Memory Corner 4
"Hercules"
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Memory Corner 4
"Hercules"
The Listed
Chapter Four
Lieutenant Sally Mason reviewed the list that she was assigned by the Bureau's new office, Department of Abnormal Forensics, which predicted patterns of deviant behavior from criminals in the prison data base who had possible predictors of future crimes, particularly serial killings, based on past social behavior, trauma, and emotional IQ. Mason didn't understand all the goobledegoop. She followed orders. The ten names on the list were men and women who didn't pass the psych test and showed sign of growing aggression that rehab and three hots and a cot just didn't squelch.
She was assigned three ex-cops. All she knew was that they were accused of police brutality, but she never got the specifics, and there was no need for her to know, so she didn't question her new team members. All they had to do was follow orders. The other three members were ex-military, two marines, one army, far as she could figure out, what with the tattoos and all. They were all the quiet type, which was fine by her. They scored high marks on the first kill, though it wasn't pretty, and far from perfect. The target seemed more like a wife-beater than a serial killer, but the FBI Psychs knew best. These ten had to be put down, including all the wife-beaters.
"Hey, Lieutenant," shouted Greeley, the army man, "when do we eat?"
"You can pull into the next Denny's," she answered. "Just making sure our next target is kosher."
"Kosher or no," said Blaine, an ex-cop from Texas, based on his accent, "a target is a target is a target."
The team in the back of the military van whooped and hollered. The camouflage green was painted back, which she thought made the vehicle look more conspicuous. Thus she parked the van walking distance from the target and hoped local punks didn't spray-paint their gang insignia over the outside panels. The driver, Sargeant Baker, ordered the men to shut the fuck up.
Mason wasn't familiar with the 101 Highway that ran along the Pacific Ocean. There wasn't enough moonlight or city light across the dark stretches of road to give her a good view of the water. She wondered at the people who lived in the beachfront homes that lined the highway. The big California earthquake followed by the bigger California tsunami would surely knock these little piggy houses into the sea. Is this where they really wanted to spend their last days?
"Sarge, Denny's at 12 o'clock," yelled Blaine over the noisy engine of the vehicle.
"I see it," Sarge replied. "ETA ten minutes. Strap in and keep your yaps shut."
"What the hell's a 'yap', Sarge?" asked Greeley.
"Ask me again when we pull over and I'll shut yours for you," Sarge said without a hint of humor.
"Shutting my yap now, Sarge," said Greeley, who couldn't wait to order pancakes, courtesy of the U.S. of A. secret police.
Mason regarded the second victim with some interest. The first woman. Petite. College grad. One of those straight A types. All work and no play. Victim of abuse as a kid, no doubt. Her file didn't say, but you could read it between the lines. Poison was her skill apparently. Chemistry major. The lieutenant never could fathom the college mind. Right out of high school she enlisted, hoping for a chance to fly, but she didn't pass the eye exam. Seemed she couldn't distinguish far from near, and that was important when flying an aircraft. Air Force didn't want their pilots flying into a mountain. Still, she managed to climb rank pretty fast in the Army. She was good leader material, her tests showed. And she proved that not only on the exams but in the field as well.
Won three straight capture the flag missions in high stress environments. Got her team to safety every time. Except that last time. Wasn't her fault. The new recruit wasn't ready for the heat of the desert. Two of the team had to carry him for most of the mission. And she completed the mission. Captured the flag. Only the recruit was pronounced dead. Her C.O. liked her record and offered her a chance to lead a new team for a secret mission, off the record. If she succeeded, her error in judgment for placing the flag over the health of the recruit would be buried. And she knew just what that meant. If she didn't complete the secret mission, she would in all likelihood end up dead. Win-win for brass. But she liked the odds. Nine more names on the list to go. And the good news was, they had just pulled into Denny's.
Chapter Five
Miguel Winter pulled into the University of Southern California faculty parking lot. As he exited his car, a well-dressed woman in her forties approached him with an extended hand. "Hello, Mr. Winter, I suppose," she said.
"Yes, that's me," Miguel answered.
"From the Daily Gazette, if I'm not wrong," she said tentatively.
"You're not wrong," he assured her.
"Good. I'm Pamela Hensworth, Executive Assistant to Professor Hinecker. He sent me to make sure you didn't get lost on your way to his office." She waved her hand in the direction of the Psychology Department building. "He's there waiting for you now."
