Sunday, December 31, 2006

Corporate Tools: The Lawyer




I started thinking about TheLawyer when I was sitting in judge Razzo’s criminal court voire dire, when the ADA and the defense attorneys asked each one of us in the jury:

“Are you a lawyer, do you have any lawyers in your family, or do you know any lawyers?”

Judge Razzo himself (the judge presiding over the trial) was a bit of a character. Older man, with silver hair, his skin had a bit of redness to it, either from being Irish (I assumed) or maybe stemming from a possible love of the booze (likely).

What killed me about him is that once in a while, the judge would roll his eyes at one of the attorney’s statements or requests, and for me, this automatically meant perhaps the trial wouldn’t be so tedious after all.

At the end of the first day, I got home and Googled Judge Razzo’s name, and I guess I wasn’t too surprised to see that the NY Post had featured him a few times, usually having to do with some controversial ruling (he was considered have some diva-like tendencies), but the last time, about his outburst to a potential juror who made some rude remarks during the voire dire. In true Post fashion, the headlines were deliciously cheesy and somewhat funny at the same time, and they wasted no time calling him “Wacko Razzo”!

So back to the lawyer at hand:

At first look, TheLaywer did everything possible to project a certain type of calculated image. That image was to translate: conservative, serious, elegant, and successful.

He wore glasses instead of contacts, for I believe, a desire to appear older. And he succeeded. TheLawyer was about 5 years younger than me, but certainly looked somewhere in his 40s.

His hair was always severely side-parted, and remained extremely moist throughout the day. Not one strand would ever move.

The severe side part reminded me of the way my aunt used to part my two cousins’ hair when they were little boys. They’d get out of the shower, she’d run after them with the comb, and in tears, they’d stand in front of her, facing her, as she ran the fine tooth comb on a geometrically precise straight line from the back of the head to the front.
The excess hair that now found itself piled up on their little foreheads was combed over to the opposite side of the part, and remained there, so proper, until all the water evaporated, and slowly their little childhood cowlicks began to show.

TheLawyer was a compliance attorney at F-ME Corporation nestled in one of those charming towns in upstate New York along the Hudson. His function was to basically be the hall monitor of the company. To comb through every minute detail of crap, instill fear in those who just wanted to do their jobs and go home, and self-hype his level of importance at F-ME.

I think the ultimate level of doucheness that I ever witnessed TheLawyer commit was when our colleague Luke introduced him to a client:

Luke: “Dr. SoandSo, this is TheLawyer, Compliance Counsel at F-ME Corporation.”

At which point TheLawyer interjects and corrects Luke in front of the client, no less:

TheLawyer: “AAhhmm, Luke, I am actually the Senior Compliance Counsel.”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

With his tendency towards self-importance (you think?), he must have really recently gotten into money, as his behavior reeked of nouveau-riche tackiness. You’d think he’d know better, living in NYC, where so many TRULY wealthy people reside, any bipedal inhabitant of the island would have at least learned that it is oh, so gauche to brag about money in such an 80’s, “greed is good”, Gordon Gecko kinda way.

The most delicious and at the same time atrocious example of this came when he told me the story of a recent date he had:

“Soooo, I went out to dinner the other night with this investment banker who does really well, definitely makes way over 6-figures, and between the two of us, the dinner came to over $800 dollars.”

Me: “What did you have, super expensive wine?” (By the way, who the fuck gives a date’s pedigree like that? Makes well into the 6-figures??? Whaaaaaatt?)

He responds with one word, but the one word that says it all:

“Caviar”.

His eyes squinted a little when he said it, and his lips glistened and opened up into a knowing smile, that knowing smile that savored every millisecond of the word, and knew that the word in and of itself was supposed to stand for something:

Yes, that’s right, I’m Senior Compliance Counsel at a major corporation, I moved to NY all the way from Iowa or Ohio, or some other Midwestern state. I went to a 3rd tier law school, but that’s still good enough to get me some prime NYC ass, an investment banker, no less. Yeah, that’s right. And when I go out, I go big, and I spend $800 bucks on

CAAA-VVVVIIIIIIIIII-AAAAARRRRR!

It all played itself in slo-mo in front of me, CAVIAR!


