Friday, April 28, 2017

The First 600 Words

       
 


             I’ve never seen a train run through town. I’ve never heard the distant whistle of a locomotive or the roaring thunder of boxcars being dragged behind. For the longest time the tracks sat alone, forgotten, except for us kids who would play around them, walking on the steel strips, one foot after the other, seeing who could keep their balance the longest. Then the men from the railroad showed up with their machines and stripped the heavy lengths from their ties and trucked them to the scrap yard. The price of steel was just too high, they said, to let them sit there, doing nothing. Soon enough the ties disappeared too, one by one, stolen by scavengers, torn from the ground and used for who knows what. Now all that remains is the old-timers’ memories of the Western Atlantic Railroad and a narrow embankment that runs through the heart of town.
            I skipped school today. I skip school almost every Friday, but this Friday in particular, I wouldn’t be caught dead inside those brick walls. It’s Homecoming weekend. You know, that once-a-year celebration when everyone parades through the halls like they give two shits about the school, as if they take some sort of pride in being a Maple Lake Indian. They paint their faces. They dress in the school colors. And at the end of the day there’s a giant pep rally in the gym, where all the members of the football team are treated like heroes, called down to the floor one by one, their arms high in the air, grunting and yelling and giving each other high-fives as if they just won the National Championship or something. And the rest of the school cheers them on, ignoring the fact that they haven’t won a game in years. And what’s even worse is that the rest of the student athletes go along with the whole charade, sitting in the bleachers, cheering them on, without receiving a single bit of recognition themselves. I sat through that garbage three years in a row. I won’t do it again.
            So I slept in this morning. Then I drove about an hour, out into the country to have lunch at an old diner that serves their drinks out of mason jars. They claim to be the first place ever to do that, but I don’t know if that’s true or just something they advertise. It must work, because their food is lousy but the place is always crowded. I just need an excuse to get out of town every once in a while and I find a long drive out that way is much more relaxing than heading the other direction, towards the suburbs and the city.
After lunch I headed back here, not too far behind the school, close enough in fact that I can just make out the building, sitting in the distance like a piece from a board game. I come here to collect the railroad spikes that lay scattered off the sides of the embankment. I sell them to a local antique shop for five dollars a dozen. They turn around and sell them for two dollars apiece. It’s not a very effective way to make money, but it sure beats sitting in school. Plus I like the walk. I like to think that when the wind blows, it’s the ghost of an ancient train.
            “Hey! You! Don’t move!” A deep voice booms from over my shoulder. “You’re trespassing on government property. Drop the spikes and put your hands in the air.”


The Last Indians is currently available at         https://www.createspace.com/7026283






Friday, April 21, 2017

Just Perfect




I need every line to be just perfect
And I've already gone and fucked it up






























































Friday, April 14, 2017

Moonlighting


One would think that a college statistics professor would be good at gambling. And that was precisely what Professor Cory Roberts believed. It was just numbers. And the ability to find patterns in those numbers. How hard could it be?

Two-hundred thousand dollars hard, as it turned out. It began as a harmless hobby. A ballgame here. A horserace there. But before he knew it, Cory was betting on everything. The presidential election. The coin toss at the AFC Championship.

It was the Super Bowl that really did him in. Seriously. How does a team blow a twenty-five point lead in the third quarter? It was obviously rigged. It had to be. And that son-of-a-bitch Brady. He considered hunting him down. Cutting off his throwing hand. Isn’t that what gangsters did. But who was he kidding? He was no gangster. Hell, Brady would probably kick his ass.

And then there was Adele. Sure, her album sold a gazillion copies and produced five chart topping singles. But Beyonce’s album had meaning. The kind of thing Grammy voters would eat up. And at 2-1 odds, he would break even. Back to zero. No harm, no foul.

Now his house was gone. Along with his car, his wife, and his kids. But he had a plan. A plan that would fix everything. His cousin worked for PricewaterhouseCoopers. He had inside info on the Oscars. He only needed to bet it all on the Best Picture winner and he would be set. But there was just one problem. He had no money left to bet.

Vegas. That was the answer. There were people in Vegas who would loan you money. He saw it on a reality TV show, so it had to be true. So he flew there a week before the awards ceremony and began asking around. It took him a few days, but by Friday he found his guy. A high-roller who never stopped smiling. A few stiff drinks and they had a deal.

A two-hundred thousand dollar loan with twenty-five percent interest. Only a sucker would agree to that. But he could afford to be sucker this time. Because he couldn’t lose. His winning film was a 5-1 underdog. By Monday, his two-hundred thousand dollar wager would be worth a million. The fifty-thousand dollars in interest would be chump change.

He headed to Caesar’s Palace to make his bet. On his way to the lobby he was hassled by a homeless man. A filthy bum that smelled of booze. No! he didn’t have any change to spare. Get a job! Take a shower! Kill yourself! I don’t care!

He placed his bet and then booked a room on the highest floor. It was expensive but that didn’t matter. In a few hours he would be rich. With his ticket in hand, he took the elevator to his room and ordered a bottle of bourbon. Might as well start celebrating.

The show dragged on forever. It always does. Who the hell cares about art direction anyway? By the time Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway took the stage, the bottle of bourbon was empty. And the winner is…Why is he pausing? This isn’t funny Warren! This isn’t the time to joke around! Faye grabbed the envelope. Good old, beautiful Faye. And the winner is La La Land.

The bourbon bottle went through the TV screen. How could this happen? How could his own cousin throw him under the bus? When you borrow two-hundred grand from a loan shark and don’t pay him back, they don’t just kill you. They torture you. He saw it once on a reality TV show, so it had to be true.

With his ticket in hand, Professor Cory Roberts walked out onto the balcony of his hotel room. On the highest floor of Caesar’s Palace. Not a cloud in sight. The moon lit up the sky. Wasn’t that fitting?

