I learned to sing folk songs at summer camp and saw my soul mirrored back to me in the key of Joni Mitchell, and company. So I begged my parents to sign me up for lessons at Guitar Works when I was 14. My mother reluctantly bought me an a gorgeous acoustic guitar but somehow, that act of faith in me crushed my will to practice. It felt like a jinx of sorts. I’d feel so cool lugging my guitar in its black case on the bus to and from my lessons with a guy named Brian with John Denver round wire glasses on his face, but I couldn’t stay loyal to the pursuit and my fingers burned with the cuts of trying.
Yesterday, I went to a local diner with my boyfriend and we stopped in the lobby to buy girl scout cookies at a little table set up by a few girl scouts and their enthusiastic mothers. I noticed the patches on their vests and felt a pang of sorrow for the girl scout in me who earned so many patches but never saw them fastened to my sash. I collected so many patches for my good deeds and tasks, but I didn’t have that kind of mother. Of course, we forgive our dead mothers for their mishaps, but I envied all the girls whose patches made it to their sashes.
I’m reading this book about surfing and one idea keeps washing over me, the notion that to ride a wave you have to learn to read a wave. That requires a “close, painstaking study of a tiny patch of coast.” A wave is a guitar is a poem. No matter where we choose to fix our gaze, we must learn to pay attention to the “innumerable subcortical perceptions too subtle and fleeting to express,” and then find a way to express it.
Sometimes a pair of words will pop up in my mind like floaters. Coated, coded. Enormous, anonymous. I usually just plop them on some platform and forget about them, but really I should be cataloguing these little gems. Word play is a more subversive game than it looks; writers untangle knots and open boxes; writers slice into a cake and then they bake it; writers crack open a word like an egg and out comes its bright yellow yolk asking if it’s the sun.
Transit Slips, #9
