What We See


Brown eyes squinting, head cocked, she scanned the desk. 
She picked up and placed down pens, a pad of paper, various notebooks for scheduling. 
"Hmmmm," she sighed.

Her fingernails clicked against the hollow plastic keys, numbers responding, popping up on the small rectangular screen in concert with the tapping. 

“Where is my calculator?” she mused, once again searching the desk. 
“I guess I’ll have to just do the tax in my head,” she said as she tapped one then five then the X symbol then period zero eight five. 
“I mean,” she said, “it’s like this big.” 
She lifted her hands a foot above the desk and made a square shape, framing the exact same shape and size of the calculator she had just released from her left hand, the one sitting on the desk. 

I was confused. 
Maybe she meant “credit card machine.” To swipe my card. But no, she had said calculator several times, usually while punching the numbers into the calculator. Maybe she had another one that was her favorite and this was just a crappy old one that would have to do for now. And really, if she hated it so much she could’ve used her Iphone; it was right there next to the chunky grey calculator. 

She turned the device so that the numbers faced me, so that I wouldn’t have to read them upside down like one of those old school kid tricks of spelling out “boobs” 58008. 
Made you look. 

She said, “This is so weird, where is it?” as the 126.275 flashed on the screen. 
My total charge, calculated “in her head.”

“Oh wait,” she blushed. “It’s this, isn’t it?” 
She grabbed the calculator, held it up to the light, doubting its authenticity. 
“That is so weird. Wow. And I got sleep last night.”

She was embarrassed, I was embarrassed. 
I was also more than slightly distraught that I was her new patient. She stuck the needles in just fine this time, but what if next time she couldn’t “see” the needles? Ouch. 
Yet I was also fascinated by this temporary lack of recognition, this momentary blindness that prevented her from seeing the object in her hand. The object she was using as though it was an extension of her brain, watching the numbers change with symbols and clicks. 

How many times does this happen to us in a day? Maybe not on such a noticeable scale, but in smaller ways: our glasses on our head, keys in our hands, toast burning in the oven when we do not remember making toast. 
Or in larger ones: how many objects, animals, people do we simply NOT SEE in our every day lives?
Maybe this world is a whole hell of a lot more crowded than we think it is.

It also made me wonder where the line between Me and Other Than Me is drawn. When I have a calculator or phone or sewing needle in hand, does it become part of my anatomy for that time? Is that why when I leave me phone at home these days I feel like I’ve forgotten a vital piece of my being? Or is that just addiction? 

Perhaps objects simply exist when we think them hard enough into being. Like how European ships on the horizon were said to be invisible to Native Americans at first. We don't see things until there is a want or need or context. That goes for people too. I've had people look right through me enough to feel this reality. I am at times someone's invisible calculator, but I am holding plates of food instead of a screen of numbers. And how many times have I walked past a homeless person without looking into his eyes in fear of connection, in fear of making him human to me?

She apologized again, nervously laughing off the bizarre misunderstanding between her hands, eyes, and brain. 

I walked out in the office, disturbed. She might be crazy. I mean, did she really think she was going to be able to multiply 15 by .085 in her head? God knows only a 5th grader could do shit like that. 

Bat. Shit. Crazy. I thought as I walked across the street, hoping I would dodge the cars- seen and unseen (both them and me).