| The Comma |
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Last weekend, I had the pleasure of attending the 2nd annual Juniper
Creek Writers Conference in Carson City with Chris Bernard, comrade and
co-editor at Caveat Lector. More on the
actual conference in future entries -- it deserves to be spread out over a few
posts. Today, on a more personal note, I'm preoccupied with traveling, chance
meetings, destinations modest yet surprising.
I'm a better person when I travel -- of that I have no doubt. Annoyances that
set my blood boiling on an everyday basis -- traffic jams, erratic weather,
finding myself lost on unknown, crowded avenues -- gain romance and significance
when I'm away from home. The phrase "with a full heart" is oft-overused, but
it seems entirely appropos when I'm on the road, as I attain a state of hyper-awareness,
receptive and happy to accept everything. The unexpected pleasure of stumbling
upon a location or a moment, the sunlight captured just so, or a snatch of random
music from a passing car or reverberating from within a bar, exchanged talk
among passersby, whether it's a familiar or foreign tongue -- it's during these
collisions of happenstance that I feel most alive, down to the atom. And yet,
these moments always have a bittersweet quality for me -- I know that soon I
will depart, unknown date of return, and within a day or so, I'll be back to
my usual addled existence here in San Francisco, oblivious to the same little
joys I hoard during my travels. Am I spoiled? Lazy? Immature? Maybe.
I have an obsession for settings -- in my writing, in my life. Some have accused
me, with good reason, of being more interested in places than people. People
vacillate, promise something one moment and flake the next, or they simply outgrow
you, and vice versa. But places are more glacial and constant. Some of the most
moving moments I've experienced have come when I revisit an old vista, or note
the disappearance of a familiar landmark or building. While we humans bustle
and dissipate and scatter energy into the ether, the streets and cafes, the
hotel rooms with their particular scents, the hills that roll away into mist
and smog, all do their best to anchor us, fight the good fight against entropy.
Sometimes a synchronicity occurs, where all the senses plus memory plus the
present seem to merge, a specific spot, something overheard, a smell, it all
comes together, with the presence of an actual human to top it off. Such is
what happened to me in Carson City.
Carson City shows signs of the suburbanization that threatens to calcify our
nation -- you have your malls, the Safeways and gas stations, the vast aisles
of car dealerships -- but the downtown preserves the charm of some of the old
architecture, mostly in the government structures (as I thought as I ambled
past the Nevada State Attorney's office: "That must be the easiest job in the
country").
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And so there I was, smack dab in the Nevada desert, a bit tired, ultrasensitive to the environment after an abbreviated night of sleep, but this woman at the counter affected me. 70s soft rock was playing on the sound system, I made the pretense of reading the newspaper and checking out local real estate prices (as is my habit no matter where I travel -- some people collect keychains or postcards, but I collect real estate catalogs), and I couldn't help glancing at her behind that counter, her head now resting at an angle on her folded arms, recalling the bored storekeepers of childhood stories. If I were a different person, I'd sidle up to her, engage her in conversation, maybe even risk giving her my business card. Or if I were really different, I could have tried the line: I'm an indie filmmaker, would you be interested in being in a movie? Or further: a date to meet later that day, after the conference? Nothing but honorable intentions, a dinner, maybe walking down those streets, so beaten and bright during the day but soothing and intimate at night, with those cool breezes, the sounds of the street bands piping in like birdcalls. Conversation, sharing histories, dreams, even commonalities, if I could be so bold to believe. And what would come of it all? Maybe a connection, maybe an agreement to meet again someday, here in Carson City or over in San Francisco, and then --
But as it often does, something between resignation and cynicism took hold: No point, she lives here, you live there, and even if what you're imagining is fact, and she's not merely being nice just to be nice (as Vernon Silver, one-time executive editor of the Brown Daily Herald, said to me once, "Just because someone is nice doesn't mean that they're actually nice"), then what? Different worlds.
All this crossed my mind in a manner of seconds, and the remaining time in the cafe was a big feedback loop, deliberations colliding with temperance, fantasies splashed on with cold water. As Annie Savoy once said, the world is made for people who aren't cursed with self-awareness. The time came to leave, and as Chris and I walked out, she called out to us, "Thanks a lot guys, have a great day." I turned as I said thanks, just half-turned, looking at her through the corner of my eye, and I could have sworn she was looking at Chris, or maybe she smiling at something just beyond both of us, outside the door, out there in the city. It was a look that shouldn't have had anything of import assigned to it, but somehow it made my heart ache. If I had the wherewithal or foresight, I would have had my camera with me, and taken a few shots of the cafe, of her. But instead I sit here in this blessedly cool San Francisco evening, reflecting on something that didn't happen, the memory already fading into the netherworld between reality and augmented fantasy, and no doubt many would say I'm taking the easy way out, making hay of pain and failure, but this is my therapy, and it's cheap. So here's to you, the women of Comma Coffee. May all your days be as redolent of dreams and alternative lives, and bittersweet as that Saturday morning was for me.