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June 30: Marcia Aldrich • Mandy Len Catron • Jasmina Kuenzli • Ryan Van Meter • Lynne Grist • Nora-Lyn Veevers • Chelsea Biondolillo • Melissa Faliveno • Natalie Lima • Boyer Rickel

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. If you wrote something (it's not too late!), send us your work by the end of June (at the latest: earlier is better!) via this submission form (it's okay if you didn't RSVP before: the more the merrier).

—The Editors



June 30: Marcia Aldrich • Mandy Len Catron • Jasmina Kuenzli • Ryan Van Meter • Lynne Grist • Nora-Lyn Veevers • Chelsea Biondolillo • Melissa Faliveno • Natalie Lima • Boyer Rickel



MARCIA ALDRICH

Beginning 

The construction workers arrive. Bainbridge Landing, the euphemistic name for a huge, unsightly blight upon the landscape, is being built right behind where I live on the destroyed ground of what once was a five-acre field of wildness. Last year in a matter of days they knocked down every tree, tore every shrub, every scotch broom, holly, and blackberry cane out of the ground and shook them in the jaws of death until they fell apart and then scooped them up and dumped them on enormous funeral pyres. Every snake, bird, rat, and deer got out and didn’t come back. Now the men start hammering around 6:55, sawing pipes with machines that break your will to live, and running a machine that flattens the earth.
     Up I get, stumble really, to shut the blinds against the longest day of the year.

Middle

I do unremarkable things. I try to figure out the title for an essay I am working on and land on either Someone Called Mother or The Enigma Variations, which gives me an excuse to listen to Elgar’s orchestral original.
     I learn the gorilla Koko, who knew American sign language, died in her sleep.
     I learn that a century ago, shepherds castrated lambs with their teeth.
     I learn that Benny, the state’s first wildlife detection dog, is really good at sniffing out illegal elephant ivory but that unfortunately he can’t be everywhere at once.
     I learn that from January 1, 2013 through December 31, 2016 there were at least 12 incidents of a large white car driven by a woman over the age of sixty-six striking a storefront on Bainbridge Island, where I live. In the past two weeks, two such incidents occurred, the taking out of the window of a shoe store, Soul Mates. The driver said without irony The car has a mind of its own.
     I am asked in the space of an hour to stand with Jeff Merkley, Patty Murray, Jay Inslee, Derek Kilmer, the ACLU, Oceana, Sierra Club, Women’s March, International Fund for Animal Welfare, and Earth Justice.
     To donate today.
     I watch segment No. 45 of Carpool Karaoke with host James Corden and his guest, Paul McCartney, singing “Let It Be” as they drive around Liverpool. I sing along. Tears form.

Late Middle

Richard and I and Omar, our dog, walk along the harbor to the Congregational Church’s community garden, where I share a plot that had been neglected for years. I am revitalizing it. Omar isn’t allowed into the garden and so Richard sits on the bench by the front gate and Omar lies down at his feet. They are surrounded by climbing roses, tall delphiniums, lilies, bachelor buttons, all profuse and unchecked. So unchecked is the growth that tall stalks with bold yellow flowers are growing up through the slots of the rickety bench and through the gate. The evening sun falls on them, lights them up as if they were the subjects of a painting called Late Sun. I open the gate and follow the winding overgrown paths back to my little plot bordered by ever-rising raspberry canes. My plants are starting to sprout and spread, the greens of the parsley and basil as intense as can be against the dark soil. Even the compost pile has red poppies blooming in it, a field of them. I water. I talk to Ed, the guardian of the garden. He tells me it makes him happy to see me tend my garden after so many years when it was just weeds.

End 

I watch The Americans. Episode 3 from Season 6, “Urban Transport Planning.” It is the endgame for The Americans and so much more. While Elizabeth strangles a security guard and Philip meets Oleg at the park, Leonard Cohen sings a love song inspired by the Holocaust:
Dance me to your beauty with a burning violin
Dance me through the panic til I’m gathered safely in
Lift me like an olive branch and be my homeward dove
Dance me to the end of love.
Dance me to the end of love.
—Marcia Aldrich


Marcia Aldrich's latest book is Waveform: Twenty-First-Century Essays by Women, University of Georgia Press. Her latest essay is "The Short Book on Grief," in the May issue of Brevity.



MANDY LEN CATRON

This morning I missed a FedEx delivery for the third time in three days. I’m not sure how much of this missing is my fault and how much is theirs. But I am underslept and I have a job interview tomorrow so I am choosing to blame them entirely.
     When I text my partner Mark, “Guess who fucking came by and didn’t buzz us??” he writes back kindly: “Delivery rage is normal.” I tell him my anger feels out of proportion—it’s just patio furniture—and he assures me that missed deliveries are a condition of modern life; everyone’s angry about them.
     On the bus to work I put in my earphones and turn on my meditation app in hopes of softening the rage. But instead fat tears leak down my face. I am thirty seven, too old to cry on the bus and yet here we are.
     The last time I cried on the bus was when Dumbledore died. It was eight years ago and I had just ended a ten year relationship and the Harry Potter audiobooks saved me from grief for a half an hour every day. That day Dumbledore’s death seemed symbolic of all the losses we must bear, even those that are intentional and necessary. It was a good bus cry, if there is such a thing.
     I guess this morning’s cry is probably symbolic, too, as I truly do not care this much about an aluminum table and six plastic chairs. Maybe I am crying because I’m bitter that modern capitalism can shrink my entire week to three failed deliveries. Or maybe it has nothing to do with FedEx and everything to do with this job interview and the precariousness of adjunct faculty work and the shimmering prospect of a full-time position. Maybe it’s to do with next month’s trip to the fertility clinic. Or maybe the tears are just the inevitable response to watching your government put kids in cages.
     I guess we are all reckoning with our powerlessness every day. Isn’t this why I bought the meditation app? For the sake of maintaining a sliver of bus dignity, I decide not to think about the interdependence of meditation apps and modern capitalism.
     I have lunch with two friends who are kind enough to curse FedEx on my behalf. Then they toss me a few practice interview questions and I am buoyed with gratitude for their good companionship.
     In my office, I grade thirty portfolios, write a final exam, and send what feels like fifty emails but is probably closer to ten. I cross things off my to-do list with firm strokes. I log on to Twitter and, about five seconds later, feel the rage lurking again. I close the website.
     In the classroom the breeze rustles the trees outside and comes in through the windows and raises goosebumps along my arms as I write the words “EXAM FORMAT” on the marker board. The students are restless. It’s the last class and the longest day of the year and all of us want to be somewhere else.
      “I want you guys to succeed on this exam,” I say, feeling the breeze rush in again. “So we have to go over the stuff, but then we can leave early.” They snap to attention at the words “leave early.” I imaging sitting on my unfurnished patio with the dog and a beer as the day fades. I want to bear witness to every last hint of daylight.
     When I thank them for making my Tuesday and Thursday nights so pleasant, my students clap and I turn a little bit red. I tell them I’ll see them at next week’s final. As I say this, I remember the littlest bit of strawberry coconut ice cream in the freezer and life feels totally manageable for the first time all day. I hoist a big stack of research papers into my arms and we all head out into the still-bright evening.
—Mandy Len Catron

Mandy Len Catron is the author of How to Fall in Love with Anyone, a memoir in essays. Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, The Rumpus, and The Walrus, as well as literary journals and anthologies. She lives in Vancouver, BC.



JASMINA KUENZLI

Torn Contact (June 21, 2018)

I’m stuck in traffic on Mopac, and I can’t fucking see. My left eye is a constant stream of weepy tears and discharge, trying to expel the foreign, corrosive object. 
     Which, of course, also happens to be the object that makes me see.
     It’s hard to drive home with a torn contact.
     This is the type of life I’ve been living lately. I’m struggling through Hard Mode on what looks to everyone else like Easy. 
     The thing that is supposed to make me see is making me blind.
     Like now, the car in front of me slams on its brakes, and I almost don’t make it in time. Distracted, the instinct to shift from first to second to neutral and back again, gliding the car forward and stopping, is a beat behind. The music starts, but I’m waiting for the right cue. 
     Hesitating on the tips of my toes, until I miss the beat entirely. Until all my rhythm gets lost in anxiety. 
     “We should have a girl’s night!” The others were sprawled around me in their various states of exhaustion, and it was the least lonely I’ve felt in weeks. 
     “Sounds awesome,” I said.
     But then that twinge went off in my chest. A proximity alarm. 
     Why are you freaking out? I’m standing on a hill, screaming at the black hole that is my anxiety, bracing myself against its sucking force. It’s just a game night. You’re good at games. 
     My eye burns, and my vision blurs.
     Oh right, I think. We put my Life settings on Hard. 

At about the Capital of Texas Highway Exit, I decide I’ve had enough. I rub hard enough for the small, flexible object to leave my eye. 
     This does not help. 
     All I can see are blurred shapes and the grey stretch of road.
     It’s going to be a long way home. 

They’re new here, so they don’t know.
     They don’t know about me. 
     What do you think they’ll do when they find out about you?
     My eye hurts, and there are permanent tear tracks down my cheek. 

The ones who know parade across my vision. The guy who made me sprint to my car and look over my shoulder, who shows up on their Snapchats, who they’d never suspect….
     The friend who already took his side.
     The words I wrote about the friend I fell in love with so absolutely, he still hates me.
     The guy I tried to hook up with in January, even though I broke every tier of girl code to do it.
     I bite my lip and the tears trickle down my cheeks. 
     Why do you think they’d believe you? No one else did.
     The road is filled with blurriness where there should be sharp edges. Where things should be clear-cut. 
     And my workplace is a minefield with triggers set only for me. 

But the music continues to play.
     The road to take its shape.
     I remember the ones who stayed. 
     The words, “I believe you.”
     The soft, “You didn’t deserve this.”
     The fierce, “Since when did you let them take any space that belonged to you?”
     And I’m still driving.
     The blurriness an easy adjustment, my fingers tapping on beat.

—Jasmina Kuenzli

Jasmina Kuenzli is a second-year master's student studying Creative Writing, Science Fiction & Fantasy, and YA Literature.  She can usually be found holding impromptu dance parties in her car, developing her superhero alter-ego, and making unnecessary Harry Potter references. Jasmina would like to thank Brenna and Sarah, who heard these stories first; and Harry Styles, who is sunshine distilled in a human being.  



RYAN VAN METER

I woke up eight minutes before my alarm was set to ring, in the room of my adolescence. I had arrived to my parents’ house in Missouri the afternoon before. I made coffee. In the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, among the letters to the editor, a reader suggested to those criticizing the president’s current policy of prosecuting and detaining migrants illegally crossing the country’s border to drive down, pick some up and host them in their own home. I read my horoscope and ate cereal with Lactaid.
     My father and I drove to a military cemetery to see my aunt’s grave. She was buried there only two weeks earlier so her grave was marked with a paper label under plastic on a metal stem stuck in the dirt. A man with a truck was just then installing the engraved white stones of the people who had died in May. Flowers were draped over the some of the plastic markers.
     After, we went to the Missouri Civil War Museum on the same campus. I saw a taxidermy horse and an amputation set, a silk dress and many guns. In an exhibit of The Civil War as depicted in movies, I learned that Margaret Mitchell, novelist of Gone With the Wind, was killed by a drunk driver while crossing the street on her way to the movies. I decided to read “The Red Badge of Courage.” On one of the display cases, there was a sign asking visitors to please pardon the darkness.
     On our way home, my father slowed the car to wait for a squirrel to cross the road. He pointed to clouds that looked like rain.
     Shortly after we got back to their house, my mother returned from shopping. She had bought me a set of blending markers. When we tested them out, the markers wouldn’t blend. She also brought home a bunch of scratch-off lottery tickets. I won three dollars on one and six dollars on another.
     We ate leftovers for lunch. I napped for 12 minutes.
     I looked through old stuff in my closet, including a collection of movie ticket stubs I’d saved from my teenaged years. Movies I forgot had ever been made. Raising Cain. Shining Through. The carved face of a hand puppet I made of Napoleon for a book report in sixth grade resembled my father’s. In a panoramic picture of my eighth grade class, I was sitting in the front row all the way to right wearing two watches in a T-shirt with horses on it.
     My husband called from California to say our puppy had chewed up a birthday card I received in the mail from my other aunt.
     My father and I watched Jeopardy!“Who is Margaret Mitchell?” was a correct response in the first round.
     We ate dinner at my parents’ country club. My mother led us on a tour. Their old club burned down a year before and since it had reopened, it was the first time I had been there. My brother, his wife, and two children met us. I held my baby niece until our food came. Her pacifier fell and it rolled the farthest it’s ever rolled, my sister-in-law said.
     At home, we watched several reruns of Family Feud. My father said it seemed that Steve Harvey was always on television. My mother said that some of the answers to the questions were too risqué for the hour the show was generally broadcast. I noticed their dog only lets me pet her when I’m sitting on the sofa in the living room. Later on, I noticed that I especially liked listening to the sound of rain when I am in a bed.
     It took great concentration, I realized, to notice what has been the same for a long time.
     Lying there, waiting to sleep, I remembered a jacket at the museum in the Hollywood Civil War display. It was a costume that had appeared in several movies. It had stripes along the sleeves that indicated the Confederacy, but letters embroidered on its collar that indicated Union. The little printed card pointed out that the typical movie-goer would not have been able to notice this discrepancy while the jacket was in motion.

—Ryan Van Meter

Ryan Van Meter is the author of an essay collection, If You Knew Then What I Know Now. His work has also been selected for anthologies including The Best American Essays. He lives in California where he is an Associate Professor in the English Department at the University of San Francisco.



LYNNE GRIST


I awaken from the best sleep I have had since arriving in Manchester, UK a week ago. I’m visiting my mother’s family who I’ve not seen for 18 years. It’s been a quiet holiday so far as I get to know my lovely cousins who are quickly becoming the sisters I never had. They leave me to myself most of the time, only making occasional suggestions of what I might, perhaps, like to do before my three weeks in England run out. I’m still grieving the loss of my husband a year ago, and I’m not myself yet. Though I’m not exactly sure what my “self” is anymore. They understand, and give me lots of hugs.
     We are going downtown today to visit the George and Dragon, the pub where my parents met at the end of the war. It was April 1945, and my  father was a soldier stationed in England at the time. But the war ended before they could marry and he was sent back to Canada. They wrote one another for over a year until my mom was able to join him and become a Canadian war bride.
     I am excited to see the pub, though I understand it has changed a great deal in 70 years. The house where my mother lived is gone, as is the factory where she inspected Lancashire Bomber parts during the war. The row of shops with a fishmonger, greengrocer, and bakery, have been turned into flats. But I have high hopes for the pub, for at least the building still stands. We shall see.
                             
Cradling my French press coffee with English “double cream”, I step outside into the coolest day so far. Bits of sun poke out from the ever-present clouds, which are threatening  rain as usual. I hope they refrain today, though I’m becoming as phlegmatic about the weather as the Brits and don’t care too much. How different the summer solstice is here compared to home. I swear I can feel the North Atlantic seeping through the ground. My cousins wear shorts and sandals while I huddle in my jeans and fleece. I wish I had brought warmer socks.
     I tour the small garden and admire the lush flowering bushes, which appear to love the cool, damp weather. I worry about my cousin’s tomato plants whose foliage is exploding from their plastic tent. I wonder how they will ever produce fruit with such a meagre ration of daily sunshine. At least the peas and lettuce are happy.
     Large, beautiful, black and white birds called magpies squawk from the rooftops and fences. They are ignored by my cousins, who still talk about the magnificent blue jays they saw in Canada years ago. Familiarity does breed indifference.

As I eat my breakfast of Greek yogurt, berries and granola – identical to my breakfast at home – my cousin reports Trump’s latest: Canadians are buying American shoes, scuffing them up, and smuggling them across the border. I find this hilarious. Canadians have always smuggled American goods over the border—it’s one of our favourite pastimes. Trump often intrudes into conversation here, just as he does in Canada, and my relatives are as appalled by him as I am.
     I go back to reading my Guardian newspaper. An article on the front page says Italy’s interior minister has declared that all non-Italian Roma must be expelled from the country. “Unfortunately we will have to keep the Italian Roma,” he says, “because we can’t expel them.” He has often expressed his admiration for Benito Mussolini.
      Fascism on the rise, again.

In the afternoon my cousins and I walk to the tram which is only five minutes away, and in ten minutes we are in downtown Manchester. Since they are retired and over 60, my cousins travel for free. How civilized. I compare all this with Toronto, where transit is expensive, inconvenient, time-consuming, and totally insufficient.
     We alight from the tram and walk to Swan St., where the George and Dragon pub once stood at the centre of a thriving manufacturing district- one of the world’s first and largest. The red sandstone pub was built in 1862, but is now painted black and silver and renamed the Band on the Wall. This had been its nickname since the 1930’s, when the owner built shelves for the musicians high on the wall to leave more floor space for the customers.
     It is 1:00 pm and the pub doesn’t open until 5:00, but we have arranged an early tour with the manager. We knock on the red door, and John takes us inside. He shows us the old woodwork and windows covered by black paint and points out the decorated plaster ceilings and original columns with shelves attached where patrons still rest their drinks. Then he takes us to another room which once housed the oldest cinema in Manchester. Filling one wall is a huge blown-up photograph possibly taken on VE Day. It shows the George and Dragon filled with Allied servicemen from around the world. Above their heads are the shelves, with a dummer and accordionist on one and a piano bolted to the other. I search for my parents in the crowd, but they are not there.
     While John is telling us how the Band on the Wall is an award-winning music venue featuring world music, a West African band knocks on the door. John lets them in, and as they begin setting up, we thank the manager and leave. I have what I came for. This iconic pub still holds the faint echoes of wartime revelry, and I am deeply gratified to have found the place where the first sparks were ignited between my father and mother.
     We walk down the street and stop to eat a 21st century lunch of lentil salad and goat cheese quiche. A chilly wind gusts through the patio and I put up the hood on my down jacket. My cousins remove their coats and bask in the sunshine of the British summer solstice.

—Lynne Grist

Lynne Grist is a retired teacher living and writing in Prince Edward County, Ontario, Canada



NORA-LYN VEEVERS

A.M.

A cup of tea is waiting for me when I opened my eyes. My husband brings my tea every morning (Insert happy faces. And hearts). Dad spoils you, Mom says my daughter. When she visits she brings my tea early in the morning (Insert more hearts than my heart can hold).  A bit of mindful meditation, a bit of hip and leg exercises prescribed by the physiotherapist, a first, soothing, hot swallow of the best a cup of tea will taste all day.


Shopping

I ran into my friend at the boutique-y bakery in town where I picked up day-old pain au chocolat. We stopped for a cup of coffee together on the sunny deck and shared our outrage over a local celebrity wine-maker who made the front page of the national newspaper for the sexual harassment of many female staff over several years. Some of our friends questioned whether it should have been front-page news. My adult daughters said hash-tag about time.


Lunch

Our oldest daughter is staying with us this summer while she writes up her doctoral dissertation. She spends most of her time burrowed deep in her subject matter. Today she made the best turkey BLTs ever. We put everything on a tray and took it out to the back deck. The sun warmed our arms, legs, faces. Not a cloud in the sky. None of us wanted to give up our lunch-place in the soothing, warm glow of the first day of summer.



P.M.

I make potato salad from the French Cooking cook book. The dressing includes white wine and lots of grainy Dijon mustard. I marinate the chopped up green onions in the vinaigrette for about an hour before pouring it over the salted, cooked potatoes.
     On our walk we discover that something, probably the muskrat living in the little creek in the swampy meadow, has dug up all the turtle eggs we watch the mother turtle lay the day before in the gravel on the side of the road. She expelled each egg with laborious determination and furiously paddled it with her hind flipper-leg deep into a tunnel she excavated at the same time.  She seemed oblivious of our hovering, so focused she was on bringing another generation to life.
     The barn swallow babies flew their nest this afternoon. After days of watching seven little, open beaks peek over the edge of the nest in the rafters of the barn in anticipation of food to be dropped in by the vigilant mother, they now got to practice finding their own nourishment. They have survived all attempts at sabotage by the barn cat and the neighbourhood Tom cat that invades our barn at night. We will miss them. They are the promise of summer each spring when they arrive back in our barn.


Dinner

We join a community of friends at a local farm for a Summer Solstice shared-dinner. The potato salad disappears fast. All the food is delicious and the farmer-couple have barbequed organically raised chickens from their farm. Long tables, some in the sun and some in the shade, are set for us. The aroma from the row of peonies behind our chairs graces our meal. The sun stretches its long limbs gently across our table. The conversation turns inevitably to the celebrity wine-maker. The women at our table—all twenty years younger than me—echo my daughter’s sentiment: hash-tag about f*ing time.


Art Opening. 

We slip out of the dinner and drive into town. My husband had a painting accepted in a juried art show and our daughter meets us there so we can see Dad’s painting on display for the opening reception. I take a photo of Dad beside his self-portrait and text it to our younger daughter who lives on the other side of the country. We join some of our friends for the Art Crawl that a few of the young artists have organized in our little town.
     By the time we find our car, Main Street has closed down and the masses of stars begin their nighttime vigil in the cloudless sky.

—Nora-Lyn Veevers

Nora-Lyn Veevers is a writer and retired school administrator living in beautiful Prince Edward County, Ontario Canada



CHELSEA BIONDOLILLO

I wake up to a loud fan and cool air. This is immeasurably better than how I’d gone to sleep, which was to a loud fan and hot, thick air. I do not want to get out of bed, which has become a routine feeling I feel, and so I stay twisted in the sheets as long as possible. M makes us both poached eggs, and that drags me up and out. 
     I make coffee and then savor the seeming decadence of soft egg and cool avocado against the rugged terrain of an English muffin. I am late “to work” which just means that it is after 9 when I wander back down the hall and at the end, instead of taking a left turn to crawl back in bed, I take a right turn into my office. I log on to the PC first, as that is where the work happens, but then I also swivel my chair around to fire up the Mac, as that is where all the distractions happen. 
     There are fourteen steps between the kitchen and my office and I only turn my chair to work or to not-work. For most of the workday I navigate this very small space and try not to feel trapped. Today I have three calls with coworkers, which is the most of any day for the past several weeks and so my voice is almost hoarse by three. Usually, I only see my coworkers in my inbox. But today, I talk with the HR manager for a while about a training initiative. I try, during it, not to exhibit the slavering excitement of an underemployed teacher. I am not a teacher for my day job. I am a regulatory analyst—and though most of my coworkers know I teach on the side, when I can, I am not sure if the HR manager knows. She has no sense of humor and does not empathize with employees as a matter of principle. She takes her job very seriously and I (often) do not. I also talk to the technical writer who took over my writing tasks when I became an analyst. I didn’t want to become an analyst, and she wasn’t sure she wanted to write, and so we commiserate with the limitations of our roles after we discuss an issue that I must figure out and she must document. Finally, I talk with a manager with whom I have an uneasy relationship. Her predecessor was my boss, but our director did not think she had the people skills or technical knowledge to manage me. As a result, she considers me an adversary who knows something she needs to know and who she must learn to dominate. We also both have a lot of tattoos and have dated a lot of shitty men—something we discussed a bit more freely when we were equals.  
     In between work tasks, I spend my time at the other computer scrolling and hustling. The university I’d had a contract with canceled me last semester, which meant a loss of twenty percent of the income I’d projected for the rest of the year. My days are consumed with worry about this. I secured a couple of workshop gigs over the summer (which had been scheduled to be my time to write, but will now be my time to try and dig out of a financial hole), but the rosters aren’t filling, which means I don’t get paid, which means I might not get offered the gig again. So, in between liking and reposting and rabbit-holing, I post about my workshops on my various social media platforms, which are deep in great friends but not broad because I don’t know how to manage such things. I try, despite the worry, despite the doubt in my abilities that empty rosters inspire, to effuse excitement about my workshops. I am a good teacher; my students often stay in touch and take my classes over, but… the longer I go without time to write, I worry, the further and further I get from being the kind of writer that people think has something to tell them. I spend a lot of the day thinkingthinkingthinking about that, too. 
     Just at the point in the day when I normally begin to cry, I instead exchange text messages with a very good friend about our flowers. She sends me pictures of her new shade garden and they are beautiful. I send her pictures of the pots I’ve made up of flowers and vining plants for my new patio, which she commends. We are comforting one another this way. This means that I make no entries today in my journal of reasons-I’m-crying-2018. 
     Around 2:30, I finally get out of my pajamas. I realize for the millionth time today (the millionth time over the past several months), that I am deeply, deeply depressed. But there is nothing to do for it today, so I get dressed and finally brush my teeth and continue reading work emails and looking out my window and walking the 14 steps to the kitchen for coffee or to make a lunch salad and the 14 steps back to type something into a screen. I worry and hope in equally unhelpful measure until the work emails drop off and I’ve inundated my few friends with solicitations.
     In the afternoon, I pick up a sweater finished knitting the other day, and I curl up on the couch and begin the slow, mindful process of weaving in the ends of yarn left from the knitting process. Part of the sweater is made of yarn that I’ve had for many years, and I am comforted by the sense of meaningful process a finished sweater represents. I think about the softness of the wool and the complexity of the colors, about the work that went into dying and spinning the yarn and the work that I put in to the sweater. I push the thoughts that follow, that wonder why I can't put that kind of effort into other, important things, away. It’s a cool day, and so even though it is summer, I wear my new sweater while I run some after-work errands, which is good, because my other preferred choice of outerwear has been a long army-green duster type coat, with a hood and drawstring waist—which bears an uncanny resemblance to the jacket that Melania Trump wore to visit the children’s detention center. Mine doesn’t have any text on the back, but I can’t stand even the possibility of someone thinking it is the same brand. 
     For dinner, M and I decide to go to the food carts a couple of small towns away, and we both pick Lebanese. He gets chicken shawarma and I get a lamb gyro and we share a Greek salad. The flat pitas are warm and soft and the sauces and meat are generously spiced. It is too much food, but the lamb tastes good and being full of anything feels good and so I eat every bite of my wrap.

—Chelsea Biondolillo

Chelsea Biondolillo is the author of the prose chapbooks Ologies and #Lovesong. She has an MFA in nonfiction and environmental studies and currently lives about 30 miles outside of Portland, OR, in the shadow of a mountain, near a river. 



MELISSA FALIVENO

I woke today like I wake most days: at 6:45 to chimes in my phone and traffic on the Pulaski Bridge, to men yelling over power saws and concrete walls going up on all sides. Lately I’ve been waking up tired, like I got less sleep than I did. I haven’t been drinking, or drinking that much anyway, and it still feels strange sometimes to wake without the weight of the previous night on my brain, or thick on my teeth, a sick fruit pit in my stomach. It also means the weariness I feel is just there inside me, that it wasn’t self-inflicted. This is its own kind of misery. 
     I crawl out of bed. My partner makes coffee. The dog and cat cry and pace until they’re fed. I take a shower—never hot enough, never enough pressure—and stand in front of the mirror. My hair is getting too long. I look out the bathroom window at the pigeons on the fire escape. It’s a Thursday, and the weekend will be here soon. I’ll sit on the fire escape and read in the sun. For now, I sit on the edge of my bed in the dark, wearing nothing but underwear, and stare at my closet, coffee cup in hand. The dog and cat circle my feet, rub against my legs. I lean down to scratch them. The dog whines and twists around to get more touch. The cat purrs, then jumps up on the bed. She sits next to me, butts her face against my arm. She looks at me. I scratch her neck and think, Am I giving you everything you need? 
     I check the weather, see that the heat will break today. I stare at my closet some more. I do ten pushups. I pull on some jeans, iron a shirt, brush my teeth, pack my bag and leave. I walk ten blocks to the ferry, through scaffolding and closed streets and construction sites. But the sun’s out and there’s a breeze, and I take the boat to work. It trundles along the East River, from my neighborhood in north Brooklyn down to the seaport. The river is dark and muddy and stinks, but most days I still think it’s beautiful. The hazy Manhattan skyline to the west, the developing Brooklyn waterfront to the east. What was once the Domino Sugar factory now a row of condos. I sit outside on the top deck with a book (Hanif Abdurraqib’s They Can’t Kill Us Until They Kill Us) and pass beneath three bridges. They’re the same bridges I pass every day—the Williamsburg, the Manhattan, the Brooklyn. I always look up. They’re a marvel of mechanics, of human invention, exhilarating if you take a second to consider what went into their construction: an amount of vision and labor and exactness of engineering that I can’t even being to imagine. The suspension cables, the towering stone arcs. The dark blue steel of the Manhattan, with just a hint of green. I would like to paint every room in my apartment this color. 
     Lately I’ve been thinking less about construction and more about jumping. I’m not suicidal, at least I don’t think so. I was for a while, a long time ago. But it’s been in the air lately, for me especially since the death of Scott Hutchison, the front man of one of my favorite bands, Scotland’s Frightened Rabbit. Scott jumped, or at least we think so, a little over a month ago now, his body discovered on the banks near the Forth Road Bridge. It’s something he predicted might happen a decade ago in “Floating in the Forth,” a song from the 2008 record The Midnight Organ Fight. It’s a hopeful song, despite its dark forecast. In it he asks if he might find peace below the roar of the bridge. And he imagines jumping. And fully clothed, I’ll float away / down the Forth into the sea. But by the end of the song, he’s steering himself through choppy waves. I think I’ll save suicide for another day, he sings. And the key is major, and there’s a chorus rising up behind him, and you can see him swimming. 
     And so I imagine him alone on the bridge the night he died. Scott suffered from depression, something he sang about often. And it’s no exaggeration to say that on some of my darker days, even recent ones during this very commute, his words have kept me afloat. Every day since his death I think about him as I pass beneath these bridges, and I imagine him jumping. And I wonder if he could feel the wind against his body as he fell. I wonder if he felt weightless. I wonder if he felt anything at all. I wonder if he’d had anything to drink (something else he struggled with and sang about), and how it might have influenced his decision. And Jesus, I think, haven’t I been there. 
Today I think that bridges are a wonder, but they’re also these historic sites of death. They wear death—past death, and the possibility of it—on their beams and in their cables. And isn’t it funny, how they can hold up so much and at the same time allow for such a letting go. And it scares me, the way I’ve been thinking about the bridges. Not just because I think of what it would feel like to fall, but because I’m reminded of how fragile and fleeting life is, how vulnerable we all are.  
     We dock. I walk along the harbor, look out toward the sea. At the office I drink another cup of coffee. I catch up on email. Scroll through Twitter, read the news. I read about children separated from their families and locked in cages at the border. I think about sending more money, about what else I might do. I feel helpless. I log out of Twitter. 
     I edit our daily news roundup. I proof the weekly newsletter. I edit a section of the magazine on writing conferences and retreats. I want to go to all of them, and know that I won’t. I edit an interview with an author whose first book just came out, who says she struggles to keep a consistent writing practice. I feel relieved at this, like I’m not a total failure as a writer. I finish the edit. 
     I don’t drink enough water. I drink too much water. I go to the bathroom. I go back to my desk. I sit too long, and my ass starts to hurt. I get up, stretch, do ten pushups. I eat a banana, some yogurt with strawberries. I take a vitamin. I drink more coffee. I have a meeting. I go outside for five minutes and sit in the sun. I plan a feature on nonfiction writers whose first books are out this year. I’m invigorated by their work, and feel an urgency to finish my own book. I’m getting close, I think. Maybe I will do a retreat somewhere. Maybe I’ll leave the city and move to the woods, where I can breathe and hike and be surrounded by silence and there are no people and there is no Twitter and there is nothing but me and the trees. 
     I write more emails. I edit a PDF guide for writers looking to promote their books. I wait too long to eat, heat up some leftover beans and rice. I write more emails. I look out my office window. A new high-rise is going up. I tell myself that I need to water my plants. I decide to take tomorrow off. I forget to water my plants.
     I walk to the harbor, take the boat back home. I pass beneath the bridges again. I think about Scott again. I’m not listening to his music now, not every day anymore like I was for a while, which is probably a smart move. I listen to the people around me instead. To the sound of their voices, to the sound of the boat’s engine, to the sound of the water beneath me, of the traffic and the trains rushing along the bridges overhead.
     I stop by the store and pick up some cider. My friend comes over to workshop some essays. I pour her a whiskey, crack open a cider for myself. I bought two, but I tell myself I’ll only drink one. We talk for hours about our work—we’re both writing about our bodies, about gender and sexuality and power—and it’s good to talk about these things. I pour her a second whiskey. The glass sweats in the heat. I take the second can of cider out of the fridge. I hold it in my hand for a few minutes while we talk, feel the cool weight of the metal, think of how nice it might feel to float away a little tonight. I put the can back in the fridge. I think about how lately I’ve felt disconnected from my body, like I’m living outside it rather than inhabiting it. I tell my friend this. She hugs me. She finishes her whiskey and leaves. I close the door behind her. 
     My partner comes home with tacos. We eat and watch Portlandia. It feels good to laugh. I realize I don’t laugh much these days. We talk about our friends who have left the city. We make plans to go see them in the fall. We talk about the weekend: we have a show on Saturday, and it will be good to play music. It’s Pride in New York, and we’ll raise some money for the LGBT Center, which is one small good thing we can do. While I’m alive, Scott Hutchison sang, I’ll make tiny changes to earth. And I hope that I can too. Maybe I’ll march again this year. I’ll be surrounded by my queer friends and we’ll put our bodies in the streets, and that’s something, I think. That’s some small something. 
It’s late, nearing midnight, but I’m not ready to go to bed just yet. The light of the day has finally dissolved, and it’s dark outside. 
     “It’s the solstice,” my partner says. 
     “The longest day of the year,” I say.
     I think about how it will get a little darker now, a little earlier every day. But the heat has broken, and it’s cooled down even more. I can hear the wind in the ash tree outside the window. The dog looks at me. The cat looks at me. 

Melissa Faliveno

Melissa Faliveno is an essayist whose work has appeared or is forthcoming in Prairie Schooner, DIAGRAM, Midwestern Gothic, and others, and received a notable citation in Best American Essays 2016. Originally from Wisconsin, she lives in New York, where she is the senior editor of Poets & Writers Magazine, plays in the band Self Help, and is at work on a collection of essays. 



NATALIE LIMA

I'm at the mall today because I need to buy some clothes, because I've reached a sloppy place in my life where I wear the same black dress over and over again, each day with a different shrug on top—sometimes a gray one, other times pink—pretending it’s not the same outfit. But I'm surely not fooling anyone. The dress has two small-but-obvious tears that sit between my breasts and navel, a result of latching onto a saguaro after a night of chasing my dog last winter.
     A lot of people talk crap about malls but I mostly like them. They remind me of my pre-teen years at Hot Topic, scoring band t-shirts and spiked faux-leather bracelets on clearance. My favorite acquisition was a Deftones shirt I bought the summer I turned 14, the same summer my dad knocked up the neighbor. I wore the hell out of that shirt, wore it until the black had faded into a chalky gray. Once, I wore it to a Heimlich concert—my first and only heavy metal concert—and I jumped around in a mosh pit until I had bruises the size of coasters on my arms. I used to be embarrassed of those days, of how foolish I was, but now I miss them a little. 
     I walk into Torrid—a clothing store for plus-size women—and ask the sales associate about any deals going on (that's how they get you). She confirms that everything on clearance is Buy One Get Two Free. This titilates me, as fashionable clothing for big women is often expensive as hell. A few hours ago, I received some good news—a result of some recent hard work on a creative project—so I’m treating myself to some new threads in celebration.
     If you’ve ever been big boned fat, you know that shopping can be a demoralizing experience. And currently I'm the heaviest I've been in years—I only fit into the larger sizes sold in the store—so finding decent pieces on clearance seems improbable. But today there is a lot of stuff in my size, and because my confidence is higher than most days, I grab items in colors and patterns I don't usually wear. Is a zebra print poncho too much? I ask myself. Of course it’s not!
     In the dressing room I realize the zebra print is too much, but everything else fits my body nicely. I slip on a long, floral dress and model it in front of the water-stained mirror. I pose. Then I pull my phone out from my purse and snap a photo of myself. I almost text it to my mom, my way of saying Hi Mami, I’m thinking about you, but I quickly remember that she’s on a trip right now, visiting some family in New York City. She rarely gets to travel, so I leave her be. Instead, I snap photo after photo, really feeling myself in every outfit, at every angle. 
     As I undress, I wonder how many days it has been since I quit drinking. From outside the fitting rooms, the sales associate calls out to me, Natalie, are you still doing okay? 
     Yes, I say. I’m great, I’m just about done.
     I grab my phone and open the nifty app that sends me daily words of encouragement and calculates my time on the wagon: 111 days. 
     After I get dressed and gather the clothes I plan to buy, I snap one last photo of myself, wearing the dress I wear everyday, with the tears on the belly. I can barely see them now.

Natalie Lima

Natalie Lima is a 2016 PEN America Emerging Voices Fellow and a VONA/Voices alum. She is an MFA candidate in creative nonfiction at the University of Arizona and can be found on Twitter @NatalieLima09.



BOYER RICKEL

I Awoke from Violent Dreams

I awoke from violent dreams. Heads smashed with clubs in an alley. A shooter with assault rifle spraying bullets in a department store. Or was it a food court? And yet I’d felt oddly safe. What triggered such dreams on my 67th birthday? I thought of what Gary and I had watched after dinner the night before: Alex Strangelove streaming on Netflix, a sweet, impossibly happy high school coming out story. No clue there.
     A block from the house on the morning walk with Cloe I experienced that queasy lightness when I leave the iPhone by accident at home. On 5th Ave. her leash tanged as usual with Mina’s. Pam and I stood back as our poodles, a red and a black, leaped in circles like puppies. The walks never disappoint. One of the guaranteed pleasures of any day. At the park when I released her, Cloe headed for the homeless man with ponytail who calls me Brother. Then she broke from his petting to attack my ankles, initiating the game of chase she often insists on when we walk on grass.   
     The chain of sonar texting pings began at the Rec Center. First Dann, who cleans my house, urged me to have a second martini before dinner, “given the circumstances,” followed by Jack, a college friend outside Santa Fe who wrote, “Longest day of the year. Most precious too . . .” while I huffed on the stationary bike. Home, when I began a frustrating Feuillard cello bowing exercise, Joan in NY sent a colorful Bitmoji avatar (like something by Alison Bechtel, I thought): a cartoon of herself in her trademark black glasses frames and leopard pants lofted among the clouds by balloons spelling  HAPPYBIRTHDAYAnd so on, ping! . . . ping! at irregular intervals throughout the day. 
     After lunch and a nap with Cloe, I finished reading Soul, a novella by the early 20th-century Russian writer Andre Platonov. Having endured over a hundred pages of the half-dead characters’ relentless suffering—“. . . when you must force your heart to work, when you must keep remembering your heart for it to go on beating . . .”—I choked up at the hero’s epiphany near the end: “Chagataev sensed with surprise it was possible to exist with only animals and voiceless plants as your neighbors, with desert on the horizon, so long as you have a human being in a dwelling nearby.” My surprise was how much I felt for him. He seemed at first, as did all the characters, impossibly strange.
     Nancy, just returned from Ireland, emailed inviting us to dinner to celebrate my birthday. I replied that an early drink would be good—to hear about her trip. Sitting on her couch, I realized how much I enjoyed the intimate conversation we were having, as compared to the noisy parties we often attend with friends. 
     Dinner at my house was a large green salad with leftover chicken Gary had coated in pesto, and potato salad. Something cold for a day that reached 106. As Gary walked to his house through the garden we share, I wondered if what we’d watched after dinner, the disturbing fifth episode of The Handmaid’s Tale, would trouble my dreams that night. 

Boyer Rickel

Boyer Rickel is the author of two poetry collections, a memoir-in-essays, and three poetry chapbooks, two of which, Tempo Rubato (Green Linden Press) and Musick’s Hand-maid (Seven Kitchens Press), were published this spring. Recipient of poetry fellowships from the NEA and the Arizona Commission on the Arts, he taught in the Arizona Creative Writing Program for twenty years. 




Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors
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July 1: Susan Arthur • Rukmini Girish • Jessie Kraemer • Alexa Weinstein • Kate McGuire • Monica Graff • Ted Simpson • Stefanie Norlin • Casey McConahay • Katelyn Wildman

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. If you wrote something (it's not too late!), send us your work via this submission form (it's okay if you didn't RSVP before: the more the merrier).

—The Editors



July 1: Susan Arthur • Rukmini Girish • Jessie Kraemer • Alexa Weinstein • Kate McGuire • Monica Graff • Ted Simpson • Stefanie Norlin • Casey McConahay • Katelyn Wildman



SUSAN ARTHUR

Awake too early, a few minutes before 5 AM, with another headache that requires my sitting up to make it go away. I don’t want to, but sleep is lost now.
     Rain overnight, a little bit of drizzle still. Good, no watering today. The first mauve rose is about to open, a deep red climbing rose is close behind it.The rain gives me ten extra minutes to finish painting woodwork and walls. I’ve begun making to-do lists, not new to me, but now I put them in the order they must be done so I don’t find ways to weasel out of something I don’t want to do. Like painting woodwork. This way, I won’t have time to fall into solitaire on my computer (just three games, I con myself, they’re short). 
     The sun appears around noon; I take a book and a cherry yogurt out to the back deck. A fat plume of smoke wafts past, big enough to be from a fire. I sniff. Nothing, no smell, so not smoke. Oh, it’s damp, a lone patch of fog moving from the east side of the yard to the west, heading into the pines. Gone in under a minute. For a moment I am Dorothy: (Things) come and go so quickly here. 
     I mop up a spill in the kitchen. Mouse turds under the stove, on the counter, in the cupboard. Damn. I’ll figure out what to do later. Mouse turds are not on the list.
     I migrate downstairs to my studio—it’s next on the list. I wedge up some reclaimed clay to throw on my wheel for the center of a sculpture I’m working on. First, second, third try, all collapse. I know to stop for the day when I have too many consecutive failures. I’ll try again tomorrow.  
     I prod my husband to go to a community party at the Japanese garden nearby. 
     “Free food,” I say. “We don’t have to talk to anybody.” 
     We toss the introvert ball back and forth between us, the loser has to take the social lead. A young woman—younger than we are anyway—introduces herself and we spend an easy few minutes in small talk. We wander through the late Spring garden: rhodies in fat, eye-searing red bloom, dogwoods fading, hydrangeas pushing out green buds that will become full blown mop heads. I keep one eye on the ground for snakes (rare) and the other on foliage for ticks (common).
     First mosquito bite of the season. It swells rapidly, stretching the skin on my hand into a smooth, pale, itchy bump. 
     After our half-hearted, rapidly assembled dinner of tortellini in a sausage-tomato sauce, we head upstairs to watch Rachel Maddow report on Trump’s most recent miscreant behavior. He is punishing desperate immigrant families by taking children away from their parents. On her visit to the children’s camps, his wife wears a jacket that has text scrawled on the back: I really don’t care. Do U?
     But I care. How can this be happening? I google places to donate. RAICES. ACLU. Act Blue. My life is so easy, so normal, compared to what these families are going through. 
     I fall asleep listening to the whip-poor-will. His calls begins at twilight; it’s the latest night of the year for him. I hope he eats the mosquito that bit me. 
—Susan Arthur

Susan Arthur is an artist and writer. She has an MFA in visual arts from Vermont College. Her work can be found at susanarthur.net.



RUKMINI GIRISH

Watch “11 Times Mohammed Salah Used Magic in Football.” Tempted by “20 Ridiculous Goalkeeper Mistakes” but decide Beyoncé is more important. “Formation” is preceded by an ad for a TV show called Queen of the South, in which a white woman storms angrily through a hallway. Smile at the irony. As usual, pause to try and decipher whether “Yoncé” is a commentary on fame or another seductive party song. Still haven’t reached a decision. Double check the online portal through which I submit my book reviews. Have had an irrational fear that my last one didn’t go through. It did. Return to Youtube, but decide not to watch the new video for “APES**T” now. That’s the portal to a Youtube rabbit hole and 4 am. 
     Shut down the computer and kill an insect on the wall. Is it a baby cockroach? Not sure. Don’t really want to know. Flush it. Brush. Floss. Wash my face. Swallow my multivitamin and my flax oil capsule with a glass of water. Chicago weather’s been weird this week. Turn on the fan? No. It will be too cold. Should change my sheets. Should also do laundry. But that will have to wait until the weekend. Need new sheets anyway. 
     1:12 AM. Lights out. Guess I’m not waking up at seven to watch the World Cup.

So dark that I wonder whether the alarm’s gone off too early this time instead of not going off at all. Then I hear the rain. I push the alarm another half an hour. No way I’m biking anywhere today. It’s still dark and still raining at 8:30. There’s homemade hot cocoa mix in the cupboard from the office white elephant, and it would be nice to settle down with a cup. No time for that. I shower, the water fills the tub a quarter of the way and I really should use the other half of that bottle of Liquid Plumr. I take the alley to the Red Line though I know that’s a bad idea. There is a lake. My shoes are soaked. It’s raining so hard that my jeans are soaked too in spite of the umbrella.
     This is like the monsoons in Chennai, and that time we got so wet on the sports field that they canceled school so we wouldn’t have to sit there, wet, all day. 
     But no one’s canceling rehearsal, though Z is soaked too. A and E arrive, and we move at less than full speed with one person missing. E and I rehearse choreographed intimacy as Z plays his ukulele in the background. As usual, I feel self-conscious. Perhaps I feel like a fraud. Perhaps I just don’t like being ridiculous. A conversation about how none of us has been in a really long-term relationship.

I arrive at work awkwardly early, and though it’s only noon, I am hungry. I heat up my noodles, with the frozen potatoes and mushrooms from Trader Joe’s, and eat while I read an article about the Democratic party’s flawed view of identity politics. I have already read too many articles about what’s going on at the border.
     I talk briefly with M, one of the new interns, who is from Mumbai, and is pleasantly surprised to hear that I am from Chennai. She describes the jitters she gets when she’s away from Mumbai for eighteen months like caffeine withdrawal. We dance around the word “home.” This doesn’t feel like the right place for that discussion, as people chatter over the chicken and pasta and vegetables behind us.
     I text L happy birthday, and then clock in. My backpack has gotten so wet that even my lanyard feels clammy when I hang it round my neck.

J asks me to come up with an incentive for the fundraising campaign coming up next month. Sitting around like this, the cold seems to have sunk through a few layers of skin below my jeans. 
     Suddenly, there is a new half-price promotion on tickets and we have to come up with a script to sell it and everything becomes a mad dash to 5 pm, when the calling shift will start. I clock out for my half-hour break, go down to the box office and chat with K and S for a little while, then stare at my phone in the break room. I text N and we decide to see Ocean’s 8 next week. I start an eight-hour Herbology class in Hogwarts Mystery and play until my energy runs out. My energy feels like it’s running out in real life too. I am still cold. I clock back in at 4:40 and help with final changes to the script. We go over it with everyone and then get on the phones.
     I find this transition hard to make today. I have spent most of the last four hours figuring out how to keep the cogs spinning, and now I am a cog. People hang up on me once, twice, thrice. I start to wonder about whether it is just me and my accent and my audible foreign-ness. I stop myself. That is never a comfortable train of thought. Between calls, I read about the World Cup matches. Argentina lost to Croatia. Croatia? I text K happy birthday too. B tells us about a true-crime series on Netflix in which a woman who was supposedly pushed down the stairs to her death by her husband was really attacked by an owl. They found owl feathers in the lacerations on her scalp.
     I eat a bowl of palak paneer for dinner.
     There’s nothing much to distract me on Facebook. Everybody is outraged about I.C.E and the new border legislation and the jacket Melania wore to a detention center. I feel too cavalier thinking this, but the greyness of the day and the coldness of my legs has made everything seem hopeless. I can hear the strain behind the cheerfulness in my voice, as I say, “Hi my name is Rukmini and I’m calling from…” again and again. The Bulls have chosen Wendell Carter Jr. with the number 7 pick.
     We make our last call at 8:55 and I clock out at 8:56. My jeans are now dry from knee to mid-calf.

When I reach my building, I see that a book has arrived in the mail. Finally, I go into my apartment, stop on the doormat, take off my shoes and socks and examine my feet.
     The tips of my toes are white. The skin is peeling off my soles. It has raised itself up in an amoebic formation, like a hollow blister. I hobble around on my toes and heels so I don’t drop petrified skin on the floor. I wash my hands and pull on dry pants. This would have been a relief, but I am too distracted. My feet remind me of specimens in glass bottles in the biology lab.
     The squeezing of the skin peeling off sounds like plastic. Perhaps this is where they got the idea for Saran wrap. What is revealed looks raw and hurts a little. I hobble to the bathroom to wash my hands again. I can feel a current of air on the newly-exposed soles of my feet.
     I was going to write, but I am too shaken by seeing hidden parts of my body. I will turn on The Office instead for background noise.
     The theme song is playing when I notice the book I abandoned on my desk. It’s in one of those vacuum-sealed envelopes. I cut an end off and peel the packing skin away. 
     The book is called The Body. That, and the skin I have peeled off my feet, is all I have left of this day.


Rukmini Girish

Rukmini Girish usually writes about performance, identity and the intersections between those topics. She earned an MFA in nonfiction from Columbia College Chicago, and was named a Luminarts Creative Writing Fellow for 2018.



JESSIE KRAEMER

I was a moose for three hours. I had to move the puppet from my right hand to my left, that's how long I was a moose. The kid would put the little duck whose eyes popped out into the mouth of the moose puppet and say this time it'll taste like coffee and yogurt and bananas and poop. I would be the moose and I would say, this duck tastes like coffee and yogurt and bananas and poop. And then the moose would barf a lot. The moose would barf for a long time. And then we would play hide and go seek with the duck and the moose for about an hour. And every time the duck would hide under the blanket. 
     I began to cry. The kid said you're just joking. I said I'm not. He said why are you crying. I said it's just been a really hard day. And he said would a hug calm you down. And I said yeah a little hug.
     I lifted up the moose. Why are you droopy? Why is the moose droopy? 
     The moose said I'm not droopy, I just woke up from a nap.
     All week he had had this running-away thing, so the plan was to give him a break space in which he could regain his composure before returning to class. It was called ‘the quiet room.’ The sound booth at the back of the theatre. But once he was in the quiet room, with the duck, with the moose, with me, he saw no reason to leave. If I suggested it he would scream and hit me. So he did not return to class. And so I did not return to class. Nor could I even reach out and grab his wrist if he began to run, which he did. Really, officially, I could only reach out and grab him if he was about to run into traffic, which he had done already on Tuesday. 
     In the room, I sat on the big block so the rest of the class and the other teaching artist could see us from the stage through the big window if they looked. On stage they were in the magical underwater world.
     I didn't get to play the pirate today. I saw the other teacher Sydney playing the pirate, standing like Sydney with Sydney's arms and Sydney's hands and a piano scarf around one eye. Through the window I heard Sydney's normal voice, and remembered my pirate voice, swab the deck, etc., how the children had called me a girl pirate, and how it was encouraging to break the glass ceiling on piracy, but that I had not thought of my pirate as being a girl at all. 
     I could see Sydney had two complete hands. There was no hook hand. The children on stage pointed back at the booth, through the window, to where I was. Ann Marie explained to them mutely that Sydney was the pirate today. They played the game where they caught the shark by standing in a circle. They relearned the parts of the ship. Bow port stern starboard.
     You're not paying attention and you let me die. The duck said to the moose. I fell and you didn't catch me and now I'm dead. 
     Down there I saw a boy scooting across the stage like a starfish. 
     I lifted up my moose. I thought of the day before when the kid was clinging to the second floor lobby railing. Where I had chased him, where he had run after being criticized in front of the others for some mild classroom transgression. He clung. He looked at me and asked, what would you do if I hurt myself? What would you do if I jumped?
     Sydney who had run up behind me was quiet. I don't remember if I lifted up my palms. I did not say anything out of respect for the question. Which came to me as very wise and very direct and very honest, from this very wise, direct and honest and important place. The kid, who was not trying to deceive or push around or manipulate, was just trying to, as grandly, as simply as possible, as earnestly, communicate the very deep feeling.
     All of it was clarifying to hear aloud. Clarifying, even not knowing what was going on with his family, his brother, his single mom, with any adult in his life or any child, any event or environment. It was clarifying to know that in that moment it was of greatest necessity that I look in his eyes, clinging to the steps railing, and hear his question, and see him see me hearing him. And I didn’t say anything, these also being my questions.
     After the eternity of moosing, class is over for the day. I leave the quiet room. I walk with our full class out to the patio for pickup. The kid is at the front of the line. Riley is close behind. Riley says all her gs as ds. Oh my dod, she says. She beams, holding her lunchbox with both hands. She says, I know what my phone number is going to be when my mom dies: it's going to be my mom's phone number. 
     Walking home after work, I remember my morning in reverse. How I walked down the hill past the big red and white tower. How there was no group of strangers waiting at my first crosswalk. How I looked up to realize how many wires there were, for the bus zipline, the traffic lights.
     And how this morning leaving the back alley gate I almost stepped into the path of a Charlie's Produce truck. How the driver had a little fear in his eyes along with the yellow vest. How it felt warm to warrant concern.
     It will be the case tomorrow that we try to make the quiet room less of an attraction, to encourage the kid to rejoin his peers in the magical underwater world, in the drama camp that he has paid for. My supervisor Laura will sit in the room, and I will prepare to be the pirate on stage. Three minutes in, Laura will respectfully decline to play the moose. And after hitting Laura, he will run out of the room, out of the theatre, out of the building, and out to the sidewalk where a third party will see him and file a formal complaint against us for mismanaging a child. He will be ushered gently to the office where he will throw two chairs and inexplicably demand orange juice after seeing cans of tangerine San Pellegrino. I will not be the pirate. I will lean against the green wall outside Laura's office, trying not to hate myself and listening to the kid navigate, quite deftly, the unknown path towards what he doesn't know he wants.
     For tonight, however, I live in ignorance of this escalation. 
     When I get home, I find on my bedroom floor a loaf of bread that has been carved by small bites, really gently, like the beginning of a canoe from a solid piece. I set it in the compost. The dog pushes open my door when I’m nearly asleep. I leave the light on low for a while.

—Jessie Kraemer

Jessie is an essayist and TEFL teacher. She graduated from VCU where she worked on staff at Blackbird



ALEXA WEINSTEIN

What Happened on June 21, 2018 in Stinson Beach, California

At 5:17 a.m. I’m having my 4 a.m. wake-up a little late, because we all stayed up to watch Trading Places. My teenage nephew has gotten way into movies and had never seen it. There was a lot more showing-naked-titties-for-no-reason than anyone remembered, a woman getting groped by Jim Belushi as a funny ha-ha joke, that very disturbing gag where The Bad Guy is getting repeatedly raped by a gorilla, and Dan Aykroyd in blackface. WTF? Also, his relationship with the Jamie Lee Curtis prostitute character is super weird and makes no sense. The casual sexism and racism of the 80s! Come on, it’s no big deal, lighten up. We’re just having fun. But my daughter is the youngest kid here and she’s already heard me talk about all these things a million times so there we were, wading through all this exhausting old crap but then laughing really hard anyway, because Eddie Murphy is fucking hilarious.
     I can’t sit all the way up in this bottom bunk bed and I’m holding an ice cube against my sunburned nose. Can’t remember if it does anything but it feels right. The burn looks better than I feared but hurts worse. Really it’s the whole left side of my face. I was vaguely aware that the hat wasn’t covering anything when we were lying on our sides on the beach, but I was having such a great conversation with Judy. We hardly ever get to see each other, and after she has the baby she won’t be able to talk like that, uninterrupted, for years. I wonder if she knows this.

At 10:34 a.m. I’ve been to the beach with my mom and the dogs. It was gorgeous and blue but there was a guy who stopped and immediately began mansplaining dogs to us, telling my mom about her own dog. Either of us could have been the world’s foremost authority on canine behavior, and he would never have found this out. Then another guy drove up in a buggy to tell us we were on the no-dogs part of the beach. Our conversation was somewhat hampered by these events. Also, I had a worry that I couldn’t let go: what if an important call about the exciting new possible job had come in this week, and I had gone days without returning it? I knew I wasn’t getting calls, but it turned out I wasn’t even getting messages. Wrong network, had to call voicemail but didn’t know the PIN, blah blah blah. Long story short, no one called. I did not make a terrible mistake and ruin everything.

At 1:54 p.m. everyone has gone into the water and given me a minute alone. I’ve been paying attention to the difference between fourth graders and fifth graders: my niece and her friend want to lie on towels in the sun and talk quietly, daring each other to go up to people and do things, while my daughter still wants to play in the sand. And to the changes in my sister’s voice when she’s talking about different parts of her life. And to the warmth of the sun on my skin. I hate that I have to be vigilant and defensive toward something I love so much. See above re: 80s comedy.
     I wish I could paint this, these bands of color, starting at my feet and going out and away.

Large expanse of light sand, not white but very pale, in small mounds and the color has a round feeling also, the whole band sort of rolling and spreading and filling up the bottom of the frame

Thinner strip of dark sand, a more diagonal wedge, wavy at its borders and dotted with bodies

Band of alternating stripes: the white of the breaking foam and the iridescent gunmetal blue of the shallows, reflecting the light of the sky as it bounces back up from the sand, freshly sheened

The curling wave, green rolling into white, one end always building as the other end is crashing

Solid field of color, almost as thick as the band of white sand, a green-blue that’s apparently between teal and ming but that must have been uniquely invented today, everywhere sparkling

Very very thin charcoal stripe at the very very end of the green-blue and growing out of it, pencil

Slightly thicker bright stripe that glows just like the light around a person in front of a dark wall

Hazy purple-grey stripe, just the height of the low cliffs on either side, a paradoxical perfect inch

Grey smoke rising, thinning and dispersing up and up, as color at this point becomes movement: shimmering columns, the physical lifting and wincing of your eyelids, tipping back your whole head, speechless reeling, and now there’s no word for it but sky blue, all the way out of the park.

At 5:38 p.m. I’m showered and so happy to be in black jeans and a green hoodie, my back to the sun in an outdoor chair in the courtyard of this house, in the quiet before we make dinner. When a house isn’t yours but you aren’t a real guest either, the host absent and unknown, it’s like a public garden or a museum. You are just passing through, slowly observing.
     I’ve been reading this book by Carlo Rovelli, a theoretical physicist: The Order of Time. He’s saying we have this idea that there’s such a thing as a universal present, a moment in time that exists throughout the universe, a now that has meaning everywhere. This feels natural and intuitive, but in fact it’s an idea we all got from Newton. Just this one guy, with this incredibly influential idea. But in fact, there’s no such thing as a present moment that spreads throughout the universe. If my sister is on another planet light-years away and I ask what she’s doing right now, the answer is that the question makes no sense. There’s no way to answer it, because there’s no way to translate my now into her now. We have different nows that can never be reconciled. The present time of the Earth is just a bubble that hovers around our planet; no other part of the universe shares our now in any meaningful way. And if you scale this down, it applies on all the smaller levels. Even when my sister is across the room, what she’s doing “right now” from my perspective is actually what she was doing when the light that’s reaching me now left her body. The timescale has grown tiny but the same thing is still true: my now is not her now.
     I keep thinking about those kids separated from their parents at the border, and how their present is related to the present of these kids, in this family, right now. By the time the light travels from those locked-up kids to me and my mom and my sisters, refracted through the news, we are learning about a moment in which those kids are no longer living. Something new is happening to them now, something better or something even worse. And then the received signal bounces off of us, is translated through conversation—the words we say and the words we don’t, the images we pass on or keep to ourselves—and it’s this reflected light that reaches our own children. We protect them from even the story of it. The full horror. The locked-up kids and our free kids are living in entirely different frames of reference, entirely different times. You could call it a parallel universe, a different fabric of spacetime. You wouldn’t be wrong.
     But it’s also true that those kids and these kids are living in the very same time, a shared present. Their fates are deeply connected. You can’t care desperately about one while hardening your heart to the other. And even when the monster who locked up the kids changes his mind, they are still where they are, facing what they’re facing. Locked in their present, which forever carries the imprint of its own past. The now that we do share will always drag the weight of these events behind it, even as it slides forward into its future. From other parts of the universe, this story is ancient history or a dystopian future novel. But inside the bubble of this planet, this story belongs to everyone who shares the same collective experience of the present, even if that collective is made up of billions of present moments, slightly out of sync. Those kids are crying right now. They don’t understand what’s happening right now. No one will let them talk to their mom or dad right now. A scary man in a uniform is locking them up right now. Right now. Right now. We are checking our children’s foreheads, making them eggs, putting pillows under their injured legs, asking what they want to drink right now. Right now. Right now.

Around 9, after doing some dishes, I went outside and listened to what people were saying around the fire.
     Did you know we both went there? Giants in the front, let me hear you grunt.
     What are designer drugs?
     She literally hates him. She thinks he smells weird.
     Does anybody have a stick?
     I would make him laugh until he died. And I’d be a cool stepmom.
     Ew, you’re biting it!
     He’s kind of a douche-rocket, but I seriously love his clothes.
     This is the first night we could do this. It was so windy I couldn’t even get a match lit.
     I want to do something simple again.

Past 10, I’m the only one left out by the fire. Cold back and hot, hot shins. I sort of want music but already have the fire in one ear and the ocean in the other. Fingers of orange flame are curling around the log in front from below, gaseous purple shooting up from the log behind, bending over to slap the butte on top. Licking it all over.
     Fuck it. I’m going for music in one ear and fire/ocean in the other. I want it all. What will the random bring?
     At 10:26 p.m., I am listening to “Die Tonight” by Ty Segall.
     If someone could take me through a montage of every time in my life I’ve sat watching logs burn down—if I could enter each scene and spend one minute in her body and her head and briefly become her again, look around and take a deep breath, even the scenes where I was engulfed by shame or utterly heartbroken or hating my own fucking guts—right now I feel like I would give up my right to see all other movies forever, just for the chance to see that one.
     Van Morrison, “Virgo Clowns.”
     I’m tired and my eyes are stinging madly from sunscreen and overexposure and smoke, but I can’t leave the fire yet.
     The Velvet Underground, “What Goes On.” I would never lie about something like this. Sometimes you just get lucky.
     The log in the back has become an owl with the craggy face of a man. The one in front has a carrying handle. Actually the whole front log is shaped like a pitcher, a beer stein. That final glorious minute of two guitars, and suddenly the man-faced owl has a burning hole in the exact shape of an ear, exactly where its ear would be. I shit you not.
     In a few minutes I’ll decide it’s time to go to bed, but first I’ll have to dump out a bunch of useless spatulas and use the jug thing that was holding them to douse the fire and bring in the s’mores stuff and douse once more for good measure and decide what to do with the gooey sticks and find my book and let my niece who’s recovering from knee surgery use the bathroom so she won’t have to wait around on crutches and take a spider out of the bathroom and decide it’s the same spider I took outside the night before and floss and brush and start to lie down and get up again to take out another, even bigger spider, because if my daughter sees this one, forget it, and by the time I actually crawl into that awkward bottom bunk, it will be 11:55 p.m. on the longest day of the year. I will lie there and listen to the raspy breaths of my most beloved person, a few feet above me. Under the same roof with these other beloveds, uniquely beloved to each other, everyone woven into this web with all of its damages and complications. I’ll be plagued by everything I wasn’t able to say, because how do you begin to say it. What if we—. How can they even—. So luckily, so unfairly, I will fall asleep within reach of my baby, safe as houses. As we sleep, all of our possible futures will be piecing themselves together. We’ll be inching forward, each of us dragging the cone of where we’ve been, breath by breath and hoping for the best.

—Alexa Weinstein

Alexa Weinstein is a writer/editor/teacher in Portland, Oregon. 



KATE MCGUIRE

Waking up is a struggle. We are both tired from the emotional exertions of the last few weeks. 
     The headlines on the BBC Today programme at 7am, when the alarm goes off, proclaim Trump’s executive order halting the policy of separating children from their parents when they arrive at the US border as “illegal” immigrants, and a story about a hospital in Hampshire accused of hastening the death of hundreds of patients through the deliberate over-use of opioid painkillers. 
     My partner’s mother, Olga, died on Sunday night, from cancer. She’s been in a hospice for several weeks, being given huge doses of multiple different painkillers in an only partially successful attempt to reduce her excruciating pain. The juxtaposition of that experience with today’s news makes me wonder what’s right, in what circumstances. When my cat was beyond treatment and living a life of no quality, we had him put to sleep. We were unable to do the same for my mother-not-in-law, despite her saying she wanted it, more than once.
     We eat breakfast in bed, as always. My partner, Matthew, reads his briefing notes for the day ahead and I skim-read the newspaper headlines. I can’t bear to do more than that, the news is full of such energy-sapping accounts of nasty human behaviour, reported in an overly simplistic way. It’s a relief when I get to the “lifestyle” section where I can read meaningless and unhate-filled articles about what swimming costume I should be wearing this summer and the latest celebrity movie project.
     We get up, shower, and get dressed. 
     Matthew goes to work and I address myself to my laptop. The urge to file and paint my nails takes over. I’m confused by someone posting on Facebook that today is the beginning of longer days, until I remember she now lives in Australia. A connected world of polar opposites. Then, via Twitter - more displacement activity - I discover this essay project and here I am. I want to write. I try. But I’m aware of the lurking dark dread of how hard it is to do well, the relentlessness of the task, how high the possibility for failure. I try to put those thoughts into a dark cupboard with a locked door but they keep escaping. 
     This project gives me a focus, and I feel my spirits lift. I love the concept of a “day diary”. I keep a journal most days. It’s supposed to support my professional development (I even wrote a dissertation once about how that was supposed to work) but mostly it’s just random outpourings of whatever is in my mind that day. This project gives purpose to today’s journal as well as casting a glimmer of possibility onto how I might use the raw material for future, as yet undreamt of, novels. 
     We are waiting for the birth of grandchild number two, the second great-grandchild of the woman who died on Sunday night. The first of many things she didn’t live to see. We were supposed to be taking her to Glyndebourne next weekend, a shockingly expensive, glorious experience, wafting around the grounds of a country manor house in a dinner jacket and a posh frock and laughing in a superior manner at the people who didn’t get the memo about the dress code. She won’t get to do this, or to hear superb opera in a beautiful auditorium. 
     A video conference call with my colleague on how to take forward our work together. She’s preparing to speak at a networking event this evening for women working in the digital economy and I’m off to the shops to buy a pair of black court shoes suitable for a funeral. 
     I fail with the shoes. 
     Matthew is home earlier than expected. We chat about nothing much, then I get down to some dull paperwork about the lease on our apartment building.
     I’m beginning to organise the pile of things I need for Olga’s funeral and an imminent holiday. It includes pairs of shoes I already own that are funeral-appropriate but not quite perfect. 
     Dying for a nap. Pardon the expression, in this week of death.
     A visit from another apartment owner in the building, joint director of our freehold company, to sign the accounts. 
     I cook supper while Matthew finishes his VAT return. 
     We watch the final episode of Patrick Melrose on catch-up. Benedict Cumberbatch is superb, as is the script. A surprisingly hope-inducing story.
     We wash up the supper dishes, then chat about some of the things we haven’t been able to share over the last few weeks because we’ve been sitting by a bedside waiting for death. Me writing this essay, writing generally. Upcoming holidays. The beautiful summer weather. Preparations for Matthew’s Mum’s funeral. We laugh at how much she would have enjoyed the party we are planning, and cry that she won’t be there. 
     We go to bed and make love. We fall asleep. 

—Kate McGuire

Kate McGuire is a London-based leadership and life coach, founder of Fenner McGuire Ltd, and an aspiring writer.



MONICA GRAFF

Another Day in New York: June 21, 2018

It’s a dark and stormy morning, so we make love and then we make the bed. 
     As I brush my teeth, Chris gets dressed, even though his morning walk will have to wait. According to the AccuWeather app the rain is supposed to last another seventy-two minutes. So he goes upstairs to make a hot cup of lemon water and I queue up a Barre3 workout on my laptop. 
     My yoga mat, really a throw rug, sits between the cat’s food bowl and litter box, so when I’m in downward dog pose I get a strong whiff of Bosworth’s breakfast—before and after he eats it. As I follow along with Ronni, Bonnie, and that other gal who likes to “take it turbo,” I remind myself that I’m almost twice their age, so it’s OK if my carousel horse pose looks like that of a lethargic mare. 
     Afterward I shower and spray an assortment of styling products onto my silver hair, hoping for a hip and flirty effect. Seems silver is in now, so I’m grateful for the good timing. I look in the magnifying mirror searching for new wrinkles, then smear retinol cream all over my face and neck and even my ears, which lately have started to resemble dried apricots. Then I squeeze fifteen drops of Pure Kana CBD oil under my tongue and go upstairs for a banana.
     On the way I pass Chris in the living room staring at his iPad. (Note: the layout of our 173-year-old Greenwich Village apartment is strange. The bedrooms are downstairs in the former scullery, and the kitchen and living areas are upstairs on the parlor level.) Chris wants to know if our password for Amazon Prime has changed. These are the sort of things I can’t remember, so I go back downstairs to my office and open a computer file containing all my passwords, wondering why in the heck someone can’t invent a better way to protect one’s privacy.
     I text Chris from my desk: “Pword hasn’t changed.” He writes back that it doesn’t matter because he has decided to set up a new account for Alexa. Alexa is the AI gizmo he’s ordered to do stuff inside our apartment like turn on the TV or change the radio station. At least that’s what I think it does. I’m not really sure.
     “Why a new account?” I type. While I’m waiting for his reply, I stand up and start doing jumping jacks because today’s workout, selected by someone or thing named Tiffany at Barre3 online, was a mere ten minutes long. Tiffany sends me emails that say things like “You’re crushing it!” after I stream one of the exercise videos. But, come on, if an entire workout takes only ten minutes and includes zero cardio, am I really crushing anything? I don’t think so, Tiffany.
     While I clap my hands over my head and breathlessly count to fifty, Chris’s reply pops up on my computer screen: “I’m setting up a new account so hopefully she won’t call me Monica.” I could make an issue out of this. Why shouldn’t Alexa use my name instead of his? But instead I send a laughing face emoji and close the laptop. It’s time to meditate and then work on the collection of essays that thus far I’ve only talked about.
     But first a cup of tea. While I mindlessly wait for the water to boil, my phone vibrates and lights up. It’s a message from an app I downloaded several months ago called WeCroak. It says, “Reminder: Don’t forget, you’re going to die.” I get five death-related quotations a day because, according to WeCroak, the people of Bhutan believe contemplating death five times a day brings happiness. I tap the app to find the following quotation waiting for me:
     “Begin at the beginning,” the King said gravely, “and go on till you come to the end: then stop.” —Lewis Carroll
     Does this bring me happiness? Hm, not yet. Maybe later. But it does seem like good writing advice.
     I take my cup of tea over to the old comfy chair where Bosworth is waiting for me. I put on my headphones, open the Calm app on my phone, and listen to the day’s guided meditation. It’s my seventy-fourth session since May 15, and today’s theme is “the habit of thinking.” The guide’s smiling voice speaks directly into my ear: “You don’t have to follow a thought just because it pops into your head.” 
     Interesting. Obviously there’s some truth to that statement, but I can’t help but wonder what Montaigne would have to say about it.
     After ten minutes of focusing on the space between my nostrils, I get up and do another fifty jumping jacks to pep up. The meditation guide’s magical-forest-fairy voice has made me sleepy and the day hasn’t even officially started. 
     I decide to eat my breakfast of yogurt and berries in the garden to get some relatively fresh air. I say relatively because the restaurant on the other side of our fence makes its own herb-marinated smoked bacon from scratch, and their vent points directly into our outdoor seating area. 
     As I watch a bee hover at the three-tiered water fountain I bought online a few weeks ago, I notice its paint is already peeling. I’ll have to write Home Depot about it, I think to myself, maybe even send a photo. Bosworth walks back and forth across my lap, dragging his tail over my bowl of yogurt as I ponder just the right word combination to convey my sincere disappointment in their product. 
     I go back inside to put my dirty bowl in the dishwasher and see that it needs to be emptied, so I turn up the radio and get busy. Ingrid Michaelson sings “I just want to know today, know today, know today,” and I sing along with her. “I just want to be OK, be OK, be OK ….”
     Uh oh, what’s happening? My eyes are welling up. Why? I sing louder and twirl around with forks and spoons in my hand.
     Still humming the tune, I go back downstairs to fix my hair, put on a little makeup, and get dressed. I look in the full-length mirror and see, once again, that my four-foot-eleven frame has become all boobs. They’re bigger and longer than ever, and my neck and shoulders pay the price, getting stiffer and more painful with each passing year.  I wonder if I should get a breast reduction. 
     I’ve had this idea before, many times, but I always talk myself out of it. Too expensive, too frivolous, too dangerous. I could die. Look at what happened to Kanye West’s mom. While I Google “New York breast reduction surgeons,” Chris comes into the bedroom to remind me that we have an escape room game reserved for three o’clock. 
     “What do you think about me getting my boobs reduced?” I ask. 
     “This again?” he says. “I thought you decided not to.”
     “Well, I’m reconsidering. How about this guy?” I turn my laptop screen toward him. “He looks like Mr. Rogers, and the testimonials from his patients are really good. One woman even said that ‘Dr. K— is proof that good people still exist.’”
     Chris shrugs. “I think you should do whatever makes you happy. I know if I had two heavy things hanging off of me, I’d find it pretty uncomfortable.” I remind myself that Chris can no better understand what it’s like to have breasts than I can know what it’s like for him to have testicles. But, still, they both seem like design flaws.
     Later that afternoon at Mission Escape Games in Chinatown we sit in the over-air-conditioned waiting room while six little boys get debriefed on their game, Escape the Nemesis. A twenty-something employee with a blonde ponytail tells them that they’re about to get locked in a room together for one hour, or until they solve the puzzle and find the key that lets them out. One boy, who is probably six years old, says “Scary!” I agree. Six six-year-olds let loose in a room with no way out? What if they kill each other … or ruin the furniture?
     “Let’s go to the library instead,” says a boy.
     “Ew, no! The library is my nemesis!” says another one.
     While we’re waiting, my phone buzzes. I take it out of my purse and read the screen. “Don’t forget, you’re going to die.” I tap the app and read the quote:
     “A thing is not necessarily true because a man dies for it.” —Oscar Wilde
     A tall athletic guy wearing a T-shirt that says “Think you’ve got game?” comes over to us and I shove the phone back into my purse. He introduces me and Chris to our partners, Karen and Joe, who, it just so happens, have done sixty escape rooms in San Francisco, Washington, DC, Atlanta, Austin, and elsewhere. Chris and I have never been in an escape room in our lives. In fact, I’m not really sure what I’ve agreed to, but I take comfort in the fact that it seems to be a game for little kids too.
     We’re led down a hall to a room with a fake fireplace, some antique furniture, and a few pieces of art. On a chess table sits an empty bottle of booze and two glasses. Our experience is called “Escape the Hideout,” and the woman who explained the game to the little boys now explains ours to us. “The good Dr. Jekyll has been acting strangely for weeks and has gone missing. A crazy fellow has been causing chaos in town so you’ve been hired to investigate. Can you find out what happened to Dr. Jekyll before it is too late?”
     She shows us where to hang our belongings and tells us not to destroy the furniture. Then she locks the door behind her from the outside.
     While I bumble around the escape room looking for clues, Karen and Joe methodically rip the place apart. Karen finds a book with a highlighted passage. Joe finds a letter. Chris finds four transparencies with big black numbers on them. A big screen on the wall counts down our time. There are cameras watching us, and we can stand in front of the big screen and ask for up to three clues to find the key that will open the door and let us out. 
     I caress the underside of every piece of furniture like a DEA agent and finally find a few chess pieces in a drawer but nothing else. I wander around trying to look like I’m working an angle while everyone else has something substantial to work with. Finally, I just stare at a framed deck of cards on the wall. First I count the cards across, then down, then I start looking for patterns. What are the cards trying to say? 
     “Got it!” says Joe. He’s been standing behind me. “Put these numbers into the lock.” He calls out numbers from three cards and Chris dials the tumbler on a padlock securing a chest drawer. Inside the drawer sits the key to our freedom and we escape eighteen minutes early. 
     So much for solving a mystery this afternoon.
     Walking down Broadway in the hot sun, I yell above the car horns and delivery trucks to Chris a few steps behind me. “That sucked! I hate games like that. Don’t ever take me to one of those stupid things again. I felt like an idiot in front of those people!” 
     Chris defends the game, emphasizing that it was our first try and that Joe and Karen have been at it for who knows how long. “Besides,” he says, “I thought you were really good at it.”
     “What? How could you possibly think that? I stared at that stupid deck of cards on the wall for practically the whole time while Scully and Mulder were busy finding glow-in-the-dark passwords in the paintings and symbols on the wine bottle.” 
     Just then we came upon a site my mind could hardly make sense of: an young cat in the middle of the sidewalk staring up a tree, right there in Chinatown, with an ambulance screaming past her and people stepping over her tail. Two kids and a dad stopped to pet her, but she didn’t move a paw. She just sat there and stared at whatever she had treed. So focused and full of purpose.
     I want to be like that cat. 
     On the next block we stop in at Timbuktu del Blaoui on 2nd Avenue. I try on a Muslim-style tunic, fondle bowls made of Moroccan cedar, and talk to the shop owner, a slim gray-headed man, about the cat we saw and the neighborhood and the wonders of Morocco. He recognizes that Chris’s bracelet was made by a Scandinavian Sami and they talk about Norway, Iceland, Finland, and the Faroe Islands. 
     Next we decide on a whim to pop into the Pageant Print Shop on East 4th Street. It’s a funky little store filled with antique maps and illustrations. But this shop owner isn’t like the other one. She demands I hand over my big green bag, stashes it by the counter, and gives me a surly look. I ask if this is her store and she answers “maybe.” 
     As I flip through the prints arranged like albums in a music store, I can feel the woman’s eyes on me. I feel guilty, like I’ve stolen something. “How long have you been here?” I ask. She licks her thumb and works her way through a stack of yellow receipts. She’s a big woman, far too large for the stool she’s sitting on, and from her platform at the back of the narrow shop, she looks like one of the barristers in the Vanity Fair prints hanging on the wall. Without looking up, she says flatly, “Since noon.” 
     “Amazing,” I say. “You’ve accumulated quite a collection of maps in just six hours.” Then I force a fake-sugar smile to hide my irritation at being treated like a street urchin. I keep flipping through the animal prints and find a drawing of a lion’s lung from 1847. I pull it from the stack and examine it. Would it be too weird to hang over my desk?
     I look at the woman and see that her eyes have now narrowed. Apparently she doesn’t find me funny. I carefully return the print to its place and ask for my bag. This is the first rude New Yorker I’ve met personally since we moved here from Montana in April. 
     As Chris and I step out into the street, I stand tall and try to shake her off. “If she weren’t such a bitch, I’d probably buy something from her store. She had some cool stuff.”
     “Oh, that’s just her schtick,” he says. “Don’t take it personally.”
     “I thought schticks were supposed to be funny.”
     “Maybe it’s funny to her.”
     “Didn’t seem like it.”
     Over a Red Tears Martini (Raspberry Tea Gin, Saint Germain, lime juice) at Misirizzi across the street, I think about sending her some flowers anonymously, just to cheer her up. That would be the right thing to do to rebalance the karma of our testy little interaction, I think. But then I decide against it. I can’t imagine she would find a random act of kindness delightful. It would probably only piss her off. Whatever has made that woman so bitter isn’t going to be fixed by a bouquet of buttercups.
     I take a sip of martini and my phone vibrates on the bar. A message from WeCroak appears: “Don’t forget, you’re going to die.” I open the app.
     “Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.” —Mahatma Gandhi
     I decide that’s a good quote, but I feel like I’m doing these things already. Or trying to. Maybe I should try harder. Maybe I should write this message to accompany that termagant's bouquet of buttercups.
     Chris doesn’t like the vibe of Misirizzi or the cigarette smoke that’s wafting in from the sidewalk, so we leave the bar to have dinner at Cotenna on Bedford Street. We have to sit at the bar because the entire restaurant, including the bar, is the size of a single-car garage. Which means I can clearly hear the people sitting next to me, despite my being hard of hearing.
     “My family is relatively wealthy in Peru,” says the man who looks young enough to be the son of the woman he’s talking to. When I casually steal a look at her, I see she’s playing with her short silver hair and beaming at him. She’s wearing a gold band on her wedding finger but he’s not. I look at the hardcover book sitting between me and the man. It's titled Sociología something or other. Are they colleagues? Is she a professor and he her student? When the bill arrives they pay separately.
     On the way home, Chris and I walk down MacDougal Street past Café Wha? and the Comedy Cellar. Chris says he’d take hanging out on MacDougal any day over hanging out on Broadway and Times Square. He says Broadway’s full of a bunch of white middle-class tourists. I say MacDougal’s full of pukey NYU students, plus those tourists. Chris insists I’m oversimplifying. I accuse him of the same.
     We debate the not-so-finer points of our argument as we stroll through Washington Square Park in the dark. Under the big white arch, now aglow in blue light, a black man croons “When a man loves a woman.” He’s belting his guts out into a wireless microphone and he sounds good. Another man skates by him, nude except for a loin cloth and a royal blue cape, holding a boom box that blasts a disco song I recognize but can’t quite place.
     Chris grabs my hand as we cross over to Fifth Avenue. His hand is warm and strong and comforting. My phone buzzes inside my purse but I don’t take it out to look at it. I know what it’s going to say. 

Monica Graff 

Monica Graff spent two decades editing scholarly monographs for university presses before she decided to put down her red pen and pick up a black one. These days she spends her time exploring the world with her husband—which she blogs about at postmarksbygraff.com—and writing essays about things that make her say "What's that about?" She splits her time between the off-the-grid wilderness of northwest Montana and the very on-the-grid jungle of New York City.



TED SIMPSON

My Place in the Universe: June 21, 2018

I woke up at 8:57 AM today. Another day. Another gift. At 9:30, I had breakfast with my daughter at a greasy spoon called Chick-a-Dee’s. We had a conversation about her job, her promotion to shift manager, and her apprehension of a shoplifter. The ham, eggs, and toast were spectacular.
     After breakfast, I returned home to prepare for a writers’ retreat at a place called “Cirenaica,” or “Siren of the Seas,” near a land-locked Wisconsin town over 1,000 miles from the nearest ocean. I spent the next hour or so going through my collection of half-written short stories in order to find a project to work on in a cabin out in the woods.
     When my pile was gathered, I called a U.S. Army soldier-friend of mine and made plans to meet him later that night before he deploys to Syria. Next, I made another call to another friend of mine who wants me to work with him in the estate planning business. The last call of the day was made to the Minneapolis VA Hospital to refill my prescription for statins.
     By mid-afternoon, I was on the way to the library to print and organize my half-finished short stories and check my e-mails one last time before heading out for Cirenaica.
     When I left the library at 3 PM, I made a quick stop for some beer. The weather was warm and sunny and perfect as I drove the ten miles to the writers’ retreat. By 4 PM, I had arrived, and after brief intros, we ate ribs for dinner and dug right in. The group of 11 set the stage for the days to come before I left for my sunset viewing spot.
     Every year, I watch the sunset from the exact same spot, marking the time and location of the sunset on the horizon. On December 21, I will return to the exact same spot to watch the sunset once again, noting the difference in the time and the 23-1/2 degree change in the sunset’s location. Tonight, at 8:55 PM, the sun will set at its’ northern-most point, just to the left of a water tower. On December 21, the sun will set at approximately 4:30 PM, just to the right of a cell phone tower. These semi-annual observances help to ground me and give me a sense of place within the universe at a specific point and time.
     When the last of the sun’s rays vanished at about 9:30, I went to meet my U.S. Army soldier-friend to say goodbye. We met at a bar called The Joynt where we watched the Milwaukee Brewers beat the St. Louis Cardinals 11-3. 
     Before going to sleep sometime south of midnight, I reflected on the day’s events. I felt gratitude for being able to savor the solstice, which always serves as reminder that the most sacred piece of ground is the square foot beneath my feet.

—Ted Simpson

Ted Simpson is a man who walks the earth, both amazed and stupefied by the mystery of it all.



STEFANIE NORLIN

I wake up around 7:30 when my husband brings my daughter into our bedroom. She’s just turned one and doesn’t like to nuzzle against me anymore unless she’s tired or getting new teeth — this morning is no different, and I find myself missing the heaviness of her body on my chest. My husband puts my daughter down in the play yard next to me and turns on the Praise Baby dvd to keep her occupied until I get up to feed her a bottle. “Happy anniversary,” I say to him. Psychedelic spirals and gummy-toothed babies flash on the television screen behind him in time to the children’s worship music. I kiss his cheek. We married on this day in 2014 at a historic church in West Village (Detroit, not New York) and when I smell clover in the summer, I still think of it.
     After he leaves for work, I lay in bed for a few minutes and quickly scroll through Facebook, Instagram and my email to check my notifications. I roll over and pet our sleeping dog—he’s curled up on my husband’s pillow already, his snout buried deep into the crevice between the mattress and the wall. I sort through junk messages and coupons, weekly newsletters and electronic billing notices, reminding myself to unsubscribe from some of these email lists later. I place my phone back on my nightstand and go into the kitchen and make a bottle. As it’s warming, I prepare myself a cup of coffee in the Keurig (no sugar, a splash of coconut creamer) and then bring them both back to the room with me. I set the coffee aside so I can sit on the edge of the bed and cradle my daughter as I feed her: I brush her hair to the side and kiss her flushed cheeks and remind myself to give her a bath before we leave tonight.
     After a few minutes of indulgence, I place her back down in the play yard and attempt to write while the DVD continues to play. My daughter walks back and forth along the side of the pen, whining piteously for me. “Just one more minute,” I say. I stop writing for a minute to pick up the pacifier that she’s thrown over the side of her play yard, inspecting it for dog hair before putting it back in her mouth. Like most mornings, I feel torn between wanting this time before work to write and wanting to hold her, so I do a little of both. Neither feels like I’m doing enough. I take a sip of coffee, relieved that it isn't cold yet.
     I shut my laptop and pick up my daughter to change her diaper before carrying her into our playroom around 8:30. She's fascinated by anything that makes noise and chooses a pair of cymbals to clang against the table. I go through my work email. My daughter crawls across the carpeting to where I am and paws at the computer keys. I shift her onto my lap away from my computer and read a passage about forgiveness from St. Augustine that I’ve found in my personal email. “We love our enemies, and we pray for them,” he writes. “It is not their death, but their deliverance from error that we seek.” I spend much of my morning thinking of the wisdom laced in those words and wonder: if not death, what else have I wished upon the people I didn’t like?
     My daughter and I move to the laminate kitchen table and the dog follows us, hoping to catch dribbled food from the high chair. I feed my daughter peaches and cream oatmeal while taking bites of my bagel. She screeches for more when I finish, and I’m not sure if she’s hungry or just bored. I start singing "If All of the Raindrops" to her and listen as she hums along in her high chair. She’s just started to do this, and it surprises me every time.
     I begin preparing my out of office package for those who will be covering me tomorrow and Monday at work while I’m on a trip to Kentucky with my family. I pull down files from the cloud, update performance tickets and write brief project descriptions. When my daughter starts to cry, I hand her a book about baby farm animals. My sister arrives with her daughter in the late morning so I can run out to a doctor’s appointment. I kiss the top of my daughter’s blonde head. I make a bottle and put it in the refrigerator before I leave.
     The traffic on the way to the office is light, and I arrive only five minutes late. I sit in the waiting room for much longer than that before they even take me back to the room. While I’m waiting, I try to read a novel by Marilynne Robinson and can’t help but wish that I enjoyed it more than I do. I scroll through Instagram on my phone to pass the time instead.
     I return home around lunchtime and make my sister and I scrambled eggs and kale chips to eat. Then, I continue writing content for a new web release later this summer. My daughter is still sleeping. Between projects, I lay on the floor next to my niece and pump her legs like a bicycle. My sister and I talk about the books that we are reading and what we need to buy for groceries. They leave soon after. My daughter wakes up from her nap and looks at more books in her high chair while I call into a two-hour working session for my job. I multitask while listening on the phone: I try to put my daughter down for another nap; I answer more emails and continue writing material for this summer’s new release; I offer my input during the meeting.
     When my daughter won’t sleep any longer, I put the Praise Baby dvd on again while I continue working, and I feel a twinge of guilt that she’s watched so much television today. After the phone conference, I follow up on more emails to prepare for my time out of the office. I find out we might be changing desks at work. I ask my manager if he can cover a meeting for me while I’m out of the office the next day. He agrees, and I log off my computer for the day around 5:30 in the evening.
     My husband comes home from work then and leaves immediately to take our dog to be boarded for the weekend. This time, he doesn’t kiss me before he walks out the door, and I find myself missing the way his beard scratches my cheek. I snack on blueberry cobbler and drink La Croix. My mom visits for a few minutes and tells me about the phonics teaching course she's taking for her job.
     After she leaves, I grab my yarn and crochet hooks and a few books for the weekend away, and then pack the rest of the things that we always leave for the last minute: pills and vitamins, my contacts, phone and Fitbit charging cords, bottles of water. I put my daughter in the high chair to feed her dinner before we leave for our trip. When she’s done, I change her diaper and put her into my favorite pair of pajamas: a footless zip-up sleeper with pink and green smiling jellyfish on it. My husband places her in the car seat, and we leave for Kentucky by 6:30.
     We listen to a Pod Save America episode from earlier in the week, and I crochet a loose summer vest for myself. The hosts discuss the family separation crisis at the border and when they play audio of the crying children, I start crying myself. We stop in Perryville to eat Chick-Fil-A for dinner. My daughter becomes restless, so I move to the back seat to be with her. I’m annoyed, but remind myself that it’s a long trip for her, that she just wants to be held, that she’s still here with me unlike the children living in detainment camps along the border. I stroke her hair and sing her Elizabeth Mitchell songs. She offers me her pacifier and laughs when I pretend to steal it. She tries to sing along with me, humming and squeaking at the right parts of the Choo Choo song. She giggles when I peek at her from behind her carseat. An hour later we pull into a rest stop about 80 miles from Cincinnati so I can move up front. My daughter falls asleep immediately. Somewhere along I-75 before we cross into Kentucky I fall into a light sleep, too. I can still hear the buzz of voices through the stereo and see flashes of street lamps through my eyelids and hear the crying children in the distance.

Stefanie Norlin

Stefanie Norlin is a Detroit-based writer, book lover and French fry connoisseur. Her essays and poems have appeared in Christianity Today, Under the Gum Tree, and the Wayne Literary Review, among other publications. She’s also received the Tompkins Award in both 2013 and 2016 for her creative nonfiction. You can learn more about her writing at stefanienorlin.com or find her on twitter at @stefanienorlin.



CASEY MCCONAHAY

Clubs

A set of golf clubs in the den at my mother’s house. My mother is starting lessons with friends. She bought the clubs for the lessons. They are teal clubs. The clubs match her golf bag.
     My mother is not a golfer. Neither are her children. I took group lessons for a summer because I wanted to play and lessons were cheaper than greens fees, but there were a dozen other children at the lessons, and we mostly kept to the practice green.
     After my brother moved to Texas, he took us to a pitch-and-putt in Austin. My sister wore her purse on her shoulder as we hacked through nine holes. My father won in the end. I was second.
     Now my mother is widowed, and she is trying new things. She’s in an investment club. She goes to Bible study. She’s taking dance classes. She could have borrowed some clubs but found the clubs at a store, and she bought them. Her friend bought some also.
     My own clubs are in the storage space above the garage. We couldn’t afford a new set of clubs, so I inherited the clubs from my grandfather—a man who also didn’t golf. Old age brought him dementia and an auction mania. He bought bizarre things at auctions—sometimes toys, sometimes saddles, sometimes cheap sets of golf clubs.
     The clubs are old and outdated. They were old when I used them. Boys at my golf lessons used graphite-shaft Pings, but my driver was wooden, and my irons weren’t matched. The shafts were long—much too long for a boy.
     Searching in the attic, I find a synthetic putting green and a bucket of range balls. I set these out with my golf bag. The bag is vinyl and dust-coated. There are tees in the bag’s pockets and balls I found in a creek in the city.
     I show the bag to my mother. She’s hoping to begin lessons soon, but it’s been raining all week, and she’s not sure when she’ll go. She’ll use the tees and the balls, but not the clubs in my bag. Her clubs are nicer than mine—her clubs all matching and teal—but she can afford some nice clubs. Her children are grown—self-sufficient. She can golf if she wants—can pay greens fees.
     It rains when I leave, and I drive home in the rain. I worry about the rainfall. There’s a crack in my concrete patio. I tried to patch the long crack. I hope the patch compound holds and doesn’t fissure and flake. I patched it last summer. Rain made it crumble.

Casey McConahay

Casey McConahay is a graduate of Miami University's MFA program. He lives in northwest Ohio.



KATELYN WILDMAN

Today began as leisurely as any other summer day. Summer used to mean hours of rehearsals, swimming, and whatever other trouble a high school student could get into. But now, two years through college, life is a little different. There are no more rehearsals; friends who used to join me for hours of fun are now all in different places. This year, my summer mornings include reading and playing with my dog, Stitch. This change took some getting used to, but now I do not mind it.
     At 8:22am this morning, I rolled over to see the sun already shinning through my windows. I went downstairs in my pajamas to eat my breakfast of sugary cereal, and turned on the television to see my favorite HGTV stars. Finished with breakfast, I replied to a few emails, checked my class schedule for next semester, and played a few of my favorite games on my phone.
     Stitch and I then went out on our weekly walk to Starbucks. He always knows exactly where we are going. I am convinced that if he ever ran away, Starbucks is where we would find him. As soon as the building comes into sight, Stitch begins to run towards it, drool coming from his mouth. I go inside to get my iced tea and his “puppuccino” (which is just a cup of whipped cream). He starts doing his little wiggle dance and inhales the whipped cream in about two minutes.
     When we return home, I busy myself with some of the household chores: laundry, dishes, and more laundry. Once that is done I go to the backyard where the temperature is a beautiful 85 degrees. I do some reading and wait for my parents to get home. It’s about 5:45 when we begin making dinner. Tonight it is pulled pork sandwiches, one of my favorites. My mom and I are in charge of cooking and my dad does the dishes. For dessert we make brownies. My dad and I argue over who gets to lick the bowl (I win). Then we watch The Incredibles, because we are going to go see the sequel this weekend.
     It is about 11:00 when I head upstairs to get ready for bed. As I lie here, I think about the events of the day. I think about things that make me as excited as a puppuccino makes Stitch. The list I come up with is: waffles, Disneyland, and the beach. I also think about what everyone else in the world is doing right now. I’m sure some people are ending their day just like I am. But other people might just be beginning their evening. Some people are on an exotic vacation; others are at home. As much as I love adventures, I today was my perfect day. 

—Katelyn Wildman

Katelyn is a student at the University of Arizona. 




Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 2: Sophfronia Scott • Lisa Levine • Samantha Bell • Jacqueline Doyle • Lynn Z. Bloom • Steven Church • Kristine Mahler • Stacey Engels • Matt Jones • Genia Blum

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. If you wrote something (it's not too late!), send us your work by the end of June (at the latest: earlier is better!) via this submission form (it's okay if you didn't RSVP before: the more the merrier).

—The Editors



July 2: Sophfronia Scott • Lisa Levine • Samantha Bell • Jacqueline Doyle • Lynn Z. Bloom • Steven Church • Kristine Mahler • Stacey Engels • Matt Jones • Genia Blum



SOPHFRONIA SCOTT

Woke up in my room at the Heldrich Hotel in New Brunswick, New Jersey minutes before my 5:30 a.m. alarm. I’m tempted to stay in bed because for the first time in days I don’t have to prepare to teach a workshop or deliver a keynote speech. But I rise because the room faces east with sweeping views and I hope to catch, as I have before, the blush of sunrise staining the sky. But this morning it’s cloudy. The few cars going by have their intermittent wipers on for a light rain falling.
     Check out time is hours away so I take my time and relax into the day. In the lobby I take a photo of the artwork I’ve admired but had no time before to study. The golden apples caught my eye and I found the women holding them enigmatic. 


     I walk down the street to the Starbucks where I order hot peach tea with two packets of honey. I continue my walk, under the tracks of the New Brunswick train station and alongside the Rutgers campus. I sip my tea and look in the window of the Rutgers Barnes & Noble. I like looking at the different styles of regalia wear even though the school is not my alma mater. A scarlet athletic top, long sleeve, does catch my eye. I decide the red is not my red—it’s too bright. Besides, the store is closed so I’m safe from the temptation.
     Back in my hotel room I pack my suitcase. The hosts of ESPN’s Get Up show keep me company on the television. They are speculating on the picks for the NBA Draft scheduled to take place that evening. I wonder how many more weeks before they switch over to talking about NFL preseason camps and how little they manage to talk about baseball despite that season being in full swing.
     When I’m almost done I text my friend and Harvard classmate, Palisa, to let her know I’m on my way. I’m stopping at her house, about halfway on my journey home, to drop off one of twelve Harvard chairs I acquired from my local library when they wanted to get rid of them. Palisa was one of the lucky ones in our class Facebook group to claim a chair when I said I was giving away the ones I’m not keeping for myself. 
     At Palisa’s house we eat freshly cut watermelon and a delicious soup she’s made from kale and white bean. I ask for the recipe. We have a lovely time sitting in her kitchen and discussing our teenage sons, our work, and the ongoing challenge of being introverts while still being “out there” in the way our work requires. She’s a lawyer; I’m a writer, speaker, and teacher. We discuss our upcoming college reunion, and the memorial service I’m helping to plan for our classmates who have died. I ask if she would like to participate in the service and she says yes.
     We go outside to take a photo of us with the chair. The sky has cleared and the sun is hot. My son’s class is having a field day and I wonder if he has remembered to wear a hat and sunscreen to school. Palisa asks her son to come downstairs to take our picture. When that’s done we say our fond farewells and I get back on the road in my minivan.



     I’m listening for the first time to my husband Darryl’s new CD, Fact from Fiction. I notice the opening songs are more country than his previous CD, while the tunes in the second half are more the Americana rock sound he’s known for. When it gets to the song he wrote based on Psalm 23 (The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want…) I feel grateful that he’s finally recorded it. He wrote it ten years ago for his brother-in-law Greg’s funeral, but the song never fit any of his other projects before this one. I’m glad more people will get to hear it now. 
     Crossing the new Tappan Zee Bridge feels like a mini-vacation, like you can feel the ages of the ancient Hudson River. It’s all I can do to keep my eyes on the road while taking in the lush green rolling hills. I can see why Toni Morrison chose to have a home nearby, in Nyack, New York. I wonder how much it would cost to have a river view house in her neighborhood.
     An hour later I’m back in Connecticut and it’s back to my world. I get off at my exit and have a few mini-errands to run. I stop at the bank and deposit my pay from the conference. I get the cash my son will need to pay for meals on the Boy Scout trip to Gettysburg he’ll leave on tomorrow. I stop at Castle Hill Chocolate for a treat, a s’mores candy bar, to celebrate the success of this week’s work.
     When I pull into my driveway I see the rose campion flowers have bloomed in my absence. Their winking pink faces welcome me home. I make a mental note to water and weed my flowerbeds over the weekend.




     I leave my suitcase in the kitchen and go into the living room to lie down for a nap. It seems I have barely closed my eyes when, in the next moment Tain, my son, is standing there, fresh off his school bus. He sits next to me and we talk about the field day, how the laser tag was lame and the huge blow-up slide kept tipping over. He shows me his middle school yearbook and he pages through it, pointing out the ten pictures he is in.
     He gets a snack and I open my laptop. I register him for a tech camp in August where he can learn game design and development. I check my email, order more water filters for the refrigerator.
     My husband comes home and we have a similar catch up conversation. There’s leftover pizza to eat so I don’t have to make dinner. I check my messages and Palisa has sent me her soup recipe, noting that she made a couple of her own additions: potatoes and a vegetable bouillon cube. That’s nice. Some people don’t do that and when you try to make the recipe, have no idea why it didn’t turn out like it did when you ate and loved it in the first place.



     I turn on the NBA Draft but only watch it for a few minutes. It strikes me that it’s not as interesting as the NFL Draft and I don’t really know the players they’re talking about. The Cleveland Indians have the night off so Darryl isn’t watching sports either. He, Tain, and I sit on our cushy comfortable sectional and read and talk and play video games and enjoy each other’s company. Suddenly I am tired, despite my earlier nap. I can’t keep my eyes open. I head up to bed, grateful to be home.

Sophfronia Scott

Sophfronia Scott is author of the novels All I Need to Get By (St. Martin’s Press) and Unforgivable Love (William Morrow) and the essay collection Love's Long Line (The Ohio State University Press/Mad Creek Books). She holds a BA in English from Harvard and an MFA in writing, fiction and creative nonfiction, from Vermont College of Fine Arts. She’s also co-written with her son Tain a spiritual memoir, This Child of Faith: Raising a Spiritual Child in a Secular World, published by Paraclete Press. Formerly a writer and editor for Time and People magazines, Sophfronia now teaches creative writing at Regis University’s Mile High MFA and Bay Path University's MFA in Creative Nonfiction. Her website is www.Sophfronia.com.



LISA LEVINE

I didn’t know, on the morning of June 21, 2018, that the day would gather the many-colored threads of a month in Chile into a describable bundle of moments bright and tightly bound. I knew it was my forty-first birthday. I knew it was the day of the indigenous Aymara population’s festival of the sun, the start of their new year. I knew my friend John Che, owner of the camper truck in which we traveled, would sleep past sunrise. 
     I would rise: when the alarm went off for the third time, I stepped down from the bed into the corridor. John coughed into a pillow as I tugged on long johns, zipped into hiking pants, layered on a shirt, another shirt, another shirt and finally a maroon, down jacket that a woman, unknown to me, had once returned to REI with the declaration she didn’t want it in her life anymore. 
     I walked. 
     From the town square of Cariquima, I hopped in the back of a pickup with four university kids, here from the nearby town of Iquique for the new year’s festival. Sociable strangers, we hid from the wind under hoods and blankets as the truck wound along dirt tracks. The driver parked below a hilltop with ancient stone walls that had served the ancients as houses and corrals. Local Aymara people and visitantes gathered on the hill, as a small fire of aromatic branches and broken wood boxes lit up under the lined hands and muttered words of a few men. Drawn into a loose circle by the drum-and-pan pipe tune, twenty or so bodies danced until the leaders, each with a bright sash across the body, turned to face the sun, now glinting over the eastern hilltops. 
     We held up our hands, palms open. I heard Spanish prayers, and myself wondered what to pray about to a sun god. My arms tired. I mimicked the others and spoke out loud, a real prayer. To my ears, American English in my rough voice sounded like a piece of bark torn off the wrong tree. The sun rose to a full orb, sky winking between it and the hilltops, and hands dropped. Two by two, pairs of men and women knelt on a woven rug, lifted up a pan of coals and water, touched the water with their fingers, and lifted their hands again to the sun. 
     Prayers over, the circle of bodies slackened into a party. I huddled with the university kids. Cristal beer went around; I refused, then accepted, and stuck the can in my pocket for later. Many drank, pouring a stream to the ground between sips. The mid-90s movie line for my dead homies floated past my mind, but there was no one to say that to; they all spoke Spanish and it alluded to the inescapable politics of difference that an experience like this softened. I’d joke to John, later; I didn’t want to be hard, up here on the hill with the sun warming a cold altiplano morning. Soon sash-adorned women spread out blankets. Onto their bright, woven folds, they slid cookies out of packages, sliced breads, set down mini-bottles of orange soda, and laid out other treats. One of the fire-makers said these items were offerings for us to share. I ate a piece of sweet bread and listened to speeches about Aymara culture and 5526, the new year beginning on this day. We circled up again, all of us now, and to close the ceremony, danced to the now-familiar beat of drums and pipes. My birthday forgotten, I shuffle-stepped with the eclectic crowd, by now recognizing this or that face by the lit-up eyes, the smile, or the wrinkles. 
     “The whole village celebrated your birthday,” John told me when I returned to the camper. To me, his idea seemed sweet and myopic. They didn’t know it was my birthday; we did. He did: he stopped my busy preparations for the day to give me a marzipan and wish me a happy birthday. To celebrate it with simple adventure, we’d planned a two-day, sixteen-mile backpack back to this pueblo, Cariquima, from one town north. Finding a ride took almost two hours, but we made it to Colchane, on the Chilean/Bolivian border, where the route—Trama Kala Uta—started. 
     After pan, tomato, avocado and cheese sandwiches, I decided that we didn’t want to walk the 200 yards to set foot in Bolivia, because a few weeks ago, when we tried that, out came three men with machine guns. In that instance, they were kind, but I didn’t desire social risk, being in South America for the first time. Instead, we stuck to the Chilean side, hiking past llamas and an Aymara church bell tower held together with dried mud, rocks, twigs, and bones. Veering toward a salt flat, we stepped over four or seven or twenty fences around fallow fields to stand on the salar. Its salt-hardened crust held up to my boots, and we followed encrusted paths where dirt and minerals bled through vast stretches of the white. After a long, flat hike, we reached hills dotted with more llamas. Llamas never failed to charm me, but John pointed out: “Those ones are sheep.” True; after a few paces a woman in a now-familiar Aymara skirt, leggings and bright sash appeared among them. She walked, then ran after her herd, as if 4000 meters in altitude did nothing to alter her stride. I thought about how her attire and physique, from a distance, made me assume she was my elder. 
     In recent road-trip conversation, John had said to me that we see ourselves very differently than others see us. I wondered about all the snapshots an Aymara shepherd might assign me, or us – crazy tourists. Silly Americans. Rich. Ragged. Old. Young. Anonymous. Strangers, passing through her land. 
     We held hands. Hiked on. 
     We hiked on, soon back on our route, and when we found a river it before sunset, it seemed like camp. The area felt pure, calm and isolated – flowing water in a little creek, creosote-like scrub, and an air of apartheid from civilization, without a shred of danger. This idyll, with its unknown stars and icy creek, heightened the illusion of familiarity provided by a rediscovered friend, in the midst of his own travels. John might have been the last happening of my day. Shivering, I craned my neck to take in the unfamiliar stars. He returned from a walk. We kissed. The earth accepted us, silent, inscrutable and beloved as ever. June 21, 2018, drew near its final hours, threads of akimbo experience dyed bright and spun together, already collecting themselves in words, as safe and snug as must have been those two humans sleeping under the moonglow of night in the southern hemisphere. 

—Lisa Levine

Lisa Levine writes realistic fiction about rebellious, tightly wound women and humans of all genders interacting with nature. Her stories have appeared or are forthcoming in Manifest West, The Tiny Town Times, The Furious Gazelle, The Southern Arizona Climbing Anthology, and Bird’s Thumb. Lisa earned a 2015 Pushcart nomination, and holds an MFA from the University of Arizona. Read more at http://cargocollective.com/alluvialdispositions



SAMANTHA BELL

The dogs refused to go out into a misting dawn rain to relieve themselves. They huddled under their green striped backyard awning instead. I coaxed. I cajoled. I explained impatiently that I had other things to do, that standing here while a scourge of mosquitoes made meals of me and my fingernails grew was not an option. They cared about as much as cats. 
     “Fine. Pee on the rug. Again. Not my dogs. Not my house.” One white face and one beige smiled back at me happily. Stupidly.  I don’t really recommend engaging me as your dog sitter. 
     On the way out, I accidentally brushed against a tangle of red and white leashes on the kitchen counter. Bruce saw. He lost his little yorkie mind all over the place. The yipping!
     I relented. We walked.
     Did I mention the misting rain? 
     Halfway down the block, it became a shower. We kicked it up to a trot. I am unafraid to say that I can jog without a sports bra just fine, as long as I flex my pectorals just so. Just so. For a block. Or nearly a block. That’s when Bonnie stopped to...you know what? Never mind. Skip it.
     Skip the drive home and the morning tasks of waking kids, pouring cereal, overlording the toothbrushes and correcting the bedmakers. Skip the twelve interruptions to a twenty minute yoga routine. Skip the math and reading practice. Skip the hour I spent editing pictures from our recent trip to Brazil. Skip the ramen noodles. The separated combatants and frustrated lectures about kindness and respect? Hop right on over those too. Let’s get to the good stuff. 
     At 3:30 pm, I mopped my hardwood floor. Then I polished it with some fancy lie of a floor polish that won’t pollute my home with chemicals but will leave a lingering smell of almond cookies. At 5 pm, I finished. The floor looked exactly the same. Exactly as 30-years-old, dented, scratched, splotchily faded, honey oak and weathered as it looked before. But it did smell of almonds. My children pressed their little noses against it and inspired. 
     We made a chair fort. The dining room chairs were already lined up just so. Just so. Jude dragged the green plaid blanket up from the basement. I fetched the woodworking clamps from our garage. Eden held the draped ceiling and walls taut while I fastened everything in its place. That was it. The next thing any of us knew, it was raining fire lava from the sky while snow fell and we had to get the babies into the shanty before we all died. We all nearly died. 
     Fast forward again. Through my husband coming home from work, past him making waffles for dinner.  Breeze right by pajama time. Pause for a moment with us in The Tale of Despereaux. Listen, if you will, as we finish the book. Think of Chiaroscuro and his wrongly-mended broken heart. Slurp the soup. Bathe in the darkness. Then in the light. Try not to laugh that the princess is named Pea. Travel on. 
     The children are in bed now. It is 9:20 and the solstice sunlight is a barely discernible smudge of charcoal above the trees. I am writing. The fireflies are out. I have buried the lede. Haven’t I?
     Thousands of insects are blinking in my backyard. I have yet to figure out if all of them are mating, or if some of these fireflies are from an imposter species, their luminous flickers a sexy deathtrap.  I try to count the seconds separating each glint of light. I search for a pattern. Glow. Dim. Illuminate. Obfuscate. There is so much movement in between.  
     "It’s just flashes that we own, little snapshots made from breath and from bone, and on the darkling plain alone, they light up the sky." 
     Jeffrey Foucault, a folk musician whose name only sounds like I’m referencing an obscure but important French philosopher, is definitely not singing about fireflies. His lyrics come to mind anyway. Flashes that we own. Snapshots. Alone. Light up the sky. 
     I have to know how this happens, so I spend a few minutes looking it up. Luciferase is the key enzyme in the fireflies’ bioluminescence. Liciferase. Lucifer? The Devil? I look that up too. One interpretation of the name Lucifer is “bringer of light.” Tell me that scientists aren't poets, that devils aren’t also gods.
     May I tell you what seems exactly right? That the world’s most efficient source of light is found on a beetle’s keister. That this light goes on, and then off, and then on. That the bearer of it dies after a short life of weeks. That the next generation hibernates and then slowly changes for months before each June’s rebirth of light in darkness. Darkness in light. 
     All of the lights in my house are off now. Only my laptop remains, an unnatural glare. I will snuff it out and walk to bed in a darkness that never finds completion in a city of a million people and billions of insects and a cacophony of little moments flashing past from a perfectly ordinary day.

Samantha Bell

Samantha Bell teaches writing at Sinclair Community College.



JACQUELINE DOYLE

The longest day of the year and already I can hardly remember it. Probably sunny because it’s almost always sunny in the San Francisco Bay Area, at least in the East Bay where I live. I raise the bedroom shade each morning to the sun-dappled front yard, a green profusion of shrubs and ferns sheltered by enormous trees, two of them, and the sun makes me smile before I even think about the day. But I’m finding it hard to breathe sometimes, often when I first get up, and the doctor does an EKG, which turns out okay, and then asks me, “Is there something you’re anxious about? Is that possible?” And I say, “Are you kidding? Have you read the newspaper lately?” But my calendar tells me that the doctor’s visit was Monday, not Thursday. An unremarkable Thursday. A long day. A sunny day. Another day of vacation from teaching. I eat a bowl of cereal with blueberries and drink two cups of coffee. I sit outside with a third cup, the sun warm on my shoulders, and read another essay in Ryan Van Meter’s If You Knew Then What I Know Now, which I’ll be teaching in September. I go back inside and spend too long at my computer, checking e-mail and then social media to see whether anyone has read my latest flash fiction, disappointed that no one seems to be online. Or they’re online checking the news sites instead. Wailing children. Melania Trump’s jacket: “I really don’t care, do u?” Is everyone crazy? “No hidden message,” the White House says, but there are hidden messages everywhere. What happens to the rest of the day? Dinner in the kitchen with my husband Steve and son Ben, burritos Steve brought home from The Burrito Shop. More reading, curled up on the couch. More time online, hunched over my computer. I can’t really remember. At least I’m breathing. 

Jacqueline Doyle

Jacqueline Doyle has recent essays in Zone 3, New Ohio Review, and The Gettysburg Review. Find her at www.jacquelinedoyle.com.



LYNN Z. BLOOM

Midsummer day/night

June 21, Summer solstice, the longest day and shortest night of the year is a day of beginnings and anticipations, reflective too of the season’s graduations and weddings. Currently, the promises of the solstice function also as an antidote to the deaths of four friends two weeks earlier.
     It is impossible to confine commentary, an interpretation of a day, any particular day, to the day itself. No day, not even James Joyce’s Bloomsday (only a week earlier), can be self-contained, just as no individual can be totally solipsistic. Nor can any written account of a single day, even an hour contain the totality of that experience—what were we thinking, feeling, remembering? What did we know beforehand to make sense of these events; what do we need to learn today to understand where we’ve been, where we’re going, the realities, and the dreams?
     Although Martin and I moved from rural Connecticut, where our house was surrounded entirely by trees, to an apartment in suburban Massachusetts, from every window of our perch on the wing of the building we can see only trees. So on June 21, when I first open my eyes to daylight, around 6:30, the sky spreading above the trees is layered with fluffy pink shredded wheat—striations I’ve never seen before.  When I look again, about a half hour later— Martin and I are preparing for our sixtieth wedding anniversary in July by celebrating early and often—the sky is a sheet of tranquil blue, soon filled with great swoops of fluffy white. 
     In rushing to get to an early morning Zumba class I am multitasking, as usual, making coffee, slicing a fresh peach onto yogurt while listening to the news, reading the paper, and commenting to Martin on the outrages du jour. NPR is reporting on Trump’s executive order to end the separation of migrant families at the border; the New York Times trumpets “Trump Retreats on Separating Families, but Thousands May Remain Apart,” commentary dissected throughout the day alternating with news of the intensifying trade wars. I worry while making the usual Zumba missteps—going left when everyone else is going right--not about my chronic lack of physical coordination, but about, as Paul Krugman opines today, the breathtaking “speed of America’s moral descent under Donald Trump . . . .  In a matter of months we’ve gone from a nation that stood for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness to a nation that tears children from their parents and puts them in cages. . . . [T]here is no crisis of immigrant crime. No, the real crisis is an upsurge in hatred—unreasoning hatred that bears no relationship to anything the victims have done. And anyone making excuses for that hatred . . . is, in effect, an apologist for crimes against humanity.” Yesterday we honored our friends’ passing with donations to humanitarian rescue organizations; today’s contributions will be to influence next fall’s elections and thus provide hope for the future of our tattered, battered beloved country.
     To keep my balance, not just in Zumba but in life, I need a cheerful alternative. Travel, with its gifts of eyes and hearts open to total immersion in new worlds, enables us “to become young fools again—to slow time down and get taken in, and fall in love once more,” as Pico Iyer nails it—especially if we turn off the Internet. But our trip to Northern Greece, Northern Macedonia, and Albania is seventy-seven days off, and is not yet radiating the treasured new perspectives, whatever they may be, and I look closer to home, to the annual Concert on the Green by the Wellesley Town Band, some forty five musicians from high school age on up. If Mark Twain can move his uncle’s farm five hundred miles from Missouri to Arkansas with no shame, I can certainly fast forward the June 20 concert four hours ahead to June 21, perfect weather. The band plays Sousa (of course) marches, a medley of forty-second motifs of famous songs from America the Beautiful to Hava Nagila, and a bouncy rendition of Beatles tunes. The audience—families, friends, townspeople, the occasional well-behaved dog—relaxes on blankets and folding chairs, many with picnics, atop a gentle slope that descends to the concert space. 
     Although we may be listening to the music, being videotaped by local TV, our eyes are on the broad green adjacent to the band, where playground equipment is scattered in abundance. Sturdy blown up creatures (pigs? horses?) to bounce on or drag around. A geodesic dome made of giant tinker-toy type struts to climb on. A large heavy plastic sheet, perhaps intended as a wading pool, in which kids climb under, roll up, or pop out of. Little lacrosse cages for spontaneous catches and escapes. Beach balls to throw—or hug. Plastic stepping stones arranged in a big circle, parts elevated six-eight inches; while bigger children hop the circumference and glide along the bridges, toddlers hold parents’ trusted hands for balance around the enchanted circle. These children are in continual motion, strutting, swaggering, racing, climbing, chasing one another, older ones mugging for TV, some—mostly boys—marching like drum majors and trying to conduct the band. One energetic lad of perhaps three climbs up the slope by the natural bandshell into his mother’s waiting arms, and then runs down, over and over again for the entire first half of the concert. We share his glee, his excitement when the train whistles in and out of the nearby commuter station. “Train, train,” he exults while devouring an ice cream sandwich at half time. 
     If we could share this peace and freedom, the community closeness, our families with the children and families so cruelly severed at the border, we would do so. We will send more money, sign more petitions, vote. We will hug our children, grandchildren. We will worry.

—Lynn Z. Bloom

Lynn Z. Bloom is Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor Emerita at the University of Connecticut, where she held the Aetna Chair of Writing 1988-2015. Although she signed a contract for her twenty-sixth book (this on creative nonfiction) on June 21, 2018, this information didn’t fit the essay, so she left it out.




STEVEN CHURCH

Things that Did Not Happen on June 21, 2018

I did not:

Wake up at 5:30 to make breakfast for our son, wake him at 5:45 to shower, or shuttle him off to the bus stop by 6:30, where the two of us often sat quietly in the car waiting for the 28 to appear, talking sometimes about whatever was on NPR. This day, a Thursday I think, he slept, but I still stalked the house, up before everyone, including the sun, because I cherish the quiet time, because I never sleep well anyway, and because I need the alone time and the mental space promised by a summer day.

Spray the small neighbor dog through the fence with the garden hose because it wouldn’t stop barking at me. I sat outside, enjoying the cool morning and the riotous noise of birds, marveling at the mocking bird’s imitation skills. Once I heard a pitch-perfect car alarm echoing from the trees and I thought about the oddity of urban nature. The dog has been more quiet lately, and I wondered if they’re keeping him inside more now. I wondered if he died and I just didn’t know it yet.

Put hard pants on until much later in the day because these summer days are all about soft pants, second-day shirts, slippers, and hats over bed hair.

Realize what day it was, honestly. I know summer is here when I lose track of the hours and days, when my life, though still busy, is not charted out on a calendar or marked by checking items off a “to do” list.

Forget to move the bookshelf to make room for the piano delivery.

Forget to move the coolers into the dining room and clear a path for the movers to also bring in the new hand-me-down refrigerator.

Realize how big a piano is or how much you like its weight and promise.

Realize how much you could hate your old refrigerator or how much something as simple as an ice-maker can make you feel classy as fuck.

Forget that later my new hair clippers would be delivered or forget how much I enjoy the simple pleasure of running their buzzing body over my skull, mowing my hair down to stubble for my annual “summer cut.”

Watch the first World Cup match of the day, which airs at 4 a.m. PST because I needed my outside time, my coffee first; but I did tune in for the 8 and the 11 a.m. matches, violating our general household prohibition against television in the mornings. Later this summer, I’ll violate it again because I like to wake early and watch Wimbledon, letting the hypnotic sounds of the game provide background noise to my writing time.

Eat lunch at the Indian buffet with our son because he’s sixteen and was meeting friends there and the last thing a sixteen-year-old wants for his summer lunch is his dad piling a plate with curry and naan in front of his friends; so I ate leftovers and picked him up when he texted, “I’m ready to go now,” and I didn’t mind the trip or the time with him.

Wake our daughter for elementary school, though I know part of her will miss the structure. After all, she has written out a daily plan for her summer days on the whiteboard in her room, including time set aside for “no plans,” this girl who loves lists almost as much as I do, who craves their promise of order and security, this girl who is so much like me and so not like me, and so far already down her own path.

Write this list.

Have to think about them—my children—locked in cages, sleeping in an empty Walmart (aren’t all Walmarts empty?), used as political pawns, treated like animals, called “animals,” made victims of the latest American atrocity.

Sleep well after watching this week’s episode of The Handmaid’s Tale because it’s getting harder to separate fiction from reality, today from dystopia.

Forget everything.

Remember everything.

Have an idea to write about all the things I didn’t do on June 21. That would come later, perhaps the next morning, only after I’d had time to let the idea tumble around inside the bell of my brain for a while. It is, after all, often only in the summer it seems that I can carve out time for the tumble, only these long days that open up to essaying again.

—Steven Church

Steven Church is the author of six books of nonfiction, most recently the collection of essays, I'm Just Getting to the Disturbing Part: On Work, Fear and Fatherhood, and he is the editor of the forthcoming anthology of essays, The Spirit of Disruption: Selections from The Normal School. He coordinates the MFA Program at Fresno State, edits The Normal School: a Literary Magazine, and is the Series Editor for The Normal School Nonfiction Series from Outpost19.



