Today's Word: camp

garden

After a long, heavy rain, when the ditches running along the sides of the road become homes for rushing runoff water, the best possible thing to do is to find a toy boat (make one if necessary) and toss into the current. Entertainment will follow.

Daniel did just that. As soon as the storm passed and the June sun came back out to resume baking the earth below in order to return it to its previously parched state, Daniel dug through his toy box and found the raft that his father had made him. “Digging” is a generous way to refer to Daniel’s search through his toy box. At age 8, his choices were relatively limited as the ‘lean times’ were in full swing. His mother often used this term when her grocery visits would net two or three fewer bags of groceries and be bereft of name brands.

Next to his baseball glove, the raft was his favorite toy. It carried with it a distant memory of a father he wished he’d been able to know. A father whom he knew loved him, but was unable to stand up beneath the weight of his ‘sickness’ (Another Mom term). He’d often heard the word, ‘cancer’ thrown around in the days leading up to his father’s passing, but still did not have a complete grasp of what it meant. The raft was simple in its construction and functionality. When the garden next to the trailer had proven to be a futile venture, his father had taken one of the pieces of wood used to border the soil and cut off an eight inch piece. He then drilled a small hole halfway through the piece and fitted a small dowel rod into, securing it with glue. The sail was a piece of an old work shirt that his father no longer wore, as he had been fired from the garage he worked at upon becoming sick. The sail was cut from the part of his old shirt with his name embroidered on the breast and fixed to the dowel rod with some old string from their junk drawer in the kitchen.

“Call it the S.S. Henry,” his father joked, handing him the finished product. His smile was weak and his hair was gone, but he still held tight to his sense of humor.

Two days later Henry died.

Daniel exited the park through the main entrance, a driveway built up over the ditch and fashioned with a cement pipe about a foot in diameter to allow water to flow through without overtaking the driveway in situations like these. He turned right and headed uphill wanting to give the raft enough time to pick up speed before slipping into the drain pipe below the driveway and out the other side.

He squatted next to the water’s edge and set  the raft into the water carefully, holding it in place for a few seconds as if to acclimate it to its sudden change in surroundings. His eyes closed slowly and he exhaled. Letting go of the raft was always a an unnerving proposition for him, but the risk never seemed to outweigh the reward. He loosened his grip and let the water take the S.S. Henry.

The next thing he knew was that he was running alongside the ditch and laughing hysterically has the raft bobbed and up and down in the current. He picked up enough speed to pass the raft and positioned himself on top of the driveway for an overhead view of the raft’s entrance into and exit from the drainage pipe. As it approached his excitement grew as he imagined himself hanging onto the dowel rod boom of the raft, hand on his forehead as he looked at the approaching darkness of the tunnel, and feeling the mist of the spray from the turbulent waters. He entered the tunnel and its darkness overcame him. It wasn’t fear, though. This was the joy of the unknown and the adventure associated with it.

As he emerged from his state of euphoric imagination, he prayed that his life would be like that when he grew up. He prayed that it would be one enormous adventure and that he could be the hero of it.

15 years later, his life would remind him of this experience and he would smile.

14 years later, his life would remind him of this journey and he would hang his head.

articulate

He couldn’t get the words out. He wanted so badly to articulate how he felt about the predicament they had found themselves in, but the words refused to springboard from his mouth.

While words escaped him, feelings did not. Anger. Hot, burning anger over what that man had done. That man and his nauseating, narcissistic, narrowmindedness. How can he assume to know everything as if he were divine and omnicient?

Tom dropped slowly and sat on his haunches. He ran both of his hands through his hair and exhaled heavily. 30 yards or so away Gerald turned circles slowly, looking up at the sky as a front rolled in from the west as a blanket would on a cold winter night. It would be raining soon and, with nowhere to go, they would forced to find shelter on terms other than their own.  Gerald could feel the cool breeze making its way through his patchy, gray beard and frowned.

“We’re SOL,” he hollered to Tom. “The rain’s gonna soak us and we’ve got nowhere to go.”

Tom couldn’t look up. His eyes burned with growing tears and he didn’t want his father to see him in such a weak state. This field, his family’s field, was no longer their’s. He had gambled it all away for fifteen minutes of fame and was nowhere near satisfied.

(this writing stuff is hard to do.)

I really want to be able to write fiction, but it’s extremely hard to pull stories out of thin air. I can’t begin describe how badly I want to give the world a story to experience that can fill it with laughter, sorrow, intensity, and love. I want to create a character that experiences life in ways that I can’t imagine experiencing it.

