Showing posts with label fight recap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fight recap. Show all posts

Friday, October 9, 2015

I'm Just Trying to Get Right With Jesus, Brother

           "I'm Just Trying to Get Right With Jesus, Brother,"
          and Other Things that Kansas City Made Us Say

      Lizard, The Detective Sergeant, The Ghost, The Body Snatcher, Korean Krush, and The Closer: when the sun rose on the last Wednesday of September, these six were making their way to the heartland. I don’t know if Kansas City was what John Cougar Mellencamp had in mind when he sang about “the heartland,” but suffice it to say, I feel extremely sorry for the childhoods Jack and Diane must have endured growing up there. Herein lies the true account of the adventure that took Tony’s Army to the barbeque basket of America.


WEDNESDAY, dawn.
            I arose to find my faithful Kat and go forth to acquire coffee before heading to the airport. I sipped an Americano, relishing the taste of a liquid that is not distilled water. 
            Shortly after, I arrived at the Denver International Airport. I was just in time to rendezvous with the Detective Sergeant himself. We sat waiting for the Body Snatcher, Sean MF Madden, to arrive from parking his car. From the amount of time it took, we assumed he was somewhere in the vicinity of Aurora.

WEDNESDAY, later.
            This momentous trio took to the pedestrian bridge and headed for security. One TSA agent making small talk asked Sean, “Where are you all going? Someplace tropical?”
            “We are going to Kansas City,” he said. “She is fighting. Kickboxing.” He pointed at me.
            This would be the beginning of a very strange and personal morning with the friendly TSA agents of the Denver airport, as I proceeded to set off all the alarms in the screening area and had to be escorted to a secret back room where a rotund uniformed lady stuck both hands in my pants and checked the bottoms of my socks for assorted weaponry. I did not intimate that my feet and hands were, in fact, the weapons, because I already felt like I needed to call Detectives Olivia Benson and Elliot Stabler to repair what TSA had broken in me. An exceptionally fun twenty minutes passed, and I was eventually released back into the custody of Tony and Sean. I fed the event to the hangry monster inside my heart.
            At our gate, we encountered Alex “The Closer” Barse, who was bewildered at having sat there waiting for us for so long. Where had we been, she wanted to know? Little did she know.
            “Would you like my crackers, Liz?” Alex asked. LITTLE DID SHE KNOW.

WEDNESDAY, even later.
            A short flight was all that separated us and our superior blood vessels from Kansas City, sea level, and a casino that smelled like bananas and cigarettes.
He is lost to us, now...
 We arrived at the hotel and I promptly stepped in something that seemed like it could only be puke. Priscilla “The Korean Krush” Choi was waiting for us inside. She had only been in Kansas City for five hours and already it had changed her…
            Tony and Sean decided that, after checking into our rooms, we would go scour for something to eat. Priscilla and I, of course, could not really actually eat anything as we had to weigh in the next evening, so the natural choice was to go to Gates’ Barbecue where the menu was displayed on the wall like a Baseball park concession stand. Food was all served on trays from large vats, and an overly friendly hostess demanded, “You doin’ all right, baby?” at frequent intervals.
            I ate some salty chicken with crushing feelings of guilt and Priscilla stared at Tony’s sandwich and fries asking “How is the sauce, Tony? And the fries? Tell me about the fries, Tony.” When the baby-darling hostess noticed that Priscilla had no food, and asked why, Priscilla explained that we were weighing in the next day.
            “That’s messed up,” said the hostess.

WEDNESDAY, even more late.
            Sean held mitts for me in the hotel fitness area, which conveniently featured a 8-foot by 8-foot section of those interlocking floor mats like you give to toddlers to cushion their playing areas. I attempted to knock his hands off at the wrists for about forty-five minutes.
            “No more water after this,” Sean told me. I cried one Navajo tear. Sean wandered off to the casino to "Make Tony that breakfast money," Tony drank his sorrows away, and Alex and I wandered up to PCHOI’s room to see how her weight cut was going.
            We found her in the tub, covered in abolene, with tiny perspiration beads dotting her face.
            “Can I do the hot tub in five minute intervals,” she asked.
            “I don’t think it works that way,” I responded. Of course, I am not a coach and actually have no idea how to cut weight unless Tyler “Thunder Tubbs” Toner is directing my efforts via text message. But who really knows. Alex and I took turns forcibly keeping the Korean Krush in the water, and showing her videos on UFC Fight pass.
            “If Ronda can do it, then anybody can do it, Priscilla,” we would say. Then, “Just one more round of this fight, Priscilla!” Except we were lying.
            “Just wait until you have to do this,” she said.
            “I won’t have to,” I countered, wishing I had hair I could flip like a meaner version of Regina George. After she sweated off the two pounds that Tony had prescribed, we allowed Pchoi to no longer soak in scalding water like a Korean potato.

