After breaking his neck, silent film star Buster Keaton
famously asked: if the audience laughs each time
he slips, trips, slides, stumbles, teeters, totters, or falls,
isn’t it better to practice? This is the challenge
of partnership: to perform your own stunts. In the theater
of our lives, my wife and I have often been physical
humorists. Feigning collapse. Faking a swoon. Fleeing
the imagined train on its tracks. With each avoided
disaster, we cheered the indignity of survival.
A thyroid mass her doctor first called “tumor.”
The sudden SUV, brake checking our bumper.
A dream of turbulence
we’ve never forgotten. Harold Lloyd once claimed:
“The more trouble you get a man into
the more comedy you get out of him.”
I submit this is sage advice for drama
but poor advice for love. There’s a reason for theater.
Not even the talkies could revise our need
for slapstick and clowning. See:
Mr. Bean. See: Jackie Chan. See: my wife
screaming in the kitchen, pretending to fall
into the fridge. There’s safety
in learning to take the dive, hit the floor, spring
lightly back to your feet. To turn
even misfortune into hilarity. Beneath the high jinks
and horseplay, rehearse for the worst
with a smile. May you practice the ancient art
of the pratfall. The banana peels you slip on—
rinds you’ve laid yourself. May the clock
you dangle from high over the city
hold you steadfastly in time.
