What if Herman Melville and Melvil Dewey made passionate love aboard a cruise ship? Would a blog such as this be the fruit of such an unlikely union?

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Danger! Danger!: Living La Vita Code Red, Part 1.


 
Shipmates,

Exciting news aboard the Pequod! It turns out that the dirty, dirty fiends we carry as cargo—“passengers,” or even “guests” my Seatltonian overlords insist—have lived up to my very worst expectations. It seems that these swine, so content to wallow in their filth, have managed to incubate some form of the dreaded* novovirus aboard the mighty vessel that is my humble abode! Routinely I see said porcine passengers—egad! how that word sticks in my muscle-bound throat!—oinking from one room to another ignoring the ample number of sanitizing stations; these beasts even go so far as to turn up their little piggy noses at my colleagues who wait on the gangway to dose their dirt-encrusted hooves upon their return.

And why, you might justly ask, would these foul detritus-loving critters so disdain the cleansing spray of chemical cleaner so vital to keeping us all happy and healthy? Three reasons I have ascertained: the first is pure laziness. It turns out that as one ages, one comes to the conclusion that one has “done enough” in this great valley of suffering and it’s time to “reap the rewards.” Apparently one of the rewards for being a productive member of society for 60 or 70 years is the privilege of not washing your hands after using the washroom. That and you are allowed to be rude to anyone working in customer service. Especially Asian people working in customer service.

The second reason why these folk deign to use the spray is, it turns out, for so-called health reasons. Here is an actual conversation** I overheard in the dining room:

“These guys are always trying to get me to use those chemical sprays when I get on the boat” One sweaty man said to the couple that was joining him and his wife for breakfast. As the red-faced man negotiated his ample midsection into the chair, his wife took up the thought. “We said to them, ‘no way buster’ we’re not puttin’ that crap on our skin.”

“Yea,” said the equally rotund and red-faced new-found mealtime companion, “but their English is so bad, they don’t understand a plain ‘no.’”

“Ya’ll just gotta be forceful. I told that one guy ‘NO’ in plain old Amurican English, and let me tell you, he backed right up.” Said the man now safely wedged between the sturdy armrests of the chair. His wife continued, “We understand that they are just doing their job, but we don’t want that poison on us! No sir!” She stated vehemently as she tucked into her third helping of dessert.

“Oh, I know exactly what you mean!” Her wifely counterpart said, gesticulating with one of the 30 slices of bacon piled on her plate. “I mean, who knows  what the long-term effects of that stuff will be!” She said and bit into the syrup-covered French toast.

 At this point I had to go back to work, but I’m sure these fine citizens spent the next 30 minutes enjoying their well-deserved seconds and thirds and enumerating the potential—nay! Enveitable—health risks associated with Virox. So it turns out these barely-mobile, sugar and grease swilling lumps are health freaks. Who knew.

The third and final reason that I think these cloven-hoofed plate jockeys refuse to indulge in the occasional squirt aboard the Pequod I just stumbled upon last night. Imagine the scene, dear reader: your humble narrator comfortably seated behind his desk with a piping-hot double espresso to enliven his senses and the last 50 pages of Anne of Green Gables to transport his imagination to a land of whimsy and sentiment. Approaching, slowly, decrepitly, one the elderly with some concerns to vent. He wants to know why the shutters are all closed in the library.*** When I explain to him that people browsing through the books would create the ideal petri dish in which to hatch the most deadly outbreak of the novovirus known to humankind!**** he merely looked at me with his milky eyes and bleated, “you know, this virus was probably on board before we got here.”

Well! I was dumbfounded. How did this have any relevance to our conversation I pondered. Then, after no small amount of said pondering, I realized that this shell of a human thought our “code red” procedures were meant to punish him. “No,” I wanted to assure him, “while it’s true that I am going to compose a delightful little sketch of this encounter in which, yes, your foul ways shall be punished, locking the books away is actually done in the hopes that by limiting the places where your dirty paws might mix and stir the bacterial soup we can end this period of heightened vigilance and return to our normal—sleepy—routine.” Of course, being the very epitome of tact*****, I bit my manly tongue, muttered some bland platitude and allowed this unpneumatic cadaver to shuffle away as proud as some kind of near-dead peacock.

But this strange outburst led me to glean that third reason of which I spoke. It seems that these people seem to think that there is an adversarial aspect to hygiene. We—the crew of the Pequod that is—are doing our best to put controls on the passengers, controls that need to be subverted and struggled against it seems. Keep raging against the dying of the light my wrinkled brethren!  

*No, the novovirus is not as dreaded as the Dread Pirate Dewey.   
**I didn’t “actually” hear this.
***Perhaps I should, at this point, tell you, dearest readers, what a “code red” means to the life of a humble shipboard librarian. Well, all of the books in the library are locked up at night behind shutters. Part of my morning duties is to open said shutters, but during code red they remain closed and people have to request books that I then fetch like the dog I am. I also have to wash all the pieces to the scrabble games that are ever so popular. And hand out the daily sudoku to people. It’s a lot of fun.
****Maybe I used less colourful language.
*****A guest who heard this exchange came up to me afterward to congratulate me on dealing so well with the angry man and told me, “tact is making someone feel at home even when you wish they were.” Thank you ma’am.

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