Everything I Need to Know I Learned from Dungeons & Dragons (4 page)

Maybe you don't need all of these self-help books or nagging mothers or guru-like talk show hosts smiling at you from the covers of their eponymous magazines. If you want to be enlightened; popular; fabulously fit; a better lover; a great friend; an influential speaker; a wealthy raiser of happy, healthy, spiritually enlightened children with nice muscle tone and good teeth, then you, my friend, need to do nothing else than play Dungeons & Dragons.

Right?

Possibly?

Worth a shot?

If this little thought nugget were to blossom into, say, oh, I don't know, a book, then I obviously needed evidence to back up my claim. And I would need to get familiar with my competition. As soon as I got home I went in search of all the books Judy sent me—the ones I used for end tables, the ones under the bed. The ones I recently wrapped up to re-gift for friends with less “thoughtful” mothers. And I got to reading. For real this time. Not just the funny parts out loud to my friends at dinner parties. Okay, maybe “read” is a bit misleading. I read book jackets and cover copy. I read reviews on Amazon. I scanned Wikipedia pages. I read the authors' blogs and the blogs of people who gave the books glowing reviews. If Dan S. from Macon, Georgia, can break free from emotional eating and Glenda D. from Valencia, California, can finally conquer her emotional clutter and Stephanie T. from Santa Fe, New Mexico, has finally found her soul mate (can your soul mate be an inanimate object like, say, a turquoise ring? Hmm … I may have to read this one), then who's to say a little quality time in your cousin's crawl space with some oddly shaped dice and your seventh-grade imagination couldn't do the same years and years later?

For once, Judy and I agreed on the topic of self-help. You can improve your well-being by reading a book:
The Player's Handbook, The Dungeon Master's Guide
, maybe even
Tomb of Horrors.
That's the thing about D&D. It changes lives. And it was about to change mine.

Roll for initiative, Universe.

me:   I'm not in a bad mood! I'm just … introspective. I told you, there's a lot going on.

judy: You were always like that when you were in a bad mood, even as a child.

me:   I'm not in a bad mood! At least I wasn't until you just put me in one.

judy: You'd get upset about something—a girl made fun of your jacket, your brother threw up on your teddy bear, we ran out of liverwurst—you would get real quiet and moody and sulk around for days. You never knew how to just let it go.

me:   I don't remember that at all. I thought I was a happy child.

judy: When you were on the Phenobarbital, yes.

me:   Seriously? You really doped me? I thought that was just a funny story you told on holidays.

judy: Nope. Doctor's orders. You were such a crybaby. Turns out you were just gassy.

me:   Well, that and I was
a baby.

judy: All you did was cry. And then your dad would come home and you'd shut right up. Ooh, that made me mad. I'm getting mad just thinking about it.

me:   But kids get upset about things. Someone puking on your favorite teddy bear is on par with losing your job or finding out your spouse is cheating on you. I wasn't abnormal. I was just reacting to things.

judy:
Overreacting.

me:   What?

judy: Nothing. Do you remember what I always used to tell you?

me:   Ugh. Yes.
Everything happens for a reason.
You still say that. All the time.

judy: It's true. I tried so hard to teach you not to get worked up over little things. Whatever happened happens because it was meant to. Once you accept that, there's very little to worry about.

me:   Yeah, except nine out often times you never find out what the reason was.

judy: And you'd get upset about that, too.

me:   Of course I did! I was promised a lesson!

judy: If you were more in touch with the universe, maybe you would have figured it out.

me:   Here we go.

judy: You know what would have made you happier? Getting in touch with your spiritual side.

me:   I tried. Didn't work.

judy: Maybe what you tried didn't work. But you can't just quit because one of seventeen billion avenues isn't for you. You just need to keep trying until you find one that feels like the right path. Religion and spirituality for you were just like Brownies or dance or gymnastics.

me:   Things my mother forced me to do instead of letting me take naps and watch soap operas like other normal four-year-olds?

judy: I never should have let you quit any of those things.

me:   Well, I can absolutely see how gymnastics would have helped me to become a better person, what with my secret life as a superhero. But how could finding my spiritual side help?

judy: Less time stewing and more time being happy.

me:   Maybe I could refill that Phenobarbital prescription.…

judy: Look at your brother! He's all about the Universe these days and can't stop making money. Ever since he
put it out to the Universe.
He even got a $1.84 credit from McDonald's. Can you believe that? They overcharged him for something and gave him the credit without him even having to ask for it.

me:   If the Universe is giving out $1.84 credits then it's going to take a while for me to get those end tables.

judy: And he won $30 on a lottery ticket.

me:   Since when does he buy lottery tickets?

judy: He doesn't. He found that ticket.

me:   Let me guess. On a homeless person?

judy: See? That's your problem. You're too cynical to let the good stuff in. You keep up that negative attitude and you'll reap negativity twofold.

me:   Come on! There's a difference between being cynical and downright delusional. You're telling me that if I eat a pan of brownies for dinner every night for a week, all the while telling myself how thin I am, I'd actually lose weight?

judy: You try it and let me know.

me:   What about manifesting my own destiny? Purveying my own happiness? Didn't you always tell me not to rely on anyone else to give me what I want?

judy: The universe isn't just anyone.

me:   What would Deepak say?

judy: To listen to your mother.

