By Michael Clune
When recovering addicts look back on their first hit, they feel there was something special about that experience, something that kept them chasing the drug long after that initial thrill vanished. It seemed to me that no one had really gotten to the heart of this mystery. Even today, with eleven years clean, when I see dope in a movie or on tv, suddenly I canāt see anything else.
Scientists now know that when it comes to understanding addiction, how the addict perceives the addictive object matters more than the feeling they have when they take it. But no one had come up with a good understanding of the uncanny nature of that perception.
So I started writing, beginning in Ann Arbor and finishing in Cleveland. Iām a professor. Iāve written academic books and articles. But as soon as I began writing about addiction, I knew it had to be personal.
My past is infected. I have a memory disease. It grips me through what I remember. For example, seven years ago in Baltimore, Cat wakes me up to kiss me on her way to work. Iām about to fall back asleep when I remember about Dominic. I remember how fun he can be. I sit up in bed and think about it.
It is mid June which in Baltimore is not a fresh thing. Mid June is already midsummer. Veins filled with heavy blue. Humid, ninety degrees. I sit in bed thinking and the things I should do like renew my driverās license or protest my parking tickets are like chewing on broken glass. Then I remember I can go to Dominicās. I just think casually about going over there and maybe hanging out. I donāt wait to have a shower.
I pull up at Dominicās, get out of the car, and someone is already yelling at me.
āDom donāt need you coming around here.ā Itās Dominicās brother. He stares at me.
āIs Dominic here today?ā The time for polite questions seems already to have passed, but I say it anyway. I say it in the ingratiating high pitched voice I use these days when Iām forced to speak to people. [blocktext align=”left”]When I was six I read in a book that Tarzan could recognize crazy people by the white that goes all the way around the iris.[/blocktext]Ā Domās brother spits, barely turning his head.
āDominicās gone, he donāt live here anymore, get the fuck up out of here.ā
The brother looks like a deflated version of Dominic, white all around the pupils, wearing a tool belt and work boots. He doesnāt drink or do drugs. Doing drugs makes your pupils swell in your iris. Not doing drugs shrinks the whole package, and you can see crazy white all the way around. When I was six I read in a book that Tarzan could recognize crazy people by the white that goes all the way around the iris.
āHave you happened to see Henry around today?ā
āMan listen to me, Dominic donāt need you around, fuck Henry I donāt know where that one-armed freak is, if I see your monkey ass here again Iāma call the cops.ā
As soon as he says āmonkeyā the door opens and Dominic himself shuffles out.
āHey Mike come on in. Me and Henry was just trynna think about that other thing for you.ā Dom is an enormous bear of a man, thick shaggy black hair, mumbly lips, big eyebrows. His whole face is camouflage for his coded speech. His eyes always on the ground, one expression. He is beyond shame.
Domās brother walks through the door and angrily starts hammering a light-fixture bracket into a wall. Dom and I follow. There is absolutely no furniture or wallpaper or pipes or carpet or tile anywhere to be seen in the room. Lightās coming through a single window with a sheet stapled over it. There must be forty staples in it. The brotherās work. I see Dominic has a syringe sticking out of his neck. I just like to be around him. Things happen around him. Heās like an open door things walk into and out of. Some of the things stay for a while.
Syringes, for instance. He has a bear-like bulk but he never eats. Heās a gathering of things. [blocktext align=”left”]Iām full of angels who fasten their lips and wings and hands to Dominicās body, until he looks like a beach a thick flock of seagulls has landed on.[/blocktext]Ā When that magnet inside him finally stopped spinning and all the things dropped to the pavement for the cops to pick up there was maybe ninety human pounds of him left for the ambulance, according to Henry, who was there, according to Henry.
In that bare front room at Dominicās there is a trembling joy in the air. The thick sun of June gets trapped, pools, and grows cloudy. Proto-organisms form in the cloud of wood-color, heat, and sheet-light. Iām full of angels who fasten their lips and wings and hands to Dominicās body, until he looks like a beach a thick flock of seagulls has landed on. By the time we get to the kitchen he doesnāt even look human.
The human form is not one Iām too committed to anyway. As Henry said once, I have a vein that starts in Baltimore and ends in Philadelphia. And hereās Henry. One arm. The missing arm is like an anchor dropped in the ocean of what he should look like and doesnāt. It keeps him anchored. He has a high-pitched grannyās voice.
āHey Mike we was just trynna think about that other thing for you.ā [blocktext align=”right”]Addiction is a memory disease. [/blocktext]Dom sits heavily down in a chair, his neck goes out like a slinky and his head is just way way back.
