On a bustling street in Naples, I saw a chap standing amidst the seething throng, having his nostril hair trimmed with an old-fashioned-looking clipper device. Was he the recipient of a service, like shoe-shining, for busy men-on-the-go who need to smarten up their appearance or primp some aspect of their personal grooming at the last minute? I couldn’t stop to check, as I was navigating the crowded pavement, trying not to lose sight of my Other Half, who was already some distance ahead and disappearing fast.
Nevertheless,
I was intrigued by the public execution of what I have always considered a
private, bathroom-based procedure and, subsequently, recalled when I first became
aware of the necessity for it. At the age of five or so, I watched with awe as
my father wielded a small pair of scissors up his nostrils while making a funny
face in the mirror. It was, perhaps, three decades later that I purchased my
own, dedicated tool for the same purpose.
I have never
enquired whether this is a singularly male phenomenon, by the way, but one
thing is for sure: it is a symptom of ageing. As the years go by, hair thins
out on the scalp and sprouts more prolifically elsewhere, a bioprocess for
which there must be a scientific explanation, if only I had time to seek it
out. But the allocation of one’s time within a diminishing lifespan becomes
more critical the closer one gets to its conclusion – which is one reason why I
should have given up reading that last novel after chapter one.
There were warning
signs in both the title – There Is No Antimemetics Division – and the
author’s name – qntm (sic) – that should have caused me to by-pass this work of
fiction and opt instead for something more mainstream, but I was swayed by the
opinion of a stranger (a published critic) and the nagging feeling that it was
time to step out of my novel-reading comfort zone and try something unfamiliar while
my mind is still sufficiently flexible to accommodate the shock of the new.
Not that it’s
a bad novel. It’s well written, has a plot and relatable characters. It’s just
that I couldn’t grasp the premise of the story and that’s a problem that makes
page-turning a bit of a chore. For those who might be intrigued, there is an
explanation of sorts, halfway through: “If something can cross over from
conceptual space into reality, taking physical form, then something can cross
in the opposite direction “. If only that had been inserted into the first
chapter, I might have made the decision to cut my losses and quit earlier but,
by then, I had developed a dogged determination to get to the bottom of things.
Besides, I had paid good money for the publication.
Not that I
relish dwelling at length on the subject of aging, but the past few weeks have been
somewhat loaded with incidents of friends and relatives coming face-to-face
with the deterioration of physical health that comes with it. It does make one
conscious that life and its pleasures – should one be fortunate enough to enjoy
some – are time-limited and ought to be made the most of. So, the dilemma, as
illustrated above, is whether to be adventurous and plunge into the unfamiliar,
or to stick with the “I know what I like and I like what I know” principle. Perhaps
it’s a sensible compromise to combine a little of each, dipping a toe in from
the safety of dry land, so to speak?
There are some things, however, that I would leave off my 'bucket list': bungee jumping is one and public nostril-hair trimming another.