KRISTINE LANGLEY MAHLER

I woke up from the third consecutive dream where I was wandering around a house I had just moved into; the houses in my dreams have all been houses I lived in before, but none of them are the house I live in now. I told myself it was because I had just finished separating my three daughters into their own bedrooms at last. We moved into this four bedroom house ten years ago with 7/9ths of a daughter growing in my womb and I hadn’t even remembered it was a four bedroom house; I’d been telling anyone who asked that there were only three.
     I ate almond cereal and sent my daughters downstairs to watch TV while I messaged with friends about a woman whom we’ve been gossiping about for six years. The woman had just changed her Twitter handle from her old GOMI-style name to one more sedate and very-appropriate-for-election. I concluded that she’d become boring, and I did not tell my friends but it made me sad to realize she’d grown up.
     I reread the two paragraphs’ worth of notes I’d typed almost a year ago about my great-grandfather’s diaries. He kept a daily diary for the last eighteen-and-a-half years of his life and I have been overwhelmed, at times, getting to know a man who died thirteen years before I was even born; a man whose children remained in the same northern Minnesota town and whose granddaughter, my mother, was nearly the only one to leave. I have been overwhelmed with longing for the sort of settledness he subtly describes by living there for fifty-six years, but I have also been overwhelmed by my great-grandfather’s extreme homesickness for the land of his youth, a couple hundred miles away in Wisconsin, which he’d had to leave when he was nine because his father had died. My great-grandfather would pass by “home” again and again, conveniently directing his itinerary to drive by the fields he hadn’t lived in for decades, and he acknowledged to himself, in the diaries, that the land had changed, but said he could still see things the way they had been.
     I watched a cardinal fly like a red stick into the ash tree in my backyard, the one I didn’t remember had existed when we moved into this house because it was so small, then.
     I was annoyed at being pulled away from Googling pics of Antoni from Queer Eye in eyeliner to deal with my daughters picking unripe sour cherries off the tree in the front yard and presenting them to me in a bike basket. I planted the tree seven years ago, and it has produced cherries I have made into pies only three times; to pit six cups of small cherries is a labor of love.
     I got my wrist twisted at my OT appointment and panicked myself into believing I have Heberden’s nodules on my left middle finger as an early sign of osteoarthritis because my father was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis at 47, 11 years older than I am now. I came home and wrote about hipbones.
     I wanted my period to have started today rather than yesterday so I would be starting a cycle with the solstice, but my body does not listen to me. I put my raw opal and ruby copper rings on my fingers to mark the entrance of Cancer, my home astrological sign.
     I realized I have been writing the word “synchronicity” a lot. I thought of the Police and I commanded “Hey Google, play The Police,” hoping I’d get “Wrapped Around Your Finger,” but I got a message in a bottle a hundred million other people have been sending; this is not the home I thought I lived in.

—Kristine Langley Mahler

Kristine Langley Mahler is a memoirist experimenting with the truth on the suburban prairie outside Omaha, Nebraska. Her work received the Rafael Torch Award from Crab Orchard Review and has been recently published/is forthcoming in New Delta Review, Quarter After Eight, The Collagist, Fugue, Gigantic Sequins, and The Rumpus, among others.



STACEY ENGELS

When I open the door to the hall, I see my mother’s reflection in the gold-framed mirror; she is sitting in her red chair in the living room, reading. She does not hear me coming down the hall; I get quite close to her before she realizes I'm there. I kiss her good morning on both cheeks and pour myself a third of a cup of coffee. While I drink that, she reads to me from the newspaper, about Trump pulling out of the UN Human Rights Commission. Then we meditate for ten minutes. The sun is warm on the back of my head. When we’re done, I close the semi-sheer white curtains. The orchids on the windowsill, purchased by the realtor over a year ago when my parents were selling their house, look like Indonesian shadow puppets with bowed heads. 
     Everyday things take time now, so it is nine or so by the time we go out for a walk. It is a beautiful morning – sunny, startlingly clear, cool. The fragrance from the French lilac trees carries on the breeze. I am like a sheepdog, constantly adjusting my gait, slowing to be sure Dad doesn’t get too far behind, listening for the thunk-ka-thunk of his cane when I am walking with Mom. 
     In the park, we stand at the side of the manmade stream, watching a family of ducks: two adults and eight ducklings. There is no notable difference between the adults, but eventually one rears up on its tail, flapping its wings out sideways, and we call it “him” and the other “her”, as long as we’re able to keep track. Mom’s ankle is hurting her. She lowers herself to sit on a dark, dry tree stump. The ducklings get out onto the bank of the stream, shaking themselves and tumbling over each other. Half of them settle down in a neat row, two to three inches apart; the other four huddle in a mass of soft grey fuzz, little yellow beaks and webbed feet.
     When we get back to the apartment, I take the quiche out of the fridge and begin washing lettuce. Dad falls asleep in his chair. I wake him up and suggest he go lie down. Half an hour before she is to be picked up to go out to lunch, I hang up my mom’s red dress on the back of her office door. She looks up from her computer and smiles, telling me it won’t take her long to get ready. I ask her if she’s planning to wear stockings. She nods, conceding stockings do take a long time, and puts her computer to sleep. Just before eleven thirty, I kiss her good-bye and send her on her way to her belated birthday lunch with Maria. She is not wearing stockings. I wake Dad up. 
     It is over three quarters of an hour later that Alec knocks at the door; he has driven Mom and Maria to the restaurant and has come back to eat with Dad and me, but traffic was unexpectedly bad. I plate the quiche and salad and pour some of the rosé Alec has just brought and ask them to sit, since Alec may soon be recalled to drive Mom and Maria home. 
     Somehow, within a minute or two, we are talking about an Egyptian colleague of theirs, whom I only met once or twice as a child. This is strange, because one of my earliest memories, dating to the age of two or three, is of being in a sandbox with Alec and Maria’s children, and the child of that Egyptian psychiatrist with a woman’s name. I have always meant to ask my parents about him.
     We have just finished the first course when Alec is called away to collect Mom and Maria. Dad and I clean up and talk about going on a mission to Home Depot. If ever there was a day when he could afford to go on a longer walk in the mid afternoon, it’s today; the temperature is in the mid-seventies. He is always eager to go on missions. 
     When Mom returns, she changes her clothes; she is going to visit a friend in the hospital. I help her put on her socks and sneakers. We all walk together to the corner of Lansdowne, and then Mom continues west and Dad and I walk down the hill, under The Glen. We stop as we emerge from the dark, cool tunnel to look up at the poplars, which look to be sixty or seventy feet tall. Their top leaves look like coins, jumping in the sunlight. I take Dad’s arm as we cross a patch of torn-up sidewalk. His bicep is still hard and sinewy, but I can’t help flashing on the image of a chicken wing, and thinking that, were he to slip, it might be better to let go of his arm; it feels like it might be easy to dislocate his shoulder. His skin is cool. 
     In Home Depot, I have him sit in seven or eight different chairs—nylon, faux wicker, wood, straight-backed, angled, with and without cushions. Just as we’re preparing to leave, he grabs hold of a metal post and closes his eyes. When I ask if he is feeling dizzy and wants to sit again, he says yes. When he’s feeling better, we make our way out the sliding doors, into the parking lot, up the sidewalk. He stops when we reach the road, apologizing for being winded. We lean against the cement parking structure while he catches his breath, then start up the incline again, over the patch of gravelly torn-up sidewalk, up to the cool, dark overpass, where he stops again, leaning against the huge, rough blocks of stone. A woman heading in the opposite direction leans out her car window and asks whether we’d like a lift up the hill. I’m grateful for her kindness, and say so, but decline, knowing my dad would be mortified if a stranger were to u-turn to come back and drive us up a not-very-steep hill. As the light changes and she drives away, I ask my dad if I said the right thing. He tells me my reply was perfect. 
     We turn the rest of our trip home into something of a game: we will do the walk in increments, from one bench to another. Our first bench sits alone on a gentle green slope, facing white lilac trees, its back to the fence around the municipal pool. I catch a whiff of chlorine and am listening for the splashes of cannonballs when I hear a lifeguard’s whistle, and feel suddenly as though this first day of summer is an accordion-day stretching all the way back through all the summer days of my life. 
     Though Dad has stopped apologizing and we are enjoying the bench game—we watch the reflections from the pond on the leaves of the overhanging trees, and laugh at the boys trying to ‘feed’ the ducks pebbles, and observe people sitting reading at the water’s edge—under the surface of my mind there is a dark, worrisome association. It is not until after we’re back that I realize that wending our way through Westmount—from the bench near Ste. Catherine and Lansdowne, to that on the edge of the pond, to one of the ones in a small semi-circle of benches next to the playground—reminds me of John Cheever’s The Swimmer. 
     When we get home, Dad plunks his cane into the dark terra cotta pot next to the door. He opens the front hall closet and carefully tosses his hat up onto the shelf. I make him drink some water. Then he lies down. When my mom gets home, she turns on the CBC news. Then she turns it off. I put my cell phone on the table right next to her chair, and turn up the volume as high as possible on the podcast I’d been listening to. My mom and I listen to the news about the “tender age” shelters in Texas as I chop red and green peppers and watch shrimp turn from grey-white to orange-pink in the cast iron pan.

Stacey Engels

Stacey Engels was born and raised in Montreal and has lived in New York City since 1995. A Pushcart Prize nominee in poetry and prize-winning playwright, Engels writes in multiple genres and has received grants and fellowships from, among others, NYFA, TCG-ITI, Yaddo, Bread Loaf/Orion and the Canada Council for the Arts. She holds MFA’s in Playwriting and Memoir and a certificate in Arts in Healthcare. She is an Adjunct Lecturer at Lehman College-City University of New York. 



MATT JONES

Every summer, one of the does that lives in the park behind the museum gives birth to a fawn. Last summer, the fawn died. Its body was found just inside the treeline that encases the theater and public pool. This summer, the same doe has given birth again. There are signs up around the neighborhood that say, “Warning! Aggressive Mother Deer! (protecting fawn). Avoid walking dogs on Mt. Adams Drive & behind the Playhouse in the Park.” This is good advice, because last summer, the doe followed me all the way up Parkside Place. When I got too close, she reared up on her hind legs and brought one hoof down on top of my dog’s head. 
     Today, when walking the dog, I did not see the doe. Yesterday, I did. She had a minutes-long standoff with a gray great dane that wears a pink collar. I did not see the fawn today, either. I have never seen the fawn. 
     My wife and I took took the dog up around the old reservoir that is now a grass field where a local LARPing group stages battles once a week. Two of the old reservoir walls still remain. Their uneven stone extends 20 feet into the air and serve as the backdrop for engagement and maternity photoshoots alike. The trail that wraps around the reservoir eventually leads up to the fountain at Eden Park. Last year, a flock of geese arrived and stayed for over a month. My dog ate their droppings and contracted giardia and had diarrhea on the apartment carpet almost a half a dozen times over the course of a week. Today, there were no geese, just two ducks floating on the water’s surface, and out in the distance, the Cincinnati skyline. It was hot and humid. There is an air quality alert almost every other day in Cincinnati. Today was no different. 
     After our walk, our dog panted in the hallway and our cat slept on a dining room chair that has never been used as a dining room chair, only ever a secondary, tertiary, quaternary cat bed. We have lived here for almost two years, and today was no different than any other day. After the sun went down, our downstairs neighbor hit her life alert button and summoned the fire department and an ambulance. Her dachshund named Mauzy barked while they pried open her front window to find a way in. She was fine, of course, our neighbor. She calls the fire department bi-weekly. The paramedics know here by name. She is old and gets loneliest in the summer and the winter. After the ambulance takes her away, a neighbor or a maintenance worker from the condo association looks after Mauzy. 
     In summer, especially, my wife and I lose tracks of the days. It seems the only way to mark the passage of time is to ask whether or not there were ducks at the fountain. Did we take the dog out yet? Has the cat been fed? Did we see the doe today? Did she watch us from afar as she so often does? And where, exactly, does she keep her baby hidden? And does she remember the summer before this one? And what about what comes after? Fall? Loss? Winter? Waiting? I am always waiting for summer, and when it is here and I am in the thick of it, I am vigilant of how slowly times moves forward. 

—Matt Jones

Matt Jones has an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Alabama. He has been awarded an Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Award, as well as residencies from Willowtail Springs, The Leopold Writing Foundation, and The Sitka Center for Art and Ecology. His writing can be found at www.mattjonesfiction.com. 



GENIA BLUM

Good morning! 
     It’s one minute past midnight in Lucerne, Switzerland, and I’m wide-awake and bursting with energy! 
     I’ve just scrubbed the stovetop, the counter, the sink and the backsplash; now, I close both doors to the kitchen because the ungodly fury of the cordless vacuum cleaner could wake my husband. Our DustBuster is sleek and black and looks like it was designed in the future—the alternate one, where technology to mute appliances will never be invented. In the laundry room, I load the washing machine. Despite its retro appearance, it has no noise issues: depress the start button, and all you get is a soft click and a delicate gurgle, and its rotating drum will merely whisper throughout its gentle agitation. In the living room, on the green leather sofa, I browse the Kindle library on my iPad mini and dip into books. Soon, I’ll flip open my MacBook, expand Netflix to full screen, and watch Hannah Gadsby: Nanette. Later, I’ll tweet about #nanettflix from my iPhone.
     My husband comes in. He’s worried about work, and because he can’t go back to sleep, decides to go to his office on the other side of the river. I pull the curtains and watch him walk across the deserted bridge, and wait for his lights to go on. By the time he returns, I’ve washed my face and brushed my teeth, and examined all the pores on my face in the mirror. We both go to bed. Since our son is away at college in Berlin, my husband escapes my insomnia by crashing in his room; in the master bedroom, I roll around on a black fascia ball and do stretching exercises. I get up for a glass of water, close the window and open it again and, back in bed, switch the lamp off and on several times. I scroll through Instagram and Facebook and read emails on my iPhone. Here’s one from CBC Books with a reading list for kids, #IndigenousReads. Yay, Canada, that’s worth a tweet! I go on slate.com and discover a harrowing essay by Jonathan M. Katz on the history of concentration camps. That’s another tweet. I reach for my iPad mini, open the YouTube app, and choose a video of David Sedaris reading "The Incomplete Quad.” I close my eyes and listen. Halfway through, maybe sooner, I fall asleep.
     Instantly, it’s 11:00 am. Dammit, the sun is bright! Before I roll out of bed, I receive a WhatsApp message from Elle, my friend in Philly. She’s up early! We message back and forth as I migrate slowly to the kitchen, and sign off with heart emoji. I boil water, brew a cup of tea, and carry it to the dining table. It’s draped in a gigantic, slate-blue, linen tablecloth which spills over the floor in all directions and is covered in clutter: books, papers, pens and pencils, two candlesticks with vestigial candle stubs, a silver vase, a wooden tray, and several unmatched silver coasters. This is my desk.
     To organize my thoughts, I draw patterns of dots on a sheet of graph paper with multicolored, felt-tipped pens: my morning ritual. Then, it's coffee and computer time. My MacBook is open and Scrivener is running. I write. (I’m writing this.) I drink espresso, nibble on a croissant, and eat chocolate. 
     Our daughter calls from London. She’s moved out of her flat-share and is searching for a new place to live. Last night she slept on a couch in the studio where she works with other recent Fine Art graduates. Today, she’s tired and fed up: It’s London, nearly impossible! I try to infect her with my optimism: Only nearly, not completely! 
     Back to writing. But first, I have to put the wash in the dryer—better do it now, before I forget again. My husband sends me a WhatsApp from across the river. He wants to know if I need anything. Nah, I’m good. I check Gmail, and then continue editing two flash essays, removing adjectives, changing commas to semicolons—an endless loop of minuscule changes. Reminded of an Oscar Wilde quotation, I search for it on Google: In the morning I took out a comma, but on mature reflection, I put it back again. OMG, shoes! How did I end up on theoutnet.com? 
     A detour to Twitter … Renée, my writer-dancer buddy in Lugano, doesn’t have WhatsApp—she barely has what you’d call a phone—so I’m tweeting her an unencrypted direct message: Are you writing that What Happened on 6/21/18 thing for Essay Daily? I thought I wouldn't, but now I am!
Something’s popped up on Facebook Messenger: Kirsten, a Canadian friend from Creative Nonfiction Collective, has discovered a site called Canadian Writers Abroad. Immediately, I visit it. Interesting! I’ll explore later, because right now, I’m busy with …
     Wait, Renée has messaged back: Yay! Yes, I've been doing it!
     Me: LOL I’m including this exchange.
     Renée: Yes, please! Include this: I won a FANTA for the COOP World Cup promo!
     She also sends an adorable photo of her dachshund Tootsie curled up on a pillow, head resting on a plush unicorn. So cute!
     Me: Congrats! That's amazing!
     Renée: Fuck me!
     Me: I'm not censoring my essay, just so you know. Say hi to Tootsie!
     Renée: *paw emoji 2x* Tootsie says, “Yay, Genia!”
     Me: :-) < 3; !!!
     I’m tired. I keep clicking on Word instead of Scrivener, even though their icons are not at all similar. They aren’t even adjacent to each other in the dock. Damn, I forgot to eat. (Chocolate doesn’t count.) Oh look, my husband bought a salad and left it in the fridge—it’s a Vegan Rainbow Bowl from the Bachmann bakery! I see cubed mango in there, cashews, roasted cauliflower florets, pomegranate seeds, loads of healthy stuff. 
     Both flash pieces are finished now. I hope Dzvinia, my poet friend and mentor, will have time to read them next week. 
     I receive a message from Wayan, a friend and dance colleague. She owns a small ballet school in Lucerne that will soon fuse with mine, and she’ll take over as the new director. In my iCloud Photo Library, I scroll through images of my farewell dance recital, only three weeks ago. Lovely memories, but I’m enjoying my new freedom—to write, to think about writing, and to worry about my family instead of the ballet school.
     Every time I turn my head away from the computer, I look out across the Reuss River and its clear, turquoise stream, at ducks and swans, and swooping seagulls. All day, the sun was out. People sat on the stone steps on the opposite shore, dangling their feet in the water; a few even went swimming. Now, it’s cloudy, and it looks like rain.
     Another WhatsApp arrives from our daughter. I call her back. She’s in a park, feeling down, and doesn’t know where she’ll be sleeping tonight. 
     My husband comes home, but leaves for the gym before I can mention our daughter’s dilemma. 
     I message her: Call your dad. She messages back: I’m talking to him right now.
     My friend Dzvinia texts to say she’s sent me an email.
     Our son sends an iMessage with a photo of his new sneakers. 
     My phone rings. Our daughter has found a short-term rental, and is moving in tonight.
     I’m done with writing for the day. 
     We’ll have pasta for dinner. 
     Later, I’ll have insomnia. 
     Even later, I’ll fall asleep, but by then it’ll be tomorrow.
     Good night!

—Genia Blum

Genia Blum is a dancer, writer, and translator. She was born in Winnipeg, Canada, and lives in Lucerne, Switzerland. Her work has appeared in Assay: Journal of Nonfiction Studies, Atticus Review, Bending Genres, (b)OINK zine, Creative Nonfiction Magazine (Tiny Truths), Solstice Literary Magazine, Sonora Review, and Under the Sun. She​ ​haunts Twitter and Instagram as @geniablum.



Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 3: Jillian Ivey • Colin Rafferty • Eshani Surya • Morgan Reidl • Ashley Hutson • Laurie Easter • Lisa O'Neill • Ronnie Lovler • Maria Sledmere • Sarah Einstein

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. If you wrote something (it's not too late!), send us your work by the end of June (at the latest: earlier is better!) via this submission form (it's okay if you didn't RSVP before: the more the merrier).

—The Editors



July 3: Jillian Ashley Blair Ivey • Colin Rafferty • Eshani Surya • Morgan Reidl • Ashley Hutson • Laurie Easter • Lisa O'Neill • Ronnie Lovler • Maria Sledmere • Sarah Einstein




JILLIAN ASHLEY BLAIR IVEY

I had to take my car to the auto repair shop at the dealership, about 35 minutes away, by 10. But in order to drive to the dealership to have them look at my driver’s side front tire, which had been slowly leaking for months, I had to put air in said tire.
     At the gas station—the one where you have to pay a dollar (quarters only!) for air, and not the one where air is free because I forgot to put air in my tire when I was near that one Sunday—a woman waved at me while I was getting out of my car. “I needed less air than I thought,” she told me. “No need for you to pay for air if I still have time left on my pump.” I thanked her as she handed the air hose off to me and topped off the air in my tire off until the pump stopped. It was enough.
     I dropped my car at the Honda dealership and walked next door to Hyundai. My husband was bringing his car in for an inspection, and he’d scheduled his service appointment at the same time as my own so we could test drive a few new cars. My lease is up and we don’t need two cars, so we’re planning on turning my car in and trading his toward something new. I have mixed feelings about this. I love my car.
     I made small talk on the Hyundai sales floor with the salesperson assigned to us—a woman, which automatically elevated her in my book. My husband arrived a few minutes later and we set out to drive two different Tuscons with two different trim levels. The cars were priced about evenly, and the mix of features in each felt incomplete. Apparently, we’d have to look at the top trim package to get everything we want.
     The salesperson also escorted us to the Toyota dealership, although she doesn’t sell Toyotas herself, because it’s in the same family of dealerships and this is something they do pretty often. We went for a spin in a Rav4. I liked it; my husband did not.
     Our salesperson had an appointment so we went back to Hyundai, thanked her, and checked on the status of our cars. My husband’s car was ready and had passed inspection but barely. It would need new brakes soon—all the more reason to trade it toward something new. My car was ready, too: leaky tire confirmed, they’d found a nail between the treads and patched the hole. It was not big enough to warrant a new tire, which was a relief given that I’m dangerously close to maxing out my credit card right now. I told the man who called me from the service department that we’d be by shortly, and then my husband and I got into his car together to drive to the next dealership over: Nissan, also in the same family of dealerships.
     The receptionist at the Nissan dealership had just retrieved her lunch—sausage and peppers—and the smell reminded me that I hadn’t really had breakfast. We were assigned to a salesperson with a heavy accent. He walked us through an informational brochure and then showed us some of the Rogue’s unique features. When it was time to go for a test drive, he sat in the back seat while my husband and I took turns at the wheel. We liked the car, but weren’t planning to make a decision that day, which we told the salesman, but that didn’t stop him from calling his manager to make us “an aggressive offer” before we departed. We’re keeping it in mind.
     My husband drove me back through the Hyundai parking lot and into Honda’s so I could retrieve my car. We were hungry and decided to get Thai food at a restaurant nearby. He headed there ahead of me, while I paid the $49 I owed the dealership for my patched tire and readjusted my seat and mirrors.
     The restaurant had a $12, three-course lunch special so we both went with that. Soup, then dumplings, than entrees—a curry for my husband, and something called “angry jungle princess” for me. It had coconut milk in it, which I was not expecting and was not thrilled about, but I ate it anyway.
     We headed home in our separate cars and I immediately got on the phone with a prospective client while my husband responded to the many emails he had missed while we were test-driving cars. Later in the evening, I would participate in a live video chat with the CEO of a non-profit dedicated to empowering tween- and teenage girls. We talked about storytelling, which seems like a fitting way to end a day I was supposed to tell a story about. 

—Jillian Ashley Blair Ivey


Jillian Ashley Blair Ivey is a freelance writer, editor, and communications strategist in Philadelphia. You can read more of her work, sign up for her newsletter, or follow her on social media at jillianivey.com.





COLIN RAFFERTY

When June 21st began, I was waiting in Richmond International Airport to pick up my wife, whose Wednesday evening flight home from a work trip was delayed. We’d had a lot of rain here lately, and the roads to the airport were lined with big puddles.
     Richmond’s not really a late night dining town, at least not on weekdays, so we went to a place called the Galaxy Diner, where I got an open-faced turkey sandwich, because I’d gotten a filling replaced the day before, and my jaw still ached a little from it. Elizabeth got a quesadilla and took a lot of it home for later. We got back home about 1:30, greeted our dog, and went to bed.
     About five hours later, I woke to walk the dog through our neighborhood. He’s old—turns thirteen next month—but still has boundless energy, and his enthusiasm for walking is unabated. The city is repairing a lot of the sidewalks in our neighborhood, so we detoured down a lot of alleys, where the more interesting smells are.
     I’m the morning person in my marriage, so when we got back, I made coffee and fed the dog, our usual rituals. He gets a pill twice a day for a thyroid condition that he’s had for ages; I take a pill for seasonal allergies. He eats a cupful of dog food—the brand is the kind that twelve years ago was a sign that you cared about your dog but now seems like the bare minimum you can give your dog. I ate a bowlful of oatmeal, because my genetics are terrible for heart health, and apparently oatmeal is a good thing to eat for that.
     After my wife woke and I brought her a cup of coffee, we both went to work, which means we moved into different rooms upstairs. I’m trying to write a book proposal right now, and throughout this day, I try to write chapter summaries. This is new to me—to write a book proposal and to write a book that’s a single narrative, as opposed to a collection of essays—and it feels strange to guess at what I might say in the hundreds of pages that I have yet to write. This results in me getting easily distracted from writing the summaries, which means that it’s much easier for me to do light lifts through the day—stuff like coming up with a driving plan for our trip to NYC next week, or how to use the rest of our health care flex spending, which expires on June 30th.
     For lunch, I made a kale salad (see above, re: heart health), as well as some tortilla chips in the oven (simple, really—slice into quarters, spray a sheet with olive oil, lay out the chips, spray and salt them, bake at 425 for 7-8 minutes) and ate the brown layer off the guacamole in the fridge. After lunch, I worked a little more on the book proposal (“do not use the phrase ‘in this chapter, I will,’” advises the Internet) and listened to a Wadada Leo Smith album I’d found the day before at a record shop in town. Then I walked the dog in the afternoon heat.
     When the work day was done—we’ve tried to get better about a work-life balance, with some success—we went to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and saw their exhibit on the Horse in Greek Art, at which I learned that the Greeks had a horse/rooster hybrid called a hippalectryon that we only know about because it appears on pottery; no stories about this beast survived.
     The rain had returned when we left the museum, but they provide umbrellas to use on the walk from the museum to the parking garage. It’s a small kindness, but given the year we’ve had, small kindnesses are something I notice more and more.
     We got home and made dinner. Neither of us was terribly hungry, so I scrambled some eggs and ate some leftover shishito peppers that Elizabeth had brought back from her work trip. We watched The Thin Man, and by the time it was over, it had stopped raining, so we took the dog out one more time. He has cataracts and is scared of the dark, so we bribe him with a treat (secretly a joint supplement!) and that’s usually good for getting him at least around the block.
     Before going to bed, we discussed our upcoming travel plans. We usually have a trip somewhere on the books to give us something to work towards and look forward to.
     Finally, as I was brushing my teeth, my phone dinged with its e-mail tone. At 11:26, just a few minutes before the longest day ended, an editor had decided to reject some flash essays I’d sent the previous month. This year, huh?

—Colin Rafferty

Colin Rafferty is the author of Hallow This Ground, a collection of essays on monuments and memorials published in 2016 by Break Away Books. He teaches at the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, Virginia. More essays at colinrafferty.com.





ESHANI SURYA

Today, on my last day in San Francisco, I meet Riley and we walk his old neighborhoods. He used to live close to La Taqueria, where he claims the best burritos are. They don’t have rice, but he says they’re the exact wet, sloppy burrito he craves whenever he is out of the Bay Area. Earlier in the morning I asked about El Farolito, another popular spot, and he said, in a text, that what he remembers best about that spot was stumbling into it past 2 AM for a late meal to brace him in his drunken haze.
     I met Riley long after he let the impulses for that behavior dictate his plans. By the time we came to know each other, he was married, co-owner to a lanky rescue dog. He’d already traveled and lived in Southeast Asia, already worked a career-defining position in the tech industry. He was already talking, every so often, about the possibility of having children sometime soon. Some people are easy to imagine risky, but for me Riley was always steady, the one I wanted to drive me to doctor’s appointments and give me advice on asking for a raise at work. I know he had a wilder life before me, but the thought of it is unsettling, an outlier in the logic of him that I have created in my mind.
     We meet at the 24th St Mission Station around noon. I am ten minutes early, and when he ascends the stairs from the platforms to the rest of the station, I feel the spark of gratitude that I always do--that our friendship has lasted through the years, that neither of us seem uncomfortable and obligated  in each others’ presence. We walk a short way to La Taqueria where the line curves around tables. Oh, wow, this is way more crowded than it was when I was here last week, Riley comments, and I’m worried for a moment that he’ll suggest we give up on the endeavor, even though he traveled all the way from The Sunset for one of these heavy burritos. But the people in line wait without irritation, and Riley joins easily too and guides me through the steps. I order a vegetarian burrito, super, and with horchata. He orders meat, carne asada, I think, but more importantly, his burrito is dorado, fried before being served. It’s a style he has never tried, so even here, in a place he knows well, with me there is newness. I wait at a table I spotted and claimed in seconds and I think, of course my presence is newness in itself, but Riley won’t be eating the same food he knows with different company. We’ll both share the same sensation at the same time: the slow chew, the tongue trying to parse out flavors, the cataloguing of all the other burritos we’ve had to decide if we like this one.

At the California Academy of the Sciences. I start in the Osher Rainforest, a four-story sealed space that is more humid than the rest of the building. Birds and butterflies fly free through the air. When I look up, I see the jewel-bright bodies studding a tree. A large blue butterfly—I don’t know the species—pauses in front of me, seems to present, as it unfolds and folds its wings. I have been in rainforests before, near Arenal in Costa Rica most recently, and I’ve never seen so much abundant wildlife. Usually, the trees are quieter, the animals and insects more wary to be seen by humans. But here, watching seems welcome. It seems like the creatures have been briefed, some museum official reminding them that the more we visitors see, the more we’ll be willing to understand and love.

Riley waits for our food by the counter while I occupy the table. At La Taqueria, the seating is precious. We share a smile, a little eyebrow twitch of hah, we’re still waiting, and then he disappears into the fray to return with two red plastic baskets and my horchata. I look down at my food. This is the famous San Francisco burrito. Naked out of its foil, it seems strangely vulnerable. With good reason, I suppose, as I steady my hands on its body, open my mouth, with its many incisors and molars. Some things are meant to be shredded, ruined, but they seem precious in the moments before. We are protective in the most inopportune moments.
     I bite the top right corner of the burrito off. I remember before I left for college, one of my biggest fears was losing all my friends who already knew what I looked like eating. I’d cultivated years of eating with same group on weekdays, with people who liked me in spite of pesto stains on my collar or mayonnaise dribbling out of the corner of my mouth. I’ve eaten in front of Riley before--many times—but never a burrito with my hands. I wonder if he is archiving the moment as a new version of me, but maybe not. Maybe he is more used to these nebulous friendships, friendships that seem like hallmarks of adulthood, where people shift and change and revert and we are not able to witness and understand each twist. If we accept this, we last.

When the sun starts to set, I walk all the way back to the hostel from the park, even though my legs are already tired. I want to catch my last glimpse of the city before I have to wake up at 6 AM tomorrow to head to SFO. Through the park, into Haight-Ashbury, Hayes Valley, near the Civic Center, just past the Tenderloin, until I hit Market and go north.
     All I can feel is the music, pounding through my earbuds, and the muscles in my legs twitching. By the end of tonight I will have walked almost fourteen miles, and I will want to keep going. I love being a ghost in the city, moving and moving, taking up as much as I can in strides. I love swallowing up space without really being seen. I love that someone could look at me from the easternmost point of the city and wonder, who is that girl, and the same could happen on the west side too. I could be anyone after that long journey.

In glass boxes there are other animals. Snakes, with alert eyes, and fish circling the same square feet again and again. A poison dart frog seems desperate to escape. It is the same in the aquarium, where I see blue tangs in perpetual cycle and eels that lay on what should be seafloor, but is only silt in a tank. And in the rest of the museum, there are dead things: whale skeletons, a slice from a redwood tree trunk, stuffed giraffes and antelopes and lions. Why is there vibrancy so close to what’s frozen, what’s trapped, these facsimiles?

I eat. I’m so hungry at first all I can register is that the food is “good.” But soon I can taste the flavors, cheese and sour cream melting together. After, I tell Riley I’m so, so happy. This is exactly what I wanted, spicy sourness of the salsa, the beans, perfect ovals against my soft palate. He is relieved, saying that he was worried he’d talked up the place too much, especially because the Mexican food in Tucson is excellent. For a moment, his gentle awkwardness, which I have always treasured, as it is an offshoot of his concern over other people’s comfort, is exposed, and I know that he wants me to love the same places in San Francisco that he considers fundamental to him. At some point, I ask him if the burrito dorado is tasty, and he nods enthusiastically, and I am glad to be part of another joy he discovers in this place.

The exhibits aren’t so unlike what I’ve just seen in Riley’s life, spectator as I was. It isn’t so unlike how I revisit my own old lives too. What’s alive is our own feelings about these places, the desire to delve back in, the obsession with imparting that time onto the people we care about. What’s dead is the rest of the ecosystem. Everything that Was is hollow, only a backdrop for the feeling. And yet the staging only amplifies those same feelings too.

When we finish, Riley asks me what I want to do next and I say that I don’t have plans, so he suggests we just walk into the rest of The Mission and Valencia Street so that I can see it all. Around us, the streets feel like an intersection of home for me too. Gridded streets with trees that gently pendulum in the breeze, like living in the East Village when I was nineteen. The burbles of Spanish like the families crossing 147th Street up where I lived after college. The murals, bright with color, almost like Tucson, where I live now, where I lived when I met Riley. We went to coffee on the first day I was there on my own. There was a monsoon, but he rode his bike through the rain to become my friend. I wonder, if I could peer into that early conversation how I would see the two of us. I imagine in some ways we’d be unrecognizable.

Alone, I double back on the walk to fill my stomach at a dosa restaurant on Market. I don’t eat food like this in Tucson. It holds so many memories of my heritage, eating it with my grandmother and mother after visiting temple, sharing it with my Indian roommate during Diwali.
     The waiter asks me if I work in the area, and I enunciate too clearly when I tell him I am a tourist. I don’t want to pretend, because I have a feeling that one day I’ll return to San Francisco, a resident now, who will be unrecognizable to the people who know me now until we get so close that have to make out my features properly. And then I can tell him, this waiter, exactly who I am and why I am here and how much I belong. I will say it every day, until I’m ready to move on.

We talk for a long while, stopping for coffee at a place where Riley worked after college, and he tells me what it used to be like. There’s a story here about a customer yelling at him for cutting a loaf wrong, which he told me months ago. We sit in the same spot where it happened, as though the energy has persisted through all the renovations of shop and self. After, we keep going. Riley points out a hill close to where he used to live. I stop at Tartine Bakery for a lemon tart with a dollop of cream on top to eat later. He suggests we look at the flavors of ice cream at B-Rite and then impulsively orders a small cup. He gets honey lavender and asks me what else we should add. Carrot cake? I say, unsure if that’s a terrible suggestion. He shrugs. Carrot cake! Why not? We eat on a bench outside, marveling over the tastes, the thick swirl of the ice cream, the strangeness lemon notes that have emerged, the bits of pure cake imbedded in it.
     It occurs to me that I would be the same if someone visited me in New York, the place that shaped me. I’d take them on a path through the East Village, narrating the whole way: I used to have class in those three buildings, that Starbucks is where my first college boyfriend broke up with me, that’s where we got coffee on Sunday mornings before starting work in the dorms, I used to take that NQR line up from Union Square to my literary agent internship, I always got the hazelnut ice cream at Sixteen Handles until I ended up being allergic, Veskelka is where I lost my favorite earrings while drunkenly crawling on the bathroom floor, Blind Barber is where we would go to dance until one of the bouncers told my friend he couldn’t dance on the tables. That was a girl I lost, had been seeking for years, finally have let go of. And yet, maybe like Riley, I wouldn’t mind inhabiting her for a bit, letting my friends in to an earlier iteration. Her existence is a stranger’s now, made to experiment with.

The last exhibit I enter is the fog room. It looks like a bathroom after a too-hot shower, but the white clouds are cool on my cheeks. I think, why not just go outside to see this? In all the mornings I’ve spent in San Francisco, the sky floods with this opaqueness. But it isn’t always possible, I realize. Some days we wake up too late to catch the fog. Some days the sun decides to be brighter. Someday, far off in the future, there may not be fog, depending on what we do to our planet, and all we will have is this room, constructed memory. In time, it will be become precious, a tool to inform the future, a beautiful place to return to, whenever we need. The room isn’t meant to overtake reality, only whisper even more truth for us to sink into.

When Riley and I say goodbye, we hug on the MUNI and I hop off. I miss him already, knowing that I won’t see him for at least another couple of months. When I see him, I’ll have to learn everything new he is. I’ll have to parse out the ripples of change that he won’t articulate, both because he can’t and because I don’t want to be told, I want to find out.
     I imagine it, both of us at the coffee shop we usually go to in Tucson, mirroring each other as we sip at our drinks. Keepers of the microcosms only we are privy to, even as we rip the memories apart and make space for whomever we need to be in that time.

Eshani Surya

Eshani Surya is a current MFA student in fiction at the University of Arizona in Tucson, where she also teaches undergraduates. Her writing has appeared in or is forthcoming in Terrain.org, Ninth Letter Online, New Delta Review, and Lunch Ticket. She was the 2016 winner of the Ryan R. Gibbs Award for Flash Fiction from New Delta Review. Eshani is also a 2018 Summer Fiction Mentor at Adroit Journal. Find her @__eshani or at http://eshani-surya.com. 





MORGAN REIDL

My morning started early, with a text at 4:54: “Get your ass up class in 45 min.”
     I hadn’t been to a morning gym class in a year, since finishing my master’s thesis occupied most of my thoughts—waking and sleeping, even though I didn’t have nearly enough time for many sleeping thoughts. But this week at my usual Monday afternoon spin class, the instructor mentioned she was going to do TRX during her Thursday morning boot camp. I hadn’t done TRX in probably two years, when my instructor moved to Hawaii.
     This is all to say, it had been a while since I had seen this hour, let alone worked out during it.
     I didn’t get up at the text, waiting until 5:25 to roll out of bed, which my remembering self recalls as being easier than I’d expected. My experiencing self would probably argue this.
     The class was fun and didn’t feel too challenging until the pull-ups at the end, but that was the sort of challenge I crave—invigorating.
     It was an early start to what turned out to be one of the longest days.
     At 4 pm I drove half an hour to meet up with a woman whose farm house I was going to take care of while her family was away. She gave me a tour of the house and introduced me to her two dogs, cat, chickens and turkeys, and two horses.
     While it was a lot of information, I felt confident.. until I tried to leave. My truck wouldn’t start. Not. At. All. Not even close. No lights. Just a strange, tinkery clicking.
     I called my mom because that’s what I do any time anything remotely “adult” happens to me that I don’t know how to handle. She suspected I had a dead battery and when she asked when I last replaced my battery and my answer was “huh?” she was sure it was my battery. My Ford F150 is eight years old.
     While this conversation was happening, the homeowner had reappeared with a stray dog she had found earlier and was keeping in a kennel until the owner could be reached. I explained my situation, and she offered to jump my truck. The process itself was new to me, and my ignorance was obvious and, for a yet-to-be-analyzed reason, discomfiting.
     Still, it worked—took a few tries, but eventually my blue truck started.
     With Big Blue running, I wasn’t going to stop until I made it to Walmart’s auto center, at my mom’s recommendation.
     Except about 100 yards out of the driveway, Blue stopped running, so I coasted to the side of the road.
     At that point, I called my insurance’s roadside assistance number to arrange for a tow.
     I was required to pick a destination within 15 miles of my current location. But I wasn’t familiar with the part of town I found myself stranded in. I could have used my phone to help figure this out, but—obviously—I was having a conversation on it.
     When, to my still persisting confusion, the representative couldn’t tell me the place closest to my house, I asked her to tell me the relative location of the first place she named.
     “It’s south, a little west, and north-east.”
     “… that’s all the directions.”
     She offered to put a hold on the request while I figured it out myself, but I didn’t want to wait any longer than I had to. It was already after 5, and I realized auto shops would be closing if they weren’t already. So I just picked the first location she named.
     After I hung up, I googled. Realizing the place she named was closed, I called the Ford dealership, which I had been to in the past, to see what could be done about a dead battery. Fixed tomorrow morning, if the truck was indeed just in need of a new battery.
     Which was an if. Earlier when I was on the phone, the homeowner had passed me on the street and invited me back to her place to wait for the tow truck. She seemed to think I might be in need of an alternator. Not knowing what was wrong with the truck made figuring out where to take it—already a challenge—even more complicated.
     The dealership was 14 miles away—within the 15-mile tow radius. But if the truck needed more work done than a battery replacement, the timeline was uncertain. I decided to risk it. I called the insurance agency back to change my destination.
     Within the hour a tow truck arrived, and Jon stepped out. He was able to jump Blue and drive it onto the ramp, which he assured me meant the alternator wasn’t the problem. As I was getting into the passenger seat, he verified the destination and I told him I’d called insurance to change it. He didn’t have any record of it.
     “I can get in trouble for taking you somewhere else, but I’m also not an asshole.”
     He said he’d call base to see if they’d gotten a notification of the request (they hadn’t), but in the meantime he asked me if I’d been to Ford before. I had, I explained, and I was only picking it because I knew it and it was open and they could get me a new battery in the morning… if it was just a battery I needed.
     “Morning? Hold on, I know a guy at Tony’s that can get you one tonight.”
     I’d heard of Tony’s actually, but I figured they were closed. “They’re open?”
     “Oh no, but they hang around there until 8 or 9 or 10 at night sometimes.”
     He called, and sure enough they were there, and so that’s where he took me.
     Blue was so dead, Jon had to jump it to get it off the tow truck. Tony and his assistant checked the battery and pronounced it shot. It wouldn’t hold a charge at all. Then they set to work replacing it.
     Meanwhile I waited inside with Jon as Tony popped in and out, on and off the phone with what seemed to be his wife, who seemed to want him home already.
     “You married or engaged?” Jon asked.
     “No, but I’m in a pretty committed relationship.”
     “Gonna get married?”
     “Yes.”
     “There’s nothing like it.”
     “Yeah?”
     “Yeah. Me and my wife are separated right now, but I’m sure we’ll work things out. We just needed some space. It’s been good for us. Made us talk about things we’d kept bottled up.”
     “Good.”
     “Yeah, I think so.”
     Tony walked in with the prognosis. Blue was fine. A new battery really was the answer.
     I texted my mom, the woman who I was going to house sit for, and my landlord whose truck I’d asked to borrow in case of an emergency—all to let them know the good news.
     As quickly as my catastrophizing mind escalated this to disaster, these people had deescalated it. It felt like some small miracle—the relief of having sidestepped, even though it was just serendipity, a greater disaster was invigorating.
     And so I drove home on a high from having replaced my car battery, feeling quite lucky.

—Morgan Riedl

Morgan Riedl is a writer based in Fort Collins, Colorado where she lives with her horse and dog. She has an MA in creative nonfiction from Colorado State University.





ASHLEY HUTSON

I woke up late and groggy, and I tried to recall my dreams. Once I committed them to memory, I took up my ancient computer tablet to perpetrate the first bad habit of the day: scrolling through the internet.
     My husband Steve, who is better than me at rising with the morning alarm, came in and kissed me hello. He said he had to film something in the living room for his YouTube channel, so I waited until he was finished with that before I got out of bed and got dressed. I was glad to get out of bed because it meant the night was over. I struggle with neurotic insomnia and irregular sleep patterns, so I was glad my husband was up, too, because once he's awake the black cloud of night thoughts dissipates, and everything seems okay again.
     After Steve packed up his filming equipment, we went into the kitchen to make breakfast. I always have a headache or am getting ready to have a headache, so I took two generic Excedrin Migraine pills. I was also preoccupied by the random memory of an old high school friend who, eight years prior, told me he had unfriended me on Facebook because he did not like my "obvious streak of feminism," I guess because I had posted a brief rant about the whole "Save the Ta-Tas" breast cancer awareness campaign. (I was sensitive about the issue at the time because my mother was going through breast cancer treatment, and I found the slogan disrespectful.) I couldn't stop thinking about how hurt I'd been by my friend's judgment, or how I'd replied to him with a long email explaining that I wasn't "one of those" kinds of women (meaning the kind of hysterical maniac I could only assume he meant when he invoked feminism) and also explaining that I was sorry we wouldn't be in touch anymore because his friendship had meant a lot to me.
     The memory of this situation flew up out of nowhere and kept pecking at me. I felt a little ashamed that this small episode still mattered to me, and that I had put so much stock into Facebook friendship or unfriendship. However, as I stood at the kitchen counter and swallowed my headache pills, I realized that I had been wrong to try and explain myself to this friend, and that I should have instead told him to eat shit and die.
     Anyway. Breakfast. Steve always fries the eggs and fake bacon while I butter the toast and make coffee, and today was no different. We live in an old apartment with questionable wiring, so I was careful to turn off the air conditioner while the coffee brewed to avoid flipping the breaker.
     As Steve cracked the eggs into the pan, we got on the subject of the movie The Graduate, specifically Mr. Robinson screaming at Benjamin, "I think you are filth. I think you are scum. YOU ARE A DEGENERATE!" Steve acted out this scene in an exaggerated fashion several times, which delighted us both a great deal. Then we ate breakfast on the living room couch while watching MasterChef, a cooking show where the judges break down the contestants until one of them cries.
     Following breakfast, Steve asked me to help him record character voices for one of his videos. I voiced the female characters. We often waste time giggling over his script, but this time it went pretty smoothly.
     Once that was done, I sat down at my computer desk in the living room to write, and he disappeared into his room to work on video stuff. Our plump tuxedo cat Ottie, who will be 12 years old this December, napped on the couch and was a vision of perfect rest.
     I made notes for this essay. I wrote some fiction that came out like a smelly sock. I checked email. I tried to fix the smelly sock I wrote. This went on for a few hours.
     However, I was still prickled by this memory of the old friend from eight years ago, who I will call MG.
     It is not hyperbole when I say that an obsessive thought loop is similar to an animal hunting me. Sometimes the best way to rid myself of this menace is to drag out the evidence and exhaust the bad memory until it surrenders and dies. To this end, I searched my files for my old, now deleted, Facebook account. I was 27 then, 34 now, and I wanted to see if I had remembered things incorrectly. Had I been a rabid feminist on Facebook in 2010? I didn't recall being any such thing. MG had also mentioned that he'd felt "strong negativity" from my posts at that time, and I wanted to double-check that, too. That claim, at least, seemed plausible.
     But no. I had not engaged in rabid feminism or strong negativity. Instead, I was surprised at how good I was at social media back then: I shared fun things I did, I made corny jokes, I was shockingly pleasant. It's a skill I've lost.
     Just as I'd guessed, the only post that had a remotely feminist flavor appeared on August 23, 2010, and reads as follows: "So on vacation I proudly (and politely) told the Seaside Country Store in Ocean City to go to hell for carrying the incredibly stupid 'Save the Ta-Tas' merchandise. And screw the 'charity' the proceeds are supposedly going toward; let's stop spreading gross male chauvinism in the name of a good cause. My mom has breast cancer. You know what else she has? Class."
     Not my best writing effort, to be sure, but it was written at a time of heightened stress and emotion. It is sincere. It is also 63 words long, which I suppose was 63 words too many for MG's acutely-tuned Negative Feminist radar. Ah, well. At least I was reassured that his claims were groundless. After completing the due diligence on this matter, I confidently returned to my earlier conclusion that I should have told MG to eat shit and die.
     At that point it was 6:05 p.m., and this bunny trail of obsessive rumination had consumed approximately thirty minutes of my time. However, I had effectively strangled the vicious predator that was this memory, so it was time well-spent. To put this beast to rest for good, I decided to do housework and busy my mind with washing dishes and the like. However, just then Steve appeared and asked if I wanted to eat.
     Because our sleep schedules have been miserably off-kilter lately, we called this lunch. I ate half a can of lentil soup and he had a sandwich and an apple, and we both had ice cream for dessert. While we prepared the food he told me about a clamor on the internet that concerned remaking the most recent Star Wars movie. We then chatted about other subjects and exchanged a few inside jokes that would take too long to explain here. Somewhere in there we hugged and kissed each other, and I thought about how much I liked hugging my husband not only because I loved him, but also because there was great comfort in hugging someone much bigger than myself (he is 6 ft tall and I am 4'9). I felt grateful and lucky.
     While we ate, we watched Dynasty, the Reagan-era houseplant phantasm. It's soapy and mindless, and the women's outfits and hairstyles become more spectacularly ugly with each episode we watch.
     We returned to our respective "offices" after lunch and worked some more. I wrote the first part of this essay. Steve took out the trash and took a shower. I wrote some more smelly socks. My teeth had been hurting me on and off all day, so I took some ibuprofen.
     I also looked at the clock several times. Time is like oil here. It slips away so easily, yet I have little conception of it passing on a larger scale, probably because the days are so unchanging and untouched by the outside world. I am always surprised by the clock and calendar.
     Taking an internet break, I read the local obituaries and looked at national news. Donald Trump signed an executive order stopping family separation at the Mexican border, and some of the headlines suggested that the public should feel relieved and consider the matter closed. Reading these headlines, I wondered, for the upteenth time, whether a deep game was being played. Melania Trump also made the news for wearing a jacket that bore the phrase, "I don't really care, do u?" on her way to visit an immigrant detention center. I mean, you can't make this shit up.
     I then looked at the TMZ website even though I know it's trash and think paparazzi are bottom-feeders, and sometimes I actually feel angry reading it because I loathe the culture that glorifies that sort of thing, and half the time I don't even recognize the celebrities because I'm getting older and more out of the loop. But the news had put me in the mood to wallow in trash. I hate the spectacle but I feed the spectacle. I eat the spectacle. America!
     I opened Twitter and found some nice comments waiting for me. The day before, my first professionally-paid short story had been published at a big-time magazine, and people were still being very kind about it. I was surprised at how nice people were being, actually, since I am constantly defending myself against an invisible, hostile audience in my head. I assume people hate me. I don't know why. I don't think I am that hate-able, yet I give myself this distinction when viewing myself through the eyes of others. It's a form of twisted narcissism, no doubt, and an excuse to avoid personal entanglements. But I was proud that this story had been published where it was. I'd always assumed someone like me would never be allowed into a big magazine like that, so I was pleased and mildly bewildered that so many people seemed to like my writing.
     The positive feedback on Twitter beat back the hostile forces raging inside my brain, and whenever that happens I get up enough courage to post something that's just me talking (vs. me publicizing something I wrote, which is oddly less fraught with potential humiliation). But my brain felt dried up as a prune. I logged off.
     Then I checked Facebook, which I went crawling back to in 2015 after deleting my first account during a suicidal funk in 2013. As I had on Twitter, I had shared my story publication news on my Facebook account.
     However, few people had "liked" this post, which by this time had been up for over 24 hours. That really got me down. My 65 Facebook friends are 90% relatives and in-person friends/acquaintances, which is why the lack of likes felt like a terribly personal rebuke. The other ten percent are writer acquaintances who seem like decent people, though I'm fairly sure at least one of them dislikes me or believes me insane.
     (I must add that, the day before, my mother did contact me to offer some unexpected positive feedback on my story after I first posted it, as did my dearest and oldest friend Brian, and my conversations with each of them made me feel so wonderful. And Steve called me his "Granta girl" all day long which made me feel like a million bucks. But all that had occurred 24 hours prior, and I have something broken inside me that will not allow praise to sustain itself. Now all I could see was who did not like or comment on this Facebook status.)
     So, upon seeing the previous day's Facebook post floating lonely as a cloud, I figured my aforementioned fears were confirmed: people hated me.
     I then wished that I did not care so much about the approval or support of others, especially since this approval came in the corrupted form of Facebook "likes" from so-called Facebook "friends," most of whom I had not even or seen or spoken with in five years. I felt deeply ashamed, as it is the height of weakness to admit to caring about these trivialities, even to one's self. The invisible audience rose up inside me yet again, smirking away.
     Which, as usual, made me angry. Surprise! I'm human, motherfuckers. I had had about enough of this guerrilla jury that judged me at all hours and wore the faces of every capable person I had ever known. And anyway, why should I feel ashamed for caring? I wondered. Because it's not cool? Because someone else might think it undignified?
     I concluded that every other person on planet Earth was a fucking idiot. After all, the whole Facebook/social media objective was to encourage people to care about this statistical-self-worth bullshit, so people who pretended like it didn't matter were probably lying. And anyone else who said they were too cool for social media, or somehow avoided it, were either a) people who were old enough to escape the great technological brainwash, b) off-the-grid types, or c) insufferable, privileged liars who had the luxury of in-person social and professional communities.
     I fantasized intensely about walking into the back yard and digging a hole to hell, or sinking to the bottom of the sea while being brutally crushed by metric tons of water. My thoughts took an even more profane turn, at which point I logged out of Facebook.
     It was during this dark fugue that I decided to finally do the dishes and complete housework.
     I took a shower first so I'd have hot water, and afterward I troweled on some good-smelling lotion, because smelling good is one of the few joys of my life that has nothing to do with other people. Then I washed the dishes while watching a Season 2 Three's Company episode, "The Baby Sitters," and scrubbed the sink and the stove and wiped down the counter tops. I felt a little better.
     I also brewed iced tea for Steve. His video editing was taking longer than he expected and he had sequestered himself in his room. I figured I wouldn't cook anything major because he likes to be left alone and plow through it on nights like this. I'm also a nervous cook and, well, I'll take any excuse to avoid cooking. I sneaked a few spoonfuls of hummus and took myself out to the couch, where I cuddled with the cat while playing Scorpion solitaire and Scrabble on my tablet. It was nearing midnight.
     I listened to some music and thought about my family, particularly my father. Steve and I went to my sister's house earlier that week (Monday) to celebrate Father's Day, and all of us had asked him (Dad) questions about his military service. He told us that Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket is the only movie that comes close to getting the boot camp experience correct, but even so, it doesn't go far enough. Mom mentioned how his mother didn't cry when he signed up for the Marines, but she did cry when he called home and told her he was being shipped to Vietnam. He was nineteen. My mother was really young at the time, still in high school. We got to laughing because Mom said that when Dad called her to break the news, she just said, "Oh, okay!" because she didn't really comprehend what it meant. His mother did, though.
     While they chatted about this an odd feeling had passed over me. It was the realization that history wasn't just in movies or books, it had happened. It had actually happened. That's a funny thing to admit, but sometimes I forget—not the historical facts, but I forget that it really happened. I think a lot of people forget. We're trained to forget. History is enshrined or memorialized or fictionalized, and then it's like we're allowed to forget it was real.
     I asked Dad if he was scared when he got his orders, and he said yes. He said, "I am not ashamed to say that yes, I was scared." I've thought about that a lot since Monday because it's hard to imagine my dad being scared of anything. With all this on my mind, I looked up some info about the Vietnam War, particularly Da Nang Air Base, where he'd been stationed. Then I worked a little more on this essay.
     Eventually Steve finished up his work around 2 a.m. I could tell he was annoyed with himself because the editing was taking longer than usual, but he was also excited that the final product would look great, and I was happy for him. He made his favorite evening snack, a peanut butter and honey sandwich that we fondly call a "PeeBeeAitch" in varying local and Southern accents, and I finished off the other half of my can of soup.
     Steve wanted to watch a show where Gordon Ramsey fixes gross restaurants in 24 hours, but I was not too keen on this because I don't like watching disgusting things while I eat. I suggested we watch a short John Oliver clip or something while we eat (Steve likes John Oliver) and then watch the restaurant show, and Steve agreed.
     I'm glad we did this, because when we watched the Gordon Ramsey show there were roaches and rats and rotten food all over the place, and in one faux-dramatic moment, a dead mouse dropped out of a toaster. I suspected the TV crew planted the mouse because the restaurant employees hardly reacted, and the mouse wasn't decomposed or smushed or anything. What I'm saying is that the mouse was acceptably dead. Very suspicious. Everything seems so fake on these shows, but I always feel sorry for the people who get fired on camera. Their disgrace radiates through the television. I hope they at least get paid a little bit for showcasing their public shame for the benefit of a TV show.
     After that was over, Steve went in to take care of a few more things on his computer. I took a half a Unisom and brushed my teeth and undressed. I twisted my hair up and clipped it (it is quite long) and climbed into bed.
     I opened a free Bible app I had downloaded a week or two ago even though I'm not religious anymore. The daily reading was from Leviticus, which, when I was a child, had been my favorite Bible book name because I found it beautiful. The excerpt was full of leprosy and ritual killing. One of the leprosy cleansing ceremonies included two birds: one to be killed, and the other to be dipped in its dead partner's blood and released in an open field. I found this image macabre and striking. Then I checked the weather for tomorrow and it called for rain.
     I started playing a game of Penguin solitaire and thought about all the things I needed to do. I needed to cook those vegetables tomorrow. I needed to start exercising again. I needed to tell people I love them. I needed to be less paranoid. I needed to go outside. I needed to read more, and more widely. I needed to open my mind. I needed to write more, write better. Write faster. Wake up earlier. Get off the internet. Keep track of time. Wouldn't it be nice? Wouldn't it be nice?
     Steve brushed his teeth and undressed and came to bed. He smiled and kissed me. A few minutes later, Ottie lumbered up onto the bed and lay down between us. We looked at our tablets for a while, and I played card games until I finally became sleepy.
     Whoever gets sleepy first usually touches the arm of the other and says, "Goodnight, my love," or something to that effect. I like to include, "Sweet dreams," because dreams are the best part of sleep, and I always want the people I love to have good ones.
     I reached over and touched my husband's arm, and I told him I loved him. Then I turned out the light and curled up on my side. And then, like a miracle, I dropped out of consciousness.

Ashley Hutson

Ashley Hutson's writing has appeared in many places in print and online, including Granta, Catapult, Electric Lit, Wigleaf, Fanzine, and McSweeney's Internet Tendency. She lives in Sharpsburg, Maryland.





LAURIE EASTER

The cat wakes me at 6:00 am by clawing the corner of the king-size bed. I turn off my cpap machine, pull off the mask, then stumble to the living room to let her out. She’s hiding when I get to the sliding glass door, and I’m irritated because first she woke me and now I can’t find her. She then jumps out at me from beside the woodstove. I shoo her out and return to my husband’s side of the bed, which I have taken to sleeping on since I returned home ten days ago after being in “town” for three months. Steve died of liver cancer eleven weeks ago today. Every morning, my first conscious thought is he is gone and another day without him. Today is no different, although the cat is competing for this space in my brain.
     I sleep another hour, get up, go pee outside (for there is no indoor bathroom), let the chickens out of the coop, and make my decaf coffee with cream before sitting on the couch (my side, not his) to scan through emails and Facebook. The posts on FB depress me. They are all about the atrocities conducted by our government underneath our very noses. I don’t need more sadness. As one friend described, I am walking in the underworld. I think, I should quit Facebook, but I don’t because living rurally and off the grid, it is a sort of lifeline to the world.
     At 8:00 am, the dog starts barking. I look out the back door. It’s Trinity, an eighteen-year-old girl who is five months pregnant and arrives barefoot. I have hired her to do some work I should do myself, but I have no motivation between my grief and the overwhelming list of tasks piling up that need attention. Besides, Trinity needs the money. She excitedly tells me that as she and her boyfriend were driving up the road, a very large cougar bounded across right in front of their truck. She holds up her hands in an O the size of a grapefruit to show the size of its paws. I tell her I feel justified in my response to my neighbor Tim, whom I asked to hike with me over the ridge to the creek to fix my water line because I didn’t want to go alone, citing as my reason: I’m afraid of cougars.
     About ten minutes later, my friend Hervé arrives with his chainsaw to clear the thicket of ash trees consuming part of the meadow above a grass landing where I intend to put a screen easy-up gazebo. I plan to haul the king size bed outside to sleep for the summer. When the weather turns cold, maybe I’ll get rid of the bed and downsize to something smaller. I show Hervé where to cut and which trees to leave—a wild plum, hawthorne, two apples, and a large ash that is my cat’s favorite to climb. He has three hours before another job, and he makes steady progress, but there is more work than he has time for. When he is leaving, I ask if he wants to keep track of his hours and I’ll pay him at the end. He says he doesn’t want to be paid. I can just pay any expenses that might arise. He had already been coming over to mow the wild, neglected grass before I returned to the land since Steve’s death. He says he will keep chipping away at whatever needs to get done. “We’ll get this place looking pretty,” he says. I start crying because that’s what I do most days and because generosity and kindness is something I desperately need even though I don’t want to admit it and I hate feeling desperate.
     Sometime between Hervé’s arrival and leaving, my daughter and nearly three-year-old grandson wake and come into the house from their bedroom, which has a separate outside access. Tristan has no interest in being indoors. He’s entranced by the chainsaw, and before I realize it, they’ve walked to the neighbors’ place to play on the jungle gym. I notice that Roxy, our dog, is missing, and I figure she went with Lily and Tristan. My friend, Maya, calls and says a few moments ago she saw the backside of Roxy trotting down the trail next to their garden and that their dog Jupiter was most likely with her. Our dogs have been running wild together into the woods. It has become a habit that we are struggling to break. The last time they were gone two nights before returning reeking like skunk. “Oh man, those little shits,” I say. I’m pissed and worried, knowing the cougar was nearby only hours earlier. I hear Lily calling for Roxy and walk down the gravel driveway to tell her the dogs have taken off once again.
     I eat the leftover sushi from the night before. My friend, Robin, took me to town for dinner because I no longer cook and have little appetite. We went to Fred Meyer and printed pictures on her camera from Steve’s 65th birthday celebration, an event more like a living memorial service than a birthday party, twelve days before he died. I gorge myself on the sushi even though I’m not really hungry. I figure it needs to be eaten before it goes bad. Afterwards, I pull the photos out and begin to slide them into the empty slots of a photo album I’m making of Steve. In some of these celebration photos, he looks gaunt. In many, he is smiling, laughing, happy.
Trinity’s boyfriend Cameron arrives to pick her up. He says when they were driving up the road this morning, he saw something brown in the bushes and he thought it was a deer, and then the cougar leapt out, and he slammed on his breaks. It crossed the road in two bounds. He says the cougar was so large that its head to the tip of its tail spanned the distance between the middle yellow line and the white line on the side of the road. We all marvel at them seeing a cougar in the wild in daylight hours, and then share cougar stories. Mine, of when I was woken by cougar screaming and wandered down our driveway, naked in the middle of the night, calling “here, kitty kitty” while looking for my cat because I was afraid she would become cougar snack. I unwittingly walked beneath it as it perched in a tree. And Lily, who also came upon one in the middle of the night as she walked from the barn where she slept at an old boyfriend’s house to go use the bathroom in the main house. She describes how she lifted her jacket high up over her head to make herself look big and stomped her feet. Tristan grins and laughs. He then tells his own cougar story, plucking details from all three stories he has just heard and mixing them into a sort of animated cougar soup.
     The dogs return smelling more like skunk than before they left. Lily drives five miles to the general store to buy hydrogen peroxide to make the de-skunking shampoo to wash Roxy (one-quart hydrogen peroxide, ¼ cup baking soda, and a teaspoon dish soap). Before she leaves, I sign letters to Steve’s creditors who have filed claims against his “estate,” telling them there is no estate because he left no money or assets of monetary value and please don’t contact me further. I stuff them into envelopes for her to mail.
     When she gets back, Lily hauls Roxy into our outdoor clawfoot tub and lathers her thick fur with the hydrogen peroxide/baking soda mixture. Tristan wants to help, but he makes Roxy nervous. She’s wary of little people even though she is fully tolerant of Tristan, so I pull him onto my lap and we sit on the steps to the laundry room next to the tub. At one point, Roxy shakes her entire body. Tristan and my legs are covered in skunky dog water, but it feels good on this ninety-degree day. Afterwards—or maybe it was before because since Steve’s death I have grief brain, which means chronological time is a blur—Lily and Tristan and I kick the soccer ball back and forth on the lawn that is drying out due to the irrigation line from the creek losing its prime and going dry. The ball keeps rolling towards the day lilies, where a chicken is tucked underneath, sitting on a ceramic egg in a makeshift nest. Lily moved the fake egg from the laying boxes in the coop to encourage this chicken to continue laying here after we stole her eggs.
     At 4:15 pm, I have a date to meet Maya at her house to talk. We need to do a clearing. A couple weeks before I returned to the land, when I was still staying in town at the cottage where Steve died, my daughter’s boyfriend, who had been taking care of things on the land, had forgotten to ask someone to close in the chickens for the night when he left to go back into town. He realized this at 10:30 pm and tried calling all the neighbors to ask for help. He was unable to reach anyone but Maya. She refused. She said she was tired and it was late, and no, she wouldn’t do it. I ended up driving an hour to go close the chickens in that night, arriving at midnight. If chickens don’t get locked up at night, they are at risk of being slaughtered. Maya’s refusal to help left me feeling angry, uncared for, and like I couldn’t depend on anybody. I felt truly alone. I was ready to cross her off my list. So I go to Maya’s house, and enough time has passed that I’m no longer irate.
     I say, “I know you aren’t a chicken person and don’t understand the ramifications of not shutting them in at night.” I say, “The last thing I could deal with was more death.” I say, “I appreciate all you have done for me in our friendship and realize no person has the capacity to fulfill every need.”
She says, “I know I let you down when you really needed help, and I’m sorry.”
     I stay too long talking with Maya. It’s 6:30 pm, and I’m a half-hour late to meet Tim to hike to the creek to fix the water line. I run home, and Tim arrives. We gather some tools—a shovel, clippers, crescent wrench, a flathead and Phillips screwdrivers—but we realize that my upper gates have been wired shut and staked down by Maya’s husband in an attempt to keep Roxy from escaping the fence, so she and Jupiter won’t roam. We have to take the long way around by going back to Tim’s property next door and through his upper gate. The trail is full of poison oak. I haven’t walked it since winter when the plants had yet to leaf out. I do my best to tip toe around the plants and evade the branches. We get to my well site and start up the trail to the ridge. The forest floor is dry and crackly. We spot many standing dead madrone trees that could be cut for firewood come autumn when it’s once again safe to chainsaw in the forest. Seeing all this potential firewood is reassuring to me. I may not have Steve around to cut it, but at least I know it is here. The climb is steep. We follow the trail to the ridge where there is a faucet for bleeding air out of the water line from the creek. The pipe is broken in half, severed by a bear who has chewed the pipe on one side of the faucet and ripped it clean apart on the other. Water is pouring out the broken pipe and seeping down the hillside. This is good news. Before going up here, I thought the entire line (2,000 plus feet) from the source at the creek had lost its prime. With Steve gone, I don’t know how to re-prime the system. But if the water is making its way uphill to the ridge from the creek, then once the pipes are sealed back together, there is nothing to stop the water from continuing on down the other side. We talk about how to patch the system and head back.
     Once home, I strip off my clothes and scrub with Tecnu, poison oak cleanser, and rinse off in a cold shower. It’s quiet. Lily and Tristan went to town for the night. I’m alone, except for the animals. The light is fading. I eat cheese puffs for dinner, a couple of bites of leftover tofu, and a See’s candy still hanging around since Mother’s Day. And because the nights are always the hardest (next to that first realization upon waking in the morning), I need something to distract me, so I turn on the TV and watch a couple episodes of Sex and the City. I’m no longer getting any sex, and I certainly don’t live in the city, so it seems a good way to escape reality.

—Laurie Easter

Laurie Easter is taking life one day at a time on her land in Southern Oregon. This is the first thing she has written since losing her husband of thirty years.





LISA O'NEILL

When I’m stressed, I salivate.
     Two short minutes after I woke up, after remembering the current state of our country, my mouth filled.
     It is 2 p.m. now and I’m salivating still. My parasympathetic nervous system is on overdrive.
     A story I have been working on for a week was published today so this morning was full of final back and forths with the editor before the piece went live. And the last few days have involved talking to community members about family separation at the border: parents, a pastor, a former youth care worker at a Tucson immigration detention facility for children.
     My house is a mess, dishes stacked high, papers scattered everywhere. Our country is a mess so even though I have a little time to clean today, I haven’t felt compelled to do so. The mess is an appropriate mirror.
     My dog is sleeping on the floor, my swamp cooler is running trying to keep my house cool when it is a million degrees outside.
     This morning, my friend and I had breakfast at a trendy new spot in a rapidly-gentrifying part of Tucson and talked about our parents. How even in our thirties, they feel the urge to protect us by telling us what to do. Not out of belligerence but because they see us--their grown children--as still in their charge.
     I read a news story about how the United States government has no plan to reunify the 2,300 migrant children separated from their parents. There is “very little paper trail.”
     I see a picture of the First Lady taken on her way to visit child immigration detention facilities wearing an olive jacket with the words: “I DON’T CARE, DO U?’ on the back. I googled to see if it was, in fact, photoshopped. But no, that was what was on her jacket: “I don’t care.”
     I read a statement from her spokesperson saying: “It's a jacket. There was no hidden message. After today's important visit to Texas, I hope the media isn't going to choose to focus on her wardrobe."
     I sent an invoice. I checked Facebook and Instagram.
     I decided to take a nap. But then I couldn’t fall asleep. Instead,  listened to a guided meditation. I lay down on my back in corpse pose and listened to a teacher named Ruth King tell me to breathe. I fell asleep until the bell to end the meditation rang. I turned the app off and napped.
     I dreamed. I had been invited by a writer friend to a party, but then suddenly I realized that party was at Sarah Jessica Parker’s house. There were long tables covered in white tablecloths and green topiaries on the outside of the tables. I was underdressed in seeksucker shorts and slip-on shoes. I walked outside the house to where there were celebrities in ballgowns and a long line of linened tables leading up to a big screen. I went to ask my friend if I should go home and change when I realized the person I just said, “Hey can I talk to you a minute?” was Sarah Jessica Parker. She turned and I said “Nevermind” and she said, “No, please continue.” I told her, “I thought you were my friend but maybe it is just that I recognize you from the show.” “It happens all the time,” she said. Then she told me maybe she needed to change and left. I was briefly in a cabin hanging up clothes before I transported to a corridored space--a labyrinthian office building. And then, I was inside an empty old school bus I understood was being used to transport children separated from their parents. On the floor, a crumpled pile of stuffed animals. Then I was back in the corridors where men leered at my woman friend and I and critiqued our writing. We were told--by whom I don’t remember--that these were men we were supposed to respect. We tried to find a way to navigate the labyrinthian halls.
     I woke not because I was done dreaming but because my dog was walking around making noise. My arms felt like lead. Years ago, I went to do cranial sacral work after my dog was attacked by another dog, and at the end of the session, I felt incapable of moving my arms. This was a parasympathetic response, my practitioner had told me. When we feel powerless, our arms leaden up. He told me to move them slowly as I could, much slower than my impulse, and as I did, my arms began to feel like they were made of flesh again. I could feel the blood coursing through.
     In present day, I fell back asleep for a minute. When I woke, I felt like my dream had moved something through my body.
     Earlier, after breakfast and before everything else, I had my cards read. The animal card that came up first was an armadillo. I needed a shield, armor, the reader said. Boundaries to protect myself, to keep the toxic outside and the good inside. I needed to maintain a sense of home and armadillos transport their homes with them.
     After my nap, I looked at what movies were playing and saw that the new Mister Rogers’ documentary Won’t You Be My Neighbor was playing. The film traces the history of Fred Rogers’ career in television and ministry and ministry through television. I decided to take myself.
     I loved Mister Rogers as a child. And when I grew up and learned that this was not a cool thing to admit, I still loved him. Because I felt seen by Mister Rogers. I was a kid with a lot of feelings and Mister Rogers told me that that was okay. I don’t remember how old I was when I stopped becoming mystified by the way he tossed one sneaker into the other hand. Why was that so mesmerizing?
     In the documentary, one of the interviewees says “There was a lot of space in the show but no wasted time.” On one episode, Mr. Rogers asks, “Do you wanna see how long a minute is?” And then he set an egg timer. That was it: Sitting for a minute to see how long a minute took on live television.
     I didn’t realize how explicitly the program dealt with the problems of the world until watching the documentary. The first episode aired in February of 1968, in the middle of the Vietnam war, and in the Land of Make Believe, King Friday XIII is portrayed as a despot who fears change and wants absolute power. He appoints border guards. “I want to build a wall,” he shouts. My jaw dropped. In the Tucson theater where I watched the film, people laughed, with discomfort or recognition.
     The film opens with Fred Rogers in a room full of children of tender age. The camera focuses in on their baby faces looking over to Mr. Rogers who sits on a small stage, attending to their questions. One little girl tells him she wants to tell him something. “I like you very much,” she says. “Well, I like you very much, too,” he responds. In another scene, Mr. Rogers wears his Daniel Striped Tiger puppet as a boy confides that his dog was run over by a car. The boy speaks directly to the puppet. Daniel Tiger puts his paws over his face. Then the puppet asks the child for a hug. It’s as if Fred Rogers, the man, isn’t there.
     By the end of the movie, my cheeks were wet. When I looked at the small children in the film and heard about child development, I remembered being that age. I also remembered the picture of the two-year-old migrant girl in pink sneakers, face distorted into a cry, as her mother was patted down by Border Patrol.
     “Love is at the root at everything, all learning, all relationships,” Rogers says. “Love or the lack of it.”
     After the credits rolled and I left the theater, I drove to In ‘N’ Out Burger just down the road in the same shopping center. As I pulled up, I saw directly in front of me was a Border Patrol vehicle. I wondered what I should do. I had never before contemplated getting out of my car and trying to have a conversation with someone in a Drive-Thru line--but now I did. How did he feel about detaining asylum seekers, putting babies in jail?  When he arrived at the first window to pay, I searched for his face in his driver’s side mirror and caught a glimpse. I don’t know what I was looking for. Some feeling or expression? He was white, clean-cut. His face was neutral. He was paying for his fast food, going through the motions of his day. I didn’t get out of my car. I sat behind the border patrol agent’s car no longer feeling hungry, feeling ill actually, wondering who else had sat inside. 

—Lisa O'Neill





RONNIE LOVLER

On June 21, I woke up in my dorm room in Prague at the Univerzita Karlova or Charles University where I am spending three weeks to take classes in poetry and screenwriting. Serendipity is how I got to be in Prague, in the first place. I am not a poet or a screenwriter, but I did meet the internationally recognized poet and screenwriter James Ragan at a conference in March and he invited me to attend his four-week course. And that is what puts me in Prague on June 21.
     I threw my laptop and some changes of clothes into my backpack and headed to the central train station to grab a bus to the airport to catch a flight to Nice, France.  If it all sounds rather exhilarating and exciting, well for me it was and is. This is my first extended trip to Europe and I am going for it with everything I’ve got.
     I had to do a run-through of the train station to make sure I would get to the right place to find the bus. Czech is not an easy language, and despite what I was told, not that much English is spoken here. I am fluent in Spanish, but that doesn’t help much. But I made it to the bus, happy to spend the equivalent of $3 to get to the airport rather than the standard $35 on a taxi. Since I wasn’t carrying much, I figured I could manage without the taxi, and it would be more fun.   
     So continuing with my June 21 adventure, as a U.S. citizen, I found traveling by plane in Europe rather interesting. Almost no choice except to use mobile boarding passes, since you just activate the bar code on your boarding pass when your go through your gate. Nor was there anyone at the security gate checking passports. You enter the security area with your boarding pass, which again is just scanned.
     No passports stamped, which was rather disappointing for me, since I like collecting proof that I’ve been somewhere.  So if you look at my passport you will never know I arrived in Nice, France on June 21.  But I did. I’ve got the photos to prove it, taken from my window seat on the plane on the approach to Nice. I had a two-hour wait for the bus that was to take me to Brignoles where my friends were picking me up. I used the free Wi-Fi, got a pastry and coffee at the airport café and luxuriated in the simple idea that I was in Provence.
     Why Provence? Through another bit of serendipity, I Facebook reconnected with friends from San Francisco who have a second home in Provence. My free weekend and their free weekend coincided, so voila!
     The bus trip itself was a delight. After all, I was riding through the Provençal countryside. What was not to like? Glimpses of the sea. Glimpses of vineyards. Glimpses of beautiful buildings from afar. I was clicking away on my iPhone, taking pictures, even as the bus was moving. I was almost sorry when the bus ride was over and we got to Brignoles. My friends picked me up, and we made a quick stop at their home in Carcès, between the Argens and Caramy rivers. I got to see briefly the street where they live, which is everything you would expect a small French village to look like—two and three story buildings with shuttered windows, flowers in window boxes and art, not graffiti, painted on the outside of the buildings. But our stop was quick because we were there just to drop off my bag and pick up food to take to the music festival the next town over.
     So I just happened to arrive there on June 21, which as it turns out was the day of the annual Fête de la Musique, a nationwide music festival where in every town, village and city there was music in the street. There are musical performances all over the country and the public gets to enjoy music for free. My friends told me that when this festival first began 37 years ago, the idea was for people to simply play and enjoy music at home. But in the intervening years, it has evolved into these public celebrations of music.
     So on June 21, I got to hear music in the village of Entrecasteaux, a village that dates back to the 11th century. We could have stayed in Carcés, which had its own event, but my friends had already made plans to see other friends in Entrecasteaux. I have never experienced music in this kind of setting. The Bar Central set up a long, long table on the walkway across from the restaurant. Then there were plenty of smaller tables out on the street. Lots of rosé to drink and I think I am hooked. You sip it in small glasses. We were eating, drinking and dancing in the streets of Entrecasteaux. The music and the party went on past midnight, and so June 21 came to an end.  Quite an eventful June 21 for me, and one I will not forget. 
—Ronnie Lovler

Ronnie Lovler is a journalist who now works independently as a writer, editor, researcher and translator. She is the author of the chapter entitled "Journalist: Don’t Shoot" in the recently published anthology, Alone Together: Tales of Sisterhood and Solitude in Latin America. She also teaches journalism classes at the University of Florida and helps people find low-cost insurance under the still-existing Affordable Care Act. She continues to travel as much as possible, as her June 21 essay attests. 





MARIA SLEDMERE

My first encounter with the summer solstice was through Dodie Smith’s 1948 novel, I Capture the Castle. The heroine, Cassandra, is at the awkward age between adolescence and adulthood. She is in love for the first time, quite hopelessly. Or she will be, after the solstice. Something happens that night, in the dreamy arras of memory reinvented. On the longest day of the year, everyone else away, she revisits a quirky familian tradition: gathering flowers to make a pyre at the top of the mound, smoking her way into the latter half of the year. A certain amount of wild dancing is required. She feels silly doing it, but does it anyway. The man who her sister is soon to marry stumbles upon her childish rites and charitably decides to join in, finding he genuinely enjoys the Pagan flirtations. He is a handsome American. Later, if my memory serves me, he takes her to his conservatory and they enjoy some Debussy together. This is after he kissed her on the mound and she ran away and he caught her, explained he shouldn’t have done it. If my memory serves me.
     She would dwell on that kiss forever. Writ on the margins: I love you.
     I love the idea of the solstice as a nexus for various intensities: those little instants which signal different planes of one’s life colliding and forming new topographies. In previous years, the day was marked arbitrarily by unusual remarks in the news, then later with more conscientious effort to respect the significance of solar energy. Romantic encounters and spooky concerts coloured the evening. I dressed up in a long silver dress and wore flowers in my hair. I felt very long in the world.
     Lately I’ve been staying up all night, falling into bed around six. I’m sleepy around two, then eat dinner and feel wired again. The light occurs indigo at four in the long long morning and then the dawn chorus. I message my friend through the wee intermission hours, as we fall in sync through the catacombs of the internet. Sending videos. I am laughing out loud quite shamelessly. Our patter overlaps and develops its secret niches. IRL, we vocalise our world of in-jokes; we do all the voices. I wake up at eight or ten, depending on work. I feel guilty each time for waking up, then desperate to be in my dreams again. I wake intermittently through the night, to new messages from various people. The messages inflect the shade of my dreams, the names crop up as characters. I might be in love with so many people. Have do you figure and narrow such a proliferating feeling? Every curl of my body into itself makes a chrysalis. There are layers of so many sleeps I have not yet finished; the day peels them from me, membrane to membrane.
     The night before the solstice this year, a busy shift cracked my depressive period. Slashed through its nasty, leatherette skin. I’d been feeling catatonic, a deep blue stained burgundy, for almost a month. Everyday interactions stunned me. Something about the running around, plate-lifting, bantering and howling and slugging water and stealing bread rolls and running some more, ascending stairs, hugging water jugs, licking butter fingers, astrological argument—it must have rubbed away at the ugly rock that was blocking me. Calcine deposits of negative consciousness. I blame the stagnant weather, which was clearing. My last tarot reading drew A Perfect Circle card and so I listened to the band of the same name, resetting a room of tables. Electric guitar like shivering fronts of weather. Somebody sparked a good fire in my mind. I stood up so late and knew the longest day would happen soon and I would howl in the time spent to fill it. Something Cassandra writes in her diaries about visiting an empty field in the rain, just to shriek, soaked to her skin in unrequited love. There is more than a shriek in me.
     The word ‘solstice’, split between summer and winter. I want to make of this half a soft season, don’t want to hide necessarily but shimmer in the myriad possibilities. Attain a pensive quietude. I am one thing then another, another. I am something for everyone. I only offer tiny facets of personality, so very few people see the gaping and complicated, hungry whole—how it breaks away nightly into pieces. I don’t want to eat but I do and too much. I have not been shopping properly.
     Was sunny and slightly warmer on the solstice. A relief to see blue. The streets of Glasgow central choked up with rubble, police presence, fence lines. I try not to look at the ghost of the Mac building. Its uncanny duplicity of blackness, before; like the negative after image of an infinite photograph. Each time glimpsed as though glimpsed through a screen. Inward crumbling. I board a train to Greenock, rushing at the last point. A relief to feel the blue rush by. Orange ticket, distant hills. Later, in the workshop, there is some kind of hospitality-related drama going on in my phone, while I am talking to a man at the homeless centre whose arms are pockmarked with vein-damage and covered in the unmistakable white-line abrasions of self-harm. I think of my own arms, mostly clear now, how lucky I am. His life defined by methadone, valium; a barely suppressed threat of violence. My little cigarette burn remaining. And I am getting this text about some woman who didn’t receive her Prosecco last night, how angry she is. How I am going to have to personally pay for the delivery of champagne to her door. I offer this. The man is so earnest about his work. He writes in staccato sentences which pack a purpose. I feel very out there now, vulnerable and meandering.
     “Can I ask you girls a personal question?” he says, so many times.
     “How can I get to where youse are? Like, obviously not that high, but on the way to it?”
     He just wants to be loved, he says, just wants to write. As though the two were part of the same. He writes precise, autobiographical poems about his life, usually with a redemptive or hopeful ring. He writes about people who shame him, about prison officers he likes or dislikes. There are poems with chiming rhymes. Social service employees who become a mass of collective bureaucracy. People who have helped him. He draws heart tattoos and expresses a constant need for love, admitting its absolute lack in his life. His doodles form a graffiti of distracted soul. 
     “But I have so much to give, you know?”
     I feel ashamed in his presence for the fact of my own life. Where I have come from, where I am going. My self-consciousness seems selfish. So I crack jokes with him; we foster an easy atmosphere. He says he can’t get a job or sort out a writing course until he’s got his front teeth. His earnestness is almost painful, but it is driven towards a performance of hope that I want to believe. We all do. It makes society. When he speaks, there’s sometimes a lisp but not a whistling.
     Together we write poems about daily life, variously expressing our desires for change.
     I part from my friend on Hope Street and sleepily walk home through the blazing park. Parquet Courts in my headphones. It has heated up considerably, the sky alight, but every bone in my body is heavy beyond measure. Punk and groove. I fantasise about a cool, soft dark, rich with humidity. Beads of sweat on my skin. Ice cubes. A person who would physically lift and carry me there, through the endless business of the park.
     A bird flies into my window.
     I’m home at my computer and Dom has sent me a message. He’s written me a poem for the solstice, like actually addressed it to me, myself, Maria Sledmere. There are butterflies in my chest. It is a gorgeous glow stick of a poem, short-lined and luminous. I love it. I want to wear it like a charm, memorise the words to take permanent shape in the muscles of my mouth, or wedged somewhere deep in my sternum where the vibrations happen whenever I talk or recite a poem.
     With a jazz gig to attend that night, I decide to dress up all nice. Formal. Winged eyeliner and lipstick a shade called Sassy Mauve. I wear my mother’s black velvet dress, the one with cleavage implied. My best black bra for luck. Tortoiseshell heels which are plastic and leather and rock when I walk, giving the impression that I am gliding over a buoyant sea, the crumbling concrete. My hair all up in curlaceous mess, barely pinned. Drop pearl earrings (fake), pearl ring (real). Thin denier tights I bought that day from Primark. £3 for three pairs and each one will ladder upon the first wearing. Everything about me is frankly unravelling. I look forward to the evening. I am going to see my friend make beautiful, curious music in a room that feels like a 1920s speakeasy. I drink whisky again which doesn’t hurt. I smile without thinking. The music is so many genres rolled into one. Saxophones, chiptune glitches, steel drums, earworm piano. The mood catches and I feel a little electric again. There’s a positive energy. We get a taxi to the bar I work in. We talk until three am then you walk me home with your haunted pakora, waving it in my face. Our talk saved my life this year. It is brilliant, scintillating, silly. Intellectual veering to absurd and empty. Which I love, I mean the veering. Gossip entrances. The day they found his body, we talked for hours of frantic messages. You’ve read Remainder. The bit with the ten cappuccinos, which is how I feel about much of life: I want to pay for ten but only get the remainder. Have it made for me, that free surplus, a cleaving. Extra.
     My friend Jack wouldn’t come drink by the river with us in case he fell in, or swallowed moss. Really he was just skint. He’s a boy of vivid humour, which comes out of him in startling streaks. I love that about him. He’s here or he’s distant.
     I fell asleep at dawn, trying to ignore the squawk of the gulls. Every 11:11 I wish for love. I am not specific.
the hum / and bustle / of some / summering,
When I hug my friend at the gig I am trying to convey that he is a special person. I want everyone to know that about themselves, but especially the sparkly ones with these making minds, a talent. And also the ones with these caring minds, a talent. When I message the one who wrote this poem I am doing the same with delirious thoughts and vivacious emoji. Asking for brightness. I could not drink the half pint I ordered in the bar where I work. It tasted of sweat and work. Lager never much did it for me, but I wanted to order something golden. More work. I think from now on in the morning before sleep I will message you the colour of the sky. We might compare scene transitions, so the lore of our sleep is sweet. Palettes of pink and indigo, lilac and peach. So upon waking there will be more words to share, things I can’t keep to myself anymore.
     I expected this to be a long night, in which I would not sleep before work the next day. A hyper-night. But it wound down quite easily, reduced itself to threads. There was something to come, brooding in my body. I just had to protect it, then figure out a way to nourish it too, the exception.

—Maria Sledmere

Maria Sledmere is a writer and critic living in Glasgow, about to start a PhD in Anthropocene aesthetics, ecopoetics and the everyday. She tweets @mariaxrose.





SARAH EINSTEIN

The dog kicks me out of bed at 5:30, having finally cuddled me over the edge. As soon as I’m out, he’s climbed up so that his head rests on my pillow, just inches from my husband’s. He’s only ours for another few days—we’ve been fostering him while his person is on Fulbright in Zimbabwe—so I’m able to find it cute instead of annoying.
     I make myself a cup of coffee and sit down to comment on short stories written by my summer students. They’re good, mostly, and it makes me happy to read them. The one guy who sporadically just doesn’t turn stuff in has, again, just not turned anything in and it might be the tipping point. I hate it when I have to fail someone; only do it when there is genuinely no other choice. But I can’t give partial credit without at least partial work. Still, I will look for ways to give him extra credit on his final portfolio, because I know he’ll lose his athletic scholarship if he fails.
     My husband wakes and kisses me good morning. He makes a cup of tea and goes into his office to listen to the Austrian news. Because it’s in German, and because om spite of three months of Duolingo all I can say in German is Ich bin nicht der Tisch (I am not a table), it’s more soundtrack than information to me. I’m grateful. The news is wearing me down, and he listens to it for more hours in a day than I could take.
     I go out to the garden. The eggplant is coming along nicely. There are two zucchini and a cucumber to pick. One of the artichoke plants seems to be dying, but the other two are doing well. One tomato on the vine has blossom rot, the rest do not. The strawberry patch is flourishing, but before they ripen, the squirrels and chipmunks steal all the berries. The back patio is littered with them, half-eaten and green.
     I shower and then, a little ashamed, I sit down to play an hour of World of Warcraft. I run around gathering Ancient Mana to feed the dissipated elves who’ve grown addicted to it so that they will give me the next step in a quest line. It’s been a good fifteen years since I played any game with any regularity, but this summer I’m in need of the escape. An blue elf takes the mana and then sends me off to kill someone. I do.
     I drive to campus for a grade appeal meeting; I’m on the deciding committee. As a graduate student, I was terrified of having my grades called into question; I assumed it was a dire thing and that it happened all the time. In fact, I’ve been on this committee for a year and it’s only the second appeal we’ve heard.
     In the meeting room, the student glares at her professor and insists that he had treated her unfairly. She doesn’t contest the outcome of her exams, none of which she passed, she just thinks it’s unfair that he failed her. That he wouldn’t have failed her if he’d liked her better. But it’s a class with definitive answers, and she’s gotten too many of them wrong. We are kind in our deliberations, but we are also firm. She will not graduate on time.
     I stop at the grocery store on my way home. It’s a terrible grocery store, one we call The Food City of Despair. Everything at the meat counter expires in three or fewer days; I’m convinced they get the almost-bad meat and produce from the stores in more affluent areas. Our neighborhood isn’t quite a food desert, but it’s close. We shop here to try to make this that it stays in business, that our neighbors who can’t go elsewhere don’t have to buy their food at convenience stores. Most of our neighbors who can drive into Georgia to shop, because there isn’t any tax on food there.
     As I’m trying to decide if the bananas are ripe or over-ripe, a toddler breaks away from his mother and runs toward me, yelling “nanners, nanners!” I’m charmed by the sound of him. I turn to look, a broad, old-lady-charmed-by-a-child grin on my face, and see that he is wearing a “White=Right” t-shirt. I walk away from the bananas. I don’t trust myself to keep my mouth shut. I’m not even certain that I should, but can’t think of a useful thing to say. The two black women also in the produce section go about their business. I also can’t think of anything to say to them that wouldn’t be intrusive or weird. When I get home, I’ll send another $25 to the Southern Poverty Law Center. I know it’s not enough, but I can’t imagine what would be.
     I buy wine and yogurt to mix into the dog’s kibble and a bottle of Tylenol PM.
     My husband makes dinner from one of those meal services; Korean meatballs on a stick with a spicy slaw. It’s good. We turn on the TV and then each pick up our books. I’m reading The Best of All Possible Worlds by Karen Lord, and I’m drawn in by its complexity and nuance. These days, I mostly read speculative fiction, because I want to imagine other ways of being. My husband is reading a Warhammer 40k player’s manual. We are comfortably settled into our nerdiness together.
At the end of the evening, we crawl into bed. The dog has to be picked up and put into it; he’s too short to jump. He growls at our feet, thinks they encroach on his territory. This is an every night thing, and yet every night we still laugh about it.
     I dream about a group of white children in racist t-shirts. I’m meant to be taking care of them, but they keep wandering off into danger and there are too many of them for me to do my job adequately. One by one, they get hurt in horrible ways, and I’m helpless to stop it.

—Sarah Einstein

Sarah Einstein teaches creative writing at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. She's the author of Mot: A Memoir and Remnants of Passion, and her essays have appeared in The Sun, Ninth Letter, Full Grown People, and other journals. Her work has been awarded a Pushcart Prize, a Best of the Net, and the AWP Prize in Creative Nonfiction. She's the founding editor of Signal Mountain Review. 




Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 4: Ida Bettis Fogle • Rhys Fraser • Judy Xie • Melissa Mesku • Ryan Kim • Helen Betya Rubinstein • Caitlynn Martinez-McWhorter • Susan Briante • Samantha Jean Coxall • Patrick Collier

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. If you wrote something (it's not too late!), send us your work soon.

—The Editors





JULY 4: Ida Bettis Fogle • Rhys Fraser • Judy Xie • Melissa Mesku • Ryan Kim • Helen Betya Rubinstein • Caitlynn Martinez-McWhorter • Susan Briante • Samantha Jean Coxall • Patrick Collier






IDA BETTIS FOGLE

It’s 5:40 a.m. and my husband is stirring. Our circadian rhythms are diverging lately, but this is a little early even for him. I fall back asleep until the sound of the back door at 6:30 wakes me with the reminder that he is making a two-hour drive for a work meeting in St. Louis. Ah, there’s a real reason he was up so very early. I allow myself a moment of midlife crisis over failing to have a career that includes conferences in other cities.
     My phone takes itself out of its nightly scheduled Do Not Disturb mode and pings with seven messages from my son, who felt moved to share the existential crisis he was experiencing in the wee hours. I reply with what I hope are bolstering statements. 
     After I shower, I listen to radio news while I’m getting dressed. I still use a real radio in my bedroom—not connected to the internet. Koko the gorilla has died. I’m hit with a wave of sadness. I hear how immigrants are being treated and I’m glad I did the encouraging someone else thing before this. 
     While having cereal and tea, I send off emails to my elected representatives urging them to DO SOMETHING. Then I read my received emails. Another writing rejection. It’s an “encouraging” rejection, telling me my piece almost made the cut. Do they really mean it, or is that just what editors are putting in their form letters these days?
     My walk to work is pleasant. So noticeably pleasant. It’s been almost unbearably hot the past few days, but we finally got rain, accompanied by a cool front. All of the plants are fresh and perking up, and so am I. 
     Today is a short work day for me at the public library where I’m employed. Five hours—9 to 2. I work 30 hours per week, plus extra hours when I can get them, plus a second online transcription job, done on a per project basis. I arrive at work, noticing the staffing on the schedule is a little thin. Oh yes, some of the librarians are at the ALA Conference in New Orleans. How could I have forgotten? I even told one of them yesterday to say hi to Michelle Obama for me. (Ms. Obama is the keynote speaker this year.) I allow myself a second moment of midlife crisis over career things, etc. etc. But then I have to do real work.
     I spend several minutes trying to help an older lady get her email open, but she can’t remember her password. I walk her through the password recovery process, which I have to figure out from scratch because she has some obscure email service I’ve never worked with. She says she’s had the email address forever, but doesn’t use it often. Her current phone number isn’t connected to the account, so our attempts fail. I set her up with an appointment for a one-on-one tech help session later in the week. She needs someone who can sit with her and walk her through an online chat session with her email provider to get things straightened out. 
     I spend the next few hours helping the variety of people that keep my job so interesting. I help someone find ESL materials, and get angry all over again about immigrant detentions. I have to keep that to myself, though. I accept donation of books, routing it to our Friends of the Library group. Relief washes over me as I see clean books, with no sign of mold and non-yellowed pages.  
     On my break, I read a few pages of Barracoon. I’m not to the narrative yet, because I’m a reader who reads all of the forwards and introductions and postscripts and footnotes. 
     While I’m standing at the Welcome Desk in the lobby, a highly visible spot, I get a tickle in my nose. I try to be as discreet as possible when I can no longer avoid needing to blow it. This is my least favorite spot to work., due to the fishbowl feeling. Thank goodness we rotate desks and never have to be at this one more than an hour at a time.  My hour today is from noon to 1, meaning I get to speak to all of the delivery people bringing food to coworkers and groups using our meeting rooms. 
     Shortly before I leave work, I tidy our New Books area, choosing books to place face-out. I select as many blue covers as possible for prominent display in a superstitious bid to help the Kansas City Royals break a long losing streak and win a game tonight. As soon as I arrive home, I change into a Royals t-shirt to re-inforce the effect of the blue book covers.
     My 20-year-old son—he of the late night crisis—is home. I have a tense conversation with him about his short-term life plans, in which I waffle between complete acceptance and being a hard-ass, unsure what’s best in terms of parenting an newishly adult person who is experiencing health difficulties, but also could probably be doing more in terms of getting his act together. Or maybe he’s doing all he can. How can I know?
     I scan through the slim pickings in our kitchen. Feeding a 6-foot-tall college student is no small undertaking, and I’m perpetually surprised at how quickly we run out of food. We have some frozen fruit and some plain yogurt. I make smoothies for both of us, plus a peanut butter sandwich for myself. He’s already been eating. 
     My husband comes home earlier than I expected, cramping my style. Now I have to worry about whether I will appear antisocial if I want to focus on an online class I’m taking or put on my headphones and try to pick up some transcription work. I spend half an hour or so at each, anyway, making a few dollars on a couple of short jobs. I don’t think I can focus on any creative writing project at the moment.
     I start thinking about dinner early since everyone is home. I look through our meager cupboards again. I try to send my son to pick up a grocery store pizza, because they’re on sale. When he doesn’t want to go, I hate him a little for a minute. I feel since I had to spend several hours of my day talking to people, I shouldn’t have to do that any more until tomorrow. I deliver a brief, muttered oratory about all of the chores I do to keep the household going.
     My son packs up his laptop and leaves for the library. My husband goes somewhere unannounced.
     After they’re gone, I do wimpy exercises with four-pound hand weights while watching an episode of Parks and Recreation. I recall the show gets better after the first season. Then I catch up on five Words With Friends games, all the while wondering when my guys are coming back and what that means for dinner. I hate them both for thirty seconds for leaving me hanging with so many of the practical decisions so much of the time. Then I hate myself for thirty seconds for hating them. Because what if something happened to either of these people that I love so much?
     I look at social media and see terrible comments about immigrants. I wonder why there is so much hate in the world. 
     I leave social media and check on the Kansas City Royals’ schedule. They’re not playing tonight. The out-facing blue book covers entirely wasted!
     What to do with myself? Hold on—the husband is back in the house. He was just out in the back yard this whole time. But now he’s putting on his bike helmet and going out the door. Maybe I should get some writing done while he’s gone. No, wait. He’s back in the house again. I should talk about dinner with him. I’m instantly tired even considering the dinner discussion, so I leave it unhappened. He goes back out the door. I order pizza delivered, even though I haven’t budgeted for it.
     While I’m waiting, I make the Duolingo Owl happy by practicing Spanish for ten minutes. Then I write for a few minutes. 
     When the pizza comes, I panic over choosing a tip amount. I haven’t ordered food delivered for a couple of years, at least. I don’t know how much is standard. I don’t want to be like my dad, who thought to his dying day that leaving a quarter on the table for the waitress was appropriate because that was a decent tip back in the 1950s. I settle on three dollars and hope that’s not cheap-skating it.
     I eat while watching a YouTube video of an interview with Michelle Obama, so I can pretend I’m at the ALA conference. It’s a video I’ve had bookmarked to watch for a while anyway. The guys both come home and snag their pizza with no thanks to me for doing the hard work of calling the restaurant. A little later, my son tells me that when I asked him to go to the store, he’d just gotten a rejection email for a job he interviewed for and that’s why he was in a bad mood. We have a good talk about overcoming rejection. I hug him. He still lets me hug him. 
     I look at grocery ads and make a shopping list for tomorrow. The evening has disappeared. A thought occurs to me that I should have done some housework at some point today, but it seems a little late for that now. 

—Ida Bettis Fogle





RHYS FRASER

It all fades away, and while it is fading I…
     I wondered if I have trouble making things special, as in this day which has already half-happened without really anything at all to write about, apart from the nothing itself, as in the nothing that takes the place of something (i.e. something interesting) to write about.
     I was and am and will have been anxious about today (i.e. June 21st, hereon ‘The Day’, about which we are supposed to write); looking at the forecast (my schedule), I could already anticipate the lack of something notable. No plans, no arrangements. I hadn’t necessarily planned to amplify mundane goings-on into ‘profound’ observations, that was very much the last port of call, but as it happens, we will be lucky to even have any goings-on to consider mundane in the first place.
     I wake up around 10am and look at Instagram for a while. There are small sections of the carpet under the bed that have been eaten by moths, like lakes dotted across a landscape you see from the plane window. The carpet is a huge, tall wheat field for them, they become fatted with the abundance.
     The moths intrigue me, strange, delicate creatures to which I have no conscience in killing. Chameleonic, they will assume the colour of the fabric they ingest, and they make an odd, Klimt-gold smudge on the wall when you swat them.
     I will be honest, I don’t know if we were supposed to write everything about ‘The Day’ during the day; I’m writing this bit the day after (hereon ‘The Day After’), trying to remember ‘The Day’. I made scrambled eggs and black pudding for lunch, up here in Scotland you can buy black pudding everywhere, they even sell huge battered batons of it in chip shops. I don’t know who could eat that much black pudding in one go.
     For the last couple of weeks I’ve been working on a piece called In the Shadow of Absence, I think it’s a novella but at the moment it’s really not much at all, a modest sheaf of handwritten pages. I’m scared to type them up in case they’re bad. Each day I either work on it or think about working on it (guess which usually wins). ‘The Day’ was no different; I thought alot about working on it, but didn’t think it would make the grade for my little piece about ‘The Day’; ‘The Day After’ would be a much more sensible time to work on the piece, except I am now writing about how I didn’t work on In the Shadow of Absence yesterday (i.e. ‘The Day’) today (i.e. ‘The Day After’), because I realise there wasn’t really much else to write about regarding ‘The Day’, as it turns out.
     That might not be true though, let me think.
     Eventually I make it outside. I was going to watch Denmark vs Australia, but I decided against it. The stairwell of the flat smells a little like burnt butter, an odd, hot smell. Walking past the glass door, I think to myself that the old man with the zimmerframe will be dropped off soon by the asian man who drives the minibus, usually around 4. I’ll watch France vs Peru at 4. The back door has a stiff lock. I drink my tea and read a little, the sun and the wind are both gentle, there is a glare from the sun shining against the white paper. A white feather floats through the thin limbs of the trees. The mug is white with a large black X on it. Is that a letter or a Roman numeral, I’m not sure. These things can happen on any day.
     I am reading Camera Lucida by Roland Barthes, ostensibly as research for In the Shadow of Absence, although at this point I am not entirely clear what aspect of the text it is supposed to inform. I’ve got to the bit where Roland is staying in his dead mother’s flat looking through old photos of her, trying to find her real likeness, the photo that shows “the truth of the face I had loved”. Spoiler alert: he finds it, it’s called ‘The Winter Garden Photograph’.
     I’m lying on the grass outside, reading this bit of the book, during ‘The Day’. Again, I’m writing this bit ‘The Day After’, thinking how I too was trying to find the real likeness of something, the real likeness of ‘The Day’. Sitting here now ‘The Day After’, wishing there was something magical to pluck out, some heautoscopic perception of the self or a vision of the world inspired by the apex of sunlit hours. In Greenland the 21st is a national holiday, called ‘Ullortuneq’, everyone dresses up and has a party. The red semicircle on their flag represents the the sun setting in the ocean. If I were spending ‘The Day’ in Greenland it would be much more profound, I think, I’d be much more likely to feel something spiritual, about the world or myself.
     We drive to the pool before dinner. My goggles mist in the water while I’m swimming. The longest day. I remember sitting in the sauna after the swim and thinking of something great to anchor the piece on, but realised I had nothing to write on. It’ll come back, I thought. It didn’t, and now all I have is the memory of having forgotten something good to write about.
     Still, though, I’m starting to think there’s a quality in the slowness, the not-quite-nothingness.
     Back home, I lie still on the bed and watch a moth fluttering across the room in the orange light of the sunset. It reminds me of the feather earlier in the day, being gently blown through the limbs of the trees, a kind of cliched observation now to remark on things floating around in the air with no obvious purpose, but in the orange light of the sun, at the end of the longest day, ‘The Day’, it seems meaningful to me, it feels nice, for a moment.
     It is something to hold on to.
     ...hope to retain a few pieces of dust, a fragment, to help us remember.


—Rhys Fraser





JUDY XIE

A strange pattern filters across your eyelids. If I were younger, I would burrow into the bed of your arm, hum a drowsy no. But I recall that summer does not last forever—it drops down to cumbersome feet where the ache from previous day wear curls anxiously against painted toes. Your warm claustrophobia, as broad as the endless sky, spans down my neck. I throw off the covers and exchange our suffocating incalescence for another type of toasting. Where, I am greeted by the glaring noon, with the streets of Tianjin rotting of sun and blister. Its oppressive heat wraps around us as the thick blanket of smog settles across our shoulders. I find that I cannot shake the layers of rolling dust. And so the day comes down gentle in its infinite suffering, the slight sensation of discomfort—a constant companion. Under the pinch of the beating sun, we swelter into gasping weeds. No rain. No tears. And yet, the forecast for today is somber. 
     Today, I visit a stranger.
     The sky is heavy with bands of black iron. I have begun to know the air, dust-thick and fog-like as it hovers between heaven and hell. The streets line with industry while its homes stand on stilts, a symphonic churning that promises of beginning. But none of this began in cites, so the dead rest in the gardens of Eden. Decorated in flowers and lost prayers, they bloom in the saline and sunlight expelling oxygen in small breaths. I stare at the glistening tombs, a sundred matrix, of forgotten voices, rising up one by one in a chronicle of stone. My grandma rests among these groves, a myriad in the greying trees and crying colors. We face her portrait, and I am mutely reminded of the separation between here and there. Here. A sky of rolling wants—sunk down from work, tireless work. The screech and halt of development : angry. in its carving of new skylines. relentless. in its scrubbing of pastor and field. Walk this path with your feet padding the shifting dirt. Watch it turn to stone. Watch it fill with gravel. There. A land rolling in dreams. angry. in its lines that cut, cut, cut. relentless. in its coping of burgers and endless highways. Stare at foreign face. Live in foreign home. Watch as a girl walks into the sea-hopeful. A boy parked in a red Toyota driving off the dock because that’s where the dreams are—under millennium of buried sand and forgotten cities. But here I am, lost on the edge of a wave, wanting all of it to be mine. But it isn’t. But it can’t be. But I barely recognize her.
     But you do. And your smile flickers in the wake of the shaking day. And suddenly I feel like a stranger locked in a moment, intruding on a timepiece. And I think, this must be it: you, electric-flecked leaving with sunny tears, trailing down the crinkles along the outskirts of your temples to a sunkeness right below your lashes, right before they fan into flame. I reach out, trace your palms. It’s the simple things. So we search for broken memories surrounded by the sweet scent of incense curling into the still air. We rot under a sun of blooming should haves, could haves, would haves.
     You light a cigarette. For her. And then for you.  The day gathers in its heavy lens, through which the crowd of smoke becomes home. I see you blurred, packed in a sweaty sanctuary- your arms raised wailing with the effort. You take another drag. Your hands tremor with the lonely chasm between heaven and a cursed Earth. Nai Nai is smoking with us. She is propped against the gravestone secure, locked in a memory. Where there is no hiding from day—no denial of birthright, no question of home. Just you, standing here, with the light fading in snatches, char- dimmed. Until it’s just your face, smoldering under the lean afternoon sun. And the soft embers, ever gleaming, begin to eat up the cigarette placed under her portrait. We leave. A half- smoked cigarette: its dying embers, glowing faintly, closed in evening’s palm.

—Judy Xie

Judy Xie’s writing has been nationally recognized by the Scholastic Art and Writing Awards; she has won a Gold and Silver medal for her works. She was also part of the TSP Speakeasy project and enjoys writing both poetry and creative fiction and has been published in Polyphony Hs. She attends Mountain Lakes High school in Mountain Lakes, New Jersey and will be graduating in the year 2020. 





MELISSA MESKU

Twenty June Twenty-Firsts

I have been cataloguing my days, off and on but mostly on, for over twenty years. Today is as good a day as any to revisit them, these cryptic notes, these echos from past selves.
     On this day in 1998, a fragment of a quote from Kafka—something to the effect that he’d rather have a page of good writing than a day of beauty. I remember thinking, man, I love you and I love writing, but you could not be more wrong. You are as wrong as the day is long—and it’s the solstice.
     On this day in 1999, I started summer school at community college, my first day of what we sardonically called “the thirteenth grade.” I had recently stolen the Suede album Head Music and decided on the drive to school that henceforth, if I ever had a song in my head that I didn’t like, I would consciously switch to the first track, “Electricity.” Somehow this actually stuck; I listened to “Electricity” in my head earlier this week. 
     On this day in 2000, I was reading A Language Older Than Words. It felt monumental at the time—exceedingly significant—devastating—even life-changing. As it turns out, it was. Twenty years later this book and the author’s other twenty books still break me and build me back up. I still have this one on my shelf. I think I even paid for it. 
     On this day in 2001, I had heard there was a total solar eclipse going on, maybe in Africa, and it pained me that I was twenty and still stuck in my hometown. Two months to go...
     On this day in 2002, while walking from Ashby to the Berkeley campus, I thought about Kant—“one is conscious of oneself only as one appears to oneself.” I thought of the absurdity of identifying with one’s own face when one’s own face is something we can’t naturally see. I became possessed by an intense curiosity about the era before mirrors and glass, and wondered how people self-identified before reflective technologies. By the time I got to work, my cynicism kicked in; people probably crowded around ponds and cisterns of water, preening.
     On this day in 2003, I studied Hungarian while my roommate was out, went to a meeting about the housing co-op we were starting, and then packed up to go to Sacramento for a direct action and a protest march. I remember hiding my studies because it felt immoral, shameful, to spend time learning esoteric things while the world was what it was, and was at war again. I consoled myself with the idea that, if I made myself effective enough in fighting the system, I’d eventually have plenty of time in prison to fritter away studying agglutinative languages.
     On this day in 2004, I arrived back to Seattle after a seventeen hour Greyhound bus ride from Oakland. It was an emergency trip—the payphone calls during this phase of my polyamorous relationship were getting too expensive. I had ridden down from Olympia with the Rad Dyke Plumber, but for all the times I went up and down ‘Hometown Interstate 5,’ getting a ride back with a stranger from Craigslist failed me only this once.
     On this day in 2005, after visiting Timm in Sweden, I was listening to Kent on my Discman and looking for apartments in Ballard, in Seattle, so we could move in together and have a quiet little Scandinavian life.
     On this day in 2006, since moving back from Eastern Europe, I still had no job, but that didn’t stop the motorcycle dealership from giving me a full line of credit. I’m the proud owner of a 125cc scooter which I cannot stop riding. Five days in, I haven’t yet left the Seattle city limits but I’ve already racked up 200 miles. It takes five afternoons at different cafes to finish Snow by Orhan Pamuk. 
     On this day in 2007, I was reading Lisa’s copy of White Noise, and my still-favorite beat up copy of Ramble Right by Amber Gayle.
     On this day in 2008, I was in Austin. Wasting time, really, trying to beat the heat at a dodgy hostel. It was either that, or continue to drive around which I’d already done for months, or go back to Fort Worth where this hedge fund manager I met a few weeks ago had a fancy hotel room I could join him in. But I knew I’d be in Fort Worth for the next year anyway, for work—my first real teaching job. This is my last chance to be free, I thought, trying to muster the energy to care. 
     On this day in 2009, I was living in my car again, somewhere in New Mexico or Arizona, but I didn’t write anything down. 
     On this day in 2010, I was living in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn, with the guy I’d met in Fort Worth, Texas. I didn’t write anything down. 
     On this day in 2011, I was in self-imposed exile from myself, which is to say I was in LA and didn’t write anything down. 
     On this day in 2012, I may have been in NYC, Seattle, LA or NorCal—not sure, and does it matter? I was in the trenches too long. PTSD. Nothing I wanted to remember; nothing was written down.
     On this day in 2013, I worked from home in the apartment I just moved into, the one I’m in right now. I know this only from emails I sent; nothing personal was written down. 
     On this day in 2014, and 2015, and 2016, and 2017, I worked from home, or from a coworking space, or from Berkli Parc, the Lower East Side Cafe near me that is no longer there anymore. I don’t know whether it was a Tuesday or a Sunday on any of these dates, and it doesn’t matter because I did the same thing every day: work. Sure, in those years, I traveled some. Here and there. Spain and Italy and Ireland; all the Western states. But not on these dates. Because I only tend to document days that are novel, and working every day maybe can be but emphatically isn’t. They were good days though. They all are now. Now all I want to do is work because there are other things I’m trying to accomplish—it used to be hard to focus because there was too much fun to be had and too much rabble rousing to do—also because my focus was on every problem in the wide world and not on my own life—I was always grateful and mission-oriented but I was never happy or at peace—travel is a drug—novelty is a drug—novelty isn’t so appealing now because it distracts me from my mission—on the outside my life looks boring but I’ve never felt so capable, even more capable than I felt all those years yelling in crowds and hurling my body against the state and flinging my life to the far corners of the earth. I work now because I finally can. But nothing was written down. There are two reasons to not document: you can’t, or you can’t be bothered. At least this was the latter.
     On this day, today, June 21, 2018, nothing much happened. I could chronicle it, but it’s minutiae. I’ve already said too much and painted in too broad of strokes to go switching to pointillism now. But I’ll try: no dots, just dashes—I took the B train at Grand Street and had my cowboy breakfast on the walk from Bryant Park to Times Square—I worked through lunch teaching myself VueJS in preparation for the rewrite of our codebase—I listened to the Invisibilia podcast and posted a letter to Sonya on the way home—the Melania jacket thing really drove me mad, madder than I usually get, so I banged out an article on it—I “researched” this piece you’re reading by turning my book of days to June 21 where I can plainly see the last twenty years of today at a glance (cheating, I know) and I was super butt hurt that I hadn’t written anything at all on June 21 for the last ten years—Geoff Dyer, upon reading through one of his old journals, wrote, “How funny, to end up being one’s own biographer, to have to resort to the kind of research required by writing someone else’s life,” but for me, it doesn’t feel like someone else’s life, it feels like mine, mine, mine, no matter how different I am or how butt hurt my sixteen year old self would feel about me now, these old selves are my riches, my greatest wealth—I feel so pregnant with riches that I’m not interested in acquiring any more—now I think Kafka was right about the page—Kristin sent me a picture of her fresh baby and I felt grateful that I don’t have one—I sat down to eat a steak salad my boyfriend made for me and we watched a documentary about a man who most likely killed both his wives and then an old episode of Big Mouth because it’s hilarious—and at 11:30pm I put my feet up on the trash can in the kitchen and drank two Bitburger tall boys and we chain smoked and talked shit and laughed and played Clash Royale until my phone died and we went to bed. 
     Writing this, I just realized that, like Gary Shteyngart said yesterday about his new piece in the New Yorker, that I, too, managed to combine the unlikely worlds of hedge funds and Greyhound bus travel. Of Sweden and the Southwest, of novelty and drudgery, activism and angst. Days of beauty and of barely caring. This kind of thing happens when you look at your life in cross-sections. Incongruous bits of this and that. Jarring changes in setting and mood. Bizarre twists in plot, radical character arcs. The way they clash is deeply compelling. The hidden symmetries and accidental harmonies build and break like waves. And a bottle you once flung at the sea comes back to you bearing a message. There is one reason to document: to honor your life. You throw the bottle to sea, trusting you will hear its message one day. When it comes back it will sound familiar, but distant, like an echo or a shell pressed to the ear.

—Melissa Mesku

Melissa Mesku is a software engineer, entrepreneur and writer in NYC. She is the founding editor of New Worker Magazine, The Void, and➰➰➰.





RYAN KIM

The events of the morning of June 21, 2018 are so tedious I’ll breeze past them to the part of the day I wish to remember in clearer detail. Perhaps “tedious” is a disrespectful word. After all, this is how my partner felt she was treated storming from the Pancake Haus before our coffees even reached us.
     We had a crab dinner at my uncle’s. He bought six discounted dungenesses at the Chinese market which really weren’t that fresh. The meat was floppy and unsweet. But we were happy to all be together, myself and Abi, my brother and his partner, my uncle and aunt, my mother, my beautiful cousin, and a socially awkward newcomer just emigrated from Korea in search of UX work in Seattle. We crowded around the table, elbows knocking as we worked at claws and meaty shoulder joints, grinning over the heads of our white guests. Whenever my brother and I bring home girls (who are invariably non-Asians) my family has the tendency to softly prod in search of discomforts. Having been raised in the desert, it was Abi’s first time eating crab.
     "Fork or chopsticks?" My uncle, the chef, posed before the meal.
     "Uhh," Abi swung her eyes towards me.
     "It’s eat with your hands." I whispered.
     Abi grinned and proudly announced to my uncle with phony twang, "I’m Appalachian people. Hands is how we eat."
     I watched all evening as my aunt quietly slipped extra crab meat onto Abi’s plate (she was slowest at cracking the shells); as my brother put his arm around Abi in the kitchen; as my beautiful cousin tried hard to laugh kindly at Abi’s nervous stories; as my mother—dressed very elegantly, even imposingly—softened her suspicious looks at Abi as the others welcomed her shy offering of herself.
     I’d been quick to anger in the morning, when she stormed away at Pancake Haus. In the corner booth of the restaurant, we whisper fought the ethics of hitting your kids—a staple of my own Korean rearing. I cursed, accusing her of high-horsedness. I seethed as the mostly elderly Caucasian clientele stretched their wilted necks to catch snippets of our interracial couple’s drama. Of course I grasped the value in Abi’s point, "Why inflict pain when you can find a non-violent, a smarter alternative?" But in her tone I couldn’t help identifying the implicit suggestion that her culture was better at raising its children than mine, even if it was completely imaginary.
      I abandoned her in the parking lot, and almost didn’t come back to find her afterwards. We’d been at each other’s throats several times this trip already. This is what happens when two people dating suddenly spend every waking moment together. When one comes to meet the other’s family for the first time after only a short six months.
     Watching Abi flail at the center of my gregarious family, darting her anxious, smiling eyes from inquiring person to person, I perceived all the work she was doing. All the work I was not. I loosened the petty, tightened fist inside my chest, and gave myself a mental spank on the nose.

It’s late, and we’re in my father’s den-turned-bedroom, where I stay summers from graduate school. It’s musty. The adjoining bathroom is twenty years cigarette-smoky. The mismatched furnishings—cold bed, a desk without a chair, aluminum shoe rack, tatty maroon ottoman, empty man-sized gun safe, pencil sketch of a cow’s head—give a strong sense of the room as afterthought. Abi is snoring annoyingly on top of the sheets I aim to get under. To distract myself, I reach for a previously unnoticed photo album on the shelf above. I open it.
     An old photo album, especially when unexpectedly encountered, has the eerie ability to remind you: You are not you. At least it can disrupt the solid sense of your memory as a reliable construct for meaning making.
     In the photos, my family appears to be on a roadtrip. There are frequent shots of us leaning against railings with waterfalls, ocean views, grounded jets, and oxidized, Korean-looking statues in the background. For some reason, I count sixteen photos of just me and my mother clinging to each other in unremarkable doorways. It makes me wonder the reason. I realize how stylish my mom the architect was in her thirties, before her vanity calmed down. She has a high bowl cut hairstyle, and the most blasé sunglasses. Yet she smiles. My brother is three-ish and heart-achingly shy, his eyes make me want to cry. My dad is fatter and happier.
     In almost every photo, I’m making a face. Demon, imp, gargoyle, fiend, gremlin, scamp; these are the moods I pitch at the camera. This is the only part of the album which resonates with my recollection of childhood. Always dicking around.
     I come to a series of four photos which tell a story of my brother and me. We’re standing in the grass with a mountain looming starkly behind us. We’re wearing matching red hoodies, his sleeves droop over his hands. I am a full half-torso taller. In the first photo, I am very nice with my hands on his tiny shoulders. He looks blandly happy. Photo two, I’m starting to pull back his hood; Evan is suspicious. In the third photo Evan is crying, his arms sticking out helplessly, as I tug roughly at his hairline with the flats of both palms. I look very fucking entertained. I remember then, the feeling of younger brother as plaything. How fun a game it was to win his trust, then violate it, then also, I remember the fear and hatred for my father when he whipped me afterwards or slapped my protesting mouth so suddenly I barely knew to scream.
     In the fourth photo, Evan is alone with the mountain, his hands in little fists, his hoodie unzipped, wearing a look of betrayal at whoever was taking the photo who didn’t intervene.
     A loud snort returns my attention to the sleeping girl curled on top of the sheets beside my legs. She shifts a tad and makes a face like she’s having a bad dream. I shut the album, stretching to return it gingerly to the shelf, then place a soft hand on the skin of her thigh. It’s warm. Her face slips back into placidity. Her breath evens. I flick off the lights and find my way back to her in the dark.

—Ryan Kim

Ryan Kim is a fiction candidate at the University of Arizona. He is a 2018 Kenyon Young Writers Fellow.





