Monday, September 2, 2019
Going Against Nature with T.C. Boyle
Jessica Arroyo English 116 11 April 2012 Life is hard. There are two things we need to succeed in life. We need to understand that nature is a key player in life, and that it has a greater power over us than we do it. We cannot control nature, nor can we impact what it has in store for us. If nature, such as the weather, decides thereââ¬â¢s going to be a storm this weekend, well the best we can do is prepare for it. If nature creates us in one mode, who are we to go against it and try to change our species? If nature decides itââ¬â¢s going to slam a commit into the earth, we are helpless in the matter.Going against nature, or even questioning its methods, has its consequences and the characters of the short stories written by T. C. Boyle seem to know this all too well. Nature is a greater power who demands great respect. It is not a choice in matter, but rather a forced way of life that we have no means to alter, which Boyle convincingly conveys through his stories. In the stor y ââ¬Å"The Swift Passage of Animalsâ⬠, T. C. Boyle takes us on a ââ¬Å"big adventureâ⬠(91) in which a new relationship is intended to flourish by a romantic weekend getaway.The nature of the male, Zach, is to impress the young recently divorced woman, Ontario. Though they are already dating, he is still courting her in hopes to further impress her by taking her to ââ¬Å"hike the trails and cross-country skiâ⬠¦ and then sit at the bar at the lodge till it was time to go to bedâ⬠(84), by sharing the experiences with the greatest thing they have in common, their love for nature. Of course, there is more in it for Zach than just enjoying the beauty nature has, he intends on fulfilling the ââ¬Å"unspoken promise percolating beneath the simple monosyllable of her assentââ¬âgoing to bedâ⬠(84).Zach is using her love of nature to his fullest advantage. Nature is not something to be taken advantage of, as it is not something to be questioned or controlled. Z ach, being the dominate ââ¬Å"risk-takerâ⬠(79) that he believes himself to be is about to get a whole new taste of what nature has to offer when take advantage of for personal gain. Though Zach claims that the main reason for their trip is to explore and enjoy their common interest of nature at the Big Timber Lodge it is just a cover for what he really has in mind, which is going to bed with Ontario. T. C.Boyleââ¬â¢s diction throughout the beginning of the story foreshadows this ââ¬Å"unspokenâ⬠(84) intention of Zach by placing details such as ââ¬Å"the soft sexy scratch of [her voice] shot from his eardrums right to his crotchâ⬠(80), and the reference of her sweater with the ââ¬Å"reindeer prancing across her breastsâ⬠(81), he foreshadows the consequences of these provoking thoughts by directly following them with the dangers of the ââ¬Å"sleetâ⬠ââ¬Å"darkâ⬠(80) road they were on. In showing his dominance and risk taking skills, Zach cho oses not to prepare in case they get caught in a storm on the way to the Lodge.He also presses nature even further by choosing to take the back road even though ââ¬Å"there was a winter storm watch out of the Southern Sierrasâ⬠¦and he knew that [it] would be closed as soon as the first snow hitâ⬠(74). All he could think about was getting there as fast as he could. ââ¬Å"He was always in a hurry. Especially tonight. Especially with herâ⬠(74). Zach experiences his ââ¬Å"first prick of worryâ⬠(81) when he spots a sign that said ââ¬Å"Cars required with Chainsâ⬠(81). Perverselyâ⬠(95) nature enhances his worries by letting the snow paint the road with such intensity it was ââ¬Å"as if some cosmic hand had swept on ahead with a two-lane paintbrushâ⬠(81). Despite the skidding of the tires and the snow ââ¬Å"coming down as if it wasnââ¬â¢t going to stop till Mayâ⬠(88), Ontario maintains full confidence in Zach. ââ¬Å"She wasnââ¬â¢t staring out the windshield into the white fury of the headlights, but watching him as if they were cruising down the Coast Highway under a ripe delicate sunâ⬠(83).But even with the confidence of his potential mate, his