The bum heard the sound before he saw the body. And the blood. He stumbled over to the stiff. What was that in its hand? A ticket. A ticket that said Moonlight. He slid the piece of paper from the corpse’s fingers. I suppose he won’t be needing this…




Friday, April 7, 2017

The Vanity of Victory: Thoughts on Competition

Image result for trail running

           This Sunday I will attempt to run 40 miles. I use the word “attempt” because I’m not sure if I’m going to succeed. But I’m sure as hell going to try. I mean, it’s really just one step in front of another for an extended period of time. It’s technically a race, but I won’t be racing. I’m just there to finish, to prove to myself that I can do it. Then why not just go run 40 miles, you might be thinking, why pay to enter a competition? I suppose I could, but I really like the aid stations (I won’t have to carry my own water or food); and the idea that if something does go wrong, somebody will come looking for me. When you get into the big miles, that’s what you’re really paying for. But why even do it in the first place? I mean, who in their right mind would even consider running forty consecutive miles? I’ve been asking myself that same question lately, and I suppose that’s why I’m writing this essay to begin with: to find the answer.
           I’ve always been a competitive person. I’m pretty sure I was born that way. Sometimes I wonder if it’s a curse. I truly envy people who are content with simply engaging in an activity without caring about the outcome. Myself, I want to win. And I want to win badly. I don’t know why. I’m not sure any competitive person really does. It’s just something engrained in our psyche. And it can certainly have its benefits. But unfortunately, for the vast majority of us, there will always be much more heartbreak than triumph. As I grow older (and wiser?) I’ve begun to think more about my life as a competitor and whether there is a way to find comfort in a contest without the desire to win.  
            I can’t really remember a time in my life when I haven’t felt the need to compete. As a young child, I played baseball. In middle school and high school, I was on the wrestling team. In college, and for a few years after, I played rugby. I remember my last game—I said I was done competing for good. After twenty years of organized sports, I had had enough. I bought a bicycle and rode it from New York to Oregon, hoping that the journey would somehow destroy whatever gene in my body that was causing this urge to compete. But it wasn’t long before I was settled into Oregon that I started competing again. This time it was bicycle racing, and “obsessed” would be a fair word to describe my approach to the sport. But after several years of competing, I eventually realized that I was nowhere near the head of the pack. And never would be. There’s nothing worse for a competitor than to admit that you just don’t have what it takes to win.
            I slowly faded bicycle racing out of my life and returned to one of my earliest loves—running. Which brings us to October of 2016. It was my birthday and I was competing in a 10k. I wanted to win badly. I had never won a 10k before and thought it would be a nice birthday present to myself. So I ran hard. Too hard. I thought someone was nipping at my heels during the finish and ran the last mile faster than I had ever run a mile before. I was the first across the finish line, but I injured myself in the process. My back went out and I would be out of commission for about a month afterwards. The first two weeks it was a struggle just to move. And all I could think was: Why? Why did I need to win that stupid race so badly? What was I trying to prove and to who? Nobody would have cared if I took second, or third, or even if I came in last. What was the point?
             I still don’t have a definitive answer. I’m sure it has something to do with evolution and that whole “survival of the fittest” bullshit. But I do know that I need to lose this ultracompetitive trait before I do something really stupid. Before I injure myself beyond repair. And so, I’ve started running really long distances. I still like the idea of competing, but I also like knowing that I won’t ever win. At least not on the results page. At this point in my life, winning is simply finishing. This weekend it’s forty miles. Later this summer, I hope to make it fifty, and then sixty by the end of the year. I’m not concerned with what place I finish, or my time, or my pace. I just want to run further than I’ve ever run before. I suppose it’s really just a different way of competing, but at least now I’m only competing with myself. I really like the idea of that, because after all, it’s just one foot in front of the other for an extended period of time.    


    

Friday, March 31, 2017

To Climb a Tree



A better look at the sky I’d like to see
So I’ve decided to climb a tree
And I’ve decided not to stop
Not to stop until the very top
So I shimmy up a trunk so wide
That inside a bear could surely hide
And grab the first branch that I see
The lowest branch on this tree
I pull myself up to the second one
Now I’m getting closer to the sun
And like climbing a ladder, up I go
Oh looky there! There’s a crow
Branch after branch, I hold on tight
So that’s what happened to my old kite
Holy cow! Now am I up high
Higher than some birds might even fly
Two more branches and I’m almost there
Almost there, so high up in the air
I can see the world so very clear
And my house is tiny from way up here
That’s the dinner bell! I can hear the sound
Now how will I ever get back down?




Friday, March 24, 2017

Bacon Cheeseburger Salad: An Essay inside a Recipe


Ingredients:
1 lb burger (I use ground beef with 20% fat)
6 slices of bacon
1 package (2 oz) of onion soup mix
2 cups shredded cheese (I like cheddar)
1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
Lettuce (I use spinach)
Tomatoes
Red Onion
Dill pickle chips
Dressing (I like blue cheese)

I’m turning 35 years old this year and I’m concerned. I know many older folks who will laugh at the last sentence. They will say: “35! That’s young!” I know they will say this, because they have. And they’re partially correct, 35 is “young”, but only if your older than 35. To a 12 year old, 35 might seem ancient. But regardless of whether you consider the age of 35 to be young or old, it is generally believed—and scientifically verified—that 35 is the age when the human body begins to go downhill. Think about it—how many professional athletes do you see over the age of 35? Not many. And there’s a good reason for that.

Instructions:
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Panfry the bacon until it’s good and crispy. Break into small pieces. In large bowl, combine meat, bacon, cheese, soup mix, egg, and Worcestershire sauce. Mix together with your hands. Form small balls out of mixture about the size of a golf ball. Place balls on pan and bake for 15 minutes.

35 is about the age (it does vary from person to person) when the human body’s metabolism begins to slow down. It is also the age when the human body begins to naturally lose muscle (1% per year, from the research I’ve read). To battle this latter issue, I have begun lifting weights for the first time since high school. As far as the slowing of metabolism, there’s really only one way to fight that: You must change your diet!

Instructions (cont.)
Chop up lettuce tomato, onion, pickle to desired sizes and form a salad. Place meatballs on top. Add dressing.

Now, you can ask a hundred different health professionals what the perfect diet is and get a hundred different answers. I believe that is because everyone is different. We have different bodies, different genetics, different ancestries. But I don’t think it’s too hard to figure out which foods you should and shouldn’t be putting in your body. It can be as simple as eating something and then deciding how you feel afterward. As for me, when I eat anything containing added sugar or flour, I suddenly want to take a nap. Since food is supposed to give your body energy, that’s enough “scientific research” to tell me I shouldn’t be consuming vast amounts of these ingredients. But the problem is that I love cheeseburgers. They are my favorite food. Unfortunately, the cheeseburger bun contains an unhealthy amount of flour, which makes me super tired. And that’s why I invented the Bacon Cheeseburger Salad—all the flavor of a cheeseburger without the crash afterward.

