredibly useful I first lost my hand!

http://www.youtube.com/captaindanger384

Saturday, April 19, 2008