THURSDAY, dawn.
            I awoke shriveled and gaunt. Alex told me so, and I trust her opinion on the matter of how skeletal I look. In the mirror, I could see an ab;  that snap of giddiness shone through the cottony thirst that had erupted on my tongue.  Back in Colorado, the Ghost had just hopped into her car and set sail across the great Pancake that is middle America. She would arrive later that evening. I rolled out of bed, promptly weighed myself and texted my known associate, Steve Eisman.

Liz: 137 lbs.
Liz: Can I drink coffee?           
Steve: No, hold off until you weigh in.
Liz: FUCK YOU STEVE. 

            Alex and I rose to go to the fitness center. I began to walk on the treadmill while watching a gangly, teenaged Anne Hathaway pretend to be Julie Andrews’ granddaughter. NOBODY BELIEVES YOU, ANNE. I was growing ever more hostile to televisions and other casino-goers. I was still walking on the treadmill, shouting things about how Cristina Yang and the protagonist of the Disney Channel Original Movie Brink should never have stooped to be cast in such tripe. Alex completed her workout and we received an ominous text from Tony and Sean:

            Sean: Come to the car.

            Alex and I ran to the parking lot and the four of us crammed into our sedan.
            “Where are we going,” I asked.
            “A little place I like to call iHop,” Tony said. The next hour included Sean hitting on our waitress and said waitress thinking that Tony’s name was in fact “Old Uncle Ed”. Sean thought he was just posting an adorable snapchat when he uploaded the photo below, but in fact he was creating a state of emergency and angering a tribe of females that stretched from coast to coast. As Sean’s phone exploded, he began shying away from open windows for fear of being sniper-rifled to death. The three of us could only look on aghast. Goodbye, Sean. We hardly knew you.
It's in God's hands now, Sean. 
THUSRDAY, A.iH. (after iHop)
          After the pancake feast I could not take part in, we received some harrowing news. Yes, it appeared that  Priscilla’s opponent had spooked herself into the hospital. But no, seriously, she had gotten a kidney stone and needed medical help. We removed a shriveling PCHOI from the bath for a second time, but all was not lost. The promoter secured another opponent who was willing to accept a bout on 24 hours notice. Basically, she would get up from her desk at work and come to engage one of the most heinous savages I know in a title fight. Alas, PCHOI was disinterested in this.
 Tony was about to call the promoter and tell him never mind, but Alex would not stand for such a thing. The Closer stepped in.       
          “Let me handle this,” she said. “I’m in sales.”            
          And so, I took a nap. As I drifted off, I heard Alex saying something along the lines of, “This is the game, Priscilla. Are you gonna fight, or not?” The Closer pulls zero punches.
 When I awoke, Priscilla had agreed to The Closer’s terms and was going to fight. Meanwhile, the tables had turned as my weight had begun to stick at 136.5 lbs. Sean assured me that I’d make 136, and that I had a leeway-pound of allowance.            
“RONDA DOES NOT USE LEEWAY POUNDS,” I screamed, only at Alex because she was the only one in the room. Yes, Regina George would have to soak.             
          I rubbed abolene on my stomach, arms, and legs while Alex added one entire box of Epsom salts and near-boiling water into our tub, which was about the size of my actual bedroom at home. I submerged myself up to the neck and immediately felt bad for heckling PCHOI. My heart thumped. All around the air had turned hot. My brain cooked inside my skull. “SAVE ME, MOSES,” I cried. But then I realized: Moses could not handle this water. That is why he parted the sea—MOSES WAS A BITCH.          
          I thanked God I was not a pussy like Moses, and endured fifteen more minutes. I emerged from the slop a clean 134.5 lbs.