āItās good to see you Henry. Man is it hot out today!ā
This is the part I think I need to remember. Or I need to forget. Itās kind of hard to put together. Addiction is a memory disease. I was there at Dominicās. I remembered one hour ago, sitting up in bed and thinking about renewing my driverās license. I remembered six months ago, writing notes to myself in scary big letters and taping them all over the apartment so when I woke up I would see them. āNo dope today!ā
I also remembered talking to one of the teenage prostitutes who sometimes slept on mattresses on Domās floor. She said that Henry once told her he lost his arm by getting high and falling asleep on it in an awkward position. He slept for three days, and when he woke up it was dead. They had to cut it off. The story deeply affected both of us. Everyone knows how your arm can fall asleep in an awkward position. Everyone knows sleep is the cousin of death.
So it came right down to it.
āMike, we was trynna think about that other thing for you,ā Henry said solemnly. Iād been asking them to see if they could get me some oxycontins. I wasnāt ready to ask them for the white thing. I waited.
āAnd, between us, you know Dom is gonna keep trying, you know he donāt wanna let you down.ā We both looked affectionately at Dom passed out in the chair. He was going to keep trying. He would always keep trying. He was probably trying now, in his way.
āBut between us thereās no way youāre going to get it. Itāll never happen. First, because thereās this lawyer who comes through and buys all we can get the first of every month. How much? Dollar a milligram.ā That figure brooked no argument. I lit a cigarette and bowed slightly to the phantom lawyer.
āSecond, the pharmacyās numbers computerā¦ā I tuned out. The genius of Dom and Henryās paranoia was in the details, but I didnāt have the energy that day.
āSo Mike, we canāt get you into any of those Oxyās.ā I tuned back in. āBut you might want to think. You might want to see about the white tops. Cause we can get those. We can get plenty of them. Theyāre cheap. And theyāre good. Matter of fact.ā He closed his eyes. [blocktext align=”left”]In this kind of situation language is superfluous. Pure waste, a luxury. Like a Rolex. [/blocktext]I saw a half-empty white-topped vial on the corner of the table.
āTheyāre pretty good.ā
Henry said it twice. In this kind of situation language is superfluous. Pure waste, a luxury. Like a Rolex. We both knew I couldnāt give a damn about those Oxys. White tops. Wishes begin in white. Jesus is white. Madonna is white. The queen is white. The moon is white. The white tops are white. A picture starts out as a white space. A white space is a picture of the future. The future poses, the camera snaps, the picture is pure white. Dominicās white teeth in his gaping red snoring mouth, like a kind of teasing promise: inside itās all white. Cut Dominic in two and youāll find white inside. I bet when they cut off Henryās arm it was pure white in the middle.
In Baltimore that summer the best heroin was sold in little glass vials with white stoppers. White tops. The color of the stopper was like a brand. If it was good, its reputation would spread. (āWhereās Dom?ā āDomās dead.ā āWhat was he doing?ā āWhite tops.ā āWhoās got āem?ā āFathead.ā āWhereās Fathead?ā) Eventually dealers with inferior product would start using the good color, and then the people with the hot dope would have to change to red or blue stoppers. It was a cycle. Iād been off the stuff for almost six months, but as soon as I saw that empty white-top, I got a funny, destiny feeling.
You might think the whiteness of the white tops isnāt that important. After all, over the past few years Iād bought red tops, blue tops, black tops, and even yellow tops. Of course, the drug itself is often white, but it can also be brown, and the white is really just an effect of the cut. But the first stuff I ever did was in a vial with a white top, and its whiteness showed me dopeās magic secret.
The secret is that the power of dope comes from the first time you do it. [blocktext align=”left”]Thereās a deep rip in my memory.[/blocktext]Ā Itās a deep memory disease. People know the first time is important, but mostly theyāre confused about why. Some think addiction is nostalgia for the first mindblowing time. They think the addictās problem is wanting something that happened a long time ago to come back. Thatās not it at all. The addictās problem is that something that happened a long time ago never goes away. To me, the white tops are still as new and as fresh as the first time. It still is the first time in the white of the white tops.
Thereās a deep rip in my memory.
Dope never gets old for addicts. It never looks old. It never looks like something Iāve seen before. It always looks like nothing Iāve ever seen. I kind of stare. Iām kind of shocked.
āWhite tops, Henry? Really?ā Itās always the first time Iāve heard of it, the first time Iāve seen it, every day, forever. Take a look at your shoe. Your television. Your car. Your girlfriend. Now compare that sight with the first sight.
You see? When you first get a new car you notice everything about it. The color is so beautiful, so shiny, so deep, so intense. After a few weeks you hardly see it. After a few months, thereās a sense in which you donāt see it at all.