Kashmir Hinecker was a medium built man in a ruffled grey suit that didn't seem to fit right on his thick shoulders. He was seated at his cluttered desk with his elbows resting on some ungraded essays and his fingers interlaced supporting his sharp chin. He took a deep breath, stood, and extended a hand to Miguel, the reporter. He wondered for a second if in this day of bloggers and vloggers, if there was still such a thing as "reporters". "Mr. Winter?" he asked courteously.
"Yes, that would be me. Call me Mike, if you prefer," he said, immediately regretting not giving him the option to call him Miguel. What was it his brother used to call him? Coconut. Brown on the outside, white on the inside.
"And you may call me Professor Hinecker. I worked hard for the title. I think I've earned it," he said with a overly friendly grin. "As I'm sure you've earned the name Michael. Winter? Your father's or mother's surname?"
"Father's," Miguel admitted. "Mother's Chicana, father's German."
"Of course," Hinecker chuckled. "Vinter, right? No, no. No need to answer. I'm sure you're eager to get to your questions, Mikey boy. Shoot."
Miguel fumbled through his flip notebook, but his mind was elsewhere. He wanted to defend his name. But which one: Mike or Miguel? What was his mother's maiden name? Ramirez. She worked in the school cafeteria. She always brought home those leftover baloney sandwiches. His brother always called them mayonnaise sandwiches. But she was born and raised USA. People just couldn't understand that. She helped fix his German dad's immigration papers. Why did everyone assume they were Mexican?
Hinecker knew what he was thinking. Plant a few seeds and watch them grow. He smiled triumphantly, but the clock was ticking, so he cleared his throat. "Excuse me, Mr. Vinter, but you have some questions. I have a class to teach in a few, you see. Es ist Eile geboten. I mean, Time is of the essence."
Miguel Winter closed his notebook and pocketed it. "If you'll excuse me, Professor, I'm not feeling well right now. Can we reschedule?"
"Of course. Talk to my secretary.... I mean, my Executive Assistant, Pam. She handles my schedule. Hope you're feeling better. Hope it wasn't something I said. I did so look forward to our tete a tete."
"Bad breakfast, that's all," he lied. "We'll talk soon."
"Goodie." Hinecker stood but didn't walk the reporter to the door. "Ta ta."
Miguel approached Pamela's desk to reschedule, then he was going to go somewhere to throw up whatever was left in his stomach.
Pamela looked up at the reporter's pale face and tucked her smile away. It was Hinecker Shock, as she called it. Newbies and their first time, every time. They were never prepared to face their deepest insecurity. And, boy, could he dig it out, root and stem. She opened her scheduling calendar. "Real peach, isn't he?"
Chapter Six and Seven
Coming soon...
Memory Corner 3
Introduction:
What I have is called "Disassociative Amnesia". There is no brain damage caused by physical trauma, but because of a psychological trauma, my short-term and long-term memory play tricks on me. Between my vivid dreams, my childhood and young adult memories, and the experiences that are being formed in my head as they happen, I'm pretty damned confused about what came first, what happened before, and what just happened. Case in point: That lengthy article about my clinical death and floating in the operating room. It seems to have happened yesterday, but it happened when I was 13 years old. I turning 56 this year.
The meds my Shrink gives me keep me in the present moment, which is quite honestly, fucking boring. She tried to get me on antidepressant pills, but I took her advice personally and told her that I wasn't depressed. She tried to explain that that's what the pills are called, but that's not what they work on; they control the wandering mind, the fluttering memories that crash into one another. I tried to explain that a good strong cup of coffee keeps me grounded in the present, so all I really need is something to keep the frazzled nerves of being wired all day in check. Thus, she prescribed Xanax, an anti-anxiety med; it prevents my frail nerve ending from triggering an anxiety attack, you know, like when the air-conditioning on the public bus goes on and you think your core body temperature is dropping, so you must me dying. Yeah, that. Without anxiety, such thoughts as "Am I dying?", "Is this a heart-attack?", "Is that trio of thugs going to kill me?", and other paranoid triggers, don't have any response. With Alprazolam, the answer is always "No" to any paranoid question. I guess with anti-depressants, the answer is always, "Who cares?!"
But enough about me.
