Restrictio (re-strik’-ti-o): Making an exception to a previously made statement. Restricting or limiting what has already been said.
“You think life is a basket of cherries sweetly beating under your chests.” That’s what my Creative Writing teacher told us on the first day of class. I was high on weed so it made total sense. She was trying to tell us not to put all our eggs into basket metaphors or the chickens will come home roost and we’ll have egg on our faces and weird names like “Rhode Island Red,” “Leg Horn,” or “Bantam.”
I disagreed wildly with my own interpretation. This happened when I tried to reason with myself on weed. I would revise my thoughts six or seven times and then give up and take another hit. My introduction of chickens had steered my interpretation erroneously toward what I called “The fog of bore.” In the fog, I would bump into words as if I was sleepwalking. I would utter them, intending to induce comfort and joy. Instead, they induced snoring and drool.
My teacher continued, “I will cure you on your dependence on a thesaurus and a dictionary for inspiration and meaning. You must stand in the shade waiting for Goddo—waiting for that special synapse that will give voice to your creative thoughts—without the protheses of coffee, acid, or shrooms. Alcohol and weed are all you need to unlock your doors of conception and stumble into the light, clutching your laptops, ready to write. Welcome to Lemongrass College, Creative Writing 190. I am your instructress Dr. “Hot Ma” Maloney. You may address me as “Dr. Hot.” Let’s get started. Hold up the Voodoo dolls you were given by my assistant Barbie as you entered the classroom.”
I was so fu*ked up that most of what Dr. Hot had to say was deeply inspirational. Oh, but wait, I wasn’t so fu*cked up that I couldn’t tell Dr. Hot that I was inspired, inspired to tell her she should forget about the “doors of conception” and dive into the Blue Lagoon instead—the giant hot tub in Iceland—where failed writers go to drown. But, when they hit the water they temporarily turn into different colored floaty noodles, bobbing in the not so yonder blue water. After five minutes of finding their bliss, they all transform back into humans and go home to be mathematicians and lumberjack’s wives.
Dr. Hot was heating. Sweat ran down her forehead and wet circles were appearing under her arms. She looked at me with her beautiful blue eyes—I could actually feel her gaze on my lips. She said: “Class dismissed. Mr. Kent, meet me in the back seat of my car in Parking Lot B at 7:00pm. It is a Delorean with California license plate “PHD.”
I brought my laptop.