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The whole caviar ordeal reminded me of Cynthia, another new-riche repeat offender. I worked briefly with Cynthia when I lived in Miami. She was recently married and moved to Florida with her husband, who evidently had an MBA from a great school in the Midwest. Mind you, this was the mid 90’s, the Clinton years, the dot com years, the years when all MBAs were being given multiple insane offers, with crazy stock options, out of this world benefits and incentives, it was a free for all. (God I wish I had gotten mine back then, and not later, when every other schmo seems to have an MBA.)
Well, Cynthia liked to remind people all the time that as soon as hubby graduated from B-school he got a job “with a really high salary”. You could see that she was just counting the days until she got the “go ahead and quit your job” sign from her husband, and she’d turn into the Midwestern hausfrau she’d always wanted to be. Hopefully by then, she thought, they’d move out of Miami. You see, she didn’t feel comfortable in Miami. By comfortable, she meant comfortable in a way that one may feel if you live in Dallas, and the local fashion dictates big hair, spatula-applied make-up and faux nails, usually in a ridiculous shade of mauve coral.

And then there was the bit about the ranch:
“Yeeeeaaaaah (think the boss in “Office Space”), my husband’s parents live on a Ranch in Tennessee, THEY OWN 350 ACRES THERE….”

She said this every-single-time the in-laws came up, without fail. We had a running tally of the times she said it, and by the end of the year, the tally had reached into the 200s easy.

Once at a work party, after already mentioning once that the husband “makes a very good salary”, the in-laws “own 350 acres”, and that the husband drove a Mercedes in high school, she also let us all know that “Hubby’s going to retire by 40”…. Nobody said anything. We all just looked at each other as if searching for the correct response.

Florida is a weird place, and people who live there and have a bit of world awareness realize it. Miami was great, sunshine all the time, going to the beach in January, the ability to go to Calle Ocho and get a true cafecito for $50 cents, that gave you a jolt harder than any grande starbucks coffee around, tres-leches at Publix, pastelitos, the relaxed feel the Cubans brought to Miami. But the further north you drove in Florida, the more like the old south it felt.

I remember one time driving from Miami to Savannah, GA to visit a friend. The drive was about 8 hours up I-95, so I had to make several snack and pee stops. One of my last stops, I think it was just north of Jacksonville, was at a Circle-K or one of those totally Florida places.

A conversation was taking place between a customer (little old lady) and the cashier. And this is what I hear as I walk in:

LittleOldLady: Miami and Fort Lauderdale were very nice, but there are just soooo many minorities everywhere! Everyone’s a minority there!

She quickly tried to suck the words back into her mouth as she saw me walk in, since she noticed the very, very olive skin , the angular, very un-anglo-looking features, the eyes that have been called marbles or kalamatas, and yet, all of this with stick-straight dark brown hair.

I said nothing and reveled in her feeling a bit ashamed and uncomfortable. I came to use this same silence technique many more times in the future, as sometimes it drives home the point so much better than words.

Savannah itself is a town that is very old school, very traditional, and full of history, but at the same time, nicely balanced by the presence of the art school. After a few days there, you get to know the bums by name (when they ask you for money, it’s “Can you spare $7 dollars?”, and not 50 cents as you would hear in other cities) and the locals warm up to you very quickly.

My friend’s charming apartment was at least 1500 square feet of antique fixtures, a gorgeous fireplace, uber high ceilings and what seemed to be miles of long-board wood floor.

In NY the place would have been at least about $6000 a month. The whole 3-floor building was owned by a couple of southern-style queens that also managed the jewelry shop on the first floor.

One day as my friend’s quasi-boyfriend was leaving in the morning, face puffy, and bed hair, one of the jewelry shop yentas had been quietly observing….

Yenta: “I saw someone leaving your apartment this morning…”

My friend, a bit incredulous by the snooping and without much time to think of a witty reply: “Ah, oh well, he’s just a friend, we ended up watching a late movie, and he just stayed over.”

Yenta, in that delicious southern gayish manner: “It’s naaaahhhhhce to have frieeeennds laaahhke thaiiiit”…..

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Besides caviar, star/CEO-effing and being uptight beyond belief, TheLawyer also had a weird love towards all things Washington, DC.

At pretty much all his speeches, trainings and talks throughout the company, TheLawyer would conveniently “drop” something about Washington. Of course with the intent to be used as his closeness to importance, closeness to the “lawmakers” who regulate our industry, you get the picture.

It became so comical, that people started noticing and started jotting down the number of times he said Washington in any conversation. Funny that it became all about the funny, and lost all the real effect he wanted it to have.


But the best Washington move he ever had was when either his cell phone or office phone rang, and god forbid, if the caller id started with area coded 202, you’d inevitable get the:


“I gotta take this. It’s Washington.”

I gotta take this, it’s Washington”, came not only with the verbal positioning, he also held both palms straight up and pushing forward, almost channeling Diana Ross in the choreography for “Stop, in the Name of Love”.

