Monday, July 28, 2014

They Call Me Doc


“There is one notion I’d like to see buried. The ordinary person. Ridiculous. There is no ordinary person.”

-          Alan Moore

 

Step right up, take a load off. Get comfortable, so that I may regale you with the legend of how I got my nickname.

Alright perhaps legend is a bit of an overstatement…

As you may know, they call me Doc. No it’s not the Doc of which you are thinking; also the name wasn’t earned through the hallowed halls of higher learning. I’m far too austere for an undertaking that demanding.

At any rate I suppose I want to get this story off my chest, but may be reluctant. Hearing it rattle around in my brain stirs up memories of who I was, and just how disconnected I could be.

Ahh, but tell it I must. What harm could there be? To judge is to relate after all.

Once upon a time in a relationship far, far away there was an argument between a couple. They were severely inebriated. One of these days I’ll run out of stories steeped in booze. One day, though not any time soon…

Words were exchanged, some hateful, several slurred, all set ablaze by a fuel of alcohol.

“Fuck it, I don’t care.”

“Have you ever?” She posed a fair question, it was masterfully simple.

“I did, but I don’t anymore. Things shouldn’t be like this.”

Instead of arguing the inarguable, she went on the offensive.

“You’re a monster, that’s what you are. You, don’t even care about me as a person.”

She said this, and I thought about it. I actually had to think about it.

I responded, thoughtfully, calmly, “No, that’s not true. We can’t coexist, it’s not fun, and it’s certainly not love. And…I just don’t care.” My words were blunt, heavy handed, slurred. Not at all me. I sat back, thought, and tried to anticipate her next remark. Not so that I could put an end to this argument, but so I could outwit her, cut deeper than she had.

It was her turn to be contemplative. She paused, trying to brush back the veil of alcohol that clouded her thoughts. And with what I tell you now, my biggest fear is that I may lose you in translation.

Now what was said bears a bit of explaining. The words she chose were personal. The character she references, near and dear to me.

The quote was exact, and although the relationship had forced me to the point of not caring, I was proud that she remembered the words. “You really don’t give a damn about human beings. You’re drifting out of touch Doc. God help us all.”

In the film and graphic novel Watchman, a character by the name of The Comedian (himself a deliberately immoral mercenary) utters this phrase to Doctor Manhattan, after the good Doctor (a near omnipotent superman) stands idle as The Comedian guns down a Vietnamese woman who is pregnant with his child. Both versions of this work seek to display a world where superheroes are the real and fundamentally flawed beings that they would be if they existed.

You might imagine my reaction to this statement. Again, this movie, this book being something that had become deeply personal for me, I was appalled at her feeble effort to taint it for me.

It didn’t take long for me to adopt the moniker.



It wasn’t until I began telling the story to friends and acquaintances that the nickname rose in popularity. People found the story typical; representative of a relationship that went south. For those that knew me, there was a sardonic humor that it encapsulated. And it stuck. I made sure of it.

I began introducing myself as Doc, instead of David. Funny thing was it began to feel natural quickly. Funnier still, people began using it. It happened so fast that I wouldn’t, at first, turn my head towards the name being called. For awhile I took pride in that. 

Looking back, the pride I had turns my stomach.

Needless to say that relationship and all its pitfalls ended. Once that happened the sharp teeth of dishonor came with anytime someone would refer to me by that cursed name. I learned to cringe when it was called. When asked to tell the story of its origin, I’d shy away, change the subject, or when feeling particularly froggy, make up stories about how it had been bestowed.

At this point you might be thinking guilt was playing a part. That wouldn’t be all true. Regret and ignorance were right there as well. It was a reminder of the fact that maybe I hadn’t done all that was in my power to turn things around for the greater good. Here I was carrying around the name of this indestructible superman, and I let that name be tainted after all. For I had been ignoring how the story ended. The character arc of Doctor Manhattan takes is largely a positive one. Realizing that human life is miraculous after all, albeit while making or abiding by difficult decisions, in spite of seeing and reacting to extreme circumstances.

To distill so specific a person from chaos. It’s like turning air into gold.

Then two of those people meet. In some moments that may be bad, it may be hell, or at least seem in the same neighborhood to those have never set foot through the gates. However, if survived it leads to betterment. This I believe for both sides of the problem.  

These days the name has taken on a positive spin, and so much more. My affinity for characters both fictional and fictionalized have grown into the name as well. Holliday, Rictofen, Schultz.

While the experiences that led to the nickname are certainly not ideal, the aftermath is a positive one.

A miracle. Now dry your eyes and let’s go home.