HELEN BETYA RUBINSTEIN

Around 7:30am it was gray and unrainy. I lay on my mattress on the floor of a dorm room and looked out the window, deciding not to run, because I had run the previous two days. I’d write instead, I thought, but stopped, too hungry for breakfast, after barely a page. By 9am it was raining lightly; by 11am it was storming in a delicious way; at 11:30, when I should have left for the doctor, it was flooding; at five before noon, when I finished some edits and got downstairs, I realized I’d forgotten the keys to the car I’d been planning to ride my bike to, and decided just to bike the whole way.
     The construction on Dubuque terrified me, as it had terrified me on Monday: no shoulder, no sidewalk, and a deep puddle that crossed the whole street. Muddy water shot up around me; I worried about hydroplaning while squeezing my brakes. On Foster, the sidewalk puddles were too deep to bike through. I passed the so-called Peninsula and the dog park. The bump onto the pedestrian bridge clanked my rims. Across the river, more construction. BE NICE! a flashing sign warned, then, TAKE TURNS! I thought of the caption I might write—surprisingly urgent for Iowa—or no, surprisingly frantic, or stern—but knew I wouldn’t post a picture or a caption, because my phone was out of memory.
     Locking the bike to a fat pole under an overhang, noting my fancy raincoat was soaked through, I remembered the time hospital staff had prohibited me from parking my bike anywhere other than a faraway rack, and I’d nearly cried. I remembered the time I couldn’t figure out how to get out of Ophthalmology, and how, behind the disposable sunglasses I’d tucked behind my actual glasses, I had cried. Now I imagined asking for a towel inside. If they said no, I thought, I’d cry, and if I cried, my crying would be ridiculous, self-inflicted just like those other times.
     No, the receptionist said, they didn’t have a towel. What about paper towels, I tried. Um… in the bathroom, she said. I took off my sandals and turned them upside down in the waiting room, then walked barefoot into the bathroom and squeezed the cold water from my dress into the toilet. It seemed weird to lock the door while I did this, so I didn’t lock the door. It seemed wrong to waste paper towels, so I used just one to wipe my legs, the brown kind so thin it falls apart when it’s wet. I didn’t cry.
     Within ten minutes I was naked from the waist down, dress bunched up and cold under my back. I’d done ultrasounds before, years ago, but I’d forgotten the particular terror of letting a stranger see a part of myself—the insides—that I can’t see and don’t know how to read. She asked if I took birth control and I asked why she was asking. I like to ask, she said. Then she pointed her wand at my cervix, said, This is your cervix. This is your uterus, she said. I’m measuring your lining. This is your right ovary. Now I’ll get your left. Oh, she said. I wonder if you just ovulated. Do you feel any pain when I do this? I’m trying to see around your bowels, she said. There’s nothing emergent, so you’ll hear from your doctor in a week.
     It was over quickly, and outside it had stopped raining. The air was soft. There was my bike by the door. I wiped the seat with a lumped-up napkin from my backpack, feeling pleased I’d saved it, and decided to visit Trader Joe’s. The truth was I was excited to go in, I thought of it as a treat, though I’ve avoided the chain as a matter of principle since 2007. Too noisy with text is what I usually say (like being inside a commercial; the walls are screaming), meaning that the packagedness of even the vegetables, the tireless profusion of marketing, the approach to food as food-concept—all of it offends me. Still, I’d been craving a bag of mango-pineapple-macadamia trail mix for more than ten years.
     They no longer sell that trail mix, it seemed, but the news wasn’t so disappointing: it meant I had even less reason to ever return here. I lingered in the trail mix aisle holding a package of fruit-and-nut disks, date-hazelnut-cacao, wondering if I should buy them as desserts for my July hiking trip, if they were too heavy or if their packaging was too bulky, then deciding my sister, who lives near a Trader Joe’s anyway, might prefer another flavor instead. I searched for unsweetened chocolate bars and found only unsweetened cocoa powder, three dollars for an amount that usually costs six dollars if not eight. Not all baking cocoa is created equal, the package says on its side. (It would turn out to taste as though it had been mixed with baking powder.) I bought some nuts for nut-pricing’s sake.
     Outside, I ate a banana I’d taken from the dorm cafeteria that morning and Googled “black hole ovary,” then “ultrasound ovary normal” and “ultrasound ovary cyst.” The pictures that came up were too varied to have meaning. I called the blood donation center and asked if I could donate blood even though I’d had a tetanus shot in the last two weeks, and when they said yes I asked if there were blood drives anywhere other than the hospital. Not until July. It was drizzling, and now it started to rain hard. I put my phone in my damp raincoat pocket and began the needly ride home. In front of a Days Inn I said Fuck when a man almost took a right turn into me. On Dubuque I took my time through the muddy puddle, a line of traffic behind me, and yelled What the fuck! when I saw that a construction truck was blocking the first available entrance to sidewalk. I thought I might write a letter to the city, protesting the lack of sidewalk along that stretch of almost-highway, then wondered how much time that would take away from all the other stuff I want to write, and all the other letters to the city that should be written and read.
     Upstairs I peeled off my dress and raincoat and underwear and hung them up and showered, water hot, but didn’t wash my hair. Then I sat naked with the door locked and curtains drawn and wrote in the afternoon dark, parting the curtains every now and then to check the puddles, the easiest way to see if it was still raining. It was. I was hungry for five o’clock dinner and restless afterward. I might want to go to the Prairie Lights reading, I told A., and she asked me why. It could be useful for my project with N., I said. M. texted and said the scene was sad, hardly anyone there, the audience half campers. I walked over, imagining that the tops of my femurs were massaging the part of my belly that was swollen from bowels or uterus, and arrived fifteen minutes late. The reader looked at me for a long beat, making it clear he had seen me walk in and wanted me to stay. Never do that, I told myself—Never make someone who walks in late to a reading feel seen—but later I thought it might have been an effective sales strategy. The reader wasn’t reading; he was talking about his life as a gay man who’d come out late. Now he was in his seventies and had been out for thirty years. As a teenager, he said, his “man-boobs” had given something away about him that he hadn’t wanted given away. I wondered what a period gives away, and began to take notes. Secrets need to be lanced. Thought I had to do drag to fit in. I looked in the mirror and I saw my mom. Vulnerability is a path to courage. Conflict is a path to growth. Having a period as a hiddenness, coming out. When he opened the floor to questions, teenagers kept raising their hands and saying, as a start to their questions, I’m gay. I’m gay and I’ve been out for two years and I want to know if you have advice for finding love. He told the story of his first boyfriend, who’d picked him up in a locker room and shown him his erection in a bathroom stall, how he hadn’t expected love from the encounter but love had happened. I thought to myself, this answer is great.
     M. and I walked back to the dorm. Someone looked at my ovaries today, I told her, and when I tried to describe the unpleasantness of lying there watching someone see things in you without knowing what they’re seeing, she knew what I meant. It was cold in the dorm lobby. We tried to hold a game night but no one wanted to play. We started playing ourselves, but then M.’s dog came over and we sat on the floor with it and said, We should sit on the floor more often. I went upstairs a little before 10:30 check-in. P. asked if they used saws for open-heart surgery in the seventies. all my raindrops in the puddle, I texted the counselor group, lying on my belly on the mattress on the floor, thinking I’d fall asleep early. S. instructed M. and M. to up their metaphors. I opened my computer to shut it down but started searching for campsites for July and then it was 11:30. In bed I finished R.’s book, shut the light, and lay awake for a longer time than I have in months, wondering why I was awake and then knowing why, seeing and re-seeing those images of hidden parts of me, parts I can’t understand.

Helen Betya Rubinstein





CAITLYNN MARTINEZ-MCWHORTER

It is raining as my mother and I turn onto the long gravel drive littered with dead tree limbs. I have to get out of the car to move them so they do not scrape along the bottom of my low Civic. June 26th is a dreary day, lending to the house’s instant personification. This house is sadness. It is hopelessness. It is acceptance.
     My realtor meets us at the door. He is young, and awkward, and omits a false “niceness.” I sense he is the type who is well-versed in passive aggressive maneuvers. Showing me this house, today, is one such tactic. This house is in my price range after a recent price drop. It meets the requirements I have for lot size, bedrooms, bathrooms, and basement. However, this house is in disrepair. It does not have flooring in a third of the rooms. The ceiling in the main living room shows signs of water damage and leaks. My realtor wants me to reassess my standards. He hopes seeing this home will cause me to abandon my already few minimum requirements.
     I text the man I have recently been “seeing.” He lives three hours away (and four states). Our “relationship” is new, undefined, but casual at best. He frequently voices his distrust of marriage, and his dislike for children. He is negative and jaded about almost everything; yet, I’m intrigued by him, so I pretend those two things, things I want very badly, are not necessary. I text him: “House hunting is a lot like dating. I’m told my very minimal standards are too high, and I’m impractical.” He responds: “Very true.”
     The house has seen an addition built over the garage, and another in the opposite back corner. There are pockets of house that seem to appear out of nowhere. When you enter into what resembles a walk-in closet of one room, there is a door that opens to stairs which lead to another room. Several of these rooms do not even have drywall, and many look as though they haven’t been touched in at least a decade. I’m disoriented as I try to find my way back to the main section of the house, and use the light of my cellphone to guide me.
     As I stand in the main living room and look up at the huge cathedral ceiling with gorgeous exposed cedar beams, I am struck by the realization that this house was once really something. The remnants of décor scream 70’s. I can almost imagine the main room being filled with swanky men and women wearing bell bottoms. I’m brought back to a scene from Boogie Nights where Roller Girl skates around guests at a house party.
     I enter the back wing of the house, which is one of the other additions. It consists of a large bedroom and a second bathroom. I nearly gasp when I see the only piece of furniture left in the entire house. It is a metal hospital bed. A bed like this is all too familiar to me and my mother, as we acted as caregivers to my grandfather just a year earlier as his dementia worsened and he was placed on hospice. I knew from the tax information that the owner of the home was a senior. Her name was listed also. She must have lost her partner in this room, though taking care of them until the end, the way my grandmother had cared for my grandfather. There is a sinking feeling in my chest, and I leave the room to find the last section of the house I have not yet explored.
     After opening several doors which turn out to be closets or pantries, I finally find the entrance to the basement. There is no light, and I once again use my phone flashlight. My mother and my realtor follow. We cannot step too far off of the last stair, as an inch of standing water has collected on the concrete below. From my perch on the last step, I can see a washer and dryer placed on high wooden blocks. The unfinished basement has always been a great symbol to me. Where I grew up, this symbol was one of the middle class and the “American Dream.” New families bought homes with unfinished basements, with intentions of one day finishing them. They held onto dreams of what these basements could become. A home gym or rec-room? An additional family room? A home studio? A children's play room? An extra bedroom? Of the unfinished basements I knew as a child, most remained unfinished. I knew that these remained unfinished because other expenses always arose, but part of me wondered if the homeowners didn’t secretly intend for this. By postponing the renovation, the basement can still be all of those things one wants it to be. It is the real-estate equivalent of Schrodinger’s Cat. The dream is more important than the reality.
     I think about this as I look for my first home as a single woman. There are obvious reasons for buying which include building equity, having a sense of permanence in one's living situation, and no longer needing to pay rent. However, I think what makes the process so urgent, and so important, is something altogether unrelated. I realize I only want to buy myself an unfinished basement. I want a home to act as the blank screen to project my dreams onto, regardless of whether or not they ever come to fruition.  

—Caitlynn Martinez-McWhorter

Caitlynn Martinez-McWhorter is a Lecturer at University of Wisconsin-Waukesha and UW Colleges Online. She once spent over $5,000 in vet bills to repair a pigeon's butt, is the voice of a popular children's toy, and has potty trained a wombat. 





SUSAN BRIANTE

Midsummer Day 

1.

I wake from a dream I do not remember, hear the last bars of a song before the station ID and the news of the new Executive Order in which we have no faith. The local reporter explains she waits outside the immigrant child detention center to speak to someone. When the police come, the women reporter tells us she asks the officer to ask questions for them. She reports the police have not been able to talk to anyone in the facility either. These days silence seems as important as the information we may or may not receive. Unanswered questions, unsaid words, carry their messages like shadows: halfmoons in the mesquite’s shade during the eclipse with which I began the first day of classes last year. 
     I shower. My skin dries, my hair curls in the drought air. When I cut off a string from my black t-shirt with the metal scissor I took last week from my father’s desk, which was once his father’s (the heirlooms of the working class), I remember a dream from last night in which I unpacked my suitcase and found three such scissors (black metal, worn, old) and knew I had taken too much from my father’s house. In my family, this is an old story.


2.

In the coffee house, the air conditioner hisses like a band of cicadas, and the white boys stare into their laptops. The man reading Anne Rice mouths the words to the song “Nowhere to run to…”
A woman with the long brown hair on the leather chair leans in toward her friend who is talking. 
     The astronomer from the documentary Nostalgia de la luz tells us that because light’s lag moving across distance, we are always looking into the past.
     It’s 10:44 am. I have answered several emails. I text with friends: one in the DMV in Dallas trying to get her license renewed after it expired during her chemo; another in a hotel room in New York questioning the limits and contours of her marriage.
     I call my 87-year-old aunt who, until last week, had been my 80-year-old father’s main caretaker when he grew sick last year. She says she went to my father’s house today, took the walker that my father was using because she is thinking about her future. Everything we do or say is time stamped. 
     “The visible is thick, but it can always be got through,” writes Brenda Hillman.
     Last week, when my father was dying in an emergency room across the country I lay very still on my living room couch with my arms folded across my chest (as if I had died, were dying as well), and I told my father (silently and across a vastness) that I loved him and I forgave him and I thanked him and he was not alone.


3.

In the coffeeshop they play The Marvette’s “Destination Anywhere.” It’s 1:18. Farid joins me for lunch: eggs and ham over kimchi. We talk, check emails on our phone: models for the possible, places we might go. The temperature rises to 102, won’t stop until it gets a few degrees higher. The Dow closes down 24,461. Global stocks fall with the U.S. dollar. A crack on the floor stretches toward my table. Farid leaves. Another song. And the woman with the straight brown hair and her talking friend have gone.
     If we witness our lives through a hole shaped by our prejudices and perceptions, I witness today through a hole in the shape of my father, in the shape of the life of man who is no longer here.
     Sophia’s poetics essay recounts the journey of the Voyager spacecraft: “We were throbbing, grasping at the wrinkled edge of our own limits.”
     When I sit in the radio studio, the air-conditioner makes a sound like thunder from a far-away storm.


4.

It’s 5 o’clock, but the streets feel half drained. On the east coast, it’s 8 pm: the time I learned to call my father after he started going to bed early because he was always tired.
     My house is empty with not calling, so I try Farid at a roller-skating birthday party with G. While pop music jingles in the background, I tell him I don’t want to lose you.
     The Buddhist reminds me the glass is not half empty or half full, but always already broken. The universe is expanding. A pot of water boils on the stove.
     After dinner G practices Kung Fu, takes a shower, let’s me brush her wet hair as she hangs her head off her bed while her father reads Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows. Mrs. Weasley tries to discourage Ron, Hermione and Harry from going off in search of the horcruxes instead of going to back to school. And this is what we do as parents: retell the story, try to keep our children from danger. And when no parent hovers above us? A kind of loneliness and freedom? A release and absence?—Not yet for my daughter who asks her father after he’s closed to book to sit with her in the dark of her bedroom a little longer.


5.

After G edges to sleep, I make her lunch. I read the section in Nanni Balestrini’s Blackout about the 1977 New York City blackout and uprising. All over the country this week, people have been assembling inside and out, all over the country a series of detention centers for people who have made an impossibly desperate journey from worse to worse. In the coffee shop earlier today, I wondered whether or not there was a movement to demand my university divest from the prison industrial complex, and I wonder for a moment when I will look in it.
     I catch a glimpse of the sapphire sky, still white gold at the horizon like an old wedding band. If my broken toe did not hurt I would run out into the longest day’s last light.
     Instead, I slip into bed where we watch the video from The Carter’s new single on F’s phone. Farid says his favorite part is when on a staircase in the Louvre in front of an angel statue, Beyoncé whips the skirt of her dress into wings.


6.

In the dream, Farid and I drive in a convertible, maybe near an airport, because big concrete planters line the road. I turn to the right, look down the street. The space shuttle ascends like a plane taking off with a fiery engine glow. 
     Instead of white, it’s navy blue.
     Instead of “USA,” it’s marked with the words “American Airlines.”
     I implore Farid to look. The spacecraft rises slow toward an unknown destination into a blackness pin-pricked with light from a past that will never return to us.


—Susan Briante


Susan Briante is the author of The Market Wonders (Ahsahta 2016). She teaches in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at the University of Tucson. She is the daughter of Rosemarie Briante (1937-2014) and Nicholas Briante (1937-2018).





SAMANTHA JEAN COXALL

Sometime around 6:30 a.m. I find myself standing in my apartment complex’s courtyard as the dog sniffs and mouths at the ground, searching for the yellow mesquite pods that he enjoys crunching between his teeth. It’s been at least ten minutes of this. I tug his leash and finally, blessedly, he lowers his hind legs into a squat and wets the dirt.
     Back inside, consider slipping back into bed. On a normal day, I’d do just that and lie sprawled on the cooling sheets, dog curled against my side, pink snout snuffling into my armpit until the sunlight through the window burned just a little too hot. But I’m five days deep in a summer cold and comfort is quite elusive these days, so I forgo the lie-in in favor of a cup of tea which is really just a vehicle for coating my throat with a quarter of a bear-shaped bottle of honey. The dog licks at my bare feet as I move through the kitchen.
     I recently bought an herb garden kit from Target and the four metal tins sit on the single sunny windowsill next to the kitchen sink. In the store I had imagined that the type of woman who keeps an herb garden is one whose laundry moves swiftly from machine to dryer to closet as opposed to it sitting in limbo in a basket blocking the hallway. This woman probably does Pilates in the morning and makes blog-worthy meals with (fresh, not frozen) vegetables. The easy domesticity of tending to my own garden enticed me. It seemed like a quick ticket to feeling more like a full-fledged adult, as if the rather low-stakes responsibility of raising a couple of seedlings from flat earth was all I needed to do to in order to cast off all of my bad habits and immaturities. Plus, all of my friends take care of plants and I wanted to be like them.
     Check the soil in each tin with a finger while the kettle heats. Only two of the four herbs have sprouted, though I don’t know exactly which ones because I neglected to label any of them. I hope one is cilantro. I have a store-bought bundle of it slowing rotting in my fridge. In one of the tins, the pale green shoots fall limp and budding leaves tangle together. I try to gently pull the stems from each other like I might do to untangle my own knotted hair, but my touch only causes the stalks to snap. Quickly give up and mentally note this as a problem for a later date.
     While I am sipping weak tea, my father drops off a variety pack of sports drinks from Costco that he picked up for me on his way to see my sister and her baby. We don’t hug for fear of my germs hitching a ride on him but he pats the dog as he leaves.
     Sort through some drawers. For weeks now I’ve been attempting to sift through the five years’ worth of odds and ends that I’ve accumulated since moving into this apartment. I find it hard to throw things away these days, entirely too afraid of tossing out something with a secret significance that I can’t yet see, and I curse past me for not binning the bulk of these unneeded belongings before the distinction between trash and treasured memory became so blurry.
     The reason for this reluctance to let go is that there’s not a single space in this apartment that doesn’t bear the mark of my mother who died suddenly in April of last year. She assembled the furniture and painted the walls mossy green and hung up the geometric paintings that I’m not particularly fond of. I can’t convince myself to take the paintings down and replace them, but I’ve switched their places. As I move through the rooms, I find the ghost of her in the little things that she left behind. Printer paper patterned with notes written in her tight scrawl. Clothing borrowed from her closet that I didn’t get the chance to return. I have no real need for these, but how can I pack them away into black garbage bags and not feel like I am losing something sacred? This I agonize over as I pick through a storage cube of binders.
     I throw away a couple of spiral notebooks because the pages almost reek of teenage angst and decide to break for lunch. I drive too far to a Hawaiian restaurant and order curry and rice to go. I feel sheepish doing so, as I imagine that I am the only person who could walk into a place advertising lush salads and rice bowls piled with vibrant, fleshy fish only to order curry on such a scorching afternoon. The hostess tells me to be careful not to tip the container, but I’m not careful and it goes flying out of the passenger seat at the first left turn I make as I drive back home. 
     I eat sitting on my living room floor and push the bowl to the middle of the table where my dog can’t reach.
     Resume cleaning. I play a comedy podcast hosted by a man whose father wrote a series of absurd erotic novels. Each week the host reads a chapter while two cohosts chime in to point out the moments when the prose is painfully unsexy. It’s easy to laugh. There’s no method behind my movements. I drift from one room to the next, often leaving stacks of half-sorted mess that I’ve deemed too mentally distressing to take care of at that moment. I find another card signed by my mother. My fifteenth birthday. I snap a picture of the note inside and hang it on my fridge. I need more magnets.
     At some point late in the afternoon, I realize that my reluctance to throw anything away is born out of a desire to memorialize this space. To leave it exactly as it was when she last walked the same hall and breathed the same air. My life has split into two parts: when I had a mother and when I didn’t. I am reluctant to let go of “before”: before the death and before I knew the acidic burn of grief. I don’t want to leave my mother in the past.
     Too many days inside has me feeling restless. The dog feels the same. I can tell because he stares at me with his wrinkled face from the mat in front of the door. He looks like an old man. I know he wants to roll in the damp grass, feel wet sunshine soak into the fur of his back, but his allergies are acting up. His nose has been dripping all day. No romping in the grass, then. I meet his stare (as best I can—he is walleyed) and hope that my that my face reads to him as sympathetic: I’m sorry, but this is for your own good. To ease my own guilt, I take him for a ride in the car. 
     As we return home, my friend calls from San Francisco, where she is walking by the Painted Ladies on the way back to her hostel. I sit cross-legged in the middle of the carpet while we talk about writing and burritos.
     Feed the dog kibble that stinks up the room like salmon. Feed myself reheated leftover curry. I run a bath too full and too hot and sink down into the water until my skin can’t stand it and the dog is impatient with the want to touch me. His need for my company despite my current state of stagnancy makes me emotional: oh, how I love this frog-faced little creature that shares this messy home with me. I lie naked with him on the couch where he falls asleep while I watch a cooking competition on television. At 10:30 p.m. I scoop him up under my armpit and carry him to bed. We curl up together, my fingers feeling for the thumping of his little heart. The air conditioner kicks on and I breathe in the cool rush of air, holding it in my lungs, thinking of dead herbs and birthday cards.

Samantha Jean Coxall

Samantha Jean Coxall is an MFA candidate in fiction at the University of Arizona. She writes about spooky forests, family tragedies, and Bigfoot sightings. She lives with a deaf French Bulldog. 




PATRICK COLLIER

From the clock-radio, a female newsreader announced, “President Trump held a rally of his supporters in Duluth, Minnesota.” A crowd chanted in the background.
     “Every time he needs an ego boost he holds a rally,” she said, her eyes still closed.
     I went to my study to check the window screen. Two wrens had been building a nest between the screen and the window. They had been getting in through a bird-sized hole in the screen. I’d blocked the hole by wedging a picture frame against it.
     Nothing had moved since yesterday.

We walked in light rain to the car, carrying bags—each of us a small bag of clothes and a briefcase with a laptop, notebooks, things.
     On the interstate, a flatbed truck carried large plywood boxes, belted to the bed by thick straps. It splashed spray on our windshield and veered slightly into our lane to avoid a breakdown where the highways split.
     She drove. I munched a chicken sandwich and sipped coffee from a thermal mug.

At the airport, I peed and got a New York Times. The lead headline read: “In Retreat, Trump Halts Separating Migrant Families.” A sidebar headline beneath declared,
Incivility Infests
Divided Nation
In Era of Trump.
     Also above the fold: “Whites a Minority in the U.S.? The Transition is Accelerating.”; “Economic Surge Gives President More Firepower in Trade Battle.”

On the jetway, one man in front of me wore a short sleeve, button-down shirt festooned with sharks. The man in front of him wore a short-sleeve, button-down shirt festooned with cacti. The man behind them wore a shirt advertising a brew pub. The woman behind them, her hair done in tight corkscrew curls, wore a flowing, beige t-shirt dress.
     Boarding, I snagged my bag’s strap on a first-class arm-rest walking by. A seated young man freed it for me, but his look when our eyes met seemed hostile.

I sat by a window in a row of two next to a man with short cropped grey hair, middle-aged (like me). Neither of us are broad-shouldered, but still I pulled my arms and shoulders inwards and kept them that way.
     I dropped a pen as I was situating myself (reading glasses, notebook, book, highlighter, pen, all from the flapped compartment on the back of my canvas brief case). He caught the pen as it bounced on the edge of his seat and handed it to me.
     Later, I noticed the smell coming from him—faint but clear—indicating heavy drinking last night.
     But I felt grateful to him for catching my pen.

In Atlanta, having missed our connection, we got quick and courteous help, got re-booked.
     She got on her phone to revise our rental car order and was told the car would now cost $500 for two-and-a-half days. We did some quick not-quite math: hours lost or saved, expense.
     We went back to the desk and re-booked again, helped by the same woman, a black woman in her thirties, carefully made up. Again, kind, in focused good humor, courteous, quick. “Sorry again guys,” she said as we walked away.

Four hours to kill. We wandered, looking for a good place to sit and work.
     In the Plane Train, in the corner, a middle-aged man and woman, he with his head shaved and wiry arms heavily tattooed, she in a cold-shoulder blouse and short shorts, kissed and clung to each other.
     Four seats down, past the doors, a young Latina airport worker stood behind a borrowed wheelchair in which a white woman sat. The woman in the chair wore a flowered blouse and black slacks, her wide sunglasses pushed back on a mop of dyed, rich brown hair, cut in bangs.
     The woman behind the chair scrolled through her phone. She wore a purple shirt with the slogan, “Another day in Paradise.”

I sipped a cappuccino and wrote this, my laptop perched on the corner of a wooden café table to make room for hers, our screens just about touching.
     The Atlanta airport has good wifi. The internet told me there are seven species of wren in Indiana, all of them insectivorous.
     The internet told me the Plane Train is really what it’s called. Capital P capital T.
     I opened up some resumes and started a spreadsheet and worked.

In an airport seafood place, we ate crabcakes and talked about a baby present. The baby and his parents will be showered with toys, books, and baby things. Should we set up a 529b? A trust? Savings bonds?
     I peeked over her right shoulder, looking for World Cup scores.

In the bathroom, the ambient music—characterless smooth jazz—was loud enough to rise to the level of consciousness. I waved my hand to activate the automatic faucet.
     Outside, a young man leaning against the wall pointed to the spot next to him and said, “Here, bruh.” He seemed to be looking at me, and for a second I thought he wanted to sell me something. Then I realized my mistake and stood, looking up and down the concourse, noting how clean and bright the space appeared.
     This triggered memories. The airport in Dubai, with the look and feel of a casino merged with a high-end mall, with beautiful women spraying perfume. And, years ago, a student from Kyrgyzistan describing his route home from the U.S., expressing his preference for flying via Athens rather than Moscow. “In Moscow, the airport is full of people who want to rip you off.”

Beyond the tall windows, outside the air-conditioned bubble of the airport, it clouded up, rained, cleared. The sun shone on jetways and fuel trucks and baggage carts, casting shadows.

Are wrens migratory? I wondered.
     The internet told me that some migrate and some live year-round in the deep southern U.S., Mexico, and Central America. The migrators winter in the upper south and fly north to a breeding area that begins in Kentucky, just south of Indiana. On the map, the breeding area was red; the band they migrate through—a narrow strip extending from north Texas and Oklahoma through the Carolinas—was yellow.
     The internet told me that wrens like birdhouses, are “remarkably tolerant of human behavior,” and are passerines—perching birds.
     This confirmed what I had seen.
     A window screen with a bird-sized hole in it would present itself as a kind of birdhouse.
     Yesterday, when I was scooping out the nesting materials and putting them in a garbage bag, one of the wrens sat in the branches just a couple feet away and chirped angrily at me.
     Later, when I had covered the hole, the bird returned periodically and stood up on the screen, its little passerine claws threaded through the holes, and looked around, quizzically.

Back on the plane, I read, retreating into a bubble of my own.
     In Eric Bulson’s Little Magazine, World Form, I read, “Modernism’s magazines, where so many writers were published, were subject to the laws, timetables, and business practices of transnational movement; some of them stopped dead in their tracks, but this provided, in the end, different strategies for interactions between magazines which, in turn, influenced how certain works could and could not travel the world.”
     In Philip Roth’s Everyman, I read, “The diamond merchant who came most frequently, and whose migration route had carried him and his family in only a few years from Warsaw to Antwerp to New York, was an older man dressed in a black hat and a long black coat that you never saw on anyone else in Elizabeth’s streets, not even other Jews.”

I pulled out the New York Times and did the crossword puzzle. Thursday puzzle: medium hard.
     Twenty across: _____ flu. Answer: “Asian.”
     The airplane flew from the wren’s year-round zone through its migration zone and back into its wintering zone.

An elderly woman with a mane of white hair, waiting for the bathroom beside our back row, started a conversation. “Are you going to Allentown? Are you from Allentown? I’m just visiting, in Wind Gap. I’m from Florida.”
     She wore a white top and a long beige skirt. When she passed by, a faint scent suggested she was wearing an adult diaper.

We descended through turbulence. My sinuses ached slightly from dry air and the pressure change.

We carried our light overnight bags and heavy briefcases through the small, dumpy regional airport. The carpeting had an alternating pattern of checks and solid color blocks, all in the palette of faded jeans.
     In the rental car line, one party stood in front of us: an Asian man in his late 60s, perhaps, and a young woman, maybe his daughter. She spoke to the rental car clerk and translated for her father. The rental car clerk was a round-faced young woman with brown hair and sharply drawn eyebrows; a long brown cardigan was wrapped around her shoulders.
     The father and daughter were wearing jeans. The blue of their jeans was much richer than that of the carpet.
     They had come, not from a flight but directly to the airport, to look into renting a car for him for two weeks in July. A long discussion ensued about how it would be paid for and the merits and costs of various levels of insurance.
     I thought, the young woman could do all of this on her phone, but I’ll be patient.
     My wife said, “I’m not counting the minutes.”
     In halting English, the man said to the clerk, “How much with insurance again?”
     The clerk answered, and my wife mouthed along, “One thousand one hundred and ninety nine dollars.”
     I thought of the Richard Brautigan story “Complicated Banking Problems.” The narrator goes into a bank to cash a check for something like six dollars. Every customer in front of him in line has a strange problem that necessitates long consultation. One has a bird on his arm that he wants to deposit in the bank.

Outside, in the fresh air for the first time in ten hours, the sun shone on the nicest day I’d seen in more than a week. It felt just slightly warm; wispy clouds alternated with pale blue in the sky.
     I drove our rented Corolla through a moderate Allentown rush hour, swerving with the freeway through construction zones.
     Her phone told us how to get to the house, leading us through residential streets lined with mid-century brick houses with small, neat yards.

We hugged and kissed our niece, the new mother. The baby, enjoying his sixth day outside the womb, slept in a souped-up infant seat with a motorized base that was moving him in a soothing, swaying, side-to-side, up-and-down pattern. His left fist was pressed into his face, scrunching up his features.

We sat on the couch and took turns holding the baby. He was born two weeks early and is small. I noted that his little forearm is the length of my index finger, his little foot the length of my thumb.
     I stroked his feet and his limbs and his belly. I lightly stroked the fine down of his blond hair. The ridges of his skull plates jutted slightly, making a V behind his forehead.
     He slept on, occasionally putting his hands on his head and face, giving him the look of an agitated old man.

Our niece’s is a household in which the default is for the TV to be on, with the sound low, often with no one watching.
     Now the evening news was on. A Texan in a cowboy hat was saying that immigrants come into our country illegally and create a burden on our taxes. “Schools, medical care, everything.”
     I gently squeezed the baby’s little foot.

We hugged and kissed my sister-in-law, the new grandma.
     Our niece, who had a difficult labor and a c-section, was feeling better for the first time since the delivery. She talked, telling us everything that happened. She described the pain of labor as a combination of burning and the need to “take a huge dump.” She described the feeling of having the baby pulled from her. She described them placing the baby on her chest, her arms strapped and tethered to IVs, unable to hold him.
     She talked more in the three hours we spent at her house than she had in the twenty-eight years I have known her. She was relieved and feeling better physically and on a very low dose of Percocet.
Her husband flitted in and out of the room, sitting for periods, then getting up and tending to things, putting things away. He’s handy and hard-working, even when he’s at home. When we pulled up, he had been installing a new latch on the gate outside, fiddling with electric drills and bits.
     On the TV, a graphic read “Police Shooting Protests.”

We hugged our nephew and his wife, the new uncle and aunt, she herself four months pregnant. They came in bearing trays of food and a plastic drum of cookies.
     Food arrived from an Italian joint: a pizza and meatball parm sandwiches and calzones. The new uncle held the baby while everyone else went back and forth to the kitchen pass-through, filling plates and plastic cups.
     We debated eating outside. The new mother said the baby shouldn’t be outside for a week, to avoid environmental toxins. The new father said, “Are you kidding me? Babies have been outside for thousands of years. Babies used to be born outside.”
     The new aunt/expectant mother said, “Yeah, and a lot of babies used to not make it to adulthood.” Everyone laughed.

Everyone talked about the night of the birth; they had all been in the waiting room while the new mom pushed and suffered and had surgery. They described the waiting, and the awkwardness with the soon-to-be-new grandfather, who is long-divorced from the new grandma and estranged from his son (the new uncle).
     The new mom described again the pain of labor; she described the night her water broke, puttering around the house for a half-hour before waking her husband.
     Her husband described the sight of the C-section, the doctor and nurses manipulating his wife’s innards, repositioning them once the baby was out.

People started yawning.
     We took turns holding the baby. The new father and the new uncle/expectant father talked about the relative merits and costs of baby surveillance devices.
     The new father talked about travelling to Greece next spring; discussion ensued of the practicality of bringing the baby—and bringing along the new grandma, to help with the baby. The new grandma detests flying.
     We hugged the new uncle and aunt/expectant parents, and they left.
     Those of us left behind yawned more, and more frequently.

We drove 10 blocks, through silent residential streets, to the new grandma’s house, where we were staying. Inside, I was nodding on the couch in less than five minutes.
     We carried our light overnight bags and heavy briefcases upstairs to what used to be the new mother’s bedroom, when she was a child. A poster hung on the wall, a photo of a mother giraffe kissing a baby giraffe, above the legend “The first kiss.”
     We lay down in twin beds pushed together. I fell asleep clutching her arm.

—Patrick Collier

Patrick Collier is Professor of English at Ball State University and director of the Everyday Life in Middletown project.





Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 5: Ander Monson • Jennifer Gravley • Jeannie Roberts • Mark Neely • Jill Christman • Alison Deming • Ella Neely • Henry Neely • Sandra J Lindow • Emma Thomason

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. If you wrote something (it's not too late!), send us your work ASAP via this submission form (it's okay if you didn't RSVP before: the more the merrier).

—The Editors




July 5: Ander Monson • Jennifer Gravley • Jeannie E. Roberts • Mark Neely • Jill Christman • Alison Deming • Ella P. Neely • Henry Neely • Sandra J Lindow • Emma Thomason






ANDER MONSON

Up at 6:30 to the screams of Athena who’s freaking out because Toulouse (boy cat, 15) chewed up her “paper bag” during the night, to which, well, yeah, that’s kinda what you get for leaving it on the floor, we told her, which didn’t help. No idea why this mattered, but it did not seem like a strong way to start the longest day of the year. I think she took his chewing somehow as a personal affront, since she’s been trying to befriend him after the recent death of Napoleon, by far her favorite of our cats. Lucky for her he’s an easy lover: before we left she was tossing treats his way and chortling.
     It’s 84 degrees out at 7:30am which is dispiriting but typical in its relentlessness. Stepping outside is a grinding punishing but we have to have the intense heat to bring in the monsoon (and to remind me that there is an endurable downside to our beautiful winters: without some suffering how does one enjoy anything?). Knowing this doesn’t stop the fact of the heat and sun from its demoralizing work. There is virtually no part of the day that will shelter you this month.
     I’m reminded that my fitbit tracks some daily data automatically, paying a kind of attention without me having to, so at least I’ll have that data to report if nothing else. The high in Tucson today will be 107, five degrees cooler than yesterday (112), which tells you something about what we mean by heat. Sunset here will be at 7:34, and every time I think about summer sunset in Tucson I’m reminded of how long June days were in Michigan (in Grand Rapids the sun goes down today at 9:26pm; in Houghton at 9:54pm). Here the differential between sundowns in December and June is only about 2 hours; in Houghton it’s about 5 hours. Stupid latitude.
     Walking A into school I notice my toenail polish is chipped. I have a little vanity—not much—about it, but I won’t get around to doing anything about the situation for another week. Hey, but noticing is a kind of doing, and it’s the doing I’m supposed to be today, so here I am, noticing. I tell Athena I’ll pick her up after lunch.
     I send out a reminder to our (333—!—at the time of this writing) collaborators on the June 21 project. The email generates a couple auto-replies that I briefly misperceive as important email. Maybe they are important email. An embarrassing percentage of my days consists of reading or responding to notifications of one sort or another, often “important email”, which suggests that “important” may not always be the most accurate word.
     I really don’t want “what happened today” to be an account of my emails.
     Cicadas and sun though. Their metallic duets.
     Silence between air conditioner cycles though.
     At least an hour elapses with me noting no data.
     Then a moment of frustration when I’m trying to pay a little bit of sustained attention to something, and every device I have starts going off: cell phone pings texts of good news (birthdays, engagements), and I a friend calls to backchannel about potential red flags about a possible job candidate. Work email. Work email. Work email. Rooster (girl cat, 17) rubbing against my leg and lobbying hard for feeding. She’s a skinny animal. Received a prognosis of “she has a month to live” 26 months ago, and I thought we’d lose her a couple times since then, but she’s still going hard in the paint for which she has my respect, and so I feed her anytime she wants, which has the result you’d expect, with her figuring this out and hitting the stimulus button as often as she can. Napoleon was her younger sibling. I wonder to what degree she misses him. He died two weeks ago, which was hard for all of us, and I don’t know how to talk about it much less write about it without feeling like a chump. With old animals, time feels more acute.
     Reminded of this line from the Silver Jews: “Time is a game only children play well.” It’s in a seemingly-throwaway song (“How Can I Love You if You Won’t Lie Down?”) but it lands.
     Text from Verizon that my bill is paid. Why does Verizon text me that my bill is paid? I feel possessive of this particular mode of notification I try to reserve for friends and family. Why does an automatic confirmation feel as invasive as it does?
     Biweekly email from the university system reminding every employee to turn in your time cards or whatever. Can’t they disambiguate the hourly employees from the salaried? I always feel a little guilty like there’s something else I should be doing, usually because there’s something else I should be doing. Try not to get into a paralytic loop about it though.
     Watching Argentina get pantsed by Croatia and trading texts with another friend, the ex of a friend I texted with earlier, about the spectacle. I don’t mention either to the other. Sad to see Peru’s run end, though, earlier, but I have Mexico to cheer for, so there’s that.
     A little truck roar comes from down the block. Today is recycling day, which is good news for Athena. For the kids at school, who line up to watch, the recycling truck’s progress through the neighborhood is an event, proof of order, I suppose, in the world. I forget how meaningful / magical these systems are to them and how routine they are to me. Trying to explain the plumbing and sewer system to her I was newly reminded of how incredibly complex these systems are. I had to stop.
     The act of paying attention reminds me of how much slips beneath my attention. And it’s an eroding feeling I’m feeling the more I pay attention to it. How much of it is like Wile E. Coyote, running out over air and not falling until he notices?
     Are you feeling that slipping feeling too? Maybe it’s better not to notice at all.
     I go for a nowhere run. The treadmill feels even less like something happening than running outside does. If work is force times distance, then what is accomplished is nothing: force expended, no (actual) distance covered. It’s a strange thought, but running outside in Tucson in June requires a different kind of commitment to bodily discomfort, which I try to do a couple days a week, and more if I see some clouds, but I won’t today.
     A day is made of many subroutines: commuting, toilet, pet attention, pet feeding, child attention, online reading, online feeding, inbox outbox, social media, submissions and contest manuscript reading. Fitbit poking me to get off my ass: broooooooo! getttt upppp. Corresponding.
     Like most days this day’s made of swathes of attention and swathes of inattention. Text arrives from Albert Goldbarth, who complains about the boringness of his day, which he is duly chronicling. It’s not the subject, man, it’s the mind we’re interested in!
     Twitter’s not always just an echo chamber or irritant. For instance: from it I find the news that today is also #NationalSelfieDay (quelle coincidence!)
     Is paying attention to the world a kind of selfie? In writing “what happens” are we necessarily manifesting a self, creating a system? Probably.
     Does paying attention to what happens on a day treat the page—or the human mind—like an undeveloped piece of film? Is that even a metaphor that will make sense to anyone? (When was the last time you got physical film developed?)
     The metaphors we use for the self or mind mirror the technologies of the time (mind as computer, for instance). The more closely they mirror the moment the less we think about what else they imply.
     Retrieve Athena from school. We go to Target and buy some shit. Come home. She eats a massive solid chocolate bunny leftover from Easter. Sure, I say, go nuts, which she does. She has a paper plane she brought home that she tells me a long story about. Esther wanted this plane, she explains, but I took it while she was sleeping. How do you think she’ll feel, I ask, when she wakes up and finds it gone? Bad probably, she says. How bad will she feel, she asks. I don’t know, I said. She wanted to play with it when we played with them. But I got to pick first which plane to bring home, she says. It’s purple which is probably why, but I suspect that Esther’s feeling bad was not an unwelcome outcome.
     Her paper airplane, though, is nice and sleek, even if she doesn’t know how to launch it. I make her a few more, but her teacher’s chops are way past mine, and my planes suck but fly, so there’s that.
     Watching drone footage of my hometown in Michigan after getting a 100-year rainstorm (6 inches in less than 24 hours: unheard of my whole life). Main thoroughfares are just wiped out. I find a gofundme for the Michigan Historical Society and Archive, which has flood damage, and I kick in a couple hundred bucks. You should too.
     Noticing that my noticing (at least as serves this project) is highly attenuated as I’m in full parent mode. Big gaps in what I remember or make a note of. Story of the last four years. This is not news to a large percentage of the population, though as usual I’m a little late to the conclusion.
     It’s rest time for Athena but I’m the one who’s exhausted. Chocolate milk. Some snack that I forget (probably pretzel sticks or Chex mix, from which she only likes the melba toasts). I read her a couple books, including an old Clifford one that’s pretty bad. It’s about how awesome her big-ass dog Clifford is, in which the protagonist ends up grandstanding shamelessly in front of her friend, a fact not really more than nodded at in the book (also the logistics of the giant dog are…gross to contemplate). One of the weirdest things about the Clifford books is how little the books are interested in consequences of any sort, which may be why they’re so appealing. The dogs never receive their comeuppance for trashing a worksite, for instance, and causing what must be hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage and almost getting one or more of their friends killed.
     One of Athena’s stuffed cats has a “vet appointment.” We go on a hunt to find her vet tools so she can administer treatments of various efficacies to the animals during rest time. I don’t comment on the quality of her quackery.
     56 minutes pass relatively restfully. I send some emails.
     She is in my office now.
     “How many minutes are left?”
     “2”
     “Can I skip the 2 minutes”
     “You can skip the 2 minutes”
     “Okay, let’s look for basketball keychains!”
     Which we do (don’t ask). More snack provisioning. Then time in the pool, which we like a lot. Megan doesn’t particularly enjoy the “swimming” which mostly consists of Athena molesting and capsizing me, but it suits me fine. It’s beautiful outside to be in the pool in June: the heat recedes, at least under the sun shade. It feels deluxe and unbelievable that things can be this bright and cool and beautiful. Leads to a lovely moment: floating in the pool, shielded from the sun, considering the sky: blue, palm trees-framed. No clouds. Neighborhood sound. From here the sun seems like a feature, not a flaw, a benevolent god. In an hour I’ll feel differently, but until then it’s sublime! Would I have noticed it if I wasn’t on noticing duty?
     I’m not moving into another house in a better school district (a consideration for the next year) unless it has a pool.
     Megan emerged from work while we were in the pool. We rinse off, and Megan cuts up potatoes and rosemary for the grill. Not a fancy meal but it is a good one.
     The gap between the end of dinner (the salmon went bad in the fridge which we only realized after cooking it: thought it was just a little bonus smelly; note to self: Megan is always better than me at catching this; just listen to her next time instead of relying on my manly intuition and my duller senses; luckily for Athena, for whom it is a fav, we had backup salmon, honey-smoked from Costco. It’s fantastic) and then bedtime. Cleaning, dishes, washing, watering plants to get them through the extreme heat until it starts raining in a couple weeks. Athena watches some insane and colorful Japanese-animated show in the cool inside.
     Thought about taking Athena to see the 12,000 bats under the bridge at the Pantano Wash, but she seemed beat before sundown, so I figured I’d punt that to another day. Her toy cats Ginger and Frank each brushed their teeth, then she brushed her teeth. Read four books. She’s been revisiting “books we haven’t read in a long time,” which is an opportunity to bring back some neglected winners. Tonight: Penguin Problems, one that I can’t remember now, and Press Here (twice). Press Here is fantastic, a stroke of genius. Penguin Problems I used not to like, but it’s grown on me.
     Ordered a box of Affresh washing machine tabs and a copy of Bernadette Mayer’s Midwinter Day, a project much in keeping with our own What Happened On June 21th, on the recommendation of my friend Susan.
     Fitbit stats for the day as of 10:55pm: 1 floor climbed (?—this is Tucson; we don’t have many unless I go to work or hit some trails), 6.56 miles traversed, 13,137 steps, 3,702 calories (kcal), 127 minutes active. Last night I slept for 5:52, with 44 minutes awake/restless. Current pulse: 66. Resting pulse: 58. I hit 7 of 9 hours with at least 250 steps an hour (though in my defense one of those hours I was in the pool the whole time so didn’t have the fitbit on). I don’t check or register my weight. Judging from the fit of my shorts I am chunkin’ up and don’t need to know specifics.
     Watch a show or two I think. Have a drink to mark the separation from the parent portion of the day.
     I planned on making it to midnight but with the kiddo getting up so early in the summer, driven by the light in spite of blackout curtains etc., I’m not sure it’s worth it to commit. Working on some notes from the day. Sense of fatigue. What did I notice that others did too, or didn’t? Where do our days intersect, and where do they stray off into their own tidal pools or—I’m trying to remember the word now: cul-de-sac? not quite, but the one I want seems to be beyond my capacity for digging at the moment. I wonder often how specific or idiosyncratic or maybe I just mean exclusive my experiences are, selfish thing that I am. All these words, all this data: it’s all buried in the mind. Like a disconnected meander, or some kind of loop that gets cut off from the main river. Like a book in the stacks that lost its card catalog card or digital entry. All the data is still there: it’s just no longer pointed to. Reminder that if you want to really delete anything on your devices you have to wipe the space and X over the data. Otherwise it’s all still there, only occasionally getting overwritten. Ask the NSA. They’d prefer I don’t tell you this. I’m off on a tangent here, and that’s not the word I’m thinking of either.
     Trying to think of the word I close the word file and go to sleep instead and hope I won’t circle the word in dreams. I won’t, or if I will I won’t remember.

—Ander Monson

Ander Monson is one of the editors of Essay Daily.




JENNIFER GRAVLEY

Something I Don’t Remember Anymore

What happened first on June 21 was the green 12:01 AM. I’d already been awake for 20 minutes with a headache. I’d had it for a few days and would for a few more. It felt like going on or off meds, but I wasn’t. I knew the store-brand acetaminophen in my purse would help, but it would take time, and it would take getting out of bed. Eventually I did and spent two hours in my office doing something that was nothing because it wasn’t writing.
     June 21 was a Thursday, so what happened that morning was what happens every weekday morning: I didn’t want to get out of bed. Did I turn off both alarms on my cell phone and fall back asleep, one time and then another, as I do every morning? I didn’t have time to write it down. When I left the house, a city police SUV was parked on the street outside our cul-de-sac. I called my husband and left a voicemail.
     It won’t be a surprise: the best part of my workday was thinking about sentences when a colleague asked me to look at a story for our library news site.
     I needed to leave the building so I walked down the street and ordered an overpriced sandwich on gluten-free bread. Another thing I hadn’t done that morning was pack a lunch. I took the notebook where I was drafting by hand one thousand words per day for a different writing project but instead looked at my phone.
     Three people asked me questions during my reference desk shift. No one called or asked a question via email, chat, or text message. When the next librarian came out to replace me, she asked if I had any exciting plans. I panicked and asked, “In life?” Then “This weekend?” She meant, of course, this summer, and then the phone rang.
     I left work early to meet a friend to work on yet another different writing project. My favorite commute: university library to public library. I went to the third floor, where the study rooms were taken, and then back down to the first floor where one group could be kicked out in 15 minutes. Two minutes before the kicking-out time, we went back to the children’s desk and learned the room had just been given away. It was raining, just a little, and summer. We spent a long time unsuccessfully brainstorming alternatives before heading upstairs to unpack on one of the long work tables. Then a group left their room early, and we were able to begin. There’s no use asking what we would’ve done with those extra minutes.
     After I got home, my husband made peanut butter noodles, and we ate the PB noodles on the couch while watching The Handmaid’s Tale. After that I went upstairs to bed, where I had on my nightstand a dozen books as well as my Kindle, my iPad, five notebooks, three pens, a lamp, two booklights, and an alarm clock for knowing the time with minimal effort when I wake, and I do, in the night.
     This was the time of night when it feels like the day is just beginning, just starting—or could be starting—to be mine. But tomorrow I would definitely be turning off the alarms on my phone one after the other and sleeping far later than I should, so I didn’t start my day.
     Instead my husband and I talked in the dark. I confirmed on IMDb that I knew the name of Phoebe’s twin on Friends. At some point I said something I don’t remember anymore, and then I asked my husband if he was going to write that on June 21 I said this thing that I don’t remember anymore. I didn’t know then what he’d tell me a few days later—that he probably wasn’t going to do it.

—Jennifer Gravley

Jennifer Gravley writes short prose, directs university students to staplers, and wants to stay up all night.





JEANNIE E. ROBERTS

Before rising, the window air conditioner gives one last blast. I get up, make the bed, and head downstairs. My husband sits on the couch, coffee within easy reach, as the morning news trumpets more chaos. Yogi pads toward me, while wagging his 13-year-old personality, seemingly repeating, "Hi, Mom, it’s good to see you!" My husband pauses the news, where we chat quickly. "Let me know how it goes," he says, then leaves for work.
     I turn off the TV, pour myself some coffee, eat breakfast, and let the day begin. Yogi and I head outside. As we walk, the nesting osprey fuss and chirp, hiss as the female circles above us. "Go away, go away!" she squawks.
     It’s time to pack, but leisurely. As I prepare for the long weekend, the resident loon comes to mind. She appears to have adopted our end of the lake, perhaps unwittingly. Concerned, I find the binoculars, where she rides the water, occasionally dipping her head. She spreads and shakes her wings, which could be a good sign. I text my husband about the loon, about her wings.
     Emails and electronic communication await, as does my Facebook group, Daily Gratitude. My post for today reads: "I’m grateful and thankful to prepare for a four-day writers’ retreat, held locally, here in the Chippewa Valley area of WI. I’m hoping to meet like-minded writers/creatives, to form local friendships, to nurture a sense of community and belonging. I’m grateful to hold these hopes, these intentions in prayer."
     As I go about my afternoon, I’m mindful and in the moment. The car is packed and I’m nearly ready to leave, but before I do Yogi needs one more walk around the yard. He spots a red squirrel. After an unfruitful chase, he wobbles and drops to the ground, heart racing. Again, he’s forgotten that he’s not the frisky puppy he once was. Patting him, I affirm his being by offering these words, "It’s okay. You’re a good boy."
     During my twenty-five-mile drive, I listen to David Whyte’s CD “Courage & Vulnerability, the Beauty in Human Reluctance.” His work resonates deeply, especially these three poems: “The House of Belonging,” “Apprentice Yourself to Your Own Unknowing,” and “In a Dark Wood.”
     I arrive to find a lovely setting midst the woodlands, where a log cabin will lodge eight other writers, plus our workshop instructor.
     We share introductions, socialize, then have dinner. We laugh, and camaraderie builds. As a group, we write about our evening, where I choose Yogi brand Peach Detox tea as my writing accompaniment.
     On this summer night, its solstice, the longest day of the year, I’m buoyed with wings of courage, lighthearted swiftness, and by the beauty and spirit of humans who gather together as one.

—Jeannie E. Roberts

Jeannie E. Roberts has authored four poetry collections, including The Wingspan of Things, a poetry chapbook (Dancing Girl Press, 2017), Romp and Ceremony, a full-length poetry collection (Finishing Line Press, 2017), Beyond Bulrush, a full-length poetry collection (Lit Fest Press, 2015), and Nature of it All, a poetry chapbook (Finishing Line Press, 2013). She is also the author and illustrator of Let's Make Faces!, a children's book dedicated to her son (author-published, 2009). 





MARK NEELY

A Hard Day of Nothing Much at All

“Bright-eyed and bushy-tailed woke not Henry up,” writes John Berryman in The Dream Songs, a line which ran through my mind as my eyes rolled open this particular Thursday—one of those gloomy Midwestern mornings when the sun is hidden behind a miles-wide shelf of clouds. Berryman’s cure for the a.m. doldrums was a few fingers of bourbon in a tumbler of water. Thinking it best not to emulate such a tragic life, I opted for a cup of green tea instead, having discovered around age 40 that I could no longer tolerate coffee on an empty stomach. The tea was a Chinese variety, “dragonwell,” a name I liked for its dual connotations of power and health. It was June 21st, just a few days after Bloomsday, the anniversary of Leopold Bloom’s adventures in Ulysses. For his breakfast, Bloom eats a fried kidney (which he almost burns while talking with his wife), along with bread, butter, and several cups of tea. A century later I found myself pouring a bowl of shredded wheat with sliced banana, wondering, as I often do, when exactly it was that I turned into a middle-aged man.   
     The writer Jim Harrison, famous for his gluttony, often ate plain oatmeal for breakfast. When his French friends teased him about this habit, wondering why a gourmand such as himself would start the day so blandly, Harrison said, “so I can live to eat another day,” which beautifully sums up my feelings about the shredded wheat. Of course, if there’s one thing we know about nutrition, it is that attitudes about what constitutes healthy eating are always shifting. The low-carb crowd, for example, would probably view my virtuous serving of shredded wheat as something akin to a bowl of rat poison. During breakfast, I scrolled through Facebook, the local paper, and Deadspin, a gossipy sports site, then went through my usual bathroom routine. See Ulysses, chapter three, for a more detailed description of my activities therein.
     The kids were up by then, out of school and equal parts excited and bored by their summer freedom. I helped them get breakfast, then made a second cup of tea and tried to do some work on my laptop. It was an unproductive hour, full of interruptions. Our new puppy, Maggie, not quite house-trained, requires near-constant attention, and Henry, age 10, was terrorizing his older sister by sneaking up and blasting her with his high-powered Nerf gun. Jill had been up early, sitting in the back room with her coffee and computer, but now she was off at a hair appointment, and by the time she returned and started getting things together for a trip we had coming up, the morning was half over. A short while later I got up to clean the kitchen and help a bit with the preparations before heading in to work.
     I had managed to accomplish one thing that morning. I had promised myself I’d send some poems out to literary magazines before we left for my mother-in-law’s house in Washington, where we’d have little internet access, and there was one more magazine to check off my list—POETRY, that venerable old mothership of American letters. Getting a poem published there had always been a goal of mine. Appearing in POETRY, which had published virtually every important American poet of the 20th century, would put me in conversation with the poets I had grown up reading—Lowell, Plath, Rich, Brooks, Berryman.
     So far my pursuit of this goal has been futile. I have sent over twenty submissions to POETRY over the last dozen years or so, all of them met with the magazine’s standard rejection. These first came as little quarter sheets of paper, printed with a generic dismissal, and crammed into an envelope I had addressed to myself. It used to take a lot of work to be an unknown poet. Now it’s a little easier, as almost every magazine has moved their submissions process online.
     As I made some final edits, I thought of Ruth Lilly, heir to the Lilly pharmaceutical fortune, who just before her death had bequeathed close to a hundred million dollars to POETRY, surely making the magazine the richest literary organization in the world. When the gift was made public, I read that Lilly, herself an aspiring poet, had sent several batches of poems to the magazine, but had always been rejected. The fact that she had still been so generous with them always struck me as the ultimate integrity, but maybe, (in Groucho Marx’s famous formulation), an organization could only gain her respect once it had denied her as a member.
     At the time, pressing the “Submit” button felt like the biggest accomplishment of my day, preceded as it was by hours of writing and revision over the previous months, but in a half-year or so, when the almost-certain rejection arrives in my inbox, it won’t have amounted to anything at all. But you have to have something of the gambler in you to play this game, always confident the next spin will be the one that hits.
     Two of the poems I’d sent were written about my father, who had died just over a year before. This fact made judging them more difficult than usual, but assessing one’s own work is always challenging. When John Berryman was asked by his student, W.S. Merwin, how he was supposed to know if his poems were any good, Berryman answered, “you die without knowing / whether anything you wrote was any good / if you have to be sure don’t write.” These are the kind of reassuring maxims that tend to pop into my head when I send out my poems.

Before I knew it, the time had come to get ready to go to work. I’d taken an administrative job in the English department, so had to be on campus more hours than usual in the summer. Most of my time that afternoon would be taken up by the second of four 2-hour computer training sessions, where administrators and staff would learn the basics of Sitecore, a “content management” system that would allow us to update our department website. The umbrella I grabbed on my way out of the house turned out to be a poor choice, a small and mangled affair that offered little protection from what was now a driving rain, and I got fairly soaked walking from car to office, then on to the library for the training. My colleagues were gathered outside the locked computer lab, and for some reason we all felt the need to explain the fact of our wet shoes and pant legs. When the man from marketing and communications arrived to conduct the training, he said he had tried to wait out the rain—he had no umbrella—but “ended up soaked and late.”
     During my eight years of higher education in English and creative writing, I never imagined I would find myself in a computer lab in the basement of the library, learning the architecture and branding behind our website’s tabs, carousels, “breadcrumbs,” media library, and personnel directory, but then again, so many things about my job would have been a surprise to this younger, more naïve version of myself.
     It was early evening when I returned home, and I had just enough time to read book 20 of The Odyssey before it was time to make dinner. I was reading (and very much enjoying) Emily Wilson’s new version, the first translation of the poem into English by a woman. In this book, Odysseus, disguised as a beggar, begins to set in motion his plan to take revenge on the suitors who have been courting his wife. They’ve also been slaughtering and eating his livestock and drinking his vast stores of wine, which for Homer is perhaps an even greater offense. Having not read the poem in many years, I had forgotten how much of it recounts episodes of eating and drinking. The characters are always slaughtering some poor pig, cow, or goat, burning its thighs (as a sacrifice to the gods), then roasting the meat on spits and washing it down with bowls of wine. Eating and reading, it occurs to me, are two of the things I think about most in life, and two things I aspire to do well. As Frank Conroy says, they are some of the few pleasures in life that “never run out.”
     When my father grew tired of living, he simply stopped eating, which was all the more shocking because food had always been a great comfort to him. This method of dying took longer than you might think, but eventually it did the trick.

Henry was off at a friend’s house, so the three of us had a quick dinner together before Ella had to leave for her swing dance class. I made tostadas, a vegetarian version for Ella, topped with leftover refried beans, lettuce, olives, salsa, and avocado. For the grownups, I’d gotten a pre-made, Frontera Grill brand “barbacoa.” The kind of thing you heat in a pan for ten minutes and serve. This turned out to be some weird looking rectangles of meat and a mostly unidentifiable mix of beans and vegetables. I realized for about the same price, and not a lot more effort, I could have cooked a steak and sautéed peppers and onions for our tostadas. I felt foolish to be suckered by this high-end branding, thinking about how much we sacrifice in the name of convenience.
     It always seems strange to have dinner without one of the children present, and makes me imagine how it will be when they’re out of the house, off on their own adventures. Ella starts high school next year, and it’s hard to picture our lives without her daily presence, just as it was impossible to imagine what life would be like with children before they were born.
     We finished eating, cleared the dishes, then I drove Ella to her dance class. I pulled into the parking lot just behind her friend Sophia and her family, who were all attending the class. It was raining steadily, and Sophia’s dad waited with his umbrella to walk Ella the few yards to the entrance so she wouldn’t get wet. A simple, beautiful gesture.
     When I got back, Jill and I found ourselves alone in the house, a rarity during these summer months, when one of the children is almost always home. Another fact of middle age—you learn to take advantage of these moments.
     Driving to pick up Ella I saw over downtown a double rainbow—one band quite vivid against the blue-gray sky, the other curving faintly above. I hoped to show Ella on the way home, but by the time I’d retrieved her it was gone. After the kids were safely back from their activities, everyone got ready for bed. Jill and Ella were in the habit of watching a show together before bedtime—they started with West Wing, and were now two seasons into Jane the Virgin. They propped Jill’s laptop in our bed, and Henry went up to his room to read. I sat down with a drink in the living room and watched an episode of Lost in Space. So many of the shows I watch these days involve fantasies about the human race starting over after the mess we’ve made. Soon Ella came to say goodnight. I turned off Henry’s light and went to bed, falling quickly to sleep. Whatever dreams I had then I don’t remember.

—Mark Neely

Mark Neely is the author of Beasts of the Hill (2012), and Dirty Bomb (2015), both from Oberlin College Press. His awards include an NEA Poetry Fellowship, an Indiana Individual Artist grant, and the FIELD Poetry Prize. His work can be found at www.markneely.com 





JILL CHRISTMAN

An Endless Retro-Infinity

I once heard Alison Bechdel give an incredible talk in which she showed photographs of the giant binders in which she records the details of her daily life, explaining that the writing of memoir was, for her, an act of subtraction. To illustrate her process, she must have flashed up a drawing of a graphic Alison tunneling through the reams of recorded information because I remember the tunnel. I remember thinking, Ah ha. Yes, of course.
     I am thinking of the tunnel today because I’m linking nerve centers with friends and fellows from across this dark land to record the details of our daily lives. I didn’t turn on the radio this morning and I didn’t take my phone past the alert screen where I peeked just to see if there were any texts updating me on the status of my 77-year-old artist father who’s in a hospital in Savannah with acute pancreatitis. The only news was a text from one of the moms regarding the afternoon playdate our 10-year-old son, Henry, was excited to attend. There would be linked Minecraft worlds, chicken tenders, and maybe a trip to the pool if the rain let up.
     I let the screen go dark without further news. I needed to check on my dad, but I don’t need to begin every morning in a blistering rage. Not right away. In other words, if number 45 began today with a Tweet announcing some kind of parade for himself for signing an executive order to stop jailing children in detention camps when he could have just, you know, told everybody working the border that separating babies from their mothers was inhumane, then I don’t know about it yet. If, while 45 was otherwise engaged with the details of his self-aggrandizing rally we’ve learned that ICE kept insufficient records, so even if we wanted to reunite kids and parents right now, we’re too bumbling to figure out how to dial back our own evil—then I don’t know about that yet either.
     Don’t even tell me. It’s morning and I’m not even out of bed. I am trying to linger.
     I am clinging to the crepuscular window where the news that Trump is still president can’t find me.

Here’s how the day began: a giant black nose appeared over the edge of the bed and gave me a nudge. Then the owner of the nose, an 8-year-old Rhodesian Ridgeback named Lola (L-o-l-a or Whatever Lola wants Lola gets—depending on your generation) pulled back her head to activate her morning head shake, a kind of castaneting of flapping ears. A real dog racket. I looked at the clock. 6:45. And then I tried to remember if I needed to get up fast and for what. You know that first moment of consciousness when you open your brain to consider what you’re in for? Sometimes you remember you have a meeting with the Dean at which you have to wear big-girl clothes and provide bullet points on the value of storytelling or you need to drive your 14-year-old daughter to Indy for an x-ray of the titanium rods in her spine or grades need to be posted on Blackboard by 3:59 p.m. and you still have seven more essays to read before you can even start calculating. There are plenty of days like that, but every once in a while, this moment of pre-consciousness goes your way and today’s awareness crept in without inflicting fresh harm.

June 21, 2018. First day of summer. Record the Quotidian for Ander Day. I settled back into my pillows and started running sentences through my brain. The castaneting of flapping ears? Just lying there, I was doing my job: pay attention, be curious, pull back the cotton wool and reach in for the good stuff, those Woolfian moments of being where we can really live our lives.
     Here’s a thing I do: a kind of active switching on of the sensory on a five-count. A body scan of my senses to make sure I’m remembering to use what I’ve still got. What could I feel on my skin? Wet dog nose, and when I put a tentative hand to my own thigh, the heat from a giant bruise that had spread beyond the reach of my fingertips. And hear? Flapping dog ears, plus the morning whistle of the cardinal who’s established his homestead in the redbud outside my window. Anything to smell? Well, dog, with an undernote of almond vanilla pet shampoo, but also human bodies. That smell that escapes when the clean sheets move and the air that’s been infused and warmed by the slumbering humans underneath wafts out. The smell of sleep. Taste? Still early. Nothing good. And what was there to see?  At 6:45, it was already light—June 21st, for heavensakes, the summer solstice, everybody will mention that, right? Longest light of the year, yaddayadda, although that of course means that tomorrow will be a sliver less light and onward to that darkest day—but despite the fact that the windows in our bedroom were covered by only sheer white curtains because the roll-down shade is broken, the light coming in was muted and soft, which I noticed, admiring the way the light took the edge of the things of my world, before making a mental note to buy new shades. Those shades have been broken since last summer.
     Perhaps I should mention that I was in bed with a poet who was still very much sleeping and who plays disc golf—serious disc with an annual tournament, a code of conduct, the whole works—with the guy who’s running today’s observation project, and while I’m dabbling in character development, I suppose I should also add that all three of us went to M.F.A.-gettin’ school together in Tuscaloosa twenty years ago; in other words, I’m not the only one in my house who’s paying attention today. Mine might not be the only description of this particular butter-yellow bedroom infused with a hazy light because of the hard rain that came through in the night.
     For all the reasons, this would have been an excellent morning for extra sleeping, but Lola’s ear flap had worked like a rooster’s crow to rouse the puppy, who was just then quite literally rattling her cage, and so I slid out of our warm sheets, gray like the sky, and padded across the carpet, past the rattling cage with the puppy in full-body wriggle, to the bathroom, because I’m establishing a rule for all the things I help to keep alive in this world: I’m learning to put on my own oxygen mask first. In this instance, I pee, and then the dogs get to go out.
     [I need to break in with a confession. It’s 9:36 according to my laptop clock and I’m sitting in a salon chair getting my gray covered, but in the story of my day, I haven’t even gotten the dogs their breakfast yet, and herein is the problem with the well-recorded day. Impossible to get it all down, really. Of course, the consciously lived, consistently observed day is another animal and more attainable. Here in the swiveling beauty chair, the smell of the chemicals is curling my nose hair and the color brush squelches, but I’m going back now to feed those dogs.]
     Because I was so aware of my body as a recording machine, I listened when I pulled up the steel bar on the puppy’s kennel, the metallic slide of the bar through the eye of the clasp, and the squeak of the hinge as I flipped open the door. No matter how badly she herself has to pee, the puppy—Maggie May, like the Rod Stewart song—falls into a languid full-body puppy stretch. You wish you could puppy stretch like this puppy. Front paws forward, back paws back, she brings her hips forward and then arches them toward the floor. Maggie flattens like a mongoose.
     [Okay, I need to break in again to say that Kim—she’s my stylist of many years and the one wielding the color brush—just asked if she could take a picture of my screen: after her eyes caught the word “confession” over my shoulder, she said she just had to know, and so she read everything I wrote below that, although I’m thinking she was probably hoping for something juicier than dog breakfast, and I say sure, of course, because isn’t Kim’s iPhone image and the likelihood that she’ll show her kids and her boyfriend and maybe even the other beer drinkers at the brewery she frequents a species of publication? A page out of the diary of my day here on June 21st in Muncie, Indiana—Middletown, U.S.A.—now shared in the very community in which the details were recorded?
     I’m thinking all this, but I’m also still talking and I double-down on my disappointing confession by revealing that I skipped the details from the toilet this morning because of course I knew Kim was reading over my shoulder—although, my God, wait until I tell you about the bruise on my thigh, more of a contusion really, sustained when I ran into a wall while pushing a stationary bicycle—on wheels, at an angle, too quickly (picnic, lightning): the handle bar jammed into my right thigh like a friggin’ javelin. This morning, on the toilet, I was noting that the once deep purple bruise, bigger than my hand and raised like the top of a skull—seriously, when I wear yoga pants you can see my bruise through the fabric—was starting to change color. My bruise looks like someone being born. Which god was that who was born out of Zeus’ thigh? Ahh, yes: Dionysus, the god of wine. This seems apt. I hope when my thigh-bruise child bursts forth, he carries with him a nice Oregon pinot. The pinot comes to mind because in my youth I stomped grapes the Greek way at a Dionysus-themed party on a vineyard in the Willamette Valley. It was as fun as it sounds. Kim’s still reading. I hope I’m not freaking her out (You okay, Kim?). Back to Lola and Maggie. For real: these poor dogs still haven’t had breakfast. Maybe if I stick with a disciplined past-tense narration:]
     After her stretch, Maggie rolled into me, all puppy fluff and sweet tongue. Delicious, really, but it had been a long night and Maggie had to go. At the back door, I felt the deadbolt in my fingers, cool, and heard the click, louder than usual—because I was listening so carefully. The deck was wet and I had to slide into my backyard Crocs and go down the steps into the grass, squatting down and calling the dogs. Neither one of them like wet grass, and while Lola can hold her urine like a champ, Maggie’s been known to let it go right there on the deck, so I called to her, pretending I had a treat in my hand and she tumbled down the stairs like a ball rolling down a ramp. Once she made it to the grass, I gave her the command: “Maggie, outside.” And she squatted to pee. There.
     Back up the stairs and into the kitchen we went and the three of us followed routine: I held the pot under the spout and filled up enough for my coffee, clanking the pot on the burner and turning the knob, click-click-click, ignite, and adjust the roaring flame, red and blue and yellow. Bruise colors. While I did this, Maggie jumped on Lola’s neck, biting her ear. Making Chewbacca noises, the dogs pinballed down the hallway toward the living room, attached tooth to ear. I’m the impatient type who uses power boil so that by the time I had the kibble scooped, medium-breed puppy and large-breed old dog, a notably different timbre against the stainless steel of their bowls, I was ready to splash the first steaming water over the black grounds piled in the white paper filter in the yellow cone above the big white cup. So much depends upon. 
     Maggie eats a prodigious number of sticks every day, so to keep them moving through, I add a tablespoon plop of pumpkin to breakfast every morning. When the dogs heard me open the fridge to get the pumpkin, they ran back, dividing and finding their spots in the kitchen, playing the parts of good dogs who deserved large bowls of kibble with pumpkin gravy for breakfast. I held a kibble in my hand and locked eyes with Maggie: “Down.” Maggie threw herself onto the floor. “Maggie, Lola—“ I made eye contact with each of them, raising my palm like a traffic cop and lowering my voice. “Stay.” They stayed. I clanged their bowls into their doggie bowl holders and both dogs kept their eyes on me—intent, as if I were some kind of giant, juicy squirrel. I dragged out the moment. Maggie’s ears vibrated like antennae. “Okay!” I said, high-pitched and happy, and they dashed to their respective bowls. I poured half and half in my coffee, swirled in a smidge of creamed cinnamon honey I bought at the farmer’s market last weekend, and held the hot mug to my lips.
     Is there anything better in this world than that first sip of morning coffee? If every sip of coffee were like that, sip after sip, I would make myself sick with caffeine. I would vibrate like Maggie’s ears. But it’s not, so I don’t.
     After the dogs ate, Maggie had to go out again: to poop. She pooped.
     Then I wrote as fast as I could to get it all down before my hair appointment. I’m fast, but I’m not that fast. To recap: in the car, I ate a too-ripe banana (beyond the ten-minute window during which any given banana is at the perfect texture for eating), then more coffee at the salon where the only creamer is fake and vanilla, so too sweet and kind of gross. The good coffee window for the day had slammed shut, which was a shame I briefly grieved. I heard about Kim’s son’s graduation party at the Elm Street Brewery during the application of the reeking color, into the chair for toner and rinsing, a quick and yummy scalp massage with fingernails scratching, hot wax on my brow bones and an audible ripping away of the little hairs, a fast but no doubt unnecessary pain, back in the main chair for cutting, drying, styling—a sizzle of steaming hair, the smell of hot product, and the click of straightener’s alligator jaws—goodbye, goodbye, have a great trip to the mountains, and then out into the world where naturally it was raining and my hair, which had looked as glossy as a seal’s pelt when I was still in the salon, started to frizz.

Back home, my husband was recording his day and our daughter Ella was recording hers and our son Henry, sick of being a subject in everyone else’s observations and anxious to get on over to Zishan’s house to play Minecraft, was putting pencil to paper to compose a comic about his sister, and we were, as a family unit, pushing the limits of meta.
     Mark at 11:11 a.m. on 6/21/18, after I announced my despair at having already exceeded 1,500 words: “I’m sure everyone’s going to be fascinated by your 40-page treatise on your day.” (This, from a man who’s read Karl Ove Knausgaard’s My Struggle, Books 1, 2, and 3.)
     Ella, typing away on her tablet: “The problem with writing about your day is: Do you have to write about writing about writing about your day? Which means you’ll spend half your time writing about writing.”
     Then, tick-tock-tick-tock, a few skirmishes about who can write what about whom and in what kind of detail, and I’m off recording my day and at the dining room table with two phones, a flash drive, and a laptop—taking care of life details so boring I hesitate to include them here: Costco.com to reserve a car, a call to State Farm, a call to the vet, an email from the vet with vaccinations records, an email to the kennel to deliver said records, and on and on to Yawnsville.
     I’ll tell you what gets in the way of satisfying in-the-moment observations and the excavation of a good tunnel: shit like that. And iPhones.

Summerful is a silly-sounding word I learned from the OED’s word-of-the-day message that means just what you would think: full of summer. Summery. Although June 21st marked the first day of summer, in Muncie, Indiana the sun refused to shine, the rain poured down, and there was nothing summerful about it. Henry and Zishan didn’t get to go to the pool, but they did jump in a puddle so big that Zishan’s mom made them change their clothes when they came in.
     At 5 p.m., I drove to pick up Ella from her final dance class at the studio where she’s been dancing since she was five. The studio is moving, and Ella will be moving with it, but still, she grew up dancing here, in this too-small studio at the end of a tiny strip mall that Premiere Dance Center shares with a Domino’s, an accounting firm, and an empty space that’s been three kinds of groceries in the years since Ella was a preschooler. There were only four girls in this final lyrical class and from my car I could hear the music through the window—Grace VanderWaal’s “Beautiful Thing.” Just this time last year, Ella had two titanium rods screwed into her spine to correct a 51-degree scoliosis curve in her thoracic—a surgery so serious I feared the worst—and on June 21, 2018, I watched her dancing, twirling and bending—what a beautiful thing—the rain and the reflection and the steam on the window softening everything and making it look as if the girls were leaping my red car. When we pulled away from Premiere for the last time, Ella wept, crying for her childhood, and I joined her, weeping out my gratitude.
     Around 7 p.m., I talked to my dad and learned the good news that the 2-inch cyst in his pancreas was actually shrinking. “I’ll tell you what,” he said, loopy with morphine, “pancreatitis makes open heart surgery seem like a walk in the park. A walk. In. The park.” I asked him if his surgeons were planning to drain the cyst. “No, no. That’s the cardinal rule of medicine: don’t touch the pancreas.”
     At 8 p.m., Mark and I found ourselves with a half-hour window during which Henry was still at Zishan’s and Ella was off salsa dancing. In the summer, we are rarely alone in the house, so we made hay, as it were, even as the rain redoubled its efforts and the minutes ticked away.
By 9 p.m., both children were home and the OED sent me the word for June 22nd (which seemed a tad premature as I’d not yet gotten through the less-than-summerful 21st, but as Henry would say, whatever).
retro-infinity
1678  R. Cudworth True Intellect. Syst. Universe  i. v. 850 And So backward Infinitely; from whence it would follow, that there is no First in the Order of Causes, but an Endless Retro-Infinity.
     An infinite series backward.
     While I was mulling this over—infinity, backward—the bruise on my thigh, which Mark had pronounced the worst thing [he’d] ever seen, began to itch. Like crazy. I was losing my mind with itching. Also at about this time, Maggie had pushed her bone into a gap in her kennel and begun clawing away with the single-minded purpose, well, of a dog trying to get a bone. The sound of her scratching paired with the itch in my thigh was suddenly more than I could bear. “Make it stop,” I said to Ella, who was brushing out her hair and waiting to watch Jane the Virgin with me on my laptop. “Make. It. Stop.”
     Ella unwedged Maggie’s bone and gave the ragged, slimy thing—a portion of some poor beast’s former thigh—back to Maggie. Then my long-time vegetarian daughter thoroughly washed her hands.
     I commenced Googling: bruise itching. I skipped past the links on bruising and leukemia—I knew how I’d gotten the bruise and I resisted the tumble down that hole—and found a page of home cures. There were many things I could rub on my giant bruise. Arnica gel. That’s a hippie remedy. If I were with my mom, there would be arnica. Alternately, I could rub myself with vinegar or witch hazel or... a pineapple? The itching, I read, is caused by the bilirubin produced by the healing blood vessels, and I flashed back to the early days of Henry’s life when his dangerously high bilirubin level required that he live strapped to a light board, a suckling glowworm at my breast—which cartoonish image carried my tiring, itch-tortured, bilirubined brain to the Looney Tunes cure for the throbbing, mountainous bump that rises up after some Looney or another is struck by a falling anvil or a well-swung cast iron pan: a giant raw, red steak that melts the bump like butter—but I doubted this was really a thing in the non-Looney world, and anyway, we had no steak.
     Ice, WebMD said. Heat, another page told me. Whatever you do, don’t scratch, all the pages said. Expletive, I muttered, getting up to scrabble through the basket in the bathroom that contains all things gel and cream for maladies ranging from pimples to poison ivy and everything in between. And there. At the bottom of the basket. A green and white tube with the bottom rolled almost all the way up. Arnica gel. I squeezed a giant glob, cool and sticky, into my fingers and rubbed the translucent gel into the bruise—and it worked. It really worked. Those hippies. God bless them.
     Ella and I watched our episode of Jane, and even though Rafael lied, I found myself rooting for him, as usual. At the very end, Petra’s mother did another really, really bad thing—that woman, seriously, so ruthless—and Ella and I closed the laptop with a collective sigh. Oh Jane. Ella kissed my cheek: “Good night. Best mother in the world.” I kissed her back: “Best daughter.” And off she went to bed.

If I were Alison Bechdel, I would have said what I’ve said here, if indeed I’ve said anything at all, in six frames and a couple speech bubbles, but fully accepting that I lack Bechdel’s genius for distillation, I closed my eyes and fell into a tunnel of dreams.

—Jill Christman

Jill Christman is the author of two memoirs, Darkroom: A Family Exposure (winner of the AWP Prize for Creative Nonfiction) and Borrowed Babies: Apprenticing for Motherhood, as well as essays in magazines such as Brevity, Creative Nonfiction, Fourth Genre, TriQuarterly, River Teeth, True Story, and O, The Oprah Magazine. She teaches creative nonfiction writing at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana, where she lives with her husband, writer Mark Neely, and their two children. Visit her at www.jillchristman.com and @jill_christman. 





ALISON HAWTHORNE DEMING

Slept in till 8—rare for me, a 6 AM riser--after four days of short sleeps. Working at Minnesota Northwoods Writing Conference, hanging late with writers to talk and drink in Pirate’s Cove. Mid-week we’re the only customers in the hotel bar, six or seven of us, talking the writer talk. The laziness of sleeping late sliding into the day. Didn’t want to shower but did. Then down for breakfast. Hard-boiled egg, raisin brain, cut-up fruit, coffee. More writer talk and jokes and thinking about getting out on the lake.
     Then alone in lobby, wicker chairs with forest green cushions, knotty pine, ceiling water-stained, on the walls moose-heads and t-shirts printed with campfires or large-mouth bass. Digging in to MacBook Air (only place with a signal here) to catch up on emails after three days of nonstop teaching, conferences, readings. Call Ander on program biz. Schedule a phone call for Milwaukee Field Work project. Dump the spam and ads.
     News of slow-release poisons dropped in Syria. News of U.S. officials imprisoning children of immigrants in the borderlands, children locked in cages and tents, given psychotropic drugs, told not to talk to reporters. Trump signs document that stops separating the families, but 2300+ still interned. Now he’ll just lock up the whole family.
     I remember a poem from Ed Hirsch’s reading last night written about the years when he was poet-in-the-schools in Pennsylvania. He’d mixed some chocolate chips of Gerald Manley Hopkins into one of his poems. How happy that made me, shook-foil happy. How he answered every question as if he’d never heard it before. How he took a moment to be sure he was listening.
     That’s not my day. That’s last night, but it’s still with me.
     Here at Ruttger’s Birchmont Lodge on the shore of Bemidji Lake, it’s silver-backs gathered for some kind of Christian family reunion or long-term marriage support group, elders sitting in wicker chairs talking about Jesus, praising someone who was willing to manifest his faith. Later I see the group on the veranda lined up at square tables, four by four, playing quiet cards.
     A teenager has the job of raking the shoreline, cleaning weeds from the lake, smoothing the sand to clean it of footprints. Ripple ripple ripple the mercurial surface laps. Kids on paddle boards and kayaks. More branding on tees: “The higher the latitude the better the attitude.” “Rugged outdoors.” Really? Here in the land of pontoon boats and an inflatable water slide the size of a pioneer’s log cabin? Here in the land of take a photo beside Paul Bunyan and Babe his blue ox? Sure. Let’s just turn it all into a postcard and move on, the heroic decimation of the wild.
     Walk the Bog Trail with Paisley, Sean and Ed. Walk, talk, look, walk, talk, sit, walk, talk. Check out carnivorous pitcher plants and sundews. Pink scrotal sacks of the Lady Slippers. Did whoever named them intend that the near pornographic fact of the flower could be re-gendered into clean-cut fairy tale footwear?
     Then back for lunch at Ruttgers. In haste, bison burger with wild rice and portobello all drenched in bbq sauce (auto-correct turned “porto” into “porno”). At next table women talking about design clients, about a fitting for a wedding dress, and someone didn’t get the right dress and now they want her to just get anything as long as it’s the right color.
     Andy picks us up in the hotel to take us in the university’s white van (we joke it’s the meth van) back to campus for conferences. Andy, local writer, Viking, skinhead, leaner than a birch sapling, pony-tailed, skinny-bearded, supremely cheerful (in that quiet northern way), a one-man jazz band of improvised organization as the six or so of us announce our needs to go from here to there and back again.
     Trump gives rally in Duluth. Wins cheers for stopping imprisonment of children. Gaslighting the audience that it was all someone else’s mistake, he never wanted this to happen, though he made it happen.
     Spend an hour reading over manuscripts for two participant conferences this afternoon—same thing that gripes me about so much nonfiction—savoring of personal memory, personal pain and fear, small joys, (I’m okay with the savoring), but no representation of time and place, moment in history, cultural context. What has the history of logging done to the small town you write about with such love? Will anyone who comes after you have the chance to cut the cedar trees off their own woodlot and built a cabin in which to raise a modest but loving family? It’s over, that kind of beauty. I want to see it, but I want to know you know its beauty comes because of the ugliness that surrounds it.
     Conferences at a picnic table in Black Point Park. Were they cottonwoods that lent a fractured shade to our conversations? Then quick back to hotel—Andy to the rescue—half-hour for  shower and flat on bed to watch a bit of Jeopardy, change into black skirt and long-sleeve Citron tee for the evening’s events. This accompanied by music of children’s voices playing in the water, parents conversing on shore. I’ve forgotten how much of children’s play sounds desperate. “Help me, please, someone help me.” Then laughter and screams and splashes. “Hey, hey, hey, look at this!” And roar of speedboat pulling a waterskier.
     More emails then Andy (!) to picnic supper on the university grounds of brisket, cobbed corn, peach cobbler. (Couldn’t handle the cole slaw that looked like a bowl of mayonnaise.) Chat with woman who lived in Paris for several years—piqued my envy. Then walk to American Indian Resource Center for Matt Johnson’s fast-paced reading and talk about how he made his comic book “Incognegro” and how it went all Harlem Renaissance and now might be adapted for TV. Then (Andy!) back to Pirates Cove for drinks and talk (beginning to think we should be called talkers instead of writers—oh how we love the gab). Paisley and I drink bad white wine and the others drink German Blond (the name leading us to a healthy round of scorn). We talk about our worst gigs (the ones where no one came), the long arguments in the world of poetry and stupid racist things people have said during job interviews.
     And then at last to sleep, at least the attempt, with youths out at the firepit playing tunes and drinking loud for too long, so I turned and turned in the white sheets long past the hour when this day came to an end.

—Alison Deming

Alison Hawthorne Deming's most recent book is Stairway to Heaven. She teaches at the University of Arizona. She lives in Tucson and on Grand Manan Island.





ELLA NEELY

My Day: June 21, 2018
Ella P. Neely, Age 14

Half-asleep, I hear footsteps pounding on the stairs, and think something like, “Here comes Henry [my brother] to wake me up.” I am correct. He bounds onto my bed and yells something indecipherable (he later tells me this was “argle-blargle”). He is not fully on the bed, though. He clings to me, trying not to slide off the bed, and I tell him to either fully get on the bed or get off; his clinging to me is uncomfortable. He says he will, but doesn’t really. I see that the clock shows the time as about 9:30. After a moment, he runs out of my bedroom and down the stairs. I remain in bed for about ten minutes, then get up after hearing my dad tell Henry to get dressed and go shoot hoops outside (in the driveway; we have a basketball hoop attached to our garage). He convinces him after only a minute.
     As Henry heads outside, I get up, use the restroom, and take out my new retainer (blue, more like purple, with sparkles). Then I return to my room to choose clothes. All my good pairs of shorts are folded in a laundry basket downstairs, so I plan to just choose a shirt and head down, but the shirt I have in mind (a blue tank top that says “animal lover.”) isn’t in my dresser, and I don’t think it’s in the laundry basket. I choose another shirt, a pink button-up tank top. Then I grab my water bottle, move two books, which were, strangely, balanced on my woven trash can, turn off the bedroom light, and go downstairs. It is now about 9:45.
     Seeing me, our Australian Shepherd mix (she was a rescue) puppy, 5-month old Maggie (full name: Maggie May Christman, aka Magster, Pupperooni, and Magsterooni) runs to the baby gate (now a puppy gate) and squirms against it, hoping for my attention; I reach over and pet her. I put my water bottle down in the kitchen, then climb over the puppy gate into the living room. Henry sits down, and Maggie jumps on him. I move across the room to Lola, our Rhodesian Ridgeback (a rescue, but still purebred) dog, who is about eight years old (full name: Lola Christman, aka Lola-nator, Lols-McGols, and Dogorooni). I pet her, pushing the much more energetic Maggie away when she leaps onto Lola’s bed. After Maggie does this twice, Lola abruptly gets up and walks over to Dad, who is sitting on the couch. The puppy follows, leaping onto Lola’s face. This is a common occurrence, and sometimes Lola plays, but now she just walks around the living room, trying to escape. I leave to go get breakfast. However, not having a book to read as I eat, I head to the cookbook bookshelf, which also has a stack of issues from the magazine True Story. The only one I haven’t finished is the one my own mom wrote, so I grab that (she told me I could read it) as well as the cookbook Vegan with a Vengeance; I’m almost done with Mom’s True Story, and I need something to read. Then, forgetting about breakfast, I sit at the kitchen table and open the True Story. Henry walks by and reads a sentence aloud. He scoffs. “Is that like an American Girl book?” He flips it over, examines the cover. “Oh.” I finish it, then get up to make breakfast. It is now about 10:25. I need to get breakfast quickly, because I’ll have to eat lunch around noon to go to dance camp at one o’clock. It’s practically lunch time already.
     There are two boxes of cereal on the counter already: plain Cheerios and Kashi Autumn Wheat. I choose the Autumn Wheat without a thought; it is much better tasting than Cheerios. This means it has nine grams of sugar to Cheerios’ one. Before I pour my milk, I get myself water and my vitamins, setting them on the table. One is a Flintstones vitamin, and I always sort of choke it down. I pour milk on my cereal and eat it while flipping through Vegan with a Vengeance. When I’m finished, I don’t move, but continue reading. At one point, Dad looks over my shoulder and we have a brief conversation about how one would make potato knishes. Later, Mom comes in and asks me to unload the dishwasher. I realize I haven’t even taken my vitamins, and have run out of water. I quickly fill my cup and swallow my vitamins. Mom tells me that today is the day we are supposed to record our day. She has already written 2,000 words. I start to narrate everything in my head as I empty the dishwasher, and I notice more, like the divots in the bottom of drinking glasses that collect water. Then I fill the dishwasher, and decide I’d better start writing about my day.
     After finding my iPad mini, I sit down at the dining room table, diagonal from my mom, who is typing. I remark that writing everything you do in a day makes the day not normal, and eventually, you spend half your day writing and have to record that, too. Then, I start typing. 195 words later, Past Me has still not gotten out of bed. Like Mom, brevity is not my strong suit. One “five to ten minute” story for Language Arts was twenty-two minutes long. As I work, Mom and Dad talk about the rental car that another person scraped against in December (but wouldn’t admit it to the police). My family’s insurance has refused to pay for it, and Mom is trying to get our credit card insurance thing to pay for it (if this is confusing, it’s because I’m confused, too). The man who hit our car had the excuse that it was dark, and he couldn’t see anything. To this, Dad now says, “Was it so dark you couldn’t hear the sound of metal screeching against metal? That dark? Was it so dark you couldn’t see the damage being done to your soul?” (thank you, Dad, for the funniest sentences in these 2693 words). I continue to write until about 12:15, when Mom tells me I need to eat lunch. She makes me a hummus wrap with Sun Chips on the side. I eat, then go upstairs to brush my hair and teeth. Before I can brush my hair, Mom calls up the stairs that we really need to leave so we’re not late to dance camp. I decide to brush my hair in the car, and run downstairs.
     In our red Prius, I look at the clock, which is seventeen minutes fast. The class starts at one, and the clock says 1:16. Uh-oh. We only have one minute to pick up my friend and drive to the camp. Of course, we don’t make it, arriving about seven minutes late. Luckily, the instructors are forgiving. The question of the day is, “If you could have any pet, what would it be and what would you name it?” Riley answers hippogriff, but can’t think of a name. I say a dolphin, but don’t give a name. Anna chooses an otter, and Michele, one of the instructors, suggests that Anna get many otters so she can call it the Otterman Empire. We all find this hilarious. Michele and Lucas, the other teacher, both want horses, named Leon and William of Canterbury, respectively. With the Question of the Day complete, it’s time to dance.
     Michelle starts us off with Nightclub 2-Step. We don’t go over the basic step because everyone, even me, has had some training in this dance. After that, Michele leaves, and Riley takes over, teaching a Salsa lesson. We start with cross-body leads, which are a fairly simple step that occur in many different styles. Then we move on to other, more complicated patterns. Anna continually jumps in with suggestions for Riley, and reminds him to give us one basic for timing (or, as someone accidentally says, “one timing for basic”). At about 2:45, we take a break before Lucas takes over the lesson to teach West Coast Swing, a beloved dance that has multiple possible timings (there are 6- and 8-count patterns). After reviewing push breaks and whips, which we already learned, we learn a whip variation. I do it completely wrong the first time (apologies to my lead) but soon catch on. We take another break, and Michele returns. I tell the teachers I have to leave ten minutes early to make it to my lyrical class, and they laugh and say they will miss me and talk about me when I’m gone. Then, it’s Rueda time! We normally do this dance in a circle, to make partner switches possible, but because we are learning a complicated pattern, we don’t dance in a circle until the last fifteen minutes of class (Lucas is pleased that we learned the pattern with that much time to spare). As we dance, I watch the clock, waiting for Mom to arrive. She walks in about five minutes before four o’clock. I quietly collect my purse and slip into my flip-flops. As I exit, Michele calls after me, telling me I should come to the salsa class at 7:30 tonight. As we get in the car, Mom says she got stuck behind “every red light.” I eat a granola bar as Mom follows Google Maps directions from Harmony Dance Studio to Premiere Dance Center.
     Once inside Premiere, I greet my teacher, Miranda, and a classmate. I quickly change into a tight t-shirt and shorts and enter the largest room in the studio, known creatively as the “big room.” The other two rooms are the “little room” and the “PDC room,” which has “PDC” written on the floor. Our class, normally eleven strong, only has four people today, in the last week of classes. As we stretch, Miranda gives us two options: pair up and choreograph a small combination, or learn some of “Beautiful Thing,” the competition and recital dance of the more advanced lyrical class. We choose to learn “Beautiful Thing,” and quickly learn a portion of the dance in the non-air conditioned room. We spend a lot of time on the turning section, which includes five turns-in-second, a float, and a double pirouette. Occasionally, a girl who danced in “Beautiful Thing” stands in the door and watches us. At the end of the class, Miranda says, “I’m not going to cry at the end of every class,” because we are getting a new studio and this is the last day for all of us in the room. She asks who is coming to dance camp, a long day of many dance styles in July. Everyone is. She smiles. Another student and I, who don’t have another class, hug her, and we leave. My mom enters the studio, and we look for a place to take a picture, but don’t see a good one. There are people everywhere. Mom waits outside while I grab my dance bag. Though I already have water, I walk to the back room, the café, to sip from the drinking fountain. Of course, my real reason is to see the café one last time. As I wait behind another dancer filling up her water bottle, I look around. Then, I take a drink and exit the studio. Mom snaps a picture of unsuspecting me as I walk out the doors. After another student enters, she takes a posed photo of me out front. I struggle not to cry, and manage until Mom pulls out of the parking lot (I am good at not crying in front of my peers, but terrible at not crying in front of Mom). I calm down fairly quickly, and am mostly back to normal when I get home, only tearing up slightly when Dad asks me how dance was.
     Henry is at a long playdate with his friend, and will be gone until eight o’clock, playing everything from basketball to the Words with Friends board game (basically Scrabble) to Minecraft, so it’s just the parental units and me. After I shower and change into pajamas, Mom and I fold laundry while we watch Jane the Virgin, a completely goofy romance/mystery show modeled, quite obviously, after a telenovela/soap opera. I feel slightly silly and slightly guilty watching it, but that doesn’t prevent me from enjoying myself. I start to wonder if I should attend the salsa class Michele mentioned. I assumed going to a fifth hour of dance class tonight would be too tiring, but I don’t feel tired (tired is a two-hour technique class followed by two extra rehearsals of the same length — this has only happened to me once). We eat dinner, tostadas (yum!), as I think. Now there is a time limit; it is about 6:45, and we need to leave at about 7:20 if I want to go (I will have to change). I can’t figure out whether I want to go because I feel obliged, or because I actually think it will be fun. This upsets me. I decide to go, but am still not happy, so Mom and Dad say I shouldn’t go. I’m still displeased. I go up and change, just in case. Finally, I make my final choice. Dad drives me back to Harmony.
     The class is taught by David, the owner of the studio. We do a warm-up without partners, then leads stand facing the mirror and follows face away. We partner up and slowly learn a small routine, frequently switching partners. I cannot quite catch the name of the dance, and have never heard of it. At about 8:35, Dad, coming to pick me up, stands by the door. David beckons him in, and he is forced to stand awkwardly in the corner while we finish the lesson. It is soon over, and Michele, who seemed to attend this as a student, talks to Dad while I grab my purse, slipping out of my jazz shoes and into my flip-flops. Every single other person in the room starts to dance again, because it is now a salsa dance social. Great, I’m the only one leaving. Teenagers just love to stand out and act different from everybody else. It doesn’t make us feel self-conscious at all. Speaking of self-consciousness, I apologize to Dad multiple times for forcing him to stand awkwardly in the corner, but he brushes it off.
     By the time I get home, Henry has returned. I have a quick snack and sit on the bed with Mom to work on my “Daily Report” while she Googles what makes bruises itch and how to stop it. She has a giant bruise that is really bothering her. She clicks back and forth from Firefox to her own daily report, recording what she does as she does it. We watch more Jane the Virgin, and then I head upstairs. I take forever (aka half an hour) to complete my nighttime routine (brush teeth, brush retainer, wash face, moisturize) because I try to read while I complete it. I have run out of library books, except for one that I can’t find (it’s under my dresser, but I don’t know that yet), so I re-read a book I own: The Dark Prophecy, Book Two of the Trials of Apollo series by Rick Riordan. I might be a little old for his books, but now I have to read every book he writes, and I have to admit they’re amusing. Besides, the third and final book in the series has just come out, so I need a refresher on the second one. Now Riordan has written thirteen books (three series) following the same storyline, which is quite the feat. Anyway, I continue to read in bed for hours, until I fall asleep with my light still on at about 12:30. My body has decided to end my long, exhausting, but enjoyable day before I do, so I sleep.

—Ella Neely

Ella Neely is a 14-year-old living with her writer parents, younger brother, and two dogs in Muncie, Indiana. She is a dancer and Future Problem Solver (awesome academic competition) who enjoys reading in her scarce free time. She warns that her daily report contains no overall message or life-changing insights.





HENRY NEELY


—Henry Neely





SANDRA J. LINDOW

Summer Solstice 2018, A Haibun

I woke to perfect Wisconsin June weather—partly cloudy blue sky and a temperature about seventy degrees. My hair was still drying from my shower when I walked out to the mailbox to get the newspaper. Next to the house, yellow evening primroses and hardy blue and pink geraniums were blooming in the perennial garden; white daisies were about to bloom. The sunshine lifted my mood as I stopped to water my potted plants. I took pleasure in the yellow canna lily that had just opened, its impossibly silky fluted cup, a pitcher for nothing but one’s deepest desire. It has been nearly a year and three months since my husband died. I’ve told my friends, I’ve been doing okay, but everything in this house reminds me of him. Still I have decided not to leave. Leaving here would be giving up too much.
     In the back yard, I saw that sugar snap peas in their comfortable, rabbit-safe raised bed were nearly ready to eat. I searched through the tangle of white flowers and green vines to find the fattest pea. For this farm girl, though fifty years from the farm, it is always like panning for gold. I found one, pinched it off, bit it in half, and popped it into my mouth. Bright-crisp swooped through my mouth like a barn swallow, and I savored summer’s first taste of green.
Saving the Summer Solstice
first sugar snaps
bottle  for their bright taste
labeled “First Green”
—Sandra J Lindow

Sandra J. Lindow is Regional Vice President of the Wisconsin Fellowhsipof Poets.  She learned about this event in a writing retreat taught by Holly Hughes,





EMMA THOMASON

When the 21st begins, I am still awake and listening to my most recent bedmate discuss the intricacies of a problem he’s struggling through at work. He’s detailing, in the broadest sense, the way that something goes wrong in his field: programming. In this case, a miscapitalized letter has caused the entire project he’s working on to stall. He describes it using a grammatical analogy, one that he assumes I will better understand as an English major, and non-programmer. It’s as if, while writing, you were to use “an” instead of “a,” and in response, the entire page becomes unrecognizable gibberish. I picture Wingdings. His style of writing doesn’t make sense to me, and perhaps that is the real reason I often speak out against tech. Maybe it is less about a techie’s lack of interest in the place they have moved, or their inability to stop overpaying, in cash, for housing in San Francisco, and more about my own perceived inadequacy in comparison. I loudly condemn their transient nature: moving here for a 1.5 year gestation period while they make enough money to go where they really want, in turn pushing me farther and farther away from the city’s center until there’s nowhere left to live on an administrator’s salary but at the end of one train line or another. There is something about the way this one speaks of his work that begs me to disregard my deeply ingrained opinions, and listen.
     Earlier in the evening, he and I had been at a beach adjacent late night cafe in the Outer Sunset. In a week, I am set to move out of my home in San Francisco and head towards Tucson, Arizona for graduate school. From the bar at the cafe, I was trying to work on a new short story, but between the end of each sentence and the start of the next, I kept stopping to reword the previous, trying to perfect each line before moving forward. This is a bad habit of mine, especially when I am overly concerned about audience. I want, entirely, to be prepared for graduate school. I stopped writing as the cafe neared closing, and instead considered whether or not the homeless woman who had locked herself in the bathroom some hour back had ever, in fact, come out. I thought: Soon, I will be far from this place.
     When we left the cafe, we walked through a half block of salt-fog-mist to my car. From the driver’s side, I watched as he opened the door and reached in to lift a clumped up set of earphones from the passenger seat, carefully untangling and then neatly wrapping them before ducking head first into the car.
     Now, in bed, when he talks about his work, I think mostly of the attention and care it must take to consider detangling another person’s earphones prior to getting into a warm car on a cold evening. Maybe this makes up for any false notions I have of the people in the tech industry here. I fall asleep staring at a layer of still flat cardboard boxes in the corner of my bedroom: a nagging reminder that soon, this place will no longer be mine. Soon, I will be far from this room; I will be far from this person.

Someone once told me that the best way to combat anxiety in the morning is to, upon waking, ask yourself: Did I inhale or exhale first today? I think it’s unanswerable. Sometimes, this method works, and I go about my morning so focused on the question of breathing that I am out the door and on my way to work without hardly noticing the tightness of my jeans, or the way my apartment’s front door doesn’t quite lock. But more often than not, my inability to discern which came first, the breath in or the breath out, sends me spiraling into an analysis of all other uncertainties. I think about the kind of financial situation I will be in some months, years, or decades from now. I think about the whooshing, dizzying sound of blood rushing to my head when I have just dialed someone on the phone and am waiting for them to pick up. I think about silent killing diseases, and what time of day I will be teaching a class in the fall, and whether or not I will ever have my own dog again, and if, when I do, I will accidentally kill it, and if so, how it will die. I wonder if I will feel ashamed of its death or happy that I only have to take care of myself, again. I think about what that shame would feel like. What kind of shame. Is there a way I can prepare for the aforementioned shame prior to ever feeling it by forcing myself to experience it now? And while forcing myself to feel an unfit amount of shame over a hypothetical dog, I think of what it would feel like to watch a plane crash directly into a window I’m looking out of, and if I would have time to think “I am definitely going to die,” or if I would just stand there, staring, until everything goes dark.
     This morning, I move too quickly to think of either my breath, or the uncertainties. It has only been a few hours, three or four, since we went to sleep. This morning, I am supposed to go the DMV, and my overnight guest has decided to join. It is 5:50am when I tear out of bed and pull on my jeans, bra, and the crusty linen shirt I wear when I don’t feel like thinking about what my body does or doesn’t look like.
     Soon, we are driving in silence across the Golden Gate Bridge towards Marin. The DMV is less busy there. For the first few minutes in the car, we keep the windows rolled down and the air feels angry beating against my tired skin. Then, we sit, with the windows up, for approximately 28 minutes until we arrive, and I get out of the car to wait. There are already about 7 people in line; I sit, cross-legged, behind them.
     The DMV is to open at 8, and I am hoping that I can get in and out of the facility by 8:40, to make it to work only 30 minutes late, at 9. The concrete is cold and I think that maybe I should stand back up, but feel that I would look strange standing up already, having just sat down some 15 minutes prior. I listen to a podcast about writing. I listen to a podcast about moving.
     Lately, I have been misplacing things. Three weeks ago, I left my phone in the toilets at a bar, but returned within an hour to find it had been turned in. Last weekend, I left my wallet at a car wash some 50 miles north of San Francisco, and had to return to get it the next day. On Tuesday, I lost my driver’s license while walking the four blocks to and from my local liquor store. I chastise myself for these mistakes. In line, I go over, again and again, the steps I could have taken to not have lost my ID. I could have brought my entire wallet with me on the walk. I could have, simply, not brought my ID; Roger has been selling to me for nearly four years and has never once asked for it. I could have been paying more attention to the gaping holes in the bottom of my pea coat pockets, and put it in the pocket of my jeans instead. Surely, I will not make this mistake again.
     After the DMV, we drive the wrong way towards the freeway. It is nearly 9am, and the sun is sharp and flooding the car with warmth. For a moment, everything feels fine. When we finally make it back to the bridge, only the first tower is visible; the others have been swallowed by fog. We enter the mist. This feels, to me, like summer.
     The day at work passes quickly. With only a few days left here, I spend much of my time training my replacement: David. David is one of my best friends, a fellow writer and administrator at the University of San Francisco, and the host of a small time radio show “Welcome to the Working Week.” Today, I train him on my program’s filing system and how to organize and run orientation, before we give in to the undeniable urge to, instead, watch short clips of stand-up routines that he has seen, but I have not, until it seems nearly the whole working day has passed.
When I make it home shortly after 5, I lay on my unmade bed and agonize over the unpacked boxes in the corner my bedroom: how best to tape the bottoms so they don’t give out mid-carry, how many boxes it will take to pack my kitchen, how many boxes, in total, I can fit into the shipping container. At some point during my analysis, I fall asleep.

It is near 9pm on the longest day of the year, and when I wake for the second and final time today, I see that the clouds have mostly burnt away, so I sit upright, pillows propped behind my back, to watch the sun set over the Pacific Ocean from my bedroom windows. This could be the last time it looks this beautiful before I leave. For a moment, the 21st of June doesn’t feel like such a waste.
     The sky fades: pink and tan and baby blue until rust-orange and a little bit foggy, finally settling into a deep, unmistakable blue. I inhale, and make a conscious decision to consider this the first breath of the day.


Emma Thomason

Emma Thomason is a soon to be first year MFA student at the University of Arizona. Currently, she exists somewhere between San Francisco and Tucson.





Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 6: Andrew Maynard • Krista Dalby • Katy Sperry • Dustin Parsons • Marie O'Rourke • Elizabeth Evans • Sandra Lambert • Albert Goldbarth • Lorri McDole • Joni Tevis

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. If you wrote something (it's not too late!), send us your work via this submission form (it's okay if you didn't RSVP before: the more the merrier).

—The Editors



July 6: Andrew Maynard • Krista Dalby • Katy Sperry • Dustin Parsons • Marie O'Rourke • Elizabeth Evans • Sandra Lambert • Albert Goldbarth • Lorri McDole • Joni Tevis




ANDREW MAYNARD

Running Rivers In Hiroshima

Near Hiroshima station I run northwest on a path outlining the Enkogawa River where it forms an acute angle with the Kyobashigawa. I weave my way in and out of two-way bike and walking traffic. It’s congested: clusters of buildings reach for the sun, small children scurry in lines like ducklings, traffic lights interrupt motion every few blocks where bridges intersect the water. 
     It’s the first day of summer, but there was no trace of the solstice this morning when I awoke in an overcast Kyoto, my sister and dad at the foot of my bed nudging me to go for a run. I opted for a short walk and then posted up on the 10th floor of our hotel for breakfast, gazing out the window at Japan’s largest Buddha perched at the base of a tree-covered mountain. I kept an eye out for my dad and sister jogging the Kamogawa, a river dividing Kyoto in two, but never spotted them. Between sips of coffee I read Francisco Cantu’s “The Line Becomes a River” which felt timely due to the current attention on the American/Mexican border; every time I turn on the international news I backtrack across ocean and continents to my home in the American Southwest.
     But now in Hiroshima the sun is out and it is undeniably summer. It’s 80 degrees Fahrenheit with Alabama-level humidity, and I’m sweating through my shirt that has a screen-printed picture of my best friend in a tuxedo adjusting a bowtie as he stares stoically into the distance. A caption reads “This Is 30, Babe.” His wife made the shirts for his milestone birthday party that I’ll miss due to travel and left one on my doorstep in Phoenix the day before I departed. 
     On this run, like almost every run, the first mile is the hardest. My legs are still stiff and heavy from Sunday, when I completed a half Ironman with my dad and brother in Nagoya. It’s becoming a Father’s Day tradition, sort of. The year before was Cape Town. Annual races feel in line with who my father has become, a man exercise-crazed since he turned 50. I turned 30 a couple weeks ago, and I feel myself gradually succumbing to the madness. It’s not that I particularly like races or anything like that, but I like how setting a goal forces me to arrange my week with long runs and bike rides and open-water swims. I like the alone time, the grinding, the setbacks, and the indiscriminate progress. I’m fond of my origin story into endurance sport: I didn’t complete my first triathlon until I was 26, two weeks after being canned by the only women I’ve ever let myself picture a future with. Daily runs made being alone seem like a choice, and there’s nothing more satisfying than the powerful illusion of agency. What a gift it was to be on those high-altitude trails in Lake Tahoe enveloped by such physical pain that for a brief moment I forgot entirely about heartache, like when you bang your elbow and your father pinches your side to “fix” it.
     The sidewalk ends and I turn around. I backtrack to the corner where the two rivers meet and head down the Kyobashigawa. Now that the triathlon is behind me, I’m training for a 50-kilometer trail run in the hills of the Marin Headlands. I’ve never run more than 15 miles, but I’m gearing up to spend my weekends alone in the trails with nothing but strangers and the water strapped to my torso, a vision that fills me with a rush of excitement as I maneuver a river cut through urbanity. 
     There’s something reassuring about rivers, how the water travels downstream with such constancy until it reaches a body that’s new. My coonhound, River, is staying with family in Oregon, where just yesterday she caught the scent of a deer, bolted into the trees, and was gone for hours before they found her sniffing around a meadow. When they whistled she ran up the road and dropped to the dirt, then turned over on her side panting rapidly without an ounce of energy left in the tank. 
     Maybe that’s what I’m after.
     I run until the river hits a panhandle that leads to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, a response to the day America changed the world forever in 1945 by dropping an atomic bomb named “Little Boy” on Hiroshima, killing nearly 140,000 people, releasing radiation and such scorching heat that in the aftermath starving citizens dug up potatoes and pumpkins that had been fully cooked in the dirt, contemplating whether they were safe to eat. As I consumed the exhibits earlier this afternoon, my focus was not on the timeliness of Trump’s recent visit in Singapore with Kim Jong-un to discuss nuclear disarmament or how in a decision to save American lives we ignored and dismantled all pre-established rules of war—you don’t kill women and children and civilians, you don’t blow up schools or entire cities—but rather on the groups of children dressed in matching chin-strapped hats and t-shirts taking notes as they studied artifacts from the catastrophe. They moseyed past the remnants of tattered school uniforms draped on wooden mannequins, a scorched wristwatch, the skeleton of a child’s tricycle. 
     I used to teach young children—second graders for a couple of years, then 6th grade English. After a recent hiatus from teaching, I’m about to move back to San Francisco to continue teaching middle school English. I’m thinking of the semester I introduced young kids to the Civil Rights Movement and answered their questions about how white Americans can be so cruel. I showed my students a Bryan Stevenson interview where he discussed the need for reconciliation and how progress is impossible without first taking ownership of our narrative. He proposed constructing monuments of lynching and slavery to remind us of our past and give context to our present. Today the Japanese kids browsing through artifacts of a middle school that was shredded as a casualty of war felt like manifestation of Stevenson’s pleas. They didn’t blink when they heard a man in a video describe people’s skin “hanging from their arms like a kimono” because they’d been conditioned to the devastating truth of their history. But to witness these kids absorb their truth is only part of the equation, because in Japan they were the victims of humanity at its worst. In America, depending on your race and heritage, in the face of a lynching memorial depicting our history of domestic terrorism, you might be the Japanese child reliving the destruction delivered onto your ancestors and everything they’d built, or you might be like me, a man mulling the rot of his foundation.
     What can be gained from the study of a single day? That today is always shaded with colors of yesterday and tomorrow? That there are patterns and echoes to be drawn from the wind rustling through the trees, the river’s refusal to waver, the man who lowers his mask beneath his chin to smoke a cigarette? That there is depth and beauty in a child who embodies our best as she wrestles with our worst? 
     I run my final mile alone on the river in search of exhaustion and clarity because this is how I’ve learned to digest. I soak in the sweat and experience of a long run and the longest day of the year knowing that what happened on June 21, 2018, can be sculpted into anything depending on the precision of the hand behind the scalpel. Maybe today is just a run down a river in a place I’ve never been but always known, one foot in front of the other, with a deep breath as I return to the place I started, changed, maybe. Undeniably in need of a shower. 

—Andrew Maynard

This is Andrew Maynard's third contribution to Essay Daily. His other essays have appeared in True Story, Mud Season Review, DIAGRAM, Switchback, Bayou Magazine, and elsewhere. He has taught creative writing at the University of San Francisco and San Quentin Prison. He is at work on a novel about running and tricycles. 





KRISTA DALBY

I wake up early, drink my coffee and eat a yogurt while scrolling Facebook and checking emails. It’s quiet. I look out the window towards the greenhouse. There’s been a baby bunny sitting in the same spot every morning and evening for weeks. Yep, she’s there, alright. I brush my teeth and get dressed for my morning walk: t-shirt dress and tights, County Pop trucker hat, silver fanny pack with my iphone loaded with podcasts, wireless earbuds in my ears. Sunscreen. I slip into my sneakers and out the door, down the gravel driveway to our country road. Not a car or tractor anywhere in sight. I set out down the road, the same direction as always.
     It’s sunny and the air is fresh and cool. I’m walking for about 5 minutes when my ankle starts to hurt. I don’t want to deal with a messed-up ankle all weekend at the festival, so I decide to go easy on myself and head back home.
     Instead of going for a walk, I’ll clean the outhouse.
     Our outhouse was knocked over in a spring windstorm. We’d finally raised it up just a few days earlier and it was pretty dirty. I mean not stinky dirty, just like, regular dirty. With dirt.
     The outhouse had posters and art on the walls and they were ruined now, so I pull them off and am filled with regret of how many staples I’d used to put these posters up so thoroughly over the years. I spend the next hour pulling staples, then give the whole outhouse a good sweep and wipe-down. Much better.
     I toss the trash and the tools in the workshop and head for the house.
     I start a load of laundry in my office/laundry room. I answer some emails while waiting for the spin cycle and when it starts I lean against the machine so it won’t do a violent dance across the floor.
     I shower and put some clean sheets on the bed. The window is open and the smells of spring are flowing in.
     My husband Mile comes in the door laden down with shopping bags of home-made food in plastic containers. He’d been to Scarborough overnight to visit his parents, and his mom always sends him away with homemade pizza and meatballs and cheese that she found on sale.
     I get a text from Glen reminding me that I have to go to work, so I hurry to get ready. Most of the time I work from home so it’s not often that I have to be somewhere at a certain time. I hop in my minivan. It’s a gorgeous drive through farmland and towns, one of those drives that reminds me of why I love living here.
     I arrive in Wellington twenty minutes later and park on the street in front of the theatre. Well, it will be a theatre, but right now it is very much still a construction zone. Workers in the next room—soon to be a box office—sing along to the radio while laying really cute tile flooring. Glen and I install a wall of Pinterest-y bookshelves in the soon-to-be script library. Actually, Glen mostly puts it together while I drive back and forth from the hardware store picking up pieces that had been forgotten. Shelves assembled and looking instaworthy, Glen leaves and I haul a dozen bankers’ boxes out from the theatre space which, perhaps unsurprisingly, is also still a construction zone. The boxes are heavy—they’re packed full of playscripts. Today’s task is to get these brand new shelves full of scripts so Aaron and Sarah will have a backdrop for their photo shoot on the weekend. I try to be efficient unboxing the scripts but it’s hard to not get distracted—there are so many scripts I want to crack open and read… but that’s for another time. The library looks great when I’m done. I mean, it will look better when it’s properly organized, but a wall of books is just a beautiful thing.
     I drive home and eat some cold pizza straight from the fridge. Pineapple, interesting. Mile’s mom doesn’t usually put pineapple on her pizza.
     I get myself cleaned up, another costume change, and Mile and I get in the van and drive into Picton. I drive because he’s eaten some pot-infused chocolate. The streets of our small town are busy with cars and foot traffic. It seems that everybody’s heading to the opening night of the art show. Mile has two pieces in it, a painting and a sculpture, and he’s been told he’s getting an award.
     We walk from the parking lot that overlooks the cemetery, down the sidewalk on the sloping street, and I notice a few trees bored full of holes by woodpeckers. I love how you notice things like that when you’re walking.
     We enter the gallery and Mile’s painting—and it’s a biggie—is hanging prominently near the door. The tag has a red dot on it! The show’s only been open 15 minutes and his painting has been sold! I’m super happy for him, it’s not every day that he gets this kind of double validation and I know it means a lot to him, even though he says it’s not a big deal.
     The gallery is packed. I realize how tired I am from all the outhouse-cleaning and library-making. I know lots of people. I don’t want to socialize. I try, a little. Mile gets his award and I attempt to get a picture of the moment and I fail. He and I walk around looking at art, sometimes together, sometimes apart. We talk to people, but I am tired. I am done. I drink a tiny glass of beer, and refill the glass several times from the jug of lemon water sitting atop the bar.
     I drive us home; it’s just getting dark. I park the van by the workshop and Mile goes into the house. I pack the van for the festival—yellow tool box, wooden crate of paints and brushes, frame for the side stage, cardboard. Always lots of cardboard.
     I walk back to the house. The night is cold and dark, there’s a clear sky and a bright moon. The crickets chirp.
     June 21: you’ve been all right.

—Krista Dalby

Krista Dalby is a multi-disciplinary artist and community builder living in Prince Edward County, Ontario, Canada.





KATY SPERRY

It is my last summer solstice in the desert for a while. The summer I turned twelve, I moved to the suburbs of Phoenix, Arizona with my family. It was 2006 and my sister and I played the Black Eyed Peas'“My Humps” and Shakira’s “Hips Don’t Lie” on repeat via burned CD as we swam in our cousins’ pool. We were on the edge of puberty, and the song lyrics didn’t really apply yet. But we felt cool splash dancing in the shallow end of the water, attempting to mimic Fergie and Shakira’s dance moves.
     We moved from the Pacific Northwest, where mostly we wore our swimsuits inside gigantic public swimming pools called aquatic centers on especially rainy summer days.
     In the desert, I learn to stay inside to avoid sunburned shoulders and slushies melting too quickly. Sometimes, I stay inside to avoid monsoons and haboobs. But that first summer, I miss the rain eventually. I walk to the mailbox as the afternoon monsoons begin, before the rain falls too hard and quick on my skin. At night, I sneak outside and stare at lightning flicking across the sky. Try to catch swelling raindrops on my tongue.
     It is a season of moving, and, in a couple of weeks, I’ll move again. Away from the desert. Lately, those first summer memories keep returning to me. Maybe because I am nostalgic and moving amplifies this quality in me. On this solstice I remember that summer again: three times.

  1. I spend the morning in the desert visiting Arcosanti with two friends. We explore Visitor’s Trail to see an expansive view of the property—would-be city. I don’t bring sunscreen and my shoulders begin to burn and blush. On the website, there are photos of a pool with a view of the Agua Fria River Valley. The tour does not take us to the pool. We don’t sit on the edge and let our legs sway in the water. For a moment, I think about swimming at my cousins.
  2. As the sun is setting I drive with my husband to downtown Phoenix. We are driving to see the last show we will go to before moving. We park just as the last flicks of sunshine are disappearing. While we walk, it occurs to me that I have not seen Shakira or the Black Eyed Peas.
    1. Lauren Ruth Ward is opening. And, if I am being honest, we arrive a late. Midsong. We curve through the edges of the crowd to find a spot near the first-come benches. I stare at Ward. For a minute, the way she flips her hair and thrusts her pelvis makes me think of Shakira’s hips not lying. Her dance moves—smooth slide of arms along body and jolt of head rippling hair—make me dream of being twelve again, dancing in chlorinated water 
  3. When the concert ends, I imagine that it will be raining outside. First glimmer of monsoon summer. But it is dry and hot when we exit. On the walk to our car, we pass a sidewalk with sprinklers softly spraying grass. Sprinkler system turns to reach edges of green, and I feel cool water spritzing my ankles and shins. Monsoon for my legs. 

     The next morning, I download Ward’s album and EP onto my phone. A few weeks into summer I’ll listen to her sing, while I’m flying to the other side of the country. Sit in row 23 seat B and sing “How do you feel? I feel cool” to myself on repeat, think of dancing and water and my last solstice in the desert. 

—Katy Sperry

Katy Sperry holds an MFA from Northern Arizona University, where she studied hybrid and flash writing. She previously worked as the nonfiction and hybrids editor of Thin Air Magazine. Her work can be found in Ghost City Review and PIVOT Literature. Sometimes she writes about citrus. 





DUSTIN PARSONS

Morning:

Bread that bakes in a wood fire oven in Thasos, Greece, bakes fast. As part of the Writing Workshop in Greece, students collect the herbs on the morning of the solstice and use them to make the sourdough starter, but cheat with a little instant yeast. Flour. Sugar. What grows there is from there, and while none of us can name many of the herbs around us, we are confident they are thoroughly Greece. Solstice herbs probably aren’t any better than everyday summer herbs, but they can feel like it if everyone making the bread believes it.
     Dough is mixed by hand, many hands, turned and slapped and folded and pressed. A wet dough slapping the simple wooden table, holding together but only barely. Kids turn it and teens turn it and college students turn it. Their professor, Christopher Bakken, looks on proudly, asks them to think about the process. Will it change what we taste?
     Proof the bread and form the bread and place the bread in the oven. The long handled peel will do nicely. The oven heats to approximately 1500 degrees before the wood is taken out, and every half hour or so the oven loses about 50 degrees or more. Other food for the restaurant is in the oven: potatoes and lamb shanks and whole chickens and chick peas and vegetables of all kinds. But everywhere we can smell the bread as it comes out of the oven.
     My kids eat bread. They tear into it just after it comes from the oven, kissing and cooing at their burning fingers. They’ll eat it for days.

Afternoon:

Bodies that swim in the Aegean will be cold. Winds bring cooler water into the small coves around Aliki beach, slapping brisk foam against the cool marble. The marble was cut from this area of Thasos and hauled on a road cutting right through the heart of the island. It was sent out on ships. The coves and shallows all look like country sinks slightly submerged—large rectangular cutouts. Sea urchins take up residence, tiny asterisks begging pardon for their dark interruptions of the white.

Ancients called the water wine-dark before they had a name for the blues.
     Solstice Greek coves are no warmer than non-solstice Greek coves. Swimmers still exit shivering slightly, but there are many today who risk it. Sense the largesse of the day, the import of summer. Gifted so much light.
     The sand is warm and the Grecian marble pebbles fit into pockets, warm slow and cool quick. It is easy to get sleepy.
     The sea, it really is wine-dark.

Evening:

Still so light so late. I am asked to give a reading for this group of students and teachers congregating here in Greece, and I do. I share an essay about my kids. The same kids who baked bread and swam in the sea earlier this day. Who are thousands of miles from their home but who are loving this time, on this island, on the longest day of the year. I admit, I get a little emotional. Have a hard time finishing the essay I read. That’s never happened before and in the moment I can’t name what is overwhelming me.
     Before you have a name for it, an experience is best described based on what it resembles. We could call all of this—the heat and the bread and the cold and the water and the choking up from pride and love—yes, we could call this name into being: solstice.

—Dustin Parsons

Dustin Parsons is the author of Exploded View: Essays on Fatherhood, with Diagrams from University of Georgia Press. He is the winner of the Laurel Review Fiction Prize and the American Literary Review Fiction Prize as well as a New York Fine Arts and Ohio Arts Grant in nonfiction. He teaches at the University of Mississippi.




MARIE O'ROURKE

Worrying

I wake to the chimes of my alarm and an email of last minute instructions from Ander. It’s a day late, for me: I am already in June 21, in the wrong half of the world. This time last year I was in the right half—fucking Facebook with its memories reminds me again, as it has every morning for the past few weeks. Flicking through this latest collage of English countryside and canals, I remember that sense of the world opening, a gentle easing of seams and strictures before it could begin unravelling.
     After rousing my youngest son for school, looking in on the other who’s still sleeping, I tend to my need for tea. My daughter is up, standing at the easel. Her eyes are barely open, and she reports only two hours’ sleep. There’s just four more days until the exhibition, and the white of bare canvas scares me, but the crumpled packets of No-Doz next to A’s coffee cup, the look of her, scares me more. I talk her back to bed and set an alarm for 10. Showering, I worry about her and me and what last night’s dream means and what my day will hold.
     Driving to school, I’m conscious of the silence and size of J. I let him choose the music to get those ear-pods out, but the lyrics pumping through the speakers unnerve me. I try to keep a light tone whenever I question the sexism embedded in the rap he loves. I’m not sure I manage. He laughs and says of course he doesn’t believe or agree with these lines, that they are just words. But I know what words can be or do, how they can open to a panorama or narrow the world to glimpses through a keyhole. I am thinking of distance and resonance as he shuts the door and disappears beneath his school’s verandas.
     James Brown’s ‘It’s a Man’s World’ fills the car, draws a cynical smile from my lips as I head for the post office to collect a parcel, worrying if there’s enough warmth in the sun for my washing to dry, wondering what I might cook for dinner. I silence The Godfather’s wailing with a call to my sister and we have another of those five-minutes-saying-nothing conversations as I navigate through the morning traffic. Is it possible to be as fucking chirpy as she always seems to be? It is, frankly, hard to believe we two come from the same family. Again, I worry that maybe I don’t really know her. That she just doesn’t trust me enough to be real, to tell me what she honestly thinks and feels.


