Syllepsis (sil-lep’-sis): When a single word that governs or modifies two or more others must be understood differently with respect to each of those words. A combination of grammatical parallelism and semantic incongruity, often with a witty or comical effect. Not to be confused with zeugma: [a general term describing when one part of speech {most often the main verb, but sometimes a noun} governs two or more other parts of a sentence {often in a series}].
My house was cold and so was my heart. It was winter. It was four below zero and I had that urge again—that cruel ruthless urge that consumed me when the temperature dropped below 1 degree. I could make the house warm almost instantly and get rid of my pain in the ass family at the same time. Gasoline and a BIC lighter were the key ingredients in my diabolical desire.
I stopped taking my lithium one week ago. I do that every six months or so. Every time, before I can “warm things up” my wife calls 911 and I’m put under observation at Manson Memorial again, fed my lithium, and turned loose, a changed man. “John Boy”—the nicest guy in town—loves his wife, loves his kids, goes to church every Sunday and tells the funniest jokes in town—in Long Point, Ohio. Little do they know it’s all chemically induced. At the alpha and omega of my being I am a lilt and a dirge.
I went out to the garage to get the gas can. I had filled yesterday afternoon. I could feel the urge. Working at the bank wasn’t enough. Watching “Fox News” wasn’t enough. Only smoke, flames and screams could satisfy my craving. I couldn’t name my craving, but I didn’t care! I didn’t give a shit! Maybe I was looking for fame as “The Monster Who Fried His Family.” Front page news. Maybe even a movie deal.
I splashed gasoline all over the living room floor, soaking the carpet. I reached in pocket for the BIC and it wasn’t there. I quietly looked all over the house. Damn! I’d have to go to Cliff’s and buy one. It was 2:00 am, but they were open around the clock. I went to Cliff’s bought a red BIC, a Red Bull, and a box of Smith Brothers cherry-flavored cough drops. All red. Ha ha! I couldn’t wait to get back home.
When I got back home I was greeted by three police cars with flashing lights, a fire truck and my wife on the lawn in her bathrobe yelling “That’s him!” But it wasn’t me. It was non-medicated Maniac Man. Ha ha! They handcuffed me and took me to Manson Memorial, where I would be re-drugged and counseled until I was “good old” John Boy again.
When I got back home we returned to our normal rituals. My favorite was leaving the bedroom doors open and yelling “Good night” to each other: “Good night Ma. Good night Mary. Good night Joseph.”
My only regret regarding my latest “episode” is that I didn’t buy a lotto ticket at Cliff’s. I love the Take Five scratch offs.