THURSDAY, later.            
          The weigh ins were being held in Overland Park, Kansas. We drove an hour and at 5:15 or so, finally arrived at a store filled with Dubs and smelling of Armor-all. The start time of 5:30 pm was, of course, only a joke and we spent the next forty minutes lounging in the corner being physically assaulted by an unattended preteen in a Spider-Man hoodie.            
          “Square up, pussy,” Sean whispered at the small miscreant. I had to spend most of my remaining vitality keeping myself appearing somewhat alive on the couch, and so the tiny Spider-Man lived to see another day.            
          After what seemed like seventeen Harry Potter films, other fight camps began to appear and we were summoned to fill out paperwork. PCHOI and I wrote down our nicknames and our fight songs.           
           “Which do you think,” Priscilla asked. “Le Choi, or The Korean Krush?”            
          “THE KOREAN KRUSH,” I screamed. Was there even a decision? “What will your song be?”           
          “Dust in the Wind,” she responded. “You know, because it's Kansas City. And she is going to be dust in my wind.” I nodded, thinking only of Priscilla farting on her opponent.
          What happened from there was a slosh of random weights and health concerns. One first-time fighter’s coach had made a clerical error and he was forced to cut from 195 on Monday to 170, an act recommended by most Physicians for those patients wishing to experience death. This sad sack of flesh relied on Sean to fill out his paperwork/prop up his lifeless body. "Get your own coach," I hissed at the Conor McGregor wannabe. Priscilla weighed in before me, as is her God-given co-main event right. She and her opponent weighed in at 149 and 166 respectively, in a size discrepancy that seemed to be the norm for this promotion. We were unfazed by seventeen measly pounds, though, because all 149 lbs of Priscilla is pure terrorism.
          Speaking of opponents, mine was still somewhere else in Kansas, and so when the promoter called “Liz Jerrerety” into the microphone, I stepped onto the scale alone. Because, you know, weigh-ins are sort of an optional event. I stood in my underpants looking like a feeble, six-pack-abbed labor camp escapee and made a face of near-death. 134 pounds, even. I was practically down to my birth weight!
          “Just hang around for a minute,” the promoter said. “We need to get a face-off picture.” 
          “And I need a pony,” I said, deciding whether or not I could bite him and still fight on the card. I opted to not bite, and our squad left that terrible place with only an Irish goodbye.

THURSDAY, night.
          When we returned from dinner, my ghostly warrior companion, Ashley “Please Don't Stare At Me With Those Dead Eyes” Acord had crossed the Kansan wasteland and awaited our arrival at the casino. She informed me that she had found Jesus on the trip, and showed me this photo:

AND THE LORD SAYETH UNTO HIM,  "WRITE MY NAME ON BILLBOARDS."
Also, because we love Ashley as much as we love most dogs, we let her make a sleeping nest on the floor of our room:
INSERT HEART-EYED EMOJI HERE
FRIDAY, evening.            
          At 5:30, it was time to check in, and so, of course, at 6:30 we were finally allowed inside, where we thought we would be examined by doctors. We were instead greeted by what appeared to be Enthusiast of Medicine students from the local community college.            
          “Um,” I said, “Where do I go?”            
          “Over here,” said one of the certificate-seeking eighteen year olds.
          After a battery of tests, I was handed a pregnancy test. I have come to accept that in the Amateur Fight Game, doping is unacceptable for men, and babies are unacceptable for women. Priscilla looked on as the frowny man handed me the pink package.    
          “Look out, Liz,” she said. “You could be due for a surprise.”
          “You never know," the man said. I don’t think he could tell by looking at me that I was not in fact due for a surprise, ever, unless I was destined for the second Immaculate Conception. “Some of these girls are pissed,” he said. “That one down there just yelled at me. ‘Do you really think this has ever seen a penis?!’ That’s what she said.”           
          “Um,” I said. “Okay.”            
          The next few hours were a hellacious blur, with Tony and Sean leaving to probably drink their dinner, and The Closer talent liasing with the sort of talent one can only be born with. Fighters started warming up and it became apparent that nobody had actually bothered to learn any striking before coming here. Coaches said the following things:
          "Just hit hard, you'll be fine.” 
          “Fuck his face up."
          “Jab, low kick! But don’t break my iPhone, it’s still in my pocket.” 

Tony sat like this for the entire night:
FRIDAY, rules meeting.            
          It was becoming more and more apparent that I was just as much in charge of this promotion as anybody else here was. I was glad Tony was seated because I think he died and came back to life at least 3 times during this meeting. The ref did not bother to disguise the fact that he was making his rules up as he went along, and in fact invited our input many times.            
          "We have one boxing fight on the card tonight,” the ref began, pointing at the boxers. Since this is governed by a kickboxing commission, we need you guys to throw at least one kick in your corner to start the fight."            
          “Help me, God,” Tony whispered.            
          “For the MMA guys, no open-handed strikes. I’m worried about eye pokes.”            
          “What!?” someone in the crowd shouted. “Why?”            
          “Oh,” the ref said, pausing. “Well...I guess you can do it.”
          Priscilla showed no sign of nerves, making comments such as “Lizard is going to eat this munchkin,” and posing like this when Alex requested that she “look like she was about to kill someone:”
If Priscilla looks at you like this, you should probably run.