Bon appetit!  


Friday, March 17, 2017

The South of Michigan

Image result for dive bar

        Detroit. James Jameson didn’t need a metaphor to describe how he felt about Detroit. The city’s name carried a connotation that said it all. That’s why he chose his latest novel to be set here. The city itself was a metaphor; for something that was happening on a grander scale across the nation. It was the perfect setting for his literary masterpiece. He just never thought that the citizens of Detroit would embrace such a novel. Didn’t they realize he was mocking them? And since when did people in Detroit read literature?
        Now, as he trampled through the sidewalk’s dirty snow, he felt trapped in this rust belt city. Where were the trains? The buses? The taxis? Any transportation to get him to the airport; to take him away from this godforsaken city? He regretted coming in the first place. But that was part of the job, wasn’t it? To travel to your audience, to read your words aloud for their simple ears, to convince them that your story is worth their hard earned pay? But why did he choose Detroit? Why not the South of France? And now, what the hell was this?
         James stared at the bar in disbelief. The Motown Tavern. But it couldn’t be. He was always meticulously careful not to use real establishments in his stories. But even the sign on the window was the same: “If the Doors Unlocked, we’re Open.” Son of a bitch, he thought, they stole this straight out of my book. This meant they were using his ideas for their profit, which surely meant a lawsuit. He pushed the door. It was unlocked.

            “Whatchya drink?” the bartender asked.
            “Excuse me?” James eyes widened.
            “This is a bar. People come here to drink booze. What kinda booze you want?”
            It couldn’t be. Could it? The bartender looked exactly like the main character in his novel, right down to the suspenders and sideburns. He even talked the same. “Is this a joke?” James asked.
            “Is what a joke?”
            James half laughed to himself. “Tell me, what’s your name?”
            “Names Martin, friends call me Chops. Who’s askin’?”
            “All right,” James said, so everyone in the room could hear. “Where are the cameras?”
            “Cameras? Watchya talkin’ ‘bout, cameras?”
            “Now, you listen here,” James pointed at the man behind the bar. “I don’t want to be on some idiotic reality television show…”
            “Television show? What da hell you talkin’ ‘bout?”
            “Listen, we both know who I am.”
            “Oh yeah. And who’s that?”
            “James Jameson. The Author. I created your character.”
            “My character?” The bartender yelled. “Now you better watch your…”
            “Hey!” A voice echoed from the end of the bar. “Both of you, quiet down.” The young, handsome man looked at James. “What did you say your name was?”
            “James Jameson.”
            “That’s impossible.”
            “And why is that?”
            “Because James Jameson is a character I created for a short story; an author, in Detroit for a book reading…”
           
           
           
             
           
           
            

Friday, March 10, 2017

Ups and Downs

  Related image          



            In 1923 the British mountaineer George Leigh Mallory attempted to be the first man to climb Mount Everest. When asked why, he replied, “Because it’s there.” His body was not recovered until 1999.
            Looking west from Denver, on a clear day, among the Rocky Mountains, you can spot a peak that is uniquely different than (FROM) any of the others. Though you could never tell from that far away, there is a road that cuts up the mountain, twisting and turning until it reaches the summit. And when I was told that it was the highest paved road in North America, I had but one thing on my mind: conquering Mount Evans.
            I had already ridden my bicycle from the Atlantic Ocean, half way across the United States. After a week of much needed rest, I was ready to go. Targeting the Pacific coast, the mountain was a bit out of my way, but I was convinced that a two day detour would be well worth the trip. I had no way to know the next time I would be in the region, if ever again, and could not pass up the opportunity.
            I got a late start on a Tuesday. Battling Denver’s mid-morning traffic, I was nearly clipped by an elderly woman in an oversized car, but thankfully made it out of the city alive. When I reached the mountains I traded exhaust fumes for a steep incline, a deal that I would take any day. It felt good to be back on the bike, away from the crowds, only myself, my thoughts, and the open road.
            I worked my way up the mountain. Normally I would not refer to riding a bicycle as “work,” but after hours of nonstop pedaling, in the lowest of gears, I am willing to make an exception. Often times mountain roads never seem to end. They play with your mind, convincing you that every next turn will be the last, but the only things that lay ahead are more gradual inclines and a steady dose of disappointment. So you rest when you need to, and you ride on.
            I reached the Mount Evans Scenic Byway just as the sun was fading, giving way to a chilly night. I had traveled approximately fifty miles, almost entirely uphill, and my body could feel the effects of elevation change. Mount Mitchell, in North Carolina, at 6,684 feet, was the highest I had ever been in my life. Now, at nearly twice that height, I could clearly notice the thinness in the air. My lungs were not getting the oxygen they craved, and the pressure in my skull had evolved into a mild ache. I found a flat spot in the woods, rolled out my sleeping bag, and closed my eyes.
            As exhausted as I was, rest should have come naturally, but it didn’t. I would sleep for what felt like ten minutes at a time, then wake up, spend the next half-hour shuffling around, trying desperately to fall back into my dreams. Finally, at around four in the morning, I called it quits, packed my saddlebags, ate some breakfast, and started for the summit.
            From the start of the byway it was fourteen miles to the top. I had been averaging just under that per hour, but almost always on flatter terrain, and never at that elevation. I pedaled in the stillness of the morning, the chilled mountain air punishing my lungs, the pressure in my head evolving, and my stomach growling. I stopped often to munch on snacks and to try to catch my breath. I passed mile marker four as the sun lit up the sky, and the realization set in that I was making little progress.
            Eventually the tree line disappeared, leaving only large jagged rocks, enormous patches of snow, and the playful wanderings of  mountain goats. It was the first snow I had seen since New York, and the first mountain goat I had seen in my life. I stopped to watch the agile animal gracefully shuffle across the scattered rocks, not a care in the world. This was his home, and I was merely a tourist.
            By mile ten I could not get enough food in my stomach and felt sick. My energy running low, I was now walking the bike more than riding. The weakness that consumed my body was all new to me. I was in the best shape of my life, but felt worn down, any remaining strength drained, my head pounding. It was equivalent to the worse of hangovers. I wondered if this was what terminally ill patients felt like all the time. In the gloom of the situation, I had never been so thankful for my health. Stubborn, I pushed on.
            The higher the road winded, the worse its condition. But the potholes and cracks did not matter, because I was almost entirely on my feet, drooped over the handlebars, leaning uphill. For every hundred yards that I rode, I walked twice the distance. And when I finally reached the summit, climbing back on the bike for the last hundred meters, an overjoyed sense of relief filled my soul. I had conquered Mount Evans, the highest paved road in North America. Well, not quite yet.
            The mountain is listed as 14,264 feet high, but the end of the road falls about fifty meters short of that. So I leaned my bike against a railing and headed up the rocky terrain on foot. Already disoriented, I didn’t realize that there was a trail, and climbed straight up the jagged boulders, scaring yellow belly marmots along the way. I climbed to the highest rock on the pile, and finally at the top, spread my arms open and embraced the crisp Rocky Mountain wind. It was that corny scene, straight out of every sentimental movie, but it didn’t matter, there was no embarrassment, for there was no audience.
            Savoring the view of the Rockies from above, time could have just as well stopped. It was a clear morning and the sister mountains could be seen in all directions: Pikes Peak to the north, Goliath Peak to the west, Roger Peak to the South, and dozens of others scattered among the rest. It seemed as if the land would not settle for flatness, and sought nothing less than the clouds. It was how I pictured heaven.
            I leaned against a rock to peek over the edge and it shifted, sending shivers of fright up my spine. It was time to return to flat ground. As I made my way back down to the road I spotted another cyclist approaching the summit. As soon as he reached the end of the road he turned around and headed back down, never once getting off his bicycle seat. I was confused. How could somebody work so hard to get to the top, and not even pause to take a look around? Just like every typical American, always in a hurry.
            Upon returning to the pavement the realization occurred that I was suffering from altitude sickness. I knew this because a large sign told me so. “ATTENTION,” it warned, “REGARDLESS OF FITNESS LEVEL, ‘LIGHTHEADEDNESS’ AND DISORIENTATION OFTEN OCCUR AT THIS ELEVATION. YOU MAY FAINT OR UNDERESTIMATE OTHER DANGERS. IF YOU EXPERIENCE ANY OF THESE SYMPTOMS AVOID PHYSICAL EXERTION. EXERCISING CAUTION, RETURN TO LOWER ELEVATION.” I disregarded the sign, its advice, and my general well-being. I had worked too hard to get where I was and was not about to leave just yet.
            The parking lot was filling fast, mostly photographers in search of that perfect shot. I used the outhouse, not that I really had to go, but rather to bask in the absurdity of there being a bathroom at fourteen hundred feet. On the west side of the summit stood an old rock foundation, its walls jutting out of the ground, open and exposed, like a scene straight out of Middle-Earth.
            Trying to keep my footing on its icy back staircase, I was halted by a mountain goat that stood firm in my path. He stared back at me, the invader that was trespassing in his castle. But already having traveled this far, I refused to retreat. It would be a standoff, a classic man versus mountain goat standoff. He knew his place and I knew mine, but neither of us were willing to give in. I took a deep breath and stepped forward. He did the same. I flinched at the beast but he was not startled. He bowed his long face to show off his pointed horns, but I was unafraid. I took another step, then another, until he was close enough to reach out and grab. I stared directly into the blackness of his eyes and for a moment could see what he was thinking. And at that second the realization occurred: antagonizing a wild animal was probably not the best of ideas.
            Acting purely on instinct, a beat away from panic, I hoisted myself upon the stone wall that stood to my left. Maybe this spooked the goat, or perhaps we were on the same mental wavelength, but he retreated as well, hightailing it through an opening, out of the castle, and down the mountainside. In spite of my cowardice, I claimed victory, but the celebration was short lived. On the other side of the wall, now all staring up at me, stood half a dozen photographers who were the least bit amused with my widening smile. I had just ruined their perfect shot.
            Behind the expensive cameras, mounted on their aluminum tripods, I could clearly see the disappointment and anger in their faces. But I was not the least bit sorry. There would be other photo opportunities, if not in the next five minutes, then later in the day. But as for me, that was probably my only break, a once in a life time chance, to win a standoff with a mountain goat. I took one last look around and decided that it was time to get off the mountain.
            I was more than excited for the descent.  Most people may not know this, but the primary reason bicyclists go through the agony of climbing hills and mountains is because it is guaranteed that they will eventually get to ride back down. There are few feelings in the world that are more exhilarating. Unfortunately this time it was different. The air being thin, the wind gusting, and the road steep, combined to send a bitter chill through my entire body. Even with mittens on my hands, my fingers went numb. Squeezing both breaks with all of might couldn’t smooth the fractured pavement. The ride was shakier than the nastiest of wooden roller coasters. I thought for certain that I would pop a tire or blow a spoke. And often with a deathly high drop to my right, one mistake would have proven disastrous.
            I passed a biker who was struggling to make it to the top. Then another, and another. The lower I got, the more I passed, until the number reached the dozens. These were not casual weekend riders. They were focused, with super light weight bicycles and full spandex outfits. I couldn’t believe that many people were attacking the mountain on a random Wednesday in June.
            When I reached the end of the Mount Evans Scenic Byway there were dozens more cyclists in the parking lot, preparing themselves for the journey ahead. It was eleven in the morning. What had taken me six hours to ascend had taken me less than an hour to get back down. I went into the lodge to get some much needed food and hopefully some information. The restaurant’s menu offered a wide variety of items but it was the Mountain Man Burger that stuck out. After dieting on cheeseburgers for what seemed like too long, it was the last thing I craved, but with a name like that I had little choice but to order it.
            From an old newspaper article that hung framed on the wall I found out that the rock foundation at the summit had once been a restaurant and gift shop that was completed in 1942. Formally called The Crest House, it was destroyed on Labor Day, 1979 when a propane tank exploded. A restaurant on top of a mountain is a picture in itself, but a restaurant on top of a mountain blowing up, that is something that I would like to have seen. And though I could have desperately used some warm food and a place to sit down upon reaching the summit, I believe a mountain goat castle was more than a fair trade.
            Another clipping on the wall described the paved mountain road as the highest in the world. I hade to take a second look, for I had been told that it was only the second highest. When the waitress brought me my food I asked her about it.
            “Technically,” she said, “there is a mountain in Peru that claims to have the highest road. But my boss was there earlier this month and said that it was in horrible condition.”
            “So as far as bicycling goes…”
            “A lot of people would consider this the highest in the world,” she interrupted, “but it all depends on who you ask.”
            The response lifted me up, because in my mind I had reached the top of the world. But the answer to my next question brought me right back down. “Are there always this many cyclists attempting to summit?”
            “Oh yeah, everyday, all summer. More in July and August, and even more on the weekends.”
            What I thought had been a grand accomplishment was something that thousands of people did every year. I was just another cyclist, completing another weekday ride. I ate my burger, bought some postcards, a sticker to add to my bike, and left the lodge. Outside a couple of other cyclists were standing next to my bike, looking at the stickers of the places I had already been. “You going cross country?” One of them asked when I approached.
            “Trying to.” I answered.
            “Well, it looks like you’ve made it pretty far already.”
            “I still have a long way to go.”
            “Are you going to try to make it up this mountain?”
            “I was already up it this morning.”
            They looked at their watches. “And you’re already back down?”
            “I got an early start.”
            “You didn’t ride up with all this weight on the back, did you?” Referring to my saddlebags filled with gear.
            “Yeah, I did.”
            “Wow, I am impressed. We drove up from Denver this morning. Made it about halfway up the mountain and couldn’t do it. Had to come back down.”
            As they wished me luck and walked away, my attitude completely changed. Here were two guys that drove to the start of the byway, and still could not make it up the mountain. Their bikes alone were each worth five times as much as mine, and yet they were impressed with me. I mean, who really cares how many people ride to the summit everyday? I know that I did it, and that is the only thing that really matters to me. It was a truly personal experience, one that I will never forget.
            Looking back I can honestly say that summiting Mount Evans on a bicycle was one of the hardest things I have ever done in my life. So why did I do it? Because it was there. And would I do it again? In a  heartbeat.

