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Thursday, February 19, 1998
"Do you suppose he did it on a sunny afternoon?
Perhaps the colors were too bright, and the laughter of the children
too flat, and the alternating pitch of the sprinklers made him livid.
I imagine it transpired in the summerit would have been more
picturesque that way, like the title of some old Hemingway novel
I never read."
Sunday, March 1, 1998
There was something about their love, about him,
that she couldn't quite reachsome soft-stirring, lulling darkness
that informed his affections with a sense of rushing wings and time
slipping through a fault in her understanding.
Tuesday, March 31, 1998
There was an awful sense of interiors to those
memories, a wretched intimacyones he had shared, those he
had been denied. Everything was so small.
Sunday, April 12, 1998
It's childish to nurse a grudge if you have it
in your power to be the one not to. Very childish. Actually, it's
worse than that. Children are forgiving.
Saturday, May 2, 1998
He remembered a time when the whole realm of
possibility had sprawled before him like the promise of an orchestra
tuning its instruments before a fanfaredoubtless, timeless,
undiscovered.
Tuesday, May 19, 1998
The room was empty, save for a few articles of
furniture, and some wall art he hadn't been able to scrub away completely.
Sunlight assaulted the flat and unadorned surfaces, blanching everything
until it took on the quality of memory.
Wednesday, July 8, 1998
There was a tension about her, some lateral disturbance,
as if her very atoms were opposed, as if they were going to rend
her to shreds at any moment.
Monday, July 13, 1998
The sky was a singular gradient of indigo, resistant
to the burnishment of the sinking sun, its infinitely fine shifts
untroubled by the yellow profanities of the city lights.
Friday, July 24, 1998
I see her in the train station every morning.
She walks by me as I read the paper, waiting for the train that
will take me away. I don't think she remembers. I sometimes fancy
that she looks away, that our eyes roll around each other, seeking
not to set, but I don't think she remembers.
She doesn't remember.
Thursday, August 6, 1998
Last night I dreamed I was staying at a hotel
with Mothershades of Fitzgerald and Bowles. We had separate
bedrooms (it wasn't that sort of dream), and Mother had gone out
for the late morning-early afternoon. For some reason, I was alternately
convinced that I was in Philadelphia or New Jersey, although it
occurs to me now that what I saw from the balcony of my bedroom
could only have been found in the Pacific Northwestern United States,
or perhaps Scandinavia.
What I saw was a vast and quiet sea in the middle
distance, gradating beyond the horizon; sunlight, blue sky. Far,
far below me (for the elevation of my room was great), a beach extended
from the hotel and met the water, its sand scalloped in places.
I could see the bathers quite clearly, for all my heightblankets,
children, umbrellas.
Immediately to the right of this beach, the sand
ended in an abrupt snake of a line, and a dense forest began, tree
upon tree, like heads of dark broccoli. Here and there the foliage
was interrupted by a house, a group of houses, a misplaced cul-de-sacno
roads, nothing to connect them. I had a memory of flying over Germany.
As my head circled back in the direction of the
beach, my eyes fell upon an unbelievably tall tree, straight and
wide, directly before me, a hundred-odd yards away. It had not been
there before. It was devoid of vegetation, and its top was flat,
so that it resembled nothing so much as a vertically exaggerated
stump. Atop the stump sat a lone hiker, cross-legged.
My eyes followed the length of the tree down
from her, little ledges resolving themselves along the circumference
of the trunk, and other hikers seeped into my vision, traversing
the narrow inscribed paths. There was a thrill in watching them,
my breath catching on their missteps; but nobody fell.
I gradually became aware that the tree was now
quite nearly below me, my balcony looming vertiginously, as if the
building had grown wider at its base and was leering. Taking in
the full measure of what I saw, I thought of boardwalks and seaside
carnivals; world's fairs; great, empty, people-scattered places
captured forever in two o'clock sunlight.
Behind me, past the breeze, in the bedroom, the
phone rang. I knew it was Mother. One world flushed into the next.
I woke up, having remembered, mostly. For a change.