FRIDAY, later.                 
          We defibrillated Tony, and had our hands wrapped. After a while, Sean began warming me up. My opponent stood about ten feet away. I could see her in her hoodie and sweats. “She is not ready for you, Lizard,” I thought. And so, I proceeded to crack the pads, and bark like a rabid dingo. Appearances, children. It’s all about appearances. The fighters came and went down the hall and into an industrial-looking hellevator, looking normal when they stepped through the double doors and invariably looking pretty fucked up when they exited.
          Down the hall, an official called my name. Someone’s lights had been put out. The time had come.

FRIDAY, even later.         
           The elevator doors parted, and in stepped the squad. Priscilla smacked my legs with her wraps and rubbed my shoulders. I was mumbling to myself: “Today is my day,” I said it in my head, and then aloud, and then I barked and smacked my gloves together, like a seal wearing mittens. I was announced first, because Blue Corner does not follow the accepted protocol of “red corner, champion, blue corner, challenger,” much like they do not believe in mandatory weigh ins or Boxers that do not kick. My brain whirred. She can only beat you if you let her, Lizard. Today is my day, today is my day.
          “All the way from Colorado, Liz “the Lizard” Gerrity!”
          My music began to kind-of play, but not really. They queued an instrumental version. I think it’s because “Don’t Like” by Kanye West and Chief Keef opens up with about seven “niggas,” a “bitch” and “shit” in the first two lines. Or perhaps Kansas City just hadn’t yet gotten its fill of fuckery. We will never know.
          I tried to enter the cage but was stopped by an official who could not understand why Tony wanted Vaseline on my headgear. Sean verbally browbeat him into submission, and after the ref checked me for any hidden shivs or shanks, I entered the cage.
          They announced my opponent’s name. I stood there in that spot, limbs loose, swaying with a song that I wasn’t quite hearing. It’s like standing on a cliff—rooted there in the cigarette stink dark with the crowd’s cheers for some other girl thick all around you. For a second I felt small, like I had never been here before. But then I heard Ashley’s voice just behind me. I can’t remember exactly what she said, it is lost now in the shouts and the god-awful song my opponent chose, but you know what? I have never felt more comforted in my entire life.
          When she stepped inside, the cheers picked up, but I didn’t care. “I’m about to ruin your night,” I whispered. Some serious shit was about to happen. Tony caught my attention from behind the cage.
          “I want you to go out there and fuck this lady up. Do you understand me?”
          I could think of no response more appropriate than “Yes sir.”

FRIDAY, go time.         
           The ref did not motion for us to touch gloves, instead just asking, “You ready?” before waving us on. It took me about ten seconds to somehow remove her headgear from her head. It took the ref a solid minute to replace it, and all the while I stood a foot away, foaming at the mouth, pawing the canvas with my feet.
          From there, a number of things happened, including the Postmaster posting, and Tony shouting “CHOP!” It was all very familiar, but also very not. I fought through the three rounds, relying heavily on my right hand and leg kicks. I was more cautious than I know myself to be, and I am not sure where that came from. I will not recount all three rounds, because there is a video for that, but rather I will say that in life you steamroll towards things, building them up and building them up, but in reality, it was six minutes. The scores were read: 30-27, 30-27, 29-28. I had won the fight on all three cards, but one judge thought that I lost a round. My heart sunk. Even as the referee raised my hand, I wondered when I would get to fight again.

FRIDAY, the wrath of pchoi     
          After we went to climb the outside stairwell back to our hallway outpost, I realized the degree of force with which I had chopped my opponent’s knee. I was seen by the “doctor”. Community college student? Who knows anymore.
          “Are you going to look at her shin,” Sean said. He did not ask, as it was not a question so much as it was a pointed demand.
          “Oh,” the maybe-doctor-maybe-not said. “No, it’s fine. It’s not broken.”
          “How about you look at the shin!” Sean suggested, a bit more viciously. We rolled down the napkin shinguard to discover a golf ball-sized lump of purple-red.
          “DEAR GOD,” I announced.
          “Um,” the person in the doctor costume said, “Ice it?” He departed, and I leapt up to follow the squad back down into the venue. It was time for Priscilla to make Korean Barbeque.