                


Friday, March 3, 2017

The Mandela Effect

In the early 1990’s the comedian/actor Sinbad starred in a movie titled Shazaam. The family-film, in which Sinbad played a genie who finds himself the servant of an upper-middle class family, wasn’t a box office smash by any means, but it did build a small cult-following when it was released on VHS. Many children who grew up in that era, who are now adults, have fond memories of the film. Some can describe specific scenes—a pool party climax, for instance—while others can recite lines from the film, word for word. There’s only one problem: The movie doesn’t exist. And Sinbad claims he never made it.

So, how does this happen? How can so many people have a specific memory that doesn’t exist? This phenomenon of collective false-memory has been dubbed the Mandela Effect. Nelson Mandela died in 2013, and yet there are thousands of people throughout the world who specifically recall watching his televised funeral in the 1980’s. Another commonly reported false-memory is that of the Berenstain Bears. Or, as, again, what thousands of people claim, was once spelled the Bernstein Bears. (Interestingly enough, my computer’s spell check recognizes Bernstein, but not Berenstain.) So, again, how can so many people have the same false-memory?

Of course, there are rational explanations for a phenomenon like this, but that’s no fun. I’d rather talk about an irrational explanation—something paranormal theorists refer to as “alternate timelines.” Think about it for a minute. What if there are numerous dimensions? And sometimes we, as individuals, split off and travel down a different timeline than others. I know exactly what you’re thinking right now: This guy is bat shit crazy. But then again, you’re still reading, so you must be at least somewhat curious. And I’ll admit, this theory does sound crazy at first, but is it anymore crazy than believing that there is an invisible all-knowing entity looking down us and judging our every decision? If that wasn’t something engrained into your mind since a young age, I’d be willing to bet you might think that’s as equally crazy as alternate timelines.

So, this alternate timeline idea, I’ll admit, when I first heard about it, I thought it was, well, for lack of a better term, bat-shit crazy. But recent events have got me really thinking about it. You see, there was a time in my life when an expected outcome of an event resulted in that expected outcome. But then, sometime about a year ago, all of these expectations—no matter how educated the guess appeared to be—suddenly began to become meaningless. In retrospect, I suppose it started with the NBA playoffs. Oklahoma City had a demanding 3-1 series lead over Golden State. And then, against all odds, they blew it. In the finals, Golden State suffered the same exact fate against Cleveland. Fast forward to the World Series. Same thing—the Cleveland Indians blow an unprecedented 3-1 lead. A week later, the Presidential Election. There was no possible way Trump could win. We all know how that turned out. Super Bowl—28-3 lead in the third quarter. Blown! And now, the Oscars—the Best Picture goes to La La Land! But hold on just a second…

I feel like I’ve entered this strange timeline where all expected results never end up quite how I imagined they would. It’s almost as if everything suddenly needs to come right down to the wire. Everything needs to be packed with an exciting twist that nobody saw coming. As if M. Night Shyamalan is scripting our reality. Now, I’m only 34 years old, but for the first 33 years of my life, if a football team had a 28-3 lead in the third quarter, that team won the game. And if a film was handed a trophy, they got to take that trophy home with them. I don’t know exactly what’s been going on lately, but if these athletes and entertainers are going to stand up after these events and give credit for these unexpected outcomes to an invisible entity in the clouds, then I’m at least going to consider the possibility that I’ve somehow skipped over to a timeline alternate to the one I had been previously living in. Call me bat-shit crazy, but the more I really think about it, the more I begin to remember that Sinbad genie movie. 