Thursday, August 6, 1998
Looking out the window on the train this morning,
I saw a sky writer learning his trade: insensible loops, scattered
numbers strewn across the sky.
Friday, August 7, 1998
Every morning, when I'm waiting for the R6, there's
a woman on the platform. She waits for the passengers of one train
to disembark, and then the other, her face grave. When no one is
left, she unfolds her little stick and begins her lonely descent
down the stairs. Her eyes don't look blind, like they do on television
sometimes. I'm almost always convinced she has an expression on
her face. I look at the care with which she has put herself together.
Perhaps someone has helped her? Perhaps she's somebody's mother.
I hope she has someone. I feel like reaching out to her, but that's
because I'm ignorant.
Sunday, August 9, 1998
As he walked in the quickening dusk, the sky
seemed stagy. Peculiar that he couldn't quite place his own impression,
but that is how it felt: put on. As if there were something behind
it, up close; as if its depth were illusory, a trick of elaborate
air ducts, electrical conduits, mechanisms he could neither devise
nor divine. It was there, all around himthis sense of deliberate
things, of energy traveling below him, reticulating; an entire world
mapped out on the inside of a cylinder, turning, radiating forever
just beyond his fingertips.
Friday, August 14, 1998
What makes a life?
I've seen her twice, on the way home from work.
Once she was with him: the manher lover, her husband? He twisted
her arm back, menaced her loudly. Her flat tones, her drawling protestations,
her broken white-trash voiceI was repulsed, and I crossed
the street to avoid them.
This afternoon, I saw them under the overpass
where the train intersects the street. He stood on one side, she
on the other. He was in his usual mode. She was weeping, and in
that instant that I looked on her, I felt the weight of the world.
All the fight had left her, and her tears had washed the ugliness
from her face. All I could think about was a little girl, who dreamed
of other things once. And the feelingwas it shame or regret?I
couldn't shake it. I couldn't save her.
Thursday, August 20, 1998
"Well, my dear, the summer ceases, even
as I have only just begun to linger in its warm embrace. In its
dying light the world is fresh and young, and I am afforded the
opportunity to reacquaint myself with the people and places I have
loved. I can't help but look forward to the newness of things in
the fall, the pleasant sensation of puzzles and possibilities. I
have missed my friends, and will be glad to have them back. In a
strange way, I even miss the people I have yet to meet. I can feel
them in my blood already, hovering just beyond my intuition, waiting
for me to find them. And I am always waiting to be found. That thoughtof
new things, new peoplealways draws me toward the future. What
will the next month bring? The next semester? I like not knowing.
What is your life like these days? Draw me a picture. I love your
drawings. What's winter like in the summertime?"
Friday, September 11, 1998
"Stay," he asked very quietly. The word fell
out of his mouth so gently that it sank without impress in the darkness
of the room. The memory of violence in the void between themlittle
screaming sunspots of silent, awful thingsstood vigil, livid,
waiting to erupt. But there was no eruption. With a sense of something
perhaps greater than the both of them, something that might break
irreparably, she extended her hand to meet his; a gesture to match
his thought.
Thursday, September 17, 1998
"Everyone has a certain comfort level. I
haven't found mine yet. Something I remembered today: there was
a shopping mall that we used to go to, my mother, my sister, and
I, when we lived in the old house. There was a department store
at this mall, name forgotten, and it had a restaurant that overlooked
some sort of atrium or similar enclosed space on the floor below.
I used to order a fish sandwichtwo batter-fried wedges, toasted
white bread cut into triangular halves; perhaps with fries and a
pickle. Memory fails me in some respects. There was something like
a children's tchotchke that came with the meal, a little cardboard
construction in the shape of an oven, I believe. It was all so simple,
and yet it meant so very much. Life was good in that quiet time,
during the afternoon, when the rest of the place was empty, save
for a few old ladies. It must have been hard for Mother; we were
so young, and she must have been lonely. Why must we always hurt
until it's too late for anyone to save us?"
