Sunday, January 31, 2010

It's a Midlife Crisis, Charlie Brown!

As he did every year on the anniversary of Snoopy’s death, Charlie Brown went out to the backyard of his parent’s house to lie atop the doghouse. With the peeling red paint beneath him and the wide blue sky above, the troubling present faded away and thoughts of the past blew in gently on the wind. Charlie closed his eyes and listened. Almost immediately, he heard Snoopy’s familiar high-pitched giggle, which always made him smile. How often Snoopy had laughed at him over the years, lovingly mocking him for some latest bit of self-pitying bumbling.

And how Snoopy would laugh if he could see me now, Charlie mused. Another marriage down the drain, another book deal fallen through. Charlie had hit the bestseller list some years back when the book he had written mainly for the academic world, “Good Grief: The Therapeutic Value of Mourning Rituals”, had become an unexpected popular hit. Although it revived his professional life, it had come too late to save his train-wreck of a marriage to Peppermint Patty. But nothing could have saved that, which Charlie had to admit. As Snoopy had warned him when they started dating, she was the wrong girl for him (technically, Snoopy had closed his eyes, turned up his nose, and given a brief but forceful shake of his head, but Charlie knew exactly what he meant). Five years and five thousand arguments later, Patty walked out the door. “Jesus, Chuck,” she sneered, the contempt palpable in her eyes, “get yourself together.”

With the success of his book and the blessings of the reigning talk show royalty, Charlie became the go-to expert on mourning, loss, and general tragedy. He was on all the networks after a school shooting or plane crash, and a sound bite from Dr. Brown was the definitive last word on any story of emotional complexity. But Charlie didn’t achieve true critical acclaim until his televised talk with Snoopy’s grandson, Snoopy Jr, III, aka Snoop, about the young dog’s involvement in the tragic death of much beloved Woodstock. Snoop had broken down twenty minutes into the interview and opened up completely under Charlie’s gently insistent questioning. It was later hailed as a moment of national healing.

Heady with his professional success, Charlie went after the great unfinished task of his youth and romantically pursued the aloof and tempestuous Lucy Van Pelt, with the very private intention of “finally kicking that ball”. Lucy, who never re-married after Shroeder’s bizarre secret life was made public and the couple’s acrimonious divorce was front-page news for a month, returned Charlie’s advances eagerly. Almost as if she had been waiting for him.

For Charlie, their romance was like a wonderful gift from a world that had finally chosen to embrace him. Lucy was a world-class psychiatrist and though she was not a popular celebrity-author like Charlie, she was at the top of her profession and enjoyed the admiration of her peers. She and Charlie married three months later and Lucy insisted on accepting the numerous press requests for coverage of the ceremony. Charlie, blinded by his own happiness, never saw it coming. Two years after their wedding, Lucy divorced him, publicly ridiculed his professional credentials, and quickly published the book she had been working on throughout their marriage about the psychological damage done to the public by underqualified, fame-hungry therapists. Her former husband was the subject of the entire third chapter of “The Doctor Is Out: The Hidden Dangers of the Self-Help Media Industry.” Charlie’s celebrity status crumbled overnight, the offer on his second book was quietly withdrawn, and he was ushered off the stage of public life with little fanfare.

“Dammit,” Charlie muttered, watching Lucy laugh with Katie Couric, “why do I always let her do this to me?”


Charlie slid off the doghouse roof and brushed himself off. I should have been trying to kick her all those times instead of the ball, he thought, and immediately felt guilty. He laid his hand on the side of Snoopy’s old home. “See you next year, old buddy,” he whispered.

A few days later, he is in the coffeehouse two blocks from his newly rented studio apartment, staring out the window and wondering what to do with himself.

“Is this seat taken?” a sweet, clear voice asks behind him. Charlie turns to find a red-haired girl standing by his table, smiling like an angel.

5 comments:

savannah said...

i even heard vince guaraldi! ;~D

(and suddenly, i feel the need to respond like cher did after seeing la boheme (with a slight twist)...i knew she was mean, but...)

CreoleBeBop said...

Thanks Alcel for forcing the little fuckers to finally grow up. I never liked that Lucy bitch anyway. I knew she'd grow into a royal pain in the ass. Fuck her. Hope the redhead delivers. Keep us posted.

P.S. - anybody who continually worships Beethoven and sits at a small baby grand is gay. Well we all knew that was coming, right?

captain chaos said...

Ha ha ha! Wonderful! I will say this, however, never trust a redhead. Never.

As for Lucy, he really should have just kicked the shit out of her. She's evil, pure and simple.

captain chaos said...

Finish the fucking story man! What happened? What about the glands?

word ver: gallyin

Mr. Moose said...

I think the story is over, as far as we are concerned. Charlie has finally met the Red Haired Girl. He has made peace with the football. And his life can really only go up from here. Although there is still that matter of Linus and his descent into addiction...