Overall this has been a real once in a lifetime experience. It was hard, really hard and unforgettable. Sometimes the hardest things are the most memorable and that’s certainly true of this. I remember the journey between Dogpack and Tincup most vividly. I had difficult times and great times. I had one of the most beautiful places on the planet all to myself, I could swim naked in the lake, get up in the middle of the night and howl at the moon and I came pretty close to some of the big icons of the wilderness. At my first camp got within 20 metres of a large moose and on the creek I almost bumped into a moose surrounded by white timber wolves. I came pretty close to a bear and filmed a caribou swimming across a lake, American eagles would come and check me out and for 50 days I lived off the wild. It makes me smile to think of it – a big smile.
I’m feeling tired and discouraged and down. I didn’t sleep well last night and there’s no obvious explanation why. I’m beginning to realize that my friend Mike is correct, and that I have no urge to write because I’m generally happy with everything, job, family, etc., except I miss the writing and I fear the complacency of comfort, but I dread upheavals and change, especially now that things are finally settling into a routine. I can’t possibly want to be miserable just to stimulate the muse, can I?
Mostly I’m feeling whiny.
Patients keep asking me what I do for fun. This makes me feel like a very boring individual because what do I do? I hang out with my family. I read, I surf the net. I work out (which isn’t exactly fun). I’m tempted to say that I raise spitting cobras, or I’m a mountain climber, or that I’m researching a book on Craig’s List prostitution. (I do read Craig’s List personals for the yucks — does that count?)
My patient who hates Bakersfield came back to see me today and wanted to know how was I settling in, how did I like Bako, what was I doing for fun. I think she wanted me to admit to being horribly miserable here. Truth is, now that the weather has cooled, my number one gripe has evaporated.
I’m not even coughing anymore. Took five weeks to get over that horrid bug, but Jake and I are finally back to full health.
I think I just need a good night’s sleep.
D.
That’s how long it takes Jake and I to run a mile. The school wants him to run it in under 10 minutes, to which I have only one comment.
Are they insane?
We’re not built to run a ten-minute (or less!) mile. We have short little hobbit legs that are meant to run down supermarket aisles, maybe, but not laps. And certainly not miles.
It’s a funny thing. I can put in an hour on the elliptical trainer at high resistance and I’m fine. Drenched in sweat but fine. Put me on the road and ask me to run, and I’m miserable every step of the way. Maybe it’s because I can’t watch TV while I’m doing it.
I feel for my son. I really do. I had forgotten how nice it was to graduate high school and know that I would never again be judged on my physical prowess. Now we’re back in the hell of doing X pushups and Y situps in 60 seconds, bringing up the rear in the mile-running competition, and don’t even bring up the horror of team sports.
I wrote his PE teacher tonight . . . tried to tell him that we’ll do what we can, but we’re constrained by the genetics of the situation. I wish there were more emphasis on individual fitness, less on being able to meet certain abstract milestones.
They issue grades in PE. Grades! Whatever happened to Pass/Fail?
D.
I can’t part myself from Path Beyond the Stars or any of the other dozen hard-to-find vintage SFs which, while uniformly atrocious, give me some weird sense of comfort.
I could make an appreciable dent in these piles by giving away all of my Pratchett, but I keep thinking that one day, my son is bound to catch the Pratchett bug. I mean, the kid sucks down everything Christopher Moore writes; he’s bound to like Pratchett, right?
And I can’t give away our graphic novels, nor my classics (SOME day I’ll manage to read Paradise Lost), my nature books, my pet care books, or books written by my friends. I would like to give away 120 Days of Sodom but I figure no one else will want it on his shelf, either.
I can’t give away Le Carre’s Tinker Tailor series, since I hope to reread it one of these days, nor can I give up Thomas Pynchon’s Crying of Lot 49, which I find unreadable, but I still want to know why some folks still make a fuss about Pynchon. I won’t give away my Michio Kaku or Steven Weinberg or Kip Thorne — all scientists who have popularized their work for the lay reader — because my son might want to read them some day.
I’m having an easier time parting with a good number of writing books which never did me a damn bit of good, such as The Idiot’s Guide to Publishing Science Fiction, whose title implies that I am something lower than an idiot. Al Gore’s Assault on Reason isn’t going to take up shelf space, nor the work of Cory Doctorow, Scott Lynch, Joe Haldeman, Jon Scalzi, or China Mieville. I’ve enjoyed some of these authors but I have no desire to reread their work. Out they go.
I think I need to go back through the “keep piles” with a sterner eye. But how can I give up my volumes from the Norton Library, or my handsome two-volume collection of Sherlock Holmes stories which I’ll never read but which I’ll always mean to read? It’s hard to part with books you’ve read partially and meant to finish but never did. Like Umberto Eco’s Foucault’s Pendulum, which lies on my table eighteen inches away, and which has once again lost my interest. (Yeah, that one’s gotta go.)
And don’t even get me started about all of our textbooks.
D.
No telling how a teenage girl’s diary ended up at the bottom of our trash can. When I tossed out the morning’s garbage I saw it there, opened to a blank page. At first, I thought it was one of my many writing notebooks (you know, you get an idea for a new story, you have to write it down, but you don’t want it to rub shoulders with all those older crappy ideas that never went anywhere; THIS idea will be different, THIS story is going to go somewhere, so it damn well deserves its own notebook!) so I fished it out and looked at it.
Nope. Not mine.
It belongs, belonged, to a girl who was a high school freshman in 2008. There are no entries later than October 28, 2008, which makes me wonder if she came to a bad end. Perhaps her mother or father, cleaning house, came across the diary and could not bear to have it around (but why throw it into someone else’s trash can?) I’ve already googled her name hoping not to find news reports of some grizzly murder or car accident. She’s clean on Google. So the question remains: why?
It’s a multipart diary with sections devoted to prayers, goals, “trials and triumphs,” etc. The cover design is of a rather Duggary-looking girl in a pink dress that’s up to her chin, looking sweet enough to put ten diabetics into ketoacidosis.
Do I have any responsibility to honor the privacy of a stranger whose diary ended up in my trash? My compromise: I decided to read it but not reveal anything too terribly embarrassing on the blog. Nor would I reveal any identifying information.
With those ground rules in place, here’s what I’ve learned of our diarist:
She’s a thoroughly indoctrinated Christian, praying that this kid or that family be saved. She prays for that sort of thing a lot. (I wonder how many people have prayed for my salvation? At least one that I can think of, back at the Crescent City hospital. *Shudder*)
She’s a young Republican. On the back page is the draft of a letter she wrote to “Mr.” McCain.
She’s trying very hard to be a better person. Seems like her heart is in the right place.
She writes the usual angsty adolescent song lyrics and poetry.
She doesn’t have very lofty goals — “Be the person you meant me to be,” which I presume is addressed to Jesus.
By far, the most detailed section of the diary is “Prayers.” It’s remarkable how pushy some folks can be in their prayers. Not only does our diarist wish for the salvation of others, but she wants one woman to “stop dating and be worthy of a good man,” and she wants all the children to be taken out of one home and for their parents to be saved. Presumably, the kids would be allowed back into their home at that point, but she forgot to pray for that.
She’s not the sort of person I would have talked to in high school (although, oddly enough, one very like her friended me on Facebook). But there’s such a desperate earnestness in her writing and such modesty in her own personal prayers that she strikes me as a genuinely good person, and I can’t help but hope she’s okay. It worries me, though, that the diary ended up in the bottom of my trash bin.
Why?
D.
Tonight was special.
I’ve been in touch with Mike for a few years now, and we had spoken on the phone once or twice, which was an experience all by itself. It’s uncanny, to say the least, to talk to someone who was pre-pubertal the last time you spoke. Things are familiar but different.
We were really good friends in junior high and ninth grade, but in tenth grade I switched to another high school, and I lost touch with my old friends. In general, I’m pretty crappy when it comes to keeping in touch with friends. (Thank heavens for the Internet, though.) I’m not sure how Mike and I found each other again, but I think I might have googled him one day and found his blog. We’ve been emailing off and on, but this is the first chance we’ve had to get together in person.
He tells me that the GenXers are so into texting that they don’t know how to conduct conversations anymore. Fortunately, we haven’t forgotten how to talk. I suppose these sorts of reunions could completely flop — how much is there to talk about after you’ve had the “who have you kept in touch with” conversation? Turns out, a lot. We had a great time, and I only broke it off because I wanted to get to my hotel before 11 to have some time to unwind, and blog, and check my email . . .
So yeah I’m down in LA for a Kaiser affair. (Sorry, Sis, but I got here too late in the evening to do dinner with you. Next time I’m down here, I promise. It’ll be in about one month.) Jake has his Freshman Retreat tomorrow and I suspect we’re going to be doing the same thing, my son and I: breaking into small groups and discussing relationships. How can you spend a whole day doing this? I guess I’m going to find out (Jake and I both). And I have not just one day of this, but THREE, blessedly scattered one month apart.
Back to Mike: we had a great time. So much fun to see someone I haven’t seen since 1976. 1976! Can you imagine? Back then, 1984 still sounded like the distant future, and don’t even mention the Millennium. We would be pushing forty then. We would be old.
But if growing old means more pleasures like these, I guess it won’t be so bad.
D.
Phil Nugent of Nerve dissects the television industry’s timidity in 10 Sexual Controversies That Changed TV. Commenters take Nugent to task over painting an excessively gloomy picture of Hollywood’s handling of gay issues, so don’t miss the wrap-up at the end.
But honestly, who looks to network TV for cutting edge programming? All gays are either asexual, or sexual far off camera; all teenagers contemplating premarital sex decide against it (That Seventies Show was a notable exception); all pregnant teens invariably decide not to abort. One does not look to television for spine.
D.