Saturday, February 25, 2017

Five Hundred Words



           Five hundred words? How can I possibly write a coherent story in five hundred words (or less)? That’s so few words; and like a fool, I’ve just wasted thirty-one of them. You see, there’s this contest. They’ve given me a plot. Now, I only need to use it. But here I sit, in front of my keyboard, with a case of writer’s block that I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy, writing alliterative cliché’s that I know I’m better than. And now I only have four hundred and four more words to develop character and setting. Staring at this paragraph doesn’t seem to be helping. Perhaps I need to get out of the house. Perhaps I need to quit wasting words with unnecessary words like “unnecessary” and “perhaps.”
            I take the bus downtown, to the market, with the idea that getting lost in a crowd might somehow spark my creativity, might help to find my story. By the time I get there, I’m down to three hundred and thirty words. I’m walking around, proceeding about my business eyeballing trinkets and ignoring buskers, all the while waiting on a strange person to thrust a mysterious object into my hand. I know this will happen because that’s the plot that’s been decided upon in advance. And then it happens. With two hundred and seventy-eight words to go, I’m caught in a crowd, confronted suddenly by a strange person, who thrusts a mysterious object into my hand, and without a word, disappears. The mysterious object, “What is it?” you want to know. It’s an envelope, sealed, with a handful of words written on one side: “Don’t open until you get home.”
            So, I start for home, making my way out of the crowd, away from the market, towards the bus stop. I check the schedule: no bus for an hour. With only one hundred and eighty-seven words left, I don’t have time to wait. And so I run, down First Avenue, a right on Belmont, over the Morrison Bridge, east towards home. The envelope weighs heavy on my mind: What could possibly be in it? Why do I have to wait until I get home to open it? What would happen if I didn’t? I consider opening it right here and now, but with only one hundred and fifteen words left, I don’t dare chance it.
            My muscles ache, I’m drenched in sweat, and with only a mile to go, I’m stopped by someone I know. “What’s the hurry?” she asks.
            “No time to talk,” I yell in full stride, “I don’t have enough words left for you.”
            I know it was rude, but what can you do when you’re on a budget? I reach my house, unlock the door, rush to my desk, and go to open the envelope with thirty-one words to spare. I tear it apart and look inside, and there it is, exactly what I knew it would be: the end of this story, because I’m out of words…




            

Friday, February 17, 2017

The Return of This Digital Life


Five days without my smartphone or the internet and the world did not end. Go figure. When I returned on the sixth day, I was so overwhelmed by notifications, emails, and messages that I decided to stay away for one more day. But now I’m back. Here’s what I learned:

#1) Whether you like it or not, your digital life will go on without you. Even though I was detached from social media, social media was not detached from me. Since I was away with friends—friends with smartphones of their own—new photos of me found their way onto the internet. I was “tagged” and they were “liked”, all without my consent, as if anyone in your vicinity with a smartphone has become part of your own personal Paparazzi. But that’s not all. Even those who were hundreds, sometimes thousands of miles away, continued to interact with my digital life even though they knew I wouldn’t respond. Some tagged me in Facebook posts. Others commented on old posts. New posts were pasted on my wall. I was sent text messages and emails. Interestingly, I had no missed calls, as if people feel comfortable digitally contacting a “ghost”, but not personally. (p.s. I apologize for not “liking” or replying to the posts, comments, etc., that I was tagged in while on my digital vacation, but with the current real-time pace of social media, I’m not sure what the proper protocol is concerning days-old posts.)

#2) It’s perfectly okay to not take photos of everything you do. I traveled to a small town in Washington that is modeled after a Bavarian Village. Simply put, it is a photographer’s wet dream. Luckily, there were thousands of other “photographers” there, all taking the same pictures I would have taken (probably not as good as the ones I would have taken, but nonetheless). Plus, if I really need a photo to remember the trip, my beautiful girlfriend took about seven thousand of her own. And like the old saying says: “A photo might be worth a thousand words, but your memories are worth a thousand photos.” (I may have just made that up.)

#3) Few people actually make it past the first couple sentences of anything posted on the internet. I know this to be true from the comments I received last week when I wrote about how I was leaving for a digital vacation. Several people thought I was leaving my digital life for good even though I clearly stated that my exit was only temporary. Apparently, people only care to read headlines these days, which explains so much about our current political situation. It also means I can write whatever bat-shit crazy thing I want right now and be confident that not many people will actually read it. Which brings us to:

#4) My digital vacation was extremely refreshing, like taking an ice-cold shower or running naked through a snowstorm. I highly recommend the next time you travel away from your safe space for an extended period of time, leave all your digital devices at home. I promise that the world won’t end, and if you’re lucky, you’ll find greater appreciation in your actual life—you know, the one away from the screen.


Bonus: If a photo is worth a thousand words, and this piece is about 500, does that mean it’s worth half a photo? 



Friday, February 10, 2017

This Digital Life

I’m going on a digital vacation. I’m traveling hundreds of miles away from my safe space and leaving my phone and computer at home. I know what you’re thinking: That’s crazy! I know you’re thinking this because when I told people about this idea they all replied (in so many words): That’s crazy!

Actually, there were two reactions. There was: What if there’s an emergency? In which I replied: You do realize there was a time before Smartphones? A time called: All of human existence. Seriously, what if there’s an emergency? What did people do before Smartphones when there was an emergency? They dealt with it, that’s what they did. Plus, we do live in a digital world now. Certainly, in the case of an actual emergency, there will be people in the vicinity that have a Smartphone of their own. It’s not like I’m vacationing in Antarctica.

The second response was: How are you going to take pictures. Simple: I’m not going to. It turns out, you don’t have to take pictures of everything you do.

A short digital biography: My digital life was born three years ago. It started with a simple website, an unusual blog, and my entry into the world of Facebook. I didn’t go through digital puberty until October of 2016. That’s when I got my first Smartphone. In only four months I’ve become fixated on Instagram, Insta-news, podcasts, the stock market, and Tetris—all things that I never thought about before the Smartphone. Only four long months and I already feel it’s time for a digital vacation.

After some consideration, I’ve come to realize that this digital vacation can end in only three ways:

A) When I return, the Internet will no longer exist, which will affect everyone, but also means I’m a trendsetter.

B) My digital death. This means that I come to the conclusion that my digital-life is not worth my actual real-life time. Due to the psychological addiction of Smartphones, this will certainly become a thing in the near future. We will see the digital deaths of our friends, which is sad, because many of my closest friends are in the digital world. If I don’t come back, I would only hope that my digital friends give me the first ever digital funeral.

C) I return to my digital life and tell everyone all about my digital vacation. If that’s the outcome, I’ll see you next week…digitally, of course.



