Farther and farther from the boat, feeling ourselves ease
down the food chain, we drifted and drifted. And a great big school of fish—little
silver ones—appeared suddenly and without warning. And they were everywhere.
And you could hear them. Millions of tiny popping sounds all around, in every
direction. We held hands.
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Ypsilanti
When we arrived, a surly woman cleaning up behind the bar
was there to greet us.
“Where you boys from?”
“Boston.”
“Boston where?”
“Massachusetts.”
Pleasantries were exchanged. The conversation continued.
There had been a riot at a club just around the corner the
night before, she explained. Dozens of people had locked themselves in here for safety, she said. If we cared to look across the street, we could still see a policeman's blood on the curb.
As we had around three hours to kill before we went on, we courteously excused
ourselves, got back into the van and made our way to the hotel.
For the next two hours, we sat—two to a bed—and watched a
martial arts movie on tv. No one said a word.
When it was time to head back, we shuffled silently
into the van. Someone put Metallica on the radio. For Whom The Bell Tolls.
It was very loud.
And very funny.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Hero Homework
One of the first things they asked me to do was submit a photo of my hero. It was a cute get-to-know-you kind of a thing. Everyone had done it, leaving the kitchen's partition wall crowded with little portraits.
Here, Einstein. There, Madonna. And all manner of hero in between.
Weeks of ignoring the request segued seamlessly into weeks of laboring over a decision. Who to choose? What about me should my choice represent? Whose picture would one care to look at lunch after lunch? Had my co-workers been stumped so?
Anyways. Once I decided, I never looked back.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
A Funny Thing To Picture Me Doing
The Bridge Cafe connects the library to the Robert Crown Center, where some of Hampshire's athletic-type stuff happens. It was named "the Bridge" because, in the architect's view, it links intellectual pursuits (the mind) with physical ones (the body), which is an odd and funny thing for a cafe to do.
For four years, I swept, buffed and dusted that bridge every morning, five days a week... a sleepy caretaker with a high-powered vacuum and some time to think.
For four years, I swept, buffed and dusted that bridge every morning, five days a week... a sleepy caretaker with a high-powered vacuum and some time to think.
Friday, February 10, 2012
Joe, Who Shared Insights Inspiring and Frightful
He was going to teach his daughter everything... and you could see how much it would mean to him. Mountaineering, bicycle maintenance, philosophy, history and on and on... the curriculum would take decades to get through, and form this stunning succession of moments in time that both of them — father and daughter — would always have to think back fondly on and smile over. Its architecture was sprawling, with branches that spiraled off in all directions.
He spoke with great pride, in sentences that sprung up from some deep paternal place, a prehistoric reserve of fatherly sentiment that every man-creature caring for a child had instinctively drawn from since the beginning of time.
In the company of such powerful forces of nature, I seemed to shrink some... thinking over and over to myself: What curriculum will I offer?
Yikes.
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