Update 11B was all about me and the long-winded analysis about why there's always two sides to the same memory. Which I've been giving a lot of thought to given the fact that my iphone has become my back-up brain, my memory retrieval. What was the name of that movie? Google it. What was the name of that barista at the Starbucks. Check your iphone notepad. What song are these the lyrics to? Search them on YouTube. That's how I remember things now. But the Shrink promises me that once the anxiety and paranoia stop triggering my reliance on my back-up brain the iphone, my memories should return normally. I need to access a normal memory to string together a series of memories, the way one remembers the annual seasons of your favorite basketball team: When you can remember one season, the following season falls into place, creating a string of memories. This string is what is strengthened by recalling the seasons rather than any one player and his individual statistics; the stats will become part of the string as one remembers more and more. That is, remembering without the iphone Google search, which atrophies the brain function of remembering. Anyway, that's the plan. That's MY therapy. Taking happy pills, noting the events in my community (the weather, the homeless, the butterflies, the deaths of our hill animals and birds), and talking with people about the old days of our little town. Connecting the past, present, and predicting the future strengthens the string of the history of my city. It's the base of my memory for the time before I moved in here and what has happened since.
Just as I have my trauma and therapy, so do all the volunteers who share theirs with us here on the blog.
Syndromes & Delutions:
Before I turn the column over to the volunteers who have shared THEIR therapy with this blog, I thought I'd go over the main conditions that trauma creates in the troubled mind. For me it's "disassociative amnesia". I can't distinguish things that just happened from things that happened a long time ago (plus, I confuse dreams and books and movies with the plot of my own life as well). Here's a look at other disorders.
1. Thought Insertion--The feeling that one's own thoughts have been inserted by outside forces and that these memories are not of one's own making.
2. Erotomania--The delusion that a stranger is in love with you. The most publicized cases involve people believing famous celebrities are in love with them, but anyone can suffer from this delusion.
3. Capgras Syndrome--The belief that one's friends, coworkers, and family have been replaced by duplicates or actors.
4. Fregoli Delusion--Like Capgras, Fregoli syndrome holds that one's friends, coworkers, and family are in fact one person, changing disguises to pass themselves off as many people.
5. Intermetamorphisis--Often called "reverrse Capgras", this syndrome holds the belief to trauma sufferers that friends, coworkers, and family are in the process of changing facial features and personality traits, often right in front of the sufferer; many times these morphing people have no faces as they are in the process of changing to another face. One cannot distinguish facial features; instead, they see blank faces.
6. Syndrome of Subjective Doubles--The belief that a doppelganger, an exact duplicate of the sufferer, exists somewhere living a parallel life; they may or may not have similar character traits to the sufferer. Often they feel that they may be living the doppelganger's life by mistake or that the doppelganger has moved into the sufferer's life while they're at work.
7. Reduplicate Paramnesia--The belief that an entire town, city, or neighborhood has been duplicated and replaced with one's own place of residence. If one travels to New York, say, one believes that they are still at home in Los Angeles, that their neighborhood has been changed just enough to seem different.
8. Truman Show Delusion--The belief that all public surveillance cameras are following only the sufferer, that they exist only for them.
9. Cotard's Syndrome (lycanthrophy or birds)--The delusion one believes that one is dead, and that their organs have been harvested and they are in fact empty vessels. Ironically, given the fact that they are dead, they also believe that they are changing into another form, a bird, a small rodent, or even a werewolf.
10. Ekbom's Syndrome (contagious)--The belief that one is covered with bugs that one cannot see; symptoms include scratching one's skin sore, washing clothes and bedsheets constantly, and trying to keep bugs out of the home. This is the only syndrome that is contagious to nondelusional people close to the sufferer.
11. Disassociative Amnesia--Taken as discussed.
Trauma Patients
Foreword & Summaries by Priest Bobue Horaguchi:
Thank you, Professor Anthony Servante, for providing me with the list of syndromes and delusions that would precede the patient updates. I am quite confident that these descriptions will help readers to better understand the symptoms that trauma sufferers display during their daily lives, symptoms that are certainly taken for granted by the general community who are unaware of the mental conditions that our patients endure and the effect that they have on family and neighborhood. Too often have I been told by parishioners that these "sick" people should not be allowed in my temple, or that they should have a separate service; they worry about how their behavior will influence the children. Well, I can most certainly assure any concerned parishioner that the effects of trauma are not contagious or dangerous, and that Temple, Church, Synagogue, or Mosque, is the best place for our patients to be in their time of mental turmoil or doubts.