It could have easily been a college roommate, old girlfriend, wrong number, no matter. You would think Condi Rice was getting a call from GW Bush himself, and national security depended on the outcome of this call.

The same side-smile overtook his face with "I gotta take this; it’s Washington", as when he told me the Caviar date story for the second time, two weeks later.

Friday, December 29, 2006

Mantra Girl




MantraGirl was a laid-back, chill, almost hippy-esque chick when I first met her in the late 90s.
She had uber long hair of a fine wave, and a stomach always tight as a board. Her features were created somewhere at the junction of Janis Joplin St. and Fergie Ferg Ave., so depending on her state of make-up and the onlooker’s state of inebriation, she could either look busted.com or pretty cute.
The fact that she had an easy smile on her lips luckily for her tipped the scales to Fergie Ferg more often than not. She was someone who most people would be happy to share a drink, a conversation, a dinner with.

But then things started to change….
2003 came around, and I swear, if I got a penny for every time she uttered those words, I may have amassed a small fortune by now. Definitely enough money to buy me a month's worth of Starbucks every morning.

"Men are intimidated by me, because I am such a strong person.”
'"They like me, but can't handle me due to my sheer strength of mind, my over- the-top-personality, my fine wit and incredible intelligence".

What she could not see, is that every time she repeated the mantra, it failed to portray her as what she wanted to be seen as: this incredible force of nature, this tsunami of self-assureds .

MantraGirl suffered from the condition I call “love-me-daddy” validation-seeking. She sought validation and self-completion from her trysts, and justified men’s subsequent loss of interest by repeating over and over that "He must have gotten afraid of being involved with such a strong person".

In late December 2004, the new mantra became:

'"I'm not comfortable with the casual nature of sex in this city".

Cynic that I am, I had to suppress the sudden reverse peristalsis about to take place , and instead, ended up rolling my eyes so deep back into my brain cavity, I swear I saw some synapses firing like mad.

Could it be that after an entire year of rampaging through NYC's men, MantraGirl, the chick who embodies the sport-sex definition, suddenly did not want or believe in casual sex? Good for her, maybe she finally got out of the straight path into a Valtrex prescription.

But fear not: Immediately after uttering the latest mantra, with an apres-diner drink at Whiskey Park, she meets a charming executive from Washington State, and…

Wakes up the next morning with her garage hurting, and calls me looking for reassurances that most AIDS cases are not transmitted through heterosexual contact.
Right? Right?

2005 came and brought with it a re-incarnation of the “Men-are-intimidated-by-me" mantra:

One recent night last winter, the last time I hung out with MantraGirl, I was offered this gem every five minutes or so, I kid you not. By the end of the night, I would rather have jumped out the window, than hear it one more time:

"I am confident". "I am so confident". "So-and-so is not as confident as me".

Every time "confident" spilled from her lips, I imagined this poor little girl on an empty dark stage at Lincoln Center repeating the phrase over and over again. Then an oval bright light would come on and follow her around the wooden floor, accentuating her lack thereof.

Ass-Monkey Poetry




My friend the AssMonkey is a brand strategy maven by day, and an artiste by night.

He enjoys writing songs titled "The Jig is Up", and he also likes to send me his quirky poetry via text messaging.

I christened him the AssMonkey due to his inclinations in bed.

************
Little bunny that lingers loses.
That's not what you want.
Shimmy up the AssMonkey vine, little bunny plug.

*************
The Brazilian goddess,
Sometimes called Brazilla,
Evoking Godzilla,
Vents flames of destruction,
From her sub-equator,
Smoldering man and beast alike.

Thursday, November 09, 2006

What a long, strange and tortuous colon it's been...




So yesterday I had my first colonoscopy, just to rule out anything that may have been contributing to my "plumbing malfunctions"....

I really thought Dr. Weber would walk in and tell me, during my anesthesia-induced stupor that :

"Observia, everything looks normal. You are under an enormous amount of stress, and that's mainly what is causing your pipes to clog up. Blah blah blah, you need to relax, drink more, kill yourself, blow up some steam, and that should take care of it".

But it went more like this:

Dr. W.: "Observia, you have what we call a long and tortuous colon."

Me: "Come again?"

Dr. W.: " Your colon is about 2 feet longer than a normal colon, and due to its extreme length, instead of assuming the normal colon morphology, it twists and turns on itself, to be able to fit inside of you. That means that your bolus has an extra 2 feet of distance to travel, as well as a decrease in speed everytime it reaches one of the twists".

