I’m not sure how much of what I have to say here will have
anything to do with writing. These are
just the thoughts I have had over the last two weeks while we were sharing this
long/short intense journey.
I read on the internet about a young kid fishing in a pond who
hooked a purse that had been lost 26 years earlier. It was returned to its owner and the kid
said, “I was lost for words.”
I am lost for words when I try to explain what happens here
at the Residency. I wish I knew the
physics to explain the peculiar behaviors of time here. Some days seem to never end and our time will
go on forever. By the time it’s over it
seems to have occurred in a blink of an eye.
Jo Ann Beard’s visit ended three days ago, but those three days feel like
a month. I hope it takes 50 weeks for
you to unpack all you’ve absorbed. I hope that, like me, you have a list of
books you can’t wait to read and a list of work you can’t wait to write.
The Tour de France, the most famous bike race in the world,
occurs every year during the Residency.
It comes on Alaska television at 4 a.m..
I start watching when I wake at about 5:30, every day. I was telling this to Jo Ann and she asked,
“What’s so interesting about it?”
Here’s what happened a couple days ago, I tell her. They’re going downhill at 45 miles per
hour. A rider, one of the favorites, misjudges
a curve and his rear tire slips off the pavement and he goes down. He shoots across the pavement so fast he hits
a bike that was a head of him and that guy goes down. The guy who was hit pops up, but his heel
inadvertently hits the derailleur of third rider. The kick to the derailleur jams it into place
so that the rider is stuck in that gear for the rest of the day; he can’t shift. So: the guy who first fell, a pre-race
favorite, breaks his pelvis and collarbone and is out of the race. The guy he hit loses a full minute of time,
but manages to finish in the top ten.
The guy whose derailleur is stuck?
He never has to think about shifting, he’s stuck on a very high gear,
hard to pedal. He just goes as hard as
he can. Relieved of the burden of
strategizing, he finishes first on the day 3/10,000 of a second ahead of the
second place finisher.
And, by the way, the announcer tells the audience to
visualize it this way: “Imagine jumping out of a car going 45 m.p.h. wearing
only your underwear and a styrofoam cup for a hat.”
Like I said, I don’t know if it has anything to do with
writing. Take away from it whatever you
may.
Last week, my novel was rejected for about the 30th
time. I don’t get too worked up about
it, as it happens three or four times a year.
This rejection letter was a particularly cold, though:
“Dear Contributor, We have selected a winner to our contest. It was not you. We posted the results on this link: . . . .”
“Dear Contributor, We have selected a winner to our contest. It was not you. We posted the results on this link: . . . .”
This is only barely an exaggeration.
As I have told you many times, the rewards of writing are
mostly personal. The amount of money I
have made from my writing over the years has been minimal. I would hate to calculate it by dollars per
hour or dollars (pennies!) per word. But
over the years I have experienced many gratifying moments. One of the most gratifying also happened last
week, within about 48 hours of my novel being rejected.
I received an email from Gary Snyder telling me how much he
loved my book, how much he learned from it, and thanking me for writing
it. He’s 87 years old and I sent it to
him as a gesture of gratitude, never really expecting him to read it. So, there’s an unexpected highlight from the
writing life.
I have gotten into the habit of sending a note of appreciation
to writers whose work I really really love.
I do this about once a year. I
don’t say too much, do all I can not to give the impression of a stalker: “I
just finished reading your book and was deeply moved by the experience. Thanks for writing it.” Usually, they write back to say thanks; sometimes
a correspondence develops.
Last spring I read Manana
by William Hjorstberg. It was
brilliant. After reading three pages I
could immediately see the inadequacies of my own novel (explaining, perhaps,
the 30 rejections!). So, I found his email
address and told him how much I love his book.
That was on a Tuesday. He died the next Saturday.
In The Great Gatsby,
a book that has been a touchstone in my reading life–no actually, just in my life
period–the narrator Nick, who for much of the novel has mostly been just reporting
what he has observed, tells Gatsby, “ You’re better than the whole damn bunch
of them put together.” Gatsby will be murdered shortly after.
After the funeral, attended only by Nick and one other
person, Nick goes to one of Gatsby’s business associates, Wolfsheim, to find
some answers to the mysteries of Gatsby’s life. He also wants to know why
Wolfsheim hadn’t attended the funeral.
Wolfsheim explains that he believes that the time to express your love or
admiration for someone is when they are alive.
When they’re gone it’s too late.
Move forward.
As you move forward now, my advice to you is that you tell
the people you love that you love them.
See you all next year~
David...#22...you are very clever...very gifted...and wise that you share your thoughts and feelings...be good...Coach Harrison
ReplyDeleteThanks, Coach! But you know I'm far too young to be called "wise"~
DeleteI gleaned some nuggets in this writing. Thanks for sharing it, David. Elizabeth P.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Elizabeth~
DeleteFucking A, did you kill this piece. Keep going.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete