Back
At It
by
Humberto Fontova
by Humberto Fontova
On
the home stretch of completing my Castro
book, with my tongue hanging, with the crowds roaring, with
the finish line in sight, I almost lost my life in a hideous accident.
(on exactly 9-11, 2004, as it turned out.)
At
11:30 PM that night (my favorite bike-riding time) I was thrown
from my bicycle and plunged off a tall bridge, bounced off sharp
steel girders on the way down and finally landed face and (unhelmeted)
head first, twenty feet below on jagged boulders. Amazingly someone
was walking their dog on the bike trail at that hour. They noticed
a bicycle on the ground near the railing and peered over. There
I lay, unconscious and bleeding heavily. I'd been down there for
twenty minutes. Had that person not happened along.....?
Anyway,
finally at the emergency room we learned the results of my midnight
ride: fractured skull, subdermal hematoma, smashed eye and orbit,
8 inch gash in forehead with cracked skull exposed, leg and hip
broken in 6 places, 5 ribs broken along with arm and hand. Various
internal injuries. The first few days in intensive care the speculations
ran to survival. We cleared that one. Then came speculations about
paralysis, life in a wheelchair (considering my hobbies, not a happy
prospect.) We cleared that one. Then came speculations concerning
severe brain damage from the horrific trauma to the head (I write
and speak for a living, again not a happy prospect.)
And
here's were the therapists got REALLY worried. "Here," one said
while handing me a notebook as I lay in my hospital bed. "Just write
us a paragraph about what you see in this drawing."
"Sure,"
I groaned. "No problema." The picture was a cutesy family pic-nic
on a lakeshore. A smiling Mom and Dad, two kids frolicking. "This
poor guy," I started writing, "is miserable. There's a Honky-Tonk
just behind that hill and he longs with every fiber of his being to
be in it, first whooping it up with the pole-dancers , then settling
in front of the video poker machine with a double-crown on the rocks.
The poor woman is on the verge of slapping the kids silly because
they just finished feeding the sandwiches she lovingly prepared
and packaged, to some turtles. And the little boy just crippled
a duck by heaving a brick at it while it competed with the turtles
for a sandwich scrap."
"Here
ya go," and I handed it back. One frowning therapist quickly handed
it to the other who frowned even harder. They were silent for a
second and Shirley got worried. "What's wrong?" She blurted. "Is
he...?"
"Well,
here. " And they handed her the booklet.
"Then
he's fine!" Shirley erupted after a quick glance. "Back to normal!"
The
Therapists gaped. "He's fine, I tell you!" Shirley blurted again.
"Don't worry. Oh, he's deranged alright. No doubt about that.
But that has nothing to do with this accident. He was born that
way. Here..." and she rummaged behind my bed where I had copies
of Helldiver's
Rodeo and Hellpig
Hunt. She handed the books to the therapists. "Open any
page and read. You'll see. He's back to normal for sure!"
Just
then the doctor walked in. "Hiya sport!" he beamed. "Ah! Got your
books here. I read 'em both. "
"Good,"
Shirley said. "Then maybe you can explain to these therapists that
Humberto's fine in the head. They seem a little worried because
of what he just wrote in their booklet."
"Let's
see here, " and he leaned over and read. "Yep! That's Humberto!
I'd say he's doing great. Now let's have a look at that wound, old
sport."
Almost
a month later I was finally home. Amazingly, this past Christmas
season, barely three months after the bashing, I found myself not
just merrily celebrating the Holidays along with my book's completion,
along with my dad's 78th Birthday, along with my 26th wedding anniversary,
along with my parents 55th anniversary, along with my daughter's
engagement but dancing at the multifarious and raucous
celebrations!
And
I'm talking everything from the Hustle and Bump to the Boot-Scootin-Boogie
and Cha-Cha-Cha! I was on a crutch and wearing an eye patch so,
okay, I wasn't exactly John Travolta. But STILL!
And
these rollicking festivities also found me as engaging, witty, erudite,
sparkling, talkative boisterous....Hunnh? Oh Hi, honey (My darling
wife often reads over my shoulder, making helpful suggestions.)
"A
bit wordy, Humberto....just write as obnoxious as ever."
"Thanks
honey!" You get the point, amigos. Thanks to a chorus of prayers,
thanks to a positively suffocating avalanche of moral (and physical)
support from my family and a crowd of not fairweather,
by any means! friends, I find myself joyfully back at it.
Heck, I even managed a week-end duck-hunt/booze/food-fest at my
chum's duck-camp last New Years week-end. But more on that extravaganza
next week.
June
10, 2005
Humberto
Fontova [send him mail]
holds an M.A. in History from Tulane University. He’s the author
of the newly-published Fidel;
Hollywood's Favorite Tyrant, as well as The
Hellpig Hunt: A Hunting Adventure in the Wild Wetlands at the Mouth
of the Mississippi River by Middle-Aged Lunatics Who Refuse to Grow
Up and Helldiver’s
Rodeo described as "Highly entertaining!" by Publisher’s
Weekly, as "Terrific!" by Salon.com, and as "Just
what the doctor ordered!" by Ted Nugent.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
Humberto
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