Wondering

I exchange pleasantries with the lady at the out-of-hours collection window. The paper envelope she hands me—thick with gloss packing tape and a Ukrainian postmark—is a pleasant surprise. God bless internet shopping! It’s over a month since I clicked this through my Etsy cart, and as I rip the package open and rub the jewel-toned velvet between my fingertips I wonder what the Ukraine is like; wonder how Aziza’s day might be different (or similar) to mine. Today I’m sporting hi-top sneakers clad in sequins patterned snakeskin one side, gold if flipped the other. My elder son C says, ‘they’re fire,’ the loudest shoes he has ever seen. The new velvet socks seem a perfect match, so I pretzel myself in the front seat of the Volvo, untying, removing, replacing, retying. Too much/not enough: I imagine plotting my clothes and my life would produce a graph with surprising results.
     The morning’s makeup was a struggle, so I check myself in the rear-view mirror before taking off: liquid eyeliner really is a young girl’s game, demands a sharp eye and a steady, fearless hand, as all hesitation, all wobbles show. I’m wearing an outfit that 90s me (the same me who had just discovered the joys of liquid eyeliner) would have worn and loved, and I think again of the way fashion loops back and revisits the past, changing ever so slightly but significantly each time around. My clothes, my memories, and life are moving back to a space where they haven’t been for over twenty-five years. It’s reassuring and alarming, comforting and confronting.
     Snaking my way along Riverside Drive, I crane my neck to see what the Eliza statue is wearing this morning. Wonder again how they get out to her, there in the midst of the water, how they wrangle clothes onto those outstretched bronze arms. The river is glass under blue sky, which I find strangely irksome. Yesterday I drove to my office shrouded in fog, and worked on ways I might describe it poetically, in preparation for today. Sun was not part of my plan, and the winter-crisp light and clear sky just seem kind of bland.
     Appreciating the present moment is not my thing. I’d make a crap Buddhist.


Studying

Campus feels empty but the car parks are full. It’s exam time, and as always, I’m thankful it’s them, not me. Back to study after blurry years of small children and homemaking, I now spend my days at a computer reading and writing about the essay—what it is, how it works, why I want to write them. Three years into a PhD, the definitions my project began with are feeling ridiculously tight and false. Today, hours of ‘busywork’ reading and taking notes from a book theorising experimental creative nonfiction, is designed to ease me back into my thoughts and my own writing.
     I usually aim to hang out until 10am for coffee, but admit defeat and walk over at 9:30, worrying again that I have a caffeine problem. ‘Only one coffee a day,’ I say, but a double shot has become a triple, and often a late afternoon dirty chai is snuck in too. The addition of milk and cinnamon somehow makes it seem less needy and desperate than that mid-morning long black, I think?
     Reading Brenda Miller, I note what she says about objects both telling a story and calming ‘the connective tissue’ of the brain, helping to '[f]ocus it. Making everything a little more clear.' [1] Twisting the rings on my fingers, I think again about last night’s dream. I haven’t worn engagement or wedding band for over a year now, though their indentation is still visible. I developed some sudden and strange allergy; the ring of red angry skin took months and much cortisone to calm. I call A to make sure she is up and hasn’t slept through her alarm.
     Lunch conversation is stilted and sparse. I eat two-day-old salad, the smell and slight tang of the vegetables putting me in mind of our kitchen’s compost bucket. We talk about L’s latest revisions, his supervisors’ comments. D talks about graduation, lunch tomorrow to celebrate his glowing examiners’ reports. I look out the window, then watch the girl who always sits alone in the lunch room microwaving two-minute noodles, stirring through a can of tuna. I don't know her name, and don’t know whether the fact of her aloneness, her anonymity, or what she is eating for lunch makes me saddest.
     My afternoon’s reading brings more reminders that all memory is just a memory of the last time you remembered it. Pliable. Changeable. I think of the subject of my most recent essay. I wonder how those events will feel different in texture or shape years from now; how different the history that is already embedded in another’s brain. ‘Your problem, Marie, is that you just think too much,’ my Mum often worries, aloud. Often, I worry she might be right. But thinking, feeling, seeing, is hardwired into who and what I am. I know no alternative.


Thinking

The work day finishes with Lia Purpura’s essay ‘On not pivoting’ and I worry (yes, worrying again—are you sensing a pattern?) that to date, I have hung both myself and my essays on so-called ‘Pivotal Life Events’. Am I incapable of drawing crystalline detail from the everyday? Her final paragraph packs a punch (oh, they always do) and I type the words into my notes, change the font to bold. ‘And I could go on,’ she says, ‘I could walk for miles right now, fielding all that passes through, rubs off, lends a sense of being—that rush of moments, objects, sensations so much like a cloud of gnats, a cold patch in the ocean, dust motes in a ray of sun that roil, gather, settle around my head and make up the daily weather of a self.’ [2] I feel a little better about myself, and about my life and this thing I’m wanting to write about today; this thing that has revealed the bones of a life lacking interesting flesh.  

     Dinner is tomato soup and toast, and I look down at the flecked green and black of basil and pepper, crunch dark rye toast, its bitter undertones glossed with butter. Perched at the kitchen bench, I watch A paint. She talks a little about that feeling when she’s in the middle of painting, and can’t help but see everything in her day for its mixture of colours. That constant worry of how she might find the precise blend of pigment to put it on canvas and make it come alive.


Talking

I get a lift to Bookclub, the car filled with the ease of conversation between people who have known each other now for twenty years. The evening is chill and black, the sun long set before we set off: remember, the longest day of the year for you right-side-of-the-world folks is the shortest day here. Street lights and signage get sparser as we inch our way up into the hills.  J lives on the edge of a national park and a kangaroo startles in the headlights when our car rounds its final corner. A circle in her living room, we settle in front of a roaring wood fire to discuss a book about a serial cheat, and the deals people make with themselves to stay in a marriage. Her husband drifts through, hovers awkwardly, but doesn’t hang around. Pressing Blue Castello onto biscuits dense with fig and poppy seeds, I delight in the clash of unctuous cheese with sweet and crisp and crumbly cracker.
     As we edge around the book’s themes—whether fidelity in long term relationships is possible, whether we can ever really know or understand the composition of other people’s lives—I sense poppy seeds buried in a back molar, and work at them with the tip of my tongue. I drink more red wine and we talk carefully about our friend T who is too ill to be there, whose latest bout of radiation and chemo has knocked her too flat for socialising. She is heading overseas soon to see her UK family and friends. We don’t talk about what all this might mean, just as we don't talk about the parallels between the plot of the novel we’ve just discussed and the life of our friend P, who was the who one suggested we read it.


Seeing

My daughter is the only one up when I return. I slump on the couch, chatting just enough to keep her awake and on task. Two eyes have emerged in my five-hour absence. Their clarity and depth unnerves me, as does the blankness around them. A’s style is what you’d call hyperrealist, but she has an unusual approach, filling in random fragments across the canvas rather than finishing whole areas in full.
     If I think about it practically, it’s probably to do with using the colours on her palette, a search for spaces which need the same combination of oils, echoes and resonances in the dips and hollows and curves of her subject’s skin. Still, the process is disconcerting to watch, the effect akin to one of those puzzles which begins with a pixelated face, small patches of clarity slowly growing, bringing the whole into focus. Kissing her goodnight, I head for bed with guilty anticipation of hours of sleep I know she won't have.
     I undress in the dark, carefully removing, hanging or folding, then storing each item. A place for everything and everything in its place, they say, and I am trying hard now to organise myself, and my life. Body relaxed under the weight and warmth of the blankets, my fingertips work at the velvet bedcover’s edge, enjoying the slip and click of the fabric’s nap.
     My day ends as it started, with me worrying about that dream and wondering what I will write. I flick again through those Facebook photos of the Brontë parsonage, cobbled streets of Haworth and Heptonstall, Sylvia Plath’s unkempt grave. My husband is long asleep by the sounds of it, and curling onto my side, into myself, on the opposite side of the bed, the curve of my back mirrors his.


Notes

[1] Miller, B. (2014). "Writing inside the web: Creative nonfiction in the age of connection." In S. Prentiss & J. Wilkins (Eds.), The Far Edges of the Fourth Genre (pp. 23-35). East Lansing, Michigan: Michigan State University Press, p.34

[2] Purpura, L. On not pivoting. DIAGRAM, 12(1). Retrieved from http://thediagram.com/12_1/purpura.html

—Marie O'Rourke

Marie O’Rourke is an Australian creative writer and PhD candidate from Curtin University. Investigating the quirks of memory and experimental essaying, her work has been published in Mediating Memory: Tracing the Limits of Memoir, Meniscus, TEXT, New Writing, a/b, Westerly and ABR.





ELIZABETH EVANS

Despite the fact that I took a trip to a tow yard way-the-hell-south-of-Tucson this morning (and, while at the tow yard, snapped at the lady behind the service window who wanted to convince me that the totaled car from which I needed to retrieve my stuff was someone else’s car; and the fact that I was on the telephone, off and on, all day—trying to reach the person who witnessed my car crash, and talking to friends, and answering many questions from insurance people—meanwhile aware that the left side of my skull is swollen and aching (which did not stop me from putting in my time on the elliptical trainer at the gym and reading the closed captions on MSNB and CNN regarding the latest crap coming down the pike from the POTUS)—I lived this day, June 21, almost entirely in a mental June 20, again and again replaying that sickening glimpse of the blue car speeding into my path and, then, the aftermath at the scene.
     The impact with its surreal swirl of horizontal stripes. There must have been a terrible noise as I spun from north to south, and I have tried to retrieve it, but failed. What follows: registering the disgusting, yellowish pillow that sits in my lap. What is it? Oh. Is this what a deflated airbag looks like? Then a man is opening my car door and telling me I don’t need to take the keys that I am trying to remove from the ignition, just leave them. 
     Which man was that? I have run through many series of blurred figures (one is young with a shining face, another is only a heavy torso in a gray uniform). Later, there is a beautiful red and gold firetruck that I initially don’t understand has come because of the accident, and it brings with it a handful of EMT’s, and, then, police officers arrive at the scene, too, but I think that first man was a mechanic from a nearby garage.
     Did he walk me to the sidewalk? Today, I repeatedly passed by the cluster of those people who, yesterday afternoon, stood by the blue car. One of the people, a gray-haired woman in a pale purple dress, calls out to me as I head to the sidewalk, “I’m so sorry!” The driver of the blue car. I am grateful that she acknowledges her fault, but too upset to speak.
     Very odd: it was not until this evening, twenty-four plus hours after the accident, that I realized that I must have briefly lost consciousness during the crash. Also, it now seems odd to me that the EMTs who arrived at the scene accepted my answer: Yes, I’m okay. But, of course, I did not tell them—I had no memory of the fact—that my head had hit what must have been the driver’s side window of my car. No memory of the airbag opening. My glasses breaking. No memory of my legs banging the door so hard that I have found bruises on the inside of the right leg as well as much larger ones of the outside of the left.
     Oh, throughout this day, June 21, it did seem most necessary—keenly important!—that I replay the conversation with the other driver who, after a series of telephone calls, told me that her apology didn’t mean she actually caused the accident: “I’m just an apologetic person.” That conversation flooded me with anger each time I recalled it, but there have been other emotions attached to other emotions from the scene: absurd shame after a man asks if I’m okay and, in my numbness, I hold up a hand that must have hit something, and when I peel off my broken fingernail, the man says a scolding, “Well, that doesn’t matter”—as if he imagines that I am some vain person who gives a fuck about fingernails. Again and again, I have been standing in the baking, ugly, parking lot of a Presbyterian church, telephone in hand, trying to get through to my insurance company while, off to my right, people—including the woman who hit me—talk in the shade of a sycamore tree. I am shy and half-deaf: the noise of the rush-hour traffic makes it impossible for me to stand where they stand and use my telephone. When I finally force myself to join the people, one of them offers me her name and phone number, identifying herself as a witness. A pretty woman with a stylish swag of orange hair, she must go pick up her child, but, later, when the police officer—a little guy with excellent teeth—tries repeatedly to telephone her, she will not pick up. My witness! Where is my witness? Did she become worried about being involved?
     I have stopped asking.
     The replays are dying out. An hour or so ago, I realized that all those visits to yesterday had yielded nothing and could yield nothing: they were just attempts by a traumatized person to make what happened not have happened.

—Elizabeth Evans

ELIZABETH EVANS is the author of six books of fiction, most recently the novel As Good As Dead (Bloomsbury, 2015). Her story collections are Suicide’s Girlfriend (HarperCollins) and Locomotion (New Rivers). Previous novels are The Blue Hour (Algonquin), Rowing in Eden (HarperCollins), and Carter Clay (HarperCollins). Distinctions include the Iowa Author Award, a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, the James Michener Fellowship, and a Lila Wallace Award. She has been a fellow at MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, the International Retreat for Writers at Hawthornden Castle, and other foundations. Evans received her MFA from the Iowa Writers Workshop. Professor emeritus in the Program in Creative Writing at the University of Arizona, Evans serves as a guest writer at Queens University of Charlotte’s Low-residence MFA Program in Creative Writing. She lives in Tucson. 





SANDRA LAMBERT

The pinch of twisted velcro on my post-operative bra wakes me up. Without remembering, I shift in bed the wrong way and pain spreads over my chest. I cup my breast to hold it still. It’s swollen, tight, and resembles a bowling ball.
     Yesterday I had a re-do on a lumpectomy from two weeks ago. That time they didn’t find clear margins, so yesterday was another, deeper, go at it. And this morning, after tightening the bra, I feed the dog, walk her, and take out garbage despite increasing pain, wooziness, and nausea. That’s enough. I return to bed with an ice pack clasped under my arm, the little dog stretched out along my thigh, watch Buffy the Vampire Slayer reruns, and eat grapes. I hope I won’t vomit.  
     After the last surgery I was not depressed. I was determined. We had a plan. I’d recover, have the seven weeks of daily radiation, and then I’d be good to go just in time for the publication date of my book. Fucking breast cancer was not going to steal my book launch from me. 
     But the plan is in limbo now. Today there’s pain and nausea, but also a terrible sadness. The surgery came up so suddenly that my beloved was away on a work trip. She rushes home as early as she can manage, and I spend the afternoon crying each time she asks me how I am. She can’t hug me because it hurts. And I’m still trying not to vomit. She says that I’ve been such a trooper so far that being sad now makes sense. A friend who calls tells me I’m such a trooper. If I hear the word “trooper” again, I’m going to scream.  
     Finally, it’s evening. I arrange pillows around my breast so it’s supported but not pressed on and wince each time the positioning fails. My beloved places herself gently under the covers. She reaches over, careful not to disturb the pillows, and puts a hand on my thigh. It reminds me that there are other parts of my body. 

—Sandra Lambert

Sandra Gail Lambert is the author of A Certain Loneliness: A Memoir due out from the University of Nebraska Press this fall. 





ALBERT GOLDBARTH









See also these supporting documents: a painting by Skyler Lovelace—

"Van Gogh's Bedroom, Aries" by Skyler Lovelace
—and five maps by Brian Evans:






—Albert Goldbarth


Albert Goldbarth has been publishing notable books of poetry for over forty years—two of which have received the National Book Critics Circle Award—as well as collections of essays and a novel, many of them from the admirable Graywolf Press. While his fingers have never touched a computer (laptop, tablet, etc.) keyboard, his wife Skyler teaches computer animation and digital media. Go figure. He lives in Wichita, Kansas. Go figure again.





LORRI MCDOLE

I’m not ready to greet anyone at 7:30 a.m., let alone a three-year-old with an attitude, but I opened the door this morning with my best everyday-is-a-goddamn-new-day smile. It gives me, for a hot second, the illusion of control.
     Time to shoot bad guys! The Kid said, shedding shoes and shirt like he owns the place. After his mom (my daughter) left, I pretended to shoot bad guys for a minute and then got him switched to books by suggesting one we could act out: If you’re happy and you know it, roar out loud. ROAR! We read for maybe five minutes before he got restless. I got out the hot wheel bin, and The Kid played happily for a half hour running cars down a spiral track. He chattered nonstop, naming each car (I particularly liked Eagle of the Desert), while I sat beside him on the floor shot-gunning collagen-laced coffee. We ate breakfast at the kitchen island: pancakes dipped in strawberry cream cheese and Kashi cereal with berries.
     At 9:30 (after a little dog torturing, fit throwing, and puzzle doing), we set the timer: countdown to the playdate with my sister and niece. When it went off at 10:00 and they weren’t here yet, The Kid frowned at me, just like his mother used to do. It’s no good explaining that I really can’t orchestrate things just for his delight, but I always try anyway.
     Sorry, I’m not in charge of traffic.
     Apparently not, Ma. The accompanying withering look probably goes without saying. Like most three-year-old’s, The Kid is expert at pulling oddly appropriate comments out of his ass. And yes, you can laugh—he calls me Ma.
We lived through the next half hour till they got here.
     It’s not easy, entertaining a ten-year-old and a preschooler. We tried badminton. Every time The Kid swung at the birdie, he made a dramatic dive to the ground, which we thought was funny at first. Both kids enjoyed our new tree swing and were more or less reasonable about taking turns. In quieter moments we watched a squirrel running up and down our fence to tease the dog. The Kid mentioned, for the hundredth time, that the dog has sad eyes; my sister agreed. I didn’t say anything but thought plenty: Hey, I walk her, I throw the ball for her, what does she have to be sad about? I didn’t get the nurturing gene, I got the defensive one. I understand all arts but the ones that count when you’re a mother and grandmother, the domestic ones. If something seems the slightest bit wrong in our home life, I blame myself. Which is why it’s funny or maybe just karma that I’m back in the role of caretaker. 
     Lunch was egg salad sandwiches and a million grapes; I tried to ignore my sister’s look when The Kid insisted on having a questionably-clean hand in literally all of it. At least he might learn to cook, which my daughter never did. My mother never taught me to cook, not that I was interested, so you can see how that all happened. At 56, I’m finally starting to figure a few things out.   
     Today was fifteen degrees cooler than yesterday (typical start of summer Seattle weather), but the cousins were determined to play in the water. My sister brought big water squirters (she doesn’t say “gun”), which only once resulted in a face full of water for her. Three of us thought that was funny. Luckily, she was inside drying off when The Kid called me Sassy Pants for reprimanding him. The Perfect Parent wouldn’t have appreciated my No-YOU-Are banter.
     When it was time to say goodbye, The Kid, who’d been an enthusiastic host, gave shy side hugs, and when my sister asked if she could have a kiss, he put a finger up in the air: Sorry, I’m all out. My niece and I shared a laugh behind our hands. The Kid princess-waved and revved up the kiss machine enough to blow some from the porch.
     Somehow, I got him down for a short, fit-free nap, and then I wasted time browsing emails about DIY butt facials (you mean a loofah in the shower?) and terrorizing political news that filled me with exactly what you’d expect. I resisted the urge to make myself an early cocktail so I could pretend I was “somewhere else doing anything else,” to paraphrase Lydia Davis on the subject. 
Later, I sat by The Kid on the couch while he watched Tom and Jerry and ate an apple. I never used to sit with my kids during TV time, but I’m Ma-not-Mommy, and if I want to spend every available minute with him (in a conflicted, exhausted sort of way), I will. 
     My daughter picked him up at 6:45 (I got a kiss on the lips from The Kid) and just like that, the house was still. My husband was out of town, which left this introvert exactly where she wanted to be after a day of kid and company: alone in my house.
     I’ve got two library books I’m on the clock for, Tomb of the Unknown Racist and Rachel Cusk’s Outline. At 8:00, after picking up toys and snacking on carrots and hummus, I settled on the couch with Cusk and a glass or three of wine. I looked out the window occasionally, thought about The Kid leaning into me while we read Good Night Gorilla and The Foolish Tortoise before nap. How he asked me to sing The Muffin Man and You are my Sunshine and all the rest. I was starting to relax when I got to the part where Cusk’s “neighbor” character quotes his mother: “I could weep just to think that I’ll never see you again as you were at the age of six—I would give anything, she said, to meet that six-year-old one more time.”
     I was close to done raising kids (if that ever happens) when my daughter got pregnant at 18. I didn’t want it. I don’t mean the baby, exactly. I mean going through it all with a young daughter who had an on-its-way-out relationship with her boyfriend: the grief over what she was giving up, the doctor visits, the babysitting, the sleep-starved overnights, the binky quitting and potty training, the fits, the fear and worry, the guilt. I didn’t want to start all over again. But when people say it’s “just a season,” that’s not the whole story: it’s the shortest season imaginable. The Kid will be four soon, and then he’ll be five. He will grow up (which I somehow couldn’t imagine my kids doing) and, in some fashion, away. I could weep. I do.

—Lorri McDole

Lorri McDole is a semi-professional writer and an amateur wife, mother, and grandmother. She practices all these things in the Pacific Northwest. 





JONI TEVIS

Dad is the kind of person who remembers exact dates. Dad. Got anything for me, June 21? It’s lunchtime and we’re eating leftover pepperoni pizza from the box. Dad and David are nearly finished replacing the insulation in the basement. A hundred and twenty-one strips of pink insulation held in place by metal wires made in Hemingway, SC, population 573. Says the manufacturer’s website, “’There is an old saying, ‘Do one thing and do it better than anyone else.’ At Southeastern Wire, that holds true.”
     June 21, 1953, was a hot day in West Liberty, Ohio. Harold Tevis, Dad’s dad, worked alone, high up on the roof of Charlie Prall’s barn, built in 1888 and held together with hand-carved oak pins, not nails. He was replacing the shingled roof with tin. Dad was eight years old, and it was his job to run around collecting the shingles that fell to the ground. When he got tired he took a nap on the broad seat of the family car, a ‘48 Kaiser.
     This was a big barn with a steep roof covering a tall haymow. Farmers used to put up hay loose in the mow, but that takes a lot of room. The first hay balers made square bales, which saved storage space, but you had to be careful. You cut the hay and let it cure in rows in the field for a few days. If you baled the hay before it was totally dry—say, if rain was predicted and you wanted to get it put up before then—and dampness remained in the center of the bale, it could get hot enough to smoulder and catch and then the whole barn would burn. Barns all over Logan County caught fire in the 1950s because of that.
     But not Prall’s barn, which is still standing, far as we know. I think about that, how the rain and cold never wear out but we do. We do the best we can with what we have, whether that’s oak pegs or steel wire angled at the end so it digs into the beam and holds the insulation snug.
     I’m still thinking about that when I get some bad news. A woman I knew in high school died on June 21. Cancer. She was 43 years old. It had been years since we’d been in touch, but still I couldn’t believe it. Do one thing and do it better than anyone else. That was Betsy. She steered by her own lights no matter what anybody thought—hard enough as an adult, let alone when we first met as awkward kids in gym class. She was just as much a drag on the basketball games as I was, but she didn’t care. She favored red lipstick and floppy hats with silk poppies stitched to the brim. Shredded it in calculus, could draw anything in a flash, knew the Andrew Lloyd Webber songbook by heart. She was the first person I knew who watched both the Oscars and the Tonys, and she had had informed opinions about who should win what. Valedictorian. Grad school at Rice. Last I heard she was teaching macrobiotic cooking classes in her yoga studio in Miami. That’s a long way from Piedmont, South Carolina, her house just past the turnoff for Brushy Creek Bar-B-Que.
     I remember once in high school when my folks drove us to Charlotte, two hours north, to see Harry Connick Jr. play. On a school night. This was a big deal. How her parents called Dad on the phone and grilled him about his driving record and habits, asked who his auto insurance provider was, what time they could expect us home. Dad just shook his head and smiled. He was protective of us, too. I bought her a pink lipstick once, kind of hoping she would tone down her look, but she never wore it. The longest day of the year, with the most sunlight, that would be her way. I remember how the night of the show, Mom and Dad waited in the car in the vast parking lot as the band played encore after encore of You are my sunshine, my only sunshine. You make me happy when skies are gray. What lasts? The ‘48 Kaiser, long since melted down for the metal, the three-rib tin in galvanized sheets nailed down with lead-head nails, the cedar shingles thrown in the wagon by the sweaty child, now a grandfather himself, to be burned in the stove that winter. The sweet peppery smell cedar releases as it burns, the flame it makes bright and yellow-white. “You Are My Sunshine” was first recorded in 1939 and since then it’s been covered by singers from Johnny Cash to Ray Charles to Jamey Johnson, but that night in high school, we felt like we were the first ones ever to hear it, ever to throw up our skinny arms and sing along.
—Joni Tevis

Joni Tevis is the author of two books of essays, most recently The World Is On Fire: Scrap, Treasure, and Songs of Apocalypse. Her essays have appeared in Orion, Oxford American, Poets & Writers, the Pushcart Prize anthology, and elsewhere. She teaches at Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina.





Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 7: Hala Gabir • Samuel Rafael Barber • Jason Thayer • Cecilia Pinto • Elona Sherwood • Simon Flory • Lynn K. Kilpatrick • Michelle Midori Repke • Caleb Klitzke • Cynthia Brandon-Slocum

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. If you wrote something (it's not too late!), send us your work via this submission form (it's okay if you didn't RSVP before: the more the merrier).

—The Editors



July 7: Hala Gabir • Samuel Rafael Barber • Jason Thayer • Cecilia Pinto • Elona Sherwood • Simon Flory • Lynn K. Kilpatrick • Michelle Midori Repke • Caleb Klitzke • Cynthia Brandon-Slocum 





HALA GABIR

Imagine you are driving. It does not matter where, all that matters is that you are behind the wheel. Keep your eyes on the road. Make sure your speed is constant. Too fast? You just rammed into someone. Too slow? Someone just rammed into you. Either way, you looked at your speedometer too long and now you are in an accident. Check your mirrors. You checked the wrong mirror and now you crashed into that guy changing lanes. Check your blind spots. You looked too long and you are eyes are off the road. Did you forget to check your blind spots? You just hit a motorcyclist. And that is just in ideal driving conditions when it is sunny and dry, and all the other drivers are following driving protocol. But what if it is raining or foggy or dark out? What if drivers are selfish and disobey laws, texting while driving, or even drive under the influence? What will happen then?
     I am a college student and I do not know how to drive, and this is my dilemma. When I am behind the wheel I have to pay attention to everything all at once and it is disorienting. Make one mistake and it costs you your life, or someone else’s. That type of pressure is scary, especially for a novice driver. Yesterday, I was in the waiting room of the driving simulation, nervously waiting for my fourth and final session to begin. Why am I so nervous? I’m glad you asked.
     You know the saying about how you are more likely to die in a car crash than in a plane? Although this is true, it is mostly used to comfort people who fear that their plane will be hijacked and will hit a tower, as well as, I assume, novice pilots. This saying is not comforting for people like me, novice drivers with severe vehophobia. I do not know accurate or recent statistics on car injuries and deaths, but I do know car accidents are one of the leading causes of death, including the health-related deaths in the United States. This fact is very hammered into the head of student drivers: unlike in a controlled simulation, the real world road is dangerous and unpredictable, and if you do not follow the rules you will die.
     Now that you see my rational reasoning for my irrational fear, how did I get anxiety behind the wheel? It all happened in late 2015 and early 2016. My parents did not want to me start driving at the ripe young age of sixteen and instead when I am eighteen and much more mature; I do not know if the age made a difference, but that was the least of my problems. I got my learner’s permit and started to learn to drive in December 2015. I completed six hours of training with an instructor and my dad wanted to practice with me. At first, things were going well. I was driving straight, well straight enough, turning and using turn signals, and stopping at stop signs; all the things I was supposed to do. Then came the dreaded turn. When I was turning right I veered too much and I drove on the sidewalk, but it did not end there. The car kept going past the sidewalk, slid onto the gravel, and it did not stop until after I ran over a fire hydrant. Outside of the paint on the front, the car was not damaged. I cannot say the same thing about the hydrant. It was completely flattened under the car; although thankfully, water did not spray out everywhere, the car could not move with it underneath, so we had to borrow our neighbor’s car lift.
     Afterward, my dad called the police, which I think he should not have done. The police issued me a ticket for speeding, even though I was under the speed limit when I crashed, and destruction of public property, something I am actually guilty of. In order to not pay for the ticket, I had to go to a defensive driving course. I was embarrassed, humiliated, and traumatized, and I did not want to drive ever again, but that did not matter because my parents had already paid for more driving lessons. Two weeks later, I had my next lesson. I became more nervous and more anxious than I was before, and what little skills I had were deteriorating, because I was so scared of making mistakes that I just made more mistakes. “It was just a fire hydrant,” you are thinking, “No one was hurt and your car was not severely damaged. People get into accidents all the time, so what is the big deal?” This was in a residential area with very few cars on the road, where I was not going more than fifteen miles an hour. Imagine if I was on a major street, the freeway, or a school zone, and I made that mistake; I did not want to take that risk.
     In fall of 2016, I moved to Tucson and attended the University of Arizona. I lived with my older sister, and since there was only one car, she did all the driving; this means that she had to drive me wherever I needed to go, whether she liked it or not. It was then I found the miracle of public transportation. As a student, for less than one hundred dollars a semester, I had a pass that allowed me unlimited rides on the bus and the streetcar. I lived near downtown Tucson, and there is a major transit center in downtown that almost all buses stop, end, or begin at. The pass and the transit center allowed me to go everywhere I needed to go and most places I wanted to go. Teenagers want to learn to drive and have a car because it gives them a sense of independence, not having to rely on anyone else; for me, however, public transportation gave me that sense of independence. I did not need to learn how to drive, rely on my sister, or carpool. I was no longer a hazard to the road or a burden on drivers, now I was just a passenger.
     Happy ending, right? Nope, not even close. I had spent almost two years without ever being behind the wheel again, with the exception of arcade games and go-karts. My learner’s permit was expired, so even if I wanted to drive I could not. Public transportation may have been a blessing, but the fact of the matter is as a college student I should know how to drive. Despite how big Tucson is, using exclusively public transportation only works there. If I wanted to live in a bigger city after graduation, like Phoenix, or leave the state, public transportation would no longer be a viable option. I had to face the fact: I needed to learn how to drive.
     Of course, there was the big question of money. Learning to drive is expensive because you have to pay for both the instructor and the special car with breaks in the passenger’s seat. The whole point of instruction is to earn my driver’s license, but what if I fail again and waste all that money? The physically safest solution was also the monetarily least safe option: simulated driving, to be behind the wheel in the safety of technology and air-conditioned rooms. The fact of the matter was that I was mentally unprepared to go on the road again.
     The first session of the simulation was learning the basics: driving straight without hitting the cones, turning left, and turning right. The second session was more advanced with me driving in residential areas and business districts and practicing recognizing signs and signals. The third session was about learning how to drive on a freeway or highway: how to merge, change lanes, and exit.
     This very long backstory brings us to yesterday. Yesterday was my fourth and final session. I checked in fifteen minutes early and the appointment was not until two o’clock. Waiting in the waiting room only increased my anxiety and my desire to just get it over with. Two o’clock came and I entered the simulation. First was a review of the previous lesson. Next came the hard stuff: weather. First I drove in a business district at night, then drove on a freeway when it was night and rainy, and then drove on a rural road when it was rainy, dark, windy, and foggy. The lesson is two hours long, and in between each hour, there is a fifteen-minute break with free snacks, possibly to calm down the nerves of the students. In order to calm my anxiety down, I did what I do best and ate a lot of the free Rice Krispies Treats. The second hour was focused on recognizing hazards early and preventing accidents. I hated that part because everyone in that simulation is very rude, selfish, and outright dangerous, just like in real life. The important thing is I made it out alive; I cannot think of a reason I would not make it out alive, but you never know.
     According to my instructor, I did well in nonideal circumstances and was ready for the road, so my mom and I made the first appointment for the first time I will be on the road in over two years. I do not feel ready, even after eight hours in a simulation. The real world is not a simulation where you can control whatever you want, it is unpredictable and dangerous. I felt unprepared; I feel unprepared. Driving is supposed to be easy, a skill sixteen-year-olds have mastered. Would I fail again? I am so sick of failure. The first lesson is next Friday, so there is only one way to find out.

—Hala Gabir





SAMUEL RAFAEL BARBER

I open: my eyes. I remember: read the note scrawled on the bedside table’s notepad. I read: the note. The note is a two sentence frame for a new story. The note asks me to remember Bolaño and Chile and the CIA funded and planned overthrow of democratically elected President Salvador Allende in 1973 which resulted in 3200 “disappeared” dissidents, the imprisoning of 30,000 (many of whom, like Bolaño, were tortured) and eventual exile of 200,000 men, women, and children. Generally, indigenous people and teachers and young people, of course. I think: they always come for us. I remember: My job begins in July, so today is a “day off.” I wonder: A day off from what? What are “on days” and who flips the switch? I think: I must write as much as possible during these days that are somehow off so that my future self does not regret these off days each and every on day morning as I walk past the five or so armed guards and through the metal detector which collaborate in welcoming each and every person to the high school at which I will begin to work, in July. I will do the things I like to do today, because the contractual terms under which my existence is justified according to the logic of the market don’t require the exchange of my labor power for money, today. I open: a screen to double check the figures of mindless violence I seem to be incapable of forgetting. In doing so, I notice: in addition to its obfuscatory naming, Wikipedia, on its “United States involvement in regime change” page, mentions only a third of the attempted coups implicating the CIA of which I am aware. It does not, for instance, mention Ecuador even once. I think: my mother lived in Ecuador for a year. 1969. She was eight. I remember: each and every time I donate blood, I must disclose the year in which my mother lived in Ecuador. Something to do with a mad cow disease outbreak elsewhere in South America during that era. I read: A military junta overthrew the democratically elected Velasco Ibarra in 1972. I feel: He is a wonderful man, my mother’s father. He is a wonderful man because he is a kind man. I think: he is living his quiet life of dignity, and it is enough, for him. He has many friends, my mother’s father. He has found a way to like people, somehow. I remember: one of these friends was also from the valley, and accompanied him during his year in Ecuador. They were both teachers, ostensibly. It became clear, much later, that my mother’s father’s friend was in fact working for the CIA to help coordinate the replacement of a democratically elected President with a General more suitable to our national interest in global resource domination. I think: this is the national interest of every country, of course. We are no more or less virtuous than any country. We are merely richer and more powerful than any country, and our country has done the sorts of things one would expect a country to do, were it the richest and most powerful country in the world. There is a logic to this. The logic of extinction. I think: all the good done by my mother’s father, that year in Ecuador, is so significantly outweighed by the suffering and violence done by my mother’s father’s friend, that year in Ecuador, as to be beyond comprehension. I remember: this is what we do to each other. I know: suddenly, how to write the story. By write I mean create on a screen by pressing a series of keys, each of which is marked with a designated letter, in a particular order. In three hours I write: the story. I feel: It is all right. It is a better version of a story written five months before about imperial slaughter and plunder in the Belgian Congo. I worry: writing about this writing in this will be construed as a sort of showing off. I consider: leaving it out, but do not. It is now 1 p.m. I consider: meeting a friend at a bar to watch the latest world cup game, but do not. I remember: last time we hung out, I explained to him how we know the identities of only a fraction of the people we kill in drone strikes, how the data we only reluctantly release to Congress categorizes anyone killed over the age of 18 to be a militant. How we specifically target weddings and funerals. How this is a war crime. How we specifically target those who come lending aid to those who have been targeted by a drone minutes before through what is known as a “double tap.” How this too is a war crime. How, despite all the caring about the brown bodies of my people at the border, these days, we cannot seem to care about all of the brown bodies at the same time. How my friend seemed grateful to learn this, while we watched Mexico upset Germany at a different bar from the bar at which he will be watching the latest world cup game, alone, today. I think: perhaps, if I write all this in this, whenever I get around to writing this, perhaps some of you people will begin to care about all the brown bodies. I think: this is foolish; I will do so anyway; this is how I survive. I consider: writing this, but do not. I make: tacos out of leftover rice and beans and corn and squash. I read: “the news” for four hours. I read: about various permutations of suffering and violence on both a domestic and global scale perpetrated by various governments and institutions and individuals for the same, simple reason, for four hours. I consider: writing this, but do not. I play: Deus Ex: Human Revolution, for a while. I pause. I open: a screen and check the game’s release date. I remember: what I was doing on August 23, 2011. I was preparing to move to Providence, Rhode Island, for college. I had not yet met my best friend. I was myself, but I was also not yet myself. Further specificity is forever lost, of course, for the same reason I have agreed to write this. I un-pause. I wish: the apartheid themes of discrimination against those with cybernetic implants was more sophisticated. My best friend returns home. I think: she has been working too hard, and too late. I say: you have been working too hard, and too late. She says: I know. She says: pride is this weekend, and I’ll let you know when I’m working as soon as they let me know. We discuss: various things. We make: vegan chili. We watch: various things. We brush: our teeth. She goes to bed. I open: a screen. I read: the San Antonio Spurs have drafted Lonnie Walker. I consult: draft experts. I watch: youtube highlights. I watch: the interview in which he agrees the world is not flat, instead suggesting the world is an illusion. I give: Lonnie Walker the benefit of the doubt. I think: it bothers me when people misunderstand this concept, or misattribute it to The Matrix. The Matrix is a rather one-dimensional allegorical depiction of Descartes’s evil demon thought experiment. I remember: I first saw it, at age six, because a childless uncle didn’t know better. I feel: it, along with The Truman Show, made a huge impression on my developing mind. I think: I have always hoped, secretly, that my brain is in a vat. Or that my life is a television program. Either would be a horrifying prospect, for the obvious reasons. However, it would become so much easier to accept the irredeemable flaws in human nature as designed obstacles keeping me in my lane as I provide power (or entertainment) to my oppressors. I decide: I like Lonnie Walker. I consider: writing this, but do not. I close: a screen. I close: my eyes. I think: our eyes are just another screen. They provide access to a certain world. We enter and exit this world every day. We assume that everything we come across is quite obvious and clear when everything we come across is really quite distorted and opaque. Eyewitness testimony, and all that. I realize: this is not original. I cannot use this.

—Samuel Rafael Barber

Samuel Rafael Barber has an MFA from the University of Arizona and an MA in English and Comparative Literature from Columbia University. His work has appeared in DIAGRAM, Fanzine, Green Mountains Review, Puerto del Sol, and TIMBER, among other journals. According to life expectancy tables, he will live another 57.2 years. For now, you can find him at www.samuelrafaelbarber.com and somewhere within a certain American city.





JASON THAYER

June 21st, I called my mother. I had not spoken with her in 5 weeks—longer than any 32-year-old should go without calling their mother, and a greater distance than is common between our conversations. The previous day, I’d met with a heart surgeon to discuss the results of a cardiac MRI. Since turning thirty, I’ve kept a closer eye on the congenital heart disease that killed my father a day after his 36th birthday. I do not, generally, mention these hospital appointments to my mother.
     “The doctor says I have an aortic aneurism,” I told her, no preamble.
     The surgeon had drawn a picture of a heart—the standard cartoonish representation. “Your heart looks like this,” the doctor said. “Because Hallmark says so.” She was full of scripted jokes like this to diffuse the tension rising in the small white hospital room.
     “What does that mean exactly?” My mother asked. “Aneurism. I’ve heard the word—it’s not good, I know that.”
     The doctor had separated the heart into its four chambers, drawing chutes looping off to reflect the arterial network. “I’m going to explain it in plain language, so you can tell your family,” she had said, labeling the components of the organ.
     “It’s a widening of the aorta,” I told my mother. “A bulging.” I told her the doctors were going to wait and see. Get another MRI in a few months, measure again for growth rates, then decide if the time was right to saw into my breast bone, pry open my chest, and get to work replacing the unwieldy aorta with some surgical mesh and tubing. I exuded an air of nonchalance when I told my mother this. No big deal. I’d get this done when they decided it was time. I didn’t refer to it as a surgery, I called it a procedure—a more innocuous term. My partner’s father had an aortic aneurism last summer. After his procedure, it had hurt to laugh, to cough. He couldn’t open jars or handle a steering wheel for a while.
     I didn’t feel like talking about this anymore and so was thankful that enough time had lapsed since our last conversation, that I had another, softer misfortune to fill her in on to steer us away from me thinking about that surgical saw chewing its way through my sternum, my mother panicking over the immediate risk to her son’s life, the memory of my father bombarding her, the image of him lying still on his back on the hospital table, my sister and I holding her hands as the doctor lead us in an Our Father.
     “I have another not great thing to tell you,” I said.
     “Oh? Okay.” I could sense in my mother’s voice a bracing for the worst—a fear that maybe I was about to tell her that things with my partner just weren’t working out, that she’d broken up with me and now I would need to pack up my belongings and move back home to Oregon to start over again.
     “We have bedbugs,” I said. “We found them in our bedframe. A ton just living there, biting us while we slept.”
     “Oh, darn,” my mother said. “I’m so sorry.” I could hear the relief in her voice. I almost felt relief too. It was just bedbugs. My life was still intact, albeit a thousand fewer dollars in my bank account, the cost of heat treating the house. I was drying every item of clothing I owned on high; I was not driving two thousand lonely miles across the country to mope, heartbroken in the bedroom I grew up in. I think this is one of my mother’s biggest fears—that another serious relationship will erode and the chasm between her and any potential grandchildren will widen. It is among my biggest fears too, as unfounded as it remains.
     Bedbugs are not as bad as a bad break up. Bedbugs are, say, just a few ticks worse than the timing belt you’ve put off replacing, snapping on the highway, totaling your aging Accord.
     “Jason, do you need some money? I want to give you guys some money.”
     “No. Thank you, but no. I’m fine.” When I’m not adjuncting, I hustle thrift store clothes on eBay—the impetus for our infestation, a colony of bedbugs stowing away in the snap button breast pocket of a Sherpa-lined denim jacket I found at a mom and pop thrift store in Lancaster, Ohio.
     “It’s my money,” my mother continued, “and if I want to give it to you—”
     After my mother clocks out as an elementary school teacher’s assistant, she cleans other people’s million dollar houses, polishes the picture windows that look out at the violent surf crashing down on the rocky cove in Seaside, Oregon. There is something like a one in three chance that a tsunami will sweep Seaside and these expensive houses into the sea sometime in the next fifty years. A tsunami far worse than any bedbug infestation. A tsunami worse than any bad break up, worse than the timing belt snapping, worse than aortic surgery with its 95% survival rate.
     On the wheel of bad luck, the cataclysmic tsunami lurking in Seaside’s future will be more on par with the trauma of living in a war-torn region, or a country plagued by cartel carnage. It will maybe be equal to getting your child taken away from you at the border, a tidal wave of anxiety and fear swelling over the uncertainty. Or maybe not. Maybe these things are all worse than any hell that could be unleashed on the Pacific Northwest when the Cascadia subduction zone quakes.
      Every pain is measured privately, against a barometer buried inside the self, the wallop of every tragedy dictated by the degree at which it affects our lives immediately. I do not fret as much as I should about the menaces lurking beyond my own bedframe, the trauma that resides outside my own chest. This is a privilege my mother shares too. And so, I change the subject, away from hospital bills and impending procedures to talking about the news, filling her in on the gloom of the nation. Because this will upset her, but it will not shake her to the core like the words heart surgery. This discussion, even in its horror, will be something like relief.
Jason Thayer

Jason Thayer's essays and short stories have appeared recently in The Rumpus, Hobart, and decomP magazinE, the latter of which was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. He teaches at Ohio University, where he also serves as an Associate Editor for Brevity. He is currently working on a memoir about loss and adjustment called Every Last Bad Time. More at jasonthayer.com.





CECILIA PINTO

I hear the birds somewhere in the three o’clock hour but I make it to about six fifteen before I get up. I eat my yogurt. I page through an issue of Family Circle that I swiped from my eye doctor’s office. I am looking for a product name. I find it. It’s called ‘Voluminous Hair.’ This is something I think I might need. I also note that the same manufacture makes something called ‘Sleep Better.’ I may also need this.
     I review these on Amazon and determine that about half those who have tried ‘Voluminous Hair’ have felt it caused them to have better hair, and half did not find it to be a useful product. The same goes for ‘Sleep Better.’ I move on.
     I am trying to read an article on the New York Times website entitled, “Glamorous Grandmas” when a screen informs me that I need to have a subscription to continue. I have a subscription and this has happened before. I call the Times. A recorded voice takes some information and then informs me that it knows where I live and what time it is here by my phone number. Can it see my non-voluminous hair?
     Eventually I speak with someone who cannot resolve my problem.
     It begins to rain.
     I cannot continue reading “Glamorous Grandmas”. I am also irritated by the fact that the Times is only able to think of these women in terms of their relationship to their childbearing status. The woman in the photograph which accompanied the article had really great hair.
     I have lost the top to my pen and stand staring out the window thinking about what to do.
     For twenty five years, I have seen the same woman running through our neighborhood, for exercise.
     She always wears a baseball cap. There she goes.
     I take a bath. No, I don’t. I look out the window some more.
     My neighbors are sitting on their porch across the street. They have a porch swing and some nice French blue, wooden chairs with floral cushions. They usually have coffee on the porch on summer mornings; even today, even though it’s raining. They make each other laugh.
     I turn on the television. The news is all about the children at the southern border. It’s too much for me today. Among many other things about this situation that I find troubling, I am struck by how we now refer to our country in terms of its borders. I think this is a shift in how we think about ourselves, or how some people do. I watch an episode of Will and Grace. 
     My husband appears from his slumber and observes that I must be “in a desperate place” because I am watching this program. Sort of, although secretly I like Will and Grace a little bit, I like any sit-com for its comforting predictability.
     I see my pen cap on the floor and feel better.
     I take a bath. I have recently learned that I have ‘chronic dry eye’ and so cover my eyes with a warm washcloth.
     You may have heard of chronic dry eye. Products for the relief of symptoms are advertised on television and one features Dr. Tendler, a real eye doctor who also has chronic dry eye. Earlier, there were television ads that featured the actress, Jeanine Turner, who is also affected.
     Jeanine Turner starred on the television show, Northern Exposure. I liked Northern Exposure which aired in the early nineties, a lot. The show had a mystical element not usually found in television programming. Also, I cannot name another television show that featured native people as characters.
     Jeanine Turner is white, she played a bush pilot. She had a cute, short haircut. There was a kid on the show named Ed, who had long black hair. I think I remember hearing they dyed it and that he was really blond. But I look him up on IMBD and it’s hard to tell, he’s older and his hair is short but his father was Native American. The male lead, Dr. Joel Fleishman, was played by the actor Rob Morrow.
     Later, Rob Morrow would star in a program called Numbers. In the logo for the show the ‘e’ was replaced by the number 3. Rob Morrow played an F.B.I. agent, his brother was a genius and his father was Judd Hirsch. Rob Morrow’s hair was clipped short, the other two actors had wilder hair, denoting, I guess, their, unconventional- ness. I tried to watch it but it didn’t do much for me. This is kind of what I am thinking about during my bath.
     It is still raining. We take our dog to the vet which is the usual disaster when a hundred pounds of muscle, enthusiasm and anxiety meets a vaccine needle. At one point five people are involved in chasing the dog through the examining rooms and reception area.
     On the way home we listen to something on NPR about Vice President Mike Pence. He is deeply religious and has presidential aspirations.
     Back home we settle into routines. The dog sleeps. My husband goes out. I return to this project which I discover I have written more in my mind then on the page. Throughout my work on this piece of writing I am listening to Cat Stevens’ Tea for the Tillerman, over and over. It’s a lovely album.
     I walk to Subway and get a sandwich. No, I don’t, not yet, because I want to wait and eat while I watch General Hospital.
     And here we arrive at the crux of the day. I loved the soap, One Life to Live. I remain unreconciled to the idea that the program is no longer on the air. I especially loved Victoria Lord Buchannan, known as Viki and played by Erika Slezak, who, throughout ridiculous hardships, disasters and indignities and despite having a second personality named Niki, who did also sorts of outrageous things, (and looked like a lot of fun to play), maintained a dignity and moral compass. According to IMBD, Viki appeared in 2091 episodes. She was the heart of the show and while One Life to Live has not been on for three or four years, I still miss it and Viki.
     From Wikipedia: “American journalist and soap opera critic Connie Passalacqua Hayman (pen name "Marlena De Lacroix") briefly summed up the character role: "... Slezak's 'Viki' is the consummate soap opera heroine, because she has so harrowingly and humanistically triumphed over all her life's tragedies."
     I look up the word humanistically because I am suspicious of it, but it is a real word, defined as, from the point of view of classical studies, or from the humanist point of view. According to the online dictionary, it is a rarely used word, so bully to Ms. Marlena De Lacroix for using it.
     I consider briefly a soap-opera-ish pen name.
     I walk to Subway. I live in the city, but my neighborhood is full of bungalows and two flats. I pass a tall, pale man in a bright red jacket with the hood up because it’s still raining. He is smoking a cigarette and does not make eye contact. For a few steps, I am behind three women in black burkas, one carries a large, turquoise umbrella. I get my sandwich and on the way back I see the red-jacketed man on the other side of the street, smoking.
     I watch General Hospital. It is a pale comparison even though a few of the OLTL actors now appear here including the actor Michael Easton as a doctor although on OLTL he played Detective John McBain which is how I always think of him. He must be known for his flowing mane. I’ve never talked to anyone about this. I don’t know that I’ve ever really talked to anyone about OLTL; I mean anyone who liked the show, although I used to recap plotlines for my family.
     I doze a little. Then I start some laundry, send an ‘important’ email to students and clean the bathroom. Other things happen. My son comes home. We talk about confederate generals. We eat something.
     In the evening, my husband does a crossword puzzle and we watch a program on PBS about the evolution of man and how people travel deep, deep into caves to retrieve the bones of creatures and then reconstruct them to see what they looked like. The creatures look like us and they don’t. They are hairy but not glamorous.
     My eye has bugging me all day. I go to sleep. Everything emptying into white.

—Cecilia Pinto

Cecilia Pinto is a writer who lives in a big city and apparently watches a lot of television.





ELONA SHERWOOD

21st Century Solstice

We are picking cherries, Sophie and I. Rain is finally on the horizon and it is 20 degrees cooler than it's been in weeks. "You can eat 'em if you want. While you’re pickin’. So long as you don't mind a little dust," Mark, the proprietor of this Midwestern orchard smiles and tilts his head by way of apology. For the dust. "From the dirt road," he says.
     Sophie, at nearly ten years old is still thrilled by the idea of picking fruit. Even fruit that she won't eat. She notices the dust, but doesn't seem to mind. It makes it more real. She searches through the branches for low hidden fruits like it's a scavenger hunt. No, "Like Minecraft!" she says. "Except in Minecraft they're apples." She notices how the cherries glow when the light hits them just right, and her smile, too, is genuine – lit from the inside out. She pulls two cherries from the dark leaves, an iconic set of twins with stems still attached at the top. "Hey! It's like the emoji!” She holds them up for me to see. “It's just like the cherry emoji!" She seems shocked.
     How strange, I think, that she is finding life to imitate art. If you can call emojis art. Which I suppose they are, in an imitation-plastic, 21st century kind of way.
     In the car she pokes a hole in a cherry with her teeth and then holds it to her mouth. It's a Balaton cherry, which is neither purely sweet nor purely tart. She sucks the juice, tentatively, non-commitally. Sophie has been overexposed to the fake cherry flavors of Tootsie Pops and Icees; I know she won't like the tartness of the real thing. But I do. I have come to appreciate the quick flick of sweetness on my tongue followed by the lengthier suck of sour. One day she'll learn, I think. One day, when real life hits her with all of its poetic might, she'll suck on it for all it's worth. She’ll roll the pit around in her mouth and notice the way the lingering tartness breathes life into the sweet.

—Elona Sherwood

Elona Sherwood lives in Kansas City, MO with her husband and daughter. She is currently at work on a novel, the writing of which she fits into the nooks and crannies of domestic life. She was recently awarded a fellowship from the Martha's Vineyard Institute of Creative Writing, where she enjoyed wide swaths of uninterrupted writing time.





SIMON FLORY

In the morning, I’m upright on a couch, and my eyes won’t adjust. My contacts must still be in. Smell of goat and rat piss and weed and old beer. This is the last place I lived before moving into an updated home in a historic neighborhood with my partner. I got in about 1:30 a.m., let myself in with the spare key I’ve kept on the ring. My old roommate is still here. He still has my canoe, and I’ve come to collect it. He quit the post office and works for a cheese shop. Doesn’t get enough hours, but gives me sandwiches for the road. My best friend from childhood is with me, his 6’5” frame doesn’t fit on the air mattress, there is confusion about who everyone is this morning.
     After hasty introductions, we use the straps I bought at a garage sale with quarters from my girlfriend’s change jar to strap the canoe to the top of my new-to-me minivan.
     It’s 100 degrees at 11 a.m. Brown brown grass of home. Texas is a convection oven. We sweat through our shirts, then pants, then boots, as we fumble with the ratchets.
     “Old men know how to do this shit because they’re goddamn geniuses.” I say.
     “My old man is dumbass and he can do this,” says my friend.
     Suddenly I forget every street name in my old neighborhood. As we make left turns around the block, I see an old lady flamingoed on one leg, trying to move a garbage can. I put the van in park and get out to pull the can to the curb while she leans against the carport screaming, “God bring you to me, God bring you to me.”
     We stop for lunch at a diner that’s a long bar with booths on one side. It’s 1:52 p.m. and the smiling host wears a bowtie, homage to the past in a town that forces my tax bracket out. The waitress rocks back and forth in her slingback heels. Her apron, made of Milky Way galaxy fabric, features a yellow button with the smiley face shot in the head, blood trickling. We order bloody marys and a beer to split. “Hope you like ‘em strong.”
     I take a right out of town, then cross the river and realize I went the wrong way. So we take FM (Farm to Market) 973 north. At 3:30 p.m., we stop at a ghost town erected across some railroad tracks in the 80s to lure undead city dwellers to the small enclave outside of town. Recently, it was used as the set of the HBO show Westworld, which is about rich folks entering into an artificial consciousness of the Old West. I had just played a festival here and gotten too drunk after the show to get one of the $60 Texas themed tattoos in the sheriff’s jail cell. I couldn’t decide between being permanently branded with a cactus or a bluebonnet.
     “This would be a great place to have a party,” says my buddy. “Especially in high school so you could make out with girls in this general store.”
     We walk through the fake saloon, the fake restaurant, and the real bar that opens at 4. I need a beer, or I need to leave. I go back to the gravel parking lot and sit in the van while he takes short videos on his phone, keeping the horizon of new oil tanks and abandoned grain bins just out of frame. A real town in a ghost world.
     By 4:15, we’re driving through little towns where old timers watch the traffic in their overalls. Automobile Repair, Tomatoes For Sale, Guns at the Blinking Light. Just like our hometown. We’re drunk and hungover and drinking tea with CBD oil and talking. My lifelong friend confesses that he was physically abused as a kid. The word “abused” blows around in the air-conditioning. Our brothers and sisters were friends, I knew the context but not the details. He punched holes in the drywall when his Mom scratched his arms. His Dad back-handed him in the face at the dinner table and boxed his ears at Pizza Hut, but came to his aid after his brother beat him by breaking his brother’s ribs. All retribution and heartache. Just like our hometown.
     The canoe made it home. My girlfriend left a note on the table, “Can WE Partay now?!” We showered and left for a steakhouse at the behest of my friend who needed some local flavor. The old part of town where the cowboys used to drive cattle and party and bathe with women was still there and celebrated more than ever. Baby boomers were mobile. We walk the short blocks of brick streets past the western wear stores announcing new old styles, tattoo parlors, haute cuisine made fashionable by reality TV and historical signs protesting the future. The old bordello is a motel now, I had stayed there before I lived in this town, driving from another state for my first wedding anniversary. We never had a baby, she told me she was sleeping with someone and I gave her the house. Life was better now.
     I get the deep fried bull-calf testicles or “calf fries” and jalapeño spears and announce my love for wine cooked mushrooms. The waitress says she’ll bring me some for free for some reason. I don’t know why. Steaks and beers in a dark lit room. The chef lords over the grill with his name against the wall, a backdrop of proof. I wish aloud that I was that accomplished. Proud steers sold at the Stock Show in the 50s and 60s hang like giant monuments in black and white, a sense of pride wells in me. My family owned a small town feed store and fed cows like these. A table of French speaking people sit down and pull out their phones to use the bright flashlights on them breaking my prideful moment. I turn from them shielding the side of my face, rude as a Frenchman.
     There was a new saloon in an old space that had $5 French 75s and Old Fashions. The bartender was alone when we walked by on the way to the steakhouse, now he had 3 drinkers bellied up. We made it 6. We had two rounds and some pony beers and the bartender was very intense but we couldn’t tell what he was saying and Bob Wills and Willie Nelson and his mouth kept moving and George Strait and Hank Williams and the men on the walls rode bulls and horses and a Native American perched in frame against black velvet told us to go home. At our real home, safe in the booze and away from dad’s fists and in the arms of our stories, I slump on the couch and passed out.

—Simon Flory

Simon Flory resides in Fort Worth, TX where he splits time as a singer/songwriter, multi-instrumentalist for hire, teacher and most recently working on a film to accompany his upcoming recording project.  Also: gardening, trail running, Larry Brown, the Davis Mountains, the incomparable love and support of his partner Anita, family recipes, tackling the Ghazal, native plants of TX, Earl Hines, mules, a nice hat, a decent pair of boots and a ten year old shirt to name a few things.





LYNN K. KILPATRICK

8 a.m. : I’m awake! Later than I would like, later than usual, but in my defense yesterday was my 20th wedding anniversary. I went to dinner with my husband, had some wine, then a few drinks, then stopped at a neighbor’s house for a final whiskey. When we returned home, our 17 year old son was hungry, not having quite figured out how to cook, on his own, the myriad carbohydrate sources from the freezer. I heated up some fried rice for him, and myself, and got to bed around midnight.
     Before the drinking, I had agreed to run with my friend Jane. We are both training for different races, her for a couple of half-marathons, me for a trail 10K that will happen in three weeks. I spent the last two weeks in Hawaii (sea level) and did not only no running, but no exercise of any kind. It seems like a good idea, therefore, to do a trail run in one of the many canyons surrounding Salt Lake City. She originally said we should be at the trailhead at 8. I told her to pick me up at 8, then texted her, mid-drink, to say, let’s be realistic, 9.
     I slowly roll out of bed at 8, not quite hungover, but not not-hungover. I drink a large glass of water, then coffee, make some hard boiled eggs, eat two to stabilize my blood sugar, drink more water, sget dressed so slowly that when she arrives, I have yet to put on a shirt or to lace up my new-ish trail running shoes.
     9:45: We arrive at the trailhead. I try not to, but inevitably do, think of rattlesnakes. I had read an article in the Salt Lake Tribune reporting that food is scarce this year, so the snakes are coming down to lower elevations. Great. To avoid snakes, one should hit the trail early, say before 8 or 8:30. We are now in prime rattlesnake viewing time frame. I veer my thoughts elsewhere.
     Jane needs to run 3.1 or 5. I have on my schedule several 4 mile runs and a longer run of 5. Or 6. Though we have run this route many times, none recently, we can’t remember the distance. Her online mapping indicates that the route is 2.8 each way. That seems wrong to me. The sign, when we reach it, says 2 each way. Either way, I’m fine. I’ll run until we reach Elbow Fork, a bend in the road not unlike an elbow, where the trail we are running meets up with the road, still closed for the winter.
     We have already agreed to walk the steep beginning, which she thinks will be about 1.6 miles. My partly unreliable Fitbit reads .75 when we come to a patch of shade and, where, to my eye, the trail becomes not too steep. I decide to run. We agree to meet up later, possibly at the top of the last hill where the trail levels out.
     I run, and quickly the level spot becomes another hill which I run up (if you can call my slow pace “running”), and at the top I walk again, then run, until I come to a spot which I truly remember as the bottom of the last hill before it gets easier. I wait for Jane there. She is not far behind and we walk up the last hill together. At that point, we’re at 1.5 miles in and I decide to run, I hope, until I reach 2. Jane has a plan to run/walk some ratio, so I take off, not unmindful that, alone, if I scare out a rattlesnake, I’m on my own. I don’t even have a Sharpie! I read somewhere that rather than cut yourself and get your companion to suck the venom out (eww!) you should actually just draw a circle around the puncture wound and then try like hell to get to a hospital. They can discern something, apparently, from how much the wound has swollen. And besides, I tell myself, hardly anyone dies from rattlesnake bites, though I did hear of one man who lost all feeling in one of his legs. No running for him.
     Along the way, I pass a group of young women hiking with dogs, and several bicyclists pass me. I encounter a solo man running with a water vest and a dog. I ponder the relative merits of the water vest, with several pockets for water and gels, versus the backpack, versus the handheld water bottle I’m carrying in my right hand and which, to my dismay, is over half-empty.
     When I reach the turn around, after running, walking, jogging, more walking, my Fitbit reads nearly 3 miles. So this will be my long run, it turns out, after two weeks off and one short run on Tuesday. My legs already hurt, so I pause my watch and do my 25 air squats, which I swear by for warding off sore legs in the days after a run. I walk around, read a sign about the closed road which features the word “culvert,” a word that will bounce around in my head on the three miles back. Jane joins me soon after, we discuss the road and the trail. We don’t mention snakes.
     We head back, walking a bit, and I remind her to run in the sunny parts and walk in the shade. On the run down, every stick and rock seems to be a rattlesnake in disguise. I keep my eyes open, but try not to be paranoid. I save what little water I have for later. I practice surges, one minute intervals in which I run faster, followed by one minute slower. I do this by counting to 60 while I run fast. Then, inevitably, I have to walk. When I try to start running again, my legs feel like a pottery project from junior high: hard and misshapen. I fear I will not be able to walk tomorrow. I still have two miles of running left!
     I wait a minute for Jane in the shade at the bottom of a hill, but then decide to walk to the next bit of shade, jogging a bit in between. Eventually I do stop, and appears. We walk up a hill, which then begins, quickly, to lead us down.
     “I’m going to run,” Jane says, “for that bat out of hell feeling.” She begins to run, but, spying some big rocks on the trail, I precariously pick my way around them. I have run enough trails to have tripped epically, once, just a week before my wedding, resulting in a scar which looks like an equal sign on my left knee. Luckily my floor length dress hid it nicely. So I am rock shy on downhill trails. Jane runs away from me. Eventually I do begin running downhill, but with an upright stance that I’m sure is not good. I am slow and pick my way between rocks and sticks that might be snakes.
     Eventually we get back to the sign that informs us Elbow Fork is a mere two miles away. My unreliable Fitbit reads 5.9. We walk the path towards the car, me letting my Fitbit run until it reads 6 miles. I like even numbers.
     11:45: At the bottom, we see the lone runner with his cute dog. He informs us, is his expression abashed?, that he had seen a snake before he passed us, and that he was going to tell us, but it had been 20 minutes, and well…. I am actually grateful. I might have turned around had he told me about the snake, and we didn’t see any snakes anyway.
     We discuss all the places we have seen snakes in the past: Mt. Olympus, Neff’s Canyon, this trail. I tell him how my dog ran over a snake, twice, and now I don’t go to Neff’s in the summer. Ever. He stretches while we agree how stupid we are to run at this time of day.
     I do my 25 air squats while sipping the water I left in Jane’s car. I am grateful for water, and for my legs, though I fear I will not be able to walk tomorrow. I have already planned an epic swimming session for tomorrow, when the blessed 50 meter outdoor pool finally opens after months of anticipation and repairs. I tell myself the swimming will make my legs feel better.
     We pay the canyon fee with the one dollar bill I have and change from Jane’s car. It is after noon already, and I feel the day has gotten away from me. For the rest of the day, I will read something for a grant, maybe work on organizing the basement, maybe dump out a junk drawer in the kitchen.
     As it turns out, I will read only one academic article, a study of goal setting. Then I will spend hours taking online personality tests that are actually legit (part of the Happiness Study from University of Pennsylvania). My dominant personality trait, according to them, is Love of Learning. “You have always loved school,” it tells me. Surprise!
     I do, eventually, convince my son to go to the basement with me. “Half an hour,” I promise. He wants to keep everything, but I manage to throw away a puzzle that I had preserved with glue and was going to frame, I think, and hang in his room. It’s a puzzle of the periodic table. In any case, I throw it away, recycle the box and the cardboard. He’s in the basement organizing the paraphernalia of his tabletop gaming. He allows me to throw away some old paint. We push some books, all the Rick Riordan hardbacks, into a corner. “It’s mostly your stuff,” he says, which is a lie.
     I agreed, midday, to go to dinner with some colleagues and a visiting scholar at a restaurant I love. I still haven’t showered from my morning run, which left dirt on my legs. I clean the kitchen, doing dishes and wiping everything down so that my husband, who actually works in the summer, in an office, won’t have to do it.
     5:30: When my husband gets home, I read him my character strengths and tell him about the tests. I report, gleefully, that Son and I have managed to be home together all day without fighting. The summer is young, however. This is our first real, long day together. And he wasn’t on his computer at all, the usual source of our arguing.
     6:30: Eventually I do shower and get dressed, making it to the restaurant just five minutes early. Our group is seated in the back, where we have a view of their beautiful garden and, it turns out, their newly acquired bees. Many items on the menu will be from or supplemented by vegetables and herbs from the garden.
     My colleague Melissa and I renew our plan to project a summer movie onto her garage. We discuss movies. I vote for Jaws, perhaps the best summer movie ever, and she mentions an ant movie from the 70s, Empire of the Ants.
     We eat all of the delicious things, an appetizer of three different mushrooms served on homemade sourdough with broth, and something called a Dukkah. I have the duck, which is sublime and served with a coconut milk broth. Dessert is equally decadent, and my favorite is the goat’s milk pudding with mint and candied pine nuts. Ridiculous.
     I haven’t mentioned the poetic descriptions of each dish by our waitress, the most comical of which is the process by which Chef creates a beet steak (yes, beet not beef) through a process of dehydration and rehydration. No one orders the dehydrated beet. Each dish has a garnish from the garden; our favorite is “micro leeks.” The waitress describes the process by which the chefs create “citrus ash.” Imagine for yourself.
     10:30: Home. I describe the meal for my husband and tell him that I am taking him back to this restaurant for the tasting menu. Sometime. Soon.
     We go to bed, both of us reading the same book on our respective Kindles, Barbarian Days by William Finnegan. I began reading this book on our vacation in Hawaii, and beneath Finnegan’s description of tunnels and the perils of surfing, I can still hear the soothing crash of waves that accompanied my beach reading. I can’t keep my eyes open. I set aside my reading and go to sleep.

—Lynn K. Kilpatrick

Lynn Kilpatrick’s essays have appeared in Zone 3, Creative Nonfiction, Brevity, Ninth Letter, and Ocean State Review. A collaboration of prose sonnets with visual artist John Sproul was recently published in Western Humanities Review. Her poems have appeared in Tin House and Denver Quarterly. Her collection of short stories, In the House, was published by FC2. She earned her PhD in Creative Writing from the University of Utah, and she teaches at Salt Lake Community College. 





MICHELLE MIDORI REPKE

When I walked into my older sister’s apartment around 12:38 a.m., my sister’s dog, an elkhound/coonhound mix, did not wake or greet me. Normally when he does, it’s because he wants me to take him on a walk so he can chase cats around the parking lot, so I didn’t mind him ignoring me. He is impossible to walk when he is constantly looking under each of the cars, is circling back because he smells what might be a cat, is not interested in actually going anywhere. Okay, so sometimes he just greets me and goes back to sleep, and maybe I was a little sad he didn’t even show his face. But it could also have been that he was so deeply asleep he didn’t hear me walk through the door. Right?
     I get back late because I work in a call center for insurance claims and adjusters—it’s not related to anything I’ve studied or want to do, but it’s not bad. It’s better than breaking my body working in a Michigan warehouse, better than living off of 8 hours of pay each week, the stress of wondering when I’ll be kicked out of my friend’s Philadelphia apartment because I can’t pay her for rent, if it’ll be warm enough at night to sleep in my car. I find I am good at calming angry people and apologizing for all inconveniences.
     This time of night is when I make and eat my biggest meal, though I know I shouldn’t. A few days ago I had made a large amount of stir-fry and I was looking forward to eating the last of it, but in the kitchen I noticed the pan was out of the refrigerator and empty. My sister had left a small portion of rice so I scooped that into a bowl, added a bit of water, warmed it in the microwave. Then I seasoned it with the furikake my siblings, or maybe just my older brother and I, used to call “the purple stuff”—dried bits of beefsteak plant mixed with salt and sugar—and sriracha, and ate that for dinner.
     As I ate I watched a YouTube video from the Philip DeFranco Show which discussed news the internet was interested in for the day. He talked about the situation at the border, how children were being separated from their parents, how some parents have already been deported and so what if they’re ending family separation now? Irreversible damage has already been done to so many. Then, upset and feeling a little useless, as I tend to do after watching or reading about the way narrow-minded and unconcerned people can treat (see: devalue) others, I left my dishes on the table and went to the couch—my bed—and continued watching videos. One was a documentary about “Pure O,” a type of OCD where symptoms often manifest in the form of violent intrusive thoughts. Another was an hour-long game playthrough video: “Cry Plays: Vampyr [P1].” I didn’t finish that video, as Cry’s voice helped lull me to sleep, and, well, it was already after 3 a.m. anyway.

My older sister took her dog for a walk around 8 a.m. and I woke up but did not want to wake up. So I went back to sleep and dreamed:
I was in my childhood home’s basement though it was not my childhood home’s basement. (The only thing that was the same was the green-blue carpet, the bare white walls.) I was myself and my younger brother was there, we were going to crawl through the door beneath the basement stairs which led to a large, low-ceilinged room, a Michigan basement, empty except for the murky grayness. Hidden behind a slab in one of the walls was a sort of rock, a crystal or something, which I had remembered putting there when I was much younger. 
     My sister and her dog came back from their walk and I thought, I must’ve dreamed about hiding something in that basement space before, it’s so familiar. I went back to sleep:
For some reason I must extract this rock from its hiding place in the wall and get it tested. What is it made of? When you hold it tightly with sweaty hands you teleport into your favorite story-world. I take it to a lab but am held up by the receptionist. She tells me they can test the crystal but they’re not sure how long it’ll take before I get my results. Due to this, I ask if it’s okay if I only give them half. The crystal shrinks to a pebble, a tiny, glassy bead, and she says, I think we’re going to need the whole thing. 
     Again I woke but this time I opened my eyes. The familiarity of that room, of that hiding spot, was strange but not unnerving. Just interesting enough for me to commit the dream to memory by forcibly recalling what had happened. How interesting that I may be able to revisit a dream place for no particular reason. I checked the time and was shocked: 1:20 p.m.
     I washed my hair, kneeling over the side of the bathtub, and parted it to hide the newly shaved sides of my head, for work. Then I went out on the balcony, smoked half a cigarette. It began raining and then stopped. My sister’s dog needed to go for his afternoon walk and since I couldn’t find my small, flimsy but manageable umbrella, I grabbed my sister’s very large umbrella—it is more than half my height—put my sister’s dog on the leash, and while eating the last half of a mint chocolate chip cookie my sister had left in the box (I assumed for me) we headed out. The rain came again in large drops but in a restrained way, for Georgia, whose rains up until then seemed to come mostly in deluges. My sister’s dog stood underneath the very large umbrella with me every now and again, content to either walk slowly or stand still just sniffing dirt, so needless to say we didn’t get too far. Walking back, I realized I must’ve looked ridiculous—I was not sure if I should rest the umbrella on my shoulder, head close to fabric, handle knocking against my knees, or if I should grip the umbrella by said handle, the canopy hovering three feet above my head, as if I were also sheltering a tall ghost from the rain—as I made eye-contact with the people staring at me.
     At 3:10 p.m. I drove to work, eating two fruit strips and smoking the other half of my cigarette. My car has been running stiffer lately, and I wondered when I would take it in for an oil change, if I would ever get the dashboard fixed: it doesn’t turn on and I can’t see how fast I’m going, how much gas I have in my tank, my odometer. (I have an app on my phone I use for these things, so it might not be for a while, the dashboard.)
     At work, only 6 of the 18 phone calls I took needed more than a quick transfer or search for basic information. Mostly, I re-read and revised a story that probably doesn’t need any more revisions and scrolled through social media. I sent a coworker another one of my stories for her to read during her shift. On Facebook I read Will’s post about Essay Daily’s project, read Dorian’s essay and both of Ander’s posts about it, thought of people who might not have seen Will’s post but might want to contribute, texted or tagged them. When I took my lunch break, I went outside, smoked half a cigarette, thought about quitting.
     The people I used to smoke with when I was in Tucson have quit, and what started as a social habit has turned solitary, secret. These days the people around me think it’s disgusting, that I am disgusting, and would walk twenty feet away if I happened to be smoking in their presence, if they couldn’t just leave. I know better than to do that now. It’s fine, of course, I am used to keeping secrets, keeping things hidden (though I think about the implications of including everything in this piece, and hope the people I do not want to know about this never read these words). Perhaps the reason I keep smoking is equal parts addiction and spite.
     I wrote most of this at work but could not write the rest of the day before it happened. I stopped writing. What I remember is that my shift passed slowly, sometimes quickly, as I phased in and out of focus. A coworker asked me what I had been working on and I told him about the project. He looked at me skeptically, in a why-would-people-read-about-other-people’s-ordinary-day kind of way, and I smiled at him. It’s nice to have a few coworkers interested in hearing me talk about stories, essays, art. Conversation is always interrupted by a phone call, though; I mean, we are technically still at work. One by one, people left. Just before midnight, as I readied to leave, I noticed how quiet it was in the office, how loud that silence was.

—Michelle Midori Repke





CALEB KLITZKE

My morning began in the woods. I woke on a twin mattress beneath buttressed triangles of square wooden beams in the loft of a timber frame cabin. At 7:30, noisy birds in the maples and poplars outside my screened window helped me out of sleep as I wiped my eyes and put in my contacts. I filled my backpack with notebook, water bottle, sunglasses, toothbrush and paste, and I slipped on a red shirt, shorts, socks and shoes. Far off, the morning bell rang, signaling all in camp to congregate at The Point in fifteen minutes.
     At 30, I feel like an elder statesman at this not-for-profit camp in Northern Minnesota, and though I am a good five or ten years older than most of my coworkers, I am also a beginner compared with them. Many were campers here or have guided dozens of wilderness trips. This is really my first summer camp experience--other than a week at Bible camp when I was in elementary school. I choose not to tell my wilderness-loving coworkers about Bible camp, where instead of learning how to portage a canoe or tie knots or carve a paddle the way the campers here do, I spent time singing at worship services or buying M&M-minis and filling the empty bottles with ants or attempting to lie to a capture-the-flag opponent about which team I was on, to which he said, “Someone is not wearing their belt of truth.”
     I found my way to this camp because I have always loved the deep woods of Northern Minnesota, taking trips with my dad to the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness at least once a year from ages 8-25. When I felt the need to hit refresh this spring, I looked online for a way to live in proximity to this my most romanticized place, and I found this camp offering a summer job as canoe master.
     I scooted to the creaky ladder and climbed down from my loft and left the single-room cabin I share with one other fellow. It’s like an enlarged bunkbed made into a full domicile, and I’m top bunk. On the boardwalk toward the point, bullfrogs belched from the swamp. At the point, I took a seat on the bleachers facing the water of Bearskin Lake as Olivia began First Word. She shared a quote by Rene Daumal from “The Art of Climbing Mountains,” setting up for us that Daumal is describing what mountaineering provides:
So what’s the point? Only this: what is above knows what is below, what is below does not know what is above. While climbing, take note of all the difficulties along your path. During the descent, you will no longer see them, but you will know that they are there if you have observed carefully. There is an art to finding your way in the lower regions by the memory of what you have seen when you were higher up. When you can no longer see, you can at least still know…”
We chewed on that and quietly walked across camp to breakfast in the dining hall.
     We ate sausages, warm blueberry coffee cake, apple slices, and yogurt. My cabin-mate, Matt, asked Johan about the Spanish morning greeting, “¿Como amasitise?” Johan helped me spell it in my notebook. Matt told me about the new video for Beyonce and Jay-Z’s song “Apeshit,” knowing I’m a fan. Apparently they filmed in The Louvre, and we talked about how awesome that is because of the people and the place, but also because people like the Carters were not the intended attendees of an institution like the Louvre. I’ve since watched the video, and they do a better job making that point, I’d say.
     Others at the table chimed in about music video stories. A different Matt (I know I’m giving you a lot of names. I want the folks who contributed to feel like they were recognized if they read this. Readers unaffiliated with the camp need not feel obligated to track all the names.) talked about Young Thug’s video for “Wyclef Jean,” the title of which confused me repeatedly since the Fugees member seems to be uninvolved. Matt said Young Thug missed nearly all the filming for his video because someone hacked his Instagram and he had to tend to that. Though there is no cell phone service and wi-fi in only two buildings (unavailable to campers), no roads so that everyone who arrives has to paddle to camp, technology and the art of the times stows away.
     After cleaning up, we passed out song books from the center of each table and sang “Puff the Magic Dragon,” pausing after for announcements from the staff. A few people mentioned goings-on, and I stood up to tell everyone about this project and to ask folks who wanted to contribute to come tell me stories about their day. We ended by singing “I’ve Got Peace Like a River.” With those modern flares of hip-hop and social media, there are still some hippie and old spiritual remnants that live at the camp too.
     We had a short staff meeting, divvying up duties for the day and ending with a joke as is the norm. Ryan volunteered one about a kid jumping up and down on a box repeating “62, 62, 62!” Ryan strung out the telling, and since I can’t see a way to do the punchline justice here, I’ll skip it and let you find it on your own.
     As canoe master--a title I love and feel underqualified for--I work in a shop called York Factory, and after breakfast, I headed there. York is built of timber beams much like the cabin where I stay, and three sides of the shop are open to the woods and wind and water. I don’t think I’ve ever worked somewhere so aesthetically pleasing. It’s all sawdust, tool boxes, bins of scrap wood, heavy duty power tools like a miter saw, a band saw, a table saw, a drill press, sandpaper, varnish, epoxy, stain, glue, paint splattered floorboards, knives for carving, ropes for tying, canvas for stretching. Out back there is a shed with some of the more severe power tools and arguably the best writing desk I’ll ever use tucked into a corner under wire shelves with instructional binders and mechanical manuals. I sit there now, writing this from my notes. There are canoes hanging in the rafters beneath the aluminum roof. There are canoes on racks in the yard between the shop and the water. There are canoes next to the shed out back that are out of commission. And on the floor of the shop, there’s one cedar strip canoe on saw-horses.
     I started my work day sanding down hardened epoxy I had previously coated on fiberglass patches inside the cedar strip. A small job to get started since I knew there would be a group of campers coming through with their guides in what the camp calls The Shuffle--stopping at stations: food prep, swim test, swamp a canoe and recover, learn to group lift canoes and heavy packs, pick out boats for trip, etc. It was our first full day of campers. They had arrived the evening before, and I had performed my spiel to inform the folks about the shop and the fleet a handful of times so far.
     Sanding the patches on the boat, I hoped for one of those Bob Vila or This Old House moments I remembered from childhood PBS shows. The audience appears in the work space while the host is in the middle of a task, and he looks up pleasantly surprised to say, “Oh, hello. I was just doing a little such-and-such,” and he welcomes them to join as he instructs.
     It didn’t quite happen that way. Instead, I went looking for my first group of campers who were running behind schedule. Anxiety preventing the PBS moment.
     I talked with trail guides, Sarah and Cody, as campers practiced setting up a tent and looked for flaws. Cody gave me my first story to add to the pile: he had played a game of bocce ball--later I found out he played with Walter, another guide, and his campers.
     The group I was expecting, led by James and Ryan, came to my shop and I gave them the spiel: York Factory was named after a fur trading post on Hudson Bay, a historical site in Manitoba. The shop is where we house, maintain, and repair our fleet of canoes. It’s a cool, open place but the tools, chemicals, and situations can be dangerous, require care and respect, so do the canoes, etc. We walked through the yard and I showed them the canoes. The aluminum Grummans: affectionately called “lumis” here, developed in 1944 near the end of WWII as Grumman Aircraft Engineering shifted some of their production from F-14 fighter planes to durable, lightweight canoes with an appealing keel down the bottom that makes steering easier. Then we talked Kevlars: fiberglass, the lightest canoes in our fleet, half the weight of the lumis, easier to portage, harder to steer, the fiberglass breaks down from UV rays, peels, and gives some people a rash. The plastics: canoes made of Royalex or ABS molded plastic, tough as the lumis but will bounce back after catching a rock to the hull rather than taking a dent. I told them about a video of a plastic Nova Craft fresh off the production line taken to the roof of the factory and dropped six stories with barely a scratch. The droppers take the boat straight to a lake and paddle with no trouble at all.
     Finally, we reached the pride and joy of the camp, the wood canvas canoes. These puppies were developed in the late 1800s near Bangor and Old Town, Maine. The design reversed the construction operation of Penobscot Native Americans in the area, who started with naturally waterproof birch bark, bent upward into the shape of a canoe with stakes holding the walls in place. They then filled the shell with outer planking, inner ribs, and fastened it all together with gunwales around the lip. The wood canvas, instead, starts with the gunwales. Then the curved ribs attach to the gunwale and the outer planking covers the ribs. Finally canvas is tightly stretched and coated in waterproof sealants and paint.
     I told the campers that the wood canvas canoes we have are some of the oldest boats in the fleet, with some built around 1940. They are all donated and some could sell for something like ten thousand dollars. But they are still boats and are meant to be used. They simply require a heightened level of respect and care on the trail. This is one of the coolest things about the camp, I think, treating the boats as boats rather than relics. The same goes for the wilderness--a place to be revered and treasured but not feared or avoided.
     I finished my spiel and the guides suggested their group of mostly beginners take a kevlar, a lumi, and a plastic, skipping the wood canvas options for this trip. They tried on yokes to test the feel and hung nametags on the boats they hoped to take.
     After they left the shop, I mixed epoxy in a red Solo cup and painted layers over the patches on the cedar strip canoe and over a crack in the bottom of a plastic canoe. The epoxy heats as it starts to harden, and the excess melted the plastic cup into a hockey puck. Fumes steamed from the countertop as the paintbrush became excalibured in the plastic. I let it cool before tossing it in the trash.
     Walter and his campers came to the shop to check on their Nova Crafts. This summer they will spend around 45 straight days on rivers in the Northern Canada, cutting through rapids, portaging or line dragging impassable sections. Their boats have been a priority. As an added wrinkle, they are being flown into their starting point, and in order to get the boats on the floatplane, they have to turtleshell one inside the other. This means they will drive to the airport with the boats on a trailer, then they will remove all the hardware (seats, yoke, thwarts, handles, all held to the gunwales with nuts and bolts) from one canoe, and slide the still intact boat inside the empty one before tucking the two between the pontoons of the plane.
     In the shop, they practiced removing and replacing the hardware, applying spray skirts that tightly snap into place over the bow and skirt the front paddler to keep some of the spray of rapids from flooding the canoes. Between Walter and the three paddlers, they share a common pseudo-British/posh-New Englander accent that I gather came about during previous trips together and lots of nights spent playing Settlers of Catan. In that voice, they joked about trying to reassemble their canoe before a charging bear reached them. I enjoyed watching the spectacle of young men bonding over shared silliness in the face of real danger that they choose to encounter.
     After they left, I checked my stock of repair kits that go with the guides taking trips over 30 days, four of which I have been outfitting over the last couple weeks. I saw I had given out the only complete kit to Heather, a guide on one of the Nor’wester trips of 30 days, who had left that morning for whitewater training with the other guides for those long trips. I couldn’t find instructions for what belonged in the kits and decided I would try to snag the one back from Heather when she returned to put together more.
     A currently unassigned guide, Carson, came to York to offer to help sometime after lunch. At breakfast, the Program Director, Claire, told me I should take a half-day since I had worked on an off day to prep the canoes for whitewater training and should try not to accrue overtime when possible. I told Carson I would probably not be in the shop in the afternoon but gave him instructions for replacing a broken thwart and a yoke pad for later as the lunch bell rang.
     For lunch we ate some sort of Italian soup (Italian wedding? Is that a kind of soup? It’s hard to know without internet to verify these things), bread, and peaches in sauce. One of the cooks, Tori, told me she baked a bunch of bread today: pumpkin, Italian herb, honey whole wheat, coffee cake--later she told me she made a second round of many of these loaves.
     We cleaned up and sang “Free Fallin” and “Ghost Riders in the Sky,” the latter being one of my favorite songs in the book. Everyone winds up an air bullwhip and screams “Yah!” at the end of the chorus.
     I gathered a few more stories from guides as the dining hall cleared out. Walter told me about his involvement in Cody’s bocce ball game. Sarah and Olivia told me about the tent they set up, which I passed by earlier. They added that they played the card game Egyptian Rat Slap with their campers and wrote trail notes for other guides to read on their trips. And they had plans for a hike to Daniels Bluff and a swim in the lake that afternoon.
     Another guide, Lily, and her group told me they had swamped their boat for the swim and swamp test, and they had had a lot of fun doing it. They wanted to do it again but had to keep moving through their schedule. While looking over maps, they learned they were going near a stretch of path called the Bottle Cap Hike on the Canadian border, where people walking side by side could be in different countries. They also said they were heading to Daniels Bluff later on.
     With my half-day, I had thought to visit Daniels Bluff but decided it would be good to stagger my hike so I wouldn’t intrude on the group outings.
     There was another short staff meeting on the deck of the dining hall. Workers finished installing solar panels on the roof that would provide all the hot water used by the dining hall from now on.
     I stopped back at York Factory to see if Carson had gotten to the thwart and yoke pad. He was otherwise occupied, so I set up Matt with the job. I learned later that a hole was being dug behind an outhouse near York by Carson, Ryan, Liam, Jake, and probably some others who I apologize for not mentioning. They snapped the handle of a pickaxe trying to break a rock. They were sweaty, tired, and sore by the end.
     Feeling flush with time, I swung back to my cabin to read some Shunryu Suzuki and meditate for a few minutes before prepping for my hike to Daniels Bluff. Just to be safe, I stopped back at York to see how Matt was doing before hitting the trail. He pointed out that the yoke pad I asked him to replace had a bolt which had slipped its threads and wasn’t coming out, just spinning. At the moment, he was trying to pry the wood to see if he could just snap the pad off. I remembered a giant pair of bolt cutters I had stashed while straightening up the shop. Pulling them out, I handed them over. Matt made short work of the problem bolt and no wood was snapped. I picked up the bottom half of the bolt from the floor and felt heat at the pinch point.
     Passing along the boardwalk through camp, I said hello to Sarah and Olivia’s group returning from their hike. Behind the dining hall, I spotted Stella and Kiera wearing safety glasses and headphones, cutting scrap wood with the miter saw. Stella gave a big smile and nod with her hand on the running saw. Kiera gathered the cut pieces and handed fresh chunks to be sawn.
     The path behind the dining hall that leads to Daniels Bluff starts wide with ruts where tires and tracks from winter dog sleds have cut into the earth. I felt the wild grass pull against the top of my shoes as I trudged through. In a swampy clearing to my right, I saw the empty dog kennels stacked, waiting for the winter activities to resume in the fall.
     There’s a turn I missed my first time trying to hike to the bluff where you need to hook north away from the wide path and sled tracks. Helpfully, someone tied an orange bandana to a tree branch at the turn, and I swung around it, moving uphill on the narrower path.
     I paused at my favorite giant white pine to press my palms against the bark and look straight up. The top swayed lightly in the wind. I tried to taste the sun the way the needles did, as warmth and sustenance. Behind me, a ruffed grouse began its accelerating drumroll of wing beats, slow thumps speeding and building, fading.
     At the end of the path, I found Lily’s group lounging at the bluff, writing trail notes and taking in the view. They presented me with a joke/riddle: “Two penguins are paddling through the desert. One turns to the other and says, ‘Where’s your paddle?’ The other says, ‘Sure does.’” It works better as a verbal exchange, I realize.
     I told Lily’s group I had heard the penguin bit on a trip I took with some guides the week prior. It took me a good 24 hours to get the joke. But I wouldn’t spoil it for them. They asked me to use their cameras to take photos of them on the bluff. I obliged before continuing down the trail to another overlook where I sat cross legged on a rock in the sun. I rubbed in sunscreen and started reading Steven Church’s “The King’s Last Game” as ant legs poked my ankles.
     The voices of Lily’s group faded, and I decided to switch to their spot with the best view of the neighboring lake. There, I sat on a log and looked over Daniels Lake. Three canoes fished the western corner, stalling near the shallows to cast. The surface of the lake was a crosshatch of waves. Light wind moving ripples that bounced off shore and rode back toward the middle in expanding and collapsing diamonds of troughs and peaks.
     I finished the Church essay and got my things together to head back to camp. On my way back down I passed Max and his campers on the way to the bluff. I moved slow and waited at a downed log for them to hop over before continuing on.
     Like curled shavings piling at my feet, I had been gathering the many grainy, fragrant verbs for cutting and working wood: carve, widdle, shave, tear, rip, split, slice, divide, rend, saw, blade, plane, lathe. I began the list in Grand Marais, looking out on Lake Superior. With my fingers I dipped water to bless my lips and forehead, like Isaiah and the Seraphim’s burning ember, in a moment of grateful awe facing the expanse and the prospect of spending time near such wealth of water and wood.
Walking back from Daniels Bluff, I worried that I had read someone do this gathering of woodcutting words already, specifically Lia Purpura in Rough Likeness, and I made a note to check when I returned to camp. I was right, in a way, the essay “On Tools” focuses on woodcutting and gathers the words and phrases of Purpura’s friend and expert.
     Passing the dining hall and through camp, I ran into Matt, who had been working in York for me, and he filled me in on all the tasks he finished. I stopped by my cabin and read more Church before the dinner bell clanged.
     At dinnertime, I started gathering more stories from others, which I was grateful to receive since most of my notes up to that point were about my largely leisurely day. Jonah told me that he jumped off the sauna dock and swam to Mouse Island in the middle of the lake. He described the oddity of swimming with goggles in a lake instead of a pool. The lack of flipturns disoriented trajectory and distance, and there was the eerie moment when the rocks at the bottom of the lake descended beyond view and all he could see was the deep.
     For dinner, we ate enchiladas, salad, and milk. I sat next to the Camp Director, Meghan. It’s her first summer at this camp too, with plenty of experience running camps like this one and time spent on the fundraising side for organizations that support wilderness camps. We talked York Factory and canoes and previous jobs and a boat expert who had come to look over all the wood canvas canoes and left notes for me to work from. I’m quietly a big fan of hers, and her little golden-doodle, Woody. She’s the kind of boss I always want to impress, I think because she’s reserved enough to only offer praise when it’s genuine--probably some parental issues on my part.
     We had another short staff meeting after dinner, a “deck sesh” as I learned they are called. My cabin-mate, Matt, saw he got a cryptic “Ugh” text from a friend back home in Memphis and figured the Grizzlies had made a troubling pick in the NBA Draft. We sidled up to sneakily check results on our phones in the island of wi-fi around the dining hall. Deandre Ayton, from my recent school, the University of Arizona, was picked number one overall by the Phoenix Suns and the Grizzlies had just taken Jaren Jackson Jr from Michigan State. Didn’t seem like a bad pick to me. There were still a bunch of picks before the Timberwolves would take Josh Okogie. I sat on the fireplace of the dining hall deck with another Matt (Young Thug fan and bolt cutting phenom) and talked about his team, the Denver Nuggets.
     Folks started prepping for a Leave No Trace activity, teaching campers about the seven principles of LNT. I made a joke about the Eightfold Path that didn’t land.
     Leaving the dining hall, I walked to the boathouse, a central point of camp and sat on benches while Max’s campers played a game of Ninja. Each person stood frozen, taking turns making one fluid motion to try to slap the hand of another player, who had the opportunity to evade in one movement. After the attempt, they had to freeze again in the new position and hope no one would slap their hand. It looked pretty fun.
     Guides without campers to tend to started coming to me with stories a little more rapid fire, and I tried to record the gist. The biggest events seemed to be a lot of wood hauled and split, the depths of composting outhouse shoveled out, and the holes dug for new outhouses, previously mentioned. My notes are bullet points that look like this:

  • Willa and Anna shoveled poop (with others I’m sure) and were surprised that it wasn’t awful and didn’t smell as bad as expected. 
  • Kiera and others carried four loads of wood in the trash cans they previously used to transport the poop and stacked the wood on the sauna dock. 
  • Powdered lime was carried, and spilled. 
  • People went swimming.
  • Stella went for a jog across the lake and pulled off nine ticks after.
  • Kiera and Stella moved more wood and cut it by the dining hall, which I passed on my way to Daniels Bluff. In three hours they made it through about a quarter of the pile.
  • Willa helped organize the walk-in freezer (with a poster of Christopher Walken next to its handle that makes me chuckle) and found banana chips that didn’t need to be frozen.
  • In the septic field where the shoveled poop was dumped, rhubarb and wild strawberries grew.
  • Anna said someone picked up a chunk of dried poop and thought it was mulch and pleasantly fragrant. I thought of the scene in Shawshank Redemption when Heywood picks up a rock for Andy Dufresne’s collection only to be told it’s a horse apple, a turd.
  • Emmet made “a ton” of pemmican for trail food, spending three hours mixing the stuff. I asked him how to spell “pemmican.”
  • Ford went to a clinic in Grand Marais and found out he does not have tuberculosis.
  • Laura mixed powdered Bisquick in a giant garbage can for trail food.
  • Charles was on Duncan Lake with his campers who tried to enter their wood canvas canoe at waist deep and, too short to reach across to handle both gunwales, swamped the purple canoe named Manomin--the only named boat I always remember because it’s the name of the lake at the center of Menomonie, WI, where my parents grew up.
  • Emery went to the clinic with Ford to get his sprained ankle looked at. With a smile, he told me there was another story of the day he wanted to tell me off the record later. I’ve since heard it and will keep it between us.
  • Jake said digging the hole was tough but gratifying. It was a tangible task that let him change the earth over the course of hours as he dazed out and just kept moving. He, Ryan, Liam, and Carson talked about their relative soreness from digging.
  • Ryan called his girlfriend, whose birthday it was, and she was glad to hear from him.
  • Liam saw a frog and a snake.
  • Carson made his first solo paddle across the lake to get gear from his car.

     While I tried to scribble down these stories, campers lay on their bellies looking over the edge of the dock and netted sunnies from the shallows, watching them flop for a bit on the planks before Sam, their guide, told them to put them back in the water.
     As folks either started moving to The Point for the Leave No Trace activity or clearing out from the boathouse, I decided to do the latter and skip the campfire activity. Jokes were made that to skip the activity was to truly leave no trace. From my cabin, I heard yells of applause and encouragement as people acted out the principles in skit form. I found and read “On Tools” by Purpura and “String” by Nicholson Baker.
     The sounds of campers faded around 9:30, and I decided to take a solo evening dip off the sauna dock. The moon was two-thirds full and reflecting off gentle chops in the water. I breathed in the woods, the moon, the buzz of mosquitoes, and jumped off the dock. The water wasn’t as cold as expected, didn’t make my breath short the way it sometimes does. I felt a nibble on my leg from the fish dubbed Attack Bass and scooted away from its territory. Loons began their evening call and response, howling and laughing.
     I side-stroked away from the dock, facing the orange western horizon, spotting two bright spots out before the other stars. Jupiter and Venus most likely. Floating on my back, I filled my ears with the silent slosh of lake water and waited as the bright spots turned from two to three to more. I rubbed down and rinsed my hair before climbing out. On the dock I met a frog.
     Back at the cabin, I asked Matt if he had anything to add to my notes and he said he had called his grandpa who was in the hospital with a staph infection but would be getting out soon. They talked basketball, and Matt was moved that this man from another generation agreed that Steph Curry is the best shooter ever.
     A couple days later, I asked the folks who were gone from camp on the 21st for whitewater training on the St. Louis River near Duluth what happened on their day. Joe and David said they swamped in rapids with their campers, on purpose, and recovered well. After one portage through tall grass, David removed 19 ticks, a camper from the group removed 13, and another removed six.

—Caleb Klitzke

Caleb Klitzke is a recent MFA grad from the University of Arizona. Feeling trees on his shoulders makes him happy.





CYNTHIA BRANDON-SLOCUM

After squinting around the house looking for my glasses, I sat on the front porch for a minute trying to decide how to spend the day. Run? Finish the sloppy collage that will probably end up in the trash? Write at the coffee shop? Plant the rest of my pea starters before they fuse their threadlike fingers to one another?
     The neighbors had their orange garbage bags on the street—must have missed the email from the city announcing all garbage pickup was cancelled until a new route was made.
     I weighed myself: 162 pounds. I took off my shorts and T-shirt: 159 pounds.
     I checked the Facebook page for the Houghton County Flood Volunteer center to find they needed help with data entry. I made a smoothie with blueberries, banana, lime, almond milk, and pea protein and, for later, packed a peanut butter and banana sandwich, water, a Clif bar, and my computer. I dug my bike out of the garage.
     At first it seemed like they didn’t need me, like they had plenty of volunteers at the Evangel Church, but within an hour, I was scrolling through a spreadsheet of addresses, work requests, and columns that said how many volunteers had been deployed.
     Every fifteen minutes for eight hours, I heard a safety briefing for each new group of volunteers—how to know if your mask is properly applied, why to never take it off in unventilated areas, why you should listen to the victim if they want to tell you their story, why you should never do work you aren’t sure is safe, why you should take breaks, why you shouldn’t take photos of the homeowners or their homes (if you want a good photo, this is all you need: muck boots and a shovel in your hand—you’ll get hundreds of likes), why you should hydrate.
     The eight hours at the volunteer center were a stream of questions. Where are we sending perishable food donations? Which towns in the county have free dumpsters for debris? Who is bringing lunch to the workers on Canal Road? Are they willing to hike a bit? What is a backhoe, a skid-steer, a front-end loader, a bobcat, a telehandler, and can we get one to Rocky Shores Drive, to Royce Road, to the house on the other side of the sink hole? Does he need sand and a skid-steer at the same time, or are they unrelated? Is someone pumping out houses yet? What can a previous resident do to help all the way from California? Is Michigan Tech still offering rooms and showers to the volunteers?
     How long have those donated sandwiches from Subway been sitting there? How long have those donated pasties from Amy J’s been sitting there? How long have those donated brats from Vollwerth’s been sitting there? What assignment can we give to the group of 35 volunteers coming tomorrow? Is St. Ignatius taking any more people for food prep, and if not, what task can we give this 70-year-old woman? Do we have any more wheel-barrows, more spray kits, more bleach, more dehumidifiers, more Oreos, more squeegees—how do you spell squeegees? There’s a street named Amygdaloid? Has the boil water alert been lifted? How much water is too much for a shop-vac? Does anyone need a volunteer who has OSHA pipeline safety training? Do we need a mobile response van from Habitat for Humanity? What is a mobile response van from Habitat for Humanity? Who can look at a gas leak, a toppled furnace, a washed-out culvert, a destroyed septic system, a leaking roof?
     I biked home around 6:30, careful to avoid any sinkholes, and when I got to our street, I walked my bike up the steep three blocks to our house. I watered my sweet potato vine, my salvia, my coleus. I helped the peas and bean plants to climb and wrap around their poles. Too tired to run, I showered and ate elk burgers and tater tots with Joe on the couch. At 9:34 the sun stamped a burning orange rectangle on the wall next to the TV. The neighbor’s cherry tree, backlit and glowing from the sun, waved its leaves from outside our porch window. The cilantro bobbed from its planter on the wall. The washing machine gurgled and drained from the laundry room. Aaron Sanchez on Master Chef couldn’t distinguish between one contestant’s pastry cream and whipped cream, therefore declaring their pie a failure. Pie after pie was tasted by the judges and then thrown away almost whole.
     I wondered if that sweet old man on the phone today finally got the ten feet of water pumped from his basement.
     I set my glasses somewhere I wouldn’t remember in the morning and kissed Joe goodnight.

—Cynthia Brandon-Slocum

Cynthia Brandon-Slocum lives in Houghton, Michigan where she teaches college english. Her essays can be found in Fourth Genre, River Teeth, North American Review, Southern Indiana Review, Arcadia, and Redivider.





Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 8: Joe Slocum • Denry Willson • Carolyn Ogburn • Patrick Madden • Alec Carvlin • John Che • Dinah Lenney • McKenzie Long • Danielle Cadena Deulen

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. If you wrote something (it's not too late!), send us your work via this submission form (it's okay if you didn't RSVP before: the more the merrier).

—The Editors



July 8: Joe Slocum • Denry Willson • Carolyn Ogburn • Patrick Madden • Alec Carvlin • John Che • Dinah Lenney • McKenzie Long • Danielle Cadena Deulen 





JOE SLOCUM

My day starts an hour before my alarm is set to go off, a small victory. I downloaded an app with extra loud alarm tones because the ones that came standard are not enough to wake me. The new one is so loud it shocks my wife awake. After the morning visit to the bathroom, I suit up: dirty jeans, steel-toed boots, a pocket knife, an old t shirt, and a hat to keep the sweat from my eyes. My truck is already loaded with shovels, a bucket, safety masks, work gloves, and cases of water. I arrive at the volunteer center a little before nine.
     Today they send me to the Houghton Country Historical Museum in Lake Linden, Michigan. They say this is the town that was destroyed the most. Five nights ago, somewhere between six and seven inches of rain fell in just a couple of hours. It was raining hard before that and continued after the flooding. Highways and bridges are washed out. Roads are gone. Over sixty sink holes have been reported. Houses are flooded. We are in a state of emergency. Nobody has flood insurance.
The drive from Houghton to Lake Linden should be twenty-four minutes, but I’m slowed by driving around sinkholes, rough areas where volunteers have filled in washout, and a steady supply of confused men in dirty clothes who wave me through their work area. I pull up to the Museum headquarters around ten. There is a dirty, green dumpster by the front door sitting next to the biggest U-Haul you can rent. The building looks like it was placed in a damp riverbed. Up and down what remains of M-26, the highway that runs through town, there are loaders, Bobcats, and Caterpillars of all sizes working to move debris. There is dirt piled up everywhere.
     I walk inside and introduce myself to the woman in charge. She is thankful and ready to get me to work. My job is to sift through the damage, clean what is salvageable, load everything into the moving truck, and unload it at the museum’s new home down the street. The next three hours are hot and sweaty. I work alongside volunteers from the national parks, an army vet, and other people whose houses weren’t destroyed. We move file cabinets, antique furniture, and various artifacts. The bookcases are antique quarter sawn oak barristers from Wernicke Co. Each section has a thick coating of what we decide to call mud around their bases. After some attention with Murphy Oil, the old hardwood comes back to shine. Not a single one had a broken glass door.
     Nothing like this has ever happened here. Nobody is prepared. They say there hasn’t been a flash flood in the area for five hundred years. The radio reminds us to be patient with first responders and volunteers because nobody has experienced this kind of disaster. I hear this as I drive by a house with a front yard filled with small boulders. I can’t help but think it’s beautiful. Each stone seems intentionally placed. If they were not blocking the car in the garage or denting the walls of the house, it would look like the landscaping of homes I’ve seen in the desert.
     My house took several feet of water into the basement. It went high enough to extinguish the pilot light in our water heater. I had no idea so much had rushed into my home overnight. When I checked for flood damage in the morning the water had already run away down the hill and into the canal with rest of the brown flood water and sewage run-off. All we had to do was relight the pilot and run a dehumidifier for a few days.
     After the truck is unloaded, we break for lunch at the Hubbell firehouse. This is a relief station for the community. There are blankets, clothing, food, gloves, and bottles of water. Nobody says much during lunch, only that the food is good and a few thank yous to the people organizing everything. The faces are tired, and you can tell by their pants who’s been bailing out basements. A little girl is driving her mother crazy because she won’t eat her fruit.
     In the afternoon we start on the catalogue of newspapers dating back to 1887. Each year is a bound hardback. Some are only an inch thick while others are closer to three. The pages are flaky and have that great smell of old books that I have to respect. Sometimes on the way to the truck, a torn fragment of paper slips out and is carried away by the breeze. One of us runs for it, and we do our best to get it back in the right volume, but it is impossible to tell if we’re putting things in the right place.
     Most of the volumes were shelved high enough that they didn’t get soaked. The old pages that met the flood are being cared for by an apprentice to the archivist for the national parks. She keeps them in a freezer and slowly brushes each page with some kind of solution. By the end of the day she’s saved a few weeks of old news.   
     On the drive from the fire house to the museum, we pass 8th street. I was there two days ago helping someone rebuild their driveway. I don’t know this area well, but I couldn’t find where 8th street was at all. Houses, sheds, and cars were buried with sand where they stood or moved by the flood waters before the sand covered them. I walked up the center of the washout until I found the yellow house I had been assigned to help. Today 8th street is a dirt road passable by cars.
     At quarter to six we called it a day. There is a lot left to move. At least four big rooms full of office supplies, antique tools, books, more newspapers, and framed photos. Everyone affected by the flooding is doing what we are doing here: assessing the damage, sifting through artifacts, and trying to put things back in place. This area needs so much help that doesn’t seem possible things will be fixed before winter when the dirt that covers everything will be hidden by our annual two hundred inches of snow.
     The woman in charge gives us a sincere thanking and handshake at the end of the day. She is delighted with what we’ve accomplished and is already organizing for work to start over tomorrow. This is life in Ripley, Dollar Bay, Hubbell, Lake Linden and other towns in the copper country for the foreseeable future. Two loads from a truck that can hold a four bedroom home seems small in the middle of a two-county state of disaster. It doesn’t seem like the work will ever be finished, but I’ll be back in the morning. 

—Joe Slocum


If you can, please donate to thesethreefundraisers to help the community. Joe Slocum is just some guy. 





DENRY WILLSON

I was drinking vodka at midnight, watching Tombstone. June 21 was the last day of our San Diego vacation, and I was sharing a suite with my girlfriend, our friend Jules, and Jules’s two-year-old daughter, Bianca. I hadn’t slept for the first three days of our trip, and had slept only a bit on the fourth. I was getting worried because—random example—at the end of that third day, I had involuntarily wept with exhaustion on the second deck of a double-decker bus at the San Diego Zoo. We were somewhere around Elephant Odyssey.
     Tombstone ended. I found the The Graduate on a different channel. It was the scene where Mr. Robinson encourages Ben to “sow some wild oats this summer.” I began some serious note-taking that I thought would be super important later. Here are some of the legible highlights:

  1. “Am I in the driver’s seat? Or is June 21?”
  2. “Anne Bancroft was smoking hot.”
  3. “A day cannot be contained.”
  4. “Is Mrs. Robinson’s coat leopard, or jaguar?”

I woke up to sounds of life coming from the other room. Bianca wants to do everything, but has a very limited repertoire of things she can actually get done on an adult-style timeline. She is darling, but can be… unreasonable. But what can you do other than answer her questions, allow her to make what decisions she can, try to honor her choices, watch her struggle, and, in the process, be totally dominated by her?
     About twenty minutes before we got in the car, the neighborhood cat that we had befriended came around again. Bianca got sad that we’d be leaving our surprise vacation cat behind. We had to talk her through it.
     Before we truly hit the road, we stopped at my girlfriend’s brother’s work, Ballast Point Brewery, in Little Italy. We ordered some pretzel bites and beers and lemonade, and sat outside. Bianca wanted to choose where we all sat but I wanted to be in complete shade. When I sat down in complete shade, Bianca flailed and thrashed and refused to sit where I wanted, and I responded by saying that she was free to sit wherever she liked. We had to talk her through it.
     Jules tore up a pretzel bite for Bianca because they were piping hot, and because even the little pretzel bites were too big. But Bianca wanted a pretzel bite whose structural integrity had not been compromised. We had to talk her through it.
     We got on the road for real. We tried to assign a name to the woman on Jules’s navigational app. There were some strong contenders, but we all kind of agreed on “Gail.” Maybe it’s more accurate to say that I led the push for “Gail” and simply outlasted Monika and Jules. Monika and Jules decided to put on a true-crime podcast. The true-crime genre always makes me think of true-crime books that smell like they were read in rooms where the reader chain-smoked indoors. I doze through the crime, trying to use a stuffed animal as a pillow.
     At some point, I make a little game out of stealing sips of Bianca’s lemonade while she sleeps. The lemonade is in her child-seat cup-holder so that I have to reach across her to get it. At some other point, Bianca, still sleeping, clasps her hand on the lemonade. Does she know?
     I spent most of the drive on the fringes of sleep, that nebula of distorted thought that can become confused with reality. One of the podcasts (Movie Crush) was two dudes talking reverentially about a horror movie with Toni Collette, ill-willed ghosts, and kids getting their heads chopped off. In another (Keep It), the hosts were talking about what it means to “cancel” somebody.

I’ve always found that Interstate driving is like playing a really boring, really high-stakes video game for a long time. But I wasn’t even the one playing.
     Later, Bianca woke up and offered me some of her lemonade. She looked too tired to cry.
     If you’re headed east on I-10, and your purpose is the smoothest transition from Interstate into Tucson, the best exit to get off onto is Congress St. Exit 258. We got off on Prince.
     Jules dropped Monika and I off at our house. We all said our tired goodbyes. I showered and unpacked while Monika lay down. While unpacking, I found a knife that I’ve had for about 15 years but that I had considered lost for about a year. It was in the inside pocket of my duffel bag.
     We ordered a car and went to Che’s Lounge, a tradition for us anytime we get back from a trip. Jim was bartending. Jim and I have a hard time communicating because we both mumble and have bad hearing. Monika relays to me that Jim is recruiting me for Space Force, which I incorrectly assume is some A-Team-style pop reference.
     “Don’t Fear the Reaper” by Blue Oyster Cult comes on over the jukebox. Monika suggests that it could be the theme song for Space Force.
     We drink. Back in the tranquil purlieu of Che’s, my attention bobs around like an old birthday balloon. Televised sports... the bar’s wood grain... Monika... the gleaming bottles... the artwork... the lights... the people.
     Eventually we order another car and go home.

—Denry Willson





CAROLYN OGBURN
It may be that when we no longer know what to do
we have come our real work,
and that when we no longer know which way to go
we have come to our real journey.
The mind that is not baffled is not employed.
The impeded stream is the one that sings. 
—Wendell Berry
It’s dark, and I can’t tell if it’s raining. I lay in bed, loathing the prospect of walking the dogs in the rain, until I was woken by a dog’s nose against my arm. Sliding out from the bed I share with my partner, careful not to pull the sheet with me, I can see only a damp morning light, which tells me nothing. 
     The coffee had been ready 20 minutes before I pour my first cup. The nose-welcome dog, a border collie/brittany mix named Puck, watching closely. Theo, a brindle catahoula/pit with one blue eye, curls on the couch, eyes open. I hold the warm coffee mug against my lip. My current favorite, a gray stoneware my mother had given me years ago in a set of four, imagining that I would have dinner parties at which I would serve Irish coffee. A certain despair settles then. I turn to the page to write, but instead find the headlines, allowing myself to believe, as I often do, that twitter threads are a distraction from despair. I like one, then unlike it. 
     The dogs will not be patient anymore. Still in pajamas, I pull on my boots and leash the dogs. Sophie, a gray cat, slips out between my feet as I’m still wrestling with the door. It’s not raining, but it’s far from dry, the morning drenched in cloud. Songbirds are raucous, and a few—jay, crow, “drink-your-tea” tufted titmouse—insistently name themselves with their songs. I think again how a child knows as much about birds as I do, think again about how an education once contained not only bird identification by song and description, but also by nest. My brain feeds me this familiar litany of shame, even as I watch the dogs picking up the scent of whatever has been sharing our gravel road, our acres of scrub and pasture, our wet and unkempt yard and garden. I think of a poem I’m trying to write, attempt to force something from my walk into its stanzas, but I can’t remember the poem well enough to find an opening. The haunting trill of a songbird whose name I do not know, whose shape I have yet to see, follows me until we’re back inside. With a towel, I wipe the dogs’ paws, then make a semblance of drying their wet fur. I make a sandwich, kiss my partner goodbye. I’m already late.
     Sometime during my morning commute, perhaps with a mouthful of pb and banana sandwich, I realize that today marks the solstice, the longest day of the year. Most of the year, this drive is made in the dark. This, the longest day of the year, marks the turning back towards the dark. My headlights are hard against the morning fog.
     It’s just before 8:00 when I pull into the parking lot at the local university, where my work  today consists of meetings with incoming students, anxious parents. I check email, reply to a few, check the headlines again, pour another cup of coffee before realizing I’d scheduled a meeting with a colleague. I’d prepared a list of topics for the meeting, knowing that I’m likely to forget things I’d meant to ask, but as we talk I can’t shake the feeling that we’re talking about different things. I try to shift the conversation, so that we’re talking about how differently people experience the same situation, how common it is that words are used to evoke widely divergent meanings, and how hard it can be to even remember that one’s intention may not be understood. But I don’t think she knows what I mean, seems impatient to get back to a more tangible topic. I don’t know what we’re talking about anymore, and my own words seem empty and alien in my mouth. By the time we’re finished, I’m nearly late to the next meeting. 
     The day passes in this way. I feel myself gaining confidence—or is it indifference?—through meetings with people who don’t know anything about me but my job, my office. Sometimes they’re teenagers newly graduated from high school, sometimes parents who’ve been battling IEP committees for decades, sometimes one, sometimes the other, sometimes both. They enter with palpable trepidation, but they’re eager for kindness, and I can give them that. I don’t need to fix problems, not today. I don’t have any solutions. All I have is kindness, and for now, this may suffice. Later, I will wonder if that’s true, or if kindness just feels better to me. 
     I forget to eat lunch. I send phone calls straight to voicemail, focus on doing one thing after the other. The next thing I know it’s after 4:00 and the office is clearing out for the weekend. We don’t tell each other goodbye in this office unless we’re walking out at the same time. As I leave, three students have just arrived. I don’t wait to see if they have questions for me.
     My office is underground, its only window at ceiling level and revealing a concrete retaining wall. It’s always a surprise to walk outside, to see the results of a day filled with weather. Now, for instance, I’m temporarily blinded, squinting at stray leaves and small branches littering the concrete walks, asphalt roads, the parking lot nearly empty of cars, the puddles steaming from a rainshower no longer in evidence. No cooling leftover from the rain, or, if there is, it’s imperceptible. I’m suddenly starving, weak-kneed, exhausted. A colleague greets me even as I try to avoid his glance. He’s just back from Greece, working out reimbursement details, paperwork. He seems cheerful, relaxed, and I’m ashamed that I can’t rise to meet his mood. “I’m sorry,” I mumble, dodging towards my car. It’s an abbreviated statement: what I mean is, I’m sorry for myself, not traveling, not relaxed, not handsome, not single. It’s the longest day of the year and all I can think to do is end it. 
     The drive home is air-conditioned, and the news is of what is being called “migrant family separations” and “zero-tolerance”. The news is comforting in its familiar absence of meaning, and in its false assurance: knowing the headlines, I’ll be prepared. I’ll not be surprised (I will be surprised); I’ll be safe (I won’t be safe). Like birdsong, percussive and lyrical, defending territorial claims. There is no actual birdsong within my air-conditioned car, no piping of frogs from the ditch, no barking dogs as I drive past. I don’t remember when the roads narrow from interstate to four-lane highway, from four-lane to two, from state highway to narrow winding backroad, from backroad to gravel. It’s not until I pull my car to its spot in the shade of the barn that I’m aware of anything outside the car. 
     My partner has made us salads for dinner. We talk, vaguely and comfortably, about our respective days and settle into the couch to watch a show. It’s something we argue about at times, whether this habit of sharing time in front of a regular show is a healthy relationship habit, or if it underscores feelings of alienation, depression. This isn’t a conversation we have tonight. Long before the light leaves the sky, I’m in bed, and, like almost every other night, in order to calm my anxious mind, I turn on the radio and listen to the news. I tell myself, I’ll be prepared for what’s next. 

Carolyn Ogburn

Carolyn Ogburn lives in the mountains of western North Carolina in the watershed of the French Broad River, where she does any number of things for love and for money. 





PATRICK MADDEN

I have seen forty-seven summer solstices before this one, a few before my memory kicked in and the rest subsumed into a general “cotton wool,” as Virginia Woolf called the bulk of life, from which I cannot recall even one particular moment, despite this being a significant day, not in the impositional sense of so many days declared such by humankind (the first of January, the fourth of July), nor in the personal sense of those days important to me (my birthday, my wedding anniversary), but in the astrological sense, which, despite the nomenclature (for Juno, queen of gods) and the numbering (the twenty-first earthly revolution since…? an arbitrary beginning), suggests a leaning toward order beyond our paltry attempts at organizing life.
     By writing it, or from it, during and after it, I will fix a small part of it, “it” being my experience of the day, the overlap between my sensory apprehension and the infinite buzzing external reality, and thus I will remember it, or store it somewhere that I can return to it and thus call it back again in the future, pretending to remember.
     This is my naïve notion: that on some future day I will want to revisit this day, that I will feel proud or relieved or accomplished that I have saved something particular, that despite my shaky recollection I can locate a past self among specific past events. For instance:
  • I awoke to my alarm at 5:40, dressed in exercise clothes, woke my sons to get ready for Cub Scout camp, carried the new puppy downstairs and took him outside, encouraging him to pee, which he did.
  • After dropping Marcos and James off at the church, I fell asleep on the couch watching Australia play Denmark in the World Cup (the game ended in a 1-1 tie) while the puppy dozed in the corner of the kitchen.
  • I awoke to a knock on the door; it was Scott Sullivan, a sprinkler repairman who loves Notre Dame, my alma mater, and who proudly showed me the interlaced ND tattoo on his right biceps then got to work replacing and adjusting and tweaking.
  • I exercised not once but twice, in a final sprint toward winning a month-long weight-loss challenge I’d been having with my friends Andrew and Kelly, which was to end the next day. (I played DVDs from Shaun T’s Focus T25 series: Upper Focus and Lower Focus.)
  • I watched Argentina lose to Croatia, 3-0, and felt a slight bit of schadenfreudish glee, I admit, though I know many fine Argentinians, and I feel bad for rooting against their team. Nevertheless I do, mostly because I have lived in and loved Uruguay, my wife’s home country, and because Argentina is much bigger than Uruguay, and Croatia, and sometimes their national team players can get big-headed and dismissive of other countries, especially Uruguay.
  • I took a short walk to the nearest church to spin a Pokéstop for the phone game Pokémon Go!, hoping to get a “gift,” which I could give to other people who play the game, but I was disappointed, as the rollout was only for players at a higher level than I.
  • In preparation for the arrival of Karina’s family next week, I cleaned our downstairs office, which had become a storage room for junk we don’t know where to put. Mostly I threw things away or recycled them or shuttled them into boxes with lids so I could hide them.
  • I sat on a stool at the kitchen island and wrote, mostly staring idly out the back window at the unpredictable movements of the leaves on the peach trees and the illusory stillness of a sliver of mountain visible past the shed we made a few years ago.
  • With my whole family, I went to Provo to celebrate the wedding of our friends the Bangerters’ oldest son, Tanner, who looks quite a bit like his bride, Sarah, and whose reception featured a live jazz band and delicious homemade cupcakes but not enough time to catch up with Neal and Lee, who had recently moved to London, so we sat in chairs on the lawn and enjoyed the atmosphere and chatted a while with Mary Anne McFarland, mostly about our oldest children, who had both begun missions last September in Mexico right when a series of earthquakes hit.
There was more, of course, including some sleep on either end of the day, and some meals, and bathroom breaks, about which nobody wants to hear, not even my future self, the most likely reader of this missive in any case.
     So I have created a repository for memory, a madeleine to jog a return to June 21, 2018. Or perhaps, as Annie Dillard says, I have begun obliterating the day from memory in order to save only the written versions of events. “After you’ve written, you can no longer remember anything but the writing.” She seems lamentably resigned to this fact, but in my particular case, I am inclined to think there is no big loss, given the almost certain probability that this summer solstice would fade into a generalized nothing just as all the others have. So I welcome the supplanting of experience by its selective translation, these small parts of my day transformed into a more particularly durable form.
     As Eduardo Galeano taught me when I first spoke with him (in downtown Montevideo at Café Brasilero one December day I could probably look up if I needed to), reality consists not only of the external non-textual; our writing, too, is real: “We begin with the moment an act happens in reality, outside the author’s head, and then the author reproduces in himself what happened outside himself. Then this idea, this reproduction of the act inside the author’s head, also becomes part of reality. The original act, which comes directly or indirectly from reality, is transfigured in the process of creation.”
     Elsewhere, near and far from me, my fellow beings spun other Pokéstops and attended other wedding receptions; joyed and sorrowed at goals and misses; sat writing staring at other mountains, or oceans, or forests, or brick walls, or trash heaps; made futile efforts to stave off the encroaching entropy. Others danced and drummed and sang, some at monuments long ago constructed to mark the northernmost place where the sun stood still in the sky. Still others suffered in common and unspeakable ways. Underneath us all, the earth wobbled slightly as it spun unaccountably fast, imperceptibly fast, as it continued its seemingly interminable revolutions, barely noting the significance of once again leaning fully toward the sun.

—Patrick Madden

Patrick Madden is the author of Quotidiana and Sublime Physick, essay collections.





ALEC CARVLIN

The assignment for this essay is to write about the events of June 21st, 2018 for an online publication called Essay Daily; to observe, record, and report what happens on that day as I see fit. Some 280 other people the world over are joining me in the effort, and the intended result, I assume, is a kind of non-fictional mosaic shedding light on how simultaneously similar and different we all are.
     This is a tough pill for me to swallow, as it would be hard to convince the people who need convincing that the man in Tunisia maybe be different from the one in China and the one in Baltimore, but that all of them are connected by certain undeniably human experiences. All delight in receiving unexpected gifts or mail, until they unwrap the box and find socks or tear open the letter and find anthrax or a bill. All enjoy riding the razor’s edge of ear cleaning, where at one distance the probing Q-tip feels incredible, and a millimeter later the drum is pierced and inoperable. And all hunger for sex so much that, at one point or another, they’ve each looked longingly—nay, lustfully—at a ripe fruit and thought, “Who would ever know?” To the people who need convincing, these comforting similarities are overshadowed by the more obvious and far less meaningful cultural, linguistic, and aesthetic differences between us. I don’t mean to say that people can’t change: they can. I just don’t believe in the written word galvanizing it, because the ignorant don’t read.
     That being said, the people at Essay Daily seem to truly love essays, and love of the game is a motive I can get on board with. What’s more, something interesting did happen on the 21st. 