It is never my intent to segregate the sick from the healthy, be it mental or physical, and I would no more turn away anyone with cancer just because a parishioner felt uncomfortable or believed their children would be frightened by the patient's appearance. I cannot say with absolute certainty that we are all equal in the eyes of the Almighty, be it Buddha or Christ, and I do recommend that anyone with the flu or extreme depression spend the day with a loved one at home lest he cause undue stress to the parish, but only in matters where it is best for all that any disease be kept at bay.
With that in mind, allow me to update your readers on the latest developments with the patients who have volunteered to share their trauma and therapy with your readers. As always, bless you, Professor for giving the traumatized sufferer a voice and a platform to use it.
Summaries:
Ms. E started Sunday services as community service for shoplifting. She attends Paint Therapy also, in addition to Dream Therapy. She was suspended from her job when the store manager noted that she worked with the Sheriff's office as a Community Safety Representative. Since she pocketed only packets of cough drops and aspirin, the manager didn't pursue charges and turned the matter over to her superior. She is serving three months community service at the temple and can return to her job only after completing her therapy. She insists that someone placed the cough drops in her jacket pocket and often finds items in all her pockets when she gets home, but does not remember putting them there. Her paintings depict her Siamese Twin with handfuls of cigarettes and lighters--other items that she has found later in her pockets.
Mr. S was in an car accident and fears driving. His partner does the driving now, but the patient feels that his partner will one day deliberately drive the car into oncoming traffic to teach him a lesson. Since his job requires driving, Mr. S now attends community service at the temple on Fridays. He comes to Paint Therapy on Sundays. He refuses any other forms of therapy. He insists that his driving is in control. But his partner reported that he always turns on the windshield wipers for no reason, though he insists that bird poop is all over the glass. He suffers manic depression and has been referred to a Psychiatrist, but he says he's only there for the community service classes. He paints his partner over and over in different suits. He says the ones in the black suits do the driving. The blue suits are the passengers. All the drawings have blue suits.
Mr. W completed his Dream and Paint Therapy but refused to return to work, though his community service was completed. He demanded the return of all his drawings, but I had to take photos to keep for his records to show his finished his therapy and three months of CS. The drawings depicting Mr. W being followed by clouds. Then he said they were jets. He dreamed often of flying in jets above the clouds, but then denied it. He was almost relieved to be done with his CS and did not return even for temple services. It was rumored that Mr. W committed suicide, though this has not been confirmed. He spoke often of returning to his home country to be with his sick father. As of today, we have no further word on Mr. W.
Mr. D communicates by email. I forward the email to Prof. Servante. He last wrote about writing a book about the causes of his trauma but was having trouble finding a publisher or volunteers to interview. That's when I put him in contact with the professor.
Mr.M attended two months worth of Dream Therapy but began showing up drunk. He was referred to the local AA. He has since been rehired by his former employer. He asked that we minimize sharing his story with the blog until he is settled into his job. We will respect his wishes.
Ms. E suffered a schizophrenic break during her Paint Therapy sessions. She is now under the care of a County Psychiatrist. Last we heard, she was taking her medications and doing well.
Ms. B avoids crowds. She was referred to a County facility. Only her close friends and family visit with her, though we heard that she limits her communication to nods and smiles. She sleeps up to fourteen hours a day and drinks vitamin juices rather than eat solid food. A nurse attends on her once a week.
Ms. S assists me with the therapy five days a week as a means of her own therapy. The other two days, she does Paint Therapy and attends multiple services. Once shy, she is now very talkative. Originally, I thought she was proselytizing, but found out later she just likes talking about Buddha very much. She always asks me questions about reincarnation and is fixated that death may be permanent. Her drawings are of Buddhist gods and demons.
Ms. N does not hide her anger, frustration, and anxiety very well, but she tries. She tries every therapy, attends services here at the temple, and sees a County psychiatrist. She has begun writing to Prof. Servante of late about possible breakthroughs in her memory, information she will not share with me.
I will continue to send you emails. Please respond.
Thank you.
P.S. There is a cure.
Update: I have contacted Ms. N by email and we exchanged phone numbers. It turns out we know each other from Facebook (small world).
Anthony Servante
Thank you, readers, for following the Trauma & Therapy series. Next time out, I hope to turn to Music Therapy and Crafts Therapy. We will continue to post updates from Priest Horaguchi and emails from others who contact me directly.