Sunday, June 12, 2011

Knock-knock! Who's There? Death! The Ultimate Punch Line! part 1

My old man, he makes everything into a Big Joke. What can I say? The old man loves to get a laugh. Growing up, half the time I didn't have a clue what his jokes were about, but I laughed anyways. Down at the barbershop, it didn't matter how many guys my father let take cuts ahead of him in line, he just wanted to sit there all Saturday and crack people up. Make folks bust a gut. For my old man, getting his sideburns trimmed was definitely a low priority.
He says, "Stop me if you've heard this one before...." The way my old man tells it, he walks into the oncologist's office and he says, "After the chemotherapy, will I be able to play the violin?"
In response, the oncologist says, "It's metastasized. You've got six months to live...."
And working his eyebrows like Groucho Marx, tapping the ash from an invisible cigar, my old man says, "Six months?" He says, "I want a second opinion."
So the oncologist, he says, "Okay, you've got cancer and your jokes stink."
So they do chemotherapy, and they give him some radiation like they do even if the shit burns him up so bad on the inside he tells me that taking a piss is like passing razor blades.




We all know laughter is the best medicine.
He's still every Saturday down by the barbershop telling jokes even if now he's bald as a cue ball. I mean, he's skinny as a bald skeleton, and he's getting to haul around one of those cylinders of oxygen under pressure, like some little version of a ball and chain. He walks into the barbershop dragging that pressurized cylinder of oxygen with the tube of it going up and looping around his nose, over his ears and around his bald head, and he says, "Just a little off the top, please." And folks laugh. Understand me: My old man is no Uncle Miltie. He's no Edgar Bergen. The man's skinny as a Halloween skeleton now and bald and going to be dead by six weeks so it don't matter what he says, folks are going to hee-haw like donkeys just out of their genuine affection for him.
But, seriously, I'm not doing him justice. It's my fault if this doesn't come across, but my old man is funnier than he sounds. Maybe his sense of humor is a talent I didn't inherit. Back when I was his little Charlie McCarthy, the whole time growing up, he used to ask me, "Knock-knock?"
I'd say, "Who's there?"
He'd say, "Old Lady...."
I'd say, "Old Lady who?"
And he'd say, "Wow, I didn't know you could yodel!"
Me, I didn't get it. I was so stupid, I was seven years old and still stuck in the First Grade. I didn't know Switzerland from Shinola, but I want for my old man to love me so I learned to laugh. Whatever he says, I laugh. By "Old Lady" my guess is he means my Mom who ran away and left us. Alls my old man will say about her is how she was a "Real Looker" who just couldn't take a joke. She just was NOT a Good Sport.
He used to ask me, "When that Vinnie van Gogh cut off his ear and sent it to the whore he was so crazy about, how'd he send it?"
The punch line is "He sent it by ear mail," but being seven years old, I was still stuck back on not knowing who Van Gogh is or what's a whore, and nothing kills a joke faster
P sking my old man to explain himself. So when my old ivs, "What do you get when you cross a pig with Count a?"...I knew to never ask, "What's a Count Dracula?" t get a big laugh ready for when he tells me, "A Ham-
And when he says, "Knock-knock."
And I say, "Who's there?" And he says, "Radio."
And I say, "Radio who?" And he's ALREADY started to bust a gut when he says, "Radio not I'm going to come in your mouth...." Then—what the hell—I just keep laughing. My whole growing up I figure I'm just too ignorant to appreciate a good joke. Me, my teachers still haven't covered long division and all the multiple-cation tables so it's not my old man's fault I don't know what's "come."
My old lady, who abandoned us, he says she hated that joke, so maybe I inherited her lack of humor. But love... I mean you have to love your old man. I mean, after you're born it's not like you get a choice. Nobody w7ants to see their old man breathing out of some tank and going into the hospital to die sky-high on morphine and he's not eating a bite of the red-flavored Jell-0 they serve for dinner.
Stop me if I already told you this one, but my old man gets that prostrate cancer that's not even like cancer because it takes 20, 30 years before we even know he's so sick, and the next thing I know7 is I'm trying to remember all the stuff he's taught me. Like, if you spray some WD-40 on the shovel blade before you dig a hole the digging will go a lot easier. And how not to shut my eyes when I pull a trigger. And he taught me how to tie a shoelace and make a foul shot in basket-ball. And he taught me jokes... lots of jokes.
And, sure, the man is no Robin Williams, but I watched this movie one time about Robin Williams, who gets dressed up with a red rubber ball on his nose and this big rainbow--colored Afro wig and those big clown shoes with a fake carnation stuck in his buttonhole of his shirt that squirts water, and the guy's a hotshot doctor who makes these little kids with cancer laugh so hard they stop dying. Understand me: These bald kid skeletons—who look lots-more worse off than my old man—they get HEALTHY, and that whole movie is based on a True Story.
What I mean is, we all know7 that Laughter is the Best Medicine. All that time being stuck in the hospital Waiting Room, I read EVERY copy of the Reader's Digest And we've all heard the True Story about the guy with a brain cancer the size of a grapefruit inside his skull and he's about to croak-all the doctors and priests and experts say he's a goner—only he forces himself to watch nonstop movies about The Three Stooges. This Stage Four cancer guy forces himself to laugh nonstop at Abbott and Costello and Laurel and Hardy and those Marx brothers, and he gets healed by the end-orphans and oxy-generated blood.