FRIDAY, later.         
          The bell sounded with The Closer and I tucked into front row seats, screaming wildly. Priscilla walked toward her opponent and uncorked.
          I began to wildly scream things such as “JAB CHOP JAB CHOP JAB CHOP,” and/or “KNEE! KNEE!! KNEE!!!!!” Alex sat beside me, manning the Periscope broadcast, also shouting.
          After three rounds of savagery, the pair stood in the center of the cage: 30-27, 30-27, 30-27. Priscilla had batted 100%.

AND SO.
          Dear readers, many things happened, and this post is getting very long. Are you even reading anymore? Suffice it to say, this is a team sport, and our team does not do it for fun. We are not hobbyists. For us, the fighting thing is business. 


     Kansas City bore witness. The rest of America had better Google us. 
               


Friday, September 18, 2015

A Not-So-Beautiful Mind

A Not-So-Beautiful Mind: the Stresses of Battle, and the Way a Lizard Handled Them

There are times in life when one finds herself in a pair of pineapple underpants in front of a crowd, grimacing at a stranger. Normally, these times are called “nightmares” and are prefaced by too many enchiladas before bedtime. But what is one man’s nighttime specter can indeed be another lizard’s waking horror.

It was the weekend of the Muay Thai Showdown—and my first-ever amateur bout. All week I had battled the urge to rip a tree up by the roots, or perhaps frisbee-throw all three of my work monitors, flip my desk and scream “THE LIZARD COMETH!!!!!! ALL SHALL LOVE ME AND DESPAIR!!!!!!!!!” like some kind of exclamatory reptilian Galadriel. I was not handling the nervous energy well. Or at all.

After running three times around the block, my adrenals still piped white hot. I was like Old Yeller right before they shoot him. Wiping the foam from my mouth, I texted my battle buddy and resident eyebrow-stitch tender-to (more on that later), Ashley, begging her for assistance.

Liz: ASHLEY???? WHAT DO YOU DO BEFORE A FIGHT
Liz: WHEN YOU ARE TOO EXCITED
Liz: AND MAY RESORT TO MURDER?

Perhaps “murder” was too dramatic a word choice. Alas, I am a dramatic reptile and participate only in tragedies and farces. Murder, as a certain provider of Head Trauma once told me, is the only way.

Ashley responded quickly, probably out of concern for felonies that may or may not have nearly occurred. “Meet me tomorrow,” she said,  “and I’ll show you what I do.”
***
When I found her, Ashley was wailing on a heavy bag like her childhood had given her a crippling prejudice against leather and fluff. My stomach was empty. I was just about on weight but the idea of eating or drinking filled me with a sweaty terror and visions of a crowded room pointing and laughing at an off-weight Lizard. Ashley completed her rounds with a series of low kicks that probably would have removed an actual leg, and then motioned for me to follow her.

We climbed into Ashley’s SUV and headed to the Boulder Creek. I chewed at my fingernails until they bled.
“It’s not so much that I’m nervous,” I said, as we walked westward through the park, and up toward the  mountains. Even as a young Lizard thespian, caked in full-on old age makeup in front of hundreds of angsty highschoolers whose attendance was not optional, I did not get nervous. I do not have a healthy fear of death, so I participate in life-threatening activities like a normal person might play a video game. “It’s more that I am like, so, so excited. Just too excited.” It was true. I had been soaked with a consistent sheen of sweat for about four days, and my heart felt like I had sprinkled it with a coarse coating of Jack3d and left it to marinate.
“I was the same before my first fights,” Ashley said, turning off down a trail that led toward the water. She explained the importance of mental preparation—to civilize the mind, but make savage the body. I still laugh at this because in all regards my brain is like a battering ram. The answer is always to bully through things, like a troll. But in order to survive, a lizard, like any other creature, must adapt and change. I sat upon a smooth, cool stone and closed my eyes.

***
A fairly common visualization technique—and the thing Ashley suggested I do—is to mentally go through the whole day. Take the event that is giving you ulcers, and stroll through it inside your soggy grey tissues. Because then, when you step inside the Tanner Gun Show with the intention to savage some poor girl—there is no stomach drop. You have already been here. You have been here a million, million times. In the creek, it is easy with the sound of water and the stones smooth against your toes, to vanish into this other place—to walk into the building. To feel the Vaseline rubbed over my cheeks and eyebrows. I felt the gauze as it looped over my fingers and the squish of the ring canvas beneath my feet.
When I felt that I had sufficiently imagined my right fist colliding with another person’s skull, I opened my eyes. I still had a bit of an electric edge, but now it felt like something I could use. Like a cattle prod, intended for self! In reality, the best mental comfort is the training—the hard training where you grind yourself into a fleshy paste and wish there was a stretcher to carry you away afterwards. When you survive this, you know that you have spared yourself nothing and that when Tony yells “CHOP!” in the corner, your leg will respond before your brain registers what it has heard.
***
My known associate Steve Eisman arrived at about five o’clock to ferry me to the weigh in. Tony was already at the venue, and told us so:

Tony: Are you guys here?
Tony: I’m a little afraid to get out of my car.

