There’s an old expression about
seasickness: “When you first get
seasick, you’re afraid you’re going to die. But after a while, you’re afraid
you’re NOT going to die.”
I have never experienced a more
miserable feeling than seasickness. (I hesitate to say it’s the absolute WORST feeling in the world, since
I’ve yet to be audited by the I.R.S. or sit through one of those vacation
time-share presentations.)
When I was about 12 years old, my
father took me fishing. A half hour into our adventure, I started “chumming,”
if you get my drift. I retched so forcefully over the side of the boat, my dad
had to grab a net and retrieve my spleen and gall bladder before the fish got
to them. (“Sit still, son, while I shove these things back inside you. And, uh,
no need to mention this to your mother, OK?”)
It’s been many years since I’ve been seasick,
a feat I’ve accomplish by following one simple rule: stay the heck away from
boats! It took a while, but I finally discovered there is a direct correlation
between seasickness and being on the water. And just in case, I composed a
little ditty to help me remember this important correlation: “Stand on land and
feel grand; Sail away and barf all day.”
Recently I’ve had two pleasant
experiences with seasickness — pleasant because in both instances it happened
to somebody else. The first situation occurred during a business conference in
Virginia. After two days of meetings, it was time for some recreation. The two
options were fishing or golf. Even though the weather forecast called for
periodic downpours, I figured being on a golf course in the rain had to be less
painful than being 20 miles offshore riding eight-foot swells.
And I was right. Although I got
drenched to the bone the golfing was rather enjoyable. On the other hand, the
folks who went fishing had a terrible time. There were 30 people onboard, but
only a couple of fish were caught during the entire trip. Even worse, the sea
was so rough, two-thirds of the people got violently ill and spent most of the
trip hurling their spleens and gall bladders over the rail. (The other
one-third avoided this misery by leaping into the sea and begging the sharks to
eat them.)
At dinner that evening, we golfers had
voracious appetites, while the fishermen just sat there so pale and weak they
could barely lift their forks. Which was a good thing, because after the third
time I loudly sang my little ditty, “Stand on land and feel grand; Sail away…!”
they tried to throw their forks at me but didn’t have the strength to reach.
The other situation occurred soon
after when a co-worker went on a fishing trip with some of his customers. My
co-worker got violently ill during the trip, and even called us from the boat
on his cell phone to say goodbye before leaping into the sea and looking for
some sharks. His customers restrained him from jumping, mostly because they
were having too much fun listening to him groan and watching him deposit his
spleen and gall bladder into a bucket every five minutes.
The next day when this co-worker came
into the office, the rest of us were sympathetic to his plight. The moment he walked
through the door, we sang a rousing chorus of, “Stand on land and feel grand;
Sail away…!”
I heard that a friend of mine is
trying to organize a fishing trip for later this month. If he calls looking for
me, you know where I can be reached. I’ll be in Kansas.
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