David's Inferno (42 page)

Read David's Inferno Online

Authors: David Blistein

Eventually, I accepted that I doth protest too much. For while, as countless books have attested,
The Divine Comedy
is the journey of one man, it is also the journey of
everyman
. Indeed, my journey through Hell (and hopefully not back), was and is every bit as important to humanity as Dante's. And so is yours. And yours. And yours.

The Dark Wood—yes, we all have been there. Limbo, we've been there, too. Hell and Purgatory, we've tasted them. And a Paradise that's beyond the forms of this earth? Beyond contentment? Beyond bliss? Well, those who know don't say and those who say don't know. Me? All I can do is say I don't know.

Translations

Not only am I
not
a Dante scholar, I don't even understand Italian. Fortunately, there are many English translations of Dante's work. At various times, I consulted ones by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Mark Musa, H.F. Cary, A.S. Kline, and others. The Dante quotations in this book are the result of my mixing and matching these translations, and then putting them into a vernacular
that made sense to me. Heresy, perhaps. But I'm in good company.

References

Growing up in my academic household, you were only supposed to use primary sources. Looking things up in encyclopedias was a capital offense. And summaries like
Cliff Notes
were beneath contempt. Nevertheless,
Wikipedia
deserves my thanks and even a bit of my money for saving me an extraordinary amount of time when I was trying to remember for the
20TH
time what year Dante was exiled or which behaviors dopamine affects. The ever-expanding website
Shmoop
was similarly helpful as were the
Cummings Study Guides
(
http://www.cummingsstudyguides.net/
). In all cases, you need to cross-check your facts, but sites like this sure make things easier when you encounter a factual block in the middle of a paragraph.

No matter how much cross-checking you do however, there are many things about Dante that are still subject to debate … in particular, when he started and completed each of the three books, and where he traveled while in exile. Sources disagree on the former by years and the latter by miles. Paris? Likely. England? Maybe. And then there's the stuff of pure legend. Which son found how many remaining cantos? Where? How many months after he died? In this regard, my favorite source for the confusion about his travels while in exile is a review of the book
Dante the Wayfarer
which was published in
The New York Times
on December 2, 1905 (
http://www.unz.org/Pub/BookmanUK-1905nov-00074
).

After reading the introductions to various translations and roaming around the Internet, I pretty much settled on
http://www.worldofdante.org/timeline.html
for the basic chronology, because it was easy to follow and was developed by the University of Virginia's Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities. Advanced technology? Humanities? I hear a little cognitive dissonance there. But is it all so different from Dante's insistence on writing in the vernacular? The medium changes. The message evolves.

Beyond that, I intentionally didn't read too much about Dante while writing this book, because, as I've said, my goal wasn't to write
about
him so much as have a relationship
with
him. Since this led me to make some assertions and projections that could raise the eyes, if not ire, of Dante scholars, it's probably best if we call those those sections “historical fiction” and leave it at that.

One biography I do need to acknowledge is
Dante in Love
by Harriet Rubin (2004). When I discovered this book, I felt I had met a kindred spirit because she, like me, was more interested in the
living
Dante than the dead one.
Also her book was the one that brought to my attention the important fact that the poet called his book “The
Vision
of Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven.” Anyone who likes my apparently speculative sections about Dante in this book will likely enjoy Rubin's.

Depression

There are two authors in this field that I—and most other people interested in depression—consider required reading: Kay Jamison and Peter Kramer. I was informed, illuminated, and inspired by
An Unquiet Mind
(1995) Jamison's groundbreaking book about manic-depression (including her own first-hand experience); her
Touched with Fire
(1993) about manic-depression and creativity; and her
Night Falls Fast
(1999) about suicide.

I also read Peter Kramer's
Listening to Prozac
(1993) and
Against Depression
(2005), both of which have been major forces for bringing depression “out of the closet,” as an illness that can be treated with medication, and the implications of that for understanding who we “really” are. The latter book also raises the intriguing question of what human life and creativity would look like without depression.

Whenever we read a book about some kind of suffering, we experience a kind of simultaneous relief and envy. There is, however, a place in the middle, where the emotional lives of the writer, reader, patient, caregiver, and innocent bystander all have their place and are equally deserving of acceptance and respect. While there are many memoirs of depression, bipolar, and schizophrenia, William Styron's
Darkness Visible
(1990) still sets the standard. By being equally intimate and informative, he lets you into the experience without forcing you to stare or to turn away. To get a bigger picture of his experience and what it was like to live with him through it, read his daughter Alexandra Styron's new book
Reading My Father
(2012).

Neuropsychiatry and Pharmacology

While I tried to make most technical terms self-explanatory in the text, I've included a Glossary for easier reference. It includes a chart of trade and generic names that professionals tend to use interchangeably.

The only medical
text
I referred to was
DSM IV: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Illness
, which is published by the American Psychiatric Association. As of this writing,
DSM V
is about to be released. Many libraries have copies, and there are several websites that give general overviews of the various diagnoses, including
http://allpsych.com/disorders/dsm.html
and
http://www.dr-bob.com

I tend to triangulate between a lot of different resources in order to understand the who, what, when, where, how, and why of technical topics. After a while, however, I began to rely on certain ones. The following are my major Internet resources for understanding neurotransmitters, diagnoses, and medications:

Burke, Dr. Brian: Abnormal Psychology:
http://faculty.fortlewis.edu/burke_b/Abnormal/Abnormalmultiaxial.htm

Culbertson, Fred: Phobia List:
http://phobialist.com/
(Not to be missed.)