Saturday, September 19, 1998
To be blessed with so pernicious an ego: in times
of humility or censure, he would care for them quite a lot, and
would not chafe against their unintentional lapses; he was generous.
But in other times, swollen with success and well-being, he would
inevitably recur upon his less noble impulsesunyielding, inconsiderate,
easily incensed.
Friday, September 25, 1998
It was a cool day in late September. In the classroom,
with its walls the color of a consumptive's pudding, its discreet
drop ceiling, its blonde hardwood floor, the temperature hung delicately
above the stillness of a chill. Every chair, its seat accounted
for, occupied its place in sequence along the perimeter of the room,
forming a theater for the lectern and its attendant activity.
He sat in the corner by the window. Thus situated,
it was his good fortune to have a margin of sunlight, clear and
bright, fall across his lap. He would now and again rest his hand
in his sun-soaked pocket, and let the warmth suffuse his fingertips,
his palm, in a convective embrace. His other hand was engaged in
the friction of writing.
Sunday, October 11, 1998
He exhaled softly. "His priorities have been
confused."
Some names were powerful. They would return to
him unexpectedly, in an image or a sound; letters on a page; sometimes
a face. The memories were always suspended before him, blurred and
still, as if caught in passing. They defied his attempts at further
resolution. They defied him altogether; it seemed he would never
be rid of them.
Monday, October 12, 1998
"Sometimes you'll find out that something's been
missing from your life, and you'll start searching for it, and everything'll
become...." His voice trailed off.
"Confused?"
He smiled, relieved. "Yeah."
Sunday, October 25, 1998
There are some people you must stay away from.
You will love them too much. You will destroy yourself just to move
them. If you are fortunate, you will never meet them.
Tuesday, October 27, 1998
"Night falls early these dayswhat,
with the tricks white men, long dead, have played with clocks and
diurnal variation. I was walking back to my apartment and I looked
up at the sky. The moon, half formed, was shrouded in a cold veil,
and I wondered if that's what lured ancient explorers across undiscovered
watersthat vision of some celestial enchantment, silver and
remote, soft and inviolable. I know now why Diana was the lunar
deity. No one writes about the moon like that anymore. What we see
in it is a flash of white teeth, like a Cheshire cat's grin, thin
and sharp."
Tuesday, November 3, 1998
He sat next to the window, but more than glass
separated him from open space. There were the treeswide branches
crisscrossing in layers, dipping, dappled; beyond them, a squarish
building, three stories, red brick deepened to brown; and there,
high above the bricks and leaves, framed in a small space of unfiltered
light: a flag idling in the wind, now and again lifted aloft, set
against the sprawl of the sky. The sun shone fixedly, unperturbed
by clouds.
Saturday, November 14, 1998
"And suddenly, life is a series of lost
metaphors. The old correlations no longer seem to work. We peel
layers back like so many hoursor do the hours cleave in sheets?
Tangent becomes substance, and there is a very definite color and
shapealmost a flavorto quantities heretofore remote
and inviolable. Mystery, apprehensionwhat's the difference?
Phantom memories of a Saturday morning linger like fingertips against
cold windowglass, and the very air we breath smells like yesterday."
Friday, November 27, 1998
Today I woke up and two years ago seemed like
yesterday, and last year never happened.
Sunday, January 10, 1999
"I wish I hadn't told you that. I was coming
off a bad time and you caught me on the rebound. I lacked discretion.
Who I am now, I wouldn't say that."
"Sometimes you say too much."
There was an expression on his face that I couldn't
quite placea tension wavering between anger and grief: disappointment.
Sunday, January 24, 1999
"Will you let me sing to you? I would like to
sing to you."
She felt then that he said it with the full conviction
of his blood, his childhood, everything he had ever known and come
to love. "Yes.... Yes."
He sang her a lullaby, sad and sweet, words repeating
like a prayer; a gentle incantation, soul-saving and graceful. She
fell asleep leaning into him, allowing the easy motion of his breathing
to come between herself and the world.