Oy vey. I couldn't have an extra 7-8 inches added to my height, or a few extra points on my I.Q. Oh No! It had to be more colon than I know what to do with.

It's not even as if it's a 3rd kidney, or an extra liver, something I could donate and feel good about myself for. Nobody I know is on the transplant list for more colon.

So add a long and tortuous colon to my already existing hemi-vertebrae, complete with scoliosis and extra rib, and what does that make me? Part alien? The next evolutionary step to a sub-species that will become really, really tall to accomodate the extra gastro-intestinal "tubege"?

Attached is a schematic of a normal colon, and a long and tortuous one, or as I like to call it, the Homo sapiens observius colon....

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Deepak Chopra, Limo Driver???


"Do you feel tired?”

I asked him, after I noticed the rectangular piece of face reflected on the rearview mirror. His eyes were squinting, closing shut for long periods of time, which meant one of two things: either the April sunshine was too bright, or he was over-worked, too tired to be driving.

Although my life wasn't exactly stellar at the moment, or for the past oh, few years or so, the thought of hitting the guard rail, plunging into the East River, choking on water, dying a slow, painful, agonizing death didn't appeal to me at the moment. Even if it made it to New York 1 and The Post. Even if they put up a hot picture of me and did a good write-up.

What I should have said was:

“Are you falling asleep?"

I felt momentarily pathetic, to think that even with a total stranger I felt the need to measure my words, so as to not hurt, not offend, not something. But I digress.

I had been watching him, the way he felt no qualms about taking his shoe off, bending his leg, sitting on his foot, so that from the back seat, I could see his left sole staring at me, squished in between his right thigh and the car seat. He had no qualms about spitting out the window, and breaking and accelerating at such a rate that I felt my stomach churn and literally beg me to just get off that car, out of my body, and meet me back at JFK.

My nausea subsided for a moment, when he responded to my question by saying that that's how he reflected about his life, by closing his eyes every few seconds or so, almost as if to visualize his problems, his whole existence, his heartache.

Not exactly the answer I expected. What I did expect was more along the lines of:

"No, Miss, don't worry, I'm awake", followed by silence. End of story. But not yet.

Within 30 seconds, he volunteered that this was his preferred manner to reflect about his family, about coming to this country, about keeping up with the Sri Lankan Joneses and becoming rich like them, about owning a house in Queens within eight years of living in New York.

This is also how he thinks of how his wife cheated on him and he has proof. And by proof, he means telephone-recording proof, the kind of proof that parrots the voices of the involved saying sweet nothings to one another, planning their next rendezvous, probably her voice complaining about her marriage, possibly recounting the details of the last meeting.

With my stomach temporarily at peace with me, and with my torso leaning me forward, I wanted to know more:

"Are you divorcing her?" "Do you ever confront her about it?"
He mumbles something about divorce being "bad for the kids", and "an embarrassment in my culture", and besides, the guy the wife cheated with moved back to Sri Lanka and married someone else anyway.

How easy it was for him to just accept all of this was beyond me.
I was already analyzing the entire situation, and imagining me in it. No amount of culture or societal embarrassment would keep me from going into a spiral of obsessive ruminations so deep and constant that my only option would be to sever any and all ties to this person.

Instead of discussing it with her, he prefers the relief of talking to his friends about it and, much to my surprise, to total strangers like me.
Supposedly that morning, just by my asking him about it, he already felt better.

He finished by presenting me with a little gem that may as well have come from the mouth of Deepak Chopra, Dr. Phil , some Kabbalah teaching, or whatever new-age religion/ philosophy du jour we have today may give:

"Moments of happiness are very short -lived, and to get to them, we must accept and be able to live through the hard, unhappy moments in life".

Uh, can I have that delivered with a cup of coffee every morning, please? Nothing like a little dose of reality right before I board a 3 hour flight to Florida.

This whole exchange lasted from the entrance to JFK until we pulled up curbside at the Jetblue area, a whole of no more than three minutes.

By that point he was done, relieved of his life burden for the morning, and well enough to switch topics and start giving me advice about how he was able to buy his pride-and-joy abode in Queens.

"It's easier with an all -cash business. With a job like yours, miss, it's harder to make that kind of money."

Not wanting to hear any details of how he probably defrauded his company, I signed the credit card voucher, gave him a $7 dollar tip and started to walk towards the sliding doors of the terminal.

As I stop and turn around to take one last look, I see his car pulling away from the curb, driver still squinting, left leg still bent under his right thigh, but this time chatting away on his cell phone, as if nothing had ever happened.
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