When we pulled in to the parking lot, we discovered that Tony’s fears were probably not completely unfounded. The Tanner Gun Show, with which the Muay Thai Showdown shared a space, had drawn all manner of local…color. Three people sported Swastika hats that read “God’s Army” (the Judeo-Christian God would definitely be pro-Hitler…definitely), and shirts with slogans like this one:





Needless to say, we proceeded inside, making strong eye contact with the weird, convention center carpeting and no one else. The weigh ins were being held in a tiny back room, which Tony assured us would have no danger of incidental ricocheting bullets because, he observed, "The walls are all made of drywall." Comforting, Tony. Very comforting...

The convention center staff had tried to be helpful by providing a gigantic rolling cart of snacks, but instead succeeded only in making a room full of ravenous wannabe-killers soak in the smell of fake butter product and drool. It was not unlike the blood-spackled episodes of Planet Earth in which fifteen asshole hyenas wait to rip apart an innocent wildebeest before your very eyes, perhaps even in IMAX HD If you sprang for the $20.00 ticket, which probably you did because you like animals a lot. You’re not scarred for life now, or anything. NO, NEVER.

Tony pulled three chairs into a semi-circular formation, to shield us from the rest of the room. “Freaks,” he whispered. Steve and I did not disagree. One woman sported a pair of baby’s feet on her forearm, a garish tattoo with even more garish script furled around the base denoting the day that the poor, poor owner of these feet popped onto this planet. I recognized the Li'l Hulk, from Instagram, of course, but did not make conversation or even eye contact because I was having spurious internal debates over whether pineapple was, indeed, the right underwear choice. It was too late now…too late…

The promoters, Oscar and Jessica, stepped forward with clipboards and prepared to do business. They impressed upon us the importance of not lying about our fight records to the point that I was sure they believed someone was lying about something. Alright, guys, you caught me. I'm actually pro. You could probably tell based on my AMAZING SKILLZ that I utilize. Perhaps you recognize such time-tested techniques as "hitting her in the face" and "throwing only the right cross like a heat seeking missile until they are dead."

After a long speech and much paper work, we were invited to get naked and frown at our opponents on a stage. I was prepared for the theoretical awkwardness of weigh-ins, but in practice, it was much, much weirder. One particularly pasty gentleman stripped down to his Hanes underpants four match-ups early, and continually turned around to make strange, scantily clad eye contact with me. No, sir. The Lizard does not swing this way. Just—no.

Fighters in underpants began to make their way to the scale, and it was often unclear what weight the fight was actually taking place at. For example, one pair weighed in at 163 and 145 lbs respectively. What? Excuse me, but what is this weight class? Kind Of Sort Of Maybe Weight? No one else in the room besides Tony and Steve seemed to object to this, which was similarly concerning.

When it was finally my turn, I ripped my shirt off in the style of the standard-size Hulk and threw my jeans on the floor. I climbed onto the scale—138.6 lbs. I should have probably eaten a sandwich. I walked to the far side of the stage and did my best to scowl and instead looked like a soulless, pasty Irish-white Kmart Underwear model with a skin condition. My opponent weighed in at 140 lbs exactly and stood across from me. I stared at her face with intense, laserlike focus, and after a second, she smiled and looked away. THE LIZARD CAN SMELL FEAR. My mouth watered. As she looked toward the cameraperson, about eighty percent of my anxiety evaporated. Then, before we stepped down, she moved in to give me a hug. Oh, I thought, you poor thing. Poor, poor thing...

Following the chest puffing, Steve supplied me with coconut water and almond butter, which I crushed mercilessly, and Tony effectively threw my pants at me. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, it was time to get the hell out of Dodge.  


And as the other fighters descended upon the vat of popcorn like so many vultures, the Detective Sergeant, the Drunken Pugilist, and the Lizard turned their backs on the Muay Thai Showdown. We had done what we came to do. Like John Nash, I just had to learn to put all of the Soviet Babies in the corner.