I can’t fly, but I want to write about a child who wakes up on the first day of 8th grade with the ability to fly.

I can’t hit a baseball more than 100 feet, but I want to write about the man who can and does so for my team so that I can vicariously be a fan of the team that wins the World Series.

I can’t chase down a criminal, swordfight him into submission, and then turn him in for a $200,000 reward, just give all the money to charity.

I can, however, write about a child that lifts his leg every time he sneezes because I just watched that happen…four times. I wonder if he knows which end the sneeze is supposed to come out of.

I think the bottom line is that I’m extremely interested in the creative process and, moreso than that, the result of the creative process. I want to hold the finished product in my hand for the entire world to see. I want the world to say, dag yo. that kid’s got the goods, writing wise. I want kids to have to read my awesomely deep writing in their english classes. I want them to not want to read my book because the books that students don’t like to read are the best books out there.

Easy, right?

grammar

Today begins my second consecutive attempt to write down 500 words. I’ll probably fail again like I did last night.

I’m not sure where his understanding of proper grammar originated from. Ross had begun to lose all useful memories of his days in elementary school and was barely hanging on to the ones from middle school as well. He attributed this less-than-awe-inspiring bit of trivia to his current career as a middle school teacher. Perhaps humans were only wired to recall three total years of middle schooling. At this point, He had more than four years under his belt. Were his theory to be true Ross would be well beyond the point of shoving old memories off the carousel of his mind in the name of new ones.

1997 was just torn from his 13 year long perch upon a pink unicorn in the name of 2010.

“Hey!” 1997 protests as he rubs a skinned knee. “What gives you the right to kick me off the ride? Can’t you see how valuable I am to this guy’s memory bank?”

“Right…” 2010 is arrogant. I’ve found in my vast (1 year) experience as a teacher that I find myself illogically arrogant and sure of myself as if I’ve experienced every possible situation that teaching can offer.

2010 continues.

“What does Ross need with armpit farting and sporadic use of deodorant?” he offers. “He’s a grown man now. He needs to be worrying about things like educational best practices and how to get the most out of his crappy state benefits package.”

“Have you met Ross? He’s perfected the art of the armpit fart over time. In fact, he and Scott are like the Lewis and Clark of armpit farting. They took this expansive, unknown wilderness inside their shirts, and made it a passable, welcoming place for all mankind.”

1998 leaned towards 1999. They’re both safely entrenched in one of those golden sleds that families with young kids tend to sit on. Safe, that is, for now.

“They really turned a corner in my year with their work. It’s a wonder they weren’t discovered by a talent agency,” 1998 said.

“Was that they year they coined the term ‘sweet spot’?” 1999 – or, 8th grade – had been on the outside looking in. False maturity and hormones had taken over by then and Ross didn’t seem to care any longer about his craft.

“Yeah,” replied 1998. “What a year.”

The conversation continued on like this for a while. 1997 and 2010 went back and forth in attempts to one-up the other as to which year added more value to Ross’ life in the long run. In the end they decided that both years carried with them some level of invaluable memories necessary to Ross’ progression through life. They compromised and decided that they would take turns on the carousel based on situational contexts facing Ross. At work 2010 would jump the carousel and Ross would use every ounce of his newfound knowledge of teaching to be the best he could be. As soon as he came home, though, 1997 would take his turn as Ross, in a feeble attempt to impress his wife, would take up his craft once again serenade his lovely wife with the melodious tones of his underarm.

The Endish

In conclusion: My grammar is extremely poor in this post, but I made it to 550ish and I feel like it was a success.

Awkward

Real nerds have tape on their glasses out of necessity. At some point, in the midst of intense study and intellectual anguish, a screw came loose and one piece separated from another. The tape is not found connecting the two lens pieces together at the bridge. No one breaks their glasses at the bridge. This is, quite possibly, the strongest part of a pair of glasses and does not lend itself to breakage, at least not of the inadvertent variety. No, the tape is found, more often than not, connecting the ear piece on one side to the lens that it attaches to. As glasses are removed time and again during said instances of intense study and intellectual anguish, screws loosen magically and pairs of glasses break.

David did not wear glasses, but was awkward enough to pull it off had his vision been lackluster. If a picture could be painted and sold to a museum as part of a collection of nerds throughout time, David’s picture would’ve fallen somewhere between prehistoric cave-nerd and basement-dwelling online gaming nerd. That is to say, David’s nerd-like qualities transcended time.