by Robert Lopresti
Happy Halloween! May you be
visited by enough costumed children to entertain you and not so many
that they get all the good candy and leave you with the healthy stuff.
I have been pondering what to write about today and decided to tell about my one-and-only brush with the supernatural.
Now,
I need to explain that I am not a fan of such stuff. I have no belief
in ghosts, an afterlife, or monsters. Things that go bump in the night
are, in my experience, usually restless cats.
But there was this one time...
It
happened in late August, about twenty years ago. I was bicycling home
from work, my usual form of commute, and I was thinking about a couple
of songs I had been invited to perform at a friend's birthday party that
night. I turned the corner onto one of the busiest streets on my city
and--
After that everything fades away. I am sure you
are familiar with pointilism, those paintings made up of individual
dots? Well, that is how my memory of that moment feels. I can see the
city scene and then it shifts into individual dots and disappears to
black.
As I found out later, I had fallen off my bicycle and sustained a concussion.
The
next thing I remember I was in a long black tunnel. There was a bright
but fuzzy light at the end of it and I sensed that I was being drawn
farther away from that light. I heard someone call my name.
Some
of you may recognize that this event contains many elements common to
what are called near-death-experiences. People who have had such events
often report that their whole view of the world has been changed by
them.
And indeed, if I had blacked out at that moment I imagine my philosophy might be quite different than it is now.
But
I didn't lose consciousness again. And I slowly realized that the dark
tunnel was actually the inside of an ambulance. The light at the end
of the tunnel was the sunny afternoon outside. It was fuzzy because my
glasses were broken. The sensation of being drawn away from the light
was caused by my being strapped onto a gurney which was being pushed
deeper into the ambulance. And the voice calling my name? A paramedic
calling the hospital to tell them who was coming.
Disappointing, I know. There went my one chance to write a bestselling memoir of my visit to the afterlife.
So,
on the whole, not as spooky a story as you might have hoped for. But
there are pleasures to be found in the real world too. Snag yourself a
candy bar before the goblins grab 'em all.
Oh, and one last trick or treat. What do these two book covers have to do with Halloween? Answer will be in the comments.