Monday, February 1, 1999
"Why do they do it? They lead lives of unremitting
inconsequence and silliness punctuated by bouts of frustration and
self pity; antics, manic behavior, laughter falling into the void,
lost to history; while I lie down, hoping to dream beneath the starlight.
Such cool, unpitying radiance, that which descends from abovesilent,
violent, surpassing intent with its insoluble rush toward dissipation.
And still my lips move, trying to form the words, the prayer, that
will save me, make me relevant and never a relic."
There lived a princess in a high tower. The queen
had placed her there. The queen was not her mother. Her mother had
passed on long before, and her father had taken another wife before
he, too, slipped into that other life, to dream of other things.
And the princess, she did dream too, in this life, in that high
tower.
Sunday, February 7, 1999
"Whenever you form an initial impression of someone,
take it about two clicks further into selfishness and perversion
and you probably have a fairly accurate appraisal."
"You sound bitter."
Thursday, February 18, 1999
"It's not that he doesn't make mistakes; it's
that his priorities, his interests, his activities are different.
His mistakes seem unrelated because there's no direct basis for
comparison. But the underlying fallibility is there."
Sunday, February 21, 1999
"You completely reinforce each others' insecurities.
The way in which you relate to one another is entirely about things
going unsaid. The basis of your supposed friendship is a shared
delusion of emotional security."
Tuesday, February 23, 1999
"Life was somehow more straightforward when its
mysteries weren't so obvious. I thought I had a personality in those
days."
"Well, we all have dumb friends. Friends who
appeal to some nebulous sense of fun, camaraderie."
Monday, March 29, 1999
It was a bright day in the cold air. The sunlight
captured the hills like a bad painter's brush, and ten o'clock was
anathema to thoughts of the afternoon.
If I could go back to May of that year, I would
go back to April; and if I could go back to April, I would relive
November; but I would not repeat February.
Sunday, April 11, 1999
She finished his thought: "And everyone's a little
uglier than you remembered."
"I can't believe how powerfully romantic I made
it out to be. All inflated. All in my head."
Friday, April 16, 1999
"They're not the right people," he said quietly.
His eyes fell, he took a drag on his cigarette. A moment passed,
perhaps containing the memory of other moments, other times. "Better
you than them."
"This has all been a massive write-off." He dragged
on the word "massive," drawing out the first vowel.
Thursday, April 29, 1999
He saw a light, doubled and distorted, through
the blinds. He was unsure if it wasperhaps it was the moon.
Suddenly the idea of frosted light bulbs, of warm electricity and
lampshades, of interior disarrays and evenings of solitude, comforted
him. How to make the moment last? Where did people go when they
went away? What did they remember?
Friday, June 4, 1999
"Presuppose insanity in all situations."
"That's not the nicest way to go about things."
"I know." And he said it with equanimity, and
maybe a little sadness, as if knowledge was love.
Saturday, June 12, 1999
"Well, look at it this way: no one thinks she's
an extraordinary person. She mostly elicits shrugs, damnations of
faint praise, colloquial shrugs'She's a good kid ... nice'that
sort of noncommittal nonsense ... bullshit. And the truth is, she's
so much worse even than thattoxic and pettybut no matter;
that's off-topic. My point is that you excite peopleincite
themyou raise the bar. You're totemic, a trademark. She's
... strictly public domain."
"Common law?" A hint of a grin.
Laughing: "...Yeah."
Wednesday, June 16, 1999
His attention moved from object to object around
the room, and the delicacy and deliberation of these impossibly
inconsequential artifacts of lifecare and haste mingling sweetly,
warmly, in his memory, quickening like bloodmoved him. He
had to sit down.
Tuesday, June 22, 1999
"Actually, you'd be surprised. People with a
superiority complex are a lot easier to deal with than people with
inferiority complexes, in a number of cases."
Tuesday, July 6, 1999
"OhI was definitely flattered." Head nodding,
an oblique stutter of the eyebrows: high sarcasm. "He flattered
me flat."
Sunday, July 18, 1999
"I'm not so bad."
Said with such a profound lack of affectation
that it breaks your heart.