Today, I found Tinder again, though perhaps that isn’t the right phrase. I didn’t lose it, I was just in a better place where I didn’t need it. A relationship, I think it’s called. But that’s done now, and a little over a month later it seems I’ve reached the critical mass of loneliness necessary to download and install the notorious dating app again for the… fifth time? More, probably – by a factor of ten if I’m being honest, but I have no idea about the specifics as every time I find myself back in a relationship and delete Tinder, I purge every memory of it from my mind. Then I’ll admit to a friend that I’m lonely, that I’ve even gone so far as to sharpie a cuddle-buddy onto one of my pillows, and they’ll remind me that there’s this magical app designed to solve just such problems. Permanent marker staining one side of my face (in streaks I argue are not the result of weeks of crying), I’ll ask them what it’s called.
     “Oh, I don’t know,” they’ll say, “I’ve never needed anything like that. Kate and I get along perfectly and have since we met in the neonatal care unit. Our incubators were side-by-side. I think it’s something fire related, though. Kindling, maybe? Or DuraFlame?”
     “No,” I’ll say, the memories flooding back and the muscles of the smudged side of my face slackening in a miniature stroke. “It’s Tinder.”
     For those unfamiliar with Tinder, it is an app that sucks out and spits on your inner romantic by presenting you with a seemingly endless supply of fresh faces to swipe right on (meaning that you like them) or swipe left on (meaning that you wouldn’t want them if they were the last people on Earth). If you like someone and swipe right on them, and they in turn like you and swipe right on you, then you are invited to converse with one another, and come to more explicit terms with how incompatible you really are.
     Wow, you think as you talk to your “match,” I wouldn’t want to be with you if you were the last person on Earth. And then you go back to swiping again in the hopes that this person is the exception. And they are not.

The guilty party who reminded me of Tinder this time was my friend Andrew, who, after hearing 40-odd minutes of bemoaned soliloquizing—Why did she do that to me? Why wasn’t I better to her? Why do I still give a fuck? etc.—cleared his throat (in what I’ve decided was sympathy) and told me it was time for me to get back out there. We were at his place in the Upper Valley, Vermont, which, outside of the grounds of nearby Dartmouth College, is not exactly a beacon of Thursday night night-life.
     “Where am I supposed to get back out to?” I asked.
     There are, on most nights, only two options. One is a chain of imitation Irish pubs—Salt Hill, they’re called—that discourage much in the way of social interaction due to their large size, and the other is a local dive bar—The Filling Station—that discourages much in the way of intelligent social interaction due to its clientele.
     “Actually,” Andrew said, “there’s a concert on the Lebanon green tonight. We could head over there and see if we can’t pick up some stragglers.”
     “I’m not really a… straggler-picker-upper,” I said.
     Andrew held up his phone and turned the screen to face me, revealing a little white flame set on a backdrop of lusty red.
     “Well,” he said, “there’s always Tinder.”
     My soul shuddered, and I said as much, so we headed into Lebanon for the concert, grabbing Cambodian food on our way. That a rural town can have Cambodian food before a decent haunt for the young and lonely is stupefying, but adds, you must admit, to the idiosyncratic charm of the place.
     I feel so alone, you might say, mouth full of lemongrass pork, matchstick carrots and Hoisin sauce, and there’s nothing built into the fabric of this place to change that. How charming. 
     Phenom Penh sandwiches in hand (essentially Cambodian bánh mìs), we headed for the green and found a fairly sizable crowd seated in the grass and on lawn chairs, facing a brick stage where a long-haired, paper-thin musician strummed his guitar and sung about love.
     “There’s a cute one over there,” said Andrew when we finished eating. He pointed into the throng of seated concert-goers at someone I couldn’t see.
     “Where?” I asked.
     “Over there, she’s…” He paused. “Oh, never mind, she looks twelve.”
     She wasn’t the only one. As a quick examination of the crowd exposed, the stragglers Andrew had imagined were only straggling because they hadn’t yet learned how to drive themselves home, meaning that they didn’t want us to pick them up romantically (if anyone has ever really wanted to be picked up by either of us), they needed their parents to pick them up physically.
     “I’m pretty over this,” I said, lighting a cigarette and turning away from the horde of jail bait. “It makes me feel old and even more pathetic than usual.”
     “Well,” said Andrew, “on Tinder you can select the age range of the people you want to see…”
     “No.”
     “Fine, fine, I guess we’ll go see what’s going on at The Filling Station.”
     “Also no.”
     “Well pick one,” he said.
     My choice was the bar, but in the end, I got both. This because The Filling Station’s only two females were even farther from my age than the girls at the park, but in the opposite direction, and the thought of going anywhere else to try and meet people after so much disappointment—on the longest day of the year, no less—was becoming physically exhausting. So there, in the dive bar, I redownloaded and reinstalled Tinder. I found it again.

My profile on Tinder hasn’t changed in the last four years and features as it’s text component a simple list: “Pros: I have a cute dog, I cook, and I travel. Cons: I write.” As if to prove this, the flagship image is my writer’s headshot, where I stare down the camera with a look of tortured constipation.
     “Do you think this is good?” I asked Andrew, handing over my phone.
     He nodded, distracted by his own swiping. “Yeah, man. It’s great.”
     “You don’t think I look like I need to poop but can’t?”
     Andrew took another look, paused, and, trying his best to look earnest, said, “No, not at all.”
     I navigated to the main screen, the place where it all goes down (or, more accurately, left and right), and found myself faced with my first contender: Bella, 27, Hospice Nurse. She was attractive – stunning, really – with long raven hair, large doughy eyes, and an impressively sincere smile. All of her pictures were like this, and just as I was about to swipe right, passing our fate as a couple to her fingertips, I remembered other people’s profiles had text components too. And I made myself a deal: If the text of her profile is as intriguing as her appearance, I’ll swipe right. If it isn’t, then no matter what, I’ll swipe left. And, the deal-making voice in my head continued, I’ll do this for everyone. 
     I tapped my screen and her text was revealed.
     “Easy going, down to earth, fun. Looking for a guy to stumble home with from the bar on a Friday night, followed by an attempted 5k in the morning and some volunteering.”
     I swiped left.
     “Why did you do that?” Andrew cried.
     “She’s too intense for me,” I said. “Drinking to the point of losing control over your legs only to run 3.1 miles when you wake up? And then, when you’re done heaving and puking your way through the cross-country course with legs that are dead for the second time in less than 12 hours, topping off whatever that feels like with volunteer work? Masochism isn’t a strong enough word.”
     Andrew balked but, when I described my plan to him, came around with a sly grin.
     “That’s an interesting idea,” he said. “It’s going to slim your results considerably, but since we’re swiping out of the same pool of people, I’m all for it.”
     He was only half right, as a few swipes later, after a few blank profiles (automatic left swipes) and ones that had anywhere in them the words “my kids are my world” (also automatic left swipes), I got: “Firm believer in only a splash of OJ in mimosas—for color.” And I swiped right. The next one was even better, reading, “Let’s match and then never speak. If we do, let’s make painful small talk about where we live that goes nowhere. If we somehow manage to exchange numbers, let’s trade a few texts back and forth about meeting up without making concrete plans. And if we get past that, let’s get married.” I swiped up—a super-like—and thought, Marry me now.
     I learned a lot over the next few hours while, in reality, Andrew and I made our way home from The Filling Station and onto his apartment’s porch of spatially invasive plants. A fichus probing my inner ear, I discovered, for instance, that the most common thing women write in their Tinder profiles is that they are “a Pam looking for their Jim” or that they “only swiped right because you have a dog.” Lots of them are looking for someone who’s going to make them laugh – which gives me the strangest idea that they probably aren’t funny themselves—and more of them than I ever would have guessed are fans of the Oxford comma. Equally interesting is that tall girls tend to mention their height and insist, if not outright then in subtle, almost passive aggressive ways, that you, too, should be tall, an example of which being, “5’8” and love a good pair of heels.”
     I swiped left on all of the above but the Oxford comma lovers, who, I reasoned, were probably the closest to my people. Interspersed, though, were other great profiles, some of my favorites being:
  • “I was a really ugly child, so you know I have a personality.” 
  • “Thicker than eel sauce, spicier than wasabi. Can you guess my favorite food? It’s pizza.” 
  • “My kitten needs a positive male influence in his life.” 
  • “No tolerance for misogyny and men who skip leg day.”
and
  • “If you don’t look like your pictures, buy me drinks until you do.” 
The problem with dating apps is that they only offer, for most, a skin-deep experience, and leave the rest to chance. I guess dating physically isn’t all that different, but I was pretty happy with myself for approaching something so in-your-face superficial in a new and different way. And as the day came to a close I realized I was, for the first time ever, happy to be back on Tinder, if for no other reason than that it seemed to provide a never-ending well of material.
     Then, as Andrew and I disbanded the porch-hangout and headed to bed, pink pressure marks on our arms from where his vines had tried to grow around us, I read the funniest Tinder profile of the day, and probably of my life. It read simply: “I like my men like I like my coffee—incapable of loving me back.” I laughed until I felt tears welling up in my eyes and pouring down my face, elated that someone like her existed and that I was finally crying from something other than emotional distress. Who is this fucking genius? I thought, tapping back to her main profile image in a sharp break from my newly established norms and rubbing the moisture from my eyelids. But when I arrived, my laughter petered off. And then I swiped left, because she wasn’t my type.

—Alec Carvlin

Alec lives with his dog, Puff, in Boston. For more of his work, check out his blog, Notes from my Phone, on his website: aleccarvlin.com. 




JOHN CHE

I woke up still feeling sick. I was in Cariquima, an Aymaran village, 12057' high in the Chilean Andes, inside my 9’ camper. The altitude, the cold, the darkness certainly didn't help. I was going to miss greeting of the first sun on the first morning of the village’s indigenous year 5526. We had celebrated New Year's Eve with the Aymarans last night, walking through the town square to the school, where we continued as a dance. The locals were dressed in colorful costumes. They played their repetitive rhythm, consisting of a large drum beat with a group of slightly off-tune flutes. They let us walk among them as the only white people. It was great to hang out with them, but this morning I was going to sleep some more.
     Lisa, a past romance, recently got intrigued by South America, Chile, the high Andes or the idea of reconnecting, and had joined me. It was her birthday. She got up. I handed her a small marzipan figure, the only present I had come up with on short notice. Short notice? We'd traveled together for 17 days already, but we had spent a good part of it trying to figure out if, and how, to live in minimal space without rubbing each other the wrong way. Our talks varied from splitting our ways to starting a family, but a hug just 6 nights ago seemed to have shifted the tone a bit towards the friendlier side, so a present was certainly due.
     After she returned from the sun prayers for the new year, we set off to what had actually brought us to the village, the Sendero de Chile from Colchane, a 2-day, 16-mile backpacking trek. The adventure started with trying to find a ride to Colchane. Everybody was very friendly in their way, trying to help us, but still lacking the commitment and confirmation to give us the confidence that it was going to happen. However, 1 1/2h and 2 early beers later, we were on a slightly overloaded bus going towards our destination.
     We started our trek. There were some trails and old roads at the beginning, and even a trail sign painted on a rock, but most of it was walking across the altiplano desert, a stark scenery, flat with high snow-covered peaks lining the horizon in all directions. Once in a while we came across a group of llamas or wild vecuñas. In-between were falling-apart ruins of old dwellings, as well as inhabited mud shacks, though we could not tell the difference. Eventually we got to a creek, still running in daytime, though it was going to freeze over at night. This was our simple, cold, but beautiful home for the night. It was an amazing setting on a unique day, a romantic spot, as far as a small tent, sleeping bags and freezing cold would allow.
     As I left the tent later that night, the moon had already gone down and left the infinity of stars sparkling across the canopy, so much denser than I ever get to see it anywhere close to civilization. It was so familiar, yet so different from the night sky I was used to from the northern hemisphere. This day will always be full in my memory—sickness, culture, nature, adventure and romance—so much more than I could share with the world in a few paragraphs.

—John Che

John Che, originally from Germany, is a former electrical engineer who has lived in 7 countries on 4 continents. Currently he is traveling the world in his camper Wyld Eagle, maybe retired or maybe on a long vacation. His publications include technical journals and some blogs.





DINAH LENNEY

June 21, 2018 Bennington, Vermont.

My collection is growing—
     it started with a pine-cone (nothing special, but it called to me from the path the other day, and I picked it up, and I liked the feel of it in my hand—it’s white tipped and medium sized) and an acorn hat (a cupule, I just looked that up, that’s what it’s actually called: mine is cross-hatched and perfectly circular). There they are, the cone and cupule, alongside a long, white twig (well, but bigger than a twig: a baton!), and a tiny scroll of bark (curling as if it remembers the branch—if only I knew how to read birch, which looks a little like braille, come to think of it)—
     anyway, here it is, my collection—my pine cone, my cupule, my baton, my bark—waiting for me on the dining room table when I finally give up and get out of bed and come down the stairs (as if the longest day of the year weren’t long enough: I’ve been up since just after 4)—
     and even before making the coffee, I’m arranging and fussing and snapping and snapping some more. Six AM and I’m taking pictures—I’m obsessed with this phone, I’m obsessed with the camera, zooming in, zooming out, bark turned in, bark turned out; same deal with that little round hat (upside down, right side up), which is three different browns, by the way—
     but okay, I do need coffee.
     So I put down the phone and make myself a pot. And it's terrible—awful, bitter, bad—which doesn’t make it any less delicious. Or photogenic. Snap, snap. Here’s my coffee on the table. Here it is on the sill, beside the screen, which is filthy. Here with less milk and more milk and a second cup with no milk at all.
     Whew. I’m exhausted. What I need is a couple of eggs. I boil them up. I resist the urge to take a picture. I mean, eggs, c’mon. Been there, done that. Plus there’s no pepper in cupboard. If there were, well then, I might never get dressed.
     But I do. On schedule. It’s been an okay morning for pictures, I’m thinking, though it’s not till I’m on my way to the first lecture of the day that I start to feel hopeful. Excited. Tuned up. To think I almost didn’t stop for this door in the wall—I almost put it off so as not to be late. And it’s not that the photo itself is so wonderful, that’s not what I mean, not at all—but beginning with the weathered wooden planks set too high in the bricks on the far side of the garden; beginning with seeing it there, an old door, beautiful and useless (mysterious); see how it shimmers in the sun?
      Well. You’d think it would be enough to notice. And it almost is. Almost. But—but so much better, so much more gratifying to find a picture, just there, camera ready, than to arrange and rearrange (the collection, the coffee): and what does that mean? What does that say? About seeing? About me? I don't know. I can't think about that now. All I know—or feel, anyway, in this instant—is that I’m very possibly set for the day.
     Sure enough, in the afternoon (after lunch with a student: tuna fish, beige, need I say more?) I get happily worked up about the tiniest daisies, if that’s what they are, clustered at the edge of the tall green grass; and the blue of the pond, clouds sitting on top, that gets to me, too. (Makes me think of that poem—“The Lake” by Sophie Cabot Black—“Day and night, the lake dreams of the sky,” it begins.)
     Later on, before four graduate readings, I pick up two sets of acorn hats—twins, connected at the stem—to add to the collection; and a long gray feather; and another piece of birch, this one thicker and marked by perfectly spaced holes; and a small pink stone, which is exactly the color of the horizon when the sun goes down. I have that picture, too, and it isn’t much, really—but the moment, the moment is extended and still—
     finally, once I’m sure the pink is fading, I turn and shoot a video (the third of the day), from the top of a bench overlooking the pond. Again, no great thing, but the crickets, and the birds, and the harmonizing frogs—I can’t resist the music, I can’t.
     Funny, it doesn’t occur to me to take pictures of people. Not the ones I know and love, especially not them. So I don’t touch the camera during dinner—which is a celebration, with toasts and elaborate desserts. Afterwards, more readings, and, frankly, I’d just as soon close my eyes.  But alone at the end of the evening, and on my way back to the house, I try for a bunny sitting in the grass very near my front porch. Then I click on the video option again, for fireflies, that’s why—but look! There’s Peter's tail, very white, bouncing across the lawn, disappearing into the field beyond.
     Inside, I hit the light switch and empty my pockets and tote: one pine cone, five cupules, one feather, two pieces of bark, a baton, and a rosy little stone. My collection is growing. I’d better charge my phone.

—Dinah Lenney

Dinah is the author of a memoir-in-essays, The Object Parade (Counterpoint Press), and Bigger than Life: A Murder, a Memoir. (University of Nebraska Press) and co-edited Brief Encounters: A Collection of Contemporary Nonfiction with the late Judith Kitchen (W.W. Norton, 2015). Her work has appeared in a variety of publications and anthologies including The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, AGNI, Creative Nonfiction, the Paris Review Daily, and the Los Angeles Review of Books, where she serves as an editor-at-large. 





MCKENZIE LONG

I awake to a gentle patter on the tent. I pull out one earplug and hear the pelting increase in volume and intensity. I slip off my eye-mask, squint in the bright Alaskan sunlight, and unzip a corner of the door just to check if it is rain or snow that I hear. Rain. I replace the earplug and eye mask and roll over for more sleep. Rain means no occasion to rouse from my sleeping bag.
     It is day eight of a ten day trip to the Pika Glacier, an area known as Little Switzerland in Denali National Park. Six of us have come here to camp in the snow and rock climb on the surrounding granite peaks. We flew in on a small otter plane—built in Canada in 1954—with duffles full of gear and cans to store our poop. When we landed it was clear and sunny, but we knew bad weather was coming, so we dragged our gear by sled an appropriate distance from the landing strip, set up camp, dug out our bathrooms, and then left to go climbing at 6:30 pm. Being in Alaska in summer means there is no danger of getting caught in the dark, so we climbed through the night in lingering twilight. Scott, Dale, Ali, and I climbed a peak called Middle Troll as two parallel teams, marveling at the beautiful view over the glacier and basking in warm sunshine at the belays. At one point Scott tossed animal crackers to me and I tried to catch them in my mouth mid-climb. The four of us summited around 12:30 am. We briefly celebrated and admired the view of distant Denali and then began the long rappel back down to our skis. We returned to camp at 4:30 am, devoured a box of macaroni and cheese each, and went to sleep. By the time we woke up the next afternoon it was snowing, and it has been snowing ever since.
     But today—the longest day of the year in a place where it doesn’t get dark anyways—it is raining. I wake up for a second time, this time to the roar of avalanches crashing down nearby mountain faces. The rain is soaking the snow and weighing down, pushing it over the cliff edges. There are so many avalanches that if I close my eyes, it sounds like the pulsing beat of ocean waves breaking upon the shore.
     It is noon, so I suppose I should get out of my tent, at least for a little while. I suit up in waterproof pants and waterproof jacket and waterproof boots and wade through snow the few feet to our communal cook tent. Thank goodness for the cook tent. During storm days, it gives the six of us somewhere to be other than our beds. Only today everyone is so depressed by the rain that no one is here yet. Yesterday we had a few fleeting hours of blue sky and sunshine, and we all had our hopes up for climbing today, so the rain feels extra depressing.
     I prime the stove, shovel some snow into our water pot, and begin to prepare coffee. By the time I am through, everyone else has arrived soggy in the cook tent. We decide to make pancakes because they taste good and take a long time. By this point in the trip we are all getting on each other’s nerves, but we manage to avoid arguments.
     At the start of our trip we began a tradition of taking a family photo each day. We chose a spot in our camp that frames a peak called the Throne, and every day we took a shot of all of us from that same location:


This gives us a feel for the changing weather, what we did each day, and the overall mood of the group. Our first photo, before we left on that first climb, showed us in climbing harnesses with huge grins on our faces. The photos since then have gotten progressively snowier and gloomier, with us wearing rain jackets and holding up bottles of whiskey. Today none of us can summon the motivation for a family photo. We huddle in the cook tent and peek out the door. Wispy low clouds drift in front of the Throne, and my skis sag sideways in the waterlogged snow. We make a group decision not to stand in the rain for a photo. Jess snaps an empty picture to commemorate the mood of the day:


     After gorging on pancakes and playing some bored card games, I retreat back to my sleeping bag. After eight tent-bound days, everything is wet and everything stinks. I pack some damp socks into my sleeping bag with me, in hopes that they will dry out with my body heat. I pull out Great Tide Rising by Kathleen Dean Moore and began to read. I am on the chapter called “On Joyous Attention” in which Moore writes about forging “an intimacy with the everyday marvelous:”
Paying attention to a night of roaring waves, a face full of stars, the kick in the pants of the infinite universe, the huge unknowing, alerts us to the astonishing fact that we have any place at all in such a world. Attentive to that, we live richer, deeper lives, more fully realizing our humanity.
I lay the book on my chest and listen to the soft drum of raindrops, the distant rumble of an avalanche, and the thrum of my heartbeat, warm and alive under my hands. What an intricate world I live in. And just like that, I am consumed with gratefulness; for mountains in all their intensity, for friendships, for my opportunity to be in this frozen place, even for rain.

—McKenzie Long

McKenzie Long lives in Mammoth Lakes, California where she climbs rocks, designs guidebooks, and writes about sense of place. She is currently working on a book about national monuments.





DANIELLE CADENA DEULEN

Morning

I wake up and lie there thinking of the night before. My mom drove down to watch the boys so that Max and I could attend a 20th anniversary party for friends. It was our second date of the year, and at a good restaurant we couldn’t regularly afford—where everything was organic, contemporary, and the wait staff was as serious about their food descriptions as any lauded writer. We ate and drank too much, and laughed too loudly at our own jokes. Max’s appeal is in his outrageous sense of humor, and mine in my willingness to discuss anything—or so I thought then. Now everything we said seems inappropriate. Were we charming or just loud? In the sober, dim light reaching beneath my black-out curtains, it was hard to tell. He’s in bed next to me, his back turned away so that I don’t have to endure his snoring, which is soft this morning. I want to wake him to share in this quiet moment with me, but decide that’s selfish and let him sleep.
     It’s strange to wake up before anyone else. Usually, a child’s plaintive voice calls me numbly to my feet—a bad dream to soothe away, a diaper to change, hunger too sharp to sleep through. Usually, I stumble through each demand, barely bothering to see the tasks I perform, bone-weary and waning, never enough of me to go around. But even my two-year-old, Miles, is still sleeping. I can see his cheerful, heart-shaped face clearly in my mind. Just a week ago, when I began weaning him, he cried and cried while I tried to soothe him without giving him what he wanted. We were both miserable. Now he’s accepted our break up and is sleeping through the night for the first time in his life. I know I shouldn’t feel heartbroken about this, that I should get up and do something for myself: I should shower! I should read a book! I should sip tea quietly while staring at my yard! During summer my husband and I trade off caretaking our boys so we can both get projects done, and it’s my day, so when everyone is up, I’ll be on.
     They’re locking up children at the border. This single sharp thought intrudes as if it weren’t mine. They’re taking children from their mothers and locking them up in “Tender Age Shelters” at the border. My eyes start to itch. My throat sweats. My stomach turns. My family’s a mix of white American and Mexican-American. I think about the election two years ago when my eight-year-old niece, a beautiful brown girl, watching the news with my sister became more and more agitated, eventually revealing that she believed if Trump became President he would send her to Mexico. She is an American born to an American. Still, at eight, she’d heard enough hateful rhetoric to believe that Trump didn’t see her as citizen or a human being, that he had no problem separating families. When I heard my sister’s account of it, I responded with what at the time seemed like reasonable words: “Well, obviously she’s confused about whether or not she’s a citizen, but even if she weren’t, this is the United States. We don’t just take children away from their parents. That shit’s not legal.”
     They’re locking up children at the border. They’re taking children from their parents and locking them up in cages like animals…
     Just then my four-year old, Mercer, opens our bedroom door in his plaid pajama pants and no shirt, his tender skin and shock of white-blonde hair haloed with hallway light. My husband startles up out of sleep and when he sees our son in the doorway he says “Well, hello there,” gently in his sleepy voice, “Good morning. You wanna come up here with us?”
     Mercer crosses the room and climbs slowly into our bed, smiling as if he knows some great secret. One of his arms does the climbing while the other cradles Baby Whale, a fuzzy, well-worn blue humpback that slumps around with him everywhere. He presses Baby Whale to my cheek and his own tiny nose to my nose and touches my ear softly, breathing his stinky puppy breath into my mouth.
     “Good morning, Mama.”
     “Good morning. Did you have fun with Nana last night?” But before he can answer, Miles yells from the other room. It’s time to get up.


Afternoon

At the dining room table, Miles decides to introduce himself to me and his brother. He reaches out his left hand for awkward handshakes.
     “Glad to meet you,” he says, smiling coyly.
     “Well, very nice to meet you!” I play along, trying to shake his hand and wipe ketchup from his cheek at the same time, but he squirms away.
     “No, Mama! Stop! I don’t like it!” He makes his best angry face. He’s been trying on faces lately.
     Out of the corner of my eye, I notice Mercer has climbed out of his chair and is going through the art drawer, throwing handfuls of paper and crayons overhead dramatically.
     “What are you doing?”
     “Where is the glue?” he uses his exasperated voice.
     “That’s not how you look for glue,” I say, kneeling to the floor, “would you please help me pick up this mess and when—"
     “But I have to pee!” Mercer says. Fair enough. I jump up to take Mercer to the bathroom. As always, he overshoots the toilet a bit before getting a straight aim at the bowl. When we return to the dining room, Miles has climbed out of his chair and runs toward me.
     “Fix Superman cape!” He’s holding the red cape that never stays Velcroed to his Superman T-shirt which he has refused to take off for two days now. I stick it on again and for a moment he looks pleased. I bend down to my other son.
     “When we’re done cleaning up we can look for the glue together, okay Mercer? Hey Mercer, are you listening to me? Please stop getting things out of the drawer and help me.”
     “Blow balloon!” Miles says, nearly knocking off my glasses with a colorful fistful to show me.
     “Where did you find balloons?”
     “Blow balloon, Mama!” I blow up a yellow balloon and hand it to him. He’s delighted and runs off into the living room with it. When I turn around, Mercer has used scissors I thought were hidden to cut up the plastic bag that held the multi-colored puff balls he calls “barnacles.” The barnacles are everywhere.
     “Mercer! That is a no! You know better than that,” I hear myself saying as I turn to pick up the barnacles, “now help me pick up this big mess you made.”
“I didn’t make a big mess. The scissors made a big mess.”
     “No. You were cutting with the scissors so you made the big mess. Now help me clean it up.” I begin singing a stupid clean-up song that entices him to clean about 10 percent of the time. He looks at me with indignation. Miles arrives with another balloon he wants me to blow up, his cape hanging from one shoulder.
     “What happened to your other balloon?”
     “Balloon pop. I sad.” He makes an exaggerated sad face.
     “Miles, I can blow you another balloon, but right now I’m trying to clean up. Will you help me?” He looks at the barnacles with interest. I sing the stupid song and with great concentration he begins lifting one small puff at a time and dropping it into my palm. I internally congratulate myself for being so patient.
     “I just need to give you a little haircut,” Mercer says as he snips a chunk of my hair off with the scissors. My patience pops.
     “That’s it,” I say, jumping to my feet, “No more scissors! I’m putting them up!” I practically stomp into the kitchen to throw the scissors in a cupboard.
     Mercer screams as if I’ve dropped them off a cliff, “Noooo! My scissors!”
     Miles, intuiting that this must be the moment to yell about my failings, joins in with, “Yellow balloon pop! Superman cape! Mercer scissors!” He’s followed me into the kitchen and kicks my ankle ineffectually, his face scrunched up. He likes to defend his big brother, a habit his big brother doesn’t reciprocate.
     “Miles, don’t kick Mama. It’s not nice and I know you’re—”
     “I have to pee!” Mercer runs through the kitchen holding his crotch.
     “What? Again? How? Why?” I say to no one, following Mercer up the stairs to our bathroom. He overshoots the toilet again. I make a mental note that I really need to clean our toilet. Walking downstairs, I notice the back door is open. Miles has slipped out. I rush out to find him ripping up my orange California poppies into a shredded pile.
     “Please,” I say, trying my patient voice again as I cross our dry lawn to him, “please stop picking Mama’s flowers.”
     I feel Mercer tug on my pant leg. He comes around and points definitively at Miles.
     “Miles picked your flowers, Mama. He needs a time out.”
     “Mama flowers!” Miles says, picking one more poppy carefully and offering it up to me, “for you, Mama,” he says, smiling brightly, “glad to meet you!” He holds out his left hand for me to shake.


Evening

After dinner is bath time, which Mercer loves and Miles screams through the one minute it takes for me to wash his face and body. His hair is grimy from lack of washing because most nights I can’t steel myself well enough to endure his outrage at the necessity of pouring water over his head. Still, each night as I lift him from the bath, feel him trembling in the towel as I carry him to his room, I’m struck with the realization of how very small he is, how vulnerable, why it makes sense that he clings to me every moment he’s awake, how scary the world must seem with such delicate skin. I feel overwhelmed with a mix of love and anxiety while I dry him, rub him with eczema cream, slip him into pajamas, thinking of how I could have been better that day, more patient, more loving, but also how I feel so depleted, so exiled from myself, a little sad that I’m no longer the protagonist of my story. Mercer is still splashing happily in the bath, talking to his submarine and rubber fish. I have to stop his fun now, get him out and repeat the same routine with him.

Once the boys are in pajamas, I lead them downstairs to the family room to watch TV for an hour. We know I shouldn’t, but at the end of the day I’m so exhausted I don’t know what else to do with them. Max is upstairs checking the day’s news in his office. I can hear him muttering angerly as I sit on the stairs within earshot of the boys looking through Facebook posts. Everyone is outraged about the border situation. Everyone is saying something about it. I type up a few different posts but can’t seem to get the tone right. Everything I write seems trite and self-serving, some variation of I care too! I decide not to post anything. When I hear an episode of Sarah & Duck coming to an end, I know it’s time to get the boys to bed.
     No matter how sleepy the boys seem in the family room, by the time I get them upstairs to their beds they’re always bursting with end-of-night energy, Miles jumping and squeal-laughing in his crib, Mercer trying out various tumble moves and yoga poses. I always mean to put the boys in their beds and walk away like all the parenting articles tell me I should do, but I always end up either lying next to their beds or snuggling them in our bed. Tonight’s a floor night. I lie on the felt rug between their beds to shush them until they seem calm enough to drift off, then slip out.
     It’s about 9 pm by the time I get downstairs where Max is waiting on the back patio. He’s in his pajamas smoking marijuana and looking at our yard. He’s tall and tattooed with short white hair and Buddy Holly glasses—super cute. By now he’s watered our fledgling garden, cleaned the dishes, and taken out the trash.
     “Hi,” he says, blowing out a huge plume of smoke, “look at the sky.” When I walk out into the yard, pink and gold cumulus stretch above me like a lit-up riverbed.
     “Wow. It’s really brilliant. Thanks.”
     “I thought you’d like it,” he says, smirking. “Also, I love you.” Max is given to spontaneous romantic declarations, an excellent quality in a husband.
     “I love you too.”
     “And I love our boys.”
     “I love them too.”
     “And I hate our evil fucking country.”
     “Me too.”
     My younger self would have mocked this life. It’s so cute, so common. I don’t disagree with that younger self, but she spent so much time scoffing at the ordinary that she couldn’t see how she was denying herself the pleasures of the mundane. I look back up at the sky. It’s been an everyday day—a whole day of nothing. We’re so lucky.

—Danielle Cadena Deulen

Danielle Cadena Deulen is the author of a memoir, The Riots; two poetry collections, Our Emotions Get Carried Away Beyond Us and Lovely Asunder, and a poetry chapbook, American Libretto. She teaches at Willamette University and is the poetry series editor of Acre Books. You can find out more about her at danielledeulen.net.  





Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 9: Emilio Carrero • Shamae Budd • Daniel Juckes • ShenLin Fang • John Bodine • Timothy Berg • Jennie B. Ziegler • Dorian Rolston • Kathryn Gougelet • Susan Olding

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. If you wrote something (it's not too late!), send us your work via this submission form (it's okay if you didn't RSVP before: the more the merrier).

—The Editors



July 9: Emilio Carrero • Shamae Budd • Daniel Juckes • ShenLin Fang • John Bodine • Timothy Berg • Jennie B. Ziegler • Dorian Rolston • Kathryn Gougelet • Susan Olding





EMILIO CARRERO

I poured the antifreeze into my car first thing in the morning. It had overheated the night before, a busted radiator. And I was running late to my appointment for a new place to live, my seventh place in two years. To be honest, I don’t remember doing it. I did all of it mindlessly—the whole time thinking about the night before, when a dad in his SUV had pulled up beside me at the stoplight. He rolled down his window and pointed at the smoke coming from the hood of my car, worried. In his back seats, his kids pressed their faces up to the window and stared. If this had been the first time, I would’ve panicked. But I’d done it so many times, back to when I was a kid; I knew what to do. I pulled over onto the side of the road, I flicked on my emergency lights, I turned off the engine, I popped the hood, opened it. And the smoke hit my face.
     I coughed, stepping back. Then I slammed the hood shut. I knew I was gonna be there for awhile so I walked to the back of my car and laid on top of it while rest of the night, the city moved around me. Headlights passed by, side by side, eyes roaming the streets in pairs. Desert creatures scurried around in the dirt, back and forth, chasing and escaping each other. An airplane flew by overhead, thundering through the black sky. Come to think of it, it was forest-like, and laying there, in the center of it all, I was strangely happy, which I felt more as a lack of worry, as if emergency, once you get to know it, can become comfort, which means, it becomes a lot like ritual. Which made me think of my mother: her birthday was in one week exactly. And if I called her, she’d remember all the cars we drove growing up—the Toyota that stalled at stoplights, the Ford that sputtered down the roads, the Nissan that overheated each day. And she’d remember all the places we lived in growing up—cramped, spare bedrooms; police-patrolled apartments; roach-infested houses. But I didn’t call her; remembering rather than reminiscing felt like enough for the night.
     One of my neighbors walked over to me in the parking lot. He was a short, stubble-faced, white guy—I’d never met him before. He asked if everything was okay, and I looked up and saw that I’d spilled the neon green coolant all over the ground.
     He must’ve thought I didn’t live there—with my frazzled hair, sweat-drenched clothes—or if I did, I shouldn’t. I told him that everything was okay, just overheating. He stood there, nodding for a few seconds. He looked at me suspicious. Okay, he said and headed to his car. I watched him walk away, his sandals flopping on the gravel, and I realized he had looked at me the same way I must’ve looked at the homeless man who rifles through our apartment dumpster every couple of days. I had stopped to watch him once, sitting in my car. I’d never stopped to really look at him—his leathery skin or the baseball cap he wore to cover his balding head. How every few minutes, he stopped to pull up his baggy, denim jeans. But the one I did, I noticed that he didn’t look through each bag entirely. He looked through each quickly, sifting through the trash with his hands. He had the look of someone lost or, the more I think about it, someone who had lost something. He reminded me of another homeless man I used to pass by on my way to work in Orlando years ago. My job was downtown and he stood at the same intersection in Little Vietnam every day at 5pm. He didn’t carry any signage. And when he smiled to say, thank you, you saw his missing teeth. Sometimes he’d wander too far into the road when the light was red—walking from car to car, jogging over to the hands holding money out their windows—so that once it turned green, he’d look around lost, confused by where he was. I remember thinking this was funny until the funniness seemed to dissipate in the heat and traffic, and me and all the other cars would give him a little honk and he’d jump a bit, put his hand up to apologize. Rushing back to the sidewalk, he’d lay his hand gently on the hoods of people’s cars as if he needed them to balance himself. All this I thought about during my appointment and on my way to campus.
     The appointment was fine. The place was fine. I gave them my application, hoping they’d accept, and walked to campus. Once I made it to my office, I dug inside my bag for my keys, but I didn’t hear them jingling. I emptied it all out onto the floor, nothing. I slumped over, took a seat on the ground.
I walked out into the courtyard to retrace my steps. Then I heard someone call my name. When I looked up, I saw my friend waving from across the courtyard.
     It was mid-day by then, hot enough to only talk in short sentences. She told me she’d just seen some students doing a bottle rocket experiment. She thought it was adorable. It reminded her of high school. Then she asked me how I was. I told her that I’d lost my keys again. She frowned and said she hoped that I found them. I told her thanks and we said goodbye. A couple minutes later, as I walked down the sidewalk, it hit me that she looked strikingly like my ex-girlfriend. I turned around and looked down the sidewalk, expecting to see—I don’t know—someone. But I didn’t see anyone. So I kept walking—past the planetarium where a group of kids splashed around in tiny, inflatable pools under the trees, but I can’t say much else about them, something about the fact that they were kids made them more like background, more past, despite shouting and laughing, to what was happening now. Instead I kept thinking about my friend and how she was and wasn’t my ex-girlfriend. Both Irish. Both studied psychology. And I’d also met my ex in June four years ago. Though was it June? I couldn’t be sure now. But we had, I remember, gone to the same high school together, a fact we only realized years later, driving past it. Her father, who’d passed away, was a science teacher—he must’ve done bottle rocket experiments before too. I thought about this, sifting, remembering, and would’ve kept doing it if I didn’t run into my car. I stopped. I almost walked passed it. I almost didn’t see my keys lying there on the hood.
     I’d found them, but they didn’t look lost. They looked more as if they’d been laid down gently, confidently forgotten, as if disposition, eventually—standing on the curb, relieved and sweating, amused and annoyed—is enough to be all that matters. Who’s asking when I say, maybe one day holds all of our days?

—Emilio Carrero


Emilio Carrero is a writer from Orlando, FL. He is a MFA candidate in creative writing at the University of Arizona and is the editor in chief for Sonora Review. He is currently working on a memoir.





SHAMAE BUDD

I wake to the sound of our rust-colored dog whining outside the bedroom door, ready to be let out. I release her from her wire crate; she follows me into the bedroom and leaps out the window as I slide it open. We live in my husband’s sister’s basement, and letting our dog leap through the window is easier than putting on clothes and walking upstairs to use the back door.
     I return to bed. My husband touches my shoulder—a groggy good morning—and rolls over. I reach for my phone and open a game I recently downloaded, selecting an outfit for an unrealistically skinny avatar: silky white blouse, jean jacket, short-shorts, tall brown boots. When I look up the dog is standing at the window, waiting to be let back in. I pull on sweats and a t-shirt, open the window, scratch behind her ears.
     I spend the rest of the morning making Mexican brownies for a couple of neighbor ladies I’m supposed to visit for church. My husband is tinkering with his tools and a little hunk of wood. The basement smells of cinnamon and chili powder and dark chocolate and walnut.
     As I pull the brownies from the oven, my sister-in-law knocks on the basement door and says it’s nearly time to leave. Her little sister—my husband’s little sister—has been staying for several weeks in a treatment facility for women with eating disorders. We’ve been attending informational sessions once or twice a month—we know so little about this addiction. Sometimes she wants to get better, she tells us. Other times, not so much.
     I dig one of the brownies from the pan in lieu of breakfast and rush out the door to attend today’s nutrition class. The irony doesn’t strike me till later.
     We check in at the front desk, sign a form agreeing not to smuggle contraband items, such as shoelaces and cell phones, into the facility. We wear name tags that say “family.” We laugh nervously when we pass the table with refreshments—raspberry danishes and brownies and apples and water—because we aren't sure whether these are for us, or for the patients. We don't eat anything, just in case. During the class, they give us tiny straws and ask us to breathe through them. “It feels like you can’t get enough air,” she says, “but actually, you can. Restricting anything just increases our desire for it.”
     Back home, I plate the brownies. As I cover the plates in Saran Wrap, I consider briefly the possibility that one of these women might have an eating disorder, in which case she will likely not appreciate the brownies. The Saran Wrap isn’t clinging properly—it flaps loosely at the edges of the paper plates.
     The first woman doesn’t answer—I leave one of the plates on her doorstep. The second woman, spritely and black-haired and wearing a bathing suit and a black knit jumper, ushers me through her living room and into her backyard, where I discover I have interrupted a summer pool-party. The women in deck chairs ask polite questions about my schooling and yell intermittently at their children—”Jackson, do NOT push your brother into the pool!”—and my eyes begin to twitch from squinting into the sun. The brownies remain on the marble countertop, untouched.
     In the evening, my husband and I go to the grocery store for eggs and milk and my favorite coffee substitute, and make small talk with the cashier. At home, we slice cucumbers and leave them to soak in pickling brine. My husband submits job applications and I proofread his latest networking emails. We clean the bathroom. We watch television.
     We walk the dog—stopping to admire a velvet soft black rabbit and a small black cow, who watches us back intently. The dog tries to catch tiny grasshoppers in the grass, and the clouds above the mountains to the west are peach and pastel yellow and robin-egg blue.
     When I undress for bed in front of the full-length mirror in our bathroom, I frown—my stomach seems so much softer and looser than it did a year ago. I say I feel fat. (I know I am not.) My husband says I am beautiful, and looks cross. He says we ought to get rid of the mirror. I bite my lip, staring a little longer, and then turn the mirror to face the wall. It’s very strange to look in the direction of the mirror and see nothing—to be inside my body, instead of looking at it. To see only blank cardboard backing and wood and wire.
     In bed, I resist the urge to play the new game on my phone and read Gone with the Wind instead. I kiss my husband goodnight, and turn out the light.

—Shamae Budd

Shamae received her MFA from BYU this spring. Her essays have appeared in Hippocampus Magazine, Bird’s Thumb, and Prairie Margins. She lives with her husband, their pet hedgehog, and a very rambunctious poodle. 





DANIEL JUCKES

I remember the pinprick of sound which woke me on the morning of June 21, 2018—the first chords of ‘What I Thought of You’ by Holly Throsby, a song which never ages more than a few bars before I cut it off (a song which I have, perhaps, forgotten the ending of). The keyboard clunks that Throsby plays each morning are followed swiftly by a brief sense of everything. And then I notice that the shower is on—I did not hear Melissa wake. The room is cold. It is an ordinary coldness, in no way biting, and in keeping with the kind of coldness I am used to.
     Before ‘What I Thought of You’ can play again I take my phone from where it sits beside my head and do what is by now normal, even though the World Cup is just a few days old and I am sure that I am done with Harry Potter: Hogwarts Mystery (I am not). Three 1-0 wins and a few minutes resisting the urge to make a micro-purchase (the one reason I tell myself I have kept up this game is to resist that urge. But there is a grim kind of glee in that resistance: the game works by making you wait, but each event of waiting can be lessened if a button is clicked and gems are secured for a fee). This is the early extent of consciousness. Then I spend an hour in bed. I check the following: gmail, messenger, whatsapp, snapchat, goodreads. I have managed to go without facebook and youtube for weeks but that—they—still gnaw a little, and so perhaps kinds of resistance are built more into this day than I realise.
     Of course, this is all some kind of resistance. 
     I read the news (the football, and the books page anyway) and do not turn on the light. I am in the shower at 7, and hear the car in the garage start after the door rolls and squeaks its way around and up as I turn on the tap. Those events are not connected.
     I drive to the train station, park, top up my SmartRider and catch the train. I read the poems of a woman in the news for the books her daughters had written about all the things that happened to them. I sit next to a boy playing a game on his phone which includes the use of a loud and stuttering pixeled machine gun. I get off the train, catch the bus, realise I have waited long enough to accrue more energy in Harry Potter: Hogwarts Mystery, and do enough to complete Chapter 1 of my fourth year at Hogwarts. My brother, Jacob, is still lost and I have not worked out yet how to locate each of the secret vaults; it might take time (or money). I begin the next chapter. The sling through which I hook my hand while standing on the bus creaks in the kind of way I was hoping things might creak on the day I’d planned to record the way things creaked or crunched or moved.
     When I get to campus I walk to my desk on the path I have been able to ascertain takes a minimum three minutes less than the one most people take—they stay on the bus longer. Breath is visible until I make it to my office. I open my computer, cheat the crossword, and answer emails; I write a storyboard for a project I am more than a little unsuited to, and I practice a lecture aimed at teenagers designed to convince them to consider how they might incorporate a deeper sense of purpose in their writing. I learn Bombarda, an exploding charm, over three hours: the game needs you to return to it, and tap on the screen until accreted time (energy) is spent. I panic about the lecture, and procrastinate because of that, flicking through theGuardian’s football page and the AFL app. I go to the toilet, eat lunch, and fall asleep.
     On the bus home I try to listen to the Guardian’s football podcast but as we set off the driver shouts down the length of the bus—I hear him through my headphones—that he is not so sure about the Eagles’ chances. He shouts it again, and so I agree with him—Darling and Kennedy are big losses—and then he and I and a man with a beard who sits behind me talk about footballs and the NBN and Exmouth and whale sharks and fishing in the Abrolhos Islands, where the Batavia sunk in 1629 and where Jeronimus Cornelisz conducted a bloody mutiny. The driver almost misses a stop.
     At home I sleep for a while on the couch in the bottom room, where the sun comes through in the winter time, and when I wake up my fingers are stiff and my back aches and the crows are out and calling. I remember they were there in the morning but that I didn’t note it down. I practice my lecture again but do not get further than the first two slides. Mum calls then, while I am listening to Max Richter, and she asks what the music is which she can hear through the phone, and I say ‘Mrs Dalloway: In the Garden’. Then I fiddle with my lecture slides, add animations, and go to the physio. He asks about the book I am carrying—Let Us Now Praise Famous Men—and he does not think he needs to work on me that evening. I am relieved.
     On the way home, as I leave the surgery, I check the spot in which I parked my car for coolant leaking from the thermostat. There is a small, green circle—I need to refill the reservoir. Then I drive to Chicken Treat and buy chips which I eat in the car on the driveway before I go inside my house—we are having a hot kind of salad for dinner and I am not convinced by that. Mel goes to Speed Fit. I gain enough stars to unlock the lesson which allows me to learn Ferula, a healing charm, as long as I wait two hours 59 minutes, and I watch the Eagles go goalless to quarter time on the television, and the World Cup—Australia play Denmark—plays on my phone at the same time. Melissa comes home, we sit together, the Eagles lose, Australia draw, and I learn Ferula before I set my alarm and turn off the light.

Daniel Juckes

Daniel Juckes recently completed a PhD at Curtin University, in Western Australia. He is currently working through Chapter 6 of Year 4 in Harry Potter: Hogwarts Mystery.





SHENLIN FANG

I opened my eyes, then I closed them try to sleep another hour. Then I suddenly jumped up and grabbed my phone saw what time it was, I realized it already 9:20. I was lying on my bed around five minutes, thinking about continue sleep or get up. Finally, I choose a middle solution, I sat on my bed and sliding my phone. I didn’t find anything interesting in news, then I literally get up. The first thing after I got up is opened my laptop and check if the WIFI still work, without any surprise, WIFI still dead. I couldn’t just abandon, so what I did is disconnect, connect, “No Internet, Secured.” Then I tried again. It just not work, thus I went to my roommate’s room, it’s the place I placed router. I checked router, looks nothing wrong. Just like what I did in last two days, I plugged out then plugged in. I came back to my room, sat in front of my laptop, I stared at that “connecting”, after thirty seconds, “No internet, Secured”. Three words under my WIFI’s name declare I need go to library to do my homework. I decided eat my breakfast first, that’s also important.
     I opened refrigerator, took out the milk, then I smelled milk carefully, I already stored it for four days, I don’t want drink anything expired. When I saw breads, I remembered I threw them on the desk for few days. So I not even check breads still good or not, I ignored them. I will throw them this evening, that’s what I was thinking, same as yesterday. I still have some protein energy bar, well, they are my breakfast. I brought milk and bar back to my room, I like watch something when I eating breakfast. I hesitated between books and laptop, then I choose laptop. There are actually no difference with book and laptop, one is on the desk, another probably are somewhere near my bed; the point is they both are using on academic way. The book should be harder, “Success from Scratch”, doesn’t sounds fit to read when I still not very conscious. At the same moment I opened chrome, I noticed I didn’t even have a working WIFI. But nothing can trouble a person don’t want be sharp at the beginning of a day, I took out my phone and continue watched the anime I didn’t finished last night.
 When I was watching my phone, my phone noticed me I got a message from google email. I thought that’s probably something on Facebook. I clicked that message it is from Facebook, and I also found something. I read the email from my ENGL class instructor. I didn’t read that before because I felt there are too many words. I was glad I read that at morning, or I will definitely forgot I have a 1500 words essay need to write. I almost want start wrote, I even opened the Word document. How could I write what happened in today in the morning?
     Breakfast was finished in ten minutes, I really don’t want eat any energy bar anymore, tastes bad. What could I do without laptop? I looking for my book for a while, I can barely remember where I put it last night. Finally I found it near the bad, when I picked up my book, I lost my pencil, I always use pencil as bookmark. The lucky thing is I did underline and note when I read a book, so I know where I read last night. I kept reading the book, but it’s not novel or interesting one, so I felt boring. I knew this is a self-improve book, so I forced myself continue read. When I read this book, I remembered the time I studying math, I don’t like ant part of it but it really helps me in my career. The book is really good, it teach readers understand the self-value and make an improve plan, I learned a lot from this book, although there are no funny stories in it, I still will finish the book. I am not a focus person, I can only reading like thirty minutes. So with half an hour, I finished exactly a chapter. When I put the book back to shelf, I saw all the books I read since I came to America, I felt satisfied. I almost finished the book, so I was searching some books in Amazon, I really interested a book about the Blockchain, an important concept and technology in nowadays. Fifty eight dollars, I considered about the value, then I noticed a lazy person like me should finished the books I had right now. If I start reading two books at different time, the first one can hardly finished, because sometimes just forget or hard to focus on both at the same time. What I did is marked the book. Probably next time I buy this book is few months later.
     Around 12:00 am, I found two pieces of chicken breast in the refrigerator. I probably bought them two days ago, so I can still eat. I looked for cooked some fired chicken, but I thought it may cost me more than an hour to prepare. So I just simply cooked them with soy source, and they were taste good. I also did baked potato, however the oven seems has some issue, so the potato still half raw after forty minutes baking. I was so hungry, I put potato in the microwave oven solved that potato, I don’t have any mood waste on that potato. Six minutes later, the potato still not like what I expected, but whatever it’s cooked. I felt like a pretty enjoyed that meal, although I always not enjoy wish the dishes. Because I used soy source, I smelt like soy source, hair, clothes and I don’t know everything smelt like soy source. I saw vent fan, I knew I forgot something, every time I just can’t remember turn on the vent fan. Never mind, one of the reason I don’t like wash dish is I don’t like oil, but I cooked chicken breast, there is enough oil to make me feel uncomfortable. I do like fried food, and I have a bit of neat freak, so whatever chopsticks or disposable gloves, I try all the ways keep my hands from oil.
     My WIFI dead, and I must go to library to do my homework, I planned go to library around two o’clock. Before that, I need read books. The book about stock for beginner, it can help anyone get sleep. I took out my note book, and with a deep breath I started reading. I prefer use pencil, it’s easy to remove the handwriting, another thing is l also like sharpening pencil. No reason, just like do it. I bought a auto-pencil sharpener, I really like that one. When I wrote down few sentences I use pencil sharpener once. I pretty enjoy the noise from my pencil sharpener, I think I like things be sharped. And the book, there are many picture on the book, so when I wrote note, I have to draw the pictures again. It’s annoying, but it worth.
     In the library, not many people. I sat down before one of the computer, I waved the mouse, nothing on the screen. Then I did the same thing to the next one, still no responds. These computers closed? Or not allowed use in today? When I was thinking those questions, the third one worked. Without any hesitate, I read the require of that 1500 words essay. It looks not need prepare too much, I still felt a little hard to write a long essay just record what happened in today. I wrote around eight hundred words then I stopped. I can’t think one more word, and I left the library. I felt hungry at four, too early to the dinner. I went to the market of university, looked around, finally bought a cup of coffee and some snacks. Time to go home, I can come to library later finish my essay.
     I kept thinking about my essay, after I got home, I checked my internet if work at the same time. Obviously, it didn’t. I can’t just suffer anymore, so I use my phone googled how to solve the problem. I still could using data to search on the internet, but with limited plan, each 1 MB is an expensive cost. I saw many familiar pages, those all I had tried. This time I opened a short video, it offers a way I never heard before. I repeated everything on the video, tried another time, I didn’t even have any hope. But this time it worked. I was so excited, I jumped around in my room. When I calm down, I started doing some TOFEL practices, I need a good score to apply business school. Usually absolutely will play games, before the few days of test, I don’t have any mood play games. The result still not good enough, I became anxiety, so I turn off the laptop and laid on the bed. I closed my eyes, and jumped up, still have work need to do.
     The first time I went to Walmart at eight pm, I never thought there still many people. I planned buy some food, I am in short of food. I was picking meat for a long time, consider of my budget, I chose pork. Pork are the most cheapest thing I can find in the Walmart. I walked around in the Walmart, I rare walking around in the store, today I just want relax. I think I like stay with people when I tired, I like listening others talking and laughing, their happiness can easily effecting me. In the an hour walking, I didn’t find anything I really need, although I pretty want the juicer, but I don’t want waste money. After the shopping, I ordered some food and sat in a restaurant. Just during sitting there, I saw many families, couples and good friends sat around me, suddenly I felt upset and left as soon as possible. It’s hard to explain, but when I keep working with stress and without any friends or family members around me, I sometimes suddenly felt overwhelmed.
     When I came back to home it’s already ten o’clock. And I can’t forget I still have another seven hundred words need to go. I opened my laptop and continue do the work, the sooner I finished the sooner I can sleep. This is probably what happened before I sleep, and I don’t like anything happen when I sleep.

—ShenLin Fang





TIMOTHY BERG

I’m keeping my head above icy water this morning, literally. Hundreds of feet above the water, to be more precise, floating in a bed on a cruise ship in Glacier Bay National Park, Alaska. This is not my typical day. No classes to teach, no emails to check, no errands to run. I’ll not prepare any meals for myself or my kids. No dishes to do. It’s a day of sitting and looking. Looking at icy water and glaciers. They appear at irregular intervals off the deck of my cabin. Later, I go up on the top deck to watch one. Everyone is hoping the glacier will calve, the moment when a large chunk of ice breaks off and falls into the water. We want the spectacle. When it does people cheer. I don’t know whether to be delighted or saddened. Yes, it’s part of the natural process of glaciers: new ice higher up the mountain pushes the old ice into the sea. But we’ve been reminded this morning that the glaciers used to be much farther down the bay than they are now. So cheering the glacier’s calving feels like we’re cheering for global warming. Even right in front of us it feels remote, though. A visual spectacle “over there”, not happening “here,” framed by my cabin balcony. Drawn by the spectacle I try to ignore what’s made my seeing it possible.
     Before getting on this boat I spent two days in Vancouver, Canada. I felt a sense of relief being out of the United States where I live. When asked where I was from I was honest, but then felt the need to apologize, saying, “No, I didn’t vote for him,” repeatedly. In addition to Vancouver’s charms, what I most relished was the distance, short as it was, between me and the United States. I relished being in a country that isn’t a bully, in a country with sane, reasonable leadership, in a country where school shootings aren’t commonplace and the 2nd Amendment doesn’t exist. The problems I’d left behind in the U.S. were “over there”, not “here.” Somehow, crossing that border made my feelings of helplessness in the face of so much awfulness in the U.S. somewhat more bearable. I know the distance is an illusion but it’s one I need desperately right now.
     Today though, in Glacier Bay, I’m back in the United States, floating over icy waters watching a slow catastrophe. It’s breathtakingly beautiful. It doesn’t feel like a catastrophe. The spectacle is carefully protected from most thoughts of what makes it possible. My in-laws like to take cruises and bring us along. It’s not something I’d choose to do but it’s hard to say no to the invitation. So I’ve not paid to be here. As much as I enjoy the beauty of the water and mountains and glaciers, that enjoyment is made possible by work and processes that are carefully hidden from me. The hundreds of laborers from poorer parts of the world fixing my food, cleaning my cabin, they’re not enjoying this beautiful place with their families. We’re friendly and acknowledge each other, but no one is unaware of the distance between us. The smoke from the ship’s engines polluting the air, helping to make the glaciers calve for my visual enjoyment, is not something I’m supposed to worry about today. But I feel my privilege every moment, and it’s an uneasy one, as it should be. I don’t think that’s a widely-held sentiment on this boat. The passengers have worked hard and saved their money for this vacation, so why shouldn’t they enjoy it? My cruise ship life today makes explicit the kind of privilege I have every day, the costs of which are largely hidden from me. And hiding the costs has long been a major benefit of privilege.
     So today has been a day of floating on sublime beauty tempered with thoughts of what makes my being here to see it possible. So today I float, helpless as usual, reflecting on the costs of beauty, of privilege, and on the proximity between beauty and disaster.

—Timothy Berg

Timothy Berg is a teacher and artist. He lives in Muncie, Indiana where he teaches humanities in the Honors College at Ball State University.





JENNIE B. ZIEGLER

1/ One o’clock in the morning. 

I’m awake, awake, awake, and porchlight glows are seeking the cracks in the blinds of our bedroom. I lift my hair onto the pillow—I can’t bare it to touch me when I try to sleep and it settles into place, a thick tongue above my head. I’ve given up on the “if I fall asleep by x then I’ll get y amount of hours” game. My body tries to cool itself on top of sheets and blankets—in the dead of summer my husband is always cold—there he is, in the dark, to the left. Sometimes he’ll wake and reel back if I’m looking at him. I try to picture what he sees: the imagined mirror—the whites of my eyes dim echoes of used daylight.
     A reverse Sleeping Beauty situation: insomnia caused by jetlag, by outpacing time.
     My heart is drumming and starting like a bad engine, stuttering and murmuring to me. My doctor said to switch positions and so I do, rolling over and over like a snake in the grass. A Midgard serpent swallowing her tail and story.
     Perrault wrote that Sleeping Beauty gives birth to Aurore and Jour. Dawn and Day.
     And it is Nótt who sweeps in the night by chariot, this woman of dreams, and her son, personified day, behind her, solemn as sun.


2/ Two hands grasping for the phone, the light, the sheets. 

Sleep must have caught me, swept me by, a pestle grounding my thoughts quiet.
     I decline dressing in the small dawn for the gym, decline to pull spandex and cotton over foot, calf, thigh. Uniform to disguise sweat and skin. I decline running to my car with a hanger or box cutter or screwdriver, ears trained for sound—any at all.
     I leave trails of footprints filled with fear.
     As any woman does when recognizing forest.


3/ Three.

My husband, awake now, stands to hug me. I lean in to this ritual, noting with relief that he will be the only one who will touch me today. People’s hands find my skin and hair and face and shoulder. Their arms fold around my body in hugs long and short, bones constricting lungs, wrinkling blazers and hairdos. My skin constantly aches.
     Today, my feet on twenty-year-old beige carpet. Into the living room. Into the office. Into the bedroom. The news is shivering and blinking and scrolling on a screen made for fingertips. I touch it like it’s dust.
     Three Norns: of before, of now, of becoming
     Three Tells: the virgin, the mother, the crone
     We watch Diana fill the moon’s lamp oil each month. That soft light erases wrinkles while scooping the shadows back into our eyes.
     Angrboda, mother of wolf and serpent and Hel: a mother of monster and death. Of mountain and sea and below.
     Hel: a daughter with a pearl for an eye and exposed teeth.
     Teeth cannot smile.
     These women gather me, my bones, the chords of voice.
     They slide into my ears, wrap me in apple skin.


4/ Thor’s day, here, a Thursday in summer.  

I slip in earrings of silver hammers, upturned crosses with stubbed handles. A month ago, the Eyrarland Statue, small and brass-bright, sat before me in Reykjavik. I bought a copy of it at the airport a week later and unwrapped it, three weeks later, and leave it on our kitchen counter. A statue or game piece, the English translation read. Christ or Thor.
     I think of him, this red-bearded shaker of mountains, and of his laughter, heavy as rain, and touch the silvered thread darted through my ears.


5/ Tomorrow, Friday, Frigg’s day, the fifth day. 

Iceland slid in like shadow, like snow into boots.
     I feel it, still, a layer of ash, shifting under my nails, eyelids, teeth.
     Did you know: Frigg, the queen of the gods, was a mother. She carried falcon feathers with her to cover skin and take flight.
     I stare at my stomach in the shower, flat with the results of trying to carve, sculpt, and chisel muscle back into them.
     They press their elbows to my ribs, these aunties and cousins and in-laws, lighthouse eyes sweeping over my stomach, and point to my ankle, the one that goes crick crack crick crack up stairs. Bones tell of age. This is why my mother fed me so much milk, perhaps—not to stand tall, but to hold the Mothers at bay. To slow the ticking they would hear, that phantom, waiting below lung and liver and stomach and down down down.
     Let my stomach fill with milk instead of my breasts.


6/ June, the sixth month, named for Hera, lady of Rome. Watcher of women. 

Peacock plumage. Golden apples and fertile pomegranates, dark ruby seeds burst like blood vessels.
     She cursed Antigone by replacing her hair with serpents.
     And Sif, Thor’s wife, once woke to an empty scalp, deforested in the night by Loki, the grinning god.
     Thin bristles of brush drag over my skin. My hairdresser calls these strands virgin. Blonde is a state. Sexual and stupid, according to the justjoking. Laughing teeth. Rich or bored. Bottled up like magic. But my hair is brass. Not yellow or white or gold or liquid honey. It’s dull-lit and dark. Someone got this script wrong, I usually think, whenever I have a gown tight around my neck, watching my hair drip onto the floor like straw.
     This is not what I think this morning, though. You see—my hair is falling out. Perhaps from heat or stress or spell. I grab it into my hands and release it into the trash alongside the used Q-tips and tissues.


21/ Days since I’ve been home. 

The 21st day of June, a solstice summer, and we turn under the sun, a slow roast, with clouds of Swiss dots.
     I repeat the day count to myself—a reverse counting down. A reminder of daily life. A grief release. Once I forget to do this, I won’t wake up bleary and unfocused, hand searching for a stranger’s lamp. I’ll remember where I am—panic or confusion no longer scattering like pollen into my lungs. Iceland will be a well-kept secret hiding under my tongue. To speak of it is to share it is to give it away.
     And I am too greedy for that.
     Each morning I collect my bones and stand, washed with bright. The intrusiveness of day, curdled and high, a reminder of time getting away from me. Each morning thin glass separates our condo from the Floridian-crumpled heat. And each morning I slip on a promise hooped of gold, banded there, on the fourth finger. A single Draupnir. 
     Esjan. Hekla. Eyafjallajökull. Pack them tight into the spaces between my ribs.
     So, here, an account: Wake at seven, have two half-cups coffee, no milk, just black, and take eight steps to the bathroom. Shower for 12 minutes, shampoo twice, pick up razor eight times. Spend three hours at computer doing god knows what, take break at 11 to ask husband for lunch. Two hours slip by without notice or importance. Get up, knees cracking, and take seven steps to laundry, tripping once over leg of coffee table. Three loads will cycle through today: six hours of drying time since the dryer is old and rusted and not ours. Eat off two distinct plates from wedding: dark blue and porcelain white. Spend additional four hours babysitting computer, staring at course developments, essays, YouTube. Count the hours (five) until I should start feeling like I should start thinking about going to bed. Eat tacos and then spend three hours watching TV because its 2018 and there’s Netflix and we’re in Florida and it’s too hotmuggyhumiddangerous to go outside while there is a light next to the front door because have you seen the bugs and the armored rats and my husband is already asleep how nice it must be to do that anywhere what would that take to slip your conscious away like a drink gone warm.
     Also.
     I forget, at various moments, what day of the week it is. Laughter—real, belly-deep laughter—heaves in and out of my body like a cracking glacier. I ask my husband if he ever regrets having a Quaker wedding since we aren’t Quakers. My mother calls, at 6:30 on the dot, on her way home from work like she does most days on her hour-and-a-half commute across state lines. She used to do this with her own mother, before she passed, and now we create content for conversation in an otherwise very still relationship. I calculate the time difference between the East Coast and Florida and close my eyes, realizing they’re the same. I wonder if cholesterol has any link to sorrow: I convince myself I can physically feel both. A small flutter of anxiety at 11:43 p.m. makes me stand in front of my bathroom mirror, whispering you’reokayyou’reokayyou’reokay softly enough so that my husband, in bed on the other side of the thin door, either doesn’t hear or politely lets me cast this alone. Shivering elbows flush close to my body and I run fingertips over the hives erupting across my wrists. No feathers or sealskin there. Ice skin and purple veins. I don’t step outside. I step over thresholds—never on. I close the blinds. I stretch my feet and wiggle the left one, hoping to gain muscle there. I feel my heart slur and jump and knot its beats wrongly: a swallowed song, a murmur, or something else. Another day declining to call anyone about anything.
     Years have passed this way.
     My lungs, twin buried ships with their breath of ghosts.
     Volcanic stones weigh my pockets as I sink into sheets.

—Jennie B. Ziegler

Jennie B. Ziegler teaches and writes in the Southeast, and is an Associate Editor of Dying Dahlia Review. Find her at jennieziegler.com or @InTheFourteenth.





DORIAN ROLSTON

Forever: A Day

Roofers vs. Roaches

On June 21, 2018, a Thursday, I awake around 4 AM with a start. Actually, Ginger does, as she sleeps in the same room as me, and whatever must’ve startled her to wrench her neck around, causing her collar tags to chime like an alarm, by extension startles me too—cockroach, is my first thought upon waking.
     I hate cockroaches, though not for any implication of their presence (a question of cleanliness), nor for any fear of what they might do upon a closer encounter (bite, burrow, inject some nerve agent—I don’t know, I’ve only seen the relevant sci-fi during my most formative years and can no longer shake those nightmarish impressions). No, with me it’s far more visceral, a yucky, goosebumpy feeling that ripples through me at the merest sight of one: roach.
     But there’s none to be found.
     Which, to be sure, can be even worse. If a roach seen makes me sick, a roach unseen throws me into full-fledged panic, and so it was that in the pre-dawn bedroom light I begin frantically searching the covers and my back and neck and beneath the bed and Ginger’s and up the wall and behind the curtains and the side tables...until moving on to the next room, and finally, the only way I know how to get back to sleep in such a state, finding the deep exhaustion I’d—really—been looking for.
     (By the way, it wasn’t wholly irrational for me to work up such a fit. I’d spotted one, a big brown juicy sucker, just days earlier, pulsing near the ceiling, and luckily had had the presence of mind to retrieve my usual implements: Windex and tennis racquet. And then again, maybe only the night before, what sounded like a tennis ball thunked against the window had turned out to be...well, so there ya go.)
     And so, roachless, curled back into sleep, man and his dog spring awake again only moments later, when the roofers arrive to start their day at five.
     I don’t hate roofers. I hate the guilt they make me feel, for cursing them—I’m trying to sleep, I whine to myself, only to remember that their disruption is the start of the workday, a day of work under the blazing sun (and closer to it, unshaded from it) that after all aims to improve my very living conditions, in which I get my precious 6-8. And perhaps for that derivative hatred, I’d peg them one worse on the Roofers vs. Roaches score. But in the end my visceral reaction to them is quite different than to the Kafkaesque insectoid: I don’t feel nauseous, rippled-through, my body threatening to morph...
     Or at least it is on this day I’m choosing to remember, attention having that funny effect of casting all in a kind of shimmer, where it’s perhaps the worst, most grating irritations, those sharpest edges of the day, giving off—as diamonds do?—the most light...but I’m getting ahead of myself.
     So: 6:00 AM, I snooze my alarm.
     7:00 AM, I finally get up, and check my email in bed to make sure I haven’t just slept through a morning meeting.
     Ah, morning meetings. I moonlight as an ad man for a company on the east coast, making the oddjob moniker (given the time difference) oddly appropriate—which, again, I kind of hate. When they schedule our Zoom call for their 10:30, figuring they’ll be long on their second cup of coffee by then and humming away into the day, I quietly resent them, knowing full well that I’m not the kind of person—as perhaps they suspect me to be, as perhaps some of them indeed are—to take full advantage of laggy online videoconferencing, namely by appearing still bleary-eyed and slovenly, maybe sans pants.
     But, no meeting, and it’s around this time (7:06 AM to be precise) that I decide to start taking notes on the day. Remembering something about the “cockroach,” I have here scrawled. Some moment in the middle of the night I promised myself not to forget.


The Deep

I’m not the kind of person who keeps a diary, a bit self-involved (ha—go figure, given this entire essay about me and my day), though I do take particular pleasure in a well-honed daily routine and in general love a day’s dailiness. For instance, I meditate every morning, and on the day in question I note as much (at 7:22 AM): sat down for meditation. Perhaps, looking back, this is a little self-negating.
     But, if my attention isn’t swallowing itself in trying not to think about thinking (and taking note as I do), I like to think I can be pretty attentive to what’s around me. At least, the moments I am attentive stand out in my mind as special, even transfiguring: those aforementioned roofers, banging away at my skull, so bad I can longer tell whether I trekked the dust into the closet or it rained all morning from the ceiling, suddenly become, post-Zen, like astronauts. Indeed, so confident am I of the moment’s indelible burn that I take no notes beyond that, and can recount it to you now entirely from memory:
     I’m sitting, cross-legged, on my stack of pincushions (I really need to buy a proper zabuton, but every time I remind myself I also think how Zen it is to seek enlightenment in this jankiest way, and how we’re all—at least in this tradition—enlightened anyway). Eyes lowered, facing my French doors. The morning light is pale, falling softly on the patio, and a light breeze stirs the wind chimes. The tree’s shadows ripple over the adobe, like deep, wind-swept grooves in sand. Not just atmosphere, but one in particular befitting the desert solitary on spiritual pilgrimage—at least until one and then another mysterious white figure, swathed head-to-toe in white, with wet white face scarf, white wide-brimmed hat, crosses the window. And in that moment, jarring to be sure, whatever annoyance I’m feeling morphs into something like: awe. How can this be, I think to my formerly irritable self, that I’m on this spaceship and out my porthole my fellow astronauts float about, readying me for warp speed into the deep!
     And then I remember I’m just sitting there in my underwear, and they can of course see me too.
     And then I decided to put on a fresh camp shirt, I note, not without a hint of pride.


The Kid/Dog Question

Out the door by 7:51, with Ginger tight on the leash to avoid all the construction hazards around us in the yard, we do one of those you-go-I-go dances with a construction guy wielding a huge metal panel and then find our way to the street. I feel really bad about getting in that guy’s way, as the division of labor between us is pretty stark: while I groan about having to walk the dog, and it’s so hot already, he’s lugging sheet metal that’s too hot to touch without gloves and glints like a flashbulb in his face, probably temporarily blinding him to how inconsiderate and spoiled I really am.
     “Sorry!” he yells out, as we stomp past.
     I’m usually pretty bleary-eyed and unconscious on this morning walk with Ginger, no coffee in me yet, while she’s ravenous for the world. At every street corner she seems to catch a scent that just drives her wild, as if it’s not the same damn dogs peeing on the same damn streetlamp every damn day. Every once in a while she’s able to arrest me with that proverbial stop-and-smell-the-roses feeling, nose-deep in some scraggly cactus bush, and I’m given to thoughts about the miracle of this hidden language she’s reading and...then it gets kind of annoying.
     Is that terrible—to be annoyed by the innocent curiosity of your pup? Is it not rather that I’m annoyed with myself, for somehow forgetting this kind of curiosity, neglecting my one superpower to make life interesting, endlessly? Are these very questions themselves annoying?
     On the walk we encounter a couple kids, both boys about seven or eight. They give us a look like they really wanna meet Ginger, their faces flushed with amazement, and so up we go to their little perch on a stonewall at the end of their yard, where they sit, kicking their legs. “Can I pet your dog?” one asks. “Sure,” I answer, thinking that I ought to reinforce the good job asking the question in the first place (kids who just reach for Gins scare the bejeebers out of me, never really knowing what a startled dog’s capable of, and perhaps still somewhat traumatized from getting myself bitten, putting my hand where it didn’t belong). So one gives her some cutely deliberate pats on the back, while the other watches somewhat guardedly, before piping up by way of participation to ask her name. I tell them.
     “She’s like gingerbread!” Aw, kids.
     It’s probably worth pausing—my roses—to offer some commentary on the kid/dog question: Are they one and the same? I mean, I’d never before compared Ginger to gingerbread, and indeed her coat’s just like that, cinnamony and sweet, and so in the same way the dog suddenly sharpens my focus on something I’d longsince let recede to the background, the kids do too—cause me a fresh look. Alright, alright: cue the Foreigner (And it feels like the first time...).
     But then it’s also the case that kids are nothing like dogs, and anyone who tells you their canine is training wheels for the saggy-diaper biped is just nuts. I know for a fact, now, finally able to admit this to myself at all of thirty-one, that I’m nowhere near ready for kids, and there’s nothing I relish more than after a long day at work (especially at the summer camp, where it’s kids galore, feeling like I’m subliminally raising them as on the surface all I’m saying pertains to beginner-to-intermediate tennis technique, “Follow through,” “Prepare earlier,” “Chin up,” etc.) coming home and—sitting down, tugging my socks off, sighing in silence. In these moments of nearly orgasmic relief, Ginger will often come up to greet me, wagging her tail and offering my wrinkly white feet a sniff.
     A kid would just need something.
     Or, to put it another way: a kid would always need something. Unlike a dog, needing no schooling (relatively) and able to be left alone for hours on end, tended to only at select and regularly scheduled intervals for pooping and doggy park play, whatever can be stomached in the way of dog owner guilt basically dictating the level of care, from a kid’s need there is—there seems—no escape. I don’t know what I’d do without the place to myself at the end of the day. Maybe this makes me an ineligible bachelor.
     Definitely a writer: the sadness of this profession is that a writer can do on the page exactly what, and to the extent that, they cannot in life. It’s what we’re missing that we write! (Or, even worse, sometimes what we don’t know we’re missing that we unconsciously write.) In any case, the words are born of lived deficiency; c’est la vie.


Summer Anthem

Then I’m in the car (air unconditioned, windows unrolled) on the way to work, ready with my tennis racquet to greet them—indeed, the kids, now it occurs to me, much as I do the roaches. I’m not sure what this means; perhaps it says something about being repelled by them, try as I might feeding ball after ball to somehow swat them off; perhaps it’s really that part of myself, that part that’s not ready for them, not a father, I’m trying to bat away; perhaps it’s none of these, and the monotony of a million fuzzy yellows, plunked—like old pennies into a wishing well—against my strings, just induces a kind of hypnosis, transporting me elsewhere...In any case!
     It’s about—no, exactly 8:49 at this point, 89 degrees climbing to 106. And I’m just jamming out to this tune, thick with synth keys and Auto-Tuned easy vocals (Never been one like you, I keep on fallin, etc.), snappy electric drums to keep me boppin along...when it occurs to me, This is my summer anthem! Ever get that feeling, where you just know something’s got you hooked, so cheesy-catchy but also so right? Well, that was me with a band called Liquid Summer on my way to work that morning.
     The song’s called—indeed—“One Like You,” and it took me about half an hour of searching to find online (a paltry 472 views on YouTube). When I found it, later that same day, I played it on loop, literally plugged the URL into a YouTube looper, while I showered and then shaved and then, as if possessed, danced around my living room, so happy was I to have found one like you—i.e., this song. This song, which it’s no easier to articulate my love for it than for any you, so mysterious is that resonance that draws us near. This song, with jaunty chords splashing something languid, like kids playing in a pool.
     This song, which I’m now listening to as I write, not a week later: and hate.
     It’s so bad! I can’t even like it ironically or whatever. Can’t even, really, be bothered to tell you why I hate it so much, but I do. It’s irrational, maybe, but definitely having something to do with the fact of its winning me over so quickly and passionately, only to be thoroughly disappointed later, upon closer, calmer inspection. It’s not fair to turn on a song when really I’m just mourning the death of some part of myself, but so I’ve done: Fuck you, Liquid Summer.


Hey, Coach

So long...but not quite yet. We’re still careening into the parking lot of the Tucson Racquet Club with a giddy smile and bouncin in the driver’s seat. Oh, that could be what it is too: trying to work myself up for the day, get into character, a kind of pep talk for being peppy: Hey, Coach.
     But I swear I don’t, or shouldn’t, need it. These kids are an absolute delight, and no sooner do I step on court than I am immediately melted—in part from the sun, to be sure, which radiates what feels like double the heat off the asphalt, but mostly from the kids, who’re out there too, sweltering and all, havin a good time.
     For instance, one, a little girl all of eight, has taken to calling me Dorito. The other girls in earshot find this hilarious, and immediately pile on: “Dorito! Dorito!” They all want to know what flavor I am, and of course it’s an uncomfortable matter of speculation, not least because now my character is under scrutiny, and it’s not just a game with a name. “Lime?” I offer, meekly, hoping to cool the group-think a bit and just get it over with. No, no, definitely not lime.
     “Cool Ranch!” one of them squeals. To which the initiator offers this objection, confirming my worst fears of a child’s uninhibited judgment, also known as truth: “Yeah but he’s not cool enough, and definitely not a real rancher.”
     By now the water break has gone on long enough, and I’m ready to feed a bottomless cart of balls under the June sun, just to get out from under this, the far more intense, harsher spotlight of their juvenile appraisal. (Plus I worry about how it looks to parents, to have these kids out on the court, braving the heat with layers of SPF and construction-crew water bottles from Home Depot and untold sums of money for what the website promises as “the highest standards by which all other programs in the Southwest are measured,” only to be all giggles, in the shade, on a bench.) But the girls are not done.
     Now they want to know: If I were a card in a deck, what card would I be? And before I can answer, she does, the one with apparently a bright future in ad copy: “I know! The Joker—the one nobody wants to play with.”
     It’s around this point that one of them spots a cricket hopping about and, perhaps accidentally, with the edge of the racquet decapitates it.


How Do I Look?

Back in the car, this being my 2000 Saturn I call the Chameleon (such is the green, shapeshifting), blazing down the highway to get to the outlet mall before closing—or nope, not yet, first stop Circle K.
     The work day done, I’m feeling pretty spent, and could really use a pick-me-up. I’ve also got the 5-gallon water jug I’ve been lugging around in the back of my filthy car, plastic probably melting (at least leaching its toxins into my ultra-purified water), to fill up at the water station, the last two Circle Ks I’d tried having had problems with theirs (one showing an out-of-order message, the other—the one where all the shoot-up druggies hang about—apparently so beyond repair nothing lights up at all). But I guess I’m acting pretty unconsciously again, especially for a day I’m supposed to be paying attention, and as I leave my jug to fill and enter the store I nearly knock over a rack of nuts.
     “And don’t let those shelves attack you on the way out,” says the cashier on my way out.
     It’s funny what other people notice about you. Jung has this great line I can’t get out of my head, which goes something like: We spend our whole lives trying to see in ourselves what a stranger can spot in a glance. I’m not sure whether that’s true, to that extent anyway, but there’s something to be said for the limits of attention, how even giving the day our mindfullest—notice, for once, the grooves on the bottom of the bar of soap, from resting on the rails of the shower rack—isn’t enough to catch ourselves in the act, and the bright beam never quite reflects back. How do I look?
     Back on the highway, can of yerba mate in one hand to wash down the bag of toasty almonds in the other (I swear I’m driving, must have a third hand), now I’m yelling in my car at the sight of the outlet mall, so exalted is it, towering like a cathedral off the exit ramp—when I notice the guy in the ruby Chevy next to me, noticing me, and smile.
     Perhaps he saw my Twitter from earlier, in response to @EssayingDaily’s call to pay attention to what happens to us:
And to what other people pay attention to: “Don’t let those shelves attack you on the way out,” said the @CircleKStores cashier to me (I had collided with the nut wrack earlier).
I mean rack. Jeez I’m oblivious today
Or is that just as [sic] amazingly Freudian slip?
So apparently wrack and rack have different origins—former from shipwreck, latter “stretch.” And yet there’s a ton of crossover, not to mention a ship’s being wrecked a way of perhaps stretching its contents throughout the ocean...
(No likes.)


For Sale: Wedding Shoes, Never Worn

So the whole thrust of this day is basically to get me to Tucson Premium Outlets in Marana before Saks closes at 6. Or so I believe it closes; now I check, I see it in fact closes at 9, and the only reason I can think of for my misinformation is that, having done the math from the date on the receipt, I realize—on June 21—that June 21 is indeed the last day within the 30-day window to return my new shoes, by Calvin Klein, and the shock of that realization creates such a sense of urgency as to totally fabricate store hours to confirm it, feed into it.
     But this is not interesting. (For sale: wedding shoes, never worn...but only because by the time I got them home and tried them on with my whole outfit, they didn’t fit, and otherwise the wedding was great.)
     Indeed, so uninteresting is this little bit of fortuitous planning that by the time I reach Saks, somewhat breathless, I find the cashier there seems to have been expecting me, and is not at all surprised. “Return?” she asks, and I stride up to the counter with my shoebox. “Yes—and would you believe it, today’s the last day!”
     To which she offers no response.


Forever

Now it’s just over a week later, and some things haven’t changed. Rod Stewart is still stuck in my tape deck, where I inserted him knowing full well the tape’d gotten plastic-warped in the heat and decided to risk it, thusly committing myself to radio-only pleasures in my Chameleon—then on the way home from the outlet mall, and now, for however many days, perhaps forever, thereafter.
     I find this particularly fitting (pun?), given that I got the tape because my mom chose “Forever Young” as our mother-son dance at my wedding (now divorced) some years ago, and I’d felt a little weird about it but nonetheless went along in full swing, gaining a surprising amount of momentum arm-in-arm with her, waltzing a kind of centrifugal force...the way perhaps our relationships with our mothers must necessarily be, a life of their own, powered as the existentialists suspected by existence preceding essence (who we are always playing catch up to what, to that).
     And so, in a way, I’m always playing my mother’s song, listening to Mom even when I don’t hear any music:
And when you finally fly away, I’ll be hoping that I served you well.
For all the wisdom of a lifetime, no one can ever tell.
But whatever road you choose, I’m right behind you—win or lose.
     (It’s funny, when I first heard this song, at her suggestion, I thought it was about her. I thought that she wanted to remain forever young, and that somehow she was going to live on vicariously through me, relive her marriage through mine...which is not entirely untrue, as perhaps there’s something inherently by-proxy about parenting. But given that, given that our parents are in a way born into us, and we can’t help but carry them with us, this song is really saying: Begin again. It’s imploring us to remain children, perhaps as the Bible does (unless you become like children, you will not enter the Kingdom), perhaps as Zen does (beginner’s mind), perhaps as this prompt, this very day, does.)
     Not that Momma Stewart is all I’m listening to these days! Indeed, the upshot of this perma-tape is that I’ve got to tune into the local KXCI, and thus I found the one—my summer anthem, my Liquid Summer. I know I said I hated them earlier, but today I heard them yet again on the drive to work and had a change of heart.
     I’m not sure what caught me this time: in part, it’s the familiarity, learning to love Liquid Summer as I do my friends and family, first in spite and then because of their flaws (which are many, including and perhaps especially the music video, in which gyrating aliens mime playing instruments against a kind of 90s screen-saver of slow space travel); in part, it’s the mood, where I’m just really hungering for a song to call my own, and it’s this ownership, this mineness, I’m really groovin to; in part, it’s the moment, stopped at a red light on Mountain and blasting the tune out the open windows, and the cyclist beside me can’t help but start tapping his fingers to the beat on his brakes; but all of it, taken together, somehow adds up to something I just don’t know, and never will, and maybe it doesn’t matter.

—Dorian Rolston

Dorian Rolston is an MFA candidate in creative nonfiction at the University of Arizona, where he's incoming nonfiction editor for Sonora Review. He also edits the reviews section for Entropy. He is available for tennis lessons.





KATHRYN GOUGELET

My longest day of the year began thousands of miles above the Atlantic Ocean. As I hurtled forward in the unremarkable staleness of plane air, I realized that it was, by stroke of midnight, June 21st in London, from where I had traveled to visit my sister, and yet to be June 21st in Boston, my destination. As June 21st unfolded behind me and began before me, I drifted in and out of sleep. The passengers around me had picked through all of foil tins of their dinner—cheesy baked ziti, bulgur salad, chocolate-orange pudding—until we were all surrounded by inordinate and shining tin waste.
     I realized long ago in an airplane, staring ahead at my feet contained by the seat before me, that the best way to fly is to be mostly a body and only sometimes a thinking one. So I tried not to think as the plane undeniably filled with the stench of my fellow passengers, all semi-thinking bodies, passing gas from the baked ziti into the closed-circuit respiratory system of the plane. So this is what June 21st would smell like, I wrote in a note on my phone, which, within the week, would be stolen, erasing all of my precise records of the details of that day. So I would part with my notes about the happenings of the long June 21st that stretched before me in Boston; notes like: I spotted an inflatable saguaro cactus pool floatie in a thrift store, and then a saguaro cactus on a mug in a store window, and then a saguaro cactus on a card that I considered buying for a friend. And I wondered: how many saguaros make a coincidence? And what vision of a desert does a saguaro signify on a mug that delivers caffeine to the lips of a Bostonite? Having lived in Tucson for three years, I missed the charismatic megaflora dearly, especially those with twisted and abnormal arms; the type that doesn’t seem to get replicated and printed on pool toys.
     Though my formal notes from the day are long gone, erased with the ease of wiping data from a stolen phone, what I most remember of June 21st was the children. Before boarding my plane, I had watched a toddler crawl across the ground at Heathrow airport. She sat on her plump diaper and pulled herself along with her hands and feet across the floor. She slapped the grey shining airport tiles enthusiastically, twisting her body as she did so, moving remarkably quickly, as if she were a many-legged octopus escaping its enclosure. As I watched, I thought about the spasmodic and improvised ways in which children move—figuring out how to fill space, how to be bodies, how to be relative to other people. And as I watched, another child, older, walked by holding her father’s hand. She paused before the octopus crawler and gave a broad, toothy smile, in recognition of some childish wisdom the two of them shared. 
     Between departing London and arriving in Boston, I watched children fall asleep in the laps of their parents on the plane, children drag along their own child-size suitcases, children lift their hands to the bathroom sinks and let the water splash upon the chaos of their moving hands. And with each blissful child, with each crying child, with each loving exchange with a parent, I felt the tug of horror at the country I was returning to. June 21st was full of children, many of them happy, but thousands scattered around the country—denied the closeness of parents, or the legal right to seek asylum in a country that had granted immigration to my own ancestors. Yes, the major aura in my memory of June 21st, and the days preceding, the days to follow, was one of anger and dismay, because how many of those children, especially those kept in “tender age shelters” would move the same way—with the freedom of a child’s body—ever again? For the lives yet to unfold ahead of these children, I should not mince words: June 21st was a day of deep national shame.
     Within my own mind, and within the enclave of Boston that I explored, June 21st had minor auras, too; flavors and feelings unique to that day and unique to my state of sleep-deprivation. I arrived at the apartment of a dear friend, slept on a floor beneath a fan that pushed the distinct composition of Boston night air across my face. I allowed myself to notice, in my notes that would soon be erased by a stranger, things that made June 21st remarkable: the slightly fermented pineapple my friend and I ate for breakfast as we listened to children scream and laugh at the nearby playground. The pixelation of world cup players (was it Belgium and Tunisia?) projected on a wall at a café at which I tried to caffeinate and restore some stronger sense of reality to my mind. The warmth of sitting on my friend’s couch cross-legged and catching up on gossip as we had done years before. The heaviness of my footsteps as I walked through a park in which the tongues of small scruffy dogs, passing by, seemed to bounce especially jubilantly. I made an attempt to notice, and with the attempt, each of the things I observed, the people, the dogs, the saguaros, all seemed to become more sacred, in the way that everything becomes sacred when the day is done and you’re right on the cusp of falling asleep.

—Kathryn Gougelet

Kathryn Gougelet received her MFA in creative nonfiction at the University of Arizona in 2018, and is writing a collection of essays about coal, green chile, lobsters, and the lives people make around extractive industries. She is the former nonfiction editor at Sonora Review. Follow her on Twitter @kgougelet.





SUSAN OLDING

Families separated at the border. That’s the news, it has been the news for weeks. Wailing toddlers, desperate parents. And now, a glimmer of hope in the president’s reversal of his hated policy, but who knows whether or how those already detained can be reunited? Next door, the neighbour’s dog whines to be let in. My phone vibrates and I open a rare text from my brother. He and I are the only members of our family still alive. I haven’t heard from him in weeks and I’m certain he’s depressed. But he claims he’s fine, just working more, nothing to worry about, nothing the matter.
     In my third-floor office, sun streams through the skylight onto the daybed. Curling there with my laptop and my iced coffee, I barely register the pine desk or my ergonomic chair, the one that seemed so necessary before I bought it. I answer email, open the document I’m editing, read for a while, make some notes, then interrupt myself to brush the cat. He purrs, presenting his chin for a stroke. Cirrus tufts of fur float toward the floor. More texts. My husband, Mark, has been shopping for fans on my behalf. He sends me a couple of options and we decide on one. Then I send him an article about Toronto’s traffic, ranked worst in North America for commuters. We don’t live in the city but we often travel there. Last July we were stuck in a gridlock in the middle of nowhere for over three hours.
     Around noon, I head downstairs for something to eat. Tuna salad or leftover tofu stir-fry? Mark and I debate, settling on tuna. The cat appears, meowing loudly, hoping to steal a taste. Our mail arrives. Among the flyers for cheap pizza and student painters, I find my contributor’s copy of an anthology. Release Any Words Stuck Inside of You: An untethered Collection of Shorts, it’s called. “We love flash fiction, but it gets all the hype,” reads the editorial note. “What about prose poems, nonfiction, vignettes, rants, questionnaires?”
     My head is full of rants and questionnaires.
     I hope they’re planning a sequel.
     From our garden comes the clink of paving stones. We’re having our patio rebuilt. It hasn’t been done in thirty years and the original brickwork has become a crumbling, moss-covered hazard. Two young men crouch in the corners of our yard, chipping away with mallets, every hammer stroke another dollar of our savings. The cat asks to go out, then cries to come in. Out, in. In, out. He’ll go on like that all day. He can’t abide these strangers encroaching on his space. Never mind that they’re nice guys, soft-spoken and polite. Never mind that they address him by name. He refuses their overtures and slinks past, threatened by their industry.
     That evening, after a supper of fish with tomatoes and chorizo, a green salad, and more white wine than is technically good for me, I go for my usual walk, heading west on the lakefront. I turn my face to the light, not wanting to miss a second of it. I’ve been listening to Susan Faludi’s rich and penetrating memoir, In the Darkroom. This is the section where Faludi’s reflections on Jewish history, gender, identity, feminism, and family culminate in a kind of reconciliation with her confusing parent. I will finish the book tonight, and like the long light of the solstice, I don’t want it to end.
     Rounding a corner of the path, I see a mother duck guiding her babies onto the concrete boat ramp. They linger at shore’s edge, ruffling their wings and grooming themselves—all but one, who continues to swim, alone in the deeper water. Is she testing herself, trying out a growing independence? Or is she oblivious? Maybe she’s frightened and loathe to leave her favorite element. It’s impossible to say. The wind picks up, the waves roll in. She paddles toward the open water. But when her mother straightens her tail feathers and waddles decisively toward land, she follows, first swimming hard, then racing across the asphalt path, slipping into the circle, becoming one with the others.

—Susan Olding

Susan Olding is the author of Pathologies: A Life in Essays. Her writing has won a National Magazine Award (Canada) and has appeared in The Bellingham Review, The L.A. Review of Books, Maisonneuve, The Malahat Review, The New Quarterly, and the Utne Reader, and in anthologies including Best Canadian Essays 2016 and In Fine Form, 2nd Edition. 





JOHN BODINE

I find it hard to recall what happened on the day of 6/21/18. This may seem like a forgivable grievance except that the day in which I am writing this is 6/22/18 and I find myself short of memory. I suspect that this also would have happened on 6/21 in the service of 6/20. But as I am writing about how I cannot quite remember I am starting to indeed remember what happened on 6/21/18.
     For me 6/21 starting at midnight. I had a bit of an epiphany, forcing myself to keep distracted to stop the voice of the tyrant from coming back. The tyrant is the one who reminds me what I should be doing—that I am not doing enough—that indeed I was distracting myself playing video games long into the night instead of engaging with the world around me, with the things that I actually wanted to do, but found no courage to complete. I was playing video games in frustration, in a deep frustration, wanting to be playing better so that my rising discontent would subside. But I was playing worse and worse into the night.
     Finally, a voice of sorts rose up within me. My conscience? God? Perhaps both? Whatever or whoever it was simply said this: “Let go.”
     The child in me came out with some shame: “But I don’t want to.” I said this, hoping the voice would fight back. It didn’t.
     “If that’s what you want, then you can have it.”
     I knew it was not what I wanted, I wanted the voice to pick me up and carry me to where I wanted to be, but it was clear that it was not going to do that. Very well. I found some courage within me somewhere and shut off my game.
     A book that I had purchased off of amazon had arrived the day before, and I picked up it up and started to read. What book was it? “The Myth of Sisyphus,” by Mr. Camus himself. The thing I like most about the existential philosophers is that they are not so much idealists sitting on their high horses, but perhaps the most deeply human and psychological advocates of the intellectual world. I immediately felt understood.
     Yes life is hard and painful! Yes we are all rolling boulders uphill for eternity! Yes, yes, I don’t mind the pain! I want you to gratify my pain, I want to be understood!
     Antics aside, Mr. Camus reminded me that engaging with the things that are important to us is one of the most foundational aspects necessary for a life of richness. He did not say this directly, but it was implied to me through the interest I had in his words. This richness is what I actually want. Most days anyways. I want to learn, explore the great expanses of intergalactic intellectual space travel: how far can ideas carry us? The uncharted territories remain every compelling. So I read on into the night, I didn’t get far because I was taking so many notes and reflecting on so much that I perhaps got 8 pages in after an hour or so. One of the better 8 pages I’ve read in a while.
     Eventually about 3 AM or so I went to sleep, after reading some Vonnegut—who better to set up the mind for dreams of adventure?
     I woke up at 11:30 the next morning. Usually I would have gone back to sleep feeling a little residue from the melatonin, but not this morning—Camus reminded me that life might not be so terrible all the time. I played some more xbox for a bit, and then came the hour when I got a text message from the front desk at my apartment: package delivered for you, please come pick up at your earliest convenience. I knew what it was. A basketball. I already have a basketball, but that basketball is an expensive leather indoor basketball that has been well worn in and not worth the cheap thrill of a dusty Tucson basketball court in the middle of June. That basketball will bounce only on the best of courts.
     I haven’t played in some time. I had played for about 10 years from when I was 7-8 to about 18. College suffocates many childish pursuits, I am finding; but I am also finding that many childish pursuits are necessary to not grow into a cynical rationalist who is already waiting to die by the age of 20. Not anymore! So I took that outdoor basketball and found my pump and went to a nearby park at about 2:30 in the afternoon. Hot as it was, and it was certainly hot, my muscles slowly, and with some prodding, remembered of when basketball was my life and granted me the satisfaction of the ball flicking off my fingertips through the sudden snap of the wrist and the extension of the elbow, holding as my feet meet the ground and then: airball.
     Though slightly embarrassed because I remembered what I once could do on the court, I gave my ego a soft mattress to fall on. It might be like riding a bike, but it is a very rusty bike that needs some oiling up. Being out in the hot sun, though, reminded me of when I was a young boy—perhaps 10 or so—going out to my basketball court at my dad’s house in the summer months, sweat instantly dripping off of me, but I enjoyed playing so much that I would bare the heat. I had imagined being in the NBA, every shot was one step closer — the adventure had just begun. That was my escape from so long. It was everything then, but that dream has since died, though it has indeed been replaced. Mr. Camus reminded me of that dream.
     I returned to my apartment and did laps in the pool for a little while, feeling myself being strengthened with every stroke of my arms and every flutter of my legs. A shower and the usual followed. Then I made an efficient but time-costly meal. I cut up mushrooms, onions, and bell peppers, sauteed them in one pan, and seasoned and cooked ground turkey in the other pan. Finally, I mixed them all together and put in a can of pinto beans, using the can opener that I had just purchased on Amazon a few days before (who would have known that can-openers would have been so expensive?). The meal was quite tasty, and a testament to the financial-efficiency available to a college student if he feels so compelled to oblige it.
     As the evening came in, I went out with friends for the first time in a long time. This for two reasons: 1) These friends were in from out of town and 2) I have yet to make the intimate friendships that I had formed in High School. They are two girls, one of which is the girlfriend of my best friend, the other is her best friend, so naturally they are also my friends. We went to see the Incredibles 2 which was entirely worth the wait (only because I do not have to wait anymore) and there were many laughs shared throughout the film. I had not been to the theatre in some time, and costly as it may be, there is nothing quite like it. Alone in a large dark room enjoying a performance of art that took years to render, you connect with the audience as if a mob when you laugh or yell or cry together, then you walk out, once again complete strangers to each other as if nothing had changed. Nothing quite like it.
     I was dropped off about 10 o’clock or so and preceded to play xbox for a while longer, though I had a raging headache. I played moderately, but one of the reasons I was playing was the my headache didn’t hurt when I was—which really makes no sense to me (other than being distracted numbing the pain)—but I was content for the headache to find some temporary relief. Though, admittedly, going to sleep earlier would have been a more sure relief, but not as fun.
     The xbox was played out of distraction that night, but out of richness: it was actually what I wanted to do.
     I didn’t feel lonely that night, as I have for the better part of the last year, as I was reminded of joyous side of life with some old friends.
     I didn’t take any melatonin that night as I am trying to not become reliant on it for sleep. So I went to bed at 3 again and for some reason, this seems to be rather new phenomenon, was looking forward to the next day. Perhaps there are some adventures to be had, especially the intergalactic sort.

—John Bodine





Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 10: Kelly Caldwell • Dave Mondy • Lawrence Lenhart • Elizabeth Boquet • Amber Carpenter • Kat Moore • Donald Carr • Sonja Livingston • Cindy Bradley • Elizabeth K. Brown

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. If you wrote something (it's not too late!), send us your work via this submission form by July 12 (it's okay if you didn't RSVP before: the more the merrier).

—The Editors



July 10: Kelly Caldwell • Dave Mondy • Lawrence Lenhart • Elizabeth Boquet • Amber Carpenter • Kat Moore • Donald Carr • Sonja Livingston • Cindy Bradley • Elizabeth K. Brown





KELLY CALDWELL

Overnight, someone left three fat softballs in the dog run in Tompkins Square Park, and this morning, the dogs are delirious with joy. A few skirmishes break out, but for the most part, the dogs just play. They tug-of-war, and take turns “losing.” They catch a softball and then coyly entice one another to chase. They race back and forth in pairs or clumps of three, shoulders bumping, fetching and catching, til all of their long, pink tongues are drooping out the sides of their mouths.
     In New York City, people avoid eye contact and don’t talk much to one another in public spaces, but in the Tompkins Square Park dog run, on early weekday mornings, it’s different. We talk. We know each other’s names, not just the dogs’. Usually, we move around, following our dogs, sipping hot drinks and chatting with whoever we’re nearest to.
     Today, though, we’re knitted together at one end of the run. The only thing on anyone’s mind is the news: More than 2,000 migrant children separated from their parents at the U.S. borders. It’s a firestorm that’s been raging for four days. We ruminate over the details: The audio released on Monday by ProPublica—seven minutes of children wailing, calling for Mami or Papa, and one clear, small voice repeating her aunt’s phone number again, and again. The ever-shifting and inadequate attempts by Administration officials to justify the policy. The lawsuit revealing that some children were subdued with powerful psychiatric drugs.
     We pause for a moment. A dissonance hangs over us, between the comic antics of our dogs and the heaviness in the air.
     It’s the stupid, pink dog dish all over again, I’m thinking.
     Three days ago, in my Advanced Memoir class, we talked about the subjective lens of the narrator, and a passage from Story Genius by Lisa Cron: “After all, we know from personal experience that when something genuinely horrid is going on, it’s always with us, no matter how much we pretend it isn’t. It not only filters everything we see, it tells us what to look for.”
     No matter what is happening in the scene, I told my students, you have to get the deeper emotion onto the page. The examples I gave were comparatively low-stakes: how after your first break-up, just buying your morning bagel was searing and poignant because it was your first break-up bagel.
     The example I did not give, but that I was thinking about, was of another morning in Tompkins Square Park, nine months earlier. My dog Pops and I had left the run, and stopped near the rose bushes so I could give him a drink before heading home. While I pulled out a water bottle and a hot pink collapsible dog dish from my bag, I was listening to NPR report that, in the wake of Hurricane Maria, more than half the people in Puerto Rico didn’t have clean water. In desperation, Puerto Ricans had reopened wells that were closed because of superfund-level contamination; they were drinking water mixed with untreated sewage. Water-borne diseases were breaking out, and health officials were worried about cholera.
     Puerto Rican men, women, and children are at risk of cholera, I thought, and I’m pouring filtered water into a pink, plastic dish for my dog.
     I’m not apologizing for watering a thirsty animal. That’s my responsibility. It is also someone’s responsibility to bring clean water to Puerto Rico.
     That was October, and still, every time I pull out that stupid pink bowl, I remember it. I’m thinking about it again, this morning, as Pops and I leave the run and I take out the dish. Thankfully, I’m interrupted, because we bump into Kate, a work colleague and a poet. She and I are both a bit sheepish at first, because she’s in workout clothes and I’m in grubby dog run clothes, but we get over it pretty quickly, partly because Pops is mugging and wriggling for her attention, but also partly because we’re genuinely delighted to see each other. “I can’t believe we’ve lived this close to each other all this time!” she says.
     That’s another thing I love about this park. In the heart of Manhattan’s East Village, it’s a magnet that draws in everyone. As Kate and I chat, there’s a teenage girl, possibly a runaway, panhandling for change, while nearby, parents in expensive suits and shoes lead backpack-laden kids to the bus stop. An older Hispanic man wheels a giant speaker past us—he’s a fixture here. He’ll set up near the basketball courts and blast salsa music for hours. The benches are all dotted with people in coveralls or khakis or sapphire blue blazers, eating egg sandwiches, drinking coffee, and scrolling on their phones, a few moments of quiet before heading to work.
     At my work, it’s a day of meeting, talking, and teaching. I interview a teaching candidate who wrote and illustrated a charming and funny picture book about a mouse and a chipmunk fighting over an acorn. Lesson? Learn to share. One of our interns wants to write an op-ed about the treatment of women in the music industry, and we work together to develop her ideas. I trade emails with my friend and fellow teacher Mary, who I haven’t seen since April, when she got hit by a car. She gives me an update on her shattered leg, and I tell her how much everyone at the office misses her.
     I’m running late to dinner, but I take a big, blue CitiBike down the Hudson River Parkway anyway. I don’t want to risk being even later because of a subway delay, but also, I want to take in the sunset. I’m not the only one with that idea—the paths are crowded with New Yorkers jogging and strolling and biking, and I have to pay extra close attention, because everyone’s eyes are trained on the river. Tonight, the sunset really is that beautiful.
     Dinner is a celebration. After two years of working in DC, our friend Indrani  found a great job back home in New York City, and she and her wife Dina are finally living under the same roof again. They got married last August and after their honeymoon, they rode separate trains to separate homes. Commuter relationships put a strain on both partners, and though Dina and Indrani handled it well, my husband and I could see it wearing on them. You can acknowledge your privilege all day long—we’re lucky we can afford two apartments, they’d say; we’re lucky to have such great support, they’d say—but when you’re exhausted because you got up at 4a.m. to take a three-hour train ride to work, you’re exhausted. When you yearn for someone, you yearn for them.
     Kent and I are thrilled that this separation is over, and selfishly, we’re thrilled that we’ll get to see our friends more often now. Indrani’s office is not far from mine, and we talk about meeting for lunch or after work in Bryant Park, a swath of green behind the New York Public Library, the branch with the stone lions.
     When our drinks come, we raise our glasses and all four of us toast at once. “Welcome home, Indrani!” I say. “Here’s to good friends and more good times together,” Dina says. “Well done, Indrani,” Kent says.
     Indrani chimes in last. “Here’s to being together,” she says, her voice thick with emotion.
     It brings everything to a screeching halt, and for one long moment, we gaze at one another, anguished. We will carry on with our celebrating, but all evening, thrumming beneath everything, is one, insistent thought: It’s not a privilege, being with the people you love. Or, it shouldn’t be. 
     At home, Kent and I find that Pops has soiled the living room floor. After more than two years of good behavior, he’s insulted the rug three times in just the last week. It’s been a busy week, and Pops has been home alone a little more than usual. “He might be a bit too accustomed to having you around,” I say to Kent as we clean up.
     But secretly, I sympathize. When your people are missing, you’ve got to do something.

—Kelly Caldwell

Kelly Caldwell teaches creative nonfiction and is dean of faculty at Gotham Writers Workshop. 





DAVE MONDY

(click images for larger versions or click here to download a higher-res pdf)









—Dave Mondy

Dave Mondy's essays have been named Notable in Best American Essays 2015 and 2017, Best American Sports Writing 2017, and have appeared in Best Food Writing 2014 and 2015. He has also received multiple Solas Awards for his travel writing. His work can be found in Slate, The Iowa Review, The Cincinnati Review, and elsewhere. He received his MFA in Creative Nonfiction from The University of Arizona, and he's currently working on a book about the true stories and strange truths hidden within famous sports photos. www.davemondy.com 





LAWRENCE LENHART 

DO

I peek over the wife-shaped hump in the bed, see the baby monitor lit green. Our eleven-month-old son is standing in his crib, his fingers curled around the rungs. We had decided the night before that I would be the one to wake with him this morning.

THINK

This is a good system, deciding on these sorts of things the night before as it prevents the kind of pleading, arguing, groveling that happened during the first months (e.g., “I did it the last two days. Will you get him today?” “I didn’t get to bed until late. I need more sleep.” “I fed him twice last night. Will you please step the fuck up?”).

DO

I alternate between sleepy eyes as I change his diaper, throw it in the pail, remind myself I need to change the bag SOON.

DO

In the kitchen, I make a bowl of cereal for myself (Trader Joe’s Vanilla Almond) and prepare a goblet of Cheerios (no milk) for Milo. That’s my son.

DO

I set him on the floor in the living room and surround him with his favorite toys. He smiles at me like he’s just hit the jackpot. Like he might be spoiled. I turn on The Vietnam War. I’m only 6.5 hours into the 18-hour Ken Burns documentary.

THINK

I am watching it because 1) it’s summer and I have the time; 2) it fits into my ritualist disenchantment process with America; and 3) my wife just discovered (through Ancestry.com) that she has a half-Vietnamese uncle. Apparently, her grandfather had an affair during the war. After some encouragement from his Amerasian friends, her half-uncle signed up for an Ancestry account and discovered his half-sister (my mother-in-law).

THINK

There’s this one thread that’s not working concerning Denton Crocker Jr. (aka Mogie). I see what Burns is trying to do with his story, and maybe that’s the problem. It’s a Stalinesque maneuver: a single death is a tragedy/a million deaths is a statistic. Oh, wait: spoiler alert.

DO

I look up the wonderfully mimetic word ‘loblolling’ after a Vietnam veteran uses it to describe bombs descending toward the earth, toward his platoon.

DO

Milo has recently been fascinated with a martyoshka-style book. There are ten cubes total, and the walls of each cube are illustrated (with a snake, a saguaro, a cactus wren).

THINK

I worry that if he gnaws the smallest one too much, he will deface it beyond recognition and I won’t remember what it says when he’s verbal and asks, “What did it use to say?”

DO

I take a picture of each side of the cube just in case. Milo crawls away, and I pull him back by his leg. He crawls away again, and I pull. He cracks up.

DO

Milo and I take the tortoise to the backyard. I fill his bath with water from the hose. I admire the bath that I’ve created. It’s an inverted RV skylight filled with landscaping rocks, positioned in a dry stream in the backyard.

THINK

I worry there is too much pine pitch in the bath. I think I read tortoises can die if they ingest sap.

DO

The tortoise excuses himself from the bath and begins wandering through the yard. I hoist Milo to the bells we’ve hung from branches in the tree. We walk from bell to bell. I call it Bell Walk (a pun after Sedona’s Bell Rock). I ask him if he remembers when we bought these bells at Byodo-In Temple in Oahu. These at the Ferry Building in San Francisco. These in—I don’t remember where we got these.

DO

My wife wakes up. I give her a kiss. She wrinkles her nose in resistance because she hasn’t brushed her teeth yet. While she feeds Milo, I go for a run. I run across the cul-de-sac, down the mulch trail to the paved trail, along the paved trail past the park and into the designated “open space,” which is a ponderosa meadow. I cross the road to the trail’s extension (1.0 mile), all the way to the airport (1.74 miles). I turn around, facing the mountain now, and do my best to negative split. My IT band begins hurting, a years-old injury that I can’t seem to overcome. I check my time at the 5K (a sluggish 26:31).

THINK

While running, I start daydreaming about when I used to run in high school. I think about our rivals, Latrobe High—alma mater of Arnold Palmer and Fred Rogers. I wonder if their coach was really as shrewd as we made him out to be. It’s the coach’s responsibility to walk the visiting team all around the 3.1-mile course before the meet. I am remembering the time he gave us the wrong directions. I turned right and had to backtrack, which cost us the match. We assumed he did it on purpose, but maybe he didn’t. I think I am finally coming to peace with this defeat now, twelve years later. It is as cathartic as it is pathetic.

DO

I finish the run. On a boulder at the end of my driveway, I sit and analyze the splits on my running app.

DO

We leave the house as a family. Go to coffee, lunch, the playground, Walgreen’s. We need to kill two hours while the cleaners do their thing.

META

(At this point, I feel the need to defend this very bourgeois sentence. But I don’t feel like it this time.)

SUMMARY

Coffee highlight: none.

Lunch highlight: the men behind us—workers on their lunch break—speak English until six police enter the building, at which point they begin speaking in mostly Spanish. I tell Andie I need to wash my hands before we leave. I look at myself in the mirror in the bathroom and can’t work myself up to smile. I cry a little bit. Because there’s no line as I cross the counter on the way back, I decide to buy a $1 sugar cone. I hand it to Andie who shares it with Milo. I congratulate myself on being a good father, good husband. 

THINK

There was a time in my life when I thought sharing an ice cream cone with other mouths was the ultimate repulsion.

SUMMARY

Playground highlights: A man locks his car with a padlock and tries to make Milo laugh by putting a cup in his mouth like a beak. Milo doesn’t laugh. We forgot the sunscreen, so Milo has to stay mostly in the shade. There are drums and xylophones and chimes on the playground. Andie picks up the mallets and begins playing. She used to be in the drum pit in high school. Milo smiles as she plays. I smile too. We’ve been together for six years, but she still finds new ways to entertain me.

SUMMARY

Walgreen’s highlight: They changed her birth control on her again. We curse at the misogyny of it. My prescription isn’t ready. I worry that I’ll be wheezing in Belize. I say it aloud: “I’ll be wheezing in Belize.” Andie replies: “I won’t let that happen to you.” She is so emphatic and protective, it makes us both laugh. Her tone was clearly accidental. She immediately calls our GP and reups my prescription.

THINK

It would have taken me at least 3 days to make that call on my own.

DO

Because we haven’t quite killed two hours, we decide to look for houses for Andie’s parents who are thinking about moving to Flagstaff. We discover a new neighborhood in Flagstaff and drive laps around it, three times. We find “the perfect house” for them, but then discover there are phone lines criss-crossing over the backyard. Andie’s dad will veto. It’s no longer the perfect house.

DO

Milo is sleeping in the carseat. We have a mirror attached to the back-center headrest that reflects his activities back to the rearview mirror. I wave to him, and he waves back, choppily. When he falls asleep, I peek at him. My new car tells me: “Driver Attention is Low.” Fuck that. I’m paying attention.

DO

“Do you not want your Father’s Day card?” Andie asks. I tell her I do. “Then why did you put it with the old mail?” I remind her I was just consolidating stacks of paper the day before when my friend Mia came over. I go to the bathroom.

META

(Come to think of it, I must have gone to the bathroom earlier too. I just didn’t record it. Not paying attention after all.)

THINK

Here, I am reminded of Georges Perec’s Species of Spaces. I think about this one exercise in the book, very similar to this “What Happened on June 21” series, in which a family wakes up and goes through their morning routines. The woman is running around, trying to help her husband get on his way to work with pressed clothes and a good breakfast. She does the same for the son. It’s very suburban. Just like us, I suppose. And then, the surveillance-style narrator reports that in her first moment alone, the woman goes to the WC and “performs her toilet.” No matter how objective the narration is, I think it’s supposed to be comical. You have to read it.

DO

Andie calls her parents. She yells at her mom because her dad is so picky about the housing. I FaceTime my mom, and she and Milo spend a few minutes waving at each other.

DO

Andie watches television (The Bachelor) while she plays with Milo. Halfway in, she says, “I don’t think I’m going to watch this show anymore.” She’s been saying that for the past four seasons, maybe more. I work on my book proposal. It’s the boring part of the book proposal where I’m supposed to compare my proposed book to other titles on the market. I spend a lot of time trying to find a less specific word for “doudouism,” or at least one with a less French connotation. It leads me to an essay by Frantz Fanon. I download a couple essays by Epeli Hau’ofa, read them. Wish I had the whole book. ILL it. I encounter Jane McAdam’s name on several texts.

THINK

I would like to meet Jane McAdam someday, ideally in a casual setting like, “Oh, you’re Jane McAdam? That’s cool. I really like your ideas. I just ordered a caipirinha. Would you like something as well?”

THINK AGAIN

I wonder if this sounds like I’m trying to pick her up. I’m not. I decide she’ll decide for herself.

DO

Andie pauses the television, and asks, “Is that a tear?” The man currently on a one-on-one (date) with the bachelorette is talking about his divorce. He is being unusually vulnerable. I look at his glistening cheek and confirm that he is, in fact, crying. She continues watching the show.

THINK

Because my friend Joe spoiled the show for me (“So, how about I was with Carly the other night and she told me that X wins the Bachelor?” he texted), I don’t have to pretend to care about the evolving chemistry of the bachelorette and her misbehaved contestants. At the time, I chastised Joe, but now I think I should thank him.

DO

With the show over and the book proposal nearly finished, we take turns getting ready. We are going on a date tonight—our first in months. I text the babysitter’s mom with some details. They live across the street. I put Gillian Welch on shuffle (Spotify). We are going to the Gillian Welch concert tonight. I text my uncle one of the songs: “Here is a song by the musician we’re seeing tonight. It reminds me of something you would like. Very Appalachian,” I say. Andie puts on an olive romper-style jumpsuit. I love the way it looks on her. She curls her hair. Puts glitter on her chest. Picks up Milo. He spits up on her outfit, and we take turns scrubbing and blow-drying the stain. It doesn’t come out. She threatens to change her outfit. And I say, ‘No, you still look great.” She keeps the outfit on. I get ready while Andie walks the babysitter through each room of the house. It’s her first time watching Milo. I use the following products to get ready (in this order): rosemary shampoo, oatmeal exfoliating body scrub, Neutrogena facewash, Dollar Shave Club lather and razor, Proraso aftershave, Degree deodorant, BVLGARI AQVA cologne, Aquafresh toothpaste, TheraBreath Oral Rinse. “I like her voice,” my uncle texts. “It’s soothing.”

THINK

I promise myself that I’ll go to my uncle’s funeral when he dies.

DO

I cry in the mirror.

THINK

Because I don’t wear makeup, crying before a date doesn’t really change anything.

DO

Laugh a little.

THINK

I have been depressed for about 40 days now. Most days, I am functional. I do a good job of hiding it to the point where Andie usually forgets and Milo doesn’t notice. I congratulate myself on my covert depression.

DO

I change Milo’s diaper, get the tortoise out of the backyard. There’s a spider attached to his tail. It “balloons” through the air. We quietly leave the house, not even saying goodbye to our son for fear he’ll freak out.

DO

We go to the Annex for dinner. Our first seat doesn’t work out because one of the ladies at the table next to us is desperate for attention. She actually said, “Look at me in this picture” while pointing at her phone’s screen. Look at me. We eat at the bar instead. Andie tells me about a word she’s invented in a new poem: crud-rudder. I love it. We have fun talking about that word. We discuss the neologisms of Paul Celan. I tell her about loblolling. She likes that word too. We start talking about Vietnam, but then the mescal cocktail is too good. I tell her that when I’m in Tucson tomorrow, I’ll buy a whole case of mescal. We both knows it’s just a fantasy, that it’s unlikely I’ll even buy a single bottle. I feel myself blushing as she talks. “We used to talk about your poetry a lot,” I say to her. I’m reminded of our first dates together—back in Tucson. We’re both giddy. Our friends text. They’re already at the concert. We don’t rush. Not until Nicole texts “Two songs in.” Then we pay the bill and repark the car.

DO

The cashier at Will Call hands me the tickets so quickly, it makes me think I’m the last person to arrive. The Orpheum is packed, but silent—everyone listening to Welch’s “serene” vox.

THINK

I realize I haven’t been to a church since Ireland two summers ago. Before that, it had been a few years more. That’s two churches in five years.

DO

After the first set, I see Ted. I see Peter. I see Luke. I see another Luke. Each of them has seen Gillian Welch before. Peter and Luke are talking about the status of their chicken coops. Each has eight chickens. “But who’s counting,” Peter asks. “I am,” I say, somewhat seriously.

THINK

I want to ask: Are eight chickens the recommended number for a starter package? Instead, I just listen.

DO

I see Annette. She congratulates me on my new job, but reminds me that there are others, including herself, that are not so lucky. I say something like, “My new contract doesn’t start until August.”

THINK

I worry I sound cocky. Really, I’m just nervous and worried about professional confrontation.

DO

Andie is talking to her friends during the second set. I step away. Standing strategically between speaker and subwoofer, I enjoy a private view of Gillian. I see the new white boots she’s been complaining about (the left one hurts). I see her age, but refuse to put a number to it. In between songs, I go to the merch table and buy Andie a shirt (“the pink one”) and Milo a poster (signed). I ask the cashier where she’s from, if she plays music too. She’s from Nashville. And yes, she plays music too. She detects her own redundancy as we exchange money. Andie doesn’t like the gin and tonic I get her, so I get her Maker’s Mark instead. I get a cup of cubes in case she wants it on the rocks. And a cup with ginger beer in case she wants a mixer.

THINK

Andie’s concert etiquette is often brazen. The thrill of a good performance does it to her. I am reminded of her earlier that day, banging the xylophone with the mallets.

THINK

She still has secrets, I think. In a good way.

DO

Her talking during someone’s favorite song causes a large, angry man to approach her. He waves his hand in front of her face demonstratively and forbids her from speaking for the rest of the show. If it was anyone else asking her to stop talking, I would feel mortified. But because it’s this guy+telling her to stop talking, I feeling activated. Erik and I walk toward him until his back is literally against the wall.

THINK

I wonder if I am immature for craving a fight.

DO

“Do you know how many square feet are in this place?” I ask him. He shoves me. His girlfriend hails security. “Go find another spot,” I tell him. My lips inches from his.

THINK

It’s kind of erotic.

THINK AGAIN

Maybe that’s the point?

DO

They leave. All this adrenaline at a sedate Gillian Welch show gives me cognitive dissonance. Andie and I stand apart from our friends during the encore. She sings “Look at Miss Ohio.” Andie cries a little. For the past eleven months, we have been singing this melody at bedtime, replacing “Miss Ohio” with “Mr. Milo” as in “Oh me oh my oh, look at Mr. Milo.” I cry too.

THINK

It feels more appropriate to cry at a concert than in the mirror.

DO

Andie asks me to text the babysitter, but my phone is dead. We hurry home. Inside the door, we see the babysitter at the edge of the couch. The cat is on the arm of the couch. “Riding the rails,” my friend Tommy calls it. “How’s Milo?” Andie asks. “He’s so cute,” the babysitter says. She’s young. Cuteness matters. “How’d it go?” my wife wants to know. “It was good. He had a hard time falling asleep.”

THINK

I remember how difficult it was for me to answer How questions when I was younger, especially that one time at the barber. “How are you doing, Larry?” Nancy would ask me. I got tongue-tied. My parents never asked me questions like that.

DO

The babysitter has rearranged the pillows on the couch. They’re symmetrical, cool. I almost take a picture to remember the formation, but remember my phone is still dead. I ask Andie if maybe it was the cleaners who did it. “No,” she says. I go to the bathroom—

META

(oh yeah, I forgot: I went to the bathroom once at the concert too…) Have you ever seen the episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm where a receptionist [Chacha] in Larry David’s office building counts the frequency with which he uses the restroom?

DO 

“Come check this out,” I call for Andie from the bathroom. She enters dubiously. I point at the end of the toilet paper. It’s folded into a triangle. “Did the babysitter do this?” I ask. “Now that was cleaners,” Andie says. And then almost immediately: “Aww, that means the babysitter didn’t use the bathroom the whole time we were gone.” We both laugh at that.

DO

We talk in bed, each of us taking turns yanking the concert wristbands off. Apropos nothing, my wife falls asleep while telling me about her first orgasm. “Why are you telling me this?” I ask. Then, she says it was during her first night of babysitting. “I was very young,” she said, almost nervously. It was on a couch after the kid went to bed.

THINK

Not that I was really trying to, but I can’t picture our babysitter masturbating. I congratulate myself on a failed imagination.

DO

“Andie?” I ask. “Andie?” again. She is sleeping. I scroll through my charging phone, realizing I’ve recorded too much of my day, that I’ll inevitably have to leave a lot out.

OUTTAKES 

Descendents’ “Suburban Home”—ironic or not?

Pause Bachelor to stare at infographic on suicide rates.

Dave Rawlings (who plays with Gillian Welch). I’d like to look like him when I’m older. Great autograph.

Fifteen minutes wasted practicing time signatures on my knee—5/4 is fun

I’ve never had to fire someone per se, but I did have to kick a bass player out of my punk band in high school. (Sorry, Geoff!)

My car’s corrective driving makes me a less retaliatory driver, but gives me cognitive dissonance.
Before they’re sentences, these notes feel like a bloated Jason Bredle poem.
Lawrence Lenhart

Lawrence Lenhart holds an MFA from the University of Arizona. His essay collection, The Well-Stocked and Gilded Cage, was published in 2016 (Outpost19). His prose appears in Creative Nonfiction, Fourth Genre, Gulf Coast, Passages North, Prairie Schooner, and elsewhere. He is a professor of fiction, nonfiction, and climate science writing at Northern Arizona University and a reviews editor and assistant fiction editor of DIAGRAM.





