Friday, May 18, 2012

What was the Very Best Moment of Your Day?


 I was just reading Diana Caplan's list of favorite moments from her day (dianacaplan.blogspot.com) and when she asked, "what are yours?" I thought of this piece of writing I did in San Diego. I love Nicholsen Baker and think this is a great writing question. Obviously, so does he, or he wouldn't have hoarded it. Oh- an amazing thing- this writing class he's referring to took place at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee, Switzerland, which I attended for three summer sessions and graduated from in '06. I can't believe he was there! And so was I! But not, sadly, at the same time. That's the worst moment of my day.

  Best Moment 


     I just finished Nicholson Baker’s glorious and sublime book, The Anthologist. Near the end, he is teaching a master poetry class in Switzerland. He tells his students to copy poems out, to start by saying what they actually wanted to say, to read their drafts aloud in foreign accents, to clean out their offices and when they pack books in a box, to make two supporting columns in opposite corners so that the boxes don’t crush and crumple when stacked.
    
        And then a man of forty or so, with a French accent, asked, ‘How do you achieve the presence of mind to initiate the writing of a poem?’ And something cracked open in me, and I finally stopped hoarding and told them my most useful secret. The only secret that has helped me consistently over all the years that I’ve written. I said, ‘Well, I’ll tell you how. I ask a simple question. I ask myself: What was the very best moment of your day?’

     Of course I asked myself this question. One eye went on reading and the other eye leaned back in my head and surveyed the day before. It came to me pretty quickly. The birds at Chipotle. It was a hot day but I’d decided to eat outside. As I set my tray down on the circular metal table and shooed a fly away, I thought I might have made a mistake. It had been nice and cool inside. I set down my spiral journal with the green cover, my Nicholson Baker book, and the little plastic box of 3 x 5 cards in a black and white swirly pop-art design, held closed by an attached black elastic loop. At least the table was in the shade. I sat with my back to the glass, behind which was a counter where a man sat with an earphone and an open calendar. I was famished, it was 2:00 and all I’d eaten was a container of greek honey yogurt as I printed out the records of my client hours for the past four years. I’d cut it a little close in meeting the 2,000 required for my registration before starting this sabbatical. 2,242. I like numbers, and I notice them. The 2s and the 4s here, all orderly then the 3 and the 5 up there, having a party in their groovy retro sixties box. I was given table number 4 at the speed dating event. “The Emperor,” I thought, from my tarot days, and how am I ever gonna meet a guy with the emperor table. Why not number 3, the Empress, or better yet, number 6, the Lovers. Michele got the Lovers table, which fits. She’s the sensual one who likes to swim naked and caress herself with silk. I’m the one who makes charts and tracks her income, which is rapidly decreasing.
     Indeed, though the event had been my idea, and I’d invited three friends to come along, I was the only one, after the returns came in, without a date. Admittedly, part of that is my own doing, as I just can’t call that guy back, bachelor number 3. I don’t know why I yessed him that night. I was rattled, looking for things in common, bypassing the obvious, and already I’m bored talking about him and want to get to the birds. I ate my barbacoa salad, took some healthy swigs of corona in a bottle with a floating lime, and gradually relaxed. Looked up. Noticed the flitting about of little birds, a whole tree alive with them. The more I looked the more I saw. I wanted to count them but there were too many, coming in and out of camouflage. Why this tree and not that one? I watched closely, but nope, no birds in that one, even though they were the same type of tree. I mean, if I were a bird, I wouldn’t go to that one. It was darker and irregularly shaped, branches shooting up vertically. Oh, maybe that’s it, too vertical to perch in. The tree they’d chosen was round, spacious, cupped with light. Each bird had its branch, plenty of room, but not so big that anybody could go off and mope and not be noticed. One bird hopped down and perched at the edge of a silver bowl of water. At first I thought the dish was for the birds, (I know, I know) but I realized it was a dog bowl. I don’t know what your town is like, but mine is very dog friendly. That’s how well these birds belonged, that for a second they tricked me into thinking that was their bowl.
     Maybe I’ve talked too much and ruined the very best moment of my day. It was, simply, sitting there, hunger sated, noticing the birds flitting in the tree, like one of those hidden pictures, the way they’d come in and out of focus, appearing and disappearing, happy.
     That’s what Nicholsen Baker said. That the best moment is often something that didn’t seem important. The birds didn’t make it into my journal. They didn’t make it onto a notecard. I didn’t tell anyone about them. But when I asked the question, there they were, utterly un-self-conscious, not even trying, fluttering to the top of my spacious day.