risk taking skills, and attitude nature still manages to turn things around on him when the car skids into a boulder and lands itself in ââ¬Å"a glistening white ditch that undulated gracefully away from the hidden surface of the roadâ⬠(85). Zach is now completely alone in the nature with Ontario, ââ¬Å"which was where he really and truly wanted to beâ⬠(85). However, it is now that all of his unpreparedness becomes apparent. ââ¬Å"He didnââ¬â¢t have a shovel in the truckââ¬âno shovel, and no chainsâ⬠(86).No ââ¬Å"knifeâ⬠or ââ¬Å"hatchetâ⬠, or ââ¬Å"anything to cut withâ⬠(87). Nothing of any use to assist them in getting the tires up and out of the ditch. All of their feeble attempts merely gave ââ¬Å"the rear whee ls a momentââ¬â¢s purchaseâ⬠which just resulted in ââ¬Å"[shoving] the front end in deeperâ⬠(88). Nature successfully pulls this egotistical, risk taking, prideful, dominant male down ââ¬Å"to feel less a risk taker and more a fool, callow, rash, without foresight of calculation, the sort of blighted ndividual whose genetic infirmities get swallowed up in the food chain before he can reproduce and pass them on to vitiate the speciesâ⬠(86). As nature pulls Zach further and further down, deepening his misery by torrential snow and all the worries that come with leaving your car out in the middle of the wilderness (such as if ââ¬Å"the yahoos come out and strip itâ⬠(92) ) in an attempt to hike to the Big Timber Lodge which was still a long ââ¬Å"thirteen milesâ⬠(93) away, Ontario is ââ¬Å"inordinately cheerfulâ⬠(91).But ââ¬Å"given how miserable [Zach] wasâ⬠(91) because of the crash, he was able to pull the optimistic outlook of Ontari o down to his pessimistic level. By the end of their hike, Zach finds himself grouped into ââ¬Å"the unlucky and unpreparedâ⬠(95) people which nature tackles with full force. His trip was ruined, as well as his time with Ontario. When they finally reach the lodge, after being rescued from the cold by ââ¬Å"the man in the gogglesâ⬠(96) on a ââ¬Å"snowmobileâ⬠(96), Ontario corrects Zachs request of a room to ââ¬Å"two roomsâ⬠(98). In ââ¬Å"Dogologyâ⬠T. C.Boyle introduces us to Cynthia, or ââ¬Å"C. f. , Captial C, lowercase fâ⬠(44) as she prefers to be called. She is a young woman who has finished grad school and attempting to ââ¬Å"challengeâ⬠(35) the misconceptions people have about dogs. The world views dogs as ââ¬Å"beneath themâ⬠¦ common, pedestrian, no more exotic than the housefly or the Norway ratâ⬠(35). C. f. was obsessed with changing the worlds view of dogs despite the fact that ââ¬Å"the graduate committee rejected her thesisâ⬠(35). Humans have domesticated dogs. This results in two types of dogs: the wild and the domesticated.Cynthia challenges the methods of nature, by trying to change herself into a member of the pack. She committed herself to doing things as the pack would, ââ¬Å"made a point of wearing the same things continuously for weeks on endâ⬠¦ in the expectation that her scent would invest them, and the scent of the pack tooâ⬠(40). She ââ¬Å"[hoped] to gain their confidenceâ⬠(40) by smelling like them, running with them ââ¬Å"reminding herself to always keep her head down and go quadrupedal whenever possibleâ⬠(35) this was how she was going to ââ¬Å"hear, smell and see as the dogs didâ⬠(35).Nature did not intend for Cynthia to take on the life of the dog. She was born human, and yet ââ¬Å"what she was doing, or attempting to do, was nothing short of reordering her senses so that she could think like a dog and interpret the whole worldââ¬â not just the human worldââ¬âas dogs didâ⬠(35). Cynthia is exposed to the consequences of challenging nature by converting yourself to a different species of the world. Though married, Cynthia commits her days to accomplishing ââ¬Å"the rhythm of dogdomâ⬠(40), ignoring the needs and the wants of her husband.She throws her ââ¬Å"neighborhood into an uproarâ⬠(41) to the point where ââ¬Å"theyââ¬â¢re going to have her committedâ⬠(51). Her husband ââ¬Å"locked her outâ⬠(50) of the house, leaving her to be with the dogs after a confrontation in which ââ¬Å"heââ¬â¢d kicked herâ⬠(49) out