ELIZABETH K. BROWN

What Happened on June 21, 2018: brain-eating amoeba, commitment, and left-over burgers

Mornings are sometimes tense between Adam, and me. Adam is my fiancé. [1] Adam thinks my morning routine takes too long. His morning routine is to wake up and immediately take a shit, then proceed from there. My morning routine follows: pee, scrape tongue, brush teeth, nasal irrigation, eye drops, splash face with water. Because we only have one bathroom, I’m often forced to complete my morning routine at the kitchen sink. I use a purple ceramic neti pot filled with water that is initially filtered through a Big Berkey water filtration system, and a quarter teaspoon of uniodized Morton’s Salt. [2] (Distilled water is recommended to avoid introducing bacteria and brain-eating amoeba to my nasal passages, where these bacteria and brain-eating amoeba can live and cause potentially fatal infections, but I don’t use distilled water. [3])
     To avoid having to use the kitchen sink, I try to get out of bed a few minutes before Adam and take care of my business before he gets out of bed and insists on the need to take care of his. If I miss this small window of opportunity, I do small chores around the house. This morning, Adam was up first and so I put away the laundry that had been hanging for days on three separate drying racks in our living room. After he was finished, he lit the lilac and hyacinths candle that sits on the back of the toilet. [4] But, even with the candle, I continued to pace around the house with my toothbrush poking out of my mouth instead of returning to the bathroom to brush my teeth in the steamy-from-the-shower, lilac-imbued stink of our small bathroom. [5]
     After the pacing, I completed my routine and we convened in the kitchen. In the kitchen, at approximately 7:30a.m., I suggested (not for the first time) that Adam see a therapist. As you can imagine, this was a fantastic way to start to the day for both of us.

Me: “I know you think that we’re having a hard time because we’re both in stressful situations and that it will all get better once work quiets down for you, but the reality is that if things go as we talk about wanting them to go in our Five Year Plan—both of us starting graduate school, buying a house, having babies, getting married, all that—this is only the tip of the iceberg.” [6]

Me: “Especially the whole baby thing. Just imagine all of this going on between us if we were only ever allowed to get two or three consecutive hours of sleep for months on end? Imagine it. Imagine!!!” [7]

Me: “Don’t you think things have been better between us since I started seeing a therapist again?”

Me: “I love you and I think it would be better for us if you also had a stronger support network, or at least started to cultivate that now. I know you talk about not having that since moving to St. Louis, but from what you’ve told me, you haven’t really had the kind of support I’m talking about, and that you deserve, ever. Would you agree with that?”

Me: “Does that resonate with you? Does what I’m saying resonate with you?” [8]

Me: “When you glance at your watch when I’m in the middle of sharing something with you, I feel like you’re not listening.”

Me: “What I need from you is for you to communicate with me if you’re getting anxious about time. Okay? See, there’s another example of something I learned in therapy, or sort of. Actually, that was just yoga school.”

Me: “What do you mean what am I talking about? The When you ______ , I feel ______ , what I need is ______ formula. Oh, really? Well, we can talk about it tonight.”

Me: “I still have the names of the therapists my therapist gave me when I asked her for recommendations for you a couple of months ago. But that was when I wanted to stop having to break things down for you about what I was going through with all the sexual stuff. This is different.”

Me: “Please stop looking at your watch.”

Me: “Have you heard back from your Aunt Nancy yet about driving to Dayton this weekend? I need to know so I can see about getting someone to cover my shift on Sunday. Do you want me to go along?”

Me: “What’s different is that I don’t feel crazy. I’m not crazy!”

Me: “No, I’m not going to send the names of the therapists unless you ask me, so don’t say, “If you want to send them.” This is about what you want. I’m just trying to be clear about what I want and what my needs are.”

Me: “You know when I’m angry that doesn’t mean I don’t love you.”

Then, he left for work.

I had the day off. I had a lot of things on my list of things to do. I only accomplished a few of them, and not even the highest priorities. When Adam returned home for lunch, I was angry at him for the way our morning began and the way this beginning impacted me and my state of mind—and, therefore, my productivity. All morning, I had the apartment to myself. It was quiet but for the buzzing of the neighbors’ air conditioning compressors, so easily heard through the single-pane windows at all times. After Adam left for work, I made myself pancakes and slathered them with butter and grape jelly and a scoop of Greek yogurt. I ate the pancakes while reading the contributor’s notes and correspondence sections for the March or May issue of The Sun Magazine. It was a very pleasant hour.
     Then I moved slowly down the list of things to do. I made several calls to United Healthcare and the orthopedic office at the Barnes-Jewish hospital in go in order to try to figure out how much it would cost me out-of-pocket after insurance to get an MRI (a lot), a call to the dentist to confirm my appointment for a six-month cleaning (feeling on top of things), wrote an email to a friend about the “What Happened on June 21, 2018” project (with a commitment to participate), and made a few changes to and comments on my sister’s cover letter and resume (much easier to get into than working on my own resume). I put the dishes away from last night’s dinner and did dishes from breakfast. I practiced yoga with the guidance of an audio recording and did my physical therapy exercises. And finally, I wrote out my work schedule for next week in my planner. [9] I stared at the weeks and months that make up the rest of the summer. They seemed spent already.
     Around noon, Adam came home for lunch. He works only a few blocks away and so often comes home for lunch. He works for the city and his office is on the fourth floor with a view, in an old octagonal building that was originally built to house a women’s magazine in—I’ll look up the year later, but I think it was the early 1900s. When he came home and poked his head in the “office” (my bedroom) to ask if I wanted any eggs, I tried to ignore him. I carried on emailing my friend as if I were doing important work.
     “No thank you,” I said, still staring intently at the screen. He made himself some eggs and the kitchen had that fishy smell from burning olive oil in the cast iron skillet. When he was done cooking, I went to the kitchen and started to make myself lunch: a salad with strawberries, green onions, a lemon garlic dressing, chopped pecans, and shredded parmesan. As I spun greens in the salad spinner, he walked in with his plate in hand to eat at the butcher block. He was trying to spend time with me.
     “How was your day so far?” I asked. I was trying to be cool, or at least to avoid “getting into things” again. But all he said was, “Fine.” Okay, I thought, so that’s what we’re doing. Pretty soon, we were back to the question of whether or not we’re “on the same page” in our house hunting search and who’s leading the way in terms of the “authentic communication” we both talk about wanting.

Adam: “I’m sorry about the house. I just wasn’t ready to make a decision so quickly.”

Adam: “Is there never a time that you feel like I also contribute to honest communication?”

Adam: “I’m trying really hard. I feel overwhelmed.”

Adam: “Yes, I am. Every day that I go to work I’m working toward our future family together!”

You can probably imagine my side of things. We stood in the kitchen hugging for a while. I tried to kiss him, but he went for my forehead instead.
     This morning, when he went to leave on his bicycle, he didn’t say, “I love you.” He just said, “See you later.” I followed him to the door and said, “I love you,” sort of angrily. I didn’t want to deal with feeling guilty for leaving on a bad note if he were to get hit by a car and become brain damaged or paralyzed on the way to work. [10] He relented and said, “I love you, too.” I think it’s okay to say it even when you aren’t necessarily feeling it. I do this all the time with my family. I think maybe we were trying to connect in the kitchen after lunch so that “I love you” would come more naturally when he left again.
     After our brief embrace, he told me about some work stuff and I complained about the cost of health care in the U.S. I reported back to him some of the horrors I’d heard on NPR that morning. And then he put his helmet on and left for work and I got back to my important emails to friends.

I got to my therapist’s office at 3:30 even though my normal slot is 2:30. We scheduled this one for 3:30 because I asked if I could get a later slot now that I’m working Thursday mornings. Today (Thursday) was the only day she could do 3:30, so we scheduled it. But then I didn’t get scheduled for work today. When I arrived at 3:30, she said she’d been expecting me at 2:30. However, instead of apologizing profusely and insisting I must have been the one who got mixed up, I said what I knew to be true, which was that we’d scheduled it for 3:30 weeks ago. As it turned out, she had 45 minutes until her next client, so I stepped over her dog, Herbie, and sat down in the recliner.
I was sort of hoping, when she said she had been expecting me at 2:30, that she wouldn’t have time and I wouldn’t have to stay. I’d been taking a nap before driving over and wasn’t really feeling like talking. I wasn’t sure what I wanted to talk about. I’ve actually been feeling sort of hopeful about things for a couple of days, maybe more like 36 hours. And it’s been really nice. I thought going to therapy might ruin the nice, hopeful feeling. [11]
     For the entire session, I talked about Adam. I told my therapist all the details about the house we had looked at last Friday and about the way he’d resisted my intuition and put up a wall. I told her how these things had really pissed me off. I said I was still attached to the idea of the house, which someone else put an offer on immediately upon viewing, which is what I would have liked to do, and the seller accepted it before we even had a chance to put one together. Adam wanted to sleep on it. I told him, “We can’t sleep on it with the market the way it is!” I said this as if I were a realtor or had any real understanding of “the market.” All I knew was that I had written to the realtor the week before that what I (we) really wanted was something grandma had lived in for 50 years and then the universe gave us exactly that. The woman selling the house had lived in it for 52 years and had just moved out of state to be closer to family. And here’s the real kicker, the sign from the divine that we were meant to put in an offer immediately and not “sleep on it”: the grandma’s last name was Brown.
     My last name is Brown.
     And Adam’s last name is Brown.
     And we’re not even married yet. It’s just coincidence that we have the same last name. [12]
So, obviously, this was a sign. I was sold on the place—big, dry basement (for him to play music) with a finished bathroom (bonus); big yard with enough sun for a big garden; on a cul-de-sac (with children playing in the street = instant friends for my niece and nephew when they visit); and the price was right. But Adam didn’t want to hear it. All he could see was the carpet and wallpaper and huge ornate dining room set. He was anxious about being late to dinner with friends and didn’t want to go over the details of the contract even though I had my notebook and pen out and was taking notes as we re-capped things with our realtor. He wanted to sleep on it and talk about it the next day, even though I had to work at 7:00 the next morning and had already explained to him that I wouldn’t be available to discuss anything until the evening, which would probably be too late. And so, we went to dinner. And we didn’t get the house.
     I told all of this to my therapist, who doesn’t usually hear too much about my current life but instead hears a lot about my childhood and the many questions I have about my childhood. She said my energy was different and that she thought it was because I was talking about issues that were grounded in the present and not in the past. I guess that’s a good thing. Present. Not past.
     People keep telling us that purchasing a home is one of the most stressful things for a couple. I keep telling Adam that he should trust me more because I’m naturally a more practical person. He keeps telling me that he just needs more time because it’s a big decision. All this desire for more time makes my therapist wonder if the two of us aren’t quite ready for commitment. People keep asking us if we have a date set and I give the same line about how I didn’t want to be looking at venues for a reception and tent rental companies when I was supposed to be finishing my thesis for graduate school in the spring. Or I say that Adam’s starting grad school in the fall and I’m planning to start (another program) in the spring, so the earliest we’re thinking is next summer or fall. Sometime. Maybe a year from now. Who knows! Or else I say that we don’t have any money, which isn’t not true. Or that we’re trying to buy a house, which maybe isn’t true after all.
     My therapist asked some questions that resonated: Are you sure you’re ready to buy a house together? Are you sure you’re both ready for that type of commitment? 
Me: “Well…we might just put it in Adam’s name because we haven’t combined finances. I can’t imagine doing that! Super scary. I’ll just sort of pay him rent. And if I help out with household projects and renovations, we’ll figure out a way to make that fair for me. I’ll get a stake in the property, or he’ll take some agreed upon amount off the top of my rent that month. So really, it’s not that big of a commitment. We just want to stop paying our slum-lord-y landlord rent. And I really want a yard so I can have a garden.”
     Of course, then the therapist asks if I’m sure I want to get married, with all this talk of paying him rent and making things fair. I have a ring on my finger, but the truth is, I’m not sure. And neither is he. Is anyone ever totally sure? [13]
     From the beginning, I told Adam I wouldn’t marry him until he was out of debt. And that I wouldn’t have kids with him until at least one of us had a stable income. [14] And that health insurance would be good. Just a few months ago, for my 31st birthday, he tucked a printout of his credit card statement into a birthday card. It had a $0.00 balance. Happy Birthday, honey. I paid off my credit card! I guess now my “yes” is now more official than it was when he pulled the ring out of his sweatpants pocket in front of City Hall on our walk home from the library last September. 
     Anyway, it’s been three and a half years since we met, and we’ve been living together for about three of those and engaged for, I guess, about nine months. I’m on his insurance plan through work, but I pay him for it. We share a car (really, it’s mine) and a phone plan, split according to use. We split bills and groceries. [15] Here’s what my therapist wanted to know: Did Adam’s hesitation to purchase the $75,000 starter home of our dreams have a deeper meaning? And her questions led me to my own line of questioning: Is my dharma to bake lemon bars for my fiancé’s office co-workers and create a detailed filing system for all of our shared accounts and household projects (user manuals, car insurance statements, notes on construction loan products we might look into)? Or should I be focusing on my writing and the evening writing classes I keep talking about putting together to teach and job applications so that I can stop waitressing? In other words, should I be focusing on my own life? On “me” instead of “we”?

After therapy, I went to Starbucks to write down what happened, something I do most weeks. [16] I ordered an iced chai latte and texted back and forth with my sister for a while, then located the graduate course I plan to take in the fall in the course catalog and noted the time. I started another “to-do” list for tonight, which had “What Happened on June 21, 2018?” at the top. [17] Then I went across the street and purchased the pair of running shoes I’d placed on hold last week because I’d wanted time to think about the decision before committing to the $93.75 investment. It started to rain.

By the time I went for a run it was after 8:00p.m. and significantly cooler than it had been here for days. It was a chilly 75 degrees, or thereabouts. While running, I thought about my grandpa’s daily diaries. My maternal grandfather kept a daily diary for years. The first one began as a joint effort. He and my grandma commemorated the day of their wedding, June 2, 1956, with an inaugural diary entry. I wonder now, was the daily diary a wedding gift from someone? Perhaps my great Uncle Claire, who was a writer. [18] After a while, my grandma’s handwriting fades away, but my grandfather continued to record each day’s events for years on his own. Of course, finding an entry for 1958 or 1968 would be ideal (for a nice, round number), but I don’t have those diaries on hand. As far as I know, they’re located in my Aunt Laura’s basement. But what I do have is the actual diary from 1956.
     The details of their day on June 21, 1956 are in my grandfather’s squat handwriting, easy to tell apart from my grandmother’s neat, right-leaning script. The entry reads,
We drove to New Providence last night to my folks, and got there near ten. We went into Eldora this morning, where I saw Dr. Nyquist. He said I was OK, and time would make me more peppy. Later, we went to Marshalltown and ordered another Hide Away bed from Mr. Cox, plus two chrome steel yellow cushioned kitchen chairs. We looked at washing machines on our way home. In the evening, we saw the Deep River Softball girls beaten by one run at Wellston.
     Added later are the prices of the items. $169 for the Hide Away bed. $6.66 for the chairs, though it’s unclear if that was per chair or altogether. These are the notes of two newlyweds preparing for their conjugal home.
     Twenty-nine years and 364 days later, on June 20, 1986, after a six-month battle with leukemia, my grandma died. My grandpa’s entry for that day reads,
Elizabeth died at 9 p.m. today. She had been breathing heavily and had been on oxygen all day. She passed peacefully. I was holding one hand and Julie and Sheilah were holding the other hand. Connie and Colleen had been up earlier—also Laura, Mark and Alisa. [19]
     One year later, on June 21, 1987, I was exactly two months old my grandfather recorded his visit to the Quaker meeting house he regularly attended, and the genealogy work he accomplished that day. It’s disappointing to find that the entry for this day, 31 years ago, isn’t one of the many in which he comments on how proud he was to show me off at the courthouse, where he was the County Supervisor, or makes note of my overall health. Those are the types of entries I enjoy. [20]
     I didn’t remember to call my mom and ask how she was doing yesterday, on the anniversary of her mother’s death. I don’t always remember to do this, but, in recent years, I’ve been making an effort. I don’t know what it would have felt like to lose my mother at age twenty-one, and I don’t know what it would have meant to have a baby at twenty-two. I’m thirty-one now and I’m not sure I’ll know what it’s like to have a baby at all.
     On my run, I took a route I hadn’t taken for a while. It was a beautiful summer evening and for once not too hot, and I saw a total of one person in their yard. The only other people out of doors were the orange-vested energy company workers for Spire.

For dinner, Adam and I had leftover hamburgers from a grill out earlier this week. Adam made basil-mayonaisse with basil from our porch box, but he over-blended it so that it was watery. It looked pretty disgusting, but I put it on my burger anyway. I had a brownie and ice-cream for dessert. The small white bowl I ate out of is still sitting next to me on the coffee table. It’s one of a set of three I scored a few months ago from Goodwill. Handcrafted Cabana porcelain. It’s the exact size of half a grapefruit. Adam has fallen asleep on the other couch with a book laid open on his chest. It looks like he’s about a quarter of the way through the latest Naomi Klein book; something about “NO” is all I can see in the title from here. I’ve stayed up two hours past my goal bedtime of ten p.m. to record all of this. Perhaps one day my descendants—if I have any, if I am not first infected by a brain-eating amoeba—will be as interested in what I had to say about today as I am in what my grandfather had to say about every day for the years he kept a daily record. Or perhaps not. As of five minutes ago, Central Standard Time, June 21, 2018, is over.

*

  1. I wish the word fiancé didn’t sound so pretentious. It’s not that I think all French words are pretentious, just that saying “fiancé,” which is what he is, instead of “boyfriend,” which is what he was before, seems to be making a big announcement. “Everyone! We’re going to get married!” But, this isn’t an announcement I want to make. We don’t have a date set and I’m not sure we ever will. I sort of pressured him into getting me a ring, I think, and now I don’t really like wearing it. I really don’t like the added hassle of having to clean it either, but it looks a lot nicer when I do.
  2. The Big Berkey system was a big (read: expensive) purchase that felt necessary when my fiancé, Adam, and I moved into the rental where we live two years ago. The tap water had—and still has—a dusty flavor and scent that was amplified when we boiled water for tea or carbonated it using the Soda Stream. Also, fancier salt is often marketed as being crucial to proper nasal irrigation, but I’ve relied on the Morton’s girl and her umbrella in the rain for years with no problems.
  3. I only learned about the brain-eating amoeba because, a couple of years ago, my mom sent me an alarming message that included a screenshot of someone’s facebook post of a news article. The news article was about a man whose death, scientists believed, was caused by the brain-eating amoeba found in the plumbing system in his home. Drinking tap water at this man’s home was safe—bacteria and amoeba can’t survive in the body when swallowed because stomach acid kills them—but our nasal passages are a direct pathway to the brain, and so the water became deadly when the man used a neti pot. My mom knew I used a neti pot for my allergies and had for years. Despite her warnings, however, I only recently stopped using straight tap water for my neti pot. A couple of weeks ago, Adam accidentally dropped my neti pot on the tile floor and it cracked to pieces. And, when searching for a new neti pot online, I came across another series of articles about the brain-eating amoeba and realized that I may be living a less risk-averse life than I thought.
         In revising this journal entry/essay, I was able to locate a headline that includes the words “deadly” and “tap water” and “neti pot.” I learned that when the amoeba gets up the nose it “burrows into the skull and destroys brain tissue.” (This was from an Orlando Sentinel article published on August 26, 2011, which sounds like about the time frame for when my mom was sending me screen shots of articles she found on facebook all the time.) It turns out that many fatalities caused by this brain-eating amoeba, Naegleria fowleri amoeba, are linked to swimming in lakes and ponds, warm or hot freshwater lakes and ponds; in the U.S., this means mostly southern-tier states. According to the CDC, “of 133 people known to be infected in the U.S. since 1962, only three people survived.” I grew up swimming in lakes and ponds and I never worried about getting water up my nose for any reason other than the discomfort of having water up my nose. Now, I plan to never take my niece and nephew swimming in warm freshwater lakes again.
         From the Sentinel article, I spent some time reading articles about all the recommended ways to make your tap water safe. I learned that the water is supposed to be boiled for three to five minutes. I don’t boil the water for three to five minutes because I use an electric tea kettle—I boil the water the night before and let it sit to cool overnight. The tea kettle only brings the water to a rolling boil and then automatically shuts off. So, even though I’ve been reminded about this business about burrowing and destruction and the very low chances for survival, I’m still pretty half-assed about my approach to taking precautions. I guess I’m weighing the harm I’d be doing to planet earth if I were to start buying plastic gallons of distilled water regularly against the slight chance that I’ll contract the Naegleria fowleri amoeba, and die within two weeks.
         Note to self: I need to research further to understand whether or not my Big Berkey filter has a pore size of one micron or less, and if a one micron or less filter is sufficient for protecting myself from brain-eating amoeba. Maybe I don’t need to boil water at all?
  4. The lilac hyacinths candle is something I purchased at Michael’s craft store a couple of weeks ago; three candles for nine bucks!
  5. We’re currently looking for a house to purchase and I look forward to having the ability to install a bathroom fan.
  6. We talk about having a Five Year Plan, but, in truth, I think the whole concept is bonkers. 
  7. I’ve spent most of the past six or seven years feeling pretty 100% certain that I wanted to have a baby. Now, I’m not so sure. And I’m not sure what to make of this ambivalence. Adam definitely wants a baby. He’d be a great dad. I think I’d be a great mom. But I’m not sure a great mom is the great thing I want to be in this life. I just started reading Motherhood by Sheila Heti, and I think reading it is pushing me to the “no baby” side of the scale. Thanks, Sheila. 
  8. This is language I picked up when I lived at a yoga center for six months. Most of my close friends speak this language.
  9. I still use a paper planner.
  10. However, the deal is that if he is not wearing his helmet and gets in an accident and suffers brain trauma, I’m allowed to leave. “Wear your helmet!” I’m always saying. “Most bike accidents happen within a half mile from home!” When we first moved to the city and he started biking regularly again, I ordered him a bike helmet. For his birthday, he got a neon yellow reflective vest and a fancy bike headlight. 
  11. It’s still hard for me to feel okay about being in a good mood when a therapy appointment rolls around. I know, intellectually, that there’s no “right way” to feel going into a therapy session, but part of me still feels that the appropriate state of mind (and heart) to be in when seeking help from a therapist is despair.
  12. Brown is the fourth most common surname in the U.S., so it’s not such a wild coincidence as you might think. Or maybe it is, but it’s not as wild as it would be if our last names were something like Minder or Montesanti. And no, we’re not planning to hyphenate—"Elizabeth Brown-Brown”—but you wouldn’t be the first to suggest it.
  13. Is asking this question the answer to this question?
  14. Actually, I said that I wouldn’t have kids with him until he had a stable job because I want to stay home with my hypothetical baby for the first few months, at least. 
  15. I’ll admit, he almost always picks up the tab at restaurants.
  16. There are several local coffee shops that I’d rather support, but what I like about Starbucks at the corner of North-and-South and Delmar is that I don’t have to talk to anyone. Not even the baristas, who are friendly enough, have time for small talk because the drive-through window always has a line and so their multi-tasking even as they take my order. And I don’t recognize any of the other customers, many of whom are students with earbuds stuck in their ears, sending out a message that they don’t want to be bothered, and so I don’t get caught making small talk with strangers.
  17. I am one of those people who sometimes writes things I have already done on to do lists so that I can experience the satisfaction of crossing them off.
  18. Claire Edwin Street was published alongside Stephen King in an early version of a Sci-Fi literary journal of sorts. My mother came across this in her childhood home once. I can’t locate any information online to back-up this claim or provide any details, but I’ve seen it with my own eyes!
  19. Alisa is my mother.
  20. Another thing possible with the daily diaries from the 80s—he transcribed 1980-1987 for us one year for Christmas, and I wasn’t very excited about this as a teenager—is to track my parents’ relationship. Here’s the gist of things. My mom’s mom died in June. She’d dropped out of college in the spring to be with her mother in the hospital (sort of), and so is living at home again with her dad. She got a job working for the city—pouring cement, mowing grass, clearing brush, that sort of thing. By May, the diary records that she stayed out all night. She went out with friends. Then my father’s name starts making appearances. He stayed over; he stayed over again; he was over for dinner, etc. By September, she was pregnant, and wedding plans began. In November, they were wed. In April, I was born. And all that time, my father was away, working on the barges, towing loads up and down the Mississippi River.
—Elizabeth K. Brown

Elizabeth K. Brown is a St. Louis-based writer. Her work has been published in Brevity Magazine, local foods magazines edible Iowa River Valley and edible Berkshires, and is forthcoming in They Said: A Multi-Genre Anthology of Contemporary Collaborative Writing. 





ELIZABETH BOQUET 

I wake up when I wake up—it’s summer after all—measure out a cup of cereal and soak it with just enough milk. I practice my flute. Until a few weeks ago, I hadn’t picked up my instrument for almost 30 years. It’s a risk to get too far into my day without playing it. I don’t sound great, but it’s not as bad as I thought.
     Before the sun gets too high in the sky, I bike the neighborhood, in and out of the side streets, ending with one long loop around the perimeter. My biking shorts with the zipper slot are in the dirty clothes, so I pull on some crop pants. No pockets. I go out without a phone, without a key, without ID. It feels radical. I am never more than a mile from home.
     By mid-morning it is hot as it should be, as it hasn’t been, enough to wear sunscreen, a linen top, a wide-brim hat. It is World Music Day, and our nutmeg of a state is on board. All over Connecticut, people have been urged to come out and play. I am not. Not in public.
     Musicians are posted all around our downtown in Milford. I park at my dad’s senior housing complex and call him from my car to see if he’d like to check things out with me. He’s an old musician—a sax man—and when he picks up the phone, I can tell he is already somewhere in a crowd. 88 and still groovin’. “We’re at the café,” he says. “Come on and meet us.”
     I head in that direction, a few blocks away, but don’t make it more than half of one before I stop for a good long time at City Hall, where a local jazz musician is playing an upright piano at the top of the steps. He is world-class. I move to where most people are sitting, under the shade of a few birch trees in a small pocket park, but it is too far. I walk closer and experiment—to the right, to the left, one step up, two steps up. I find my spot. Between songs he asks, “Do you play?” And I say, “A little bit.”
     Later I find my dad and his ladyfriend still at the café, listening to a female folk singer doing her thing. I tell them what a performance they missed at City Hall and encourage them to stop by there on their way back to the apartment. They do, and they catch the local high school choir. “How was it?” I ask. “Oh, it was exciting,” he says, but only because one poor girl puked in the heat. The paramedics carted her off.
     That night, my husband and I throw some burgers on the grill and find reasons to sit out on the back deck for hours. The animals in the estuary behind our house get impatient waiting for the sun to set. A red-winged blackbird harasses a hawk, a baby raccoon practices climbing the oak tree at the edge of our property, a possum peeks out from behind the azaleas, our dog sprints across the patio and chases it into the marsh. Finally, the mosquitos drive us in.

—Elizabeth Boquet

Elizabeth Boquet is Professor of English and Director of the Writing Center at Fairfield University in Fairfield, CT.





AMBER CARPENTER

It starts with a circumstantial beginning: localized, lower back pain. My body is limited in its ability to stand upright, to move at a fast pace, and since the incident, I have become acutely aware of connectivity.
     We recently moved. Several windows illuminate our new home, and this morning, a blinding sunrise compelled my eyes to squint and my injured body to shift. Instead of instantly bending at the hip, I have to map each movement with caution. If I steady my elbow here, swing both legs around and place my hands here, I can transition from this position to this position. It sounds like an algebraic word problem, which must be solved each time I sit, stand, and lie down.
     My wife brings me coffee in bed, tells me to take this and drops four Ibuprofen in the palm of my hand. I take slow sips, scroll through Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram, and check on donations for immigrant children. Koko the gorilla died today. She was forty-six. They say that her impact was profound, which is far more than anyone could say about our current administration.
     Our laundry hamper currently serves as a stand-in for my nightstand. Bathroom belongings lay scattered across the double vanity. Cardboard boxes line the linoleum floor, upstairs and down. But my electric toothbrush is plugged in, the same set of mint green sheets covers our mattress, and I drink ice water from my purple water bottle, the one with a dented bottom. I take comfort in the ordinary, but I tend to resist routines and practicality.
     In the shower, I notice terra cotta rooftops and California fan palms. Two rock pigeons land on the roof closest to ours, and just as I start to admire their color patterns—flecks of greens, purples, and blues—one pigeon rushes toward the other until it flies away. It, as if a bird is an object without body or song. They might be more appropriate. I would hate to misgender.
     I take Stella, a twelve-year-old Boxer, on a mid-afternoon walk. Her owner warned me about a heart condition and mentioned that Stella’s heart could fail at any minute. What an unpredictable organ. Sometimes I forget that I have an expiration date, that my heart will someday stop. When we sit together on the bare floor of her one-bedroom apartment, she stares into my eyes, and I wonder what she thinks of me, of this stranger who enters her home twice a week. Spit bubbles form at her jowls. Movement is gradual, something we now have in common. I look closely at bookshelves in the living room: Cunt: A Declaration of Independence; Memoirs of a Geisha; Even Cowgirls Get the Blues; Like Water for Chocolate. Such intimate findings, more intimate than conversations.
     Back home, we argue. Three years of residency brought us here: here as in San Jose, 2000 miles from Chicago; here as in this moment, this argument, this predicament. 1095 days of separation—an invisible, unsought line drawn between spouse and spouse, shifts and classes, sleep and consciousness. She concedes that she needs more love from me, but more implies not enough, and I find it hard to admit that my love is not enough, not right now, in this moment. The thing is, I need more love from me, too. 
—Amber Carpenter

Amber Carpenter is a recent MFA graduate from Columbia College Chicago's Nonfiction program. She completed her MA in English from East Carolina University in 2012 with a concentration in both poetry and nonfiction. Her work, which includes writing and photography, has been published in Sinister Wisdom, Two Hawks Quarterly, Mount Hope Magazine, and Glassworks Magazine.





KAT MOORE

I sleep in. I stay somewhere between wake and dreaming in between the snoozing alarm. I blame my sleepiness on the end of two years of middle school teaching. I still dream I’m in my classroom overcrowded with students and I don’t understand why we are still there. In my dreams, I know it’s June. I know school should be over. I awake relieved and then drift back to sleep and into better dreams. I finally raise myself out of bed around 10:30.
     Once up, I pour a cup of cold coffee, made earlier by my husband, and then heat it in the microwave. I need to start sorting through my books and clothes. We are moving from Memphis, from our three-bedroom home with a finished attic that is a two-room loft, and into a small two-bedroom apartment in another state. I need to downsize, to find a way to let go of some of my books and dresses. In the fall, I will be working on a PhD at a university in Texas. I am forty. Old, in my mind. A late bloomer. A heroin addiction took up the better part of my twenties, and then living in twelve step meetings filled up my late twenties and early thirties. I am behind in life, but have decided to live the life I want.
     Around noon, I put a Bikini Kill record on the player. I want music that will energize me into opening my dresser drawers and separating clothes into a keep pile and a donate pile. Instead, it makes me sit down and write an essay that I have been wanting to write for years. That I have tried to write on numerous occasions, but somehow can’t find the narrative. I know I want to end on me at seventeen inside the gritty punk Antenna Club in midtown Memphis, my hands picking up the microphone while Bikini Kill performs on the small stage, the lead singer doing cartwheels, and then my voice screaming out made up lyrics. But I don’t know what comes before. I don’t know how to shape the story that would show how much this band, these three women and one guy, mean to me. With their music blaring, I open a document and write. I sing along with the songs. The lead singer Kathleen Hanna screams out “Silence inside of me silence inside,” and I am seventeen again and lost inside my own angst and pain.
     After four hours, and two records playing over and over, I finally have a rough draft. The voice isn’t my usual fare, instead it’s rough and angry, like their music, like I was at that age. A narrative emerges. A story of teen rage, of teen brokenness, a drunk father, a punk rock girl best friend, a history teacher who harassed and intimidated, and a guidance counselor who punished and didn’t advocate. I let the words settle. I change the music to The Julie Ruin, a recent band with Kathleen Hanna and the bass player of Bikini Kill all grown up, and dance barefoot in my office.
     Around six p.m., a young man arrives at my door. My husband is home from work. The young man is in Teach for America and has signed up for two years of teaching in Memphis. He looks to be in his early twenties. He wears a blue button down and khaki pants. He has been in Teach for America (TFA) training all day.  He lives in a dorm at the local university that works in conjunction with TFA. He’s hoping to rent out our house. He stands in our living room, full of idealism with sweat marks saturating his shirt beneath his arms. Architecture is his current obsession and he likes our crystal bulb doorknobs and built in bookshelves.
     We bought the house a year earlier when I still thought that secondary school teaching was a doable thing for me. When I still had delusions of being Mr. Keating (Dead Poet’s) ten months of the year while still finding time to write. But that had deteriorated when my identity as anything other than a teacher began to fade due to lesson plans, data planning, behavior planning, differentiated instruction, and a whole lot of other words that are common place in public education. I regret buying the house. I feel like it tethers me to Memphis and to that career. But then my husband said that we could always rent it out. Then I applied to a PhD program and got in. Now, the fresh-faced man, just embarking on his teaching journey, is in my home, and he loves it, and wants to rent it. He seems smart and kind. Responsible. Better suited for that career than I. His girlfriend will be moving down too. I’m glad to rent it to them. To free myself from this place.
     For dinner, I eat rice cakes smeared with peanut butter. I watch a YouTube video of Kathleen Hanna performing a sort of spoken word storytelling thing with a back-up band. She tells about coining the phrase “Kurt smells like teen spirit,” and how her friend turned it into a hit song. A hit song that made him a lot of money while she had to strip to make enough money to fix her band’s broken van. She pauses during parts of the story and sings bits of his song. She isn’t spiteful. It’s humorous, part confessional/part homage. Yes, she had to strip, but the guy, her friend, is dead. I remember when he died. It was April 1994—the end of my junior year in high school. I was over the hit song, and more into his wife, who walked around a Seattle park in her pajamas and pigtails, no make-up, and read aloud his suicide note. I liked her because she was hated, and soon would be more hated, and even accused of murder. But she was all fucked up, like I was soon to be at that time. The wife even attacked Kathleen a few years later. Punched her in the face at a Lollapalooza. When the video ends, I turn on The Punk Singer, a documentary about Kathleen Hanna. It mentions the phrase that became a hit song, it mentions the face punching. I still love them all, Kathleen and Courtney, and Kurt too.
     I end the evening with a hot bath with lavender Epsom salt. I soak in the water and start reading a collection of essays that I bought on my honeymoon days earlier in San Francisco. The voice is deeply internal. A voice trapped inside layers of thought, a strong interior identity that probably isn’t shared with casual friends, but reveals itself intimately in the essays. After a few pages, I realize I have no idea what I just read because my thoughts have returned to my essay, the rough draft from earlier in the day. I realize that not everyone knows who Bikini Kill is, and that I probably need to add sections about the band. Like how they kick started the riot grrrl movement, like how they were a young feminist punk band that challenged the machismo of the 1990’s punk scene, like how they were criticized by the mainstream media, how young teen girls loved them because the music was just what the girls needed in their own lives.
     After the bath, I crawl into bed relieved that the house is rented, and with a plan to sort my clothes and books tomorrow. But I know that I will spend most of the day listening to records and revising my essay, the first one I have written since the summer before. For a moment, I wonder if I should have remained a middle school teacher, but the joy of writing and remembering is still fresh in my skin as I drift off to sleep.

—Kat Moore

Kat Moore is an essayist and poet. Her work appears in Yemassee, Profane, Salt Hill, New South, Pithead Chapel, Hippocampus, Blunderbuss, and others. 





DONALD CARR

Golden rays of light pour through my windowpane. My eyelids flicker. Consciousness taps every so gently on my membrane. I awake today into the estate of gods— the present—this paradise of earthly delight. I have been waiting all my life for this moment to arrive. Yes, heaven is here on earth, and only those who don’t know it seek to leave. Dying is optional. N’est pas? Well, it is possible I exaggerate, slightly. I hear angels walking. Angels can fly because they take themselves lightly. Come fly with me down the corridors of life. I’m a tour de force now forced to tour.
     10 a.m. The electric sundial-clock registers the tenth hour of daylight. I break my nights fast with six sweet oranges, and homemade strawberry-cherry juice simmered overnight with ginger, which goes down well. My stomach growls its appreciation. I leave home to meet with Cheryl. The neighbour’s pink tea-rose bush is in full bloom. Delicate fragrances surf the morning breeze. I need no invitation. I gently hold a few roses, my nostrils inhaling their essence. I am pollinated. My life opens up just like a flower.
     At the subway booth, the operator calls out “Hey man, what’s happening?”
     I drop a ticket in the box give him a smile. “Happy I’m here.”
     The TTC eastbound subway train pulls into station. On board are many good-looking people but today not many of them are looking good. Students peruse open books. Businessmen with plugs in their ears stare vacantly into space, some with blackberries in their hands were engrossed to the point of oblivion. Though they did look up from time to time in consternation as if they heard mermaids singing. Then they returned to their hand held sirens. Once upon a time we went out to meet others, now we go out to be alone. Am I bored? Hell no! I spent my green age on an Island in the sun, blessed by nature. I crossed oceans to get here. I am here for the experience. I know why the caged bird sings-to keeps from crying. I don’t trouble trouble till trouble troubles.
     For mental stimulation I find the newspaper’s crossword puzzle. I read my horoscope first, just in case. AQUARIUS: “You sense a lot is going on behind the scene, yet you can’t seem to verify your hunch. Let go of your intuitive feelings for now. Use your energy well. Know when to separate work and play. Tonight be the belle or beau of the ball. It’s a wonderful life.”
     I look around me. Posters promote “If you see something say something.” Headlines on the front pages; “Twenty first century schizoid-man is suffering from M.A.D. Now that’s an oxymoron— Mutually Assured Destruction. Yes, even cows are mad. Prophesied terror is now visited upon us. Black widow returns as suicide bomber. Toy solders grin widely as they posed for photograph. What all the wise men promised has not happened and what all the damned fools said would happen have come to pass. One woe is past. One woe— Resident evil Trump—is now visiting Casablanca. And behold, comes two more woes hereafter. To put it lightly: SOS; it is urgent!  Save our souls. At any minute the lights could go down. And I don’t mean for the feature presentation Gone With the Wind. What do you think? It’s impossible to reply? I return to crossword. Number 21 down, 4-letter word for despot…Tsar.
     Yes, dark days up ahead! Hell is coming for breakfast, whether we like it or not.   
     11:45 a.m. “Hello.” “It’s me. I’m downstairs.” I arrive at chez Cheryl. She gently informs me I am late. She hugs me in greetings the little companion dog licks my face. She asks that I notify her whenever my estimate time of arrival changes. Humbled, I promise to honour her request. We work on 20 pages of URBAN SHAMAN RAVES ON X-T-C. 
     Dark star Marcus ‘Messiah’ Garvey-Miss Rosa Parks Rap:
Friends, we are traveling together.
The world is a mandala.
Throw off tiredness.
Let us show you the beauty that can be spoken.
Truths dressed in tales of wonder
Some as young as the tooth, some as old as yesterday
Oh! What tales we ancient mariners have to tell
Some from the buried past of the earth
the shades of night have long cloaked over,
Like that first time on primordial earth
The Himalayas were coral reefs under the sea
The Sahara an ocean populated by mighty blue whales
when our ancestral species emerged from the dim mist of time.
All this is not hearsay or heresy,
not legends or myths but living facts.
History shouldn’t be a mystery.
     2 p.m. I’m on my way home, walking through a green park. Trees, unable to move, wave branches at me, rocking in treetops birds chirp to console baby chicks. In the spaces recently vacated by fallen leaves the horizon moves in closer for a kiss. Butterflies dressed in the blossoms of wildflowers flirt shamelessly with me as they flit by. I reflect on the past two hours of mental and emotional stimulation in Cheryl’s wordsmith lab using the twenty-six magic symbols, the alphabet. “Such a joy to work with a gentle spirit.” The grass whispers, “Speak your mind and others will be delighted by what they hear.” The sunflowers in the garden beds turn their yellow faces towards me and—for a moment forgetting the sun—nod their heads to me in soft ovation as I pass by in holy indifference. I am blinded by delight.

The subway compartment is very cool, even cold.  Outside the Lansdowne station the air is turgid. Wheelchair warriors negotiate with pedestrians along the sidewalk. A daredevil in a spider man suit performs a stunt at the crosswalk. He may have been big in Japan (as his musical accompaniment proclaimed) but backed-up drivers beep-beep their horns in annoyance. I count 10 cars, private chariots made of steel; 8 have only one person in them, and 7 out of the 10 drivers had a large stomach and one was pregnant.
     I check out the passer-by. I see Ray bans, knock-off Calvin’s, even an eye patch (I did not catch the brand) Not many bare faces. On an average, 9 people out of 12 wear dark glasses. Yes, the sun is bright. Some eyeglasses are prescriptions, and yes, I see my reflection a lot. I remind myself not to look at people wearing dark shades since, by their shades, they have communicated to me that they are travelling incognito. Henceforth I will abide by their unspoken wish.

The Paradise Club is at the top of my street on the west side. In Canada women everywhere are free but at the Paradise Club they wear thongs. Eyes veiled but still available. A vast Value Village storehouse occupies the east side. I satisfy the thrill that comes from spending—wisely. My stars are aligned as far as pleasure and value are concerned: I get a Daniel Hechter floral shirt; a Versace shirt—nuff said; and the most beautiful purple paisley patterned shirt from Express. The total sets me way back—$30. “Say what? Today I get 30% off.”
     “Have a good day.”
     “Yes, I intend to.”
     The houses I pass are modest, many still owned by the original owners, some now reluctantly moving into old age homes. Text messages from busy grandchildren are not enough in the dead of night when one needs is a live touch. LOL does not evict a smile. I see a “For sale” sign. A Wheel-Trans vehicle pulls up two doors down.
     I say hello to various people sitting on verandas. I recognize different languages—Ukrainian, Japanese, Italian, Irish, Somalia, and more. They all acknowledge my greetings, in their own way. I stroll past the tea-rose bushes in full flower. Unfurled petals call out to me, again. I hear them with my nose. Some of the deep pussy-pink tones of the rose petals have—in the light of the sun—now lightened in colour, their yellow centers still inviting. I wait my turn while two bees do their thing. They load themselves with yellow stuff, they buzz off to their hidden hive. Roses are so hip. I visit the yellow center, extend my tongue, and sip some nectar. I inhale the scent of beauty conquering decay.
     2:46 p.m. Home, I turn on the light. The man-in-the mirror comprehends why others observed him in mild amusement in the subway cars and on the streets as he passed them: my nose is yellow from the pollen dustings, yellow polka dots the landscape of my face from when I supped the nectar. Yes, in me the tiger sniffs the rose. Though wildflowers please me more.
     I turn on my favourite music station. The music is infectious. The singer entreats me: “Have you ever dreamed, have you ever loved someone…tell me how you feel, when you feel real.” I check myself: Am I feeling groovy? Am I in a place where I feel I can be real? The DJ hears my call. “Jamaica Funk” hits the airwaves. Hell yes! Turn up the volume. Light up a chalice in the palace.  Jamaica Funk, let me get into you! If I set my mind free my ass will surely follow. I am not hard. I am frightfully soft-by half. In fact I’m micro-soft. Am I tripping? This is more than just a twist in my sobriety.
     3:33 p.m. where does the time go? Shower. Clean underwear, check. Dressed in my new floral shirt, yellow pants, and footwear. Check out the man in the mirror. My mirrored image smiles back at me. Yes, I’m flex. Outside and into the heated air once more. The last ten summer temperatures have been hotter, each year, than the year before. I smell my tea roses, some petals wilting. “Good afternoon” I nod to old men in shirtsleeves playing chess on front porches and to gardeners on their knees uprooting unruly weeds. Young ones on their way home from school play games under the gaze of anxious mothers.
     In the subway before the evening rush, many are engaged with little black boxes they caress in their palms. With no distraction in my hands or ears or pockets (No! I don’t have Lucifer on speed dial I am left up to my own devices—my mind, which like a parachute only functions when open.) With time on my hands I see hunched-over shoulders, either to protect privacy or a function of deteriorating eyesight, no doubt from staring into a lit screen for hours on end. Even sunlight burns if you get too much of it. I observe how bad—on a whole—posture has become, how monotone the clothes are: beige, black, and white. Women dress with more sense of flair. Men dress to hide their lack of style.  Most are dressed by the Gap; blue jeans predominate. Look at that—ripped jeans! How au courant! Torn knees. How very 80s! I wonder if Cher and Diana Ross still have theirs.
    The train stops. A woman hiding in an angry-red dress with a hood and wearing ‘fuck me’ pumps cha-cha into the car like a cat on a hot tin roof. Mon dieu! She is startling—one of the Gorgon sister—to say the least. Yes, many insist that beauty, like contact lens, is in the eyes of the beholder but this writer assures you: ugliness is to the bone. I have to presume she has no friends, because a friend would not have allowed her to leave the house looking the way she did. I would not have been surprised to learn that she was also banned from mirror shops. She must be on her way to meet a blind date. Some big bad wolf dressed in sheep’s clothing and wearing shades a-waits up ahead. No doubt ready to huff and puff and blow her house in.
     An unseen voice crackles over the TTC’s communication speakers: ‘due to unforeseen circumstances this train will be standing still until future notice.’ Heat swept through the car like a tidal wave. Seems Wi-Fi, whatsapp news, weather, sport, all down. High anxiety ran amok. Little Miss Red Riding Hood smiles in my direction. Her hot-lava dress rocked and rolled my soul with more dolomite than Lot’s wife. Now I comprehend the line from Sartre’s play, No Exit: Hell is other people.  Okay Medusa! Though it kills me to say it. You’ve proven it. I am human. For, I am stoned again. The train pulled into the station. My body got out and stood still until sight returns. Unlike Lot’s wife I did not looked back
     At the Shiatsu Clinic, an old building with a character, the waiting room is friendly. Everyone smiles easily, even if they are in various degrees of pain. A team of three students of different nationalities who graduate in six weeks and a supervisor attend to me. They take my pulse: 82; observe my tongue color: purple, dusky; ask the reason for this visit: lower lumbar. A team member—during a conversation on the importance of the skin and touching and positive body acceptance— tells me about a book she recommends: 5 LOVE LANGUAGES. Her conversation opens a door to observe my feelings through a different set of prisms. The team discusses my diagnosis, and suggests treatment: cupping, massage, and needles. I surrender my body on a narrow bed. What? Sixty minutes passed already? Okay. Thanks a $1000000. No Don, only $20. Refreshed, I am walking on air.
     5 p.m. From the cool interior of the clinic I go out to the roller coaster of Spadina Avenue. At intersections, bicyclists line up waiting for the stoplight to change. Daredevil skateboarders zip by in apparent disdain for the laws of gravity. I go for a trip to Kensington Market. Beggars down on their luck seek handouts as they hold up walls with their backs. I give a Blanche DuBois in a clean white dress-the symbol of purity and innocence- the changes in my pocket.  Talk about having ‘to depend on the kindness of strangers.’ It cannot be denied: begging is one of the hardest jobs around this town.
    The market’s outdoor stalls bustle with shoppers. Trucks drop-off pick-up produce. At a small café I eat an amazing colourful of salad with a curry-ginger dressing that delivered on its promise. I felt I had eaten the rainbow. At the Caribbean Corner, I pick up a dozen mangoes from Jamaica, an avocado from Dominica, plantains, and fresh frozen coconut water. Frozen coconut water, just what the doctor ordered. At the health food store I purchase cranberries, cilantro, black beans, cashews, and hibiscus flowers.
     Bob Marley reggae-rocks the airwaves. “Sun is shining, the weather is sweet.” Long-legged girls in short-shorts eat mangoes in the shades. A Sampson in dreadlocks tries to persuade a wandering Delilah to offer up her honour so that he can honour her offer; all night he would be on and off her. Down the next street I pass a music vinyl shop. A singer keeps asking from the speaker:
“You love me now, don’t you? Don’t you? Don’t you?”
     I think: this is not a love song she must be very pretty to have such a problem. Still, the beat is infectious. My spirit dances, it sings the refrain: “You love me now, don’t you?” to everyone I pass. The ugly people frown cross-eyed, the alive people’ eyes light up. Sweetly we smile in happiness. Cool guy banters, “I like your true colors.” Of this I am sure, just as I am sure that E= MC Squared: free people look alike no matter what the colour their skin.
     I return to the Shiatsu Clinic. I gift a mango to each of the three angels of mercy who laid their healing hands on me, as well as one to the receptionist and to the supervisor. I have now completed one of my daily goals. I returned from a trip to South Africa with a better understanding of the word “poverty,” and made a promise to myself: Every day I will give someone a gift to prove that in this brief time called life, I live in an area of the earthly paradise named Canada.
     As the evening spreads out against the sky I amble northwards through leafy streets with two-story houses. Front gardens bloom in the richness of summer. Green lawns grow signs: “Leave fossil fuel in the ground.” “Slow down children at play” Restaurants advertise with signs: “Our flights are never overbooked, and we won’t lose your luggage,” and “Tonight’s forecast: 99% chance of wine.” Evening diners call to others. Forks click-clack on china plates. Chilled wine does its magic. Chatter inebriated by distilled spirits takes flight. Ah yes, the pleasure of leisure. La dolce vita. Indeed!
     6:30 p.m. The Sivananda Yoga Center on Harbord St is housed in a two-story building that used to be The Fifth Kingdom bookstore. Books: Journey to Shambala, Silent Springs, The Pictorial Key to the Tarot, The Book of Grass, Secrets of the Third Eye, The way of Tao. Now Yoga shows the way. Health is wealth. Peace of mind is happiness. I keep eyes closed for the full 90 minutes of yoga class. Time belongs to me to spend in physical meditation. The sound of traffic fades. In the backyards birds raise their voices in a choir. I am in the right place to be real. Om shanti shanti shanti. Peace. Peace. Peace. Class ends. I go downstairs, and I am in luck; I am invited to a celebration for a teacher’s birthday. A feast is laid out, lentils, rice, varieties of vegetables dressed with turmeric, ginger, cardamom and others to which my taste buds were introduced for the first time. I am gifted a small bag to take home. Gratitude flows. I feel blessed.
     9:30 p.m. On the subway journey homeward, it is clear that little black tablets have replaced newspapers. This morning on the train a lot of people looked sad, as if they were going somewhere they didn’t want to go, but now at the day’s end, but on the return journey a lot more people look sadder, as if where they were going they didn’t want to go. How peculiar.
     Outside Dufferin St. Stationand Bloor St. is abuzz. Shorts, seersucker shirts and sandals. I pass among people to whom the street corners serve as a kind of living room. Some are caught up in the yellows and blues of their days they spit out the butt ends of their days and their ways on the sidewalk. A lady of the night gives me the ‘come hither’ look.
     “Hey baby, you want to have some fun?” 
     I am amused. I bargain. “It depends.”
     “Depends on what?”
     “Depends on how much you are going to pay me.”
     She laughs and passes on, seeking a better bargain, no doubt.
     At Mercer Union Center For Contemporary Art there is a crowd of fashionable people. The crowd exhibits style from their toes to the crowns of their heads. Is this where the post-modernist are hanging out?”
     “Hey D, so good to see you,” someone calls.
     Cosmos, a calypsonian and bandleader of one of the Caribbean floats greet me. ”What you been up to? I haven’t seen you in a donkey’s year. Chill out! Come have a drink with us.”
     An opening night party for a new art installation is in full swing. Different rooms host a soundscape installation. I spend time in each twilight zone absorbing the sounds and visuals, wall murals, and photographs. It is loud, hypnotic, verging on cacophony. I ponder, “Brave new world? Is this the current undercurrent?
     An acquaintance, with beautiful lips, greets me. “Hello D, you look resplendent tonight”
     “Wow, such vocabulary. Intelligence is so sexy” I respond.
     She was charmed. “Who are you wearing?”
     She was in full Black Panther mode. I couldn’t resist a jest “I’m wearing white privilege”
     We collapsed in laughter’s euphoric feelings of well-being. My friend introduces her two beloved daughters. In the neon light they shine like black pearls. Intelligence and graciousness becomes them. One tall slender child weighed one-and-a-half pounds at her birth. I hug her longer sheer amazement at the miracle of her being in my arms. I whisper in her ear, “Never be afraid. FEAR means you have Faced Everything And Recovered. I admire you for your strength.” An hour is spent skylarking at the ball. Thanks for all the memories.
      Swimming through the waves of heat my body floats homeward. In the moonlit garden the tea-rose petals fold inward. Standing on a carpet of pink petals. I pull rose branches closer, avoiding the prick of their thorns, which is their way to caress. Dewdrops wash my face as I inhale deeply. A wise echo whispers in my ears. ” I am Nature. I adore you.” I can still hear sweet echo’s refrain “ I adore you”
11 p.m. Home. Note to self: my new apparel served me well. Yes full value, give thanks. I hang them up. Turn fan on full blast. Breeze hits my naked skin. I am home. No need to dress. Put on music. Will wonders never cease! What’s this I hear!
      Cascading on the thin-skin eardrum a mystifying transcendental melody vibrates. A holy shit moment! Van Morrison’s ‘Moondance.’ Yes, it’s a marvellous night for a moondance. I do not need a second encouragement from the magician to sail into the mystic. My new motto: Reach for the sky and if I only touch the clouds, well, at least my feet will have left the ground. I turn up the volume. Time to go stargazing. Light up another chalice in de palace. Bring out frozen coconut water. DJ sure knows how to move a crowd: retro techno disco dub rock pop hip-hop bebop don’t stop!  This miracle called a body is high after massage, acupuncture, yoga, art and meditation. I dance my ass off. I flee the scene for a love supreme.
     11:55 p.m. My concubine—named Art—calls me. I put Alice Coltrane Ptah the El Daoud on the turntable. Lush string arrangements and cascading harps wash over me. The day’s excavations—my collaboration with Cheryl—I bring up on my MacBook. My energy body thrills in anticipation.
     This ark of clay with its sail screen of skin, nerves, and bones rides on the flood of time. Inside this chemical crucible, time performs its carbon miracle with the accidental and fortuitous concurrence of atoms, gene cascades, enzymes, and colliding molecules. Inside this chariot of flesh, there are canyons, Pine Mountains, lakes, and hundreds of millions of hundreds of millions of stars. (But, who is counting?) Each star has its orbit: centric, eccentric, and ex-centric, each one a concentric soul of light scattering in the darkness, never burning out—like love—only growing fainter or stronger Here on Earth, this place where God dawns on chaos, bones need bare flesh, for in the heavens and in the hells love is a crime that needs an accomplice, and gods are obsolete unless they kiss.                                                         
     Yes, energy is delight shared, and eternity is an hour that the wind blows back again. And as to how many angels can dance on the head of a pin? It depends on whether they have rhythm.
     If I have to disturb the universe, so be it.

—Donald Carr


Donald Carr. Born on an island in the sun, blessed by nature with a Jamaican birth. Mr Carr combines poetry and hip-hop-rap-opera to explore themes of racism, toxic masculinity and power. He has written and directed a steady stream of creative works that have progressively explored the boundaries of dance and theatre. By tapping into the energy and visions of diverse cultures he simultaneously entertains while educating the mind and feeding the imagination. He is committed to collaborating and producing original works reflecting the voices of Canada’s diverse communities. 
     URBAN SHAMAN RAVES ON X-T-C concentrates on the cutting edge of cultural and political themes. Three distinct voices—an Intelligent Black Man (IBM), historical legend Rosa Parks, and a Black angel— discuss the agony and ecstasy of being Black in a largely white society. Looking beyond the exotic and into the universal human heart to explore universal wounds.
     The wounds that can be named can be healed. 





SONJA LIVINGSTON


I wake up in a part of the world where three states touch toes. I’m on a writing retreat in the Cumberland Gap, which means I drive to Kentucky for coffee, cross back to Tennessee for a lemon-filled glazed from Sweet as Honey Donuts, head into Virginia and the Wilderness Road where Daniel Boone forged a trail through the Appalachians more than two centuries ago. Exploration we called it back then. Progress. Destiny. Funny how the words we use to describe wandering onto new lands change depending on who does the wandering and where and when.

I start up my car and just like that I’m in Kentucky. Just like that I’m in Virginia. Just like that I’m back in Tennessee.
     Tennessee, the welcome sign says, the Volunteer State. 
     Virginia is for Lovers. 
     Kentucky: Unbridled Spirit. 
     Apart from slogans, nothing seems different but license plates, laws governing cell phone use in moving vehicles, and the ability to buy liquor locally. If not for signs informing you of your whereabouts, you would not know the exact state you’re in. The mimosas bloom their otherworldly silken blossoms without deference to zip code. Catalpa leaves cascade like oversized green hearts from massive branches. Steeples rise from Baptist churches alongside Dollar Generals and barbecue places named for the folksy characteristics of those who ostensibly manage the pits. Heavy’s. Bubby’s. Grateful Ed’s. All of these things, the sweet smoky same, regardless of state line.

I grab a coffee to go, drive a mile east, and stand in the Cumberland Gap National Historical Park reading an informational sign.
     You are here, the sign says, the dark block of text hovering over Virginia.
     An image of Meriwether Lewis with his surveying equipment is featured beside a map of the Cumberland Gap, and an excerpt of a letter sent a few months after Lewis and his friend Clark pushed west exploring and cataloging the land beyond the Mississippi River. 
     This day, Lewis writes in November 1806, I undertook to settle the latitude of…Walker’s Line, formerly dividing the States of Virginia and North Carolina. 
     Lewis goes on, talking distances, divisions, and state lines. For 27 years, the sign explains, no one agreed on the border between Kentucky and Tennessee.
     I look again at the map. You are here. What a tempting a triad of words. What solidity they seem to offer; the key to sorting yourself out within the larger landscape. Even the sketch of Lewis has a sepia-tinged post-colonial pioneer charm. Still, I can only look into the sign for so long before I’m distracted by the land itself.
     Coffee in hand, I consider the mountains, the trees, and the kudzu creeping whichever way it pleases. I stretch out from Virginia, push a hand into Kentucky, breathe the cool clean air from Tennessee while considering the chicory raging in powder blue stands. They die nearly as soon as you pick them, those roadside flowers—try to grab hold of certain shades of blue, and just like that, they’re gone.
     And on this day when the light begins its slow crawl back toward darkness, the impermanence of those soft blue petals and the changeability of state lines makes me lean against my car and wonder about the edges of things. I think of the morning news. Men and women pounding at our southern border. Children detained behind barbed wire. Families captured, turned away, sent back. The lengths we’ll go to keep people from crossing lines made by men who roamed the land centuries before—men with ambition and mapmaking skills; men who looked at the curve of the river, the rise of mountain and said to themselves, here. You are here.
     That the land belonged to others was a minor inconvenience. That the land is not made for human holding did not enter into their acquisitive mechanical heads. That states and countries and all manner of borders are arbitrary, imagined, and all too often cruel, we can still hardly face. Instead, we give in to the overwhelming desire to box ourselves in, insisting on walls and lines and various points of demarcation. This is understandable. We are so small in the face of the world, what can we do but grab sticks and scratch lines into the dirt around ourselves like children playing with crayons?
     This is Kentucky, we say. This is Tennessee. 
     This is my side of the river. That is yours. 
     You are here, we say, and let ourselves believe it stands for more than it ever can.

—Sonja Livingston

Sonja is the author of three books of literary nonfiction, including the award-winning memoir Ghostbread. She teaches creative nonfiction in the MFA program at Virginia Commonwealth University.





CINDY BRADLEY

Woke up later than the sun did. Later than the birds did, but not late enough to consider it sleeping in. Walked into the family room, opened the blinds to let the sun that had been up for over an hour into the room—not too bright with a few passing clouds—and opened the sliding glass door to let my cat out of the room, waited for her daily dart through my legs, into the back yard.
     Turned on my computer. Listened for the faint humming of waking up, a somewhat reassuring sign of things working in a time when there’s little reassurance of things working. Loaded and checked the usual pages – Yahoo email, Facebook, Gmail, Twitter, Submittable, in that order—because there’s solace on this solstice in rituals, no matter how small.
     Drank two cups of coffee. Turned on YouTube, clicked and scrolled to find my workout for the day, deciding on cardio walking, followed by Pilates. Got through the cardio fine, the Pilates gave me trouble. I’d hoped the nausea and lightheadedness I’d been feeling for a couple of weeks—ebbing and flowing like the tide, not a constant thing—had ebbed its way out of my system, but no. It flowed with me as I rose from a supine position to reach for my toes, still there as I rolled back down. My daughter jokes that I’m pregnant, which at my age would be something resembling an immaculate ha-ha.
     Slice a piece of bread. Sourdough Yellow Corn Bread, to be exact. Homemade, but not by me. Bread is my son-in-law’s baking department, and his monthly varieties can’t be missed. I slip the slice in the toaster, slater avocado all over when it’s done. I grab a bottle of water, the first of five or six throughout the, thinking maybe I’m dehydrated and make a mental note to drink more.
     Opened the front door, letting in my friend and neighbor. She’s here for our weekly The Handmaid’s Tale viewing. In a series built on the novel of a disturbing dystopia, containing episodes leaving me haunted, this one left me completely undone.
     Think maybe my symptoms are related to stress. Not sure what the source of the stress could be, but I remember feeling this way once before. It was the month before my then-husband and I decided on divorce, and the tension was more than I could bear. I thought I might be developing an ulcer, or some other stomach malady, but the symptoms disappeared when he said yes, we’re over.
     Left the house. The sun felt warm, the day hovering just under 100. Met my daughter and three granddaughters at the library, marveling as always at their antics. They read books, jumped on chairs at the computer station, prepared food in the kitchen, rocked baby dolls, played puzzles. A reminder of how children jampack the minutes, hours, days with so much wonder.

—Cindy Bradley


Cindy Bradley obtained her MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Fresno State University. She currently serves as a nonfiction assistant editor for Pithead Chapel. Her work has appeared in 45th Parallel, Front Porch Journal, Under the Sun, among others. Her essay "Death, Driveways, and Dreams", featured in Under the Sun's 2016 issue, was selected as notable by Best American Essays. She is currently working on a memoir and looking forward to attending The Normal School's Creative Nonfiction Workshop and Publishing Institute this summer.





Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 11: Brian Michael Barbeito • Alison Stine • Katherine E. Standefer • Abby Dockter and Thomas Dai • Karen Schaffner • James Butler-Gruett • Rebecca Graves • Jennifer McGuiggan • Cassie Keller Cole • Margot Singer

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. If you wrote something (it's not too late!), send us your work via this submission form by July 12 (it's okay if you didn't RSVP before: the more the merrier).

—The Editors



July 11: Brian Michael Barbeito • Alison Stine • Katherine E. Standefer • Abby Dockter and Thomas Dai • Karen Schaffner • James Butler-Gruett • Rebecca Graves • Jennifer McGuiggan • Cassie Keller Cole • Margot Singer





BRIAN MICHAEL BARBEITO

I drove my daughter to high school and took a winding way back and as I went through the streets there I saw old homes that had much character and I wondered what it would have been like to live a few decades previously when things were still modern but a bit slower. I noticed a lot of cars and thought that the physical and social infrastructure might not be able to handle the all the new housing developments, the sprawl as they call it. I cut the lawn in the back and realized if you make a brick border around a garden’s perimeter, as I had done the previous summer, that you have to account for a way to cut the grasses and weeds that will grow between the bricks. I surveyed the scene as it were and thought that the place still looked pretty well and reminded myself that everything is a process and this, that, and the other thing that need tending to, take time, and that there is a line between pacing oneself and actual procrastination that I had not crossed yet.
     I gathered the dogs, a husky cross and a shepherd cross, got in the jeep, and headed towards the roads that would take us to the forest. In the forest I crossed a small bridge, wandered along the ridge that lay atop a steep valley, searched for Chaga mushroom, and took a few pictures of feral flowers, other worldly-looking root systems, and one small garter snake that waited on a summit and did not like me there in near his domain and around his digs. I went to an open field at the end of the forest and the dogs joyfully played and sniffed by a sandpit and I just stood there and daydreamed and looked at the clouds. I thought about various things that were basically unrelated but seemed to pop in and out of my mind and these included but by no means were limited to, spaceships and Jim Sparks, Advaita and Alan Watts, the fact that though things were well enough that they would have been better had I remembered a thin winter hat I wear in the summer there that the flies and insects can’t get at me through, and whether I needed to get petrol in order to make it home or not.
     After leaving there I did in fact get petrol but I checked to see if the gas card I had been giving by someone worked or not. It did not and the attendant thought I must have used it and forgotten but it was not the case. The cards are often problematic for some other reason. But, there is nothing like someone judging or assuming they know something about you (and being wrong), to deepen your maturation process and your tolerance of humanity and their ways. So, instead of arguing I just pre-paid cash and let it be, choosing to stay in the light so to speak, or at least centred. I drove home not on the highway but along Woodbine Avenue because it burns less gas, is more scenic, and is relaxing in general. The whole road there is perfectly in fitting with a professional slacker like me because it’s simply slower and easier and somehow freer than the highways or other roads that are full of discordant energies, temperamental people, and many stop signs and lights (read simply: what is considered the ‘regular world,’ and its populace.
     I watered some plants when I got back. They were impatiens flowers, and also potted tomatoes and peppers. I listened to an Alan Watts video on YouTube, and I also looked up all the books written by William Golding. In high school they get you to read Lord of the Flies, or they used to, and since I always liked it, I learned he had written several other books, pretty well received, that had symbolism and literary devices and so forth. I decided I wanted to read them, or at least one or two, and made a kind of inner mental note that says something like, If I get a chance time-wise and money-wise and whatever else-wise, I am actually going to purchase at least one other book by him and sit and read it as opposed to just thinking about purchasing at least one other book by him and sitting and reading it.
     I made a sandwich and drank a diet soda and stared out the window for a bit. I went soon after to pick up my daughter from school. I made the same route, and the same slightly different route back, but that was okay because it was all a positive and predictable occurrence as opposed to something chaotic or stressful. I think at that point I made her some food and told her if she needed any help with some school work to ask. I then read some Rumi in a book put together by the American poet and translator of Rumi work named Coleman Barks. I remembered that he went to or taught at Baylor College if indeed it is the right term ‘college,’ as it could be possibly called simply ‘school,’ in Tennessee. I remembered that I once dated someone that went had just finished school there. I thought that strange connections and things like that were somewhat interesting but that not much ever came of them. I wrote some nature vignettes and edited my photography.
     When the dusk came I watched that day a movie called The Tribes of Palos Verdes, which I was so completely impressed with on various levels—all levels basically from mise-en-scene to script to spirit of the whole thing and so on so forth, that my idea and faith in film was restored. I thought though, that I was a bit dumb compared to how I wanted to be since I didn’t even know what Palos Verdes meant, and I did not speak Spanish. To further muddle my thought with needless judgments against myself I remembered that I had just learned that Cormac McCarthy, the world’s finest author, could speak and write fluently in Spanish. There would be no hope for me I thought, yet—I could still write my small vignettes and photograph the wildflowers of the forests, if even for my own inner joy and creative pace, process, and progress.
     After the movie I wrote a mini travel memoir called, simply, Playa Del Carmen, Mexico which I posted to Facebook with no accompanying photograph because no longer have any pics from there in my phone to upload. I then watered the flowers again because for the heat and humidity, the general dryness of the land as of late then—I worried.  Soon after I went to bed and began a succession of weird dreams that were not outright nightmares but could be termed uneasy and not benevolent. They were, from what I remembered the next morning and could remember now, about people I did not really trust and who disliked me. I was trying to get away, to get out from their environs and back to a more calm if not positive physical, emotional, and spiritual area though I do not know now, nor did I know then, just what or where that place was.

—Brian Michael Barbeito


Brian Michael Barbeito is a Canadian writer, poet and photographer. Recent work appears at Fiction International from San Diego State University, CV2 The Canadian Journal of Poetry and Critical Writing, and at Catch and Release-The Columbia Journal of Arts and Literature. Brian is the author of Chalk Lines (Fowl Pox Press, 2013, cover art by Virgil Kay). He is currently at work on the written and visual nature narrative titled Pastoral Mosaics, Journeys through Landscapes Rural. 





ALISON STINE

Many older women gave me dirty looks as I walked out of the art museum, into the rain. But only one man—older, white, and wealthy, based on his pinched leather loafers, his suit so slim and tailored it shone; even his umbrella looked expensive—concentrated, frowning so hard as he read the words of my T-shirt (MEN HAVE MADE A LOT OF BAD ART), he dropped his I-phone X. And with a smack—louder than the sound of the credit card denied at dinner, louder than my child waking me at 6am, but not as loud as I laughed in the car, not as loud as the plastic ball colliding in a spray paint  can, or my ancient computer wheezing on, or the moon beating high through my rented window, it cracked.

—Alison Stine

Alison Stine is the author of five books, most recently The Protectors (Little A, 2016).





KATHERINE E. STANDEFER

Stumble

I wake to mist, a green dawn full of birds, the promise of a storm. The paper on my parents’ driveway in Illinois is speckled with rain. The dog, for the first time since he joined our family 11 years ago, does not come to my room in the morning, does not even come bursting out of his downstairs bed when I turn the corner from the stairs. He is sleeping in the living room, the place that has become his refuge in these final months; we surmise the carpet must be thicker there. He lifts his head once he recognizes whose scent has entered.
     The three of us take him for what my dad calls a Stumble. It is certainly no longer a walk; old Jack Boy totters down the steps, my dad supporting him lightly at the hips, and then drags his back legs across the driveway. They dangle, rubbery, his paws clubbed and scabbed, useless unless he plants them just so behind him, a tripod he bounces off like a bunny rabbit. His front legs have become thick with muscle, and when he gets going he moves quickly down the block,  with momentum. But one misstep sends him twisted to the ground, pushing hard to get up. More and more often he is unable. He pushes so hard he pops boners, the wet red end of his penis waggling at us as he struggles to get purchase on his heavy hips.
     “Good boy, Jack,” we say, urging him on, as he looks frantically over at us, as we help to set him back upright. “You’ve got it. It’s okay, boy.”
     My gentle father, in his polished business shoes and blue plaid shirt, holds Jack’s hips while he poops, the dog unable to squat and so bounding between each turd, trying not to fall in his own shit. My mother, crying silently, in jeans and a raincoat, follows quickly with the poop bag, trying to keep up, to collect each piece as Jack litters them across the yard like eggs.
     “He is actually pretty efficient at not falling in,” I say into the green wet morning, and my dad nods.
     “He’s adjusting,” he says.
     We adjust to our broken parts until we can’t anymore, I think, and then we die.
     The whole Stumble back the dog looks up at my dad for reassurance each time he falls. The new intimacy visible in their relationship makes my chest hurt. At the house, I hold the hose nozzle for the dog, and he gratefully drinks the way he has always loved, biting and gulping at spray.
     I have been home two days, and the dog has sometimes seemed to be doing well, his floppy boxer ears jaunty as he hurtles down the block. My parents tell me I must have perked him up; he hadn’t made it to the end of the block in ages, and he did for me. But this morning, after the Stumble, he finds me panting, whimpering, and I feel his heart yammering inside him for no reason. “What is it, boy?” I ask. The dog can only stare at me and whine, leaned forward, his butt sagging towards earth. Jack Boy stands on one of the many carpet mats that now cover the slate hallway and the wood kitchen floor, so he will not slip on the slick surfaces as he lurches like a drunk around the house. My mom tells me she has stopped running all but the most basic errands. She feels he needs her to be home.
     When I see him panting like this, I understand. I feel the lumps in his neck. I wonder what his heart is doing in there, and what kind of pain he’s in. I touch his velvet coat, his graying muzzle. He stares at me, furiously, with his golden eyes.
     Ten years ago, whenever I came home to the Midwest from the mountains my parents would plead with me to take Jack for punishing runs. He was getting into trouble, they said, and they were too old, too busy, too tired to play with him as much as he needed. Jack and I ran fast loops around the neighborhood beneath the big maples of my childhood, until he would lie down on a random stretch of parkway and refuse to go any further. Those furious eyes. Back then, my father—the long-suffering lone male in a family of four women—would crow about the dog’s “high marks,” the way he impressively lifted his leg and splashed higher than the other dogs’ piss in a show of dominance. My dad joked that the dog was mad at them for months after they had his giant balls cleaved off. Jack was well-trained, but stubborn, and for years if I tried to run him off-leash like my parents did he’d dart away, challenging me with his gaze, staying just far off enough that I couldn’t grab him.
     But in the last five years, he’d started waking me when he needed something—using his paws, as boxers do, to hit me in bed. When we’d stayed overnight in a Wisconsin Motel 6 for my dad’s 60th birthday, the dog stood whining at my bedside, striking out with his paw until I came to sleep on the floor with him. He curled into the nest I built for myself out of blankets and pillow; I slept in the dog bed.
     “He picked you,” my sisters joked.
     Today, my mom stands in the kitchen and quietly says, “I know he loves your sisters too, but your relationship with Jack has always seemed deeper. I don’t know what it is.”
     Now, I place my suitcases by the garage door. My flight back to Tucson leaves at noon. There is nothing left to do but find the dog, curled up again in the dark living room, to say goodbye. After my younger sister visits home for the 4th of July, and has her goodbye, my parents will end his discomfort.
     I would have liked to midwife him, I think as I lie on the ground beside him. To hold onto his coat as he slipped out. Instead I have half an hour here on the rug, in a golden pool of lamplight, while a hard pour drops out of the sky. It’s predicted to loose 7 inches out in Aurora. “The last thing we need,” my mother said, watching the weather last night. “There’s nowhere left to put it.”
     I try to memorize the dog: the patch of bare fur on his back flank, his black skin rubbery and exposed. His extraordinary eye boogers and the inflammations on the edge of his floppy jowl. The cyclone whorl of fur on his butt, beside his cropped brown tail. The barrel chest I have thumped and thumped with the flat of my hand.
     My mother comes quietly into the room, still crying, and switches off the light. “It’s time to go,” she says.
     When I leave him for the last time, kissing his velvety, wrinkled head in the dark, I hope he will understand what is happening. I whisper the stupid prayer, “Please stay forever.” I desperately want him to follow me to the door, to bark angrily, indignantly, like he used to as the car pulls out. I want to see his small squidgy black face and the outline of those ears in the window, as we always did, but they do not appear. Jack stays on the floor of the living room as we pull out into the rain.
     Death begins long before it fully arrives, and maybe this is all that makes it bearable, in the end: that death feels like grace. That what could go on is worse than what must happen. It is not lost on me that we recognize this so much more clearly for our dogs than for our humans. Something in us hopes harder for each other. Something in us has heard the story that we are fixable.
     Eventually, of course, we are not.
     “Do you think we’re wrong?” my mom asks on the way to the airport, both of us red-eyed. “Do you think it’s time?”
     “Of course,” I say.
     At the airport I will inhale a jalapeno-cheddar bagel with jalapeno-cheddar cream cheese, having foregone packing a lunch in favor of crying with my dying dog. I will sit in the middle seat beside a greasy-haired veteran wearing some kind of brace, who tells me in abrupt, loud sentences that he returned from Desert Storm half paralyzed and with “PTSD on top of PTSD.” His bare knees will touch the seat in front of him. “I’ll live anywhere I can see a Wal-Mart one direction and a corn field the other,” he crows. He will tell me he’s coming to Arizona from Arkansas to see his girls, that after the war his wife told him she’d married him as a corporate climber but ended up with a cross between Forrest Gump and the Rain Man. He will talk through my headphones trying to get my attention. The flight attendant will give me a tiny bottle of Bombay Sapphire for my tonic water, waving off my credit card, glancing in the veteran’s direction as he continues to talk. He leapt out of planes! Has been to 16 countries and talked to twenty thousand people and still somehow his fifteen year old daughter knows more than him! I will give him the cold shoulder when he makes fun of the male flight attendant, the one with the pale pursed lips and blonde hair, calling him “Princess.”
     In Tucson my friend will pick me up in my red truck and we will leave it running while we buy burritos because it has recently stopped starting. I will take her back to work and we will eat our messy burritos in a conference room and we will go outside expecting to jump the truck, pleasantly surprised when it turns on itself, squinting in the heat. In my house two dead cockroaches will lie on their backs in plain sight, a sign of the month I’ve been in Europe. I will kill ten more before the day is out, hurtling my copy of the alpinist handbook Freedom of the Hills at their shit-filled bodies and peeling them smashed off the floor, gagging. I will send two scuttling back beneath the bathroom sink, where I desperately try to locate them lest they reproduce. I am about to be gone another two and a half weeks—teaching and attending a wedding in Seattle—and the house is feeling ghosty. Or maybe it is that it’s June 21. That even as I drop the car at a repair shop for battery testing, as I walk over to court to file a motion to change a parking ticket hearing that’s been scheduled for when I’m working out of town (the clerk dully looking at me through the window—“We’re done here”—when I don’t move on quickly enough), I am not fully present. I am with Jack-in-the-Box. As I get a row of curly hairs ripped off my chin at the eco-friendly spa down the street (“I don’t get anything else waxed,” I tell her, “but I’m drawing the line at a goatee at 33. I’m still on the dating market.”). As I wait on hold for 15 minutes to talk to the IRS, who’ve sent me a letter telling me I owe money I already paid. (“Frankly, ma’am, we’ve got bigger fish to fry,” he says, wiping clean $2.50 I’ve been charged for paying the final chunk of tax—which oh yes, now they see, it’s fixed—a few weeks late.) As I put a new car battery on my credit card. As I go to a friend’s new magick shop, located in an old funeral home downtown, where women are wearing yellow and putting dried herbs and stones in pouches to celebrate the solstice, sending their intentions for their lives out into the world. As I am interviewed by a student reporter about the shop, as I drink cold white wine out of a red solo cup, as my friend sends me home with the leftover strawberries and a bag of popcorn that will be dinner, as I stay up until two a.m. scanning the openings of seven different memoirs about illness, printing neat stacks of copies for the intensives I will teach.
     Even when it is no longer June 21, it is June 21. I am on my belly in the dark living room. My lips against his velvet head.

Katherine E. Standefer

Katherine E. Standefer's debut book, Lightning Flowers, is forthcoming in late 2019 and was shortlisted for the J. Anthony Lukas Works-in-Progress Prize from Columbia Graduate School of Journalism and the Nieman Foundation at Harvard. Her work won the 2015 Iowa Review Award in Nonfiction and appears in Best American Essays 2016. Jack Boy the Boxer is, as of this writing, still with us. @girlmakesfire





ABBY DOCKTER & THOMAS DAI (PHOTOS BY THOMAS DAI)

Once, Ridley Scott and Kevin McDonald and Youtube produced a 2011 documentary called Life in A Day.“We asked people around the world to film their lives and answer a few simple questions,” they explain in the opening black English text on white background. “We received 45,000 hours of video from 192 countries. All of it shot in a single day: 24th July, 2010.”
     In edited montage, people slip on shoes. There are the sounds of water running, of an early morning market, traffic, peeing, and some goofus howling convincingly at the moon and then cackling. Beneath it all runs a rich cello track, which lends sublimity to the glass-bound reflection of the man taking us up a parking garage elevator in Roanoke, Virginia. He holds the phone camera still as the city lights fall through him. Then comes surgery, breakfast, the releasing of goats, the lighting of candles, a newborn giraffe and the splash of its afterbirth. The effect of montage is pleasantly overwhelming. This global sense that the world is happening, right now and all around us, is not that common, but also not that difficult to achieve in the early twenty-first century. I often take note of the ceiling above the place where I wake up, thinking how strange it is that I and this view of this ceiling should intersect on this day, which I never could have predicted. The view and the thought don’t mean anything. Just a morning jolt to the heart.
     So the sun comes abruptly into the night train to Lanzhou, and I am bright, bleary, jet-lag awake on the top bunk. The train plays elevator music in Chinese. I get down to look at the crops flashing by—corn, barley, rapeseed in full gold, and flowering potato. Cigarette smoke floats in through the open door and burns the back of my throat, which tender lungs must get used to in China.

*

I have been reading lately of travel and its discontents. “At present, on this sleeper train, there’s no where to arrive.” the poet Jenny Xie writes, while the philosopher Paul Virilio notes that every departure is also a “rehearsal for mortality.” In travel, this week at least, you’re either waiting or dying, hopelessly bored or staging a morbidity. 
     The sleeper train stops: Lanzhou, Gansu Province, early morning, brief wind pushing an empty bottle across the plaza. We go to a noodle shop on a side street where the broth is excellent, life-giving. Then we take a taxi to the bus station and are deadened again, sent like packages to Liujiaxia, where a tout sells us passage to the Buddhist grottos at Binglingsi. I could negotiate, but the price is not bad and Binglingsi is where we are headed.
     Soon, we are aboard a black sedan racing into the mountains. Our driver makes small talk about the city and the weather. He buys a communal watermelon. The no-seatbelt warning ding sounds like it knows its own futility.
     Looking out the window, I see identically sized trees with pom-pom tops passing in a long file beside the road. “They look like Dr. Seuss trees,” my boyfriend Liam says, and I am dozing already. 


     When my friend Abby arrived in Chengdu to start this trip, we were still talking about and remembering Anthony Bourdain, a man who “traveled well” it has been said; who cared about the people and not just the places; who was punctual and timely and generous, a mensch among tourists. 
     I think Mr. Bourdain would have liked this drive, how the plants growing in the Chinese terraces we pass are potatoes instead of rice, how the reservoir on the Yellow River blinks in and out of view, how the driver can stop the car in any dusty hamlet along the way and yell out the window for hard bread and a pack of smokes. Where are you going? starts to lose its relevance out here. I stop worrying about the bags left to pack at home, the flights unbooked, the forms I will have to fill and scan and send. Everything slows or perhaps quickens into this presentness. The ding of the dashboard keeps insisting on our safety.

*

The driver unexpectedly makes a sharp right turn onto a dirt road and dives into switchbacks down the canyon. “The regular road is being repaired,” Thomas translates dubiously, and the driver puffs his cig and scrapes the undercarriage slightly on a rock.

And suddenly it’s like we’re in Utah, with rugged canyons dropping off from shrubby heights into feathery grasses. We get to the grottos by the back door. Tourist websites universally call them “difficult to access,” and Wikipedia claims they are only accessible by ferry across the lake, “as there are no roads in the area.” On a sign is a poem in Chinese and English, unattributed: “Between two cliffs, the sky becomes a string.”

*

One massive rock face looks like a honeycomb, another like a hand ready to high-five. Abby, Liam, and I all met when we were living in the American West, so this scene seems familiar to us. Familiar but also not, which I hear is the defining quality of the uncanny: this topographic deja vu, this feeling of normalcy and strangeness delivered in the same breath.

*

We sit in the shade and pass round loaves of dense bread while the driver begins to slice through the rind of the melon with his car key. When he is done scoring it, he gives it a pop with his palm and the slices fall apart. LIFE HACK. He passes me the largest piece, with the amorphous bulb of the interior melon flesh clinging to the neat slice. I make a puddle of juice on the ground.

*


Few other tourists walk the grottos with us today. Our faces pass the colors back and forth: sand and rose, lichen and rust. In the folds of the rock are twigs left by our recent predecessors, some bent in their pliancy, others standing straight and short in their groove.
     I have been reading about the angst and disillusionment of travel because I have lately been feeling quite angsty and disillusioned with travel. The reasons for this are nothing but mundane. I’m moving out of China soon and it’s a process full of anxiety (What am I forgetting?), confusion (Why am I going back?), and self-reproach (How the hell did I acquire so much crap?). All of these questions are rhetoricals, rites I will repeat at my next assumed departure. I need to ask them not so much to find their answers but to assure myself I’ve been at this point before and will undoubtedly be here again.   

*


In the canyon is a Buddhist temple, simultaneously a tourist trap and religious space and somebody’s house and garden. Cooking pots are lying around and clothes are drying on the line. The proprietor, an old man with stringy gray beard and sideburns, tells us the place is 1,600 years old, which may be true for the carved stone grotto if not for the buildings or decorations. When we come downstairs from the temple, he offers us a bag of loose tea leaves, which Liam sprinkles in red paper cups and the man inundates with boiling hot water from a thermos. His wife brings an enormous bowl of that same dense bread, shot through with sweet, bright yellow paste. We are full of melon and a little dismayed, but it seems rude not to stuff ourselves. We sit in their courtyard under the shade of an umbrella, smiling at each other although even Thomas can’t understand their dialect.
     Liam talks—half-joking or mostly joking or not joking at all—about the hostel he and Thomas are going to run someday. This is Liam’s way of thinking about hospitality and the kindness he has received here as a foreigner. He says the hostel will feature chocolate chip cookies and a full bar. “A gay bar, naturally,” Thomas says. Our conversation and our hosts’, forming separate streams of dialogue in the afternoon heat, must have diverged by more than language at this point.
     I spend a lot of time thinking about how people form ingroups and outgroups and how best to manage these tendencies. If I get lost, Thomas and Liam joke, they will just ask everyone where the blonde girl went. Early this morning, crossing the street in Lanzhou, an old man patted my backpack and gave me a thumbs up. I don’t feel much exotic distance between myself and the Buddhist monk, head shaved, eating a giant serving of fried potatoes alone in a restaurant. Or between myself and the woman on the street who is operating machinery—a very large drill or a very small jackhammer—and wearing a thick woolen skirt. We are all rattling around this day I came halfway across the world to share with them explicitly because they are different, or because they are the same, or because I can never decide which is more true. Tomorrow a taxi driver will take us to the bus station and refuse payment, using a Chinese word that roughly calls up notions of hospitality. Because we are different, and he is kind.

*

If I had to define travel I would call it motion turned into metaphor. The trip can be many things: a river flowing, a lesson learned, a balloon chasing clouds, a vehicle taking you far, far away. It can be these things literally and it can be these things figuratively. It can engulf, distract, or break down our concept of a self. What it can’t be, I’d bet, is stationary, sessile, set. 
     But here I am, fixed, looking at Buddhist statuary from the Tang dynasty, trying to take their measure. Many of the forms lack faces. The more important among them are sheltered in cubicles cut into the rock. When the scouring sand is lifted and blown, they hide behind barriers of wood and mesh. The doors to their quarters are open now. We visit with them in the daylight, squinting into the dark to see what has been quarried (quarantined?) from history in this place.

*



We eat noodles for dinner, bookending the day. We ask the Muslim proprietor if we can bring a beer into his restaurant and he says no, but serves us a tomato and egg dish that Thomas craves as comfort food. Outside, in a large public square, middle-aged women are dancing in sync, and we go in search of ice cream.
     I wish my mind did not keep carving out the same ancient channels of thought. Travel is supposed to help with that. But I’ve been reading Yiyun Li, who knows what travel can and cannot do for you: New scenery cannot make you a different person or give you a new mind, she writes. I cannot seem to break out of my usual modes of expression, the linear march of text and logic and narrative, even for a moment. I can’t seem to escape my own perspective. I can’t seem to stop using “I,” an English word Li claims to hate.
     But perspective also drifts, changes, looks out windows. Those adjustments are hard to monitor when you’re on the move. Li again: “The train, for reasons unknown to us, always stops between a past and a future, both making this now look as though it is nowhere. But it is this nowhereness that one has to make use of.”

*

When my mother left China for America she was twenty-six and starting a Ph.D program. As I write this, I have moved from the Binglingsi grottos to a bullet train bound for an airport where I will once again leave China for America. I am twenty-six. My Ph.D. program starts this fall. Nothing changes. Nothing stays. I watch my gene line chase its ragged tail across the map. 
     “I knelt to the passing time.” says the poet. “The internment of bodies is no longer in the cinematic cell of travel but in a cell outside of time…” says the philosopher.
     Still, I think maybe John Mayer (the crooner) says it best: Stop this train. I wanna get off and go home again. I can’t take the speed it’s movin in. I know I can’t, but honestly, won’t someone stop this train? 


—Abby Dockter & Thomas Dai

Thomas Dai is a doctoral candidate in American Studies at Brown University. His essays have appeared in Guernica and Entropy. He blogs occasionally at thomasndai.com.

Abby Dockter spent a few years following field and lab science jobs up and down the Rockies, and holds an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Arizona. She has written for the UA’s Institute of the Environment and edited Nonfiction for Sonora Review. Her work appears in The OWL literary journal, Essay Daily, and deep in the Mesa Verde National Park website. She enjoys long, dry archaeological reports, and usually hikes with poetry.





KAREN SCHAFFNER

June 21st began not with a bang but a with a whimper, or rather a thud, when a bird killed itself and chose my picture window as its weapon. I don’t mind, really, because one day I had what might be referred to as a little vision after a roadrunner threw itself against my moving car. It was running around in the afterlife yelling, “I’m free! I’m free!” meaning, unironically, that he was now free from the fear of death. I felt bad all that day about the roadrunner but as to the mourning dove that banged into my house, a workman who had come to paint the living room buried him in the backyard. While he did that I cleaned up the cat poop left by Yo-Yo, our 20-pound, brown tabby cat, also in the backyard. Then I spent the rest of the day worrying that the bird was, in fact, not dead but only knocked out and was now buried alive. On the other hand, the yard didn’t smell anymore.
     Next, I got a text from my daughter, whose birthday is on June 22, remembering with some not unjustified anger that one year when she was a kid we ignored her birthday altogether because we had to go to a family wedding. Not for someone in my family but someone in her father’s family (I write this with perverse pleasure because I still hate them, although it’s really only the regular kind of in-law hate, nothing special. The odd thing is I like them individually. Still married to her dad, too). I apologized profusely because she was right to be hurt and angry and after all these years I can say with a fair amount of sorrow that I played my role in it. Dang.
     From there things improved because I went to the salon where, for a bit of money and pain, I got the Wolfman treatment, which means all the excess hair was removed from my face and neck. When I was young I used to look at my moustache and wonder what to do about it. My mother had her own moustache, plus she often railed against women who wear makeup so she was no help. When I got older I asked my stylist about it and she said, “I’ll just take care of that for you,” and after a burning application of hot wax and some ripping, presto!, no more hair on my upper lip. Hair doesn’t just grow there, though. Now it’s my sideburns (When did I get sideburns?), side of my neck, excess eyebrows which insist on growing all willy-nilly and sometimes even my forehead. I tell myself at least it’s not my nostrils or ears.
     When I got home I was still in poop-cleaning mode so I cleaned the bathroom, gave treats to the furry 20-pound pooper and made notes for this essay.
     Eventually it was lunch time so I dragged my son out of bed and we went to the Guadalajara Grill, a local establishment that serves up what we call White people Mexican food. Gabriel is an adventurous and snobby eater; even when he was a kid he would eat strange stuff. When we ordered burgers, he got jellyfish salad. When we got a sandwich he ordered lobster bisque and baked trout. At the Grill it was Lobster Thursday, so he decided on a steak chimichanga, no cheese, no guacamole, no sour cream. “No good stuff,” the server said.
     After lunch came the best time of day: nap time. Some things in life are meant to be copiously enjoyed. An innocent laugh, a hot shower, a cat’s purr and for me, a nap. Here’s the best part: It’s free and there’s plenty of nap to go around.
     As the day wore on, I paid the workman, guessed and got wrong most of the answers on Jeopardy and checked to see what homework I have due. Why, and I ask this a lot A LOT, why did I think earning six credits in five weeks was a good idea? There was a long list of writing and reading assignments due Friday so of course I closed my computer and ate supper, watched more television and felt guilty because I was not doing my homework. When I went to bed, I promised myself I would get up early the next morning and get started.
     As I reflected on the day’s big moments and little moments and medium-sized moments, it occurred to me you don’t know as you live them which moments are going to take up residence in your life forever. Who would think that ignoring my daughter’s birthday 30 years ago because I was mad at her dad for some long-forgotten reason would cause her so much pain today? The answer is anyone with half a brain, which evidently is not me, but lesson learned. I also promised myself to be more thoughtful about the moments of my life as I live them. I will begin tomorrow morning.
     But first I have some cleaning to do in the backyard.

—Karen Schaffner

Karen Schaffner learned a valuable lesson on June 21st this year and will try really hard to live fully in the moments of her life as she lives them. She is also trying to make a decision about which schools to apply to for a master's degree in writing, having decided that a career in writing is the road to fame and wealth. Or at least a small amount of creative satisfaction and a bit of inner peace.





JAMES BUTLER-GRUETT

On the morning of June 21st, I’m next to my dad in a McDonald’s booth, scheming. Yellow-wrappered breakfast sandwiches carried forth on plastic trays swirl around us, traffic streams by out the window, and my dad sits at the center of my line of vision, steepling his fingers and leaning forward. His bald head glistens.
     “When we get out there,” he says, looking at me and then at his hands in concentration, “be ready.”
     I give him an earnest nod and slip into Pensive Listening Face.
     “Don’t be distracted by whatever they dangle out in front of you,” my dad says.
     “Right.”
     “The offers, the promises,” he says, and he karate-chops those two nouns out of the air, dismissing them. “No. We have two parameters, and we stick to those. We stick to the parameters. And don’t be afraid to get the guy back on track.”
     I nod, feeling freighted with responsibility. We are half an hour away from beginning the search for my first car, half an hour away from encountering and grappling with that dreaded guild, that profession so easily equated with sleaze that a comparison is an insult by proxy: “That shirt makes you look like a used-car salesman.” As we sit at this McDonald’s, itself a kind of diving chamber for entering or exiting still-deeper levels of sleaze, I am fortifying the mental battlements my dad’s advice suggests to me are necessary.

They do wear those shirts, too. The first used-car dealer we pull up to, a man in a black, logo-emblazoned polo shirt and dress shorts saunters up to us, hand out already for a shake. I’ll call him Romulus, for his enterprising spirit. He’s the first dealer my dad and I meet, and he’s ready to do his job. Our two parameters for my car (which I’m buying, by the by—my dad with me just for his know-how) are mileage and price, and immediately he’s testing my devotion to them, my ability to be distracted. Here’s a car $1 under my maximum price range to start with, there’s a car with 2,000 more miles on it, look at the sunroof, the gleam of the unblemished rims, here are some bottled waters for you fellas while I check on something, what do you think about putting a down payment on something before you walk out, the sunroof, O watch how it retracts!
     But I’m incredibly frustrating to him, I can tell. I’m the equivalent of the Boomer in the cell-phone store who just wants something with big buttons, ducking and dodging all the pricier offers. We leave without really saying whether I’m interested, saying we’ll come back a day earlier than we in fact do end up coming back, and I can see Romulus exasperated at my stubborn aversion to any baubles or ornaments. My dad, nods at me in approval as we leave, and I feel I have done my due buyer-bewaring, feel slightly triumphant, even.

Later that night, I don’t know, sitting at home and comparing prices and Carfaxes, that we will come back to Romulus, albeit a day after we’ve told him we will come back. I’m not thinking that after exploring almost every used-car lot in Tucson, we will end up being drawn back to Romulus to find a car he hasn’t shown us yet, which I’ll then buy.
     Instead, I’m at home, snapping at my dad, getting irritated over how irritated he is at the website of Romulus’s dealership. The website doesn’t reveal necessary details that buyers need, a ploy to get more people to see the cars in person, of course. My dad goes on a tirade against this website, sitting on the couch and scrolling through listings to try to see better deals. I get annoyed and frustrated with him, for his getting annoyed at the website.
     When we will go back to Romulus’s dealership two days later, I will pick a fight with Romulus over this website. I’ll ask him, virtually ignoring whatever he says, why he simply doesn’t update the website (as if this is Romulus’s job), pestering him with cutting remarks. Half of me will think that I am still putting up a front that’s necessary to not get schemed, and half of me will know I’m taking out my and my dad’s irritation, or so I’ll think.
     I won’t realize, haranguing Romulus that day on the hot, shimmering asphalt lot, that he’s showing me the car that I’ll buy two hours later. I’ll be caught viewing him an enemy, not realizing he’s doing his job, an often-maligned and probably underpaid employee who has no control over the stupid website and is merely trying to please people.
     That night, on June 21st, though, I don’t yet know any of that will happen. I put my phone in my face and sulk. I’m fed up with my dad’s persistence and finicky complaints about technology. I don’t think about what he’s using the technology for. I’m caught in the same loop I’ll be caught in days later with Romulus, one that’s difficult to see in the moment, which I don’t see at all that day, which I never see in the moment. It’s that the person I’m fighting is so often the one trying to help me.

—James Butler-Gruett

James Butler-Gruett is a writer and a 2018 graduate of the University of Arizona MFA program in fiction. His work has been published in Yes, Poetry magazine and the Sonora Review website. He lives in Tucson and can be found on Twitter @etinarcadia3go. 





REBECCA GRAVES

I wake up in the woodshed. 8:15 a.m. The sun has been up for two hours and light filters green through the skylight. My husband is up already so I have the king bed to myself. I close my eyes and recall my dreams, tracing the feelings of them. My brother, an acquaintance, and I are looking at homes for my mother. The floor slopes horribly and no one seems to notice. No one in the dream listens as I point this out.
     Out of bed and into the shower. Through the glass, the copper soaking tub looks inviting and I wonder how long it would take to fill. The cabin is chilly and my husband and I make easy conversation as we dress for breakfast. The packet left on the door says that the temperature will reach a high of 73 degrees. Back home in Missouri it has been in the 90s.
     Breakfast in the dinning room is a buffet—granola, yogurt, fresh fruit, bacon, sausages, omelets and eggs made to order. I sit at the long table, next to nephews and first cousins once removed. We talk of summer and college starting in the fall, of music, violins, fiddles and Hamilton. My oldest stepdaughter, Zoe, stops by for a hello. The staff in tan khakis and burgundy shirts are quick, efficient and quiet. My brother sends a text of his daughters with a new puppy. They won, he says. I listen in on the conversations along the table. At the far end, Uncle Dan and Aunt Deener keep company with neighbors. Today is their last full day here at their inn and home that they built from scratch.
After breakfast, we gather in the gift shop picking out mementos—mugs, t-shirts, sweatshirts. How do you capture a moment such as this in fleece or ceramics?
     Lauren, my husband’s first cousin, announces a hike to the water fall. We meet up 45 minutes later, most of us grabbing our lunches already packed in backpacks by the staff. A few of us take our complementary walking sticks. The trails are well maintained but at 5000 feet the hills are felt in the knees. About twenty strong at the start, our group splinters in the wood, taking different paths, doubling back, stopping to photograph wildflowers and signposts. Cousin Sarah has been teaching me the wildflowers—squawroot, mountain laurel, galax, flame azalea. We walk through a grove of rhododendrons so large they block the light.
     We all find our way to the falls. The air is loamy, primeval. The water, mountain cold. I sit on the bank and eat my sandwich enjoying the spectacle of others playing in the waters. My brother-in-law wants to climb the waterfall like he did 45 years ago. The family talks him down. Some memories are best relived in our minds.
     After the falls, my husband and I join Lauren and her four children to hike over to the neighbors. We hike up to the ski slopes then follow the road. At the cluster of mailboxes, we to turn onto Double Gap and climb. We pass over two creeks, or the same one twice. I am grateful for the walking stick as Lauren’s children are in their twenties and quick. We see the balcony of the neighbor’s house but it doesn’t prepare me for what we will see once we pass through the wrought iron gate. Ron is home. Turns out he was the neighbor visiting over breakfast. At 76, he still hikes the four miles over to visit with Uncle Dan and then back. A war hero, he spent 20 years in service then turned his mind and hand to starting and running private companies. His house is a cathedral—vaulted ceilings of hand hewn wood beams, field stone fireplaces, stained glass lamps, floor to ceiling windows paying reverence to the view of the mountains and their clouds. He is proud to show us the place—I love this about my culture, this showing of one’s home. We admire his home the size, the detail, the layout. The counter of the bar is one continuous piece of stone a good two to three inches thick. Thirteen men were needed to carry it into the house. We eat our lunches on the porch. I am amazed that I am here in such physical beauty, in such luxury.
     The weather turns quickly and we head out into rain. Thunder rumbles a ways off.  We pass up the chance to hike to the top of the bald. The forest keeps the rain off of us and we stop to admire one of the old arrow trees—trees that were bent by the original habitants here to point the direction of the trail.
     Back at the inn, Laurin shows us a secret hiding space of hers and her brother’s when they were little. It is bittersweet to be here knowing the family won’t be back, that this will no longer be their home.
     The rain holds off, so several of us encourage Zoe to lead us in yoga on the croquet court. Even with gnats swarming us and rain starting up again, we laugh ourselves into and out of downward facing dog and other poses.
     Cleaned up for dinner, we meet up in the dogtrot for hors d'oeuvre. The new owners are here, circumspect and polite to the family. Uncle Dan leads us in sung grace. The food is indeed divine. I go back for seconds, then hurt myself over dessert. There are too many choices to be prudent. Tomorrow we leave and I do not cook like this at home.
     After dinner we gather in the living room to hear a musician who has written songs just for the family, just for us—three generations and two branches of a family. This day has been too short. We extend it with a game of wallyball, but eventually my husband and I head to back to the woodshed, to the king bed under the skylight, to our last night in the mountains.

—Rebecca Graves

Rebecca Graves has published several articles and book chapters in the world of academia where she works by day as a health sciences librarian. In her other life, she writes fiction and poetry which have been published in Interpretations IV, Interpretations V, as well as the anthology, Eternal as a Weed: Tales of Ozark Experience from Creative Writing of Columbia. Ms. Graves lives in Columbia, Missouri, with the inventor and jazz musician Pack Matthews.





JENNIFER MCGUIGGAN

I finally fell asleep around 5:30 this morning. I spend a lot of time awake during the dark hours these days. I've always skewed toward the night-owl end of the spectrum, but my schedule has been more topsy-turvy than usual for the past couple of years. It started a few winters ago when I had several nasty viruses—illnesses as vicious as the flu but not the actual flu—for nearly two months straight. My sinuses were so clogged that I could barely breathe when I lay down. Sometimes I'd start to drift off and jolt awake, feeling like I was suffocating. That's when the panic attacks started in earnest. I couldn't sleep because I couldn't breathe, and then I couldn't breathe because I couldn't sleep. Loop-de-loop.
     At one point that winter, I went three days in a row with essentially no sleep. I also didn't really eat for those three days. Did you know that sleep deprivation, low blood sugar, and panic attacks have a lot in common? A buzzy, shaky feeling in your limbs; cloudy, paranoid thoughts; fast heartbeat and nausea; sluggish yet jumpy reactions to everything and nothing. The not-a-flu virus was bad, but even worse was this self-fueled merry-go-round of sleeplessness, hypoglycemia, and panic. Round and round and round.
     My doctor diagnosed me with PTSD, which was both a relief and an embarrassment. I was grateful to have my anxiety validated, but I felt ludicrous claiming trauma from something so pedestrian as a stuffy nose and insomnia, no matter how intense they'd been. It's now more than two years later, and I still have nights when I struggle against irrational fear when the lights go off and my head hits the pillow. I no longer feel like I need to bolt out of bed as though I'm drowning in quicksand. But I still spend hours awake—under the covers, on top of the covers, on my side, on my belly, on my back—trying to breathe and trying not to fixate on breathing.
     What finally did the trick this morning was turning upside down so my head rested as the bottom of the bed. When I was really sick and scared that winter, this maneuver could sometimes calm me down. I still don't know why. I suspect it has something to do with interrupting an established pattern. It reminds me of how my college friends and I would stand on our dorm room chairs when we needed a new perspective. It was a move we got from "Dead Poets Society." We also used to stick strips of clear Scotch tape across the bridge of our noses, like some kind of homemade Breathe Right strips. We didn't do this to breathe better. At least, not in a literal, physical sense. I don't remember who came up with this quirk or why, but we often combined it with the poetic chair-standing. Something about the combo allowed us to be silly and playful—all of which helped us to relax in the midst of finals or whatever social drama was spilling around campus.
     Growing up, I used to sleep with my head at the foot of my bed during humid summer nights when the air felt almost too thick to breathe. We didn't have air conditioning, so I'd attach a small oscillating fan to my windowsill. The foot of the bed was marginally closer to the window, and I needed all the cool air I could get. Eventually, I'd pass out from the heat or the exhaustion.
Sleepless winter nights are the hardest to get through because they're so long. During those winter months of being sick and awake, my husband sat up with me for as long as he could, usually until well after midnight. I'd spend the next few hours trying to rest. If I was still awake at dawn, my anxiety turned into outright panic. All those hours of quiet darkness had made me feel cloistered and claustrophobic, trapped in my bedroom, in my house, in my own body.  I'd force myself to wait until 5:00 or 6:00, and then I'd stumble downstairs to call my mother, who'd generously said I could call her anytime day or night. I took her up on the offer. She'd recently gone through her own battle with extreme anxiety, and she knew firsthand the kind of havoc it plays on the mind and body. She would stay on the phone with me until I calmed down or until she had to get ready for work, whichever came first. Those nights—or rather, mornings—I usually fell asleep on the couch. That's where I felt safe when even the foot of the bed didn't work.
     I wouldn't have made it through those winter months without my husband or my mother. I also wouldn't have made it through without my cat Gatwick. In the hours between my husband going to sleep and me deciding whether or not to wake up my mother, Gatwick would join me at the bottom of the bed. He'd curl up beside my shoulder and let me drape my arm across his fluffy, 14-year-old, 14-pound body. I could feel him breathing, feel his heart beating—proof that something existed outside of my own fear and pain. He'd stay with me like that until I finally relaxed and drifted off. Sometimes I'd manage to sleep for hours at a time that way.
     I thought about him this morning as I tried to get comfortable at the wrong end of the bed. Gatwick died a few months ago from a tumor in his head that sometimes made him forget where he was and who I was. To be honest, it's this grief that keeps me up until dawn some nights now. Sometimes I place a pillow beside me and drape my arm across it, but it's never as firm or as soft as he was.
     I made it through one 90-minute sleep cycle this morning before waking up. I opened my eyes and could see the garland of paper stars strung across the wall at the head of the bed. I stared at those stars, half awake and completely disoriented about where my body was on the bed and where the bed was in the room. I knew something was topsy-turvy, but I couldn't tell what it was. I knew the stars should be a clue to what direction I was facing, but I was too tired to figure it out. I felt something soft against my back. I knew it was just a pillow, but I let it comfort me back to sleep.
     One year ago today, I was in Iceland with my husband. By the time I met up with James, I'd already spent more than two weeks traveling around Iceland and England without him. In the 48 hours leading up to this last leg of the trip, I'd taken a train from Cornwall to London, a plane from London to Reykjavik, and then a car from Reykjavik to Vik, a small village along the southern coast of Iceland. That night, I fell asleep almost instantly, a welcome miracle. But within an hour I woke with a gasp. I squinted in the midnight sun that filtered through the window shades of our AirBnB bedroom. I knew I was in a bed, right-side-up, but I couldn't locate my body in the space of the world. I literally didn't know what country I was in. James, still awake in the twin bed a few feet from mine, looked at me. "I don't know where I am," I said. He replied, "You're with me." He hadn't answered my actual question, but he'd told me all I needed to know. I fell back asleep, no problem.
     When my alarm went off this morning, I'd had about three hours of sleep. I took my cat (the one who is still alive) to the vet for a check-up. She needs to have a procedure that requires anesthesia next week, and I'm worried about it. I can't lose another one so soon. I came home and napped on the couch for much of the afternoon. The nap will probably make it harder to fall asleep tonight, but I'm learning to be okay with taking what I need when and where I can get it: on a couch, standing on a chair, at the foot of my bed, on the telephone at dawn, up against a pillow, in the light, or in the dark. 

—Jennifer McGuiggan


Jennifer (Jenna) McGuiggan's work has appeared online and print. Her essays have been nominated for the Best of the Net anthology and been named as finalists in contests from Orison Books, Prime Number Magazine, and Hunger Mountain. She lives, breathes, and naps in southwestern Pennsylvania with her husband, one live cat, and one ghost cat. Find her online in The Word Cellar (www.thewordcellar.com). 





CASSIE KELLER COLE

Trying

On the day I deliberately focused on paying attention, the two minute moment that lingered with me most was the 20-something chick in a miniskirt, untangling her long hair as she berated me. The girl didn’t have the courage to look me in the face while she snarled twice, “You really should take better care of your kids. This is a Frisbee golf course! You need to watch your kids, lady.” Of course I need to take better care of them. Of course I need to watch them more closely. And I’m trying. At that moment, my seven-week-old was screaming and hungry, my almost two-year-old had dashed away with my husband chasing behind him, my oldest boys ages 9, 7, and 5 had spotted a set of boulders they knew they could conquer, and my daughter started spinning with her eyes closed, singing, feeling the swish of her skirt around her knees. I was watching them. I was trying to care for them all, individually. But I know, even more than that girl, that it is not enough. She’s right: that’s why it bothers me, even now. If, instead of six energetic children, I had charge for a single placid one—she would still be right.
     I wanted to punch her. Part of my brain started justifying my situation while the rest of me panicked to gather my innocent, life-enthusiasts (using a tone sparked by my frustrated feelings that no one ever deserves—particularly a child). While I corralled them to me, my thoughts flickered, smoldered: Perhaps I’m not caring for them at all. Perhaps the books, songs, laughter, the insistence on allowing them to make choices for themselves is not enough. Perhaps they will grow up unstable, irresponsible, and emotionally strung-out because I failed them. Or perhaps my frantic attempts to keep them physically safe are futile. Perhaps we shouldn’t have tried rock climbing with all of them—we should have split up, I should have stayed home. Perhaps I’ll never come out of postpartum depression and no one will actually know who I am; they will only know that my attempts never worked, that trying can only accomplish the first meager steps.
     Before I had finished my thought bonfire, all of my boys had returned and my daughter continued her nature dance at my side as we finally figured out where our friends were, waiting for us. No one heard the girl except me. It took me until that evening to remember that she’s dealing with “stuff” too. That she probably felt annoyed with our presence, or was pushed by the desire to act superior and impress others; she could be nervous socially, or needed a conversation starter. Yes, I groaned within, “Please just let me try.” I remembered that she’s trying too.
     I’m grateful that I didn’t have time to respond.
     When my husband and I finished coaching the kids through washing up, brushing teeth, changing clothes, it was 9:45—two hours after bedtime. We sang them their goodnight songs, chatted with each for a minute, and hoped they would rest rather than talk to each other. After all, we always unconsciously assume we’ll have another day.
     Why do I clutch that moment above the others? Why don’t I remember the heaving body of my five-year-old next to me at midnight who hobbled into our room with aching feet? Why don’t I hold to the eight hours breastfeeding our last baby, going hoarse as I read aloud to him, to his eager siblings? (“Mom, can’t you feed him more? We need to read the next chapter!”) Where are the images of my children’s determined, dirt smudged faces, their wet footprints on the sidewalk after our water fight, their surprise at the sprinkler spinning on top of the trampoline, the sunlight glinting on their already blushed skin, their voices singing in the van (everyone on a slightly different rhythm), the baby’s hand holding onto my cheek as he sighed contentedly, my little girl giggling as she snorted, “Mom, you said, stupid! Now I can!”? My running “toddler” pulling a rocking chair next to his crib to climb in by himself. The poplar leaves applauding in the wind. Five tiny mouths full of apricot muffins we invented together. The screeching shuffle of chairs and plates and cups and utensils and food and water and noise around every meal and snack. Piles of horsetail weed breezing away after we pulled them from the strawberry patch—all of us chasing them to prevent more from spreading. The gray-streaked cliffs we climbed together with tiny fingerledges and cracks. My boys’ bodies tense in the new harnesses, anxiety and thrill enticing them to climb even as their adult belaying audience hung onto them with our cheers. Telling each other stories as we drove over familiar, yet always shockingly beautiful, roads.
     Why would memory sear a stranger’s comment into my mind when everything else weighs against her? Why would I train my brain to feel defeat rather than grasping those tiny fingerprints of joy? How can I go to bed crying just as hard as my five-year-old when there were moments of powdery feet in my hands, the thunk of weeds dropping in the trash can, and a man in his 80s clutching his walker with hands swollen with tumors, telling my kids how nice they are to bring him jam? I don’t want my life to be a daymare. Even if my hours are dust now, why can’t I see the splinters of gold?
     What am I actually trying?

—Cassie Keller Cole


Cassie Keller Cole writes when she can. She mothers six brilliant children daily by ensuring that they all read, eat, and glory in the outdoors without too much of a sunburn. They all sing, romp, and scribble in Blackfoot, Idaho while they play in the mud, live loudly, and keep the neighbors entertained. 





MARGOT SINGER

Morning

June 21, the summer solstice. On this day, it’s said, the door that separates this world from whatever lies beyond swings open on its hinge. Shapes change. Spirits shift.
     At 6:45 am, the world outside my window is a leafy bowl of green. Oaks and maples, buckeyes and beeches interlace their leaves. The undergrowth is thick with striplings, brambles, ferns and grasses, thigh-high weeds. Overnight, the daylilies have opened up their yellow beaks. Cardinals are whistling in the upper branches. A cabbage moth flutters in the thyme.
     I am the first one up this morning. I tiptoe past my dozing husband, softly shut the bedroom door. Down the hall, my teenage son is still asleep. In the kitchen, I muffle the coffee grinder with dish towels. I fill the kettle, fold the filter. Cut a slice of bread for toast. Check my email on my phone. I am waiting for a call.
     This week, I am directing a creative writing summer camp for high school juniors and seniors, forty-eight of them from across the country, here on the college campus where I teach. Today is Thursday, day five of eight. The week is long, the days packed. I’m beat. But the kids are still excited, notebooks out and laptops ready, nametags swinging around their necks, far more engaged than you’d ever imagine a bunch of teenagers could be about school. We’re past the initial buzz of anticipation, the awkwardness of a new social circle, the anxiety many feel at being away from home. Like most adolescents, they avoid eye contact, or look straight through you, searching—for their people, their passion, themselves.
     I sip my coffee at the kitchen table, still bleary-eyed. My phone lights up. It is the father of one of the campers: this week’s problem child. She has been suffering from severe panic attacks, running out of class in tears. She cannot bring herself to face group meals in the dining hall. She clings to two of my staff members, confiding disturbing things. She has asked them to call her by a different name. We are okay with that. Then, two nights ago, they found her banging her palms against a concrete wall until they bled. This is not okay. I called her father, who came and picked her up. Now he wants to know if I will let her return to attend classes on a day student basis for the remainder of the week. “She really wants to participate,” he tells me. “This is so important to her.” I sigh, give in.
     I walk down the hill to work. At 8 am it is still cool and bright and the humidity has dropped for the first time in days. My neighbor’s yard is bright with impatiens and petunias. In the distance, the hills are a hazy, dappled green. There is beauty in the world, I remind myself. I remind myself to breathe.
     The campers arrive and set off to their morning classes. In my office with no windows, time slows down. I check my email, chat with my colleague across the hall (his back is in a spasm; he has caught a virus from his three young kids). The college student I am supervising on an independent summer creative writing project comes by to meet with me. Her project is on fairy tales. We have been reading about the transformations of werewolves and other shape-shifters. She has written a story about a fairy godmother’s apprentice who clashes with Rumplestiltskin in trying to rescue an abused girl. The apprentice promises to send the girl to the ball to meet the prince. Rumplestiltskin offers her a deal instead: he’ll make her queen in exchange for her firstborn child. All magic comes at a price, Rumplestiltskin says. Even the magic of a fairy godmother is not free. “She will twist something unknowable inside you,” he warns and smiles his evil smile. “It’s your choice.” The girl is dying to escape her mother. She is caught between them, her back pressed against the rough bark of a tree.
     My student sits across the table in my office, her notebook open, waiting for my feedback on her draft. But I am thinking of my problem child and her talk of an abusive mother, her pale face bent as if in prayer, her wish to morph into a boy. I am thinking of her bloody palms, scraped to stigmata. Her hunted, shifting gaze.


Noon

By midday, the air has changed. The blue sky has clouded over, the humidity returned. The clouds hang heavy, dishrag gray.
     After lunch and afternoon classes, we load onto a school bus for an outing to the Museum of Art. I walk up and down the aisle, counting. Forty-seven: the problem child’s father has taken her home. I perch up front behind the driver, call out directions. The bus has no air conditioning or seatbelts. The students must be used to it; no one complains.
     By the time we hit the highway, it has begun to rain. The rain mists in through the open windows. Two small fans blow ineffectually at the condensation on the windshield. The driver swerves out into the passing lane, muttering about how everyone creeps along in the rain, and I brace my arm against seatback. “We have plenty of time!” I say in what I hope is a cheerful tone. Why are there no seat belts on school busses? How easily our bodies would fly into the aisle and out that foggy windshield, if we stopped short or crashed. The wipers slap the rain away.
     At the museum, we send the students off with docents to write poems about the art. I wander through the galleries with my colleague, Peter. We are drawn to the wavy lines of Chaim Soutine, to a bizarre construction in which a creepy, loudly moaning Kewpie-eyed face is projected onto a fabric doll. In a small dark projection room, we watch part of a film showing a procession of people aged one to one hundred. We are horrified at how old the people look when they reach our age.
     On the way back to campus, the rush hour traffic crawls through the now heavy rain. The students are quiet, bent over their phones. On my phone, I toggle between the traffic and the radar maps. I am thinking about my sixteen-year-old son, just back from ten days in France on a high school trip, his days spent much like this. I am thinking about my twenty-year-old daughter, still away at college, who leaves tomorrow for five weeks in Chile. I click on a world map and scroll down, down, down. How far away Valparaíso seems.
     We are just a few miles from campus when there is a loud thwack and the bus driver lets out a yelp. I look up from my phone. The driver’s-side windshield wiper has sheared off and blown away. “Oh, my god!” the driver wails. We are driving at seventy miles per hour down the highway in the pouring rain. Everyone seems to be holding their breath. The driver is freaking out, but somehow, through the fog and rain-streaked windshield, the road is still visible, more or less. “Just keep going,” I say.
     Finally, we turn off the highway, creep up the hill to campus. We have made it back. I send the students off to the dining hall for dinner. “Thank you,” they say politely, as if nothing has happened, as they climb off the bus and step out into the rain.
     I sit on the bus for a while with the driver, who is trying to figure out how to get back to the other side of the city, over an hour away. It is nearly 7 pm now and the local Napa Auto Parts is closed, not that they would carry school bus wipers anyway. No one is picking up the phone back at the bus company’s office. Her boss is not responding to her texts. School busses, it seems, do not come with Roadside Assistance or AAA.
     I offer to get the driver dinner, to call a cab. Her hands are shaking as she pulls up the map on her phone. “I’m just going to go for it,” she says. “I’m just going to do it. I gotta get back.”
     “You’ll be okay,” I say, doubtfully. “Call me if you need anything. Let me know when you get home.” I realize I sound like I am talking to a child.
     I stand for a while in the rain and watch her drive away.


Night

At home, my husband has dinner ready: farfalle with fresh pesto and pancetta. He pours a glass of wine. My son offers up details about his trip to France: the crowded Louvre, the disappointing Mona Lisa, the fancy chateaux, the beaches in Normandy and Aix, a dairy and its herd of goats. He has brought me chocolate, perfume, a bar of soap in the shape of a duck. I knew that he’d be fine, but I’m still relieved he’s back. (The duck soap has fared less well in transit—it has a broken neck.)
     I exchange a few texts with my stressed-out daughter, check my email, browse Facebook, scan the news. Another black boy has been murdered by police. Refugee children are being separated from their parents at the border, held like animals in a cage. The camera zooms in on a disconsolate five-year-old, cuts to Melania’s appalling jacket: I don’t really care, do u? The reporter’s voice breaks. I click away.
     It is not yet 9 pm on the longest day of the year, but out the window, there is only darkness and rain. What happened to that green and leafy morning? Was that door between the worlds still open? Fatigue tugs behind my eyes.
     I run a hot bath. In the tub, I read my colleague Peter’s latest memoir, which is about his return to competitive fencing in his fifties. In a chapter called “Humility,” he writes, “I would wake each morning and listen to my body. I would recognize the knot of anxiety in my stomach for what it is: the fear that I can’t control my life, that often things happen and we can’t do anything about them.” He quotes Rupert Graves: Not being anxious requires a level of humility, doesn’t it? It does, I think. It’s not all about you. 
     If anxiety is a form of self-centeredness, I must be a monster of egotism, I think.
     I toss the book aside and get out of the tub, itchy from the heat.
     My phone dings: it is the bus driver, texting to say she has made it safely home.
     It dings again: it is the father of our problem child. He writes that she is happier than he has seen her in weeks, that she hasn’t stopped smiling since he picked her up that afternoon, that he is so grateful we are letting her come back.
     There is hope yet in the world, I think.
     I forward the father’s message to my staff. Thank you for all you do, I tell them, and they send back happy emojis: smiles and hearts and stars.

—Margot Singer

Margot Singer's most recent book is the novel, Underground Fugue (Melville House, 2017), just out in paperback. She is the co-editor, with Nicole Walker, of Bending Genre: Essays on Creative Nonfiction (Bloomsbury Academic, 2013). She is a professor at Denison University in Granville, Ohio.





Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 12: John Bennion • Lee Reilly • Gabriel Dozal • Danielle Geller • Rachel Haywood • Karen R. M. Koch • Jill Kolongowski • Jessi Peterson • Silas Hansen • Lucy Nash

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, for the next month and change, roughly ten a day. Today's the last day to turn in your work via this submission form.

