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travel far now

a sporadic archive of rants & revelations from life on the road

substack essays

On memory as make-believe and the secrets of a scene

2/25/2026

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I wake with a headache; pain is its own reprieve, perhaps. I grant myself the morning to meander. At least the sun is reaching for me through the window.

Before coffee, I’ve already gone swimming in a strange bath of news—the cruelty and shame of adjuncts in academia; the maddening mantra in these times, “they knew, they knew”; the death of the middle and the mediocrity it often peddled; it’s all too much for a Wednesday morning meant for writing an essay on letters.

I went to Cheesecake Factory the other day, and it was packed, and it was actually really good. I don’t think we can romanticize these places any more than we can critique them for the paradox they perpetuate—that we want ease and consistency and we also want curation and gates.

Walking on an indoor track is a form of self-hypnosis. I started listening to a woman talk about memoir and her video had the strange tinny affect of a 1990s infomercial. She wanted to sell me her genius and kept on dangling the promise of two main components to a memoir that she discovered after studying thousands of them at a big publisher. It took her at least three minutes to reveal her secrets: the scene.

As I circled the track, I grew mad at her for wasting my time and then I also realized I had no where else to be and kept walking. I left the gym with her gems: 1. a scene must have a time anchor; 2. something must happen in the scene. That was her reveal, the grand finale fireworks of her spiel. I thought about it while dreaming last night, still walking around the track inside my mind.

I’ve decided that when I write a scene, it’s actually fine if nothing happens, as long as there’s a person and a verb and feeling. Time anchors are useful, to stretch beyond the once-upon-a, but I call bullshit on the pressure to advance a plot. Guess what, we’ve lost the plot. Fragments and figments are their own kinds of happenings, and that’s the kind of non-story I need to tell at this point, about anything real or imagined. And I’m still circling the track—I’ll be back.

Why did I leap from poetry to the journalism? Some naive idea about justice and the facts. I spent about a decade thinking I could comb for them carefully and come up with real gold for the people. But the newsroom is a blues room with the same 12 bars. The stories got predictable, though the players often changed. We rarely riffed or reflected, rather put together and scrambled the same puzzle parts over and over again, until many of us got laid off.

“To be a writer is to betray the facts,” writes Christian Wiman, in his very dark and difficult essay, “The Limit.” It made my stomach turn, the scenes and the story. But I kept reading to mine this reminder: “to cast an experience into words is in some way to lose the reality of the experience itself, to sacrifice the fact of it to whatever imaginative pattern one’s wound requires.”

My wound requires a wind-up and a let-down—I want the story to come in pulse beats of sensation. I am not a puzzle maker or a heart-breaker, and I certainly realize at this point that memory is a make-believe game.

I’ve read and thought about much too much darkness before noon. It hurts my heart. My transit slips are slipping from my grip. I’ve collected all these mental notes for scope, but I’m not obliged to analyze or file. Wiman says we can work with memory as little stones we “smooth and polish with the waters of imagination.”
​

Transit Slips, #25
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On writing, teaching and questions without deadlines

2/8/2026

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My father was a teacher so I was a teacher, perhaps the same way a shoemaker’s daughter learns to love leather. I was grading high school English papers under the dim light of the kitchen table by the time I was 10. My father gave me a red ink pen to circle grammatical errors on his students’ handwritten essays and I spotted them easily, winning frosted apple squares as compensation for my time.

I’ve been following a jagged path for a while now, though if I have to stick to a story, I’ll mention writing, teaching and traveling as a trio of themes that have kept me ticking since I was a little kid. I made magazines, bound books, performed poems, spoke soliloquies, tied my worth to words and the nesting-doll effect of their power. Watch what I can do, said the little magician within.

Later, I had to figure out how to make money. I learned to pay attention to the world around me even as it flew right past me. Some of my earliest gigs involved serving drinks at a country club to rich people with gold-toned buttons fastened all the way to their necks. I’d punch into work with a timesheet each shift hoping to see Flores, a short guy with rosy cheeks who washed dishes in the kitchen. His name meant “flower,” and I loved this detail. That whole summer was a crash course in crushes.

I heard rumors that Flores slept on the floor in a dorm with a group of other seasonal workers from Mexico that summer. I didn’t understand what any of this meant but I took notes on these unjust circumstances and wanted more information. There are all kinds of reasons why people don’t talk or if they do, they’ll tell you a tale so tall it obscures the more painful truths unfolding. Flores was fine for the time being, as long as I didn’t interfere.

​First, I was a poet. Then I was a teacher. Next, a journalist.

Zanzibar gave me the courage to ask questions and attempt to translate answers across great distances. When a stuffed passenger ferry sank, I started taking notes. Hundreds of bodies washed ashore. When the “radical” imams got arrested and thrown into prison, I tried to get the story. Prison guards shaved their heads and beards to humiliate them. When the fishermen battled sea turf for octopus, I went to the field to observe. I still remember how they slapped the living creatures against rocks to kill and tenderize their bodies.

How little I knew then about what happens to a story when you try to hold it, how it slips through one’s fingers like water.


I slow-drifted into journalism and now I’m swimming my way back out of those waters. As a poet, questions contain the seeds of something green—the imagination is all about audacious metaphor, the power to pair two disparate things and find a connection between them. This creates a “felt infinity” inside the poem, at least, and sometimes extends to life itself.

As a journalist, questions often create more conflict than clarity. If I ask a question, the assumed story already looms so large between us, there’s little room for anything else but the obvious answer. I can usually tell when someone’s lying to me, though. In a poem, the lie is it its own truth. In a story, it’s a stone wedged between reader, writer, and source.

A question without a deadline sets us all free.

#Transit Slips, #8​
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    Essays by Amanda Leigh Lichtenstein is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

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    Bio:

    Amanda Leigh Lichtenstein is a writer, poet, editor and vintage collector based in Skokie, Illinois. 

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