Sunday, May 13, 2012

My Mom Can Out-Rooster Your Dad



I love this photo of my mom. I don't know where it came from or who took it- a lot of random pics came my way in '05 when I was helping organize my parents' 50th anniversary party. Don't you love the Lucky Strikes on the Look magazine with the Kennedy cover? That's not my Dad she's wrestling with though- that's John Warner, our friend and neighbor. Actually, I think this was taken by John's wife Pat. They were parents of my best friend, Laurie. Mom liked to wrestle and often challenged my brother's friends, pinning them to the linoleum kitchen floor.

When Mom was a little kid, her Dad called her a "banty rooster." I just looked it up: "This term is used to describe the behavior of some short men who may tend to walk with a swagger and adopt a somewhat exaggerated male posture. They are called banty roosters after the bantam rooster both because of their size and because their behavior can "out-rooster" the more standard sized rooster."  I never thought of it until now, but my first skype name was "blustery rooster" and I called my art room in Ramona the "Psychic Rooster Studio" after an article in the Weekly World News about a guy who's pet rooster, Roy, wouldn't let him leave the house one day, consequently saving him from a plane crash. I have a poster in my living room by Gary Houston of a rooster man with a guitar. I was born in the Chinese year of the rooster and I live on Hancock Street. Oh, it's all coming together now.


Mom was physically adventurous and a good sport, going along with my dad's long off-the-trail hikes- I remember her once finding a piece of asphalt, dropping to her knees and kissing it then running uphill with excitement towards what must be a road. She joined Dad in becoming members of the N.S.S. - National Speleological Society- which meant we descended hanging metal ladders into mud holes, unrolling a ball of twine so that we could find our way out. She was, and still is, a flirt, often attracting men in grocery stores who want to know how to cook an eggplant or choose a cantaloupe.

Last night I got to hear Alison Bechdel read out of her new book, "Are You My Mother." I'm fascinated with her layers and "strands" and how she uses other authors (Woolf, Winnicott, Seuss) to tell her story. Everywhere I turn these days and nights, there's diary. First there was the mom's diary in "Tiny Furniture," then I re-read "Fun Home" where Bechdel shows the onset of an OCD episode in her childhood diary which becomes so intrusive her mom takes over and writes the little girl's diary for her, as she dictates. Next came a novel by Louise Erdrich where a woman keeps two diaries- one that she knows her husband is reading, so manipulates, (creepy) and the other which she keeps in a bank vault and tells the truth.  In the current "O" magazine, there's an article by a woman who "reads" her mother's diaries after her death (I won't spoil the strange surprise for you), and now, in Bechdel's new book, she uses her mom's diary and also Virginia Woolf's.

When I got my haircut last week, Robin and I talked about the Mortified show and I said how I'd love for Serra to be in it- "She has such great stuff! She has this one entry where she writes about her new romance and how jealous I am." Robin asked if Serra lets me read her diary. "Well, we used to always read to each other out of our diaries, and I have her teen diaries, so the other day, I just took a peek at the first page..."  Robin asked how my mom felt about Mortified. Mom's words were, spoken flatly, "I don't get it." I told her my Mom probably has bad feelings about my diary, from the times she read it when I was at school. "She's such a snoop."  "Yeah," Robin said all smart-like, "She's such a snoop."

This is turning into a long post. It's just that I'm putting some stuff together here, as I think about the next phase of Mortified, whereupon teen Donna loses her innocence. It's vulnerable material coming up... and why would I share that stuff? Cuz that's what writers do. And hopefully, the sharing benefits more than myself.

I wish my Mom had a diary I could sneak a peek at.

                                                At her granddaughter Serra's wedding, 2009