I was six years old when I had my first existential crisis. In my mind, God was a cowboy. I don't know why I saw him this way as I didn't know any cowboys, didn't grow up on a farm, and, other than the clothing worn by my Western Barbie, I wasn't particularly fond of big hats and pointy boots. Yet the God I believed in was a giant, bandana-wearing wrangler in a ten-gallon hat. I remember lying in the grass in the backyard and looking up at the clouds.

“God,” I said. “Show me your cowboy boot.”

Yes, even six-year-olds need proof of existence. And to be fair, I wasn't asking for miracles. I just wanted to see the tip of his boot or a shiny spur poke through the gauzy whiteness of the clouds.

I waited, maybe an hour. Maybe ten minutes. To a six-year-old it felt like a lifetime willing that giant in brown leather to wink down at me. But alas, not so much as a sunbeam poked through the clouds. I was highly disappointed. I mean, I knew God was busy and all, but I was always told he had time enough for all of us. No doubt there were people asking him to cure cancers or snuff out house fires or find loved ones who were lost at sea. As far as I was concerned, my request was an easy one.

“Well, I guess you don't really exist,” I sighed. Then I called Woofie, my imaginary German shepherd over and went inside for a Ring Ding.

“What's the matter?” Judy asked when she came into the kitchen and saw me face down in plastic wrap and white cream.

Yes, even at six years old, I turned to chocolate when I was having a bad day. Good thing I didn't have a credit card.

“God ignored me,” I said. “And now I'm going to ignore him. Forever.”

The following Sunday, my brother Mike and I were enrolled in Sunday school.

We went to church at 10:00 a.m. (got to respect a parish that doesn't open its doors before double digits) and Sunday school at 11:00. If there is a hell I'm sure that whole pushing Heather Hoffman in the slush on picture day in fourth grade and playing Mommie Dearest with my seven-year-old cousin (I was Joan, of course) had already granted me a one-way ticket there, so I'm just going to say this: I hated it. There's not enough Chips Ahoy and Hawaiian Punch that could have made those sixty minutes bearable. The only saving grace was that Mike and I were in the same class. Together we were a Bible-studying Heckle and Jeckle. We were like Statler and Waldorf from the Muppets, questioning the teacher's teachings. Laughing inappropriately. Mike used me as his mouthpiece when he wanted more cookies or answers to things like, “Were apples the only thing to eat in the garden? Apples? Really?” (Mike's not a fruit guy.) Or, “Didn't Noah have any human friends? Why did he just save the animals?”
(Noah was my favorite Bible character, by the way. I could totally relate to only saving animals.)

From 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m., Judy and the rest of the moms who had kids in Sunday school met in the back room of the Tally Ho diner across the street. There they could be found smoking cigarettes and drinking black coffee. I know this because Mike and I left class one Sunday under the guise of having the stomach flu, claiming we needed to use the facilities. Mike was really good at faking the heaves. We walked across the street to the Tally Ho.

“What are you doing here?” Judy asked when she saw Mike and me meander around the tables and chairs strewn with peacoats and purses. “You're supposed to be in class.”

Mike took a slab of bacon from her plate.

“It's booooooooooooring!” I told her. “Can I have a cigarette?”

We did the whole Sunday school thing every week for about five years. (Give or take a few Sundays when I was excused because I “passed out” in church. It was a phase and about forty thousand CT scans said as much, but once I learned it would get me out of Sunday school, I staged a few episodes. See? Going to hell.)

A few years later we took our first communion (wine!) and a couple years after that we were confirmed (cash!). I'm sure the official meaning of “confirmation” isn't “stop going to church now,” but that's what it meant for us. Perhaps Judy was hoping we wouldn't need her throwing the covers off our sleeping bodies every Sunday to get up and go. Or maybe it had something to do with the Tally Ho burning down. I'm just saying …

Back then I dreaded Sundays, but now I look back with some gratitude. I'm glad Judy tried to instill a sense of religion in us. Other than the fact that we were kids and therefore couldn't say no to her, Judy never forced it on us. It was more of a canvas for us to expand (or not) upon.

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