Dewey, Russell A., PhD: Psychology: An Introduction.
http://www.intro-psych.com/ch12_abnormal/five_axes_of_dsm-iv.html

Drugs.com
:
http://www.drugs.com/

EMC Publishing:/Most Commonly Prescribed Drugs:
http://www.emcp.com/college_resource_centers/resourcelist.php?GroupID=7237

eMedExpert:
http://www.emedexpert.com/compare/ssris.shtml

Enchanted Learning:
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/anatomy/brain/Neuron.shtml
(As with all complex topics, children's books and websites are the best place to start your research … and often to end it.)

Hart, Carol: Secrets of Serotonin:
http://www.nasw.org/users/twoharts/serotonin.html
(My favorite comprehensive explanation of serotonin.)

Livestrong:
http://www.livestrong.com/

McManamy, John: McMan's Depression and Bipolar Web:
http://www.mcmanweb.com/neurotransmitters.html
(A comprehensive blog that combines really good information with memoir.)

Pharmacology Corner:
http://pharmacologycorner.com/
(Some very helpful short video lectures.)

Poore, Jerod: Crazy Meds: (
http://www.crazymeds.us/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/HomePage
) (
The essential layperson's guide to prescription drugs.)

Prescorn, Sheldon: Applied Clinical Psychopharmacology:
http://www.preskorn.com/books/ssri_s1.html
(Clarifies the history of SSRIs)

Psychresidentonline.com
:
http://www.psychresidentonline.com/

WebMD:
http://www.webmd.com/depression/features/the-dalai-lama-and-depression-treatment

Chapter Notes

NB: Dante Alighieri was born in Florence in 1265 and died in Ravenna in 1321
.

THE DARK WOOD
Words Fail

• Epigraph: From Book 5 of Marcus Aurelius's
Meditations
. This 2
nd
century Roman emperor—as famous for his mastership of Stoicism as his military skills—is the kind of guy who gives brooding melancholic insight a good name. He spent many nights encamped with his troops in the far northern territories of the Roman Empire, writing down his reflections on what it means to be a whole human being … in terms of how you think, feel, and behave. I highly recommend a few passages next time you have to take a deep breath and accept that it really is what it is. Even when it's not.

LIMBO
Fifty-Three Years, Four Months, and One Helluva Week

• Epigraph: From
The Journals of Søren Kierkegaard
, February 1836.

• The BBQ place in Mississippi is called The Shed (
http://theshedbbq.com
). It survived both Hurricane Katrina and Isaac.

• Paris: The most famous river is, of course, the Seine. The most famous cemetery is Père Lachaise—resting place of Jim Morrison as well as Chopin. The most famous bookstore is Shakespeare & Company. Its legendary owner, George Whitman (a relative of Walt) used to serve tea every Sunday afternoon to whomever showed up until he died in 2011 at the age of 98.

Make Up Your Mind

• Epigraph: One of Sam Spade's many great one-liners in Dashiell Hammett's
The Maltese Falcon
. He uses it to describe a guy whose life was completely turned upside down when a beam falls to the sidewalk right next him and almost kills him. Spade goes on to say: “He adjusted himself to beams falling, and then no more of them fell, and he adjusted himself to them not falling.

HELL
Looking for Traction

• Epigraph: A friend said this to me in May, 2006. He was commiserating about my increasingly chaotic state and, after making a few mild suggestions, ended with this simple statement. I scribbled it down word for word and returned to it frequently. While on the surface, it might sound rather harsh—for me, it was a reminder that I still had at least a modicum of personal power and that I would endure.

Road Trip

• Epigraph: Theodore Roosevelt was more of a situational depressive. Or, perhaps a situational manic-depressive. For him, a major change of scene was often the best therapy. His famous line about the “black care” was written when he fled to the Badlands after the death of his pregnant wife and his mother on the same day in 1884.

• Neal Cassady was the model for the character Dean Moriarity in Jack Kerouac's
On the Road
(1957) … a dash across America that was easily as mad as mine.

• Michael Chabon's book about Sherlock Holmes is called
The Final Solution: A Story of Detection
(2003).

• The University of West Virginia Mountaineers lost to Texas in the NCAA Sweet Sixteen that year. Florida beat UCLA in the final.

• One of my late godfather Larry Spitz's best stories was about how he helped organize the textile workers in Woonsocket, Rhode Island in the mid '30s. Among other things, this involved arranging night classes in English for the primarily French Canadian workers. Larry was the real deal.

• The Susan Orlean book of essays I was listening to is called
My Kind of Place
(2004).

• Natural Foods Expo: This is a good place to clarify my “business career.” Why was I at a Natural Food show? Hadn't I retired from advertising? Well, back in 1987, a friend and I started a company to import soaps and body care products. I ended up owning an ad agency. He ended up running the soap company. But I occasionally consulted, wrote, and, as indicated, went to trade shows with him.

• The poem in Brown's Park is by Joseph Brown, an ancestor of the family who created the park.

•
One man's miracle …
The “famous man” who said this was Godfrey de Bouillon, one of the leaders of the First Crusade. You won't find it, however, on any website of quotations, because he said it in a book of historical fiction that I'm writing.

• The main goal of primal scream therapy is to help patients release childhood
trauma. Janov's most famous patients were John and Yoko Ono. Listening to the song “Mother” on their album
John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band
, gives you a sense of the technique's intensity. Janov's book
The Primal Scream
(1970) is still in print.

• For more on the Rainbow Family see
http://www.welcomehome.org/rainbow/index.html

• “Sympathy for the Devil” is, of course, by The Rolling Stones. “We Built This City on Rock & Roll” is by Jefferson Starship. Apologies to the many people who still love hearing the “Pachabel Canon” and “The Rose” at weddings.

• The song “Long December” (1996) is by Counting Crows, from their album
Recovering the Satellites
.

• I'm happy to say that, with the help of a neighbor, I eventually got the rock free and it's now the front step of my cabin.

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