—The Editors



July 12: John Bennion • Lee Reilly • Gabriel Dozal • Danielle Geller • Rachel Haywood • Karen R. M. Koch • Jill Kolongowski • Jessi Peterson • Silas Hansen • Lucy Nash





JOHN BENNION

The Longest Day: Observations on 21 June 2018

This morning a former student sent me a poem on Soundcloud, John O'Donohue reading "A Blessing for a Friend on the Arrival of Illness." She heard that I recently had knee replacement surgery and wanted to send me one of her favorite poems. She also said, “I hope you enjoy the beautiful summer coupled with healing and a chance to slow down.”
I know the world is not really full of thoughtful people, but at that moment it seemed to be.
     Before surgery, I anticipated the pain, and it has been both less severe and more pervasive than I thought. So O’Donohue’s words resonated: “Now is the time of dark invitation beyond a frontier that you did not expect.” My “old life seems distant” and my “future shrinks.”
     I’m strapped into a Continuous Passive Motion machine, which I have renamed the Rack. We made up the couch in my office for a bed, so that the Rack doesn’t keep Karla awake at night. I lie on my back with one sheepskin band above my knee, one below my knee, and one around my foot, which fits into a stirrup. The chrome machine bends and stretches my knee for 10 hours a day. The first few cycles it hurts at each extremity and then my muscles relax, and the constant motion distracts from the pain. Narcotics make me feel like vomiting and fill my head with steel cotton, so I use them as rarely as possible.
     I’ve come to hate my office.
     I slept last night, second in a row, after two weeks of insomnia, due to slight pain that keeps me awake. In the middle of the night, the pain seems to penetrate my being. I am convinced, after lying sleepless, that it will never go away. It is a “a dark companion,” a “stranger [who] has married [my] heart.”
     I feel foolish complaining about pain I chose through elective surgery, when other people have ongoing pain that actually will never stop. My low level of pain makes me feel always on the edge of sanity, and I don’t know how victims of chronic pain bear up—my brother-in-law with permanent back pain after 4 surgeries, my neighbor with MS, the man two streets over who suffered for a year with prostate cancer in his bones. So many kinds of suffering, and I have just a taste.
     Still my experience is mine. When I need to pee, I use the plastic bottle if I don’t want to unstrap from the machine, or I walk to the toilet with crutches. Sitting in a kitchen chair or lying on the floor, I do the exercises and push my knee to bend and extend. I have thought of myself as a stoic person, able to endure pain. I’ve been calm through a nail cut on my eye, a circular saw cut to my thigh, a chainsaw cut to my knee, a burn on my wrist, a kick by a calf to my nose. If someone is injury prone, as I am, they should get used to pain. But this surgery is different because it feels endless. O’Donohue again: “Nothing before has made you feel so isolated and lost.”
     I complained to my sister in Vermont about narcotics making me thick-headed and nauseated. She has just had foot surgery involving nerves, so while my pain ranges from three to five, hers moves between three and nine. She also can’t abide narcotics but has other options. She wrote, “Shall I have someone drop some edibles by you? Let me look into it.” A few minutes later my son texted, saying that my sister had contacted him. “I have something you put in your tea. It’s like honey drops basically.” I told him no. THC is not yet legal in Utah. Then that night my daughter came to me, furious that I wouldn’t take the “honey drops.” She was very stern with me; I was being too scrupulous.
     It’s complicated. I signed the petition for a referendum that would allow medical marijuana in Utah, necessary because our legislature refused to pass any bill for people who live with pain. Marijuana is safer than narcotics. But right now it’s against the law. I have broken laws before: speeding, driving unregistered and unsafe vehicles when I was a boy, poaching when I was a boy, fudging on my income tax, others I don’t care to mention. So it isn’t exactly breaking the law that stops me. I have committed through my church not to take non-prescription drugs. So I’ll disobey my children, but recommend to my friend that she take MJ for pain. Not a simple matter. After I explain all this, my daughter sighs and leaves me alone.
     Pain is tedious. Even when it changes—less a dull but steady ache and more a sharp tearing along the scar along the right side of my left knee and where they cut a muscle above my kneecap—the pain bores me. I tell myself that I’m above it, can exercise my will and conquer it. But it’s still there in five minutes, an hour, twenty-four hours. It’s instructive, forcing me to believe what isn’t true—that it will never leave me. Even though I tell myself it’s temporary, the pain doesn’t flag. It outlasts me. The insight that there will be an end is a thin abstraction, while the pain is ever there. Now. And again now. Selfish, steady, insistent.
     Outside the slatted window of my office, I see slices of the sky and trees. O’Donohue writes, “When the reverberations of shock subside in you, may grace come to restore you to balance.”
     But I don’t believe it, not now. What I do believe is the kindness of my children, my sister, and my student friend. That’s with me also, tangible as pain.

—John Bennion

John Bennion writes fiction and essays about the arid lands of Utah, and the people who live in that forbidding landscape. He has published a collection of short fiction and a novel (Signature Books), and two more novels are forthcoming next year. He has published short stories and essays in Southwestern Review, Hotel Amerika, Hobart, AWP Chronicle, English Journal, and others. He teaches creative writing and the British novel at Brigham Young University. 





LEE REILLY

I’m packing for Swans Island, Maine, where I’ll live in a lighthouse and write. 
     22 emails, 12 from the client, 10 from the designer still to be addressed. What time will you be available Thursday, July 5 to meet for an hour over the phone? Who are you interviewing before you leave tomorrow?
     Flying to a city to drive to an island to take a ferry to an island in order to write.
     What’s the potential for photography for the report? Didn’t you cc B. on that email? Who are you interviewing from the island? 
     Packing hard copies of the short stories that I wrote to win the residency to live in the lighthouse on the tip of the island, where I will write. 
     Another client: can you attach this PDF to my website and where should it go? 
     Packing clothes, chocolate, books, computer, sunscreen—is it sunny in Maine? Packing the hard drive that holds the rough drafts that I’m going to finish at the residency on the island, where connectivity is a question. 
     My husband: have you called L. back? When are you planning to do it? 
     Packing gifts for the childhood friend who will take me in for the night before I do a full day’s drive to an island to take a ferry to an island, where I write.
     United Airlines: are you sure you don’t want to pay $79 for legroom? 
     A care worker and colleague: do you have any job leads for me? 
     The credit union: secure message expires June 21, 2019, 3:02 p.m. 
     Walgreens: press 3 to discontinue these reminders.

—Lee Reilly

Lee Reilly has written volumes about tofu (Vegetarian Times), women (two nonfiction books), and her grandmother's life (a series of flash pieces, several of them written on Swans Island).





GABRIEL DOZAL

What questions did you have on June 21, 2018? 

Why are you driving to El Paso today? 
Who are you supporting in the Mexican election? 
Should you bring sunscreen to the protest in Tornillo?
How does it feel to hear songs about oceans while you’re driving through the desert?
Did she just sing “I want to die in your Ocean?” Or “dive”?  
Was this desert once ocean? 
Well, is it raining with you? 
Is the answer to this last question probably no? 
Was this desert once littoral but now literal?  
The internet desert or the regular one? Or both?
Even when you didn’t live on the border, were you still living there?
Can you see into Juarez? 
Through the mesh fence?

Gabriel Dozal

Gabriel Dozal is from El Paso, TX. He is an MFA candidate in poetry at The University of Arizona. 





DANIELLE GELLER

I wake up waiting. This isn’t a new way to enter my days. Six months ago, I moved to a new country. Now every day is filled with waiting. Waiting for Owen, my husband, to come home from work. Waiting for friends to answer emails. Waiting for warmer weather, then for sunny days, then, just, for something in my brain to revert itself to a state of unwaiting.
     I understand brains don’t work that way. That I should be proactive. Do the dishes, go for walks, find a new friend. Something. But the next-door neighbor has been trying to build a treehouse out of shipping pallets for weeks. And the dog upstairs barks every time I sneeze. And my student loan provider sends me an email with the conversational subject line: All set for your student loan payment? Or need some help? But the help I need isn’t the help they’re offering. And, these infinitesimal incidences adding the way they do, the something I should be doing starts to feel too threatening.
     So, I play video games. I resubbed to WoW a week ago. But fact-checking that sentence, it’s a lie. It’s been two weeks. It’s easy to lose time in this game, which makes it good for waiting.
     In-game, today is the first day of the Midsummer Fire Festival, a fact more relevant to me than the real world’s summer solstice. In-game, honoring the bonfires of your allies and extinguishing the flames of your enemies awards [Burning Blossom]s, a kind of currency you can trade to special vendors for costumes, toys, and pets that are only available this time of year. I’ve been playing the game on and off for a decade and have most of the items, though I realize I’m missing the [Set of Matches], added in patch 7.1.0.22731, after I stopped playing again. I look up the toy in the collections interface: “Set yourself on fire! For reasons! (30 Min Cooldown)” and decide to pass. In-game, I have better things to do.
     Like dailies, quests that expire and renew each day when the servers reset. Or completing the next stage of my legendary weapon questline. Or listing items on the Auction House to make some gold. Or leveling one of the many alts (alt-ernate characters, alternate from my main, a troll priest named Peyla) I would like to reach level cap (currently, level 110) before the next expansion launches on August 14th. I realize none of this sounds very important—that it might not sound like anything at all.
     Earlier this week, the World Health Organization announced “gaming disorder” as a new mental health disorder to be included in the 11th edition of the International Classification of Diseases. The ICD-11 defines gaming disorder as “as a pattern of gaming behavior (“digital-gaming” or “video-gaming”) characterized by impaired control over gaming, increasing priority given to gaming over other activities to the extent that gaming takes precedence over other interests and daily activities, and continuation or escalation of gaming despite the occurrence of negative consequences.” But for diagnosis, this behavior pattern would “normally have been evident” (must have? may have been evident?) for at least 12 months.
     Today has me thinking about how much time I’ve wasted playing this game: 267 days, 13 hours, 42 minutes, and 12 seconds /played. On one character. 48 days, 8 hours, 24 minutes, and 8 seconds on another. 43 days, 17 hours, 6 minutes, and 41 seconds on another. On all of my characters combined, more than a year of my life.
     When Owen wakes up and walks into the computer room, I ask him to guess how much time I’ve played. He guesses a thousand hours and cringes when I tell him the actual number. (He would call it a wince.) He sits at his desk and turns on his computer and checks his Steam library for hours played: at highest, 200 hours in a single game. Nothing close to mine.
     I still feel guilty I lured him into WoW. I don’t know what to do with that guilt. But I was lonely, playing without him.
     In Discord, a text and audio app designed for gaming communities, our friends Hot and Kittenpower mention resub(scrib)ing.  People start posting screenshots of old and abandoned characters. Talking about factions and discounted server transfers.
     When Owen logs on, we level our demon hunters for a bit. KP and I already have three characters at max level, and Hot boosts a warlock and a druid to cap. I’m trying to help Owen catch up, but he doesn’t have the same stamina for this game. His eyes tire and his interest wanes, and we log into Heroes of the Storm to end the night. Heroes was the game we were playing when we first started talking, about a year ago. He and his family still call me Peyla, the name I’ve carried from game to game. It can’t all be wasted, this time.

—Danielle Geller

Danielle Geller received her MFA in creative writing from the University of Arizona. She is a proud recipient of the 2016 Rona Jaffe Writers’ Awards. Her work has appeared in The New Yorker, Brevity, and Silk Road Review and has been anthologized in This Is the Place (Seal Press, 2017). She is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation: born to the Tsi’naajinii, born for the white man.





RACHEL HAYWOOD

My summer solstice starts like many of the days before it, just a hair earlier. At 6:12am, the sun begins to weave through the treetops into my seventh-story window. I started sleeping with the blinds open so that this precise moment would happen every morning giving me a few more hours to be a productive human, but today, I don’t want to get out of bed. (I should mention that when I slept with the blinds closed I wasn’t rolling out of bed until noon or so if I was lucky.)
     Curled up under too-thin overs, my sockless feet hit a spot of the cold mattress and I want to die a little inside. Ice cold. I cranked my “thermostat” (if it’s even worthy of the name) back up to 72 degrees the night before but the humming air conditioner above my bed suggests otherwise. Anyway, I turn off the 6:15am alarm with a snooze and curl up a little tighter for four more 15-minutes of sleep. When I wake up I am as close to fetal position as possible and my phone reads 7:23am.
     I check my work schedule to make sure I haven’t overslept or otherwise forgotten that I am a new employee of my school’s housing and residence life department. My first shift of the day is in Park Hall. I am tasked with the fight of my life against the wooden accordion “curtain” that hides the front desk, and I will “babysit” the building until I close it at 2:00pm. After pulling on the black uniform t-shirt that I’ve worn for the last three days, I schlep my backpack onto aching shoulders. The trek to the student center for breakfast is a warm one, but by 8:00am when I am out the door, 78 degrees feels pleasant.
     Continuing my new morning routine, I drop my backpack onto the ideal seat right outside of Starbucks and order two eggs over easy and hash browns from the Tally. The eggs are cooked near perfectly (thanks to one student employee who knows how to make eggs over easy) and the hash browns are a perfect portion (which sometimes, are not). The student center also restocked their no-pulp orange juice so I grab a bottle before paying for my food and heading back to my comfy armchair. I set three alarms before work at 15-minute intervals so that I can leave for my shift across campus with plenty of time to get settled. At 8:25, I break the first yolk. Campus is quiet now. It feels as if nothing could go wrong.
     I would be remiss if I did not mention that I am nervous for this first shift of the day. Park Hall is a new building to me and contrary to the two days that I spent in employee training, I can do--and know how to do-- very little at work. I’ve worked for almost a month and today is the first day I’m working in this dorm. I send up a prayer on Twitter so that my friends can think of me as they go about their own activities during the solstice: “Today is no bueno. Requesting and accepting nearly all forms of cheering up.” I know now that that is my first mistake. Before work even starts I am convinced that something will go wrong.
     The wooden curtain does not “come quietly”. I knew it. My coworkers warned me about this building. In hindsight, they did not offer any advice, just grievances against Park. The bones in my hand scream as I struggle with the lock and key. I cradle it to my chest, keeping expletives to a low whisper. Checking the staff binder, I find a suspicious lack of occupants in the building.
     My first shift ends in a blur, four hours later. Maybe I black out from my anxiety and don’t remember most of what happens. I never managed to close that wooden curtain on my own. I called a coworker to help.
     In any case, I have thirty minutes to regroup myself and prepare to welcome another bunch of eager incoming freshman to campus for orientation. This shift is much more enjoyable. I get to interact with coworkers, other people. Students don’t start showing up until 4:15pm or so, but I’m on the clock by 3:30pm. For forty minutes we scramble to check students in and toss keys across the open lobby. Over and over I direct people towards the corner with the double doors to the residence hall. We’ve never made it to 5:30pm. On this day, I send five students to other orientation leaders for various problems that I do not have the power to fix and apologize to one hall director and a student for checking them, a female, into a male room. The girl hands me back the key and someone else puts her in a new room.
     5:15pm arrives and the refreshing outdoor air hits my face. I clock out and shuffle 100 feet to the nearest dining hall for a pasta dinner. It’s undercooked and the sauce is a bit cold. Heating it up requires patience and skill so it doesn’t explode into a puddle of butter. I decide to pack the rest of it in my bag for tomorrow’s lunch. I schlep my backpack again onto my aching shoulders and return to my on-campus housing for some much-needed rest. For a minute, the thought of crawling into bed at 6:00pm crosses my mind. I push it far away. The sun hasn’t set. It won’t for a few more hours.
     My parents are living it up on a cruise in the Bahamas. They won’t have cell service for days. By default, my twin sister is on the receiving end of daily Facetime calls. She’s never watched the house by herself before. She called me first a few days ago, asking if she should set more ant traps in the kitchen. She went to work today, but I’m sure she’ll answer the phone in her pajamas, petting our dog. She does. For far too long we exchange “so, how’s it going?” conversation with far too little engagement. She occasionally flips the phone around so I can see our dog wiggle her beard or run in her sleep. Until Saturday, we’re all each other has. I settle for staring at her through Facetime. It’s almost like sitting in the same room. This works for all of five minutes before we’re bored, wasting phone battery. We part ways before I go to bed (just after dark, I should say) and I prepare to do it all again tomorrow. Will the next day be as tiring? It should be shorter by a hair.

—Rachel Haywood

Rachel Haywood is a senior undergrad studying Creative Writing at Ball State University in Muncie, IN. She did not write this essay to be life-changing, but maybe it will be someday. When she's not writing, she's trying to rock climb or cooking for her family. She lives in Fort Wayne, Indiana, with her parents, twin sister, and beloved dog. 





KAREN R. M. KOCH

I tiptoe out of bed, careful not to wake our two geriatric dogs, who, despite their advanced ages, manage to make so much noise with their pacing, their scratching, their slurping of water, that peaceful mornings are few and far between. One is zonked out on the floor on my husband’s side of the bed; the other is sprawled in the middle of the hallway and I must step over him on my way to the bathroom.
     I swallow my medicines and pad on bare feet into the living room. The blue recliner welcomes me as it does every morning, and I pull my Bible and my journal out of the bottom drawer of the side table. The cat jumps onto my lap, making herself comfortable, and I gaze out the eastern window where I like to watch the sunrise. But today is overcast, foggy, and humid. It reflects my state of mind.
     Sighing, I read a chapter from my Bible and settle in with my Father. I ask him to help me let go of the things I can’t control, as well as the things I don’t need to control. It’s a continual, perpetual prayer. I feel constant pressure from myself to succeed at everything.
     It’s a dreary day, but in a soothing sort of way. As if the mist is saying, “Slow down. Be still.” My heart is tight with too much emotion, and my mind is filled to overflowing with words and tasks. The summer solstice is the day I always imagine I will fill with activity—getting up at sunrise and enjoying the long, long day. I picture myself spending all the daylight hours outside, biking or hiking or canoeing, not coming back inside the walls until the sun sinks behind the horizon and the fireflies begin to blink in the grasses. But today, the soft rain tells me to relax. Stop hurrying. I vow to try.
     Still, there is much on my to-do list. Once my quiet time is finished, I change into my running clothes and head out in the drizzle for a three-miler. I think about all the things I need to accomplish. My house is filthy (a fact directly attributable to the aforementioned canines), but cleaning will have to wait until tomorrow. There are too many other things on my plate today.
     As I run, I pay attention to the nature around me—the corn stalks whispering in the fields, the cows lowing in the meadow, the rain dripping down my cheeks. I do love living in rural Indiana. Even the small town where my husband and I used to live felt claustrophobic to me after thirteen years. Our home in the country has been a blessing to me, and rest for my troubled soul.
     I return home, and after a shower, I throw a load of laundry in the washer and eat a simple breakfast of an over-easy egg (laid by one of our own hens) on a toasted corn tortilla. Then I sit at the kitchen table to work. I spend an hour on readings and discussion posts for my graduate class, then throw the laundry in the dryer and take a break. My husband has gotten up by now. He sits at the table with his coffee and breakfast, watching YouTube videos on his phone. Since he typically wears headphones so as not to disturb me (he knows I prefer the quiet), I’ve no idea what he’s looking at. Sometimes he’s watching comedy sketches or political commentaries, but based on the concentrated look on his face, I suspect that today he’s viewing a tutorial about lumber milling or timber frame building to give him insight into his work of building our house to replace this double-wide trailer we’re living in.
     A quick conversation in which I remind him that I’m leaving in a few hours, a kiss, and he’s out the door to his workshop.
     Little tasks must be accomplished now. I tidy the kitchen, fold the laundry, make the bed. By now, it’s time for lunch, so I heat up some leftovers and eat while hunched over a book. Today, it’s Kelly Gallagher’s Readicide, which I study with sticky notes and a pen always at hand to mark important passages. It’s giving me many things to think about as I consider changes to make in my middle school English classroom in the fall.
     This is one of those areas in which I feel an intense drive to succeed. I want to be not just a great teacher, but the best teacher. The pressure of the high-stakes testing gets to me sometimes. While I know that I am good at what I do, I feel that the all-important data doesn’t always show it. I seek perfection, knowing that it’s impossible. But I want it anyway.
     Another hour on my coursework, and then I grab my car keys and head out the door. I’ve agreed to drive my best friend, Pattie, and her mom to the airport. They are heading to Boise, where Pattie and her husband will be moving in September.
     When I arrive at the house, Carol and I pack all their things in the trunk. I had forgotten how much stuff they’d have—they’ll be gone for about three weeks—and I failed to remove the box of books from the back of the car. Still, we shift some things around and manage to get it all in. Windshield wipers on, and we’re off.
     Carol sits in the back, watching out the window, and Pattie dozes in the passenger seat next to me. I don’t have the radio on, so it’s nearly silent in the car. I think about how this is another step in the long goodbye to Pattie. We’ve been running buddies for about six years now; we met not long after her first husband died. She’s quiet and I’m cautious, so it took a long time for us to become close, but now I tear up at the knowledge that she is moving so far away. I’m happy for Pattie—her new husband is so good for her, and she loves Boise and they’re excited to move there. But do you know how far Boise, Idaho is from Daleville, Indiana? Really, really far.
     Finally we pull into the departures section of the Indianapolis International Airport. I help them with their bags and wish them a great trip. My sister lives not far from the airport, and I have invited myself for dinner, so I plug her address into Google Maps and go on my way. The app takes me places I didn’t expect—country roads when I expected interstate—and while I don’t mind that so much, I’m puzzled why it’s telling me that it’s going to take me an hour and a half to get there when I know full well Michelle lives only about 40 minutes from the airport. I roll my eyes at myself when I realize that I somehow had set the app to show me the bike route instead of the car route. I make the fix, but I’m still on tiny, winding, numbered roads until I reach my final destination.
     Michelle’s house is a construction zone. At last after eighteen years, they are painting every room (and adding some color to the walls like I’ve been suggesting to her forever) and replacing the worn-out carpet with laminate flooring. Mostly, three of her boys are doing the work—and strapping young men they are, too. She takes me on a tour of what’s been finished and she shows me what’s next.
     I try for the hundredth time not to compare my life to hers. She is the eldest of the three of us girls, and she seems to have a charmed life. Healthy marriage, financial stability, six beautiful children—five biological and one adopted—and a cute-as-a-button grandson. I think that Amy and I have always compared ourselves to Michelle and felt that we can’t quite measure up. Amy, the middle child, who has dealt with ill children and financial difficulties, now finds herself a widow at age 46. While my life looks fairly successful—happy home, great job—the pain of our infertility is always a small knot in my spirit. I smile, hug my nieces and nephews, and enjoy dinner with the family. They welcome me always, and continually affirm that Auntie Karen is their favorite aunt, but it’s not the same as having my own children. Parenthood is something I’ll never have the chance to be great at.
     We finish dinner, put the leftovers in the fridge, and load the dishwasher. Dark storm clouds pile up in the west, and I decide it might be good to get on the road now; I have a ninety-minute drive to get back home. I hug my sister and head out.
     The radio remains off all the way home, and I spend the hour and a half hanging out with God, asking him again to help me let go of the things I can’t control, as well as the things I don’t need to control. I tell myself that perfection is an illusion, and I don’t have to strive for it. I let God remind me that my value is not determined by my bank account, the number of dependents I can claim on my taxes, or my student’s test scores. As darkness falls, I try to remember the lesson of the morning’s mist: “Slow down. Be still. Relax. Stop hurrying.”
     And I vow to try.
—Karen R. M. Koch

Karen Koch lives in rural Indiana with her husband, two dogs, a cat, 28 chickens, and 11 rabbits.  She spends August through May teaching 7th and 8th grade English language arts, and every month striving for the unattainable. 





JILL KOLONGOWSKI

Thursdays are a day off, so a day of beautiful nothing stretches ahead. I have to run errands, but I like running errands in my town. I’ve lived here long enough to know it’s best to walk past the noodle place and the old Baskin Robbins that stays put no matter how gentrified this place gets, and walking by them at this time of day meant you got to walk in the shade.
     After, I went for a manicure and a pedicure. As a younger me I used to think this was something only stuck-up rich princesses did, but now I find it a small joy I can bestow upon myself—no matter how terrible I feel, it’s a kind of comfort to look down and see your nails, still beautiful. Jenny the manicurist draws a pink and yellow flower on my ring finger freehand. She wipes away the first, imperfect attempt before I can see it, and tries again. Something about this persistence breaks my heart.
     On a whim, on the way home, I decide to stop at Urgent Care. I’ve been having vague abdominal pain for a month and I’m supposed to go to Disneyland in four days, so I figure I might as well get the all-clear.
     Two hours later I’m stripped down to a hospital gown in the emergency room, getting ready for an appendectomy. The day has gotten unstable, moving like thick drips from a faucet, both very quickly and very slowly. First, the urgent care ultrasound tech, who is not supposed to say anything, but is worried enough to break the rules, tells me my appendix is extremely inflamed, so kind that I wonder if we could be friends in real life and I’m sad when she leaves to get the doctor and I never see her again and can’t remember her name; fast-forward and my husband and I are driving to the ER and I’m trying to pull up the GPS but my hands are slow and clumsy and none of the icons make sense; fast-forward and the nurse is saying they will take me upstairs to my room and I realize I’m going to have to stay here overnight and no one explains to me that they are going to pump me full of antibiotics first, surgery later. My husband Googles it. I’m maddest that I didn’t get to eat dinner and now I won’t be able to eat anything for 24 hours.
     My new nurse’s name is Princess. Her father’s name is Ray (or perhaps Rey), which means king in Spanish. “Get it?” she says, with the practice of someone who’s told a joke over and over.
     Time has gotten slow again. I’ve never stayed in a hospital room overnight. No one tells you how much of it is waiting. My husband goes home to get me my toothbrush. I spend a lot of time looking at the clock and turning it into geometry, squares for 15 minutes, then wedges for five-minute increments. The view out the hospital room is gorgeous, lighted windows stacking up the Santa Cruz mountains. It makes me mad to look, so instead I watch Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives. For some reason I am finding Guy Fieri very comforting. Every episode is the same, no matter what restaurants he visits. Each episode starts and ends with the same words and I love its sameness, the way I can always count on him to say “Hey, it’s Guy Fieri and we’re rollin’ out” every 30 minutes, every half-circle of the clock.
     My husband returns with the toothbrush. He wasn’t able to find a travel-size toothpaste, so he brings me a brand-new full-size one, and this feels like love to me. I make him go home—one of us should sleep. As soon as he leaves I wish I’d asked him to stay. The view is great, I could have said.
     Princess comes in to do the IV, which has made my arm all puffy. She’s wearing a cardigan over her scrubs and this makes me feel a little better, this small bit of visible comfort, of someone trying to keep warm. She tries two new IV sites, stabbing around in my hand first and then my arm, stabbing so much it will leave a bruise for two weeks. She says, “Damn, I thought I had it!” I nearly apologize.
     The two-hour block of Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives I just watched starts over again. I turn the TV off and listen instead to the patient in the next room, who sounds far worse, with a horrible wheezing sandpaper cough that never gets better. My surgery is in the morning. I straighten out the IV cord to try and sleep. My nails do look beautiful.

—Jill Kolongowski

Jill Kolongowski is a nonfiction writer and professor living in Northern California. She is the author of the essay collection Life Lessons Harry Potter Taught Me (Ulysses Press, 2017). Other essays are published in Sweet: A Literary Confection, Sundog Lit, Profane, and elsewhere. She is also the managing editor at YesYes Books. She is a Hufflepuff who grew up in Michigan.





JESSI PETERSON

On the Road to Cirenaica (near Fall Creek, WI)

I’m running late, which is my way. I try to cram too many things into the day and I always think I can do one more thing before I leave for work or the dentist appointment or the DMV. You would think that today, the longest day of the year, I would have a chance to catch up, but so far it has not happened.
     I’m almost ready to be away for 3 days—I’ve settled the new hogs we got two days ago, taken down the laundry, rounded up what I need for time away and left a note for my husband. But then I can’t find my hat or my keys and I remember something else that Dan needs to know, so by the time I leave I have ten minutes to make a 25 minute trip. Still, I won’t be too late—it’s a straight shot east and then 5 miles south, easy peasy. That is, unless a bridge has been washed out by last Sunday’s rains. The detour takes me down a series of narrow, nonsensical country roads that don’t seem as though they will ever connect with someplace I need to be and I am fuming now, irritated by every twist and turn. Coming round a sharp turn out of overarching oaks, I am met with a chicory blue flash in the gravel at the roadside, an indigo bunting bathing in a puddle, then retiring to the boxelder scrub as I pass. Which turns the day on a dime for me, a blue sky moment I’d have missed had I been timely, had the road not detoured. Sometimes it pays to be late.

—Jessi Peterson


Jessi Peterson is a children's librarian, an erstwhile farmer and a poet. Her work has appeared in Wisconsin People and Ideas, Barstow and Grand and Sky Island Journal.






SILAS HANSEN

It’s 12AM on June 21st, the day I’m supposed to keep track of what happens, and I’m starting the day off right: with my third (okay, maybe my fifth) shot of bourbon—Bulleit, on the rocks—and a night of karaoke in Indiana’s oldest (and Muncie’s only) gay bar with a group of my friends. I can’t be sure (see aforementioned bourbon), but there’s a decent chance I’m singing either “Achy Breaky Heart” by Billy Ray Cyrus or “Man! I Feel Like a Woman” by Shania Twain when the day begins.
     Around 1:30, we decide we’ve had our fill of karaoke, so my friends Andy and Meredith and I head a block over to the bar where we all met. Our friends Chuck and Robby are there, too, so I end up playing a game of euchre with the guys while Meredith drinks a Two Hearted and our friend Casey, the bartender, starts cleaning up. Andy and I do surprisingly well (again, see aforementioned bourbon) and I realize I really need to head home around 2:30. I run into a couple of friends—also bartenders at my other regular hangout, taking a smoke break before they finish cleaning up—on my bike ride home, so I stop and talk to them for a minute, finally getting in my house a little after 3.
     I realize I should probably eat something before I go to bed, so I take the pizza box that I’d stuck in the fridge earlier and eat a couple slices of (cold) Little Caesars stuffed crust pepperoni pizza. I may be 31, a homeowner, a college professor, etc., but I still eat like I’m 19 and in college. I think, for probably the fourth time in the past 24 hours, that I really need to get back on the keto diet, and also that I’m not sure when I last ate a vegetable that wasn’t either (1) tomato sauce on aforementioned pizza or (2) barely recognizable as a base for the chicken makhani takeout I got from the Indian place in the plaza by the grocery store.
     Once I’ve polished off the pizza, I take my meds (antidepressant, blood pressure medicine, allergy medicine), grab a glass of water, and fall asleep on the couch (where I’ve been sleeping lately, since my central air seems to keep the living room about six degrees cooler than my bedroom), watching Bob’s Burgers with my cat curled up on my chest, somewhere between 3:30 and 4AM. I wake up around 7 with wicked heart burn, but fall back asleep after taking a couple of antacids and, once again, telling myself to eat healthier and drink less because Jesus Christ, Silas, you’re 31 fucking years old.

My alarm goes off around noon. I’d forgotten I even set it. The first thing I think when I wake up is: water. Water, now. The second thing I think is that I should have stopped with the bourbon around drink 3 and switched to beer—or better yet, water. Water. I need water. I drain the rest of the glass I’d gotten before bed and then head to the kitchen to refill it.
     It’s officially Thursday now, for real, and I need to take my friend Emily to the airport in Indianapolis by 5 (it’s about a 90 minute drive from Muncie). I text her to see if she wants to work in a coffee shop before that (secretly hoping she’ll say no, since I think I need to eat some fast food, drink some water, and lay on the couch for a bit before I’m really ready to do much of anything), but she says she needs to finish packing and to pick her up a little after 2. We’ll grab lunch in Broad Ripple—a neighborhood on the north side of the city—and then I’ll take her straight to the airport. Thank God.
     I throw on some gym shorts, a clean T-shirt, and my flip-flops, brush my teeth and put on deodorant, and head to the car. I’ve been traveling a lot the last couple of weeks and don’t have anything except oatmeal for breakfast and that’s just not going to cut it. I need something warm and greasy, preferably with a side of fried potatoes, so I head to McDonald’s, listen to my favorite true crime podcast on my way there and while I sit in the drive-thru, and then head back home with a sausage McMuffin, a hash brown, and a large unsweetened iced tea (my usual order). I always eat while I drive, so by the time I get home—just over a mile, about a seven-minute drive—I’m left with just half of my iced tea.

I’m finally feeling like a human again, so I make sure my cat has food and clean water, unload and then re-load the dishwasher, start a load of laundry, and lie back on the couch for a half-hour playing euchre on my phone and listening to the rest of my podcast while the clothes are in the washer. is the first time in my adult life that I’ve had laundry in my house, so maybe this is normal, but my shower loses water pressure and the temperature changes pretty abruptly if I shower while the washer’s running, so I try to avoid it.
     My cat, meanwhile, sits on my stomach and occasionally licks my beard. It’s cute, but kind of weird. I push him away and he settles for curling up around my right foot and rubbing his face all over it. A slight improvement, I guess.
     I switch my clothes to the dryer, take a quick shower, put on clothes—a pair of cut-off jeans, my favorite T-shirt (featuring a pig with the cuts of pork labeled; the tenderloin is—falsely—in the shape of Indiana and underneath it reads “Indiana Born and Breaded.”), and my flip flops, again, and otherwise finish getting presentable. I also pop 600mg of Advil—half because of the slight hangover I’m nursing and half because of the crick in my neck from sleeping on the couch.
     It’s just after 2, so I quickly clean the empty iced tea cups out of my car (I drink a lot of it, okay? Don’t judge. It’s unsweetened. It’s practically water!), throw the trash bag in the can in my backyard, and head to Emily’s to pick her up.

Emily’s going to be gone for two weeks and is traveling to four different cities, including two in Canada, where she’s from, so she’s (understandably) stressed. We stop at Starbucks for iced teas and then talk on our way down about her trip, about our jobs (we’re both in academia), about plans for the rest of the summer: I’m going to Columbus, where I lived in grad school, and then home to western New York; she’s taking a research trip.
     We decide to go to one of our mutual favorite places in Broad Ripple for lunch—a cool bar called The Sinking Ship that serves a half-vegan and half-carnivore menu alongside craft beer and only two things on TV: either hockey, or Japanese wrestling. I get the “country mac”: pulled pork and macaroni and cheese and a side of star tots: just tater tots shaped like stars. They’re nothing special, but there’s something about the shape that makes them taste even better—extra surface area to get crispy, maybe?
     Emily gets a beer to go with her veggie burger, but I decide it’s smart for me to stick with water.

We get a brief thunderstorm on our way to the airport—about a half-hour drive through city traffic from the restaurant—but it’s otherwise uneventful. Emily navigates from the passenger’s seat. I’ve used too much data this month—and her phone is set to have a dude’s British voice, which I find refreshing compared to mine, which is still set the default. I know how to get to the airport, but I always go straight from Muncie, so I’m not sure of the fastest way to get there from this neighborhood. We get turned around for a second, but we figure it out and I get here there a couple minutes late, but still with plenty of time.
     I drop Emily off at Departures and then immediately start heading back to Muncie. I get a couple miles from the airport when another thunderstorm hits. This one seems stronger, and it’s now rush hour (and the only thing I hate more than traffic is getting stuck between two semi-trucks, which always happens on I-70), so I get off at the next exit, go through a McDonald’s drive-thru for another (my third of the day) unsweetened iced tea and then sit in the parking lot, listening to another episode of the true crime podcast, while I wait for the weather to clear up.
     Dad calls while I’m sitting there. He, my mom, and my grandma are driving to my aunt’s boyfriend’s old house to pick up his lawn mower (they have just moved in together, into my aunt’s house). They’ve stopped so Mom and Grandma can get something at Walmart and he’s sitting in the car, bored. Knowing Mom and Grandma, they’ll be a while. We talk for a bit about the weather, about a couple of projects I want to do around my house, and my summer class, which just started. Mom and Grandma get back in the car in New York and it’s finally stopped raining in Indiana, so I say a quick hello and goodbye to them and then hang up.

Traffic has finally let up a bit, so I make pretty good time and am back in Muncie by about 7:30.
     The whole day feels like a wash. I had a good time hanging out with Emily, as I always do, but other than a few chores earlier in the day, I haven’t accomplished much.
     I end up getting pizza for dinner (and, while waiting for it, stop in the grocery store to pick up a few things so I can cook at home—something I actually really like to do, despite what you may think based on what I’ve written here: a couple of manager’s-special steaks and some asparagus and zucchini for dinner, a fresh loaf of sourdough and a dozen eggs for breakfast, a package of rotini, some cherry tomatoes, and a jar of pesto for lunches. Keto next week, I guess.)
     I go home and eat pizza on the couch while watching another episode of Bob’s Burgers with my cat. It’s almost 9, but I still have a long to-do list. I take out my bullet journal and see what I can push to tomorrow (working on a new essay, grading some reading responses and recording a lecture video for my online class, etc.) and then spend an hour or so crossing off the things I need to do right away: I answer a couple of emails from students/colleagues, post a couple of essays for early next week so my students can work ahead if they need the weekend off, and then clean up the kitchen a bit and take out the garbage.
     It’s almost 10. My friends Andy and Austin both text and say they’re at the Peach—the second bar from the night before. I’m supposed to go down and play cards—we’d made the plan at karaoke. I’m beat. I don’t want to get up. “I’ll be down soon,” I tell them both. I believe it at the moment, even though I should know better.
     I’m on the couch, no pants, and I’m watching an episode of Bob’s Burgers. Bob’s chaperoning Louise’s class field trip to the museum. My AC is blasting and so I grab a blanket and my cat immediately jumps up on top of me.

My phone buzzes against the coffee table twice, waking me up. I grab it as it buzzes again. “Cards, shitbird?” Andy asks. Austin more politely asks where the fuck I am. Emily’s waiting for her connection and wants to know if I watched Drag Race. It’s 10:48.
     “Shit, I fell asleep and now I think I’m too sleepy to put real pants back on,” I tell Austin. Honesty is the best policy. “Tomorrow?” I copy and paste it and send the same to Andy.

It’s not even 11, but I’m done. I get up (the cat tries to keep me there for a second, but eventually gives up and jumps down) and brush my teeth and take my meds, promising myself I’ll do better on Friday. I’ll get up before 10. I’ll make breakfast at home. I’ll go to my office and work all day. I’ll pack a lunch. I’ll go out with friends in the evening and drink two beers—and a glass of water in between—like a responsible adult. Fuck it: I might even go to the gym.
     I get back under the blanket on the couch, turn off the light, and restart the episode of Bob’s Burgers. Tina’s trying to earn a merit badge, so Bob and Linda take the whole family on a camping trip. The cat seems to have forgiven me for waking him and immediately jumps back up on me, curling up in his spot. We’re both sound asleep before the episode’s even over.

—Silas Hansen


Silas Hansen's essays have appeared in The Normal School, Colorado Review, Slate, Redivider, Puerto del Sol, Hayden's Ferry Review, and elsewhere. He lives in Muncie, Indiana where he sings karaoke, plays euchre, and teaches creative writing and literary publishing at Ball State University.





LUCY NASH

The alarm goes off at 5.30am, my son is already in my bed, and I have a case of the raging butterflies. That’s right, not the kind of ticklish, fluttering butterflies causing you to tingle with nervous excitement, I mean the big angry kind that had been up all night plotting their escape. In other words, I’m pretty damn anxious. I look across at my outfit for the day, each item scrupulously selected, hanging up ready to go. No reassuring sweatshirt and leggings combo pulled haphazardly from my wardrobe today.
     After two years, I am going back to work, well sort of. I have just been offered a job and although it isn’t set to start until September, I have been asked to attend an annual meeting being held up in Birmingham with all the other employees. I know my boss, and her boss, we have all worked together before and all I have to do is sit there and listen to presentations all day, but I am a wreck. I have been for days. I saw the 21st looming on the horizon weeks out and I could not see past it. And now, here it is.
     My husband and son drop me to the train station and I wave through the back window and watch my son reach out and mouth “mummy” before my husband pulls away. Deep breath. Today I am going to have to be a grown up again. What if I have forgotten how to do it? Forgotten how to be out in the world, just walking through space on my own, only myself to think about, able to grab a coffee or wander into a shop or even just tune out. I turn my train tickets over in my hands and double check them for at least the tenth time. Two trains to Birmingham and was I on the right platform? Have I got the timings right? I panic about how busy it might be and whether I’ll get a seat. The thought of a crowded train, of a suffocating lack of oxygen and personal space, makes my stomach lurch.
     Eventually, clutching my coffee, I step onto the train with wobbly legs as if it were my first time, feeling somehow like an imposter, two kids stacked one on top of the other under a trench coat trying to get away with being an adult. Since the arrival of my son, my world has gotten progressively smaller as he has become bigger and more difficult to manage in public spaces. I live most of my life within four walls and I rarely travel beyond an eight-mile radius from them. Now, here I am rolling through big open country. I hit upon a brief moment of lucidity outside of the swirling snowstorm of anxiety and panic and notice how beautiful it is and click a picture of lush green fields full of wild flowers to remind myself to be a bit more present. Then I promptly return to the greyish confines of my mind to consider my nerves.
     The second train is far busier. I watch more and more people drip onto the platform before it arrives and inexplicably I begin to resent them each individually. The seats are packed in tight, there are hundreds of people on this train and I frantically elbow my way through the crowds looking for coach D. I anticipate a confrontation, there aren’t enough seats, someone will have found mine empty and I will be forced to ask them to move. Fortuitously, I find my assigned seat unoccupied and I squeeze myself in next to a dark-haired woman staring into space who politely contracts her body and averts her gaze so as to avoid any unwanted contact. It’s very British.
     I’m an hour away and still clutching my now tepid coffee. I affect an air of relaxed nonchalance, as if I’m just a normal person doing normal grown-up things and take a few sips of the coffee which comes to mix with the nervous agitation and form a lump in my stomach. I throw it away and try to read but I realise that I’m just staring at words and give up. The romantic notion of hours on a train on my own reading and enjoying my own company as a break from my daily life now seems farcical. I decide to just wait it out.
     I’m relieved to arrive but immediately begin to feel a creeping uneasiness about the return journey. I realise that it’s not the job, the colleagues, the work that has been occupying me. It’s been the journey all along. I was being released back into the world after my ritual post-natal cloistering and isolation and now it felt somehow bigger, more intimidating. It was almost like being a child again, seeing and experiencing things anew with all the fear of the unknown or unknowable but without a hand to hold, to keep me company, to reassure me.
     I don’t start to breathe until I am on the final train on the final leg of my journey home. But I’m irritable, the trains are far busier this time around, I can’t relax, and I can feel the cortisol coursing through my body keeping me upright, tense, alert. It’s noisy and everyone seems too close to me. I hear snippets of loud phone conversations, of music rudely intruding into my private head space from another passenger’s headphones, I watch the conductor attempt to escort two guys off the train who have no ticket and who are clearly high on something. It’s a petri dish of humanity. I’m returning home with a new sense of gratitude for my small and quiet domestic life.

—Lucy Nash

Lucy is a temperamentally neurotic human first and foremost and then a busy mum; teacher; freelancer; and anxious procrastinator, in that order (sorry this is late!).





Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 13: Kayla Haas • Yelizaveta P. Renfro • Amanda Holmes • Mattison Merritt • Amber Taliancich • Elizabeth Miller • Sarah Haak • Kathryn Clarke • Tain Gregory

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, through July 16th.
—The Editors



July 13: Kayla Haas • Yelizaveta P. Renfro • Amanda Holmes • Mattison Merritt • Amber Taliancich • Elizabeth Miller • Sarah Haak • Kathryn Clarke • Tain Gregory




KAYLA HAAS

A Tale of Two Junes

On June 21st, 2018 I was at work.
     Because of the solstice I was at work perhaps double that day. I work in marketing. I used to work in academia but I don’t anymore. On June 21st a man who hurt women is having a sandwich while the waitress dances in his imagination. Meanwhile I am writing about garage tiles and flooring and other boring topics.
     In another June I would be working on my thesis and waiting to see if Title IX would choose this time to protect women. In another June I begin an essay collection about domestic violence and I can’t figure out why it’s so present in my mind. It can’t be the professor that calls women fat, that tugs on their shorts and sucks on their necklaces? It can’t be the man who walks into my office to ask me if we are enemies? It has to be something else, right?
     At my new job men don’t pull on shorts or suck on necklaces. I work on my computer writing “man cave” over and over again and feel thankful about health insurance and HR.
     On this day I feel like I’m going to throw up. This is because four months ago I went off Prozac. I thought leaving academia, leaving Kansas, and lots of therapy solved my problems, but problems are rarely solved. Now I feel like my existence is to only throw up. And once the anxiety is back so is the depression, and so is the PTSD.
     My PTSD was worse in school because of the man who would ask if we were enemies and the man who would say I was evil because I looked too much like his ex-girlfriend and because of the man who would hurt women.
     When men hurt women I get her too, even if they aren’t touching me. That’s because when I was younger a man hurt me, too. He would steal my jewelry and tug on my shorts and touch me when I didn’t want him to.
     His birthday is in June, so every June I have to think about him.
     I don’t want women to be touched when they don’t want to be. My new job is a good place to escape that. Here, I plan emails and blog posts and not whisper networks and self-care routines. Here my boss is a normal boss-man, and there my boss was someone I testified against to Title IX.
     Here my boss asks me how things are going, and there the chair told me to forget anything ever happened as I cry in her office.
     Here I’m not scared. There I was scared.
     Here, in June, I’m receiving a raise. There, in June, I considered dropping out.
     There, on this day in June, a man will never have real consequences to his actions, and he will eat his sandwich with his friends.
     Here, I feel the consequences in every retch my throat produces and I wonder if the other women feel it, too.
     Anyway, on June 21st, I scheduled some emails and left work at 4:30.

—Kayla Haas


Kayla Haas is a fiction writer and an essayist. You can find her work in The Toast, NANO Fiction, The James Franco Review, Gigantic Sequins, and Winter Tangerine.





YELIZAVETA P. RENFRO

First task: driving the Phantom of the Opera to debate camp. She is wearing the cape I made her three years ago, when she was going through her magician phase, and the half-mask I made for her from plaster cloth last Halloween, and she is carrying the artificial red rose, tied with a black velvet ribbon, that we got at Michael’s more recently to complete the costume. On the way to debate camp, which is held at the Hebrew high school, 3.2 miles from our house, she recites “Ozymandias” by Percy Bysshe Shelley. In the parking lot, I leave Son—Phantom’s little brother—in the minivan while I sign her in at the table out front. A very small Roman emperor wearing a white drape and laurel wreath in his hair along with an even smaller Mario are being checked in by their parents when I leave.
     Since it’s Son’s first day of summer vacation—his school year was extended seven days to make up for snow days—and since it’s the longest day of the year, we drive 4.6 miles to the reservoir to go on a walk. We will walk the trail that lassoes the reservoir—a 3.6 mile loop—and at first I have high hopes. The task seems possible. The last time we were here was in February—we wore snow boots and crunched through the icy crust that had formed on the trail—but today is too hot. I know that as soon as we begin, but the first part of the trail is through shady forest, and the task still seems possible. During the first half of the walk, Son works on learning “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” by Robert Frost. I feed him lines, and he repeats them back to me. Next week, he is going to debate camp with his sister, and he wants to have his recitations for the daily “speak-off” prepared. He keeps stumbling over the last two lines of the third stanza, so we go over these again and again. Walking through the humid green forest, we keep saying, “The only other sound’s the sweep / Of easy wind and downy flake.”
     We occasionally meet people making the loop in the other direction. This is a place people come with their dogs or their kids or their friends to walk. When Son has mastered the poem, we fall into a silence, and my mind begins to churn around the book I’ve written—the book the book I’ve written and rewritten and rewritten and rewritten, but isn’t finished. All the pieces are there—all the pieces and then some—but I don’t know which ones belong or in what order. My mind worries over the pieces and rearranges them and gives up in despair over the enormity of the task. It doesn’t seem possible. Then I think about an essay I’m working on—an essay about stones—but even that eludes me. I decide that writing is hard. I decide that it would be easier, more aesthetically pleasing, more lasting to erect a pile of stones.
     The last 1.4 miles of trail turns out to be in full, relentless sun. The task is no longer possible. Son asks if we can turn around and go back the other way, even though he knows that after passing the halfway mark, after we come around the far tip of the water, it would be further to retrace our steps. We are despondent, despairing. We are at the apex of summer—this day the very peak—and from this pinnacle of heat, this top of the mountain of light, we will start down the slope, the slide into darkness so gradual that it will be August before we notice. We walk because the day is long, the light unending: 15 hours, 13 minutes of daylight in my New England town. The task is not possible. I look ahead to the month of July, which is the month of dread. I dream of winter and darkness, of Frost’s snowy woods. I much prefer the descent into the dark pit of the shortest day. I much prefer cold and darkness.
     But here we are, on a dusty, hot trail, and the boy, who is ten and prone to moodiness, has grown surly and angry. He trails behind me. He does not want to go on. The task is not possible. He is an eager, avid hiker in cool weather. But in the heat, such a task is not possible. I did not mean to teach him my hatred of summer and hot weather, but I have. Or else it’s written in our genes: too many Russian and Eastern European winter people in our line. I have tried to hide my deep hatred for summer, but I can see that Son hates the merciless beating of the sun, the days that are great yawns of harsh light as much as I do. The high today is only in the mid-80s, but there is the humidity, unrelenting. 
     And then a man jogs by us, heading in the other direction, and I look up just long enough to see that he is wearing a shirt celebrating the 90th anniversary of Son’s elementary school—a shirt just like a couple we have stashed away in drawers at home—so he must be someone’s father, maybe even the dad of a classmate of Son’s, but we don’t recognize him. In fact, he seems like some alien lifeform, appearing happy to be running in heat, while we trudge onward in intense grimness. It’s worse, somehow, that we should know him—almost know him—but we don’t know him at all. Seeing him makes the task even more not possible. 
     But it is possible: for there’s the parking lot, the minivan. There’s the AC that we can blast on the 6.4-mile drive home. It is entirely possible; it is done, and we are home. While Son goes to read a book in his room, I get on the computer. Probably I check in on the online writing class I am teaching, though I don’t post anything. Probably I scroll through Facebook, though I have no status update to share. I go through emails. I delete 42 emails—39 of them unread—and I archive 17 emails. I send six emails: two forwards, two replies, two new messages. They are about: the solicitation of gifts for Mr. Ricky, the school custodian who is retiring (forward to Husband—because he is fond of Mr. Ricky), a program for gifted girls (to the Phantom—because maybe she is interested?), a music camp for low brass instruments (response to music teacher—no, we have a conflict and can’t attend this summer), and Friday afternoon’s debate camp event (three total emails, two to Husband to plan logistics; one exchange with the Phantom: “I may or may not be inducted into The Order of Loquacious Knights this week,” she writes, to which I reply, “Have you been very loquacious?” and she writes back: “I don’t know yet.”).
     I watch an episode of CNN’s documentary on the 1960s (which I checked out on DVD via interlibrary loan from East Hartford Public Library), as a sort of research for my book, even though I couldn’t tell you in any straightforward way what JFK and MLK and RFK’s assassinations and the moon landing and Vietnam have to do with my book—except that my book is about all the things that happened before I was born and all the things that happened after I was born, which explains why I am having trouble finishing it. My book is a container for everything that’s happened to me—probably this is why people write multiple books, because they need more than one container—so the key is to figure out which things belong in this particular container. By watching more and more documentaries, I am adding things to the container—I have already watched the 1970s and 1980s—so soon, very soon, on this downward slide toward cold and dark, I will need to begin taking things out of the container and putting them away for later. 
     In the afternoon Son and I drive 4.0 miles to the bakery to have lunch and pick up our first CSA box of the season. We get two Southwest turkey sandwiches, a latte, an orange juice, a loaf of day-old bread, and a chocolate croissant (which we will save for the Phantom). After eating, we drive back home, and I unpack the box, cramming the refrigerator full of produce, and I slip the yellow half-sheet of paper that lists the contents of our box into Husband’s mail pouch in the kitchen, so he will know what I’ve filled the refrigerator with and remember to eat some of it before it goes bad. On this list: arugula, head lettuce (x2), curly kale, radish, Hakurei turnip, cilantro, garlic scapes, strawberries.
     We drive the 3.2 miles to pick up the Phantom from debate camp, only she’s not the Phantom anymore. She is a 13-year-old girl with a pile of cast-off clothing. She is hot and tired but full of news: the speak-off went well, she debated school uniforms, the guest speaker talked about guns. At home, the kids devour the strawberries from the CSA box while I google how to make garlic scape pesto. I can’t make the kind with nuts, due to Daughter’s tree nut allergy, so I find one that uses sunflower seeds. I start a shopping list.
     In the evening—only it doesn’t feel like evening—we walk 0.7 miles to the Russian chess master’s house for Son to play chess. Son doesn’t want to walk. “Why do we have to walk?” he wants to know. “You already took me on a death march today.” I tell him: We walk because it’s summer. We walk because the light goes on and on. “Broad and yellow is the evening light,” I say, because the words come to my mind, from a poem I once loved. It is not a poem about walking in Connecticut humidity. It is not a poem about today at all. It is a poem about two people finding each other after years and years and years of not finding each other. 
     Daughter comes with us but does not complain, because I have not already taken her on a death march today, and because she is clutching a sheaf of papers and is eager to work while her brother plays chess. The Russian chess master is stern and he runs his chess sessions outdoors, in his backyard, at picnic tables. Like old men in the park, playing in the shade of trees, this group of eight or ten boys assembles here every week. And every week, when I drop Son off, I think of my Russian grandfather, and it’s as though he’s here, even though he never set foot on American soil. I was a bad chess player, those summers we spent in Russia—my grandfather beat me every time. My grandfather was named Alexander, and so is my brother, and so is the stern Russian chess master. I think of all of these Alexanders and how well they played chess, and I think of my son, who is not an Alexander, but who also plays chess well and beats me. Seeing him sitting there under the trees at the picnic table, with the stern Russian chess master pacing back and forth, it’s as though they’re both here—my grandfather and my son—even though they missed each other by fifteen years. I think of that chasm of time—when I had neither one of them, when my grandfather had ceased to exist, and my son hadn’t yet come into existence—and I wonder how I lived through those years without them. Did you miss me before I was born? I remember now this question that one of my children asked me years ago, when they were earnest toddlers. 
     But Daughter does not want to linger, misty-eyed, looking at the assemblage of boys playing chess under trees. Daughter wants to walk and recite poems. Daughter wants to practice her recitations for tomorrow, and for all the days of the following week of camp. We walk in the neighborhood, and all around the small college campus near our house, stopping on the bridge to look down at the frogs in the pond and to watch the redwing blackbirds flit in and out of the cattails and to check on the color of the wild mulberries, and all through our walking Daughter is reciting. “We wear the mask that grins and lies,” she says, for tomorrow she will recite Paul Laurence Dunbar. Then she goes over “The Tyger” by William Blake and “Small Variation” by Octavio Paz for next week. Then she speaks, with great gusto, the lines of “Dulce et Decorum Est” by Wilfred Owen, even though she’s already recited that poem at debate camp earlier in the week. Her voice grows impassioned over her favorite lines: “If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood / Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs, / Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud / Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues.” And then, finally, we turn to our real work: memorizing Cassius’s monologue to Brutus in Julius Caesar. It is to be her crowning achievement, on the last day of camp, but so far, she’s learned just half of the forty-two lines. So I feed her the lines, again and again: “Caesar cried, 'Help me, Cassius, or I sink!'” And: “He had a fever when he was in Spain, / And when the fit was on him, I did mark / How he did shake. 'Tis true, this god did shake.”
     Before we reach the end of the monologue, it is time to pick up Son from the Russian chess master, who merely nods at me, and then we walk home. Husband has returned from work, so we share the events of the day, and then we eat fresh produce from the CSA box because it’s too hot to cook, and then the kids read books, and I work on clues for their annual summer treasure hunt, which will happen in two days, and it’s still not dark even when the kids are brushing their teeth with their electric toothbrush. 
     Before bed, there are the nightly rituals. First, I go into Daughter’s room, and we write in our five-year diaries together. Each day, there is room for five small lines of text, so we must be economical with our words. We are on the fourth year—we started this ritual when she was nine—and as long as we’re not rushed, we like to look over the past three years to see what we were doing and thinking on this day. A year ago, my parents were visiting from California and my brother was visiting from Nebraska, and we went duckpin bowling, and Daughter went to a tuba lesson, and we ate shrimp scampi and homemade pasta, and we played bridge. Two years ago, while the kids were writing in writing camp I was writing at Panera. Three years ago, it was Father’s Day, so the kids made waffles and decorated the dining room with their knitting, and I cleaned the bathroom, and Daughter made chicken korma and Son made shortbread, and I went to a writers meeting at my friend’s house. None of the entries give much away; they are mostly a record of events. This happened and then this. But still, there is a sense that there is a point to this project, only we don’t know what it is right now. There is a sense that it is a piling of stones.
     Before leaving Daughter’s room, I give her a magic spell: I rub the top of her hand while I speak magic Russian words to her. She still wants this, even though she’s a teenager, and even though her brother, who is younger, no longer needs magic to sleep. Soon, I will sleep too. I will get in bed, and I will read a chapter of Little Men by Louisa May Alcott (because it’s research for my book), and then I will sleep. There will be the summing up of the devices: they will tell me that the high today was 86, that the sun set at 8:29 p.m.; my Fitbit will report that I walked 19,053 steps—a distance of 9.95 miles—and had 124 active minutes. It will tell me that at 10:46 p.m. I went to sleep. But nowhere on the devices will remain the trace of one of the final moments of the day.
     I go into my Son’s room, to say goodnight, and he already has the light out. He is tired, because we have walked so far. I sit on his bed, and then I see that there is a firefly, glimmering against his window, trapped there between the panes of glass. “Look,” I say, “A firefly,” because just recently he asked me if he could see a firefly someday, and I was surprised that he had never seen one. “It’s so small,” he says, and I wonder if he’s been imaging flying lightbulbs. And then I remember a conversation I had with my friend James—three years ago, during an Alaska summer—about how fireflies were a hallmark of his childhood summers in the South, but not my Southern California childhood summers. I remember saying that I didn’t have a memory of seeing a single firefly as a child. And I remember feeling wistful that we couldn’t share this childhood experience. But then, during the four years I spent in Virginia—after I got married but before the kids were born—the summer nights were so hot and humid it was like being swaddled in damp, warm terrycloth. And fireflies had filled our yard, and even though I was in my late twenties, looking at them made me feel like a child, because I had to look so eagerly for that next flash—when will it come? where will it come? And then I think of “Knoxville: Summer, 1915,” the opening to A Death in the Family by James Agee, which I read back in graduate school, during my Virginia life, and the depth of feeling in his words has stayed with me all these years—even though it’s 103 years and 827 miles away from Agee’s Knoxville. The words put down by a writer who has been dead for sixty-three years are so with me that it’s as though his sounds of the locusts and the garden hoses and the families on quilts on the lawn happened to me—as though these impressions created by his words are more vivid than any pale moment from my own childhood. And I think: this is what writing can do. This is what reading can do. And I think: have I read too many books? Do I live too much in words? What am I missing, looking at a firefly trapped in Son’s window but thinking of other times, held captive in other people’s memories? What does it mean that there are so many layers of thoughts, like veils, between me and this moment? Does this moment come to Son, who by virtue of still being a child is closer to the actual world, like a piercing spark? Does he see it more clearly and more genuinely than I? Is this the moment—one of them—that he will trap in a jar and keep, that he will carry with him as a man? Goodnight, goodnight, my son. And were it not for these words, trapping this day here, holding it tight and pinched and captive, it too would have blinked off into the dark night of the forgotten. 

—Yelizaveta P. Renfro

Yelizaveta P. Renfro is the author of a collection of essays, Xylotheque, and a collection of short stories, A Catalogue of Everything in the World.





AMANDA HOLMES

Normally on June 21 we have a Midsummer Night's Dream party. Guests comes in fairy wings and ass heads. It’s an outdoor party where people read scenes from Shakespeare’s play. There are sparklers and lights in the trees and the fire flies glitter. Also, June 21 happens to be my birthday.  Last year was the biggest party of all—my son Alex married Australian Katie and people came from across the world. This year we did not have a party. But half way through the day, my daughter Rosalind texted me from Paris.
Are you having a good birthday?
You deserve a marvelous one. I’ve been remembering last year and wishing I was there.
It’s been ok.
     They sang happy birthday in the Bikram yoga studio.
     Then someone brought birthday cookies to the book festival programming committee meeting.
     But later this afternoon, Ilse Nithercott made things rather unpleasant at our book club meeting. On the plus side, Elliot and Molly are taking me out to Northside Social for dinner.
     Hahaha!
     What?!
     If you read that back to yourself I think you’ll see that it’s an account of a very successful day so far.
     This is true.
     Everyone was happy and celebrating you because you were hot and sweaty and salty and frizzy looking in the yoga studio, and they admire you…
     Also Elliot gave me headphones so I can do my Sacred Acoustic Meditations in comfort.
     …then free cookies…
     Daddy gave me a dress from Kohls which I will likely never wear.
     …then weird drama.
     Hahaha.
     …Then headphones and then…
     Oh, and the greyhound we just adopted is an absolute gem.
     …So on top of all that, you have a new alien dog friend!
     AND will shortly go out to dinner.
     Weird Ilse Nithercott has been making life complicated for several months.
     She wants us to raise our hands when we make our comments. Also, to transcribe the
entire discussion.
     Oh, and I hosted the event at Politics and Prose last night.
     120 people for a book called Bad Blood about the Theranos scandal.
     I also have a book review coming out tomorrow.
     Flowers were also sent from Australia from Katie Alex and the Sproglet.
“Dear Ilse Nithercott thank you
For making my life complicated recently. I
enjoy exotic names to an unusual degree and
yours, Ilse Nithercott, is completely in my wheelhouse
of people I usually have unusual drama with. Thank
you also for offering a distraction from the Bad Blood
book and the pain of new names.”
     Now say that five times fast.
     You are right. Thank you, darling.
     It was a very successful birthday.

Amanda Holmes

Amanda Holmes is a bookseller at Politics and Prose, a book club facilitator, and the author of many short stories and book reviews. Her novel, I Know Where I Am When I'm Falling, was published in 2014.





MATTISON MERRITT

I had a tongue infection for a few days, but today, I considered having my whole mouth removed to stop the pain. I woke up early and groggy from the Benadryl I took the night before in a bed next to one of my friends who has been in my life since second grade. There were four of us in the small AirBnB, Elle and me in the bedroom, Emma and Tara in the living room sleeping on a couch and a deflated air mattress. We took this Colorado vacation to celebrate graduating from college and remaining friends for over a decade. We were going to hike, smoke weed, drink, and say goodbye before we all moved away and started real jobs.
     However, I couldn’t do any of these things because I got a hilariously, ill-timed tongue infection that made my mouth feel like I drank hot coffee too fast and then dumped sriracha directly into the burns. I had dealt with the pain for three days, complaining a bit, but just sucking on ice cubes when my friends told me to shut up and quit ruining the trip. Today though, I felt like I couldn’t breath. We planned a hike for the morning, but I begged Elle to take me to urgent care. My friends made fun of me, but eventually took me to the doctors, still grumpy that I bailed on going out the previous night because my tongue had swelled so much I had a hard time talking.
     I paid $40 for someone to take my pain seriously, but I got some fancy mouthwash out of it. I left the doctors office, mad that I spent half of my weed budget on actual medicine and met my friends at brunch. We drove to the aquarium where we walked through herds of kids, stoned out of our minds in order to have a spiritual experience around fish. My mouth still stung a little, but I was quiet. These three friends cared about me, but they were right, I was ruining the trip. These three friends weren’t here to help me deal with my pain or anyone’s pain. These friendships had been marathons and we took this trip to reward ourselves how much time we had put into them. We had known each other for so long that at this point, there was no use growing or deepening our friendships. We were almost done. Elle had called me last year to tell me that she was starting antidepressants and I never checked in on her after that, it felt too weird to mention it again. Emma had spent two nights in a mental hospital the previous month, but she never brought it up. Tara was my hottest friends so I assumed she didn’t have any problems. All four of us, high in an overpriced aquarium, pretended that our baggage stayed at home and that nothing had changed since second grade apart from getting boobs.
     Today we smoked, talked about boys, ate nachos, posted cute instagrams about how long we had been friends, went on a whiskey distillery tour, got dressed up, and drank together. I enjoyed it, but I had to remind myself to not complain about my tongue, not discuss the fear and uncertainty of college graduation, and not come out to my longest friends because I knew all of this would make them uncomfortable and ruin the illusion of what this trip was all about. After I accepted the mouth pain, drank enough to not be afraid of the future, and set my tinder to ‘interested in men’ I did enjoy the day.


—Mattison Merritt

Mattison is a comedian and writer from Nebraska. She is currently the social media coordinator for Sex Posi-Ed an organization dedicated to educating young people through sex-positive, factual information. Her summer side hustle is selling her dog portrait paintings. You can find her on twitter at @24merrittgold.





AMBER TALIANCICH

I snooze the alarm as many times as I like because I no longer have to share the bed with someone who hates it. I keep my eyes closed despite my dog’s whine, hot breath on my face. The cat licks my hand, bites. I get up and see that the day isn’t so bad. I shouldn’t stay in bed. I want to stay in bed, but I won’t. I know I should get out of the house. The sun will make me feel better, I say to myself. I should point out that I don’t really feel bad, though.
     Everything is going right at this moment.
     I’m free from a marriage that was falling apart long before anything was done about it. A miserable semester of teaching five classes while still working at Starbucks so I can afford to take care of myself after said earned freedom is finally over. I’m dating someone new who makes me smile every day. I just scored a job I’ve been pining after for years.
     Everything is going right at this moment.
     And, yet.
     Coffee will surely help, it always does. Coffee and sun.
     I spray myself down with enough SPF to keep me from burning but hopefully not enough to keep me this pale all summer long. I slip into my bathing suit, hoping it fits since last year, and I’m happy to see it does, but I still have to amp myself up enough to not think about a beach full of people seeing me half naked. Especially since I’ll be going alone. Only a book and sunglasses to protect me.
     It’s the loneliness sinking in, really. It’s not that I never felt alone in my marriage, but at least I wasn’t physically alone. That sentence, itself, is sort of sad and somewhat sums up a deep rooted issue with our relationship that extends far before the day we married. But that’s another story entirely.
     It’s two in the afternoon and I haven’t spoken to another person. I’d tried. Everyone always has something. Usually it’s work. Sometimes it’s other people. Mostly I hear back from them—eventually.
     I’m at the beach and it’s busy but not as busy as I’d thought, considering it’s June and sunny and in the 70s. I scan for a place to perch. I have to be strategic, here. I avoid areas with groups of men, for fear of their gazing or mocking, I’m not sure which. I don’t mind areas with children, especially because areas with children usually means areas with mothers who have bodies of women who have had children, which is awful to admit. I’ve never had children, but I find comfort in knowing our skins have been stretched, though theirs for much nobler reasons than mine. 
     I find a spot I’m happy with and unroll my beach mat. I don’t remember it looking so small, and I worry it won’t be wide enough. Of course it is, but I don’t know this for sure until I’ve so quickly stripped and placed my body against the fabric and feel the few inches left over on each side between my hips and the sand. I’m relieved and determined to relax despite wondering if anyone noticed my stomach as I brought myself down.
     I pick up my book and read and for a moment I forget it all. I forget the strangers around me. I forget the whiplash of changes from the past few months. I forget that despite having people I love in my life, I often feel alone, because I am. For the first time in all my thirty-one years, I live alone. And there are days where this is wonderful and I thrive and I’m so proud of myself, and then there are those when I just want someone around to see when I spill the coffee all over my bed or know that I’ve had a shitty day because they can see it on my face as soon as I walk through the door or to eat all the food I cook when I’m stressed so I’m not stuck with leftovers for days on days.
     The sun is high and warm and the crashing water is calming and I know how whiney this all sounds. Everything is going right at this moment.
     And, yet.

—Amber Taliancich

Amber Taliancich has her MFA in Fiction from the NEOMFA and is the co-founder and Essay Editor for Sidereal Magazine. Her work has been published in Ninth Letter, The Pinch, Gigantic Sequins, Entropy, and elsewhere. You can find her on Twitter at: @ambtali.





ELIZABETH MILLER

I wake at my childhood home in New Jersey. It is not my birthday. Seven and a half hours removed from it, I am happy to have slept a little late. I will be flying, alone, to Utah in the afternoon to meet my husband at the end of his work conference. A long weekend. Land of sandstone. Land of light. To begin the trip rested is a gift.
     I hear soft voices, a giggle. Maggie, our two-year-old, is playing. My mother must have quietly gotten her up earlier. After breakfast, the three of us run errands, then stop at my brother’s house mid-morning to wish him a happy birthday. The solstice celebration is his, this year, with spring’s final hours having been left to me. We will see him later, but we sit and chat for a bit, then head back to my parents’ house so Maggie can settle in for a good nap after an early lunch.
     While she still sleeps, my brother and nieces arrive. The girls wish me a belated happy birthday and jump into the pool. My father comes home early from work to join my mother, brother, and I on the chairs near the pool. We talk. Mostly, we listen to my brother’s stories. Maggie wakes about the time I expect her to, and I let her splash her feet in the water.
     My father has offered to drive me to the airport. He plans on rush-hour traffic and advises that a 3:30 departure from the house will keep me on time for my 6:00 flight. I begin making a sandwich five minutes before we plan to leave, and so we leave late.
     A good deal of stop-and-go traffic and one motion-sickness pill later, we arrive at Philadelphia International Airport. As I lean to open my passenger door, my father slips $40 into my hand and tells me to treat myself. The gesture feels like something from a movie, feels like something he has wanted to do forever.
     I breeze through security. I do not fly often. I like to take my time. TSA lets pass a harried man with no identification except his credit card. I scoot around him as I move toward my gate and find I have arrived early enough to read an email from a friend. Her father’s condition is growing worse. She feels selfish for feeling sad. But sorrows do not demand labels or explanations. I have a few minutes to respond with a line or two, and so I do. Here, there is no later, only late and too late.
     I am nearly last to board the plane. It is too late to claim any overhead space, and I am asked to check my bag. Two others and I have been assigned seats that earlier-boarding passengers were also assigned. We are given new seats, and I begin reading my book almost immediately. I am certain I’ll finish it in a hurry.
     The promise of uninterrupted reading time plays its usual joke on me. I grow distracted around page 80 when the plane jolts, and I close the book. I have stopped reading early enough to be able to waste hours worrying about turbulence, about the environmental impact of the flight, about plummeting to my death and leaving a two-year-old behind. I have stopped reading early enough to daydream about mountains, to not enjoy craning my neck to watch someone else’s bad movie.
     The flight arrives early to Salt Lake City. Chris meets me in a rental car and I fall into his arms, I breathe the dry desert air. Usually, a four-day absence is nothing, but this time it has felt heavy with waiting, maybe because my birthday was the day before, maybe because I woke this morning in my childhood home, which always warps my sense of time.
     We drive to his nondescript hotel, where my flight tension washes off easily in a hot shower. We talk briefly about our plans for the weekend. We think of sandstone, of light. We go to bed. The hour is early, but it feels late.

—Elizabeth Miller

Elizabeth Miller is an English teacher and copy editor in Montgomery County, Maryland. 





KATHRYN CLARKE

My daughter barks out her command before the morning sun turns the sky from grey to blue-—“nurse!” I comply;  she pulls on my tired breast as she nuzzles closer, a twitching bundle who is so much longer than she used to be, but somehow still fits perfectly into the C of my curled up body. My husband left for work hours ago; I imagine him crawling in dark spaces, pulling wire, the arduous task of bringing forth light where there is none. I too have a workplace awaiting my arrival but my occupation is less proletarian, my hours more friendly. Still, I rebel against the quiet yet insistent buzz of the day starting to vibrate in my ears and long to stay home in the grey light, doze, nuzzle, please, let it all wait just a bit longer.
     But it never waits. Full bladders and empty stomachs and mindless urgency pull me from my daughter, push us out of bed, on to our feet. She has my long toes, my knocked-in ankles but her stride is her own, purposeful and sassy.  We are up.
     This morning is like all the others. My child sits naked on the counter, demanding fruit, demanding yogurt, demanding music, not Raffi, the Moana soundtrack, no not that song, that one.  I find the song she wants. Perhaps I am too obliging. I feel a flicker of doubt, a desire to ask my mother for validation or correction. But she is dead, and my memories serve as imperfect guide to what she would say or do now. I remember her bald head bent over, swollen belly pushed up to the kitchen counter, making my cranky, ill-tempered grandmother a 3 course breakfast just because it was asked of her. So there is my answer. I feel more sad than validated.
     Then comes the daily wrestling match, punctuated with screaming and tears. I pull clothing on my toddler, I pin her down to comb her hair. I slap sunscreen on her kicking legs and with a final victorious click I strap her into the jogging stroller, sweat already glistening on my forehead. 5 miles roundtrip to daycare, a modest insurance policy against the liberal guilt of driving so much these days. The pounding of my feet on pavement drowns out the buzzing, my daughter settles in too, and suddenly it is just the hot sun and quick breathing and left and right and left and right. And suddenly I stop with a jolt. Two spiny lizards are entwined on the sidewalk, the male’s throat with a lovely cerulean flush. Spared from the crush of stroller tires, the twisting mass become separate, and the lovers scamper off to a darkened corner among some rocks, to answer their own buzzing destiny.   

—Kathryn Clarke

Katy will sometimes write when she isn't caring for oncology patients, chasing her toddler, hugging her husband, or struggling to rock climb in the mountains of Southern Arizona. 





TAIN GREGORY

June 21: NYA day at school

Well, I’m gonna tell you all a story. A story that starts with me, Tain, getting out of bed to my alarm. My alarm wakes me up at 6:10 while blasting Dogsong from the game Undertale. I like to start most days eating Nintendo Super Mario Cereal (aka pure sugar) while watching anime. I think at the time I was watching an anime called K-on. It is a really good slice of life show without cringy people who suck at life. The characters are relatable and likeable, and it is a great show so you should watch it. Anyway, let’s skip ahead to me going to school.Yup, that’s right! SCHOOL! Because of storms and stuff we had to stay in school until the 26th OF JUNE! So that's a bunch of extra days doing basically nothing. But this was a “special” day at school. Cause we were going to have a “field trip” to the gym. Don’t get the wrong idea, it’s not like we were going to work out or anything. The day at the NYA gym was really fun. They usually put out bouncy houses, and we had pizza and ice cream and it was good last year. Emphasis on last year. This year all of the activities were extremely CHEAP! When my cluster got there, my friends Jimmy, Matt, and Nate and I got off the bus and immediately went in the bouncy house. We said no words to each other. We just went in and started jumping around. But then, we remembered that there was supposed to be laser tag games going on. So the four of us got out of the bouncy house and went to find the laser tag place. “Wait!” I said to the others. “I’m going to find our friends in other clusters so we have a bigger team!” So Matt, Jimmy, and Nate went to find the laser tag arena and I went to find more friends. I had recruited my friends Thea, Lily, and Jack. I had other friends there too, but I found these three first. That’s so like me. If I am given a choice of many random things, I would just choose what is either closest, or easiest for me to do. So the three friends I found and I went to find the laser tag arena. Problem is, there was a sign up sheet we needed to fill out. So the 7 of us signed up, and found other things to do. Matt, Thea and I stuck together and found something else to do. We found a HUGE INFLATABLE SLIDE that was about 20 feet tall. It had a short line too! We found our friends Charlotte and Ella in the line already. We got behind them in the line and started to climb the stairs. Now, I want you to take a brief moment to think what will happen next. Go ahead, look away and think. Welp, here is what happens. THE SLIDE FRICKING FELL OVER! WHAT THE HECK! It started to deflate and fall down. Two kids actually fell out. My friends and I were fine, but I noticed one thing. There was no staff supervising the slide. I mean, we are a bunch of 8th graders on a giant slide that is 20 feet tall. Did the staff here even THINK about supervising it? NOPE! NOT AT ALL! After the slide was reinflated, we all went back for laser tag. Charlotte and Ella said they had already done it. “It is, umm, interesting…” Charlotte told me. I didn’t know what to expect. First of all, this laser tag wasn’t even put together well. It may have gone better if the guy running it wasn't completely CLUELESS! This guy had NO IDEA when the frick he was doing. It took the guy about 10 minutes to remember how to turn the game on. After the guy FINALLY figured out what he was doing, we started the game. However, let me point out a few minor details of this crappy game. Usually in laser tag, the area you shoot at is a BIG OBVIOUS AREA on the chest. But in this game, it was a small hard to see area on the head. WHAT THE HECK! WHO DESIGNED THIS? So we start the game. We start hiding and trying to find other players. I find another person, and I shoot. And nothing happens. NOTHING! In fact, none of the guns are working. And the guy running it is acting like EVERYTHING IS GOING GREAT! So the game didn’t work at all, but at least the slide was back up. The line was a bit longer, but I still waited in it. Matt and Charlotte were with me too. While we were in the line, we were talking about how terrible the laser tag was that we didn’t notice one important thing. There was no staff supervising it. So I go to the top, and no one else is there. Except one stupid person who needs to get off this planet. Now for the sake of this story, I am going to call him Chip. Chip Turkeylegs! If you know me in real life,  you know who I am talking about. Chip has been the number one enemy of my friend group since  6th grade. Also he is really short. That's why we call him Turkeylegs. But this kid is MEAN! He says sexist and racist things about my friends, he does mean things to them too. Luckily now he and his sister (who is just as bad as him) moved to Maine. Now Maine has to suffer. So if you are reading this and you live in Maine, I’m sorry that you must suffer. Anyway, Chip is climbing up the slide like the jerk he is. Maybe the tiny brain in his head didn’t realize this is a SLIDE and you go down and not up. Or maybe he was just being the butt that he is. So as I am going down, I run him over and we both fall down. “TAIN! YOU MOTHER F******* BI***!” He just kept blasting swears. But in my mind, I tuned out his curses and I heard him say, “I’m Chip! Blah blah blah I’m short and angry!” Then he slapped me. Usually, if someone was slapped they would be upset or attack back. But, I smiled a huge smile and ran away. Where did I run you ask? Well, Thea was at the bottom of the slide, so I had a good witness. I grabbed Thea by the arm, and we both ran straight to the principal. We told him what he did, and the principal said he would find Chip and talk to him. Thea went to get some water, and I tried to find Matt and tell him what happened. But instead of Matt, and I ran into Chip. “What did you just do?” He asked in an intimidating voice. Problem was, I wasn’t intimidated at all! “Oh, I just told the principal! Nothing too big!” I said. Then I ran. He was running after me. I wasn’t afraid though. All I did was smile and keep running. I did my great imitation of Br’er Rabbit from Disney World’s Splash Mountain and said, “Ha ha! You can’t catch me Br’er Fox! I’m making my way to the Laughing Place!” He got really mad. I saw the principal come up behind Chip. So I did my best to blend out of the situation by laying down against a wall looking like I was about to fall asleep. The principal tapped Chip on the shoulder, and took him away. I like to assume he was kicked high into the sky by the principal, and landed in a beehive! But most likely he just had to sit out for the rest of the day. Don’t you just love getting dirt on your enemies then getting to watch them get punished? It’s pretty fun! The rest of the NYA day went ok. My friends and I just hung out for the rest of the day without any problems at all. When I got home, I thought about how strange this day was. Then (like usual) I took a nap. THE END.

—Tain Gregory


Tain Gregory is a 14 year old boy who enjoys doing theater programs.





SARAH HAAK

Viva Las Vegas

A couple of years ago, to announce his orders transferred us to Nellis Air Force Base, my husband sent a video of Elvis Presley singing “Viva Las Vegas” in the 1964 eponymously-named musical. I wonder how things would have been different if he’d sent me a video of the Dead Kennedys’ version of the same song, or Engelbert Humperdinck’s, whose name alone would have made me laugh. The Dead Kennedys’ cover might have made me think of Terry Gilliam's Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, which I used to watch high on acid when it came out in 1998. I was seventeen, high on acid a lot of the time, and always hated it when my friends chose Fear and Loathing because Dr. Gonzo trashing the hotel room and all the vomit horrified me. I had to be careful on acid, to avoid all ugly things.
     ZZ Top also sang “Viva Las Vegas” in 1992. I would have recognized his version from The Big Lebowski and maybe that would have given me a better immediate association of ideas. But you can’t choose your mental phenomena (or if you can I don’t know how), so Elvis Presley singing “Viva Las Vegas” produced an abstract cognitive road map that looked something like Dreamland → drones → John D’Agata → nuclear waste → bombs → bodies in the desert → hedonism → suicide → dead father → suicide → death, and in the two minutes it took me to watch the video and subsequently call my husband to tell him he needed to come home right now, I had already begun to associate Las Vegas with death.
     Maybe that association was there before. Maybe I was always meant to die in the desert. Vegas is the place many people choose as the end of their road, or it’s the place that becomes the end of the road for many people. There’s a correlation there, between exposure to the city, and the city being a place people come to die, but it’s a causality dilemma. Does living in Vegas make you suicidal, or do you come to Vegas because you’re suicidal? Even the best coroner couldn’t be sure.
     My husband and I went to Vegas anyway, of course we did. We had orders. To make any other choice would have meant him being absent without permission and a lot can happen to a person when they go AWOL. Just six months before, for example, a veteran Army Special Forces soldier training with my husband in San Antonio had become disgruntled after the cadre had him out in a field picking flowers while the other Air Force pararescue trainees ran ten miles carrying 100-pound rucksacks on their backs. This kind of humiliation may not have negatively affected all former FBI and CIA operatives, but it affected this one, so much that he went AWOL all the way home to Ohio. Likewise, being then charged with an Article 15 by the same cadre may not have led all people to the Commander’s office, jovial in their dress blues, rows of service ribbons on their chest, with a couple of Glock pistols and 66 rounds of ammunition. He didn’t get as far up the chain as he was aiming those 66 bullets to take him, but when it was all over there were only 60 bullets left. Not all disciplinary action ends in murder-suicide, but sometimes murder-suicide follows disciplinary action. So maybe we went to Vegas to avoid murder-suicide, or maybe exposure to Vegas made us think a lot about the murder-suicide we were exposed to. Either way, the first year there was total shit.
     We moved to Vegas in June of 2016 and exactly one year later in June of 2017, I moved to Ohio for grad school. Maybe I ran away. A friend told me that after living in Ohio, she noticed the state mentioned everywhere. It seems strange but it’s also true. For example, I watched a movie the other day where the owners of a chain of delicatessens (in Ohio) meet a group of strangers at a Michigan wedding. Hijinks ensue. Last week I called customer service to return an ill-fitting jacket I bought when I was in Los Angeles. Where was the office? Ohio. And today, in June of 2018, home for summer break, I’m sitting in the Las Vegas Library, reading about Steven Bellino, the Green Beret who went AWOL to Ohio, hoping against hope to avoid everything that led my husband and I to that first year here, so I can keep it from happening again and save my marriage.
     Oddly enough, they say your chances of suicide are reduced if you live in Vegas and leave the city at least once a year. But, again, your chances go up if you move there or visit on vacation. So, coming to Las Vegas increases your risk of suicide and leaving lowers it, but those who leave are still at a higher risk than they would have been if they’d never come in the first place.
     On June 21st, I pick my husband up from work at 3:30 on the dot. We drive off base, passing heavy security with assault rifles slung around their shoulders, and take Craig Road toward Lamb. We could continue straight, ending up on Allen, where we live now, but instead he turns the car right and drives toward our old house off County Road 215, a beltway wrapped around the city. We pass billboards with blacked out backgrounds and taxis with advertising boards promoting the #VegasStrong fund set up by the Nevada resort industry following the Strip mass shooting.
     In North Las Vegas, where we are now, the 215 abuts Sheep Mountain, a dusty range of hills we affectionately named Dirt Mountain. Our old house is one of the last before the shrub grass and cactus begin, and as we drive by it we both remark on the sense of foreboding we have; how isolated and hushed it is up here. Up here it feels like the edge of the world, or like being underwater all alone. “Maybe we didn’t notice before because we had nothing to compare it to?” my husband says. In the distance, the desert whips up a dust devil. We both watch as it spins and spins. 

—Sarah Haak

Sarah Haak is an essayist from Albuquerque, New Mexico. She is a master’s candidate in creative nonfiction writing at Ohio University, where she serves as an Assistant Editor for Brevity Magazine. She is also a chef. 

















Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 14: Verity Sayles • Margaret Foley • David L. Garcia • Joshua Unikel • Denise Wilkinson • P. A. Wright • Tracey L. Kelley • Natalie Wardlaw

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, through July 16th.
—The Editors



July 14: Verity Sayles • Margaret Foley • David L. Garcia • Joshua Unikel • Denise Wilkinson • P. A. Wright • Tracey L. Kelley • Natalie Wardlaw 




VERITY SAYLES

I like the sound of saying, “I’m from Seattle,” more than I like living here. Yes, it rains a lot. No, I haven’t gotten used to the grey.
     I wanted this city for the coffee shops. In line at Victrola Coffee, Jason and I run into, Jane another teacher from his school and we chat about how wonderful the summer is for teachers—we can sleep in, have time for coffee in the morning, put away grading and turn to the life that stacked up over the past nine months. Jane is here with her mother, and she introduces her to Jason who then turns to order, mindful of the growing line of patrons behind us. Worried Jane had forgotten my name, as we’ve only met once, I introduce myself.
     “I’m Verity, Jason’s girlfriend.” After a moment’s pause I fill the space, adding, “I’m also a teacher.”
     “Well, yes, I thought you must have more of an identity than that, right?” Jane’s mother laughs. It takes me a second to realize she is referring to my immediate identification as “a girlfriend.” Perhaps she thinks I only see myself as an accessory. Perhaps this was her opportunity to remind a young woman to see herself as more than an attachment. I had an urge to explain to her I hate the term, “girlfriend” and I don’t even know why I used it. I want to show her the feminist pin on my backpack, tell her Jason and I did the Women’s March together, and went to see Hillary Clinton. She’s unintentionally hit a nerve.
     I do feel attached (too much?) to Jason after moving to Seattle, his city, where he lived alone for years before we met. I have been dreading his leaving for the summer, dreading being left to roam aimlessly uncoupled in a city which, even after two years, feels closed off, unfamiliar. I have been acting like I’m being abandoned, looking for his sympathy, telling him, “It’s always easier to leave than to be left.” I don’t say, “I’m worried when you leave, I’ll realize you’re all I have here.”

I wanted this city despite warnings of the “Seattle Freeze”—the coldness newcomers feel, the difficulty of making friends.
     I try a new Yoga studio and the slim, blonde instructor checks me in on an iPad.
     “Verity.” She pauses, running over it. “Hm. I’ve never heard that name.”
     This is not a compliment so I avoid saying thank you and say something like, “Yes, it’s different.” She nods and tells me where I can grab a mat. This is the distant coolness of Seattle interactions. No follow up about my name, what it means, if she likes it.  As we take to our mats, the yoga instructor reminds of the Solstice today, perhaps now is time for a change. I’ve wondered about this through the winter rain—not if change is necessary, but how.

I wanted this city for the water.
     In order for the boats on Lake Union to travel out to Puget Sound, they have to pass through the Ballard Locks. A boat enters the lock, the doors close, and the boat waits while the water level drops and salt and fresh water are exchanged. We climb down the tiers of grass lining the canal banks so we can have a view of the process. The grey of the winter months has almost passed—patches of sunlight reveal every few minutes in a cloud break. I lie on our blanket and hope for full sun. It’s officially summer, shouldn’t we be getting a return on the endless rain by now?
     It seems antithetical to call the freeing release of boats to the sound, “the locks.” Perhaps, when they return from fishing trips to Alaska or boating around the San Juan Island and sail back into Lake Union—a lake bound on all sides by the city—the term “locks” is appropriate. When I moved here I imagined sailing and kayaking and long beach walks picking up driftwood and bits of kelp. I imagined smiling at the waves through the rain.
     Jason and I watch the boats from our blanket, eat cheese and bread, drink wine and nap—buzzed with our books over our chests. Steeped in moments like this, I think this place is perfect. I can be happy like this. I can be happy here. Two years ago I thought I was falling in love with a city, but really, I was falling in love with the man who introduced me to it--who pointed out buildings and told stories, who drove me from coffee shop to coffee shop, who read books for as long as I needed to write.
     Carrying the blanket, lightened cooler, and books to the car, a ragged man stops us. “What do you all have in your bags?” He asks, pointing a dirty finger at my canvas tote.
     “Blankets, picnic things, you know.” I say, almost wincing—no he probably doesn’t know.

I keep a hand on Jason’s knee as we drive to caffeinate away the sun-sleepy afternoon. In the Italian espresso shop, we sit with our books, occasionally reading a line or two aloud. A man drops two packets of gum on our table with labels saying, “I am deaf and selling this gum to support my family, please give $2 or $3 dollars.” I pocket the strawberry gum and give him $2. Most people look through him. A self-preservation technique. The man touches his hand to his lips and opens it in a thank you.
     Later, on the sidewalk, Jason said, “I choose to believe that guy is deaf.”
     “I guess I didn’t think otherwise. But deaf or not…he is selling gum.”
     Jason shakes his head—sympathetic, sad—a gesture we’ve mirrored hundreds of times. I tell Jason that I’ve been trying to switch my language from “a homeless person” to “a person who is experiencing homelessness.” In this way, person is the defining subject, homelessness is temporary. Jason thinks for a moment and agrees, it’s a better construction.
     “I admit, I heard about it from someone else.” I say.
     “It’s still a good idea.”
     I didn’t know about the homeless crisis in Seattle. Or maybe, vaguely, but not up close. In the mornings, grubby sleeping bags and thick blankets curl in the doorways of unopened shops. Sometimes men are tucked under a city sapling, sometimes they lie directly across the sidewalk. Once we walked by a man out cold on the sidewalk. My head turned and I tugged us backward. Jason tried to call to him, “Hey man, hey man, you okay?” When he was unresponsive, Jason got the police, found someone to help him up. Tent and cardboard dwellings grow and recede on lips of earth above highway on-ramps, shuffling men with matted hair carry cardboard signs, stand at intersections, ask for help, state identities: veterans, Christians, jobless, single, kids at home. They’re often the only people I see in the early, dark mornings on my way to the downtown bus stop.
     “Should I bring granola bars in my backpack?” I asked Jason in my first weeks here. “What if someone is just hungry?”
     Jason gives money to a few, specific people when one of us has cash, like the man with a speech delay outside Bartell’s who has trouble asking for change. Sometimes when Jason buys six or seven bottled smoothies for lunches, he’ll hand one to the man asking for money at the entrance on Bellevue avenue. When I first saw this gesture he said, “Sometimes guys have gotten annoyed, turned it down—they want money, not juice.” He shrugged with the resignation of someone who had lived in this city for nine years, who’s watched the rents skyrocket and tent cities spring up quicker than apartments.
     I’ve stopped crying as much as I used to about the volume, the overwhelm.

I pop the strawberry gum and we walk to the candy store. Jason has never seen the original Willy Wonka and I’m delighted for a rare chance to introduce him to something, to tell him knowledgeably that you can’t watch Willy Wonka without candy.  In the middle of filling a basket with Red Vines and Violet Crumbles, we see a crowd go by. Marchers with signs about immigration.
     “I though the march was happening on June 30th…” I said. We both looked at the brown paper bag. Guilt runs through me.
     “Do you want to walk for a while?” He asked, sensing.
     We step out on the street and into the march. This is not the first time I have joined a surprise movement in Seattle. A few days after Trump was elected, I left Jason eating a burger to join a throng of people with bandanas around their mouths, yelling up at the lamp-lit houses, “Get out of your houses and into the streets!” At the time, I thought this event was monumental, couldn’t believe Jason would miss it.
     The priests in front of us wore cassocks. As we passed by Annapurna Nepalese restaurant one said to the other, “That smells so good, it’s making me hungry.”
     “We’ll have to wait.” The other one said and chuckled.
     We took in the signs: Keep Families Together. Immigrant Rights Are Human Rights. An old woman had a sign pinned to her back, reference Melania Trump’s coat saying, “I really do care!” Families ran into each other, mothers and fathers pushing strollers with small children in hand. Protests seem like the Seattle equivalent of the neighborhood block party.
     Jason held the bag of candy in one hand and my hand with the other. The night was beautiful, the type of long, golden evening of Seattle summers had been promised during the deep rainy chill of November, December, January, February, March, April, and May. We walked for a mile or so, eventually peeling off to cut one block over and walk back up through Cal Anderson park. Gutter punks cradled their small dogs on the grass while across the path techie bros play with a golden retriever puppy.
      “Who said this quote J,” I quiz, “‘Do you watch for the longest day of the year and then miss it? I always watch for the longest day of the year and then miss it.’”
     “I don’t know…”
     “It’s a character in a great American novel which neither of us teach it.”
     “The Great Gatsby?”
     “Yes, although, I might be misremembering Daisy’s line...”
     “We didn’t miss it today.”
     No, we didn’t miss the longest day of the year.
     But, I still can’t shake the feeling of watching for something, always missing it.

We stop at the Thai place and I order take out, giving Jason’s name instead of my own.

It’s just easier this way, I tell myself.

—Verity Sayles

Verity Sayles's work appears in The Normal School, Passages North (blog), Proximity, Punctuate, Crab Creek Review, Under the Gum Tree, and others. She earned her nonfiction MFA from Oregon State University in 2016. She writes and teaches high school English at an independent school in Seattle, Washington.





MARGARET FOLEY

I am up around 6:30. This is my new habit because I am trying to go to sleep earlier, wake up earlier, and use the quiet time of the morning to drink coffee, think, and work without interruption for a few hours.
     This goal is upended an hour later when my daughter, Sarah, who is home from college for the summer, texts me from her bedroom upstairs that the tennis lessons she teaches have been cancelled for the day because of the weather and that we should do something together.
     We eat a leisurely breakfast, make a plan, and get ready. I open a closet and look for cardboard, go into the basement and grab a couple of wide-tipped markers from my husband’s workbench, and throw them into the backseat. We do a couple nondescript errands, eat lunch at a deli, and then head to #OccupyICEPDX.
     A few days earlier, a group of activists began to occupy Portland’s ICE building, moving tents onto a strip of grass next to it, putting up signs, creating communal spaces, and blocking the building’s entrance. The building, which takes up a whole block not far from downtown, looks nondescript from the main street, with only its address is large letters and numbers along the side. It is only when you turn the corner that you see the guard gate with a fenced driveway. Detainees are brought in here, processed, and then usually sent to a long-term detention facility in Tacoma, Washington.  It is usually a quiet corner, but with #OccupyICEPDX, it has become very active.
     This is not the first time I have been to the camp. I have been twice already, but this is the first Sarah has been. Each time, it is busier. At the entrance area to the building, a small bookcase has become an altar, filled with candles, for nightly vigils. Reporters are roaming around. Tents physically block the driveway’s gate; and a group of people are set up to help those who show up for appointments. The building, which has been temporarily closed because of the protest, has its entry doors and windows covered with signs, and a big X made from tape covers the door. The side street and main street are filled with people holding handmade signs with slogans such as “Immigrants Are Not Criminals” or “You Have Blood on Your Hands” with “blood” written in red glitter.
     The building’s wall ledges along the main street have signs left behind for other protesters to use. I see someone holding the sign I left a couple days earlier, “PDX Is Supposed To Be A Sanctuary City.” Sarah has made her own sign, “Hugs, Not Handcuffs,” a reference to the fact that workers are not allowed to comfort children in detention. I grab “Make Cruelty Unusual” and stand beside my daughter with a group on the busy corner of the main street.
     Our goal is to interact with cars driving by. Many honk and wave; some look away, and some deliberately ignore. The most interesting is when cars are stopped at the light at our corner, and we try to get reactions by holding our signs out more toward the street. A woman, who is driving a business van, rolls down her window and gives us a quiet thumbs-up. “I’m not supposed to be political at work,” she says. “But, I support this.” Another driver does the opposite, rolling down his window to make sure we see him shaking his head.
     We stay for a little over two hours before putting our signs on the ledge and heading home. Sarah, who is studying ways to reform our criminal justice system and has long been interested in its toll on women and children, takes a few quick photos of some of the signs before we leave. “I’m glad we came,” she said. “More people need to know this kind of stuff is going on.”
     We say goodbye to our corner friends; we plan to come back, so we might see them again because by standing there, we have all become members of a larger community of people who want to say, “Not in my name.” 

—Margaret Foley

Margaret Foley is a journalist, writer, and editor living in Portland, Oregon, whose work has appeared in a wide range of publications. You can read more of her writing and connect with her at http://www.margaretfoley.com or @mfoleypdx.





DAVID L. GARCIA

On June 21st, 2018 I woke up, I showered, I caught the bus to work. The MFA program’s Admin Director was out visiting his parents in Louisiana, and Professor Madden was leaving that morning for his own cross-country summer trip. I had the whole office suite to myself for the rest of the week, so I spent the morning trawling through YouTube and rereading Pitchfork’s Top Tracks of the 2000s. I turned up my desktop speakers and listened to Boxer by The National again.
     Emma hates The National because her ex liked them and because they perpetuate toxic masculinity, which is true enough. There’s a bunch of nameless Dylanesque “you’s” throughout their catalogue and I’m more than certain that Nate Berninger’s quivering baritone and his band’s understated, idiosyncratic hooks have been used by countless millennial men to console themselves for things they should not be forgiven for. Nonetheless, when your father sends you a clipped email letting you know that he has nothing more to say to you, Boxer by The National is a gift from God, a warm bath of wallowing that does to your problems what a six-hour stint in a crockpot will do to a slab of chuck.
     I shut it off around 10 because Emma showed up from the DMV or wherever and was ready to train me. She shows up whenever because it's the summer and students aren't here and she’s leaving for grad school soon anyway. I’m taking over her job, in the newly consolidated Honors College, because the admin has requested budget cuts and the MFA program is too small to justify a full-time assistant. I am about as thrilled as one can be for a job that they do not know if they will hate yet. We sat in the cafeteria and discussed the academic year, orientation and campus visits and such. I’ll have to handle all that, and I'm sure I will. I ate one of her breakfast sausages.
     We went back to her office and sat across from one another at her desk. Three people we graduated with just put out this webseries, and our social media pages had been full of promos for it. I hadn't seen it yet, so Emma pulled it up and we talked about it.
     She had to go move her car, so we walked half a block to her Honda and drove it to a new parking space. Neither of us could find a reason to leave the car, so we sat there for 20 minutes, on the clock, her smoking and me reminding myself that I should not smoke cigarettes. I mention that I called Kaiser to set up a therapy session, and she told me that that was a good thing to do, and that reminded me of this bit by the comedian Emily Heller:
I think therapy is great. I think everyone should be in therapy. Don’t do it for yourself, do it for your friends. They don’t want to hear that shit anymore.
I started laughing so Emma pulled up a video of Heller performing the bit on Conan. We watched a few of the recommended videos before forcing ourselves out of the car. I realized after stepping out of the car that that was maybe the most content I had felt all week.
     I went to lunch at the McDonald’s. I hate that I did, but when you have an eating disorder and are relatively broke and are filled with a desire to get as far away from your office building as possible on your lunch hour, you take the bus to the McDonald’s. I ate a Triple Cheeseburger and a 4-piece McNuggets with Honey Mustard. Self-hate engulfed me the second I stepped back out onto the sidewalk. I got back to campus and took a few extra minutes to sit outside on a staircase in the cool San Francisco sunlight, because I knew no one would be expecting me.
     I had forgotten to find something to put on the MFA program’s social media accounts, so when I got back I toggled through LitHub and The Millions and the social media accounts of local bookstores, looking for a public reading or author birthday or book-themed listicle to post about. I couldn't find anything literary worth sharing, so I retweeted the campus bookstore because they were having a sale on Macs. Emails arrived and I deleted them. My business manager returned three invoice requests, so I revised them and sent them back. I left at 4:45, because no one was there to tell me not to.
     I sometimes bring weed to work to smoke when I walk home. Before I leave in the morning, I roll up a pre-rolled joint from BASA, already sheathed in a plastic tube, inside a Ziploc bag. I put that bundle inside one of those airtight pouches dispensaries give you and then put the whole thing into the zipper pocket on the backside of my book bag. I unwrapped the joint and walked home.
     I got home and took off my shoes and belt. I took a long pull on one of the bottles of water I keep in the mini-fridge that I keep telling myself I need to remove from my bedroom. I realized that once Emma leaves I will know no one in San Francisco with a car.
     I do this thing when I get home where I finish any leftover food from the previous night: the last third of a bag of Hershey’s Kisses, or the four remaining slices of Trader Joe-brand prosciutto. I’ll drink more water and take a few puffs of vaporized weed oil. I mostly lay on my bed because I don't have any comfortable chairs in my room.
     Around seven or eight, I got up and put my shoes and belt back on and put in my earbuds and went for a walk. I do this most days. After the immediate joy of walking in your front door after work, I get antsy. I hate just laying there, the room getting darker and darker. I start to feel like an opium addict in the 1800s, unable to stand up and leave the den. Going for a walk creates the illusion of progress.
     Of course, if your only goal is to fill time, leaving your house can be risky. I never seem to have a plan, just vague desires that I will almost certainly overcompensate for. I might buy more weed. I might walk to China Beach, hidden among the rich people’s houses, to stare at the Bridge, or to stare at the fog that’s hiding it. I might catch the 38 going up the hill to the V.A. Hospital, so I can get off at Clement and walk home downhill. I might go to the Grocery Outlet. I will almost certainly buy more food, which I will bring home and mentally refer to as dinner, despite the fact that it will be close to 10 when I get back.
     That night, I left kind of early, around 6:30, and because the sun was still up, I went to the Safeway out by Ocean Beach. I took the bus to Cliff House and walked down the hill along the beach, so I could see the water and the encroaching marine layer. The fog mellowed the sunlight, giving us all a perfect view of the remaining smudge of orange. Everyone along the shore stopped and watched the sunset, because it's rare that you’re able to see the day’s literal end, one last glimpse of the sun as it shrinks and flattens into a strip and finally drops behind the edge of the world.
     At Safeway I bought a tray of poke from the seafood section. It was marked 50% off because it was going on 8 and the Safeway can’t sell raw fish the day after it was prepared. My friend Brian used to work there and told me that people won’t buy it because it feels depressing and wrong to buy raw fish at a discount, even if it's only an hour older than it was when it was when it was displayed in a heap behind the fish counter. I also bought a bag of Chicago Mix popcorn, which is half cheddar corn and half caramel corn.
     I went home and ate the poke and half the bag of popcorn and then laid down. I probably masturbated. I fell asleep around midnight.

I remembered most of this five days later, on the 26th, and then more sixteen days later, on the 3rd of July.
     I’d like to think that there is something missing because of that gap, some literal experience or specific emotion that I failed to capture, but that’s not true. I’m pretty certain Madden could give me a book explaining why that is not true.
     The stream keeps flowing and the suns keep setting. I found a book in a Little Free Library about how to make the most of your twenties that gave me a decent hit of enthusiasm for structure in my life that may or may not last. I started the job and the job is fine and sure, it may eventually not be, but it is now and that feels good. My brother’s having a baby so I went home for the baby shower over the Fourth of July weekend. My dad and I are fine, I guess, until we won’t be or one of us dies. I bought groceries yesterday and I’ve been eating a yogurt every morning. Kaiser sent me a list of referral psychiatrists. I picked one at random and got her voicemail and left a message that I assume will be returned. If it’s not, I guess I’ll have to call the office again.

David L. Garcia

David L. Garcia is a twentysomething administrative assistant living in San Francisco. His writing has appeared in SF Weekly, Los Angeles, and The Bold Italic.





JOSHUA UNIKEL

I bought a muffin and a double Greek coffee. I past the bakery on my way into town. I got it to go, eating as I made my way into town. I was starting to memorize the way from my Airbnb to the archive downtown. I drank more coffee there. The staff let me have coffee with them in the courtyard before they opened for the day. Someone brought cookies in a tin and passed it around. The courtyard and series of connected buildings was part archive, part place of worship, and part historical museum on Crete, the largest island in Greece. It was the only synagogue still standing on the island after the war, and it was the only place I had found any information about the community before, during, or after. I hung around the office after coffee, talking to the resident historian Katerina for most of the morning and afternoon.
     I had a list of questions that I never asked. Katerina was forthcoming and factual, telling me what I wanted to know and more. Though in her informed way she was careful to mention every small uncertainty. It was part of her training as a historian but the more she talked the more it felt like part of how she processed it all. Crete was one of the hardest hit in Greece, she said, and, Nearly 100 percent, she said. That’s why we say around 270 people drowned on the ship, she said, and the three lists we have don’t all agree, she said. The only way we can know for sure how many escaped or hid is to get their personal accounts, she said, and the more time that passes the less likely that is, she said. Our estimate is that 70 fled, she said, and 4 that we know of went into hiding on the island the day of the invasion, she said. I stared at the blue and yellow multicolored pattern on her computer mouse and other objects in the office for most of our conversation. I had trouble actually facing the information I was looking for, and I couldn’t look people in the eye when something was remotely troubling. I told her that in the States we had a saying: Sometimes you get what you ask for.
     The restaurant across the street hand-delivered food to the office if you asked. I ordered stifado and baklava, eating while Katerina and I talked. I asked her about the Enigma Machine and if she thought the British knew what was on the ship before they torpedoed it. I’d read that it was hit twice: once to strike and again to capsize the ship. I was taken by the names of the two ships: the Tanaïs and the HMS Vivid. Katerina said I was looking at the wrong thing. It was late in the war, she said, and there were many ships like the Tanaïs sent by the Nazis. What’s more important, she said, is that the community had been arrested and detained three years earlier, and it’s likely that they were only put onto the boat in June 1944 because the Nazis knew they were going to lose the war and had enacted their Final Solution. That was June 9, 1944. The anniversary had just past. It was June 21, 2018.
Katerina and I finished talking around three when she left for the day. The synagogue closed at six. I spent those last three hours in the archive reading and staring at the box fan on the floor. I took photos of documents and books I wouldn’t be able to find again. One of the groundskeeper’s sons was playing with his pet baby duck outside of the archive when I left. I walked to the beach. I wanted to watch the waves. I wanted to fall asleep for days under an umbrella listening to the tide. I couldn’t sit still. I set up on a beach chair and swam out farther than I should have, out toward large rocks that looked like broken hands from a distance but up close they were just crags patched with algae. Standing and leaning against one of them, I wanted to swim out into the open ocean as far as my body would take me.
     I didn’t go anywhere. I stayed on the rock just staring out into the open horizon of the Aegean Sea and eventually swam back to shore. I laid in my beach chair reading Sebald’s Austerlitz, having brought it because I wanted to study its relationship between text and image. I hoped to come up with a theory of how it made meaning between them. I hadn’t come to Crete to study Austerlitz, though, or research the Occupation. I came to study Greek design history and its relationship to the Phaistos Disc. I was interested in the use of movable type almost two thousand years before Gutenberg’s famous printing press. I forgot about it all when there was so much absence in the Historical Museum of Crete.
     I met up with Konstantin for dinner at eight thirty. He was an expat from Hamburg who had been active at the synagogue even though he was a self-proclaimed atheist. I met him earlier that afternoon when he stopped into the office to drop off a map he’d made for a memorial walk. We ate slices of pizza for dinner on the Venetian wall out in the harbor. The sun had gone down. We sat on the wall, eating and talking about European history and trauma. I watched the waves break along the boulders lining the far side of the wall, the barely visible water tossing over itself in the dark.
As we walked back I noticed for the first time that the lighthouse—though lit from below with amber stage-lights—went unlit every night I was there. As we walked into town I kept looking over at it. At times it looked like it was just permanently shut off and other times it looked like its beacon window cast out a circular, dark gray beam into the night. None of the tourists or locals sitting in the tavernas in town or walking along the harbor seemed to notice. Konstantin and I walked back into the city to the Airbnb where I was staying. It was above a nightclub that was blaring dance music and putting on a bright lightshow for no one. The bartender scrolled through something on his smartphone. The bouncer was smoking his cigarette slowly. Konstantin and I agreed to stay in touch.
     I was binge-watching a Netflix series, getting through an episode or two each night. It was a documentary about a murder and its aftermath. In one of the episodes I watched they were debating the weapon or weapons used to commit the act. Evidence had been hidden and kept from the jury during the trial. A lawyer said that, Absence of evidence isn’t evidence of absence, and the phrase resonated. I remembered one of my peers in a philosophy class as an undergrad saying it once, and it stuck with me. I liked how cryptic and straightforward it was. I liked its chiastic structure and how Greek its syntax was. I liked how satisfying a fifty-minute Netflix episode could be.
     I called my girlfriend on WhatsApp. She asked me how things were going with my trip, and I asked her how things were going with packing up her apartment in Houston. We joked about how much pizza and pastries we were going to eat when we met up in Rome in just over a week. She promised to take me to the Birthplace of Za, as she called it, a pizzeria in Naples that claimed to have invented the margherita pizza. She was coming to Italy do research, and I was coming to see her on my way home.
     She said that I sounded tired, and I said ten or fifteen more minutes. We got off the phone an hour or so later. I told myself I not to check my phone again. I checked my phone for texts and emails. I laid in bed thinking about trains. I thought about how the entire first act of Austerlitz felt like it happened in a train station and how unrelated that felt at first except for the central role that trains in Europe played during the war. I’d seen each train line mapped out in Gilbert’s Atlas of the Holocaust. It was in the synagogue’s archive, and I looked over its abstracted maps feeling as though I was looking through a pathology textbook. I was astounded and sad thinking about Sebald’s use of indirection. I laid in bed trying to formulate a theory on the complicated way he used photographs, at once illustrative and full of artifice. I thought about Emmanuel Levinas’ concept of “enigma.” I thought about the lecturer I’d heard years ago who talked about the photographs. She referred to Roland Barthes’ concept of “punctum.” I kept thinking about a tightrope walker, that crushing but brief image Sebald lays out early in Austerlitz. I thought about the ends of that tightrope walker’s pole glinting against the abyss, as he calls it. I thought about the phrase that that lawyer on Netflix used about absence and evidence, and I thought about how my girlfriend said “Za” and how Katerina said “enacted.” I thought about an artist who renamed himself the letter “El” and a novel without the letter “e.” I thought about maps and erasure. I thought about the bar downstairs and its wild lights, and I thought that if I didn’t stop thinking I’d never fall asleep and I needed to fall asleep.

—Joshua Unikel


Joshua Unikel works at the intersection between literary and visual art. He is the co-editor of No Quo: Attempts (DesignInquiry Press, 2017) and Beyond Category (Hobart and William Smith Colleges Press, 2015). He also serves as a contributing editor of Seneca Review.





DENISE WILKINSON

June 21 is my father’s birthday. His favourite colour is yellow, like the sun, which shines for the most hours on his birthday than any other day of the year. This is wonderfully ironic because Dad prefers to stay out of the sun.
     On this particular birthday, he and my mother drive me an hour and half to Saskatoon for my oncologist appointment. I tell my dad it is good luck for me to have my appointment on his birthday. This is my fourth visit to my oncologist, a check-up since my current cancer management plan is watchful waiting. It’s kinda like being out, minding your own business on a Friday night, when things go sideways and now some scary chick thinks you hit on her boyfriend and all your friends are warning you to watch your back. This woman, let’s call her Brenda, has a proven history, so it is just a matter of when, and as a result, you just spend the rest of the night waiting and watching for Brenda to attack. Except, this isn’t just for one night—it’s for the rest of my life. If you want a more to the point explanation, the good luck version is my cancer is slow growing. If you want the sit in the shade version, it is Stage 3: incurable. Like the longest day of the year, it will last, and potentially so will I, much longer than other cancers which either go into remission or take out the host, like Brenda would do.
     Our first stop in Saskatoon is at NorDon Medical because my mom needs supplies. Mom has been cancer free for over ten years, but her survival came at the cost of an altered life-style. I go into the store with her because, as usual, I drank too much coffee. Mom goes to the counter and announces me, like I’m a celebrity or something. Whereas I might have sheepishly requested directions to the bathroom, Mom declares, “This is my daughter, Denise!” I smile awkwardly and wave. I have no idea why these people would care who I am, but my mom thinks it’s important, so I guess that’s kinda sweet, in a weird way. Actually, that sums up my mom: sweet and weird. I inherited the weird part, but I also got a touch of my dad’s lack of patience, so I am weirdly impatient. I believe God brings trials into your life to help teach you things you need to make your life ultimately better: enter wait and watch cancer. What a guy. I can’t help but think, one day, a long, long time from now, when I die from something other than this disease, he’ll announce my arrival into heaven in much the same way my mom introduced me at the medical store. Then, because he has an amazing sense of humour, he’ll say, “It’s about time you got here!”
     After the introductions at the medical supply store, we do some shopping and grab lunch at D’lish by Tish, where they serve gargantuan vats of homemade soup for $10. Dill pickle is my favourite so far, but today I order bison stew soup because it is National Indigenous Peoples Day. I know, I know—food is pretty surfacey stuff when it comes to understanding a culture, but what they hey, I also ate feta cheese in Greece and pizza in Rome, so I am equally surfacey with all my cultural appreciation.  The restaurant looks to be an old house converted into a coffee/soup/panini/dessert spot, and the bathrooms are gender neutral. They have a big sign which reads “Love is love” and lots of decorations for Pride Month. It’s half way between the university where my eldest is going next year and his new condo, so I can picture him sitting here with his friends which makes his leaving home a little easier. Today we sit next to the wall-size map of the world, and I look for the Azores where my grampa spend some of his time during the war. It’s right where it was the last time I looked: in the middle of nowhere. I have difficulty eating—going to the oncologist always makes me nervous—but I pretend I am fine. It’s just another check-up, right?
     Mom sneaks a quick puff on our way back to the car, and, as usual, I resist saying anything about how she survived cancer and actually quit smoking during her months in palliative care so WHAT THE HELL IS SHE DOING SMOKING AGAIN!!!!!! and we head off to the Cancer Centre. Dad spent months in Saskatoon when Mom was in the Royal University Hospital, which is attached to the Cancer Centre, so I assume he knows where he is going. However, this time, just like my last appointment, Dad turns too early into the parkade and has to ask directions which he doesn’t seem to listen to, then turns the wrong way into a one-way lane and Mom and I are ever so helpful yelling “No—wrong way!” so Dad, patient as he is, drives a bit faster scaring the you-know-what out of me as he whips around corners still the wrong way and finally backs into a spot right next to the Cancer Center door.
     Check in is much more calm, and I’m off to do blood work. I’m always amazed at the little needles and skinny tubes they use to collect my blood. When I used to donate blood, before blood cancer put me in the category of permanent deferral, the needle was about the size of a straw, but these ones are so teeny, they look like a toy. I love watching the nurse find the vein, which is an art given how difficult mine are, and then slide the needle into my skin. Today the nurse has some difficulty, and has to dig around a bit. I am fascinated by how she pokes around inside my elbow-pit to find the right angle so the blood will flow. I’m caught between staring at my arm because I love it, and looking away because I don’t want to make her feel nervous or like I’m judging her for not getting it; hardly anyone gets my vein on the first try.
     Next we shuffle to the waiting area for Dr. MacKay and Dad tries to hook up to the free Wi-Fi, which turns out to be more difficult than finding my vein. Since Dad is hard of hearing, Mom tells him everything at least three times, so I sit back and watch as they stand before the posted password and try to work it out. It doesn’t hook up immediately, which causes my father great consternation. There is an elderly couple sitting a few chairs to my right, and the woman keeps telling the man to make sure to tell the doctor how hot he gets and that he takes off his clothes wherever he is. The man says he has nothing to say to the doctor. The woman says it is his appointment, and he has to tell the doctor how hot he gets. And so they go, repeating varying versions of the same conversation. I get up and walk to the wall of information pamphlets, and take a bookmark which outlines how to deal with cancer related fatigue. Then I grab a brochure on cancer and smoking, and deliver it to my mom. I know she won’t read it, but I do it anyway. As predicted, she holds it for a few minutes and then passes it back to me.
     After waiting over an hour, which is odd at the Cancer Centre, I get my other stats taken—blood pressure on the low side, weight on the high side—and have my pre-appointment interview with my doctor’s nurse. I go through the list: I am feeling more tired than usual, I have a rash on my arm, I found a new lump behind my ear, night sweats are worse, my throat has been sore lately but it could be allergies. Then Dr. MacKay comes in and greets me as Mrs. Wilkinson, which makes me smile. I think the person who treats your cancer—the one who first confirmed you have lymphoma and explains how it isn’t curable but is treatable—should feel free to call you by your first name, but she is lovely and respectful and younger than me, so she calls me Mrs. Wilkinson. She has full lips with no lipstick and big eyes which I concentrated on as I tried not to cry the first time we met, and a calm, kind demeanor. She treats me like an intelligent, powerful person, not an invalid patient, which I appreciate. I hop onto the bed and she checks the nodes in my groin area which is super ticklish so I try not to wiggle. She checks my arm pits which aren’t ticklish but are a bit sweaty, and I wonder if she thinks it’s gross to touch so many sweaty pits every day. She washes her hands before she checks my neck, which is where I found the first lump, and asks me where the swelling has been lately. I show her and she feels again, telling me those are my salivary glands. Then she asks about the new lump and I point to the crease where my left ear meets my neck, and she says it’s not a lymph node but likely a cyst. I’ve lived in this body over 47 years and suddenly I feel like an alien in it—how can I know so little about it? She suggests options, which involve waiting, because it isn’t good for my body to have lots of scans. Chemo, which will eventually be my treatment, will make me tired so it isn’t a great idea to treat cancer related fatigue with something which will make me tired. My blood looks good, she tells me, and I haven’t experienced any unexpected weight loss (damn it!) so we agree I should come back in four months for another check-up. But, she is pregnant, so I will be seeing a different doctor then. “See you in a year,” she says, as she leaves the room, and the permanency implicit in that statement settles in. I am in this for the long haul. She expects me to be alive and expects me to still have cancer a year from now. I get to continue to be alive, and besides being really tired, I feel pretty good, so why aren’t I happier?
     When my husband texts to find out how the appointment went, I reply “Same ol’ same ol’” to which he answers, “Well that’s good I guess.” He’s taking care of things at home, making sure our youngest gets to beach volleyball. I’m supposed to meet friends for a drink later, but I’m out of energy. It’s not just my body, but my brain which gets tired these days, the cancer taking up more space than it deserves in my thoughts. I need to figure out a way to live with it, a way to be patient and accept it so I can enjoy the fact that I am alive. However, on this sunniest day of the year, cancer is casting a large shadow. Tomorrow will be a bit shorter, though, and maybe so will the time I spend in the restless shade of cancer.

—Denise Wilkinson

Denise Wilkinson writes to figure out life. She hasn't got it yet.





P. A. WRIGHT

I awoke in Mom’s house. The Atlantic ocean’s surf pounded the sandy shore a half-block away. The nonstop ritual began long before I was born and will continue long after my ashes dance in the winds of time. If there was comfort to be found there, it escaped me.
     There was work to be done, blame to be accepted, indifference to experience, and no chance of avoiding abuse. The assisted living spokesperson arrived at one o’clock and Mom had to be somewhat presentable.
     After a few shots of OJ, I took my pills. Take your meds: live a long life. Live long enough to be a pain in the ass to your kids. Though I have no offspring, I vowed to be a pain in someone’s tuckus after I admitted growing old.
     “Mom,” I said with zero compunction after I’d traversed the house to her adopted bedroom off the kitchen. “You have to get up.”
     “Go away!” she bleated.
     The bedroom was smallish, about a third the size of the master. It smelled. She lay in the pajamas that she’d worn for the past three days, not snoring, not sleeping, just slowly dying.
     You don’t realize what a moment really is until you’re confronted by one and there’s no doubt you’ve reached a mile-marker you can’t understand or fix. I stood in the enormous kitchen with my back to Mom’s bedroom. My fingers rubbed my forehead. There’s no training for this. You can read books till you’re blue but until it’s your parent bitching at you, accusing you of plotting to put them in a home, of needing you so much it terrifies them, it’s all theory.
     I fixed myself some lunch, I don’t remember what. There isn’t much I know beyond the routine: Put food in front of Mom. Watch it sit there till long after the first glass of wine. Turn the TV down when she falls asleep. My heart was breaking in ways I had no idea it could. My wife came downstairs. I thanked God she was with me. Could I do this alone? Maybe, but Mom’s needs scrape my insides raw and my wife's the only person who can apply the salve.
     Here’s the pisser: my dad died years ago, long before they were done enjoying new friends and neighbors. Mom joined the Wacky Widows Club and partied for over a decade. Then, like a stone skipped on the water of a calm lake, she sank into a depression she couldn’t escape. She was done.
     What do you do in that situation?
     The assisted-living spokesperson’s visit went as expected. Mom was sober, wary, and steadfast in her refusal to budge from being “on the cusp” of moving into a home. She reclined on the beige sofa that was her throne, heard the woman out and said she’d think about it.
     The plastic goblet in her hand wiggled immediately after the lady left.
     “Pour me some wine, please.”
     I did, knowing she’d crawl further into the bottle as the sun crested the sky and sunk into the horizon. Glass after glass of golden elixir dulling her pain. Food an afterthought. Sitting on the couch watching Judge Judy and The Price Is Right, and all manner of shit TV. I could say nothing. My hangover prevented me from a coherent argument.
     I could barely concentrate with the guilt of enabling her whispering in my ear: “She’s got cancer. Let her go.”
     How do I do that?
     My wife and I made dinner. We dined. Mom wined.
     I returned to my studio to write. To bleed.
     God help me

—P. A. Wright





TRACEY L. KELLEY

Mala

One.
     One stone.
     One bend forward.
     One straight step back.
     One lift to look up and beyond.
     One long angle, both feet, both hands.
     One foot forward, then the other, fingertips aside toes.
     Lengthen, rise up, stand tall, palms together, gaze ahead, breathe.
     Two. 
     Counting before or after doesn't matter. Just move the stones. Five in a row to keep track. Earthy hues smoothed by the river. Each rubbed softer with worry. Stones don't matter, either. Pennies will do. Beads, too. Peppermints.
     Solstice. The longest day above the line. The closest relation to the sun. Greeting this shift in the universe with perseverance and deliberate motion: yoga. These are Surya Namaskar, or Sun Salutations. Speed doesn't matter. The breath, movement, sweat, and yes, pain, does. Salutations to acknowledge a chance to connect, challenge, succeed. Salutations to say "I will" or "I can" or "I tried." Arms lift and open to the sky. Hands and feet lower and root into the earth.
     Two down, 106 more to go.
     Two per minute may be fast. One per minute may be slow.
     Regardless, the rest will take a while. But it's the longest day.
     A mala strand, with 108 beads, circling a larger guru bead. Crafted of sandalwood or Bodhi seed. Lapis lazuli blue or royal amethyst. Crystal. A mantra repeated with the touch of each bead. Ancient yogic texts reference 108 marma points, or sacred places, of the body. Science averages the distance of the moon and the sun to earth as 108 times their relative diameters. So on this day, 108 movements yokes these and other elements of tradition. Perhaps superstition. Dedication.
     I can. I will. I tried.
     Forty-three.
     Form is softer, less aligned. Shaky arms plank a mere moment before release. Standing and resting more. Gulps of water whenever another is done. Ragged breath is slower to calm, regardless of the even counting for inhales and exhales. A towel to dry slick palms. Perspiration smelling of yeast between breasts. An hour gone of the longest day.
     Forty-four.
     Move down the first stone in the row. Start again with this visual. Five more until 50. Four after that to the halfway mark.
     Focus.
     The question of why. No one cares as much as you. The world as a whole doesn't understand 108. You're not Hindu. You don't study the ways of the sadhus, the yogic holy ones. Who does this? There's not a prize at the end. Enlightenment is ethereal. Satisfaction is a question—is it ego? More questions. Should this want be fulfilled? Is the challenge reward enough? The world as a whole doesn't understand the mountain climber. Marathon runner. Yogi. 
     Sixty-five.
     One every three or four minutes now. Muscles tense and spark. Shoulders burn. A sharp tingle behind the eyes as the head throbs. Another towel along the mat to catch every drip. Standing tall is the only relief. Stopping would be okay. Nothing lost. I tried. But the row is incomplete.
Drink. Blink twice. Ease arms overhead, fold forward once more.
     Sixty-six.
     Slide down a stone.
     At one time, you stopped caring. It was fast becoming bunk. The designer clothing, celebrity workshops, and expensive retreats in exotic locations. Westernized for entertainment. Bridal yoga. Yoga and wine. Goat yoga. You were never a purist, but it seemed to lose significance, reverence. You stopped caring enough to let all that go. Regular practice allows for little victories. Lets light in, forces darkness out. Just move. Release.
     Eighty-eight.
     Easier with eyes closed. Not as dizzy, less sweat. Walk a little after standing, just a couple of feet to the left or right. The coolness of early morning fades in the heat of a brightening day.
     Eighty-nine.
     I will.
     In the end, the rest doesn't matter. Each body has its sheaths; every person does the work to pass through them. This is what it means to be present. This electricity, this "aliveness." The "I will" mantra is fuel for the engine, the kriyas that force energy to spiral from the base of the spine, the primal red root, igniting every chakra point along the way to the crown of the head. Orange, yellow, green, turquoise, indigo, violet. Emotions, creativity, love, communication, intuition, and acceptance. A cleansing. Bliss.
     One hundred seven.
     Fire in the chest. Ammonia in the nose. Stabs of hunger pierce the belly. Muscles seizing. Hollow at the back of the throat, scorched since the last of the water at 99. Rock back and forth, heel-to-toe, sweep the grime and salt and stench off your shoulders, between finger webbing, around your neck. On the longest day, just this day, you stepped outside the ordinary. Allowed your body to be the gateway to mind over matter, a spirit with purpose.
     Lightheaded. Blurry. But there's a quickening. Nearly done.
     Breathe. It hurts. Ears ring as the pulse surges.
     Arms up, exhale down, knees buckle.
     Three stones in a row, two above.
     One more. Fuck me. Come on.
     I tried. I will. And I can.
     One hundred eight.


