Dear Sharon,
I’m writing an open letter to you
because that seems to be the thing to do these days and since we broke up, I
haven’t had a single, fresh idea of my own. In fact, I can’t even find proper writing
tools in this snowglobe of a house I live in, which explains why I’m scribbling
this letter on the back of a Wild Things color
sheet from the library in pink marker.
That is how bad things have
gotten between us. So let’s talk.
(Come closer!)
Oh, you have somewhere to be?
I get it.
I see you out there, speeding
through the woods across the street, blowing your pouty whistle to rub in my
face that you are moving forward...without me.
Tracking
down the muse: Of course,
the morning I go out to find her, Sharon is nowhere to be found. |
I hear you right this instant—the
whole neighborhood hears you too, by the way—whining about how I’m not doing my
part to woo you, that I’ve been distracted by a four-month long Good Wife binge
and what the world is doing on Facebook and untouched stacks of overdue library
books.
(In my defense, I’ve read all the
picture books, several times, at least. I read Oliver Jeffers’ It Wasn’t Me maybe 92 times this month
alone. And I gave The Goldfinch a
shot but it was so heavy my arms hurt by page 20 and there weren’t any
pictures.)
You say you feel neglected, but
the truth is: I don’t know how to woo 240 tons of iron and steel. I miss the
version of you that climbed up onto my lap and purred wild word after word into
my ear. Now, I strain to even hear you ramming your cars into each other at odd
hours, drowned out by the sound of Mahna-Mahna
on repeat and four people hollering that they have no clean
underpants.
A friend e-mailed the other day
to let me know about a free two-hour Scrivener workshop I might be interested
in.
Which I would have been, I told
him, except I don’t write anymore, and haven’t since you crawled out the door
dragging half of my brain with you in search of a clear route west...all
because YOU wanted to see what the moon looked like over the Grand Canyon and I
wouldn’t drive you.
I guess it’s not entirely true,
that I don’t write. I tweet, although I get scared and delete them before
people comment. I write Facebook rants about ridiculous tools I need but don’t
have, and notes for my kiddos’ lunchbox napkins when I remember. I can manage a
decent obituary and the occasional newspaper article, but that doesn’t cover the bills.
Our projects? The ones you and I
loved like children, that we named and hugged and whispered to and envisioned
in glossy Pantone colors with double-fan adhesive binding before sending off to
yet another not-the-right-agent?
I haven’t seen them in months.
If we wait a bit longer, “months”
changes to “a year.”
They cry for us, sometimes.
(Doesn’t that just break your heart? Do you even have a heart?) We left so many
of them dangling on the edges of various cliffs and ravines. They deserved a
chance to reach The End, but you needed your own adventure, and I was too tired
to drive to Arizona.
I’m sorry. Let’s stop blaming
each other. I’ve changed, or at least I am trying: I only watch TV when I fold
laundry now; I switched my Facebook password to something so complicated I
couldn’t remember it if I were a World Memory Champion; I am reading longer
books again, or at least, I will be once I return that stack in the corner to
the library.
Just come back inside. My lap is
empty, and I’m allergic to cats.
*
Jennifer Mazi is a 2011 graduate of the MFAC program. She lives in Missouri.
This was hilarious! Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteWell thanks for reading it! I will let you know if it works....
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteLove this! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the thank you!
Delete(and for spreading it around. Almost makes me want to write some more....)
Jen, you will always be a writer, with or without Sharon.
ReplyDeleteAgreed.
DeleteAwww, you GUYS...
Delete