...Drunken Kung Fu...
There was a time in my life
when I had a deep affinity
to all things Kung Fu.
Now perhaps you envision me
flying sideways through the air,
moments before the heel of my lethal foot
shatters a concrete slab.
Perhaps you have this brutal image of yours truly
flailing about amidst a circle of would be assassins,
each of whom drop to the floor
consecutive upon consecutive corpse
from the application of my pin point death touch.
Is that Kung Fu?
Well… not exactly.
Contrary to popular belief,
the term “Kung Fu” does not translate to martial art.
Does not equate to the concussive application
of fist to fragile cranium.
That is, unless you do it very well.
For you see Kung Fu more literally translates
to “excellence of technique”.
A Kung Fu of cooking.
A Kung Fu of tightrope walking.
A Kung Fu of chainsaw juggling.
A Kung Fu of putting up
with your drunken father
on a hot Summer’s afternoon.
Did you know there’s a style called
‘Drunken Kung Fu’?
Sounds pretty silly don’t it?
And so it should.
So it should.
In the golden olden days of chop suey cinema,
our suppressed and antagonized hero
would be forced to take up the elusive Drunken Style
as taught by some dotty old vagabond monk.
And Drunken Kung Fu was always fun to watch
because let’s face it:
Being drunk is always funny, right?
I figure this was why those villains in Kung Fu flicks
never got to do the Drunken Kung Fu style
‘cause you can’t come stumbling
and slurring into a fight scene
and still be taken serious.
Sorta strange then that these special rules
never really applied to the strained relationship
my father and I shared.
High Noon in June.
Sitting on a porch of which I currently coexist
with an agitated wasp.
I play the protagonist in this scene,
and I suppose you think the wasp
is the much dreaded antagonist, but no.
That role is played by
he who just strolled onto the porch
with a bottle in his hand.
Bottle in his hand; book in mine.
I do my best to ignore the
beer braced bravado of banter
that spews from his toxic lips.
Mano-a-mano denial.
My inability to embrace the existence
of one whose state of inebriation
conveys manifest masculine destiny.
Not ‘walk quietly and carry a big Kung Fu stick’
but rather,
‘swagger brashly and sling a mean brown bottle’.
And he of bottled bluster
would really like me to know
how my professed Kung Fu knowledge
would defend against an agitated wasp.
And for the next sixty seconds,
he who I’m trying so hard to ignore,
moves about that screened porch,
doing everything possible to shoo
an increasingly pissed off wasp in my direction.
And every time it swoops toward me,
the smile upon my father’s face
increases in maniacal glee.
Yes kids.
Here is Father/Son bonding at its finest.
The wasp swoops around behind me
and though I can hear the hum of its of its wings
as it careens along the porch’s screen mesh,
I do not take my eyes off the book
for that is the power of myKung Fu.
Ignoramus ignorer extraordinaire.
Ahem…
There is a sensation you get
when a wasp lands on your skin
which is quite unlike that of a mere fly’s anointment.
I’m not talking about that pending sting of pain.
Just the heightened moment of its legs alighting
upon exposed epidermis
accompanied by the instant cease of buzzing wings.
Thatsensation…
That sensation has just occurred,
there on the back of my neck.
An unseen presence,
yet I know precisely where it is.
And with one complete fluid motion,
my right hand leaves the edge of the book,
shoots to the back of my neck
where my thumb and index finger
instantly crush the wasp’s torso
and then just as blindingly fast,
my hand whips back
to sling the insect carcass
there at my father’s feet.
I would not have been able
to do this again in a thousand years.
And yet, there it was.
Most certainly something to
make one jump up and exclaim
“Yo Pendejo!
Did you see dat shit?!”
Well that’s how I felt on the inside,
but on the outside I merely gave my father a quick glance
and calmly returned to reading.
No doubt I conveyed my Kung Fu excellence of
“Hey! Don’t fuck with me!” and yes,
I suppose that compared to true Drunken Kung Fu
what I had just done wasn’t very funny but then again,
if you had seen my dad’s Drunken Kung Fu
as many times as I have,
you’d be forced to admit
as with most jokes of inebriation,
they all lose their kick pretty damn quick,
for instead of laughing at Drunken Kung Fu,
you simply find yourself staring at a drunk,
and no,
there is nothing
funny
about it.
©09 Jack Hubbell