of the frustration of her ââ¬Å"researchâ⬠(49) which he plainly saw as ââ¬Å"bullshitâ⬠(49). ââ¬Å"He wanted her back home, back in the den, and that was his rightâ⬠(49), however Cynthia had other ambitions. Truly, she was accomplished being ââ¬Å"left aloneâ⬠(49) to enjoy ââ¬Å"the unalloyed sweetness in lifeâ⬠where ââ¬Å" the sun blessedâ⬠her body as she lay ââ¬Å"streched outâ⬠among the pack.However, to the average citizen it may seem all a bit too costly to sacrifice the lives we live and relationships we have all for an understanding of something so ââ¬Å"commonâ⬠(35). In ââ¬Å"Chicxulubâ⬠we are faced with the worst scenario a parent can imagine; a late night phone call, when we least expect it, stating ââ¬Å"there has been an accidentâ⬠(135) involving our own daughter, or in this story their daughter, ââ¬Å"Madeline Biehn of 1337 Laurel Driveâ⬠(135).We are rushed through a flury of emotions while paralleling the catastrophic events of ââ¬Å"Tunguskaâ⬠(133) and ââ¬Å"Chicxulubâ⬠(136), a ââ¬Å"meteorâ⬠(133) and ââ¬Å"asteroidâ⬠(136) that had impact with the Earth with such force that they were able to flatten ââ¬Å"seven hundred square miles of Siberian forestâ⬠(133) and make ââ¬Å"at least seventy-five percent of all know n species extinguishedâ⬠(136). The most recent of the two, ââ¬Å"Tunguskaâ⬠(133) was ââ¬Å"nearly a hundred years agoâ⬠(133).No one was expecting it, as no one expects a phone call in the middle of the night saying your child has been in a car accident. It seems nature has an awful need to demonstrate its authority every now and again, reminding us ââ¬Å"that we, and all our works and worries and attachments, are so utterly inconsequentialâ⬠(139). The chances of these catastrophic events are rare; they are about as likely as ââ¬Å"dying in an auto accident in the next ten monthsâ⬠, however they are not unheard of. There is nothing we can do if one of these events were to take place in our lifetime.It doesnââ¬â¢t matter if you spend your life preparing for such a catastrophic event, such as the most recent dooms day preparers, or you buy your daughter ââ¬Å"a Honda Civic, the safest thing on four wheelsâ⬠(134). If nature has a plan it will e nact and follow through with its intentions. In fact the narrator clearly states his ââ¬Å"point. Youââ¬â¢d better get down on your knees and pray to your gods because each year this big spinning globe we ride intersects the orbits of some twenty million asteroidsâ⬠(134). Sometimes, nature ââ¬Å"perverselyâ⬠(95) likes to hand out wake up calls.We find out after ââ¬Å"the slow striptease of deathâ⬠(142) as ââ¬Å"the sheet draws backâ⬠(142) from the gurney where the supposed dead Madeline is to be, that their ââ¬Å"daughter is not in the hospitalâ⬠(143). Their daughter is exactly where she is supposed to be ââ¬Å"asleep in her roomâ⬠(143). It was a mistaken identity because Madeline ââ¬Å"[loaned] her ID to her second-best friend, Kristi Cherwinâ⬠(143). The narrator of the story, ââ¬Å"rushing still with the euphoriaâ⬠realizes that this is not his daughter, and in fact not the ââ¬Å"Chicxulubâ⬠of his lifetime.However he is left with a renewed perspective that ââ¬Å"the rock is coming, the new Chicxulub, hurtling through the dark and the cold to remake our fateâ⬠(144). So it is through the stories that we have a renewed sense that nature is much more than a companion in life. Much more than just the flowers, and trees we pass by as we are ââ¬Å"cruising down the Coast Highway under a ripe delicate sunâ⬠(83), much more powerful than our tactics of prevention such as our ââ¬Å"Honda Civicâ⬠(134), or our will to undue to the simplification of our domesticated house pets.Nature has created the ways that we live in today. We are merely the players on its game board, ââ¬Å"inconsequentialâ⬠(139), insignificant. Nature does not bend to our will, but rather, we will bend to its will. Otherwise, we will be subjected to the wrath and fury of mother-nature itself.Works Cited Boyle, T. C. Tooth and Claw. New York: Viking, 2006. Blio. com. Blio. 2006. Web. 11 April. 2012.
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