That doesnāt happen with dope. Dope never gets old. It never gets familiar. Itās always new. Itās a deep memory disease. This disease is much stranger and simpler than nostalgia. With nostalgia, you see a thing. The thing triggers a memory of a good time. Then you start to want that good time to come back. Thatās complex. Itās a multi-stage process.
Now watch what happens to the addict. Iām sitting there at Domās, minding my business. Henryās kind of talking, Iām kind of listening. Then I see a white-topped vial. Wow. I stare at it. Itās the first time Iāve ever seen it. I know Iāve seen it ten thousand times before. I know it only leads to bad things. [blocktext align=”left”]Because habit is what destroys the world.[/blocktext]I know Iāve had it and touched it and used it and shaken the last particles of white from the thin deep bottom one thousand times. But there it is. And itās the first time Iāve ever seen it. The first time I encountered dope isnāt somewhere else, it isnāt in the past. Itās right over there. Itās on the table.
Something thatās always new, thatās immune to habit, that never gets old. Thatās something worth having. Because habit is what destroys the world. Take a new car and put it in an air-controlled garage. Go look at it every day. After one year all that will remain of the car is a vague outline. Trees, stop-signs, people, and books grow old crumble and disappear inside our habits. The reason old people donāt mind dying is because by the time you reach eighty, the world has basically disappeared.
And then you discover a little piece of the world thatās immune to habit. Thereās a little rip in my brain when I look at a white-topped vial. The rip goes deep, right down to the bone, to the very first time. People love whateverās new. Humans love the first time. The first time is life. Life is always fading. The work of art is to make things new. The work of advertising is to make things new. The work of religion, the work of science, the work of philosophy, the work of medicine, the work of car mechanics. Their tricks all work, a little bit, for a little while, then they get old. The addict, alone among humans, is given something that is always new.
Itās not the feeling of doing the drug that stays new. The drug high starts to suck pretty quickly. Pretty soon it sucks so bad you quit. Never again. Then you see a white top. Or even imagine youāre seeing one. And itās the first time youāve ever seen it. Addiction is a memory disease. Memory keeps things in the past. Dope white is a memory disruption agent. The powder in the vial is a distribution technology. It carries the white down the tiny neural tunnels where the body manufactures time. Dope white turns up in my earliest memories. I remember Momās white teeth. My future whites out.
Iām cured now. Ten years. How? How did I escape my white mind and body? How did I exit the white pollution of the past and the future, the white mind where every thought and feeling is a long or short road to the white tops? Iām outside. Iām free. But how? Can you run from yourself? [blocktext align=”right”]Luckily thereās also a flaw in time.[/blocktext]Try it. Itās impossible. But I did it. I ran out of myself. How? Once you get a glimpse of something that never gets old youāll never be able to live like the others. I donāt want to give too much away. Thereās a flaw in my memory. Luckily there’s also a flaw in time.
Dom wakes up. He pulls himself together in a literal way. His eyes kind of go back into their sockets. He is a big hearty bear-shaped man. The syringe is still in his neck. It makes him look kind of military, like heās a soldier from the future. Henry, with his missing arm, looks kind of military too.
āIām going to get the white tops, Mike,ā Dom says. Henry stands up. āGet the walkie-talkies, Henry.ā Henry goes over to an open black gym-bag, takes out one walkie-talkie, takes out another, then takes out a gun.
āWhen Iām halfway there,ā Dom says, āIām going to say OK through the walkie talkie. When I get there, Iām going to say OK. When I get the stuff. When I get halfway back. Mike, if more than five minutes go by between when you hear from me, give Henry the gun, open the door for him, and get out of his way.ā
āYes Dom.ā I say it in the deferential high-pitched voice I used to reserve for cops or teachers. Now I use it with everyone. āI want you to be careful Dom. I really care about you.ā I pause. āI donāt know if I ever told you this, but I really like you. I want you to take care of yourself. [blocktext align=”left”]Language is a total luxury in a white out. A full sentence is like a Rolex.[/blocktext]When you come back, we should talk about getting you some help.ā
Language is a total luxury in a white out. A full sentence is like a Rolex. Iām still straight, but already feeling really luxurious. I feel like blowing my nose with twenties. āIāll even drive you to get help, if you want.ā
āOK.ā Dom says through the walkie-talkie. āOK.ā āOK.ā āOK.ā
Michael Clune is an Associate Professor of English at Case Western Reserve University. This excerpt is from his bookĀ White Out.Ā Ā His essays have appeared in Salon, Granta, and elsewhere.
Powerful. The description of how new things fade and life fades with age, not only paints the analogy beautifully, but opens thoughts on the nature of perception (nature of mankind).