Dissolved

By Meg Sorick

The pain started in my thumbs. It was an itching, tingling sensation at first. I rolled over and shook my hands, thinking I’d just been sleeping too long in the same position. The pain only grew worse. I lay staring at the ceiling for a time, willing the sensation to cease. It spread from my thumbs to my wrists and back down into my other fingers. Both hands were now fully engulfed in white, hot pain.

I slipped quietly from bed so as not to disturb Henry. He was never pleasant when awoken in the middle of the night. In the bathroom, I elbowed the light on to protect my tortured hands.

I screamed. The light intensified the pain tenfold. My wedding ring dropped to the floor and I screamed again.

“For god’s sake, Molly, what’s all the racket?” Henry called irritably from the bedroom.

I couldn’t speak, couldn’t put into words what I was seeing. “Come, quick!” I finally managed. “I’m dissolving!”

It was true. My fingers and wrists and forearms had disappeared. The only way I could think to describe it was as static —the kind of static an old analogue television signal produced when it wasn’t tuned in tightly to the channel. The static was steadily snaking its way to my shoulders and dissolving my flesh and bones as it climbed.

With a heavy sigh, Henry leaned against the door jamb of the bathroom. “Molly, your being hysterical.”

“Look at me!” I cried.

Henry frowned. “What?”

“Don’t you see it? Can’t you see that I’m disappearing before your very eyes?”

He sighed again. He bent over and picked up my wedding band. “Look, you’ve dropped your ring.” He held it out to me.

“Henry!” I wailed in bitter frustration.

He set it on the bathroom vanity. “Fine. I’ll leave you to your histrionics, Molly. Come back to bed the you’re over it.”

I sank to my knees sobbing. The static had dissolved my shoulders, spread to the top of my chest and breathing was becoming difficult. I drew in a deep breath as one final burst of static consumed all of my body below my throat. The sensation of being a disembodied head was wildly disorienting. It lasted but a moment as gravity engaged and I fell face first to the floor.

I sat upright, heart pounding, breath ragged. A dream, only a dream. I pushed my hair off my face and swung my legs over the side of the bed. Elbows on knees, I willed my breathing to slow. Better.

The dream mustn’t have disturbed Henry because he went about his business as usual in the morning. Fixing his coffee —he didn’t like the way I made it, toasting bread and spreading copious amounts of orange marmalade —I wasn’t generous enough to suit his liking. And he had nothing to say about it during breakfast. He nibbled the toast and sipped his coffee and ignored me like he did every morning. I sat quietly across from him, still rattled by the events of the night.

The phone rang and he reached for it absently. “Hello?”

Someone on the other end spoke.

“Molly? No, sorry, she’s not here. Haven’t seen her all morning, in fact.”

The agony of Laocoön

Treachery and disaster
A warning unheeded
“Trust not the Horse”
“Beware the Greeks bearing gifts”
A hurled spear
Sways no opinions
Only angers the petty gods
Athena rages from on high
Shaking the very pillars of the Earth
Steals Laocoon’s vision
Yes, it’s desperate measures
“Burn the horse, burn the horse
And you will see what I cannot”

But the Goddess was with the Greeks that day
“Feel my wrath and pay with your life,
And the lives of your sons”

Stinging venom, teeth like knives
The serpents rose from the sea
Agony and suffering, muscles straining
Contorted in pain, Laocoon has no redeemer

Header Image: Detail from The Procession of the Trojan Horse in Troy by Domenico Tiepolo (1773), inspired by Virgil’s Aeneid

Toasting – The pagan origins

Week 33 in The Year of Drinking Adventurously. Supposed to be Blueberry Wine. Fail!

This week’s adventure was supposed to take us to the great state of Maine, USA. They grow lots of blueberries in Maine which results in the production of all sorts of blueberry related items,  including blueberry wine. Now I have to be honest. That is really not my kind of thing. So I didn’t try very hard to acquire said product. But not one to shirk my responsibility to talk about something booze related, and since I’m also kind of on a history kick I decided to share with you the origins of “toasting” since Lula has named this event Toast Tuesday.

Raising a glass of wine or other alcoholic beverage is a common and age-old practice. While details may vary from culture to culture, the idea is to wish good luck or good health to someone or several someones. Sometimes the glasses are touched together and the person offering the toast may make a short speech bestowing wishes for long life, good health, wealth and happiness on the person being toasted. Usually those sharing in the toast will raise their glasses and voice their agreement, after which everyone drinks.

What, though, is the background of the custom of toasting?  According to National Geographic:  “The now-respectable custom of the toast was once an exercise in aggressively competitive drinking. Historians guess that the toast most likely originated with the Greek libation, the custom of pouring out a portion of one’s drink in honor of the gods. From there, it was an easy step to offering a drink in honor of one’s companions.”

Additionally, the 1995 International Handbook on Alcohol and Culture says: “[Toasting] is probably a secular vestige of ancient sacrificial libations in which a sacred liquid was offered to the gods: blood or wine in exchange for a wish, a prayer summarized in the words ‘long life!’ or ‘to your health!’”

But why “toast” you might ask? Back to National Geographic: “The term “toast”—as in drinking to someone’s health—comes from a literal piece of spiced or charred toast, a tidbit once routinely dropped in a cup or bowl of wine, either as form of h’or d’oeuvre or to make the wine taste better. Shakespeare mentions this in The Merry Wives of Windsor, in which Falstaff calls for a quart of spiced wine, then adds “Put a toast in it.” By the 18th century, the term  “toast” had been transferred from the floating bread to the person honored by the toast-hence the particularly popular could become the “toast of the town.”’

It’s quite fascinating to examine how something we take for granted has its origins in the pagan world. The wedding ring, for example, is another tradition based on superstition. But that doesn’t have anything to do with alcohol so that must wait for another day! And just a heads up, the next several weeks of my drinking adventures are going to be a deviation from the book. Our guide introduces some very obscure alcohols that I’ll never be able to find locally. Instead, I’ll share some of my personal drinking adventures of which there are many!