Friday, February 3, 2017

The Last of the Hard Men




               I needed out of the city. I needed to get away from that urban lifestyle which seemed obsessed with cool clothes, hip hairdos, stylish staches, multi-flavored macchiatos, soymilk smoothies, yuppie yoga, or whatever else was trendy at the time. I longed for proof that hard men still existed. The kind I had seen in the movies when I was a kid. The kind filled with courage, honor, nerve, and grit.
            So I headed away from the city, through the suburbs, past the small towns, deep into the wilderness, until I found a random tavern, a one-room shack whose sign simply said: BAR. I parked my bike, walked inside, ordered a beer, and waited.
            It didn’t take long before he walked in. He was everything I dreamed he would be. I studied him carefully. He was tall and muscular, with a jaw line right out of a John Wayne movie. He wore an old cowboy hat, flannel shirt, leather jacket, ripped jeans, and work boots, all of it filthy. His eyes were cold, his beard thick, and his face tanned like a catcher’s mitt. He had a scar running across his brow, a couple chipped teeth, and fingers missing from both hands. When he ordered his drink, he only needed to growl one word: WHISKEY.
            There he was, right in front of my eyes, close enough that I could smell pine tar on his hands and the tobacco in his lip. I wanted to touch him, to make sure he was real, but the bowie knife that hung from his belt and the pistol hugging his ankle were clear signs not to get too close.
            So I just stared, carefully examining the proof that sat next to me. The proof that courage, honor, nerve, and grit were not virtues of the past! The proof that there was at least one last hard man left on Earth…and then he pulled out a Smartphone and started playing Candy Crush.



