--YOU THROW AWAY THE THINGS YOU LOVED
1. Moonrise Kingdom
2. Lincoln
3. Argo
4. Django Unchained
5. Les Miserables
6. Silver Linings Playbook
I saw “Life of Pi,” a colorful, cinematic little masterpiece. Actually it wasn’t little. It felt very big, physically universal.
It followed the book fairly closely, but was even better and far more tender and thought-provoking.
Next up is “Zero Dark Thirty.”
…Yesterday Washington State raised its
minimum wage to $9.19, highest in the country.
…Over one million people turned out in
freezing temperatures to see the ball drop at Times Square in NYC. Afterward, cleaning crews picked up 50 tons
of garbage.
As Andie MacDowell’s character so
famously asked in “Sex, Lies and Videotape,” where does all that garbage go?
…I had a very productive day yesterday and also wrote this:
Evergreen
When I get to the meeting, it’s just
Zac and a new girl, a woman actually.
Females rarely attend, mainly because they make themselves and the rest
of our group uncomfortable. The things
we share here we wouldn’t tell our wives or closest friends. Some days we paint the floor with our shame
and misdeeds.
The woman’s name is Joan, and her
goal is to make 30 meetings in 30 days.
She says her habit has eaten her alive and destroyed everything. Looking at her, you can see she’s a jittery
rabbit, a ragamuffin stuffed inside an army jacket and black sweat pants. She barely raises her head, even when she
reads the first meditation.
Me, I’ve been coming since winter of
last year when I was discovered, when the world then collapsed, Mary leaving
with the kids and not saying where she was going, saying only. “You’re sick and you disgust me.”
I share this with our tiny group and
it does and doesn’t feel good. The long
hand on the clock resembles a knife I was once going to shove into my own chest
but didn’t because, in the end, I’m something of a coward.
We finish early, after reciting The Serenity
Prayer and telling everyone to keep coming back “because it works if you work
it and you’re worth it.”
Zac tells me, “Happy New Year,” and
that he’ll get the chairs.
Outside I find Joan on a curb having
a cigarette. It’s so cold there’s barely
a difference between the smoke and her breath.
“Want one?” she asks.
Now that her head’s lifted, I can
see she’s pretty and that one side of her face is bruised purple and evergreen.
“Thanks,” I say, “but I gave them
up.”
“Lucky you.”
“Nah. I’m an idiot.”
“You got a car?” she asks, her oily
blonde hair not blowing at all in the breeze.
I tell her I do.
“Give me a lift?”
It’s a bad idea all the way around,
but I let her get in. After I crank up
the heat, the sound of the vents makes my skin prickle.
We’re not even a mile out when she
scoots against my side and puts her hand on my thigh. It’s been a long time since a woman touched
me without being paid to do so.
At my apartment that night, I get down
on my knees. I try clearing my mind of
the things Joan told me, how she begged, how she said she was lonely and broken
and just wanted to feel skin on skin. I
remember the money I gave her and her stunned expression when I said I wouldn’t
do it with her, that one false move on my part would rip me open forever. She might have understood, but she clawed at
my jacket nevertheless.
I close my eyes and picture a beach
with Joan and her husband on it. I make
them a happy pair. Then I do the same
for myself.
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