—Tracey L. Kelley

Tracey L. Kelley shares stories, teaches yoga, and helps people listen. Her award-winning writing appears in a variety of forms, including essay, short story, online, magazine, broadcast, and podcast. 





NATALIE WARDLAW


—Natalie Wardlaw


Natalie Wardlaw is a cartoonist, artist, and writer currently living in Austin, Texas. She enjoys hand-spinning and other antiquated crafts such as weaving, letterpress, analog photography, candle making, and writing in cursive. Natalie is avoiding social media, but can still be found there from time to time @natalie.wardlaw. 





Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 15: Erin Rhees • Will Slattery • Ellen Sprague • Shell Stewart Cato • Laura Swan • Cassandra Kircher • Amy Probst • Ashley P. Taylor

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, through July 16th.
—The Editors



July 15: Erin Rhees • Will Slattery • Ellen Sprague • Laura Swan • Cassandra Kircher • Amy Probst • Ashley P. Taylor • Shell Stewart Cato





ERIN RHEES

On the morning of June 21, I woke just as the pale grey light of morning filled my room. I got up, washed my face, and patted it dry with a hand towel I accidentally stole from my mother’s house—it somehow found its way into my luggage. I just returned from two weeks away at my parents’ home. My three siblings and I congregated there after the expected-yet-somehow-unexpected passing of my grandma—my dad’s mom. “Passing away” is a strange euphemism, as if she’d just passed into a different room instead of a different world. Hopefully somewhere, rather than nowhere. I’ve always believed in heaven. But she knows now, whether she’s wrapped in golden light with her husband and siblings, or not. If anyone was going to heaven, it was her. I learned, after her passing, that she made a birthday cake for every member of her religious congregation. Over the years, she made hundreds of birthday cakes, took meals to neighbors who had new babies, who lost babies, or who had sick babies. She canned peaches for family, took the extras to people who seemed a little down. In her old age, she hand-fed deer in her backyard—a thought that both delighted and terrified me in equal measure.
     After I washed my face, I dressed for the day in a dark blue jumpsuit I bought online on a whim. On the model, it looked chic, effortlessly cool. On me it looked ok, a little like a toddler onesie, but it was lightweight and airy, and it was too hot for jeans.
     I sat at my computer and tap tapped on my keyboard. I highlighted and erased large blocks of text. Then quickly undid erase. Then erased again.
     After writing next to nothing for nearly an hour, I stood up and buzzed about the kitchen, threw a handful of frozen blueberries, a cup of spinach, and avocado in a blender. I sliced the tan-grey skin from a ginger nub, smelled the sweet spice as its skin fell off my knife. I dropped it in with the other ingredients, heard its satisfying little “plop” and turned it on. As it whirred, I packed my bag for my meetings at school. I was on break between semesters of my graduate program and teaching. In a week, I would begin teaching another section of freshman writing.
     The day was usual, mundane even. The afternoon was a whir of meetings, dropping off books at the library, then driving home in the dry desert heat of Northern Utah. My blue jumpsuit clung to the sweat trickling down my back. My hair wilted in the heat, little wisps of baby hairs curled around my temples. I held crumpled tissues in each hand to lessen the heat of the steering wheel. Even the backs of my knees felt hot.
     When I arrived home, I opened the freezer and stood in front of it for a few minutes, then ran an ice cube along my neck.
     I sat down at my computer again, this time willing myself to write something. Anything. I typed the words, “write something down,” then stifled a giggle.
     In the evening, my husband and I prepared dinner together. I held a round radish with my fingers, sliced it into pink rimmed moons with the other hand, little pools of purple bleeding onto the cutting board. We both used to hate radishes, until one day we didn’t.
     While my husband and I cooked, my brother sent me a text with a photo of my grandma during World War II. Her dark hair was set in glossy, shoulder length waves. Her red lips curled in a soft smile. She waited for my grandpa, who was serving in the war, for two and a half years. When he returned, they married and had five children. After 38 years of marriage, my grandpa died of a rare form of sarcoma and my grandma never remarried. She was alone for another 34 years and fumed at anyone who called her single. She always wore her wedding ring, but stopped wearing red lipstick—my grandpa’s favorite. The night she died, she kept saying how she was trying to get home. She put on red lipstick and sat in her high-backed pink chair. She passed away in her sleep shortly after.
     It sounds fantastical, too peaceful to be real, but it really happened that way.
     That night, as I laid in bed next to my husband, I looked at that photo of my grandma on my phone. My husband rolled over onto his stomach, as he always did at night, pushed his pillow up over his head, and exhaled a little vowel of relief. I turned my phone over. The room went dark without the glow of my grandma’s photograph. As I closed my eyes, I imagined her sitting in her chair, that deep red lipstick feathering into the small lines around her mouth, the folds in her face softening as she fell asleep.

—Erin Rhees





WILL SLATTERY

Summer is a hazy, liminal sort of non-space for me—it always feels like a little caesura, an ephemeral reverie, a gap in between the content of my life, whatever that may be. I’ve spent so much of my life now (as a child, as an undergraduate, as a grad student, as a high school teacher) wedded in one form or another to the rotations of the academic calendar that I struggle to think of it any other way.
     I wake up mid-morning, see that Melania has done something obnoxious, and then drive to the high school I teach at, grabbing some gas station pizza and one of those Starbucks espresso canned drinks on the way. I’ve been teaching a creative writing summer camp (the first one ever offered by the school I work at) for several days now.  It’s a small camp, just me and about 10 students, ranging from 5th grade to 10th, for 4 hours a day.
     The camp offers up more difficulties than I expected (keeping that wide an age range occupied for that long is very hard). Still, the whole thing is pretty chill: they free-write while I play instrumental covers of pop songs, we work on some illustrated erasures using a giant pile of markers I found in the teacher’s lounge + a giant pile of old lit mags I had in my apartment, and then the kids do writing exercises in which they write letters to famous people. We take a break, get snacks from the gas station next to the school, and look at yearbooks for a while.
     A student asks me who my favorite member of BTS is. I truthfully but unhelpfully offer that I don’t have one, on account of how I only dimly even know that BTS is a K-pop boy band, and I have almost no real knowledge of that genre. The students are shocked that I don’t know anything about K-pop. Everybody their age knows K-pop, they tell me. Lately, this has been the primary way I notice that I am getting old: the shift in cultural reference points.
     Camp ends at 5:00 PM, and as I’m cleaning up the room I notice for the first time this week the hunk of canvas drop cloth attached to the door. Every classroom in our school has something similar--a curtain, a piece of fabric, a section of cardboard, a bunch of construction paper, something—on the inside of the door, so that we can cover the window in case of an active shooter. This one is brightly painted, in order to look like a rainbow. I shut the lights off and head home.

—Will Slattery

Will Slattery helps curate things here at Essay Daily. He tweets on occasion: @wjaslattery.





ELLEN SPRAGUE

French Fry Fail

When your first big marital fight is about French fries, you shouldn’t be surprised that your brother-in-law, a witness, is worried that the marriage won’t last. But when that fight is two-plus decades behind you and that same brother-in-law claims he just ate the best French fries ever, you take a risk. Despite those two decades of relative tranquility, French fries continue to tempt the fates in this marriage.
     I hadn’t thought much about Shake Shack until local and social media insisted I take note that the restaurant now had a location in St. Louis’s Central West End and that I should expect to wait in line for their supposedly famous food. Now I was hearing this from family. Still, I harbored two resistances to Shake Shack: 1) the repulsive “everybody’s doing it” phenomenon and 2) long lines. I’d learned about the lines by binge-watching Bosch, where the crusty, eponymous detective puts up with the Shake Shack lines because it means spending time with his daughter. I would get to spend time with my husband, so maybe it would be worth it—for French fries.
     I have the summer off. My husband had a rare weekday off. So at 4:30 pm, a time Google metrics assured us was a slow time for business, we arrived having sharpened our appetites with a very light lunch. The first time I went to Shake Shack, there was no line. Having waited in over 20 lines in 19 hours of trans-Atlantic travel just days earlier, I was ready for this. And clearly, not everyone was doing it. I could proceed.
     Inside the shiny and high-ceilinged establishment and on the far side of the crowd controlling stanchions and dividing ropes, a trainee staffed the cash register. Black shirt. Black baseball cap. Green burger logo? Definitely green Shake Shack worker and customers. Over his shoulder I saw mounds of golden fries, ready to go.
     Since we had a little time, I told him it was my first visit to Shake Shack. His blank look told me he was unmoved. I dragged suggestions and answers out of him. Single or double? What’s the special sauce? You see, I was trying to be a good customer, not the controlling type I usually portray. I was trying to be agreeable, something that’s hard for me when I’m nervous about getting what I want. Ask my mother-in-law, and she’ll confirm that I can’t go to Panera without noticing some mistake or inconsistency (don’t get me started on the tiny baguettes they serve these days) or some process they could do better. If only I ruled the world.
     My husband was still ogling the menu on the wall, so I ordered my burger and added fries. “Fresh fries, I hope,” I said with one of those smiles I give when I know I’m telling someone how to do his job but don’t want him to know it.
     “Uh huh” or “Huh?” he might have said.
     Moments later he confirmed that the two people across the register from him had requested three orders of fries. “Uh, no, just two.”
     At our table, we were confused about why we didn’t have drinks yet at least. We spotted a manager interviewing someone in a neighboring booth. The pager buzzed.
     So my brother-in-law had promised us hot, crinkle-cut fries—“the best ever,” he said. What I conveyed to our table in exchange for the buzzer was below standard then. Okay, it wasn’t even close, and it wasn’t a surprise. Once again I’d predicted the failings a restaurant worker although I’ve never been one and have determined I’m not really suited for customer service in the food industry. And once again I would suffer for it.
     For what was not the first time in our marriage, we returned lukewarm fries and demanded hot ones—“fresh” ones, if you can call them that. We didn’t even discuss it. Well, there was some tension in determining which of us would do the returning. I was afraid I would say something mean. It’s happened that I have behaved badly when it comes to French fries—perhaps more so than my husband, if we’re being honest.
     We resigned ourselves to starting our burgers—my double with the perfect toppings. “How did you get pickles and lettuce?” my husband asked. Another casualty of the trainee, who didn’t ask my husband what he wanted on his burger after I had placed a precise order for myself. There may have been brief pouting.
     Burgers depleted, I went to check on the fries where two employees were lollygagging. Anyone not making fresh fries is a lollygagger. I was nice. Honest. We drained our drinks. We pretended we were fine. I realized that the TV my husband was watching had subtitles while mine didn’t, and it started to make sense why he was so interested in it. A good 15 minutes after we had re-ordered and seen others come through the now-forming line, our hot fries were delivered with no particular fanfare. And behold, they were very good.
     “Best ever”? I don’t know. I prefer hand-cut fries myself, with crinkle-cut and steak fries in a tie for second. And my husband and I are on track for our 24th anniversary, despite the ever-lurking danger of French fries.

Ellen Sprague

Ellen Sprague's essays and translations have appeared in Emrys Journal, The Laurel Review, and Asymptote Journal. She holds an MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts. She writes personal essays, translates from French, is learning Slovenian, and teaches both academic writing and creative nonfiction at Principia College in Elsah, Illinois.





LAURA SWAN

I tried on 9 personalities on June 21, 2018.
     My day started too early, the sky almost light enough to read by, if it weren’t for the morning fog already making the air heavy. Still thick with sleep, my mind was straining to hold on to my dreams but the bite of mint toothpaste jumpstarted my brain. I abandon the nonsensical Cher lyrics to scan ahead to the day’s schedule and plans, the hours that are already booked and plotted.
     I slipped on my yoga pants and my Healthy self. The local class is small and I am the youngest person by 15 years, but I am probably the least fit attendee. Tree pose is tough, and I’ve learned to hone my focus here. We end with bridge poses that feel amazing on my lower back, and I feel the bliss of an empty mind for almost eight whole seconds during final relaxation.
The drive to work is quick, and so is my transformation into Sarcastic Comic. I regale my coworkers with a self-deprecating story of how I attempted to hang three pictures in my bathroom and failed hilariously in my use of a level. Leaving the room with laughter behind me, I settle into my office’s desk chair and shrug into Robot mode.
     For the next few hours, I am functioning only on logic and routine, problem solving via flow chart and following procedure. My fingers move the slides on and off my microscope and my eyes skim over millions of cells in a practiced method, finding what does not belong. My job is a never ending Where’s Waldo, having trained my eyes to see instead of look, and now Find-A-Word Searches are no longer fun. But who I am does not matter, only the cells, and we all look the same under the microscope.
     Today I am only at my desk for a few hours, I get to leave early. I start the two hour drive still mostly in machine mode, thinking of the route I will take and calculating if I have enough gas for a round trip. As I settle into cruise control, the options for my auditory entertainment are plentiful. The radio scans across the stations and I am quick to select any song I know, belting out the lyrics and cranking up the volume for my favorites. This is when I feel the most like myself, whoever she is.
Once I was out of range of my pre-set buttons, I turned on the podcast I had started earlier in the week. I was listening to old Pottercast episodes from 2005, when the Harry Potter phenomenon was in full swing. These episodes had been recorded before all the books had been published, and I enjoyed listening to the passion of the fans. I have an intense desire to slip backward in time, and for a moment I feel sixteen and giddy again.
     My destination is a coffee shop, but I arrived thirty minutes early and decided to investigate a gourmet popcorn shop in the same plaza. Dark chocolate salted caramel popcorn melted on my tongue, and I considered the trip worth it, regardless of the meeting’s outcome. I selected a seat in the empty coffee shop and then consciously decided on a personality to wear while meeting the doctor. Should I be cool and aloof? I wanted her to like me, but this was not an interview. I settled on effusive and engaging, with a hint of humble, my best ‘Charming The Mom’ self.
     Doctor R reminded me strongly of a childhood friend’s mother: bony and eccentric but constantly smiling and oozing compassion. This doctor had started a foundation aiding women in a third world country, providing women’s health and maternity services. Cervical cancer is preventable, treatable, curable, and I wanted to put my skills to use. We were on the same page, we shook hands, and agreed to email and start working on the paperwork.
     I got back into my car and drove across town, slightly tweaking the personality to be ready to be Darling Niece for my great aunt. Prepared to be helpful and patient and full of family gossip, I let myself in to my aunt’s condo. She sat in the family room, surrounded by years of photographs and pleased as punch to have me visiting. We talked all about my meeting and my china pattern, and Aunt C promised to tell her daughter that I was to have first dibs on her Ivy Corelle when she died. After discussing the health status of every relative we had in common, we went to dinner. Over fried potato skins and chicken sandwiches I told Aunt C all about my sister’s new boyfriend and listened to her stories of my grandmother as a young woman.
     With a hug and promise of staying in touch, I left her house with a lipstick print on my cheek and a can of pop for the road. I put on my Wife persona and called my husband, letting him know I was hitting the road and promising I would call him if I got sleepy while driving.
     Alone in the car and tired after the long day, I was surprised that my mind turned to the story idea that had been growing like mold in a back corner of my brain. As the sun set and I headed home, I dove into the disjointed imaginings that are the dramatic scenes, constantly shifting perspective and adjusting the plot. I enjoyed the Author self, as she is fickle and never seemed to stay long.
     Though my speed was the same as earlier in the day, the now dark surroundings obscure landmarks and make it hard to perceive my progress. It seemed sudden when I spotted the sign for my exit, and I was both relieved and faintly disappointed that the journey was over.
      My day ended too late, I knew I would be quite tired at work the next day. I went through the motions of my nightly ablutions and shed my many personalities the same way I shed my dirty clothes. I dropped heavily into bed and drifted into sleep, wondering who I would be tomorrow.

—Laura Swan





CASSANDRA KIRCHER

Woke up before alarm, before Kevin. Remembered I’ve been misspelling pika for a very long time. Showered. Made coffee in a machine that didn’t exist last time we were here. Took crowded bus to the airport. A one-hour ride. Looked out the window the whole way and practiced saying every number we passed. Wondered why I never learned any higher than 69. Funny, that number. But it’s true: the seventies, eighties, and nineties are harder.
     At the airport I rented a car. It surprised me that I knew the vocabulary since I’ve never rented one here. The driving was easy. That surprised me too. We made the 11:00 a.m. tour, and it was pretty much as I expected: the tower, the solitude, the space where Montaigne would have shelved his books. The views. The tunnel beside his bed so he could communicate with his wife sleeping on the floor below him. I hadn’t known about that. Before the tour ended, all six of us, plus the guide, were locked inside the tower by accident. I wanted to say that there were worse places to be stranded, but I didn’t know how.
     On the way back to Bordeaux, we filled up with gas at a place where four pumps weren’t working, and I avoided English. From the airport it was all a breeze. Kevin and I were able to sit together on the bus and I realized that women in France might have smaller breasts and that might be why I felt comfortable. I liked being with strangers on a bus. The kid with the cleft palette. The woman in the wheelchair who could back up fast. I could have been either of them. 
     Before returning to the apartment, we stopped at Paul’s and I did okay ordering two quiche and a baquette. When I went into Monoprix for lettuce, Kevin stayed on the street watching France beat Peru.
     It should have been a quick trip for lettuce, but it wasn’t: I was stopped by a man, my age, who, at first, I thought wanted money, but he didn’t. He kept speaking in English, so I’d understand, and I kept speaking in French, so I’d learn. He wanted me to buy soap or toothpaste for his organization to distribute to gay youth shunned by their parents. I did. I didn’t have the words, but I decided to tell him about my son.

—Cassandra Kircher

Cassandra Kircher's nonfiction has recently been nominated for Best American Essays and a Pushcart, and has appeared in North Dakota Quarterly, South Dakota Review, Cold Mountain Review, Flyway, Apalachee Review, and others.  She is the winner of Flyway's 2010 Notes in the Field contest and teaches at Elon University.  





AMY PROBST

It was a time when my garbage cans were full of stink and wiggles from missing trash day two weeks running. Today was another chance and I shot out of bed twenty facebook-surfing minutes after the alarm went off, when I heard the garbage truck on my street. The dogs staybed in bed, the cans made it to the curb. I also dragged out a 6’-round Oriental rug off the back deck railing, tragically exposing a thriving society of ants and their cup-of-rice-sized huddle of infant eggs.
     Plus, one day the previous week, I'd walked by my Jeep in the driveway, which I only use in Winter months, and saw its windows covered thick with flies, from the inside, like a horror movie, and the consequent hero's journey inside turned up the frozen raw meat patties I feed my dogs, pruchased in January and left until the present heat wave had turned it into a leaky, bloated, baby-fly-nourishing bag of raw heat meat, and that bag was in one of the two-week-old trash cans, as well.  Baby flies, by the way, are maggots, which I saw none of in the Hour of Jeep De-flying, but I did see several more little bundles of symmetrically aligned, exru, thin oval eggs, like anorexic rice grains with Dwarfism. And how tragic, really, the generations of flies in my Jeep this summer before I'd noticed the Amityville scene going on: born in a Jeep with windows rolled up in a summer swelter warranting Head Advisories—don't pump gas today, stay in the air conditioning, hydrate the elderly —only to lay eggs of their own and then die.
     Exhausted from these brushes with nature that made me a monster, I wrote my Morning Pages like a good first-week Artist's Way student, went to a new yoga class that didn't happen because I was at the wrong location, then talked on the phone for an hour and 39 minutes to a sober friend struggling to keep the bottle away.
     Again exhausted, I went to the backyard with my dogs and a book and stared at facebook until I dozed off.  Came inside, worked on a training program for a client who thinks all training materials should be done in PowerPoint, then dashed off to a Drum Corp show with my sister, mother, and newly minted high school marching band niece, Gina, after dropping her sister, Bailey, off at circus school for contortion class.
     The drive home was long.
     My dogs were happy to see me, and I them.
     No larvae were present upon my arrival.
     A decent day.

—Amy Probst

Amy Probst rescues worms from puddles.





ASHLEY P. TAYLOR

Nothing smelled that day; if it did, I don’t remember it.

My alarm went off at 7:20 but I stayed in my twin bed, the coolness of my fan and the cover of my top sheet balancing each other, for another hour and a half. When I sleep in like that I get up feeling like I’ve arrived in heaven, but if I don’t start doing something within an hour or so, I fall into a lazy, guilty depression that’s difficult to reverse. Every hour that passes, I feel further behind.
     I ignited the gas beneath the kettle, put two tablespoons of Café Bustelo into my French press, and fixed a bowl of Rice Chex. Once the water boiled, I filled the French press to just below the lip and carefully, slowly pressed the lid down on top. Success! No spillover. While the coffee steeped, I ate my cereal and streamed HBO’s Big Love on my laptop, floating each woven grain pillow in a kiddie pool of skim milk before swallowing as on screen, proverbial shoes dropped and dropped. I slurped the remaining milk and took my bowl back to the kitchen, where I fixed my coffee.
Sometime after coffee, in the lime-green section of my notebook, I made a list: schedule MRI; cut my nails; shower & shave. I was also planning to talk on the phone with a friend and go to a literary salon, called Les Bleus, in the evening.  A freelance journalist, I was between assignments but not really looking for a new one, as I would be leaving for a short vacation trip the following week.

In the same notebook entry, “Thursday, June 21, 2018,” I wrote down what had happened the day before: how I’d been in a blue mood, had started my period, had walked from my Brooklyn apartment to Prospect Park, where I’d begun reading the Philip Roth story “Defender of the Faith” from the collection Goodbye, Columbus. I think I finished the story on the 21st, which may be why it preoccupied my entry that day.
     In “Defender of the Faith,” a young Jewish soldier at a U.S. training camp tries to win sympathy and favors from his sergeant (also Jewish and just back from World War II in Europe) by making shows of piety and asking for accommodations, supposedly so that he can practice his faith. From the beginning, the sergeant dislikes this trainee and doubts he’s telling the truth, but they continue uneasily along until an elaborate falsehood—the trainee forges a letter, supposedly from his father, regarding the camp’s non-kosher food—seems to set them apart. For a while, it seems as if the trainee has learned his lesson, has learned restraint.
     Near the end of the story, the trainee, having minded his own business for some time, approaches the sergeant again and asks the sergeant to let him and his friends leave the camp for a belated Passover seder at his aunt’s house. The sergeant resists at first but, as usual, relents in the end. When the trainee gets back to camp, he approaches the sergeant at his bunk and they have the equivalent of a heart-to-heart, which the sergeant actually enjoys—he mentions having “a homey feeling.” It’s in this setting that the trainee gets the sergeant to tell him where he and his friends will be assigned as soldiers: the Pacific Theater. It’s a moment of sadness for both parties. Changing the subject, the sergeant asks after the leftovers he’d been promised from the holiday meal and the sergeant pulls out an egg roll in a paper bag. The trainee had been mistaken, he says, the invitation was for the following weekend—so he’d probably be asking special permission to leave again—the aunt wasn’t home. The sergeant realizes that there was no invitation to begin with and effectively says to hell with the trainee.
     Some days later, the sergeant sees that the trainee is the only one of his number not assigned to go to the Pacific. The trainee has gotten someone else to make an exception for him. When the sergeant realizes this, he makes one last call on the trainee’s behalf—in order to make sure that the trainee is sent to the Pacific—and claims on the phone with a higher-up, in a nice touch, that this is a favor to the trainee, who can’t stand not to fight after his brother died out there (lies of the sort the trainee might tell).
     The story bothered me because it was obvious that the sergeant liked the trainee, though the trainee drove him crazy, and that the trainee’s efforts, however manipulative, to create some kind of special connection with the sergeant had worked. The relationship, not of chumminess but of a fly and the person swatting it away, became familiar despite the sergeant’s best efforts to prevent it; the sergeant knew the boy and what he was likely to do and say. Something about that nineteen-year-old constantly piping up about Jewish traditions reminded the sergeant of himself and his past. Near the beginning of the story, for instance, as the trainee and his friends walked off to Friday services, their departing sounds reminded the sergeant of his childhood: “But now one night noise, one rumor of home and time past, and memory plunged down through all I had anesthetized and came to what I suddenly remembered was myself.” The connection between the trainee and the sergeant wasn’t just the product of the trainee’s brown-nosing; it was that the sergeant saw himself, before the war had hardened him, in the trainee, and it was to that past self that the sergeant felt so much tenderness. The satisfaction of sending the trainee potentially to his death was not total.
     I felt a certain sensitivity to the story because it reminded me of my own past, of a time I went too far in pursuing some kind of closer-than-average relationship with a higher-up—a professor—and ended up cast off, though I also had plenty of reason to believe the professor still liked me to an extent. What made me sad reading the Roth story was the way the sergeant believed the trainee had learned his lesson, forgave him—and then the trainee just blew his second chance and went on to manipulate someone else. The professor also forgave my missteps, before the final one. I felt the sergeant’s mental anguish as he tried to decide whether to believe the trainee; I saw the way the sergeant thought about the trainee even when he was being gruff or they weren’t speaking, and even after the trainee had gone and the events were just a story. It bothers me to think I might’ve caused the professor similar worries—or that she might not have been able to turn off her thoughts about me quite as easily as “casting off” implies.
     So, on the summer solstice, I was still thinking about something that happened nearly seven years ago. That’s not unusual.

According to my notebook entry on June 22nd, I did as planned on the 21st. I probably cut my nails over a piece of newsprint from the London Review of Books, then folded the paper around the clippings to throw it out. This is the best method I’ve come up with for not getting nail clippings everywhere. Cutting them on the round black dining table I share with my roommate and sweeping them into my palm seems distasteful. Your roommate’s bodily waste does not belong on the dining table (or on the kitchen counter). An alternative, cutting my fingernails on my own desk and sweeping them off, means in practice that the clippings accumulate in the crevice near the desk’s edge, something distasteful even to me. Despite my interest in the writings of Jenny Diski, who chronicled her death in the LRB, I haven’t read enough of the LRB subscription my parents gave me to justify it, so in collecting nail clippings, I’m glad to use it for something.

The morning of June 21st, I was thinking about revising a short story in order to submit it somewhere with a July 1st deadline. It’s possible that thinking about the story discouraged me from getting out of bed with the alarm. I aimed to finish the revision before my trip, but I was feeling down about it, unsure if it could be saved. What I had already written, which my writing group had faulted for its lack of propulsion and conflict, was ornately finished. One thing connected to another the way I had it. I was unwilling to rewrite the original story, which had become the middle section of the new draft; it was either frame the story to make it work or give up.
     “I was craving satisfaction,” I wrote in my notebook, “and since [the story] wasn’t satisfying, and I’d decided against the kind of marathon work session that might have made it satisfying [ie., skipping the salon], I went for my run despite the heat and sun (the running path itself is not shaded) and the knowledge that all the away around plus to and from [the park] was a lot for someone who hadn’t run at all since this winter and not a long run since—”

After the run, my thoughts turned to the literary salon and the phone date. I hadn’t spoken with this friend in a long time and, in particular, not since I’d spent nearly a month in the hospital and had had three brain surgeries, “revisions,” as they’re called, of the shunt that treats my hydrocephalus. After the hospitalization, in April, I’d spent a month at my parents’ house and farm in Kentucky. So I’d been out of commission for a while. My friend, an editor, had offered me an assignment while I was away, but I’d turned it down. After my trip, I told myself, I’d get back to it. We arranged the call to fit neatly before the literary salon, which was yet another reason to follow through and attend. So I showered and shaved, careful not to nick the pimples from the poison ivy I’d picked up in KY, put on a light blue-and-white zigzag-patterned dress, and got on the subway a few minutes early so that I’d be near the salon when my friend called, at 7, and would be on time to the 7:30 event.
     I was feeling quite put together—early, seated on a clean rock slab near a flower-filled bit of landscaping—as I waited for my friend’s call. I took a selfie and made it my Facebook profile picture. When I asked my friend how she was, she told me that she wasn’t so great, that a fairly close relative had killed themselves. I had imagined that the conversation might focus, to some extent, on me and my recent ordeal. Yet here I was, alive, recovered, about to go to a fancy-sounding event. I was glad that I had not let more time go by without checking in with my friend.
     She was talking to me from a park, she said. She mentioned something about taking off her uncomfortable work shoes. I chimed in that although I was wearing flip flops my uncomfortable shoes were in my big yellow bag and I would soon put them on. After we hung up, I crossed the street, leaned against a telephone pole, kicked off an orange Teva and tried to smoothly replace it with a cream and electric-blue sandal. The crisscrossing ankle straps made smoothness impossible—they made a circle barely larger than my ankle; they caught my toes. I describe these sandals as “good for standing around in,” and that was exactly what I planned on doing in them.

At the Les Bleus destination, a friend from my writing group followed me in the door. “I’m going to give you a hug,” he said, and did so. It was a welcome back. Then we started up the stairs, still talking, until my legs complained, I slowed down and declared, “This is exercise!” But it was worth it to get ourselves up high.
     The salon was on a rooftop deck. There was rosé and there were DIY Aperol Spritzes with strawberries floating in them and we had a view of a sunset that progressed along with the schedule of the evening. Each reader had a different backdrop in the photos I took. But the sunset wasn’t behind the readers, at least not from the side where I sat, so there were no complicated color changes; the sky just got darker blue.
     As for conversation, I found out how one Les Bleus friend had been in a bad bike accident, riding around Prospect Park. I learned the story behind the name Les Bleus. I also heard about a gala to raise money for a literary journal that had happened the night before and felt a sense of having missed out—what’s that called?—though I could have gone if I had been willing to pay for a ticket. I’d seen, on Instagram, that there was a black-and-white backdrop sort of like what you might see at a film awards ceremony; I’d seen pictures of writers I’d heard of posed in their gowns before it. I wondered, had I gone, if someone would have taken my photo there and thought about how embarrassing it would be to expect to have one’s photo taken and then learn that you weren’t known enough for that, or something, that not enough people would recognize you. Back at Les Bleus, open to everyone, I wondered: Is this the real thing, a real literary party? Because if they’re letting me in . . . The real thing is a fantasy only, a fantasy of exclusivity. Of course I’m not in it.
     One attendee talked about a trip would soon take, within the U.S.; her children, U.S. citizens, having heard about immigration officials separating kids from their parents at the border, were afraid they might be taken from their parents if they went to a new place.

At some point that evening, I started reading “Epstein,” the next story in Goodbye, Columbus after “Defender of the Faith,” and it reminded me of my short story in that it involved grown children returning to a childhood home and people sleeping in other people’s rooms, children’s rooms still theirs in name and in decoration, though the children have grown up, moved out, died. Unlike my story, I noted with envy, Roth’s had conflicts, and sex, and death, not just characters thinking of the possibilities of those things.
     My poison ivy, I noted, was still spreading.

—Ashley P. Taylor

Ashley P. Taylor is a Brooklyn-based writer of journalism, essays, and fiction. Her essays have appeared in LUMINA Online Journal, Vol. 1 Brooklyn, The Brooklyn Rail, Entropy Magazine, and Catapult and have been listed as notable in Best American Essays 2016 and 2017. Her short fiction has appeared in Vol. 1 Brooklyn and Joyland.





SHELL STEWART CATO

Osage Orange at Summer Solstice

Memories lie slumbering within us for months and years, quietly proliferating, until they are woken by some trifle and in some strange way blind us to life. —W. G. Sebald, Rings of Saturn

21 June 2018

A man walked up to me today. I was sitting cross-legged
under my favorite tree. I was also doing research for a story
on my favorite tree on campus. It’s my favorite tree because
it’s:

1.
Got so many names—like me—I am Shell I am
Shelly I am Mama I am Mac I am Teacher


I am Kudzu  I am Bones I am Skelly-ton
(in order of importance) I am me
It is Osage orange it is mock orange it is hedge
apple it is horse apple it is Bois d’arc (bow-
dark) in the Delta where I’m from it is
green monkey brain tree

2.
Got so many uses—like me—I can dance I can
write I can paint I can teach I can birth I can
love I cannot sing the Osage orange’s wood it
can make canes make flutes make bows
make war clubs for the Osage to hunt its fruit
can scare away roaches away spiders also if you
grind up the fruit you can dig a little trench
put the fruit in you’ll have a row of hedge apples
a hedge of hedge apples a living fence

At this point in my research, that man walked up to me asking about my new electric bike parked under my favorite Osage orange. I am holding an Osage orange leaf and a piece of Osage orange bark I ask him if he knows some bike paths around here he said yes he told me how to ride off the mountain he said he rides sometimes to his mother’s in Petersburg his wife picks him up

I ask him if he knows about Osage orange trees. he said yes he grew up sixty miles away his father planted these trees they have big thorns he said see? yes I see I said I am trying to make a story about them I said here’s a place where a branch was cut two thorns are still there sideways almost



like a cross he held up a branch said crown of thorns? that’s it I thought my story I thought he said we call it a hedge apple it makes natural hedges because of the thorns see? we cut the wood for fire it burns hot he said it’s hard he said bois d’arc means wood of the bow I know I said bois means wood in French I know I said the duh means of I know I said then I said the arc means ark like Noah’s ark I said no he said it means bow my father called our place Bois d’arc Hills Farm he said the wood is orange it turns yellow when it is old

I asked him if he ever threw the apples. he said of course I found my story I thought he said his brother ten months younger they would roll fruit down the hill oh I found my story I thought it’s like bocce ball I said yes he said but we rolled to see who could roll the farthest I said oh and you knocked the other apple out and that’s who won like bocce ball I said smiling he said if you rolled it in a ditch and it went farther it still counted I did not say oh it was not like bocce ball we rolled it to see who could roll it the farthest he said oh I said

he said once when I was nine I stepped on a fallen branch and lodged a thorn in my heel I said oh I said I bet that hurt he said yes I said I bet it hurt getting it out he said they never got it out I said I bet they tried a lot your parents with tweezers and a needle I said how sometimes you have to hurt people it’s for their own good even your own child I said but sometimes a child doesn’t remember it that way only the hurt is it still in there I guess so he said looking like he hadn’t thought of his thorn in the flesh for years

I have lead from a pencil in my palm I said my mother has lead in her arm he said I thought lead paint he said my mother has lead in her arm from a shotgun oh I thought but didn’t say it

I said oh I was supposed to meet you God does this for me this was supposed to happen I said tell me your name again you have a lot of stories you helped me so much now said he you’ll have to decide if it’s true oh I said oh I said oh I thought


—Shell Stewart Cato


Shell Stewart Cato teaches American literature and first-year writing at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. She writes poetry and flash, but considers this piece a new venture into genre—the photo poetry essay.





Check back for more dispatches from June 21, 2018 tomorrow. —Editors

July 16: Stayci Taylor • Laura Schuff • Chris McGuire • Joshua Dewain Foster • Craig Reinbold • Carlos Davy Hauser • Heidi MacDonald

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Today we present ten more dispatches from June 21, 2018 to you. More details on the project here, but, in brief, we asked you to write about what happened on one day in June, and are publishing the results, largely unedited, through July 16th.
—The Editors



July 16: Stayci Taylor • Laura Schuff • Chris McGuire • Joshua Dewain Foster • Craig Reinbold • Carlos Davy Hauser • Heidi MacDonald





STAYCI TAYLOR

There are fewer options at this breakfast buffet, one of three on this island resort and the closest to the sea. The limited selection brings with it a sense of calm, but there is still panic inspired by the free time ahead. Unlimited choices are dangerous; they pave the way for a day lived incorrectly. Given the environment, this is despicable. A woman, probably here for a conference, asks for warm milk. She is directed to the espresso machine, but this will not do. She needs it for cereal. This request is mildly curious against the backdrop of palm trees, but only half-registered. There is pressing interior business. Don’t be miserable in paradise.
     It’s much warmer than home, but the coldest temperatures here in living memory. The locals are bewildered, and wearing polar fleece – an extreme response, perhaps. The temperature won’t fall below 20° C. Two days ago a lone visitor braved the swim-up pool bar, wading back, everything clenched, to deliver a tinnie to a waiting girlfriend. There is more than one pool, though, and the closest is heated. It can be seen from the balcony. The same balcony from which, this morning, a sunrise was witnessed over the sea. The accommodation, when booked, did not include an ocean view. Don’t be miserable.
     This outside table also affords a view of the beach. The plate is less overloaded than previous mornings but still strangely appointed. When else do fruit and pastries and eggs and toast and mushrooms and chia pudding share the same stage? At a table behind, someone reassures the warmly milked woman that she’s ‘still glamourous’ despite their shared advancing years. She reports she had her upper eyes done five years ago, ‘which is fabulous. It’s about looking fresh’, she says, ‘but not fake’. She’s also lost a lot of weight, on a drug that makes her feel nauseous if she overeats. There’s apparently—and quite literally—a downside to thin faces. You can go too far, she says, but at least she’s not devouring the lamingtons. 
     They do look like excellent lamingtons. They nearly made the plate.
     A cockatoo lands on the table beside and seizes upon the empty butter portions. A deft claw lifts the foil flap and the beak dives into the tiny shallow plastic tray. A tongue, presumably, laps up the remains. 
     Mid-morning, the reclining view from the pool noodle is of alternating knees, slowly advancing and retreating in the heated water. This performance of relaxation is watched and weighed up against activity in the solar plexus. It feels like fretting, but hard to discern amidst the competing sensations of caffeine and the pseudoephedrine fuelling much needed cold & flu meds. To pay this much inward attention feels unforgivably self-absorbed. Sleep is resisted and undoubtedly needed. There may never have been a better bed to accommodate such a task, but yet a bush walk is attempted. The swim-up pool bar is circled warily. Soon, and with no towel required, bourbon is added to the mix. 
     Later, the internet celebrates the birth of the New Zealand Prime Minister’s daughter. Ex pats join in with whisky on the balcony. The booze and the news do their job and the sunset is greeted with decided cheer. But a setting sun is always more promising than a rising one. There are always fewer options at the final hour. Fewer ways in which to fuck up five days in paradise.

—Stayci Taylor

Stayci Taylor is an Industry Fellow with the Media Program at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. She brings to her teaching and research a background in screenwriting, which is still her main professional practice. She has lately become interested in creative nonfiction and critical autoethnography; mainly through an investigation into the performance of girlhood diaries with colleagues from RMIT's non/fictionLab.





LAURA SCHUFF

Katze’s warbling shout of “Myowwww,” the one that descends in pitch and usually means “I just pooped in front of the litter box,” wakes me up. She’s a talented ventriloquist.
     It’s early and things happen in dreamlike succession because I’m pretty much asleep. Lift Katze onto the bed. She purrs a minute before wanting back down, so I help her, fearing for her arthritic joints. Snooze my 5:50 alarm. Justin half-wakes and mumbles that waking up next to me makes him happy. Today is the five-month anniversary of the morning after we got married, when we woke side-by-side to express similar sentiments, snuggling and dozing again, united in contentment, feeling right and whole and excited for each moment of our future together.
     The daylight is dim for summer. It filters gray through the remainder of last night’s thunderstorm, blue through the tarp we secured over our unfinished roof last night. We are sore and sunburned, shards of shingle fiberglass stinging our fingers. I relish some of this exhaustion, or at least the idea behind it. There’s something fairy-tale-like about us literally building part of our home together, almost reminiscent of a pioneer couple hewing themselves a log cabin.
     The rest of the house is a disaster zone of neglect. Sink overflows with dishes. Katze’s litter box has annexed the hallway. Waterlogged raspberries fall to waste in the crabgrass jungle of our garden.
     My first 12-hour work day of the week yesterday provided a welcome deviation from the roofing project, but the novelty was short-lived. I snooze every alarm until 6:25, which is supposed to be my last call to get out the door. I still take more time than I should need to put on scrubs, brush my teeth, snatch a giant box of rice crackers from the pantry (leftovers from our wedding reception) for today’s potluck, and leave for the pet hospital where I work as a lab assistant. The send-off party for a coworker’s last day should take care of the breakfast I didn’t make time for.
     I’m sheepish about getting to work eight minutes late, but no one calls me out on it. The morning rush is sort of a plate-spinning circus act. Keep the ponderous, seventiesesque blood chemistry analyzers (Doom and Gloom), CBC machine (I’ll call that one Abby), electrolytes machine (um… Edgar?), and the Unicorn centrifuge (because someone, probably Lindsey, taped “RN” to the end of the “UNICO” logo) running simultaneously. The goal here is to finish at least the essential bloodwork for each of today’s nine surgery patients as quickly as possible so the surgery doctor knows whether to run more tests, cancel, or start pre-meding. Add in whatever urgent bloodwork the two exam room doctors need and whatever maintenance issues come up. And the ever-abundant heartworm snap tests and fecal samples to be spun down and read under the microscope. I rerun some tests for stupid reasons, like when I realize I’ve probably grabbed the wrong blood sample or misplaced a results print-out on the wrong pet’s paper.
     Edgar, usually one of the lower-maintenance machines, needs a new gas canister and I don’t find replacements where I usually do. Jen locates them quickly in a different cupboard and I feel stupid. I start the electrolytes test for Cosmo kitten, but can’t find his blood sample. Edgar insists that I discard the unused reader I’ve inserted when I take too long searching under Doom and Gloom, behind Abby, everywhere I can think of that a sample tube might roll under or fall behind. Without thinking, I state my frustration to the brusque surgery doctor when she walks by, but of course she is unsympathetic to my stupidity.
     Turns out I accidentally tossed Cosmo’s blood along with last night’s samples. I retrieve it from the trash can and avert that crisis, but then run out of hematocrit tubes. Apparently these are important enough (a recent development) that Loni leaves her surgery prep post to borrow some from another location. Korey tells me I should have noticed when we were down to two containers and ordered more. When Loni comes back, I find her tirade about the traffic amusing. (“Why do so many people live here? It’s not that great. Go back home.”) But then she tells me how I’ve cost our business an hour of her time. She wants me to do a weekly inventory procedure that I haven’t been expected to do before—unless I’ve grossly misunderstood—and I find it confusing.
     I would have figured all this out long ago if I were the sort of go-getter I’m supposed to be to “succeed in life,” but I’m not. Instead I slink.
     A doctor maneuvers the end of a leash on a shrieking, thrashing, teeth-baring chihuahua, careful and attentive while consoling with words like, “I know, you’re so scared. I’m sorry.” An anesthesia-drunk pit bull starts up a lament of dinosaur noises in his kennel.
     Doctors keep asking me, “How’s my [insert name of test] going?” and I keep having to admit I haven’t gotten to that yet, more frantic and drooping each time. Korey asks something I don’t make sense of because I’m tired and distracted. The doctor he’s assisting, who often hovers while I beg the machines to go faster, surprises me by telling Korey not to stress me out. Later Korey says, “I’m not rushing you. Just checking” in a way that reminds me of his doctor dealing with the aggressive chihuahua. It hits me that these veterinary professionals I work with approach me with the same cautious attentiveness to stress levels that they’re trained to use on dogs.
     “Dogwoman” would be the worst superhero name ever.
     My hands keep working while my mind goes to town producing a tabloid showcase of I’m so Incompetent. The feature ties in extensive replays of something I regret saying to Justin two nights ago that sting my eyes, even though that scene is long since talked through and moved on from. The melodrama subsides when things slow down enough to allow a snack run.
     Our makeshift potluck table is actually a freezer where the bagged and labeled bodies of euthanized pets await pickup from the cremation service. There’s a euthanasia today, so I help Teddi move our party to the x-ray table.
     The brusque doctor is a master of efficiency and surgeries finish early in the afternoon. We all cheer on Braden, today’s guest of honor, as he cuts an ice cream cake for all of us and stores the remainder in the pharmacy freezer (not the death freezer) where he has posted numerous “No Food or Drink” signs. The surgery doctor plotted this specifically as a memorable conclusion to several years of teasing Braden for being a stickler.
     While taking lunch in my truck, I discover that my phone’s battery is dead, probably over my failed attempt to record notes this morning, and I don’t have an alarm to wake me up before I exceed my hour. Still, I’m losing my mind for need of a power nap, so I take it on faith that I’ll wake up on time and do.
     The rest of the afternoon is less hectic. I’m witness to a medical miracle—a 26-year-old cat in fairly good health. I’m jealous of this old lady who can still leap onto furniture and keep her fur dred-free while my Katze, only 18, can’t. But it’s kind of ridiculous to describe a cat as only 18.
     Since I’m planning to write about today,  I quantify some of my duties. 25 kennels with no major diarrhea, urine, or pulled IV catheter incidents to clean up today. 12 canine snap tests (heartworm etc.), two feline, two canine pancreatitis, and one giardia, all negative. Instead of discarding the plastic indicators right away, I collect them in a pile to see how big it gets at the end of the day. Emily gives me a weird look and reminds me that they show inaccurate results if you keep them too long. All 20 fecal samples I read today were parasite-free.
     I wrap and sterilize the surgical packs. Sweep and mop the floors. Despite the hectic morning, all the closing chores are done by 7:00 p.m.
     Justin and his dad are working on the roof when I get home. I intend to join them after I snack and write a few notes about today, but I get too comfy and my body turns to cement. By the time I finally drag myself up, it’s getting dark and the roof project is being wrapped up for the night. I feel guilty and relieved that I’ve escaped, and guilty for feeling relieved.
     Justin comes down from the ladder and hugs me for a minute, still in his plumber’s uniform. I’m still in my scrubs. We are fairly well matched in exhaustion and the grossness of our work attire. I don’t know how Justin is still standing, having put every spare moment into that roof before and after going to his job for the past four days.
     My brain is too tired to process much of how I get from outside to crashing in bed. At some point, Justin gives Katze her evening dose of pain medicine and I pop a birth control pill.  It would be much simpler if this really were the end of my June 21st, but tiredness is also a form of drunkenness that impairs judgment into doing fun, but not necessarily practical things. Like staying up any later than we already are when tomorrow is full of work and Dungeons and Dragons and, in Justin’s case, probably more roofing in between. But we start to make out and I tell him that going further might be a problem because I intend to write a truthful-as-possible account of what happens today and I don’t think either of us are very comfortable sharing details of our sex life with the public.
     Katze squeezes through the gap in the door and interrupts with an indignant “Mroooow!” She’s silent once we banish her to the living room. But I have a lingering sense that her meow might be translated to, “Seriously, you two, for all your prudishness, can’t you have the decency to consider me a threat to your privacy?”
     Someday I’ll meet Katze at the gates of kitty heaven and she’ll greet me in fluent Human, reminding me that nothing was actually safe with her. But meeting her eyes will be all it takes for realization to burn in my cheeks.

—Laura Schuff

Laura lives in Oregon. 





CHRIS MCGUIRE

The sun on a spoke toward the eastern corner of my office window heralds the longest day of the year. June 21st finds me hunched over my desk, shell-shocked gaze on the traffic sweeping by on East 5th Street. In my crotch I can feel my father’s hand, a memory shard left over from the 3-day EMDR Intensive I just completed on Bainbridge Island, WA.
     That hand, drenched in callous bone, the brutality of which I’ve always known. But not this. Not this horrible awakening of my flesh, refusing to be silenced, refusing to retreat. I rock with the after-quakes.
     But now there are my clients, needing my attention, needing me to hold space for them, hear them, validate them. My mind drifts to the little red kayak I paddled out around Bainbridge’s Eagle Harbor, seeking rough waves, something edged and raw against which my body could throw itself. The pair of eagles I watched, transfixed, in high branches, shrieking their indignation against an assault of crows guarding nests. My kayak beached as the tide receded beneath me. Me, all at once embodied, trudging knee-deep through the heavy mud toward water to get the little boat afloat again.
     I hear my name, paged overhead. First I see R, who’s here on the advice of her attorney on an asylum case. She’s fleeing Mexico b/c her abusive stepfather waited for her outside her nursing school class and tried to kidnap her. She cries soundlessly while stroking the red sand of my sandtray as if it were her pet cat. I become hypnotized by the gentle, rhythmic movements, my heart breaking for her at a distance, because with the current Administration, her case does not look favorable. In my mind, my father’s voice: “Boys are gonna love that ass” while his hand—
     Next there’s a couple of kids, siblings, jubilantly unselfconscious in their unsuppressed bodies. Sprawling on the carpet, limbs askew as they play with the toys on my shelves. Their untarnished sexuality breathless and innocent. I balk, freeze, grit my teeth through the hour. Curl like a pillbug on the carpet afterward, my door shut against colleagues.
     Subsequent appointments will arrive and depart in a blur, shades of pale passing in and out of my scope of consciousness, accompanied by a low hum. I will wonder if I’m asleep, drifting in dream. Outside the window, the sun will shift along its spoke, growing dimmer as the afternoon progresses. A thought, like shattered crystals: “What did happen today?” My eyes searching the street outside for a response.
     I find a bright bird on a bare branch in the mesquite tree across the street. It is only there for a moment. I watch it lift from the leaves, sweep over the whisking traffic, disappear after the stretched sun.

—Chris McGuire





JOSHUA DEWAIN FOSTER

So I woke up after nine a.m.—which is not something I like to admit but also something that happens a lot so at this point why lie? So I wake up late and I stay there in bed, which is not something I usually do. Usually, I’m up and at them as soon as my eyes are open; most days, I spring from my sheets to my shoes. Normally, I work at a standing desk in the other room. But not today, the summer solstice, June 21, 2018, the longest day of the year. The sun is out in Houston, Texas for another ten hours—or something. I relax. So what if I’m starting late today. I have plenty of time. I scoot away from the warm round ass of my bed-partner so that I can actually get some work done, reach off the bed to the floor and get my janky cheap chromebook.
     I open it up and write an email to my agent. She is in New York City, a place I have visited three times in my life. Once, the most recent, was to meet her. I’ve been telling her I’d have a novel ready since 2014. I’m surprising her with it today, attached as a PDF and shared in the cloud as a DOC. It is 399 pages; 107k words. I told her I’d send her the manuscript by my birthday, July 5, but I’d finished it early, could not stand to read it one more time, so I decided to print it out and put it in a binder for my own edits and to email her and invite her to finally take a look and at least get the good grace of beating my own often extended deadline.
     What did I feel like, after I sent it? Glad, and proud. That email took me like thirty minutes to get right. Happy, I got up to take a leak.
     About then, G rolled over. It was her ass I had been lying beside. Her kids were with their dad for the summer, and we were luxuriating in these slow mornings where modesty could be relaxed and neither of us really had anywhere to be but to our desks, in our books. Except I no longer had a book to write, I’d written it, so I had nothing to do. I asked G if she’d cook us some french toast.
     This is also not something I usually do. Usually, I handle my own food intake, especially for breakfast. Most days, I’m a black coffee banana kind of guy. If I have time to really cook, it’s meats eggs hashbrowns. Never breakfast cakes. Pancakes? Waffles? Too heavy. Those put me back to bed, and that’s something I cannot abide. But the day before, G and I had been in the grocery story together, and she’d been waxing nostalgic re: real New England maple syrup, which I had never tried, so she bought some, and I got a good loaf of five-dollar sliced bread knowing I would try to talk her into cooking French toast for me soon. Which I did, successfully.
     She put on a robe and went to the kitchen and made the French toast. I piddled about, scooped the cat boxes, shit the dog in the backyard, brushed my teeth, took my meds. Extra naproxen, because a bunch of shoulder pain had returned to my left arm, where I had had an operation in 2017. But three weeks ago, this pain had settled on me again, left me wincing any time I reached and turned, pushed or pulled, typed, drove, washed my hair, or anything of the sort with my left. I thought I was better—I’d been pain-free for six months—and clearly I was not. I froze all my summer plans, including a trip home to Idaho for a family reunion, until I could meet with the doctor, which would happen tomorrow, which, as I told the doctor’s scheduler, might as well be two weeks away. As soon as I knew what was up with my arm, I could plan the rest of my life.
     G and I ate French toast together. The New England maple syrup ran thin and warm and washed across the butter egg bread, tide-like. I could see why she relished this great American sap, appreciated that I’d been let in on the secret. I felt the same way about russet potatoes. There, on the plastic table in front of us, was the manuscript that took me four years to write. It was in a hot pink plastic binder, four inches thick. An inch a year—so much for personal growth.
     10:30 a.m. My agent had had my email for over an hour. Had she read the book yet? Did she love it? Already sent the contract? Check(s)?
     I gathered up the dishes to wash them at the sink, my pleasure and gratitude after such a food gift. G removed to her desk to edit and knit. I washed and dried and shined the dishes, put them up. Folded and refolded the dishtowels. Swept the kitchen floor, something I’d been wanting to do for seven months. In the bedroom, I turned on the World Cup—France versus Peru—and rooted for the Spanish-speakers. I always pull New World. I took out my empty luggage and looked inside my closet, starting to plot what I would need up north, back home in Idaho, if we were lucky enough to make it back there. G and I had a secret hope and plan: if the doctor cleared me to travel, we would pack the car and leave by Saturday, be to Idaho by late Sunday so that we could surprise my mother, who was turning sixty on Monday.
     I didn’t see the point in actually packing without knowing what was up with my shoulder, so I hooked up the leash to the dog and took her around the block for some fresh air. Out on Gray Street, I paced and scoped out a palm reader sign that G had told me recently showed up. I had always wanted to have my palm read. I can handle the truth, and am happy to pay for it. Of course, I wanted to buy G a round of hand-reading too, as a late birthday gift.
     So I walked the dog past a sagging peeling house on a main drag in the historic Rosemont district of Houston, with a covered front porch and a beat to shit Ford Excursion in the cracked uneven driveway, a neon OPEN sign in the window, not illuminated, and a phone number on a placard on the sidewalk. In the front window, a shadow appeared behind the curtain. I wanted to make nothing easy, no dead giveaways, no easy outs. I hustled around the corner with the dog and called the number. I wanted to keep everything I could a secret; I had no faith in the palm reader, but had a hope I’d learn something somehow, anyways. I didn’t disguise my voice or give a fake name. I asked if she had time to read the hands of two people as soon as possible. She said she could at one p.m. That was less than an hour away. I said okay.
     She told me to call back in a half-hour to confirm my appointment. So I confirmed something with her then: She wanted me to call her in thirty minutes to tell her I’d be there in thirty more minutes? Yes, she said. I said I’d text her at twelve-thirty, and that we’d be there at one p.m. on the dot.
     The dog rushed me home. There, I informed G of the plan, and she took a break from the editing and fussed about the flat, changing clothes a few times, deciding a hair situation, and wardrobe. I too checked myself in the mirror, wondering what the palm reader might discern and misinterpret. For two months, the temperature hadn’t dipped below eighty degrees, and I was in shorts and a tank-top and a farm hat, always sweaty, far from my element. I decided not to change. The palm reader, like most people, would have no idea who I really was.
     These bustling moment in our relationship when both are readying for a joint event, equally energized, are intensely gratifying, and do a lot to unify. This was still fresh, vibrant, steeped in meaning, cosmic, revelatory. As G and I readied, we smiled and winked at each other, took one another by the waist, danced, swayed a bit.
     What does the future—our future—hold? I couldn’t guess, and didn’t need to know but was asking just because I could, just because I was with someone who wanted to go along with me to find out. I pinched an ass as it went by, kissed a cheek, said thanks and also hurry up or we’re going to be late.
I texted the palm reader and tell her we’ll be there at one p.m. on the nose. Which we weren’t. We’re a few minutes late.
     At the house, half a cigarette smoldered in an ashtray. Oh, how peppery and lovely that smoke smelled. Cigarettes had not been present in our lives for 84 days, according to G’s stop smoking phone app. I had finally stopped coughing long enough to want another cigarette. I didn’t pick it up and smoke it, though. I was past that point. I simply longed for it, reminisced about the good old bad days. I stamped down the nico-urge, knocked hard on the thin front door. Above me, a diamond window cardboarded from the inside shook against the glass.
     A little girl opened the door. Younger than eight, for sure. Cute kid. Looked a lot like any one of my nieces. Pink clothes, long hair, a few missing teeth. I asked her to go get her mom. I didn’t really think about it. Old Mormon Missionary reflex. A young short woman came to the door and shooed back the kid and her little brother, who had been in the shadows of his sister the whole time. The mother, who was our palm reader, A, brought us inside and shut the door. We stood in an empty living room with thin path-worn carpet over a bowed floor. A, chewing gum, speaking English Italian Chicagoan, set the kids up and explained she’d be in the other room, working. Once they were settled, A led us into another front room, behind a white door—her palm reading room.
     A large pink lounger, in front of which A stood, centered, at the back wall. In front of A, center of the room, was a table piece, alter-like. Facing this desk were two fabric covered chairs, nice enough, but with stains. I took the far chair, and G took the near. We sat down once she did.
     A reminded me of my youngest sister E, and my first ex-wife R. A was twenty-four, twenty-five. Poised, serious. Wise but unrefined. No pushover, but easy to confuse. A, who was wearing jeans and a shirt, had three burns or scars on her sternum. They looked surgical, earned, unfortunate, designed. We discussed what services we were looking for, and landed on one in which we could each get our palms read, a tarot reading, and the opportunity to ask any questions we could come up with. That ran me sixty bucks a piece. I paid A through the cash app.
     Transaction sent and received, phones down and away, A crossed one leg over the other, interlocked her hands, mystic-like, and asked who would be going first. I looked at G to see what she wanted, and I could tell she wanted me to go, so I said I would. A got out a deck of tarot cards from the alter desk. She warned both of us that regardless of what we were to each other, who we were in each other’s lives, things might come out in a reading that could damage a relationship, so she invited G to leave the room if I was uncomfortable. I said I’d like her to stay. I could trust G with any bit of information, any secret, any sin.
     I was disappointed with A, incredulous—she was trying to figure out who G and I were together; she was reading us. Which I knew she would do, but didn’t anticipate it being this obvious. Maybe she wasn’t psychically inclined; maybe this was all just jig.
     “So she can stay?” A asked me.
     “Yes,” I said, again.
     A flipped over some cards and arranged them on the table. Then she took my palms and looked at them. She leaned back and interlocked her hands again.
     “Okay, so before we start, I have a message for you. I don’t know what it means, but I have to give it to you from the other side. Did you recently lose a child?”
     I’d never had any kids. It was a strange whiff to start with. I considered my very much alive mother and father, my living breathing five sisters and their husbands and children, G, her two kids, my cat, their cat, the dog—all all good.
     “No,” I said, “Not that I can think of.”
     I looked back at G. She had this look on her face like: Are you kidding me?
     “Who then?” I asked.
     “H,” she said.
     I realized I had been thinking too narrowly about A’s question. Selfishly, I had only been considering my immediate family. But just a few weeks before, my ex-family of my second wife M suffered the catastrophic loss of their youngest member, H, a little girl age three. I had not been in contact with this family since the divorce, but once I heard the news, I texted M and let her know that if there was anything G and I could do, we would. M took us up on that, and brought over her two cats for us to watch so she could return to Idaho for the funeral. She had just retrieved the cats the day before, and was actually coming over to have dinner later tonight because she needed some good company and a meal. G had offered to cook.
     I said to A, “Yes, there is one person, but my connections are hard to explain.”
     “Here’s the message. Celebrate her in her time of death. Don’t blame anyone. Celebrate, and love.”
     I nodded and said that I would pass that along, which I planned to do, but didn’t yet know exactly how, or to whom.
     That gravitas delivered and leveled, A reviewed both my palms again quickly, roughly, and set them back down on the table. She told me I led a simple, but complex, life. I agreed. She said it would be relatively long, which brought a lot of relief. She said I was happy on the outside and sad on the inside. She was so right that deep down this made me quietly weep. But that was all my hands had to say about me, and so I took them away and she turned her attention to the cards.
     She told me to think of three questions I wanted answers to. This gave me pause. I was not prepared to think while at the palm reader. I looked at G. Was there anything I wanted to know with her? I knew she was as solid and beautiful as a person as any I’d been lucky enough to be with, and felt we would be together for a long time, one way or another, and since we spent all our time together anyway, I’d had all my questions answered, whether she knew it or not.
     I told her I had them. She told me to tell her two. So I did.
     What would happen with my book?
     Where would I go next?
     On the first, she said I’d be fine, on all counts. With the book. I asked her how fine. She said fine fine. I didn’t want to jinx anything, so I left it at that.
     And what about the next thing?
     She said she was was really feeling Arizona, Arkansas, or Colorado. Any of those places would be good. Also, I’d have a house for once in my life.
     I trotted out my third question, too, this about G, about us and our future, but I cannot write it here. So I listened to that answer, and felt good about everything and had nothing left to ask.
     G and I swapped seats, and A and G got right down to it; it would not be my place to go into all that was revealed. You’d have to ask her. As for me, I was feeling pretty glowy and golden, having a message to pass on, knowing I still had some life left to live with a person I loved, and a fine fine book situation on my hands.
     G’s future all came back good too. I can at least say that. A made some mistakes on that one, reading her, flubbed a bit. But who doesn’t? G’s a tough nut to crack. We left through the front door, saying thanks to A and adios to the kiddos, time well spent. 
     We talked about everything on the walk home, and for an hour at the flat. It was 2:30 p.m., and once we had rehashed everything a few times, we shut up and got back to our desk work. We had a lot to do if we were ever going to get out of Texas. She edited. I paid all of my July bills and budgeted the rest of my summer money. Transferred cash over from savings to cover the travel and upcoming doctor’s visit. I walked to the bank and took out some road cash, went to CVS and bought heel bandaids for G and toothpaste for me. Returned to the flat. I read the news on my phone.
     Around seven, G started cooking chicken curry, and I made some watermelon juice Mexican-style—watermelon, lime, a bit of sugar, water, some ice, blended it up in G’s kickass ninja blender, served in a pitcher—and set up the table in the back driveway. Soon enough, M showed up and we went and dished up curry and all three of us sat out back and ate like we were starving and talked about her trip to Idaho. She got to sing at the funeral. Sad but good.
     Our upstairs neighbors and their daughter came down and joined us. I hadn’t seen them for two weeks, as they’d been in Utah on summer vacation. I’d been sitting upstairs twice a day, taking care of their birds while they were gone, a cockatiel and two budgies. The daughter and wife caught up with M, who had lived in the flat with me for a month or two, and had started a friendship but paused it, and now wanted it again.
     The kid went to bed at ten, her summer vacation bedtime on certain nights, and after that someone spilled vodka into the agua fresca, and wine and kind bud materialized, and stories were traded, and we all laughed about the north country, which everyone had been to but me and G, and we were pining for it. But it felt like after the palm reader, we both knew our plan was a good one, and we’d be leaving Texas soon enough. We squeezed hands in the dark.
     I told M of the message from A, and she told me to relay it to H’s father, so I said I’d contact my friend and ex-bro-in-law, and let him know to celebrate, and love, and not blame. So much of life is out of everyone’s control.
     M was in great spirits, too, after having come home, because she had met a new man, a twenty-five year old snack-bite, as she called him, a lil nugget. Made us laugh; reminded me of funny sweet things M used to coo about me, back when we were in love. I was happy for her in this new flu. I looked around the table. We all were.
     Then a miracle happened: M produced a half-pack of love cigarettes, bought with her new beau, in Idaho. She didn’t want to smoke all of them, or smoke alone. Well, it was the perfect timing to break us. We were all weak. All the rest of us in the house, upstairs and downstairs alike, had been living healthy for most of 2018. G and I had been clean for over eighty days of the nicotine smoke gum vape et al. But we were all in that transitory summer state, hot and bothered and itchy, and could use a break.
     So the pack went around, and we all smoked one together in the humidity, this at about eleven o’clock. M left the pack, and took off with some tupperwares of leftovers, and drove to her place across town.
     Then it was just the four of us. There were five cigarettes left. We each smoked another one, talked for another half hour. These people were my family, my friends, my tribe. We could do this all night, and often did. But by the time the smokes were up, the neighbors excused themselves to bed. They had dreams to dream about home.
     Eleven-thirty, it was just G and me, out in the back drive, staring up at the new builds looming on three sides. What a sad wonderful joke this neighborhood will be in the future, we thought together, when the palm reader and us are gone. G and I will be in Fayetteville, Show Low, Trinidad, I’m sure. But where will A be? Can she read her own palm and know? The truth was in the backyard, G knew my future, and I knew hers—what else could be said? We were smug, satisfied, content. We shared that last cigarette, puffing and passing, not ever coughing, old pros. It was a real treat.
     After midnight, G and I, happy, horny, needy, tugging at each other, got up and went inside and—technically, what occurred next was on June 22, so I don’t have to mention details, but know that morning I slept well, woke loved, made it to the doctor on time.

—Joshua DeWain Foster


Joshua Dewain Foster is the online fiction editor at Gulf Coast. He tweets @jdfish_9 & instas @jdfish9





CRAIG REINBOLD

My 20th blurs into my 21st: I'm wrapping up an 1100 to 2330 shift and I’ve stocked my rooms and I’ve handed off my elderly fall patient and my abdominal pain with a history of bowel obstruction patient to my nightshift replacement, but I wanted to stay on to discharge the ankle pain who's been here going on three hours. She's a little, off, right, and came in with a previous diagnosis of gout, but the PA on her case tonight ruled that out so she's going home with a referral to an orthopedist, an ace wrap, and a prescription for ibuprofen. He also wants her on crutches and she wants a cane and now, after three hours, she tells me she’s a minister and needs a cane for Sunday’s service, and  what? I tell the PA and he says, No way. She needs to be non-weight bearing on that ankle. Eventually she leaves with crutches, and a cane, and now it’s 0015, June 21st.
     I bleach-wipe my shoes, my stethoscope, my shears, my pens, my nametag, the roll of surgical tape I carry around, and my watch, and while I stand there performing this end-of-the-day meditation, I chat with the third-shift crew about their seating arrangements and why the only guy on tonight has been segregated to the far side of the arena. This group’s playlist is typically Trap Rap or Pop Country, and he apparently resists both, and no one can stand his music, so there he is, way over there. Ten feet away, in a different world. As I’m leaving, finally, fuck it’s late, I stop and ask what he’s listening to. Tool, he says, and I say, Oh. I thought it was going to be something really far out. You know them, obviously, he says. And I say, Sure, I used to listen to them when I was a kid, which I later realize might be an offensive thing to say, but I said it, and I can’t spare much energy to dwell on these things.
     He suggests I dig out those old Tool albums, for the nostalgia, if nothing else. He seems excited at this thought, happily indulging in this nostalgia himself, so I just say the obvious, For sure. Well, take it easy, man, instead of the honest, I have no interest in indulging in nostalgia for that time in my life. 
     I am enveloped, and happily so, I think, in the present tense.
     Home, shower, wind-down with 20 pages of The Fifth Season. Then it’s 0200, and I melt into the mattress.
     Jack, who’s three, is up at 0630, and Angie works today—she’s already in the shower—so I pull him into the bed and try to cuddle with him until he turns perpendicular and, pretending to swim, starts kicking me in the face. Ari, 5, appears at the door. I tell him to go pee, because if I don’t, he won’t. Does anyone else struggle with this?
     I know it’s June 21st today, the solstice, the longest day, the day of this big project, all that, but it’s also just Thursday. It’ s any day, every day. Enveloped in the present tense. A creature of the present tense. This largely means living inside a very comfortable routine.
     Today is a Cathi day, Cathi who runs a small daycare out of our house two days a week. I drag myself to the stove to get the coffee going. Stretch a little. Get the boys fed, dressed, teeth brushed, and then hand them off. Two days each week. Sometimes I work on these days, but today I’m off, so it’s truly a free day 0800–1630. I’m off today, so I suppose I mean 8:00 to 4:30.
     Head to the basement to work out. The aim is two days a week of planking, two days a week of intervals. Today it’s intervals: kicks, pullups, star jumps, handstands, squats, leg lifts. This should take me 30 minutes, but I can’t really pull it off in less than 45. I feel good when it’s done, but also so tired, like I’m being slowly pulled into the floor. All I want to do is go sit in a coffeeshop and read all day, and maybe fall asleep there. But these free days are rare, and I made plans to meet an old friend for lunch. Angie has the car, so I’m already late for catching the cross-town bus. It’s a 10-minute walk and 30-minute ride and a 20-minute walk and I’m at this lake-front café a little early so I just sit outside with my feet up and eyes closed and try to empty it all out, you know what I mean?
     Eventually I open my eyes and my friend is 10 minutes late. I head inside, then outside again, and find him parked by the bike rack waiting for me. He’s newly retired from the cubicle world where we both once worked, and we order BLTs and coffees and he catches me up on his latest workout routine, his latest injuries, books he’s been reading. We’re an unlikely lunch couple, and I can’t quite figure it out myself, but here we sit, every few months, catching up. I value this friendship, it’s idiosyncrasy, I worry about a bit about him, too, and this is good, this seeing him periodically. To see he’s doing all right. He did tell me he’s been wearing elastic-banded exercise pants for the last month. He doesn’t say sweatpants. He just says pants like these. Elastic-banded exercise pants. I make fun of him a little bit, and that’s important, I think, that I can do this.
     I walk back to my bus route, a mile along Prospect Ave., quintessential MKE, East Side. Past coffeeshops I used to frequent, bars I haven’t visited in years. I think about stopping for a drink, a quiet sit by myself, maybe take some notes for this project, but I admit I’m anxious to get home, too, to hang out with the boys, and enjoy that space. Once upon a time I was a stay-at-home dad. I often miss the ease, the easier franticness, of those days. I miss the boys, when I’m not there with them.
     On the walk, I’m so tired, people everywhere, noise, cars, kids biking against traffic with no helmets on, so much happening and my head spins. Some college kids are leaning against the bus stop next to me, texting—texting each other?—on their phones, and I feel a little old. Worn. But really good, too, satisfied, and tired, and satisfied, and heading home having not accomplished anything today, but that was a nice walk and I never walk in the city anymore, and it feels almost foreign it’s so unfamiliar to me now and that’s a wonderful feeling. Rejuvenating. So there’s that.
     I fall asleep on the bus.
     The kids hit me when I open the door, the five of them, grabbing my legs, all trying for my attention.
     I get dinner started, can’t remember what I made, just another dinner, one of the five or six I make all the time. The not-our-kids get picked up, then Angie’s home and she takes the boys outside to water the gardens. We eat, we clean up, walk to the next neighborhood over, then back. The boys on their balance bikes. Ari should probably be on a pedal bike by now, but we haven’t picked one up yet. Never seem to get around to it, but whatever. He doesn’t mind, his days are so filled with everything else. Back home, we get them undressed, they both pee, we get them dressed, teeth brushed. It’s hot, so shirts off tonight. I read the bedtime books—I work the next three days 0700-1930 so I won’t really see them again till Monday.
     In bed, they goof, and we’re in and out of their room for another 45 minutes. Finally, they’re out. I pack for tomorrow, scrubs, snacks, breakfast, lunch, more snacks.
     Angie and I take to the couch with the laptop and watch a Marcella, but seriously, why can’t all of these shows be Happy Valley? She invites my hand under her t-shirt, and this is the best part of my day, it’s the point really, or the pinnacle, I don’t know. It’s as if the day with all its momentum, gears grinding, wheels in motion, is just a vehicle meant to arrive me here. So many lovely moments in the day, most days, all days, today, and here is one more.
     Of course, we start falling asleep almost immediately. Rouse ourselves to brush our teeth, our own teeth, let the dog out, and in again, take off our day clothes, hit the lights, get up again to turn the ceiling fan back on, tuck back in with just a sheet—this is our routine. A little cuddle, a roll away. And there are all those things I’d wanted to accomplish today, emails to finish, other friends to catch up with, words to write, the toilet is still running needs a new flapper probably, the boys’ ceiling fan isn’t going to fix itself, the lamp in the front hall needs a new pull chain, the garden is still carpeted with purslane, the front porch that took a year and a half to build is finally finished but needs staining. Stacks of books, so much reading. I’d love to just hit the lake and do some fishing. There is this constant list, a daily litany, but perhaps my greatest survival trait is my inability to stay awake. I crash hard and sleep easily.
     All of that clutter, I push it aside and focus on a memory from last Sunday—I’ve been falling asleep to this memory all week: We’ve finished dinner with my folks at the campsite, sausages and corn and watermelon, and then we hike to the boat launch on the far side of the lake, where the kayaks are tethered, and where it’s less crowded and everyone’s dogs are let loose to swim, and it’s after 8, the sun almost orange now, the water so warm and peaceful, and Jack is in a lifejacket next to me as I float on my back, only the sky and the green tops of the trees in my view. He can propel himself through the water now, but as I drift away from him, he reaches out and grabs my big toe, and now I’m pulling him, and I look at him, his hair wet and wild, spiked in every direction, and his eyes are wide—he’s thrilled to be getting this ride—and he smiles, such a big smile, and I float, weightless, and I love him, and this, all of this, so much. There is nothing else. Nothing. I will fall asleep to this memory forever.
     And then I'm out.

—Craig Reinbold

Craig Reinbold was once the managing editor of this site and continues to curate Essay Daily’s series featuring international essayists. He works in the ER of a Milwaukee-area hospital. 




CARLOS DAVY HAUSER

Should be asleep already (12AM; long drive tomorrow), but choose to flip through channels. Must first take Clorox On-the-Go Disinfecting Wipe from backpack and sanitize hotel remote from top to bottom; front and back; in the grooves; behind soft buttons, esp. Power and Channel Up.
     Infomercial for Age Spot Cream, Free Naughty Channel, Infomercial for Ab Cruncher. Think about buying one Ab Cruncher w/ Free Exercise Band (Low, low price of $39.99). Last week I jabbed my lil pinky into softness of belly and almost felt one ab coming thru. Soon I will be big and strong.
     Here’s a good one: it’s Dumb-But-Well-Meaning Parcel Deliveryman Has an Angry Wife. (Episode in which Parcel Deliveryman attempts to hide fact from Angry Wife that he has purchased sports car, but she’s too smart for silly Parcel Deliveryman. Wife figures out Deliveryman and fight ensues.) Many laughs. Nagging Wife! Silly Stupid Deliveryman!
     Eek, a gnat has landed on my plush duvet! I kill it and disinfect the area with a combination of bar soap, hot water, and Purell Advanced Hand Sanitizer (kills 99.9% of germs!)
     At 12:30, more laughs!—on New York Sports Writer Has Angry Wife and Lives Across from Overbearing Mom and Lazyass Dad, Angry Wife thinks Sports Writer might liker her better if she gets a boob job. (Episode is called “Boob Job”.) Already seen. Back to Ab Cruncher while I do a crossword on my phone.
     Lights out. Close eyes. Remember that even the most scrupulous housekeeper would not likely think to disinfect the little knob beneath the lampshade, so I double-wash my hands and return to bed.
     Sleep.
     Up to pee. Almost pee usual way (standing), then remember urine epiphany from last week after Friend B.O. and I hiked big muddy mountain. When B.O. and I returned to his house to relieve ourselves, B.O. said:
— Gotta pee like a racehorse.
— Ok, B.O., you go first.
     B.O. only in bathroom minute or so. Now my turn. Standing at the toilet, I see two muddy boot prints facing towards the sink, not the toilet. Did B.O. make a poo in such little time?
— B.O., did you make a poo?
— No, just a pee.
— Then why were your bootprints facing away from the toilet, B.O.?
— I pee sitting down. It prevents splashing.
     Yes it does! Why have I not previously thought to do this? When I was a child I asked my parents to install a low-flow urinal in my bathroom (they said no), but I never thought to just sit down like a lady does.
     So I sit down to pee. Wash hands twice. Can’t be too careful.
     More sleep.
     Up. Shower. Pee sitting down again. (It’s quickly becoming a habit, although I’m still mad I’ve wasted an entire quarter-century splashing myself while urinating.) Pack up. Down to the front desk to check out and turn in my keycard.
— Checkin’ out? asks Needlemark Jim from behind the desk.
— Yep.
— What brought you to Cathedral City?
— Just passing through. On my way to Phoenix from the Bay Area.
— Oh yeah, you from the Bay Area? Me too! What part?
— No, just visiting family in the South Bay.
— Ah, don’t know that part too well.
(A relief. Neither do I. All I know is that down in the South Bay there are many old men on bikes with all their gross leghair overflowing from their wool socks as they pass me. The worst part about them is that when you honk at them, even curse, all they do is wave at you and smile rather than the more customary approach: present you with their finger.)
     Needlemark Jim bids me adieu as he achoos into his crusty sleeve. Bye Needlemark Jim!
     My car’s temperature gauge says it’s 112°, so I lower the thermostat to 60° and turn the fan on high. By the time I reach the Jack in the Box drive-thru a few blocks away, the car is comfortable. Thank jesus for technology. Otherwise he only redeeming thing about this Coachella Valley desert town would be the local oppressive sun’s ability to remove all scent of street piss immediately.
     After enjoying one Chicken Fajita Pita and one Medium Jumpin’ Jack Splash in the parking lot, I drive 275 miles. Along the way, I listen to a few podcasts, including How and Why I Broke Up My Marriage by Killing a Series of Prostitutes and Who Killed Grandma Eleanor with a Blunt Object?
     When I arrive in Phoenix, Young Friend Millicent asks to meet me for dessert.
     We go to one of my favorite eateries, Hipster Diner Where All Waitpersons Must Have at Least Three Arm Tattoos, which has recently added some delicious pies to its menu. Young Friend Millicent orders strawberry rhubarb, but they are out, so instead she settles for blueberry.
     Young Friend Millicent and I catch up.
     I see that Young Friend Millicent has unshaven armpits. In fact they are as furry as the rear end of the hefty hirsute man named Dwayne I see in the gym most weekdays. I know his name is Dwayne because he likes to introduce himself to new gym patrons (—Hi buddy, I’m Dwayne!) in the locker room while naked, but thankfully his hirsuteness and big belly veil his tiny pecker.
     Recently Cousin Nelly told Grandma:
— I am going to stop shaving my pits.
— That’s just silly! protested Grandma. Girls should shave every day. Haven’t I taught you anything?!
     Normally I would side with Cousin Nelly, but I too do not understand why anyone, woman or man, would desire to have unshaven armpits. My pits are currently as bare as a baby’s bottom. This allows my Secret Powder Fresh Solid deodorant to glide on effortlessly.
     I would quite like to be hairless. I imagine that hairless people generally have less stank than the haired, as stank often seems to be a product of sweat mingling revoltingly with arm hair, leg hair, head hair, eyebrows, pubes, et cetera.
     Done with pie, am beat, it’s getting late, return to apartment.
     Am about to slip into bed when I remember that Friend Zander, who was watching my cat and my bird and my apartment while I was away, had been sleeping in my bed. Friend Zander seems to engage in sex quite often, so I don’t know what or whose germs I might be exposing myself to if I choose to lie down on what has surely become a cesspool of dried bodily fluids.
     I strip my bed, place the sheets in the hamper, and walk to the laundry room downstairs, where I spy my dirty neighbor Stanley.
     Will just get a hotel room.

—Carlos Davy Hauser

Carlos Davy Hauser is a poet and photographer originally from Skagway, Alaska. He recently received his MFA in Photographic and Electronic Media from the Maryland Institute College of Art. He shares his apartment with his cat, Tim-Tom, and his parakeet, Brandon.





HEIDI MACDONALD

I'm at the Tucson Botanical Gardens, sitting in Cafe Botanica with my new laptop—an experiment. I'm a member of the Gardens and I told my peer counselor that I wanted to come here one morning a week to start the day elsewhere, because I tend to waft around my apartment in the morning, petting my cats, drinking iced coffee (I make really good iced coffee), sitting at my desk, then on the couch, thinking about taking a shower, and taking a shower, or not taking a shower, remembering and forgetting that my number-one job is to write, and hours later remembering, oh, shit! that's what I was going to do: write! I don't have a job-job anymore because there's no job-job that I can do consistently, or that I can do without making mistakes, because my brain keeps jumping the tracks. When I was at the end of my job-job working life, I got used to feeling incompetent. As the administrative assistant slash receptionist, I’d sit at my desk with pens and post-it notes, a stapler and a 5-line telephone, a list of stuff I needed to do and the stuff that needed doing. I would read my list of stuff to do, start the first thing, but then I would stop, turn my head and read my list again, and then look at what I’d just started, and say, “Okay.” The phone would ring. I’d answer it, talk, write a message, and then I would read my list, again. I felt like I was a third grader put into the 11th grade by mistake and I would cry because I couldn’t keep up. It turns out nobody wants to work with a crybaby, and neither do I. So now I don’t have a job-job, but I get a check every month from the Feds. I’d always wanted more time to make art and write, but this doesn’t feel like “free time,” because part of my brain is on vacation. But now I’m writing. Right now. I’m writing what happens. Today.
     I'm amazed that I made it here. I woke up at 9:00 a.m. and got up. That doesn't sound very impressive, but for me it's an accomplishment worthy of a high-five. I use the alarm app, “I Can’t Wake-up!” to make my phone wake me up. (Really, that’s the name of it.) It has a slew of tasks you can choose from, that you have to accomplish before the alarm will turn off. So once the alarm starts playing the extremely irritating blues riff that I chose to wake me, I have to do three tasks: copy a string of random text, press five buttons in the correct order in a five-by-five button grid, and get up, go into the bathroom and scan the bar code on my shampoo bottle. Waking gently just isn't something I can do. The previous music I'd used was too lyrical and lovely to wake me up, it only served as a weak prompt to get me to consider waking up—it might as well have been a lullaby cooing to me to snooze the alarm again—even after doing the tasks.
     It's not that I need more sleep, but as my prescriber told me, "vivid dreams" are a common side-effect of one of my psych meds—quetiapine—the generic version of Seroquel. In my case, if I open my eyes, do the tasks my alarm requires, and snooze it for any length of time, 10, 7, even 4 minutes, as soon as I close my eyes I enter an instant full-blown vivid dream. They are richly colored breathing scenes that spring out of my unconscious mind like a lady bursts out of a cake at a bachelor party, and I can’t wake up from the party, the lady, the cake, the bachelors. But today, when I heard the irritating electric guitar blues riff, I woke with a growl, started the tasks, put my feet on the floor and stood up.
     Sitting here isn't comfortable, at all. My back hurts like a sling shot stretched too far. Ouch. This is not conducive, even with Bob Dylan on the system. The sound system. I just noticed that the word shoulder has the word "should" in it.
     The lady with the black apron is crouched in the shade of a patio umbrella holding out her arm with something in her fingers. Ooo! A lizard approaches; it's a big lizard, fat and checkered. Hmm, how big? how fat? It’s about ten big blueberries long, and two big blueberries across. She drops the something, the lizard darts and the something is gone. She stands up, and looks into the distance—this is her habitat—she shares it with lizards. I think she's lucky, and I am lucky to have come here today.
     When I first walked into the empty cafe, I asked her how much a cup of coffee was. “$3.50 plus tax,” she said. Geez, that seemed like a lot, I thought, so I didn’t order coffee, but asked her if I could sit and write for a while. She was slow to answer. “You can sit at one of the little tables until it gets busy, then you’ll have to go.” I thanked her. It was so un-busy at the moment, with only me there, that I had my pick of the tables, which is worse than having only one table available, because I had to choose one. Choosing confuses me because it involves considering, and I am a slow considerer. Each table was by a window, so I looked out each window, considering what view I wanted. I put my stuff down on one table, then looked out the window again, and chose a different table. I wanted the optimum table. That reminds me, I stopped at the 12-foot square little Japanese garden on my way to the café. It’s one of the little gardens in this big garden. It’s neat because there is a sand table with miniature monolithic rocks sticking out of it. I picked up the heavy, steel, miniature rake and slowly drug it through the sand, making little sand waves around the rocks. A little girl saw me doing it and I offered her the rake. She didn’t take it from me. As I walked away, the lady with her said, “This is feng shui. I’ll teach you about it when you’re older; how does that sound?”
     I wanted to say, “That sounds horrible. Fuck feng shui. It’s just sand and rocks.” But that wouldn’t have been very Japanese gardenesque of me.
     When I asked her what she fed the lizard, the café lady said, “A blueberry.”
     “A blueberry?!” I said.
     “Yes! I dropped a blueberry once and a lizard ate it. They LOVE blueberries! Now two of them will eat out of my hand. I feed them all day long." I ordered a cup of coffee.
     I told her about my project, "A bunch of people from all over are writing about what happens today." I wondered if the lizards’ tongues turned blue, like mine, when they eat blueberries, and I wondered if I shouldn’t have told her what I was doing, because I didn’t have to, and maybe I’d blown my cover. But no, I’m not an undercover kind of gal. A lady, a lizard, a garden, a stretch of shade, another lady, a computer, a cup of coffee, a saucer, a see-through garden table with see through chairs—expanded metal—lathe. Oh, yes, I always want to add an extra lump of expanded observation to every thought. It is my way. This is not a police report.
     I'm getting out of here. It’s super-hot already: 11:42 a.m. 97 degrees. Tucson, Arizona. The high is supposed to be 106 today. Will I go to the YMCA? That's my plan, and today is today and available.
     I went to the Y. Other stuff happened. I ate. I watched the news and turned it off when I heard that Koko had died in her sleep. Koko the gorilla was dead. I started to cry when I thought of the Mister Rogers episode when he went to visit Koko, and how she took off his shoes and socks, and how little he looked when she held him in her arms. He was very brave. Two gentle beings, both gone. I looked up some articles online. There was an email address. This is what I wrote:
I'm so sad to hear that Koko has died. She was a beautiful being. She taught me about kindness and I thank you for raising and caring for her and never mistreating her.
     You are a wonderful example of how much goodness we bring to the world when we choose to be the best human beings we can be.
     I will never be able to fathom how we can be such a loving and kind species, yet some among us persistently devote their time, their spectacular minds, and our shared resources to invent and invest in a constellation of tools and methods to kill one another and institutionalize cruelty.
     I disagree with people who believe that we humans, specifically the males of our species, are unable to control our cruel and deadly "instincts," that war is a given, and that "evil" is an actual proven "force" akin to gravity.
     Maybe I stray too far from our shared grief at Koko's loss, but I do believe that to live gently, as Koko did, would be a wondrous achievement for humanity; we might even find that it feels natural. And if it doesn't, we can learn to do it anyway.
     Without Koko and without your work, I would not have come up with this version of the (my) truth on my own. Thank you for inspiring me.
—Heidi MacDonald

Heidi MacDonald writes nonfiction and poetry. She has a MFA in sculpture from the University of Houston. She began writing in 7th grade because it helped.





And… that's all folks, at least from our Write-a-Day June 21st project this year. We're back to our regularly-scheduled programming in a week or so. Keep an eye out for the next version of this experiment and some thoughts on what happened. —Editors

Another June 21st from Matthew Vollmer

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JUNE TWENTY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND EIGHTEEN

Woke up. Turned on phone. Watched a dead leaf butterfly open and close its wings. Wife announced that she had been up since 3:30 am, at which time she smelled that the dog had had another accident. Went back to phone. Phone told me that quantum mechanics says multiverse is real and that Christina Aguilera posed topless on Instagram and that I should eat these carbs to eat to lose weight and that a woman died in a closet and that a 15-year-old can draw animals from memory and the results will blow my mind and that J. Crew just launched some exclusive, extra-comfy underwear. Why are Americans so sad? Don’t know. Didn’t read article. Also: Canada legalizes marijuana, parasites can mind-control other animals without infecting them, and Ronaldo is grooming himself to resemble goat. Eventually got up, drank a cup of coffee with sugar and half-and-half. Made two eggs. White cheddar. On toast. Checked World Cup scores, watched Ronaldo’s header goal. Got in argument with wife about whether or not I should clean up shat-upon dog bed. Lost argument. Put shit stained dog bed in trash bag. Put trash bag in trash. Tried to wash shit stain off large woven mat that lives—or lived—at back door of basement. No dice. Got email from friend saying “XXXTentacion may have been killed by Soldier Kidd. Then sent something about an article that said Spotify users around the world streamed XXXTentacion’s music 10.4 million times—breaking a record set last year Taylor Swift for the most streams by an artist on a single day.” Friend said “half were just streaming to see what he sounded like.” I texted back: “same.” Drove to office on campus. Noted grandmother of son’s friend at the smoking deck—a place by parking garage where smokers gather—and thought briefly about son’s friend, whose name is Harold and who lived with his brother up the street where we lived during our first ten years in Blacksburg, before his father, who studies sustainable biomaterials, moved the family to Vancouver, where apparently many Chinese billionaires also live, and whose Lambos and Bugattis are parked up and down the city’s streets. In office, tried to read book by woman whose materials I agreed to review in exchange for $100 and the knowledge that I served as a good literary citizen and member of the professorate. Wished I would’ve been given something to read that wasn’t so boring. Took breaks to look at Facebook and Instagram and Twitter, reminded myself that I should take a look at that Chelsea Hodson book. Texted my friend Evan to say hey can I borrow that Chelsea Hodson book and he said yes and I said are you at home or Shanks, and he said I’m coming in around 11. He came in around 11, preceded by Bucky the dog, who jumped up on the couch where I had been lying, wearing a hoodie because I keep the air conditioner turned to frigid in my office. Wife texted, said I had hurt her feelings when I argued with her about not cleaning up the dog bed. Texted her an apology, and she said she was probably tired and grumpy. Talked to Evan about his wife’s head injury. Took a dump in the bathroom. Halls on fourth floor of building where office lives were vacant. Wondered where everyone was. On vacation? At beach? At home? Went home. Transferred boxes of son’s old toys from garage to garage attic. Disassembled tent that son and son’s friend had planned to sleep in but didn’t, found a popcorn bowl plastered with dog hair and butter and earwigs. Thought of son at work installing blinds in building where son’s friend’s dad works as contractor. Thought about blowing off porch, which is always strewn with pine needles, thanks to the neighbor’s towering pines. Didn’t. Ate leftovers from night before: a kind of make-it-yourself taco salad. Listened to two scientists talk about dinosaurs on NPR. Announcer reminded everyone that dinosaur meant “terrible lizard.” Retrieved mail: TIAA-Cref envelopes, junk mail from Suntrust bank, the new David Lynch bio. Read first few pages of David Lynch bio. Read first two essays in Chelsea Hodson book. Got in car. Partially composed email to fellow colleague who wrote prequel to the Godfather but now was waiting to hear back from his agent who was waiting to hear back about novel submitted to publishers. Drove to the ABC store, bought a liter of cheap vodka and a fifth of Maker’s Mark, reminded self to retrieve bottle Evan and I threw into the air the night before so as to shoot with handheld CO2 cartridge-powered BB gun. Dropped bag of liquor at car, went grocery shopping at Kroger. Went home. Paid phone bill via app on phone. Texted with Evan’s kid who said he’d go see Hereditary with me. Said good because your dad is a wuss. Evan’s kid texted back haha and crying laughing emoji faces and wondered if I’d bought any Jordans lately. Told him I’d ordered a pair of black obsidian Jordan 1 Re2pect high tops but had to send them back because they were too big. Evan’s kid said he was more into Vans. Went to the Vans site and concurred that Vans were cool, especially the SK8 HI high tops, which Evan’s kid said weren’t really his style. Wife returned. Said vet wanted to keep dog overnight, blood sugar low. Said ok. Thought about working on book manuscript. Opened Spotify. Listened to a few songs from the “Chill” list, remembered XXXTentacion from day before, and how good it was, so typed XXX into search bar and rest of name came up, hit enter, then clicked “follow” which seemed stupid since he was dead, or purported to be dead, what did anybody know for sure, then thought maybe he had some unreleased tracks or another album in production, so maybe not all that stupid after all. Opened Scrivener. Worked on book manuscript. Went to retrieve son from job where he works installing mini blinds in new town houses. Bought dog food—Taste of the Wild—and wondered if I would need to take it back, supposing dog somehow didn’t survive through the night at vet. Son sized up my clothes—T-shirt, flipflops, Adidas sweatshorts—and asked if why I was wearing pajamas. At home, opened pork chops, cut potatoes and put them on to boil. Chopped broccoli, tossed in olive oil and salt and pepper. Microwaved butter, squeezed minced garlic from a tube into bowl, along with sage, rosemary, and thyme. Salted chops, then slathered them with butter garlic mix, used tongs to place them in hot cast iron skillet heated on outdoor gas grill. Finished dinner, remembered that Evan had the tent we were to borrow over the weekend for a camping trip to Grayson Highlands, where many of the ridgetops are bare, and where I once hiked with a man who, with his big ruddy face and beard and his cheerful demeanor, resembled the character Yukon Cornelius from the stop-motion Christmas classic Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, a man who, because his wife didn’t like living where they did, in a round house in the middle of nowhere, and longed to return, with the son to whom they’d recently given birth, to Orcas Island, which they did, after the man quit his position as an Associate Professor of English to become a Harbor Master. Texted Evan and as soon as I hit send a text from him appeared nearly simultaneously. “Wtf” he typed. “Jinks,” I typed. “You owe me a Coke,” he typed. Drove the six minutes to Evan’s. Went down into his basement. Six giant heavy duty plastic bins contained thousands of dollars of camping gear, which Evan and his wife had used when they’d gone to Burning Man. That’s from the playa, Evan said, brushing dust off the tent bag. Upstairs, Evan opened his laptop and found an instructional video. Returned home. Popped corn. Watched Westworld finale on phone while son played Fortnite and wife watched whatever show she was watching. Probably a mystery. Probably something British. Told son not to stay up too late. Son said okay. Crawled into bed, where wife was already asleep. Shut eyes. Slept. 



(For more information on the June 21st project, see here; apparently we're still publishing the occasional straggler…)

Rachel Ratner's June 21, 2018

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RACHEL RATNER

June 21, 2018—

I am a summer baby, in the truest sense. I came into this world on June 21st, when the
day is long, and the night is short, and airy, chatty Gemini gives way to sentimental Cancer, and spring turns to summer, brimming with possibility, with wonder, with the enchantment of new smells and sounds: a whiff of sunscreen, a symphony of crickets, a blossoming romance. On June 21st, we’ve not yet accounted for the swampy asses, sandy crotches, and oppressive subway platforms ahead, on June 21 we are still on the cusp of magic.
     On this June 21, I wake up in a Courtyard Marriott in Sunnyvale, California. I can feel that I’m not home, even before I open my eyes; sunlight floods my hotel room in a way it never does back home in Portland, OR. I begin this day like all others: disoriented, reaching for the phone, silencing my alarm before it gets loud enough to be annoying, and autopilot-tapping my way onto the Astrology Zone app, where I read both Gemini and Cancer horoscopes.
     As a June 21 baby, I sit on a zodiac cusp—neither and both. Always the end, and always the beginning. I suspect my first identity crisis (there have been a few) was deciding if I was a Gemini Twin or Cancer Crab. Was I ruled by idea or emotion? I couldn’t decide, so usually, I read both horoscopes and accept whichever is the most exciting or most devastating, depending on my mood. At some point, I learned that astrologers refer to this specific in-between as the Cusp of Magic. One astrologer said this cusp, and those of us born on it, are symbolically likened to age 21, when we approach new experiences with a childlike wonder, when the world is our horizon, and we are enamoured with potential.
     I am nothing if not enamoured with the horizon. This is both a fantastic and terrible quality for an event planner (which I am). I approach my work, and each new event with an anything-is-possible mentality. My enthusiasm is infectious to all, until it’s time to put all those ideas in a spreadsheet and execute the damn thing. It’s hard to hold on to all the promise, when you’re 46 emails deep with a caterer who just doesn’t get your vision for the aperitifs.
     This morning I dress in all black (event day uniform) and head downstairs. When I get off the elevator, I see a few of my event team members waiting for me at a table in the lobby. They begin a sluggish version of “Happy Birthday,” but they are uncaffeinated and peter out before the end.
“Who has the van keys?” Kara, the senior event producer asks us. We all pat down our hips, and asses, and backpacks, until the van’s last driver, Lizette claims ownership from across
 the lobby. She hands the keys to Kyle, this event’s Creative Director. When I first met Kyle, I assumed that he was a San Francisco bro. He’s hip, usually hidden behind a MacBook Air, with just a flat-brimmed colorful hat and half-sleeve peeking out around the screen. But soon I know much more. He is from New Orleans by way of Detroit; an artist, a vegetarian, an Aires. His hands are big, rough, not the hands of someone who sits behind a computer all day. They show the markings of someone who knows how to work.
     “Ready?” Kyle says to me, holding the van keys. He is smiling. He is much more functional in the morning than I am. I feel my eyes widening with enthusiastic consent—they are Disney-princess-like as I follow him outside.
     Four days earlier, I rented that van from the Enterprise next door. When I noticed “pick up rental car and put down credit card” listed under my job duties, I panicked. Before I turned 25, I regarded renting a car as a signifier of true adulthood. If I could rent a car, I was adult enough to do anything. But now, car rentals had come to represent my own developmental delay, my adulting failures. Before they let you rent a car, companies like Enterprise place a large credit hold on your card, and even at times perform on-the-spot credit checks. Although I would be reimbursed for any expenses I incurred, my credit cards were usually maxed, and I was faced with the awkward position of asking my mother to help me make a dent on my Visa balance, so I could drive that van off the lot.
     The first day of the event, I pulled the van up to the Courtyard Marriott, and Kyle, who was still a stranger then, hopped in the passenger side. From the driver’s seat, I felt him watch me slowly inch out of the parking lot and merge into the morning commute. “I hate driving,” I said excusing my nervous merge.
     “Well, obviously.”
     “What does that mean?” I feigned outrage. I knew exactly what he meant.
     “You just don’t look that comfortable cemented to the 10 and 2.” He said he would drive from now on. I could DJ.

“Well, 34!” he says, inching out of that same parking lot on June 21. “Don’t remind me.”
     “Why not?”
     “Well, it’s 34—it’s like the last young year.”
     “How do you figure?”
     “At 35 you can run for president. Constitutionally speaking, that’s grown up.”
     “That’s fair, but for what it’s worth, I don’t think ‘presidential’ and adulthood are still synonymous.”
     “I guess I’ve always considered 34 to be a last chance year—your last chance to fuck up and blame it on youthful indiscretion or call it a learning opportunity.” I intentionally avoided specifics like, at 35 you’re too old to ask your mother to pay off your credit card so you can go to Enterprise.
Kyle changes the subject. Earlier that week we commiserate about recent exes, when mid conversation, he cut himself off, embarrassed: “If I tell you the full story I feel like you’ll think badly of me.”
     “What? No. I love talking about this stuff.”
     “You’re such a gossip,” he teased.
     “I am! Tell me on my birthday. We’ll drink tequila and you can gift this gossip to me.” Before the tequila, and before we even hit our first traffic light, he launches into it. I listen with the same care I would take unwrapping a beautifully wrapped gift—pausing to consider after I remove each layer of paper, anxiously anticipating where it’s going, what I’m uncovering.
     He tells me that over the course of their brief relationship—“we’re talking four months max”— this ex went under the knife three times, for three different plastic surgery procedures.
     “You’re kidding me!” I say. I sound like my mother.
     “No!” he laughs. “Her life and her surgeries are completely funded by her parents,” he adds, not hiding his disgust.
     “Wow,” I say, shifting to hide something he cannot see.
     We talk about authenticity, and the lack of it, how we present ourselves on the dating apps, and when, if ever, you actually know someone. I wonder if under other circumstances we’d swipe right on each other.
     Watching Kyle behind the wheel of the minivan reminded me of a recent episode of The Bachelorette, where contestant Garrett, hoping to make an impression on bachelorette Becca, arrives at the mansion driving a souped-out minivan. He takes her hand, and slides open the door to reveal a backseat full of car seats, sports equipment, and diaper bags. He says it represents the future he is driving towards. I thought Becca was too smart for such a hokey stunt, but she loves it, and watching Kyle drive behind the wheel, I can see the appeal. I doubt either of us will ever be in the market for a minivan, but I like playing this version of grown up with him—trying on a life, where together, we endure the morning commute, stop at the adjacent shopping center for iced coffees, discuss what we have in store for the day, me DJing, him driving, indulging my preference for Lite FM: Easy Morning Listening.
     It’s not yet 7am when we arrive at the event center. The catering staff is setting out breakfast when my roommate, Meredith FaceTimes me with birthday wishes. I sneak out of the event production office, and en route to a quiet place to chat, give her a virtual tour of the space. “Look at this pool!” I say, holding the phone to the floor-to-ceiling windows that overlook the an Olympic size swimming pool in the middle of the campus. A few Googlers are swimming laps, some are tanning on surrounding lounge chairs.
     The first day of the event, after I got lost in a maze of on-campus cafes, nap rooms, and cute picnic spaces full of vibrant young people, I stood in front of the same windows and looked out on what felt like another world. Kyle stood next to me, and silently we watched a handful of Googlers breast stoke across the pool. “Where did I go wrong?” I asked him. “Why am I not working here? Why is this not my office view?” I was (mostly) kidding, enduring parallel silence was not? one of my skills.
     “You don’t want this,” he said. “You would be miserable.” He spoke with the authority of someone who knew me—someone who knew that despite the shiny perks (sunny views, massage chairs, snack rooms), such a workplace would suffocate my creativity, my sense of wonder, my enthusiasm for what could be. And though we only just met, I knew Kyle wouldn’t want this either. Kyle was unlike most other ‘event’ people I encounter. I mean, he’s a straight guy—we don’t get a lot of that in these parts—but specifically, there is an openness about him. He is not interested dictating from a clipboard or a creative brief; he is present, he is sharing the experience with you. Kyle is a painter, and when he is not working on an event, he is traveling, learning, creating—animation school in Paris, Spanish classes in Mexico City, buying property in New Orleans, and dreaming of what it can be—always adding more color to his pallet.
     After my birthday FaceTime with Meredith, some of the event team is tasked with jimmy-rigging 50 pieces of scrap cardboard into 25 science fair trifolds. I am the first to volunteer. “I love a craft project!” I say sincerely. A few others join me; we have one hour to finish before the attendees arrive, and we need to go, go, go. It feels like we’re on HGTV. Both Kara and Kyle insist that the birthday girl curate a playlist for the project. I tell them they’ll regret it. The craft supplies are out, the walkie talkies synched up, I am sweating from running trifolds around the event space, and the co-working banter is definitely reality TV-worthy, when Billy Joel’s “The Longest Time” plays from my phone.
     “Oh goodie, another Billy Joel song,” someone says. I laugh, and tell them that as a Long Islander, Billy Joel music is the soundtrack of my life. I don’t tell her just how right this song is for this moment, when I don’t feel like I’m at work, or Google HQ, or a country club, but rather I feel like I’m summer camp, which has always been my space. It’s where strangers instantly become friends, life plans are dreamed up, new skills are mastered, and inspiration is always present. And like the song says, I haven’t been here in the longest time.
     My phone rings, and interrupts the Billy. Kyle glances at the screen, “Fran’s calling,” he says. “Again.” It’s very important to my mother, Fran, that she connect with me on my birthday. It was barely 11am, and I sent four of her calls to voicemail. Since we were just about finished, I answer.
“Happy birthday, Ray!” she yells. “How’s my summer baby?” I tell her I am good. I mean it—so much so, that I feel a little buzzed when I say it. “Really?” she says, and then after a thoughtful pause adds: “That makes me so happy!” She is genuinely surprised.
     For as often and enthusiastically as this summer baby falls in love with the horizon, I have a hard time holding onto all that is good, and all that is possible during a setback. It’s challenging to have a summer camp mentality when you’re knee-deep in finals week. The setbacks really do set me back, and during my 33rd year the setbacks hit hard.
     In November, my lifelong best friend died of lung cancer. We knew each other since utero, and were born three days apart. She, the first day, me, the last day of the Cusp of Magic. I spent most of the year collapsed into the couch, not working, usually drugged, void of any enthusiasm, or sense of possibility. I’ve always had a laissez-faire attitude towards adulting, but over the last year, would laundry cover the floor for months, accounts were overdrawn, work nonexistent, sobriety optional, showering not required. It was like being 21 again, in all the worst possible ways. My mother would call to ask ‘how are you?’ and like a parent of a toddler who has just stumbled, she would hold her breath for my answer, suspending her reaction until I’d either jump up to shake it off, or I’d decide I was too hurt to stand. For most of 33, I couldn’t stand. I couldn’t see beyond my own grief.
     My roommate, Meredith would whiteboard my accomplishments, exciting action steps, and all the great things in the works—there was so much to look forward to, she’d say. And I would feel positive for a matter of time, a moment, an afternoon, but then 3, 2, 1, poof! Like the sneeze or orgasm that slips away, the good feeling would disappear. When winter turned spring things started to improve for me, good feeling stayed around for a while, possibility bloomed again, but no one, myself included, thought I’d get through this week unscathed. How could I celebrate my birthday, when hers never came to be?
     “Do they know it’s your birthday?” my mother asks. They did. I slipped it in earlier that week, when we were all sitting in the production office, and someone mentioned the summer solstice. “Which is also my birthday!” I said, like I couldn’t contain it anymore. Kyle looked up from across the board room table, mischief on his face.
     “Ooooh,” he said. “I’m gonna ice you so bad!” I had no idea what he was talking about. “You’re gonna what?” I said.
     “Ice you!”
     “Like, you’re gonna separate me from my parents at the border, or...?”
     “No!” he stifled a politically incorrect giggle. He wouldn’t tell me what it meant, so I made an intern explain. Apparently, I already aged out of viral drinking trends.
     After I hang up the phone with my mother, and the science fair trifolds are set out, and we eat lunch, and white board our loadout plan, I hear rumblings outside the production office, and then, an eruption of “Happy birthday.” Kyle walks in, holding the cake, Lizette behind him with red, green, blue, and yellow balloons—very thematic for a Google birthday party.
     “Make the first cut,” Kyle says placing the cake in front of me. My face is burning red, part embarrassment, part joy. I cut into the cake, but the knife won’t pass through. It hits something hard and glassy. Kyle attentively watches; his eyes are wide, Disney-like.
     “Oh my god!” I say. I realize what it is. “Oh my god, oh my god!” I say again and again, uncovering the blocking object. Kyle films my reaction. I am laughing so hard that I keel over. Off-camera he asks what I found. “Smirnoff Ice,” I say, cutting around the cake to reveal the neck of a bottle sitting between layers of buttercream. This, as I learned from that event intern, is getting iced. It’s a drinking game prank, in which one person hides a warm bottle of Smirnoff Ice (you know, the sugary shit you drank in high school, college if you were a late bloomer) and when the prankee uncovers the bottle, they must take a knee, and chug it all at once. Everyone in the production office returns to their task at hand, but Kyle is still recording me. We both can’t stop laughing.
     That evening, after we clear the event space, and before we leave Google, Kyle hands me the bottle of Smirnoff. “It’s time,” he says. The team gathers round me, Lizette ties the balloons to my wrist, I take a knee, and chug. To be honest, I don’t really understand this prank, but it doesn’t matter. Like the sorority girl I once was, I chug quickly, jump up, and throw my arms into the air. Victory. The team cheers.
     After dinner in downtown Sunnyvale, we return to the lobby of The Courtyard Marriott, beers in tow. We take turns telling life stories, and praising each other for a great event, a great week; we all acknowledge that our team chemistry is magical. We say we felt it from the first night of this project, when our entire team went out for Chinese food, and clicked. That was the first of many meals that Kyle and I would share side-by-side, eating eggplant and tofu off each others plate. I knew then, with that group, the week would be fine. Great, even. I felt excited and inspired for the first time in ages. At the end of that dinner, we cracked open our fortunes, and went round the table reading them aloud. Next to me, Kyle read his: “The one you will love is closer than you think.” I couldn’t believe it. Later that night I texted my friends: “Get ready to hear about an amazing meet-cute!” and fell asleep dreaming about his fortune, and all the promise it held.
     I sit next to Kyle in the lobby of the Courtyard Marriott, and I allow myself to wonder what will happen when we say goodnight? What will be when we board our planes the next morning, and return to our respective parts of the country. For the first time all week, I feel a twinge of a sadness. I don’t want him to slip away. I don’t want to lose this feeling.
     It is getting late. We can all feel it. “What time is it?” someone asks.
     “11:58,” Lizette says.
     “Oh! My birthday is almost over.” I convince everyone to stay with me for the next two
minutes— “I want to count it down. New Year’s style!”
     “I’m pretty sure that’s not the way it works,” Kara says. “You’re not on the brink of anything this midnight.” But the beers are gone, and they indulge me. We count together: 10, 9, 8, we are yelling, 7, 6, 5, guest reception shoots us a look, 3, 2, 1, as if by magic, gone.

—Rachel Ratner

Rachel Ratner is a nonfiction writer with an MFA from Oregon State University. She has written for the Oregon Stater, Portland Monthly, and participated in live storytelling events like BackFence PDX.





(For more information on the June 21st project, see here; apparently we're still publishing the occasional straggler…)

Rukmini Girish: On Not Understanding

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I began reading Jenny Boully’s Betwixt-and-Between on a bus. I stopped after the first half of the first sentence of the first essay. I wanted to return to the beginning of the preface and arrive at this point again. I stopped myself. I feared getting stuck in a loop, because it is possible to read this first half of a first sentence again, and again, and again, and never read anything else. “In the writing life, an occasional glance sometimes out of windows where clouds scuttle and the sky is autumn blue, but somehow one is not a part of it,” Boully writes, followed by a semicolon.
     Place a comma before “sometimes,” or place one before and after, and the sentence becomes familiar. Read it aloud the way it is and you will trail off into slightly breathless uncertainty. Or, perhaps, dreaming. Boully often writes about dreams; the essay which begins with this fraction is, in fact, about tenses, and dreaming, and daydreaming, and the ways in which we meld our pasts, presents, and futures. That “sometimes” blows us straight into the dream state. There is no subject, unless it is the writing life (even the “one” which peeks in timidly is banished as “not a part of it”). There is only a state where things are at once terribly clear (I remember the times when I too have looked up from my desk to the sliver of sky I can see between tall buildings and felt a sense of wonder because the world outside the window is so far away) and terrifyingly vague (I feel, by the time I reach that semicolon, as if I am about to float away).
     And then there is another half sentence to read.

I like to watch the steam curling in fantastic spirals from a freshly-brewed cup of tea. It always takes me a few seconds to enter a state where I can simply follow the movement, without attempting to hold onto one tendril before it curls into nothingness. And yet, if I was a speck of dust, small enough to be caught up in a coil of steam without seeing its end, perhaps I would finally have something with which to compare reading Boully’s sentences. There is an engulfing sincerity to them; it seems not that she believes what she is saying, but rather that there is no other way to experience the world. The second half of that remarkable first sentence describes a glance into a mirror. A few sentences later, Boully writes, “I refuse to see that the mirror too is glass, a window, a glass with a thin sheet on which I am written, a sheet that keeps the inside in. To be a part of it is to be apart from it.” A window becomes a mirror thanks to the thin sheet of reflective metal coating the back. That sheet reflects rays of light, creating the world within. To be written on that sheet, one must be apart from it. Boully’s “refusal” to see the connections only strengthens them; writing, mirrors and (a)part-ness exist, not in the often hierarchical relationship of metaphor, but simultaneously. The sheet is literal and figurative, the coconut on a German chocolate cake is “a million anemones,” the letter X is a deletion and various former lovers, and I do not question any of it.
     I am fascinated by the way Boully views the world, but it is the movement of her sentences that really draws me in, their unexpected curvatures, the ways in which they loop back on themselves without getting stuck. One of the most remarkable is yet another beginning, this time of an essay titled “The Art of Fiction”:
When I first met Butch, he was counting spiders on his ceiling, which he said wasn’t the ceiling but rather a metaphor for sky, which itself wasn’t a sky at all either but rather a metaphor for something else, and so it happened that I fell quite madly in love with Butch; however, Butch never really happened either, or maybe he did, but his name was something other than Butch, and the manner in which we’d made the other’s acquaintance didn’t happen with such significance—but the way I am telling it makes it no different from the telling which occurs quite truthfully under the guise of fiction, which means, if it’s truly true fiction, which is to say, if it is true, then it really is fiction, and everything else is a failed mimicry.
I smile each time I read this sentence. A ceiling expands to a sky, a sky expands to something else, and then the sentence doubles back to doubt a fundamental assumption of its beginning. It retraces its path through a different lens (that of the telling) and then, in a glorious hailstorm of truth and fiction, transports us to a place I still cannot see from the beginning. The sentence dissolves each time I try to grasp it, but if I surrender to the curving, I find something unexpected on each journey.

I showed a friend that fraction of a sentence about the writing life and the autumn blue sky. She told me it reminded her of the Penrose stairs, a staircase that makes four ninety-degree turns, forming a continuous loop so that a person could climb it forever. But no one will do so, for the Penrose stairs can only exist in the mind and on the page. Stairs, in waking life, must arrive somewhere. I should have remembered that Boully’s texts rarely do the same. A couple of years ago, I tried to track the movement of ghosts and writing and Boully’s family in Thailand in “Too Many Spirits Who Begged to be Let In,” but gave up after three pages. There is too much contained, for example, in these two sentences: “I can’t think of only nothing. My mind wants to think in terms of white: white curtains, white bedding, a white wedding dress, a white handkerchief, a blank sheet of white paper, a dizzy, smoky memory, a few stars shimmering, snow on the T, a white dusting covering everything.” Why does your mind move from this object to this, I wanted to ask. But tracking and glossing and all those other techniques I learned are supposed to provide answers.
     You see, a large part of my education has been in the art of controlling texts. Understanding them. Separating useful information from flourishes of style. Parsing what, exactly, stylistic flourishes are doing to aid the intentions of the text. I was used to reading through. Even if I happened upon some twist of logic or phrasing unexpected enough to warrant a second look (the movement from a handkerchief to a sheet of paper, for instance), I was always aware that I was only interrupting, briefly, a familiar movement. If I happened upon a text that moved nonlinearly, I learned to find its rules and articulate them. I failed, spectacularly, to do so with “Too Many Spirits Who Begged to be Let In.” I feel no desire to try with Betwixt-and-Between. Perhaps my first sustained experience of Boully’s writing has taught me that there is no logic to dreams. The longer I spend in this text, the more clearly I see that it does not behave like any other. It does not behave at all. Though the essay is often a meandering, a tracing of thought, this text does something more. Like a dream, it remains mutable, almost unbearably real when I am part of it, resurfacing most unexpectedly—when I look in the mirror, when I am negotiating traffic, when I look at another person—when I am not.
     This is beginning to frighten me, for it is destroying my many notions about the nature of reading. I read it. I and it are both static (in the physical world, at least). I choose when to bring an end to reading, or so I thought. The action moves in one direction, or so I thought. But it contains an i, and perhaps this is the truest thing I have said about this more-than-reading that Boully reveals. Reading describes an action. And yet I am not acting on Boully’s text; nor is it acting on me. It simply makes manifest a state of confusion without chaos, uncertainty without tentativeness, into which I am drawn almost imperceptibly. I can never see a route through Boully’s texts. Even “The Poet’s Education,” perhaps the most straightforward essay in Betwixt-and-Between, moves through the second, third and fourth grades, then circles back to second before moving on to fifth. The connotations of tutoring and killing change. But, as always, I follow this turning.
     The wonder of the Penrose stairs is that their looping cannot exist; the wonder of Boully’s text is that it does.

When I read The Stranger for the first time, I knew I was in the presence of something beyond my understanding. The Handmaid’s Tale made me wonder at what is possible in fiction. But I had never felt a book changing the way I think, changing my assumptions about something as fundamental as the act of reading, as I read it.
     So as the pages in my right hand dwindled, I grew anxious. I set the book down. I glanced at it guiltily for days. The thought of a return to mundanity turned the sky gray. Of course, Boully has words for this too: “The used one envies the new one: the new one has yet to come into the rite of her first opening, unveiling; the used one admits then to pitying herself and her lovers one thing: that the book is not being read in its original: meaning, it would be lovely to live serially, to await patiently the next chapter instead of acquiring a book completely bound, its ending already fully dressed and departing before the completion of the love act.” Boully uses the metaphor of the love act, but I imagined reading Betwixt-and-Between a second time more like climbing the Penrose stairs. Though this movement exists in the mind, it would be a novelty only at first; soon, it would become regular, up and down ad infinitum.
     I wanted to find the appropriate time to finish off the book, to leave behind that state of wonder. But then I had ten minutes before I had to leave for work, the day was so beautiful that the sky was blue, and I seized it. It felt right to depart almost before the completion.
     So I read the last essay and then climbed onto my bike and jolted over potholes with the wind in my face. Now, I understand that this was vital. If I had grieved the end of the book, I would have wept at the sight of the more-than-reading state receding into the distance, not realizing that I was the one pushing it away into memory. But the potholes reminded me of the earth and the wind reminded me of resisting gravity, and I realized, as I stopped and started, that though there is no more steam when a first cup of tea has been drunk, the steam from a second cup curves no more predictably than the first.

What does reading become when it is no longer an action?
     “Poetry is an instant,” Boully writes. “It is an instant in which transcendence is achieved, where a miracle occurs, and knowledge, experience, and memory are obliterated and transformed into awe. The instant passes quickly, so quickly, and then you are just your regular self again.”
     Reading Boully as extended poetry.
     I like this description. I have been resisting the use of the word sublime for all its religious implications. Boully does not set her writing up to be worshipped; I imagine she would be profoundly uncomfortable at the idea. And yet, the experience is undeniably transcendent. I find myself pausing to take deep breaths when I read Betwixt-and-Between, feeling my ribs expand as I look up from the page for a moment simply to reassure myself that knowledge, experience, and memory still exist in some far-distant realm. I do not know whether I stop breathing, or whether my breathing only slows to the bare minimum necessary to keep me alive.  Perhaps it is fitting that I can only describe reading Boully in Boully’s own words.
     But I have not yet returned to being my regular self.

When I read Boully’s interpretation of orgasm as “marginalia I couldn’t help but have,” I think of the only other time a text caused me to wonder at its very existence. As the old year died, I lay on my stomach in my grandparents’ house in Mysore, reading Toni Nealie’s The Miles Between Me, a collection of essays about motherhood, migration and the complexities of heritage after colonialism. I had just realized that my cousin and his wife were moving to Australia. I was thinking about the fracturing of families, mine in particular, and what it would mean when I could not categorize us as simply as those-who-left (or those-who-are-apart) and those-who-stayed (or those-who-are-together). Nealie quotes her fellow countrywoman, Katherine Mansfield, who advises, “Do the hardest thing on earth for you. Act for yourself. Face the truth.” Nealie responds, “How can we know what is hard until we are in the pain of it? And once there, how do we confront the truth?” I stopped reading, stared, rolled out of bed, rummaged through my backpack for a pencil, got back into bed, stared again, then underlined the sentence for fear that it would vanish. I read it once more.
     There is something unexpected about the journey from “hard” to “pain.” We have all been told that what is worthwhile is usually hard, and many other variations on the same theme. But the word “pain” makes the hardness physical, evoking bruises and scraped knuckles and throbbing muscles. And when one is in pain, it is harder to arrive at the clearheadedness I imagine is necessary to confront something so vast as the truth. Nealie’s extra twist of reasoning led me down a path I might never have noticed in the first place. I had to move; I had to commemorate it. I couldn’t help myself.
     So when I got home from work the night I finished the last essay in Betwixt-and-Between, I sat down with the book in one hand, pencil in the other, and opened to the preface. I underlined three words in the first paragraph: strives. serves. It.
     I laid down the pencil.
     The difference between reading Nealie and reading Boully is in the length of wonder. I underlined other sentences throughout The Miles Between Me, each one a paradox or a contradiction or an articulation of something I have never managed to say. When I return to the book, and to those sentences, I will pause, again, to admire all that they contain. But I can either underline all of Betwixt-and-Between or I can underline none of it. The commemoration is in the reading. The reading is, perhaps, poetry. The poetry is neverending.
     So all I can say, all I can leave you with, is a desire to be a part of it. Read Boully. Read Nealie too. And let’s talk about it.

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Rukmini Girish usually writes about theater, performance, identity and the intersections between those topics. She received an MFA in nonfiction from Columbia College Chicago and was selected as a Luminarts Creative Writing Fellow for 2018. Her work has appeared in Punctuate: A Nonfiction Magazine, East End Elements, and BUST.com.

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