Friday, January 27, 2017

The Reason I Write


               Why did I become a writer? Boy, do I have a story for you…
            I must have been in first grade, or was it second—makes no difference either way; I was a young boy: wild-eyed, enthusiastic, curious, carefree, stubborn, and overly rambunctious (not much different than the man I am today, some might argue). My entire class piled in a big yellow bus for a field trip to the zoo. From our tiny hick town—where the cows outnumbered the kids twenty to one—we journeyed the thirty or so miles into the BIG CITY. Now, thirty miles may not seem that far to the average American adult, but to a child who grew up in the boonies, we may as well have been traveling to a strange, faraway world, like Neptune, or Guatemala, or Aspen, Colorado.
While most of my fellow classmates fought over the coveted aisle seats—for that was where the banter, laughter, horseplay, hijinks, and rabble-rousing all occurred—I considered myself more than lucky to be trapped on the “inside” seat, where a world I had seldom seen in my young life passed before my eyes; the only thing between me and it, a scratched-up rectangle of glass. (How those windows always became so severely scratched was and still is a mystery to me; perhaps the buses were being used to transfer feral cats to the incinerator on the weekends?) Regardless, (or irregardless, for those of you who subscribe to the use of double negatives) what was happening outside that window was more exciting than anything on television at the time (not counting MacGyver and Quantum Leap, of course). Gravel roads turned to paved streets and paved streets turned to four lane highways. Barren fields gave way to rows of cookie-cutter houses and rows of cookie-cutter houses dissolved into century-old homes built in the style of Victorian architecture; and in the distance, the skyscrapers and high-rises, built of brick and steel and glass, climbing over the horizon like the fingers of a giant metropolitan God. Oh, what a scene! But those weren’t even the most interesting of sights…
The People! Yes, the people, they seemed to be everywhere, walking on tiny concrete paths that ran parallel to the automobile-infested streets; concrete paths known as “sidewalks,” an oddity that didn’t exist in our hobunk town, which saw only ditches, guardrails, and barbed-wired fences lining our roads. The people, they had skin the color of chocolate, the type up until then we only saw projected on screens, and never in our “neck of the woods” so to speak, where 99.3% of our ancestors were from Northern Europe, with the exception being the one family of Italian heritage, whose sons all the girls swooned over because of their “exotic” skin tone. But now, compared to the urban dwellers outside my window, with their genuine black hair—not dark, dark brown—these descendents from the Mediterranean boot suddenly seemed as ordinary and pasty white as the rest of us. 
After thirty miles and what seemed like seventeen hours, we finally arrived at our destination: The Buffalo Zoo. (Not a zoo filled with buffalo, unfortunately—come to think of it, I don’t recall seeing a single bison that day—but rather a zoo in the City of Buffalo, a midsized municipality in the rustbelt of Western New York, at the time best known for its chicken wings and Super Bowl losing Bills; now, only for the chicken wings. Go Bills! Go Bills?) We all piled out of the bus (if we piled in, we can most certainly pile out, can’t we?) and as is custom in totalitarian regimes such as elementary school, formed a straight line to make our way through the entrance gates. As each student in front of me muscled their way through the turnstile, my anticipation grew—this was the ZOO! after all, a magnificent place where any human being, for just a couple dollars and change, could come within a few feet of wild animals, some having been shipped from faraway places, like Africa, or Guatemala, or Aspen, Colorado. But within a dozen or so steps of entering this inner-city-safari I had so built up in my mind, my enthusiasm deflated faster than a set of bald tires over a strip of traffic spikes.
The animals that stood—or more likely, sat, laid, slept, or moped—in front of us were anything but wild. They looked weary, worn, beat-down, and desperate, like inmates in a maximum security prison, sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. There was nothing that resembled a smile on any of their faces—even in animal terms—or the slightest hint of hope in their eyes. If they could talk, I’m positive they would have uttered phrases like, “Please shoot me.” Or, “Put me out of my misery, I’m begging you.” Or, “For the love of God, what is wrong with you animals?” Immediately, I realized that I despised zoos (a sentiment that I still embrace today).
The main attraction that season was an albino alligator—“One of Only a Few in the World of its Kind,” or so they claimed—that traveled the country, visiting zoo after zoo, like some sort of circus sideshow. At least at a circus, though, it would have been out in the fresh air, or at the very least, far below the high canvas ceiling of a ginormous big top. But here, at the zoo, inside the Reptile House, it had only a small room, not much bigger than my parents’ kitchen, with an even smaller swimming area, which could best be described as a large puddle, not much different than the kind automobiles were accustomed to swerving around on the gravel roads back in our hillbilly town.
The chatter amongst us children was quickly hushed as one of the zoo’s “experts” started spewing out facts; things like, “an alligator’s chances of being born with albinism are about 1 in 100,000.”  When it was time for the Q and A segment of the tour—being a curious kid and all—I was the first to raise my hand. “Don’t you feel bad,” my high-pitched prepubescent voice asked, “about keeping such a large animal in such a small cage?”
“I can assure you that this alligator is more than comfortable with his current living arrangements,” the expert explained. “Any other questions?”
Before any of the other students could raise their hands, I blurted out, “But how do you know how the alligator feels?”
“Because I’m an expert.”
Besides immediately losing faith in anyone who referred to himself as an “expert”—a sentiment that I still embrace today—I didn’t feel as if my question had been sufficiently answered; so I asked another. “Wouldn’t he be better off in his own natural habitat?”
“The truth is, the majority of albino alligators don’t last more than twenty-four hours after being born in their natural habitat. He’s actually extremely lucky to be in captivity.”
“How could you possibly know that?” I shot back, thinking about the Italian brothers in my school and the already explained infatuation with them by all the girls, and how this alligator, with his own exotic skin color, would certainly receive similar attention from his female counterparts. “With the rarity of one being born in the first place, how can you be certain that he would only last…”
But before I could finish my thought: “Look kids!” The expert pointed at the alligator, “He’s getting into the water!”
While the other children pressed their faces against the large glass viewing area, elbowing each other to get the best possible angle of the eccentric beast bathing inside, I slyly slipped out the backdoor of the Reptile House.
I’d had enough! Enough of the albino alligator; enough of the “expert’s” claims; enough of the zoo altogether. I walked past the elephants and the giraffes, the lions and the polar bears, through the gift shop, past its key chains and snow globes, its magnets and postcards, and out the exit doors. After all, everything I had seen on the way to the zoo had been much more fascinating than anything I had seen inside.
I scurried through Delaware Park, across the rugby field, heading toward the baseball diamonds. As I scampered through the largest field of green I had ever laid my young eyes on, I found three white golf balls, and like a child during an Easter egg hunt, deposited each one into the left pocket of my cargo shorts, much to the chagrin of a cluster of adults in the distance, who waved their shiny sticks toward the sky and filled the open air with foul words—the same type of vulgarities that would have earned me a seat facing the corner at school or a mouthful of soap at home. This obnoxious yelling only made me run faster, through a tunnel beneath an expressway, by a lake empty of boats, a graveyard teaming with souls, and south down Delaware Avenue.
Soon enough I was lost: a small child in the big city—a place where I knew nothing and no one, in no particular order. Now, most children’s instincts would have been to panic, but I was much too smart for that; knowing that the Earth was round—a fact that we had recently learned in science—I realized that if I simply continued to walk in a straight line, I would eventually make my way back to the zoo. So that’s what I decided to do. But then, I heard a voice.
“I wouldn’t go much further if I were you.”
I looked to my right to discover a house built of brick, three stories high, with arched windows and a small covered porch on its far left side. Alongside the front door, hung the numbers 4 7 2, vertically, in large bronze castings. On the stairs leading to the stoop, sat an old man, his hair wild and white, with a mustache and suit to match. “I’ve been waiting for you,” were the next words out of his mouth.
“For me?” I asked, somewhat confused.
The old man turned his head left, then right, before settling his eyes back on me. “I don’t see anyone else around, do you?”
I turned my head left, then right, before settling my eyes back on the old man. “Do I know you?”
“Not yet.” He put a cigar in his mouth and lit it with a match. “But you will.”
Now, most children’s instincts would have been to panic, but I was much too bright for that; knowing that elderly men almost always suffered from chronic arthritis—a fact that I had recently learned from my grandfather—I realized that I could simply run away at any time and there was no chance this old geezer would ever catch me.
“You don’t need to run away.” A cloud of smoke poured from under his mustache like steam from a locomotive. “Take it from me. I ran away twice. There’s not much satisfaction in it, even as a recollection.”
What was this ancient man talking about? I needed to find an excuse to leave. I remembered the golf balls in my pocket and pulled them out. “I’m sorry, mister,” I said, “but I have to return these.”
“Oh, those guys have others. Plus, golf is a good walk spoiled. You did them a favor, Jon.”
“How do you know my name?” I didn’t think about saying the words; they merely flew out of my mouth.
“I already told you—I’ve been waiting for you. Jon Penfold, right? If that doesn’t sound like a writer’s name.”
“A writer’s name?”
“Yes. You are a writer.”
“I am?”
“Aren’t you?”
I had to think for a moment. Was I a writer? I suppose I had written things down before, but never anything I would share with anyone else.
“It is no use to keep private information which you can’t show off.” The man raised his big white eyebrows.
Was he reading my mind? “But my teacher caught me writing in class once and said that I shouldn’t waste my time with silly stories; that I should concentrate on my studies.”
This made the man chuckle. “Don’t ever let schooling interfere with your education.”
“But…”
“No. There are to be no ‘buts’. You want to be a writer, don’t you?”
I suppose I did, I thought. “I suppose I do,” I said.
“Then you must remember a few things. Are you ready?”
I nodded my head.
“Good. First: Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience. Got it?”
“Got it.”
The old man flicked the ash of his cigar off to the side of the stairs. “Second: It’s easier to fool people than to convince them they have been fooled. Do you understand?”
“I think so.”
“Lastly: Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones that you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.” The old man took a long drag from his cigar. “Any questions?”
“What should I write?”
“What should you write? WHAT SHOULD YOU WRITE? Write what you want. Write what you know. Write things that will make people laugh. Write things that will make people cry. Write things that will make people think. Write things that will downright ruffle people’s feathers. Sometimes you’ll tell nothing but the truth. Sometimes you’ll flat out make things up. And sometimes you’ll combine the two, like you are right now. And when all else fails, write what your heart tells you. You can’t depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus.” The old man put his cigar out on the steps and stood up. “Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got to go.”
“Where are you going?”
He slowly shook his head as he headed toward the door. “To write, of course.”
“Wait!” I pleaded. “You never told me your name.”
The old man turned toward me and smiled. “My family calls me Sam, my friends, Clemens, but most of the world knows me as Mark.”
He stepped through the entrance, shut the door behind him, and within a blink of an eye, the house was gone—the entire complex: the bricks, the arched windows, the covered porch—transformed into an A-framed carriage house. As you can imagine, this freaked the hell out of me, so I took off, full-speed the way I came, North up Delaware, past the graveyard and the lake, beneath the expressway, by the baseball diamonds, through the largest field of green I had ever seen—where I dropped the three golf balls in proximity to where I found them—across the rugby field, back in the exit door, through the gift shop, and into the zoo. I immediately began searching for my classmates, but couldn’t find them anywhere—not at the lion cage, or the monkey house, or the elephant lands. Now, most children’s instincts would have been to panic, but I was much too intelligent for that; knowing that you should always look for something at the last place you saw it—a fact that I had recently learned on an episode of MacGyver—I returned to the Reptile House, and I’ll be damned if they weren’t all still there, just as I had left them, their faces pressed against the glass, trying to get a better look at an alligator of a different color.
And that’s why I became a writer.