White Girl in the Hood

Culture clash en el barrio del Fruitvale

Monday, October 22, 2007

Psychics in the Hood
Tonight 3 psychics came to my house and healed it.
It all started a year ago, when I won a fierce bidding war on a Berkeley Psychic Institute gift certificate at my daughter's school's silent auction. It was a hotly contested item. I prevailed, and for $40, I had myself a psychic house healing.
It took me a year to use it, because, like tidying up before the cleaning person comes, I felt like I had to actually clean my house before it could be psychically healed. I kept putting the place in order, but it would get messy again before I could make that call. Or maybe I thought the psychic house healers would just KNOW to come to my door, and the moment simply hadn't arrived yet.
Finally, last week I found the home-made looking blue certificate in my desk drawer, picked up the phone and dialed. A woman's voice answered. "How can I help you?" she asked. I stopped myself from saying "Don't you already know?", and told her I wanted to redeem my house-healing certificate. In a matter-of-fact way, she said "please hold and I'll transfer you". To where? I expected to hear ghostly moans, or wails at the other end of the line.
Another very cheery, matter-of-fact voice came on the line. "Hello, Berkeley Psychic Institute, may I help you?" I told her I wanted to schedule a house healing. She sounded as though she was paging through a thick appointment book. "Let's see, usually they do those on Monday nights at 8. Will that work for you?" As a matter of fact, it would. So that was that, they were coming the next week.
So I went about my usual after-work routine. Made dinner, ate dinner, helped daughter with bath, read, cleaned up a little.
Then the doorbell rang and I answered it. Standing on my porch were three fairly ordinary looking women. Elaine, Jennifer, and Marisela. Dressed in denim, t-shirts, and sweatshirts. No flowing robes or turbans. I was vaguely disappointed. Marisela held a bible. I invited them in, and they asked if they should take their shoes off. I think from now on I'm going to ask everyone to take their shoes off.
They asked if I'd ever had a house healing before. Nope. Why do you want the healing? I told them the house's history. (When I moved in, the neighbors came over, one by one, and told me how happy they were I was living there. Apparently the last residents thought that "landscaping" meant home appliances in the front yard, pit bulls patrolling the roof. My house was formerly a crack den.) They asked if there were any rooms they couldn't go into. Nope. Then all 3 began moving through the house, hands in front of them like they were feeling for something invisible, as though they were blind.
They walked through every room. I sat and read. Then down to the basement. Then upstairs and down, cheerfully talking and giggling as they walked, arms outstretched in front of them.
"We're done!" said Maricela, who had emerged as the group's leader. "Time for the reading." They set up chairs and mine faced theirs. Feet on the ground, eyes open for me. Feet on the ground, eyes closed for them. Marisela stood behind Elaine and Jennifer. Then followed lots of talk about colors, layers, history (I'll save that for another time). They giggled and laughed and smiled the whole time. It was so merry. I thought they'd be very somber, but it was more like a ladie's tea party or sewing circle. Joana sat happily on the floor, drawing and interjecting comments every so often.
Then they said they were filling the house with golden balls of light, from the basement on up. Marisela pronounced the finish. "I call that a house healing," she said happily. And they gave me hugs and shook off all the psychic energy, put their clogs and sweatshirts back on, and said goodbyes as they left.
The house does feel different, cleaned of all the sad crackhead angst of the past. We'll see.

Labels: , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home