Sunday, July 25, 1999
And suddenly, I wanted to be far away from this
place. I remembered the scent of my grandmother's perfume lingering
in the bright foyer of her great house on a Saturday morning. That
sense of potency, of power and possibility. We didn't concern ourselves
with "tomorrow" and "yesterday" and "forever" in those days.
Sunday, August 8, 1999
Peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwiches in the lamplight.
The smell of your lip balm mingling with the odor of cheap carpeting
and the scent of your laundered linens. A sad song that made me
remember all the times I ever couldn't cry, when I should have.
November that year reeked of death.
Tuesday, August 10, 1999
If you're ever walking down a crowded sidewalk
along a busy street on a day just like this, and you spy a single
margin of sky, hinted with clouds, blue and bright, against and
between the tall buildings that reflect and color the sunlightwalk
toward that fine tower of empty, open space, entertain no hesitation.
Sunday, October 17, 1999
"Everyone's neuroses are grating on me," he said,
doing a desultory three-sixty in the swivel chair. His right hand
idled in the air.
Thursday, November 4, 1999
Massaging his temple with his left hand: "There
will be fallout from this."
She smiled, stroked his head gently. Touching
his chin, she brought him up to face her. "Does it really matter?"
Grateful for her good sense, he felt his eyes
moistening. He took her hand in his. "No." Almost a smile in return.
Thursday, November 18, 1999
"You look at people, and you determine that they
will be a part of your life someday: 'You. You will be a part of
my life someday.'"
Wednesday, December 15, 1999
Her smile, a genial narrowing of the eyes. "He
wears thermal underwear." And that was enough to neutralize him
in my mind.
Thursday, February 24, 2000
"Do you ever feel like a shithead? I feel like
I just don't measure up sometimes."
"You're not a shithead."
"There are people I let down in these small ways
everyday. A phone call I didn't make, a criticism I offered too
quickly, affection I didn't respond to."
She leans into him, holds him. But remains silent.
He can feel her so close right now, almost breaking through the
surface tension of his sadness.
"And maybe it's because I just don't think about
themabout other peopleenough. Everything I do, I do
it for me and through me, like I'm some great instrument or vessel
set out into the world, with everything warped to suit that purpose."
Breathing. She strokes his head. Warmth, darkness,
closeness. He exhales loudlynot so much a sigh as a deflation.
"I believe in some things," she begins quietly,
with evident conviction. "I believe that there can be consideration
and even love between people. I think the problem is that we start
to temporize, become paralyzed"
"Afraid"
"And we start putting things off, and it's as
if every person has a little universe inside them, where everything
oscillates at a very specific frequency, and we start missing people,
overlooking things, because what we need to be doing, where we need
to be going, is always just five minutes behind or ahead of us ...
like a hologram."
In the darkness, he laughs softly. "Like a carrot
on a stick."
She smiles. "Or the prospect of the farmer's
swift kick."
"Will you help me?"
"I'll help you. But I won't second-guess you."
Smiling quietly. "So wait: I'm a donkey now?"
"You're MY donkey."
Sunday, March 5, 2000
"How much 'in love' were you?"
"I feel stupid talking about this."
"It's okay. I'm sorry. I don't mean to make light
of it. It's just my way."
"I understand. You know, it's really pretty dark."
"Love."
"Yeah."
"Ugly."
"And beautiful. Terrible."
Monday, May 22, 2000
"Every year, new friends, like the first snowfall."
"But some stay with you."
"Like autumn leaves, then."
Saturday, July 22, 2000
"Why are you acting this way? I don't understand
you sometimes."
"It's not important." He pauses, maybe searching
for the correct phrase, the correct expression." Again: "It's"
exhales loudly, shrugs.
They lapse into the silence of unsaid things.
Too many unsaid things. Somewhere in the deep structures of the
brain, a surfeit of emotions has triggered aphasia.
Silence invents its own choreography, turns to
brooding. This sentiment, unspoken, shared, will atomize, will blow
over. But its fragrance will persist: "I don't understand."
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