Prompted
by
Dallas Itzen
From
the shop window, five caged felines watched rush hour Slopers wasting their
freedom. They laid stoically under fluorescence the color of a zested lemon as
humans and dogs hurried at outer borough speed along dusky 5th
avenue near Union Street. The cats and I watched everyone heading away from us
towards home. I stood munching street truck guac and chips, a snack that
reminds me of my original home, Texas, that isn’t anymore since my parents
died. The furry five and me were biding our time, waiting to be adopted.
I
was in serious author mecca, Brooklyn, nervously early for my creative
nonfiction class. The upcoming writing exercise filled me with dread. I suffer
from literary rigor mortis. Going rigid, I stare at my notepad like it’s an
operating table for an autopsy where diseased innards will be uncovered.
Instead of a scalpel, I use a pencil for quick removal. I act casual in my
terror. My classmates, real writers and true locals, wildly type on laptops,
excited to unleash their raw genius. I fumble for one cohesive thought and I’m
a writer by trade but it’s not real writing. When I start, time’s almost
up. Unable to erase the stupider words, I scribble over them in nearly
unreadable scrawl. Thankfully the key-pounding covers my pencil scratch.
What
I call exercises, the literary crowd calls “prompts.” So much cooler. Our last
one came from the New York Times: write about something underrated. Examples
given by known authors were so clever, I became short of breath. My hands went
numb. Oxygen and pauses were underrated but hard to explain quickly. My numb
hand held the answer — the #2 pencil.
Yesss. My arms moved! I cleverly used my ad-writer skills to sell the faded
glories of the wooden tool of yore. The
pretty, published teacher invited me to share. I decoded my scrawl
aloud, preparing for applause. The response gutted me. Apparently there’d been
a millennial movement to re-imagine the #2. My classmates schooled me on the
sleek redesigns they cherished like “The Palomino” and “Blackwing.” Their
comments were more interesting than my piece.
So
here I was up on the crest of Park Slope, already over the hill and drawn to
this line-up of silky outcasts — an
almond-eyed blonde, a teen with a sly calico mask, a black cat, splotchy
all-in-one and striped tabby. Thank you autumn early nightfall which concealed
my messy snack consumption, something I’d never do on THE Fifth Avenue. The
bench in front of hipster institution Brooklyn Industries had been removed.
Perhaps they objected to a chip-chomping non-Sloper interloper, marring the
view of sustainable puffies and urban
combat-style backpacks.
Black
cat with eyes the shade of my guacamole studied me as I shoveled glob in. Upon
crunch, Tabby surveyed me. Guilt set upon me. They were my TV. Maybe I was
theirs. When Calico stood up to poop, I felt their plight. Not easy to be on
display. Not for me certainly. The street sounds soothed me — discernible
footsteps and whirring wheels of cars, strollers, carts and walkers. Homier
than the roaring din of Manhattan where I lived for two decades. How I had
loved being swallowed by it. It was impossible to be a misfit since most were
there to stand out not fit in. I was happy knowing no one other than
cats, liquor store workers or those at work including a temporary husband and
friends who stuck with me.
Having
lived in Cobble Hill for a few years as a human, no longer a work robot, I
appreciated the sounds of individual lives though my footsteps still
sounded impostor-ish. A Brooklyner not a
Brooklynite. Big difference. Especially visiting the Slope, the iconic Prospect
Park-rooted community with involved parents, evolved co-parents, nurtured kids,
charming shopkeepers, beardy artisans, big time writers and artists and many in
multiple categories. They chat like it’s one big porch, so foreign to me, the
outsider and former military kid. We moved eight times by the time I was ten.
As soon as I belonged, it was time to leave. “Don’t get attached,” my parents
would warn. I was always borrowing home.
When would I have to turn Brooklyn back in? Maybe when my rent went up. If I
had kids, it might be different.
The
window cats were most unsympathetic and I admired them for it. A duo joined me
in cat-gazing — a tall 30-ish blonde
white woman and a 40-ish black man with cool-nerdy glasses and a beret. She was
drawn to Blonde cat while he examined Black cat. So cute.
“Doesn’t
his face look like the in-bred kid playing the banjo in Deliverance?”
she chirped. Wow. No words. I looked at the golden boy. His face was narrow
with close-set slanted eyes, maybe a bit similar to the character from the
disturbing 70’s film, but come on. Don’t do that to this caged creature on a
clammy night with no banjo. Dubious, I tested their cat love.
“Let’s
hope the black cat stays here for now. Most places won’t adopt them out in
October,” I lobbed. The man nodded. “Terrible that whole thing,” he said. She
said nothing. So he knew about all the sickos who get black cats at Halloween
for cruel reasons. “If I weren’t allergic, I’d have three.” he said. Aw. A cat
man.
“Three
cats for three rats,” he added. The guac lost its flavor. “I’ve lived here 30
years,” he lamented. “The building next door was gutted to become condos,
driving rats into our homes.” Poof went my cat kinship dreams. My Slope
idealization soured. He continued despite my widened eyes and stranded chip. “I
woke up, heard one scamper under the oven. My super caught three foot-long
rats.” He glanced at me adding, “Not counting tails.”
“Woah”
I blurted. We’d hit that strain of stranger over-exposure. In unison like we’d
rehearsed for a play, we shouted, “Have a good night!” and evacuated. Melting
into the darkness, I headed for class. Fear of the prompt made me forget about
homeless cats and strange strangers.
* * * *
Wanna
be local. Wannabe author. Though I’ve been a successful freelance writer, I’m a
double impostor in these serious Brooklyn-to-the-bone classes. In lit circles
no one cares that I wrote a branded content video featuring Nobel Prize-winner
Malala Yousafzai. My ad credits don’t transfer. But I no longer let my
misfitness keep me from trying. I don’t stuff emotion or hide in work or booze.
I feel it. Hold it gently. Like a lost kitten.
The
classes are in adorable crafty local shops after hours on too-small wooden
chairs, taught by terrific Brooklyn authors with MFA’s and huge Twitter
followings who speak on panels and know famous other authors. They write blurbs
for each other’s books. Everyone’s younger, published or close. Some write
for socially responsible magazines. Or
they’re editors. Or activists or actors. Or secretly important ghost-writers.
One has a memoir grant. From what I’ve picked up, trauma stories are the rage.
We read these essays, oohing and awing over the searing truth, quirky symbolism
and dark imagery. The latest winner of the “I Had it Harder Than you” Contest.
The winner so far was a phenomenal now best selling writer, a scientist whose
husband left her before she lost everyone in her office to a mass shooting. Not
in Brooklyn, thank goodness.
I’d
had my struggles but now I was writhing and writing from run-of-the-mill grief
in sloppy fits and starts trying to reconcile the illness and death I’ve seen
recently. Inching closer to the grave myself and running out of time, I’m
finally trying free writing — something people have insisted I do forever. I
reminded myself that being a beginner, making mistakes, flailing, failing and
trying is how I became a meditator, a sober gal, mindfulness teacher and
intermediate skier. Learning from those who know. Fucking up, humbled. Taking
classes. Embarrassing myself, crying, throwing jealous tantrums, practicing
until I’m doing it.
* * * *
In
class #2 on that dark evening with the window cats and strange strangers long
forgotten (unlike the #2 pencil), I smelled the prompt coming and my mind
promptly emptied. My arms went wooden. My neck hurt. The teacher asked us to
describe a recent encounter with strangers. Hm. Can you get more recent
than minutes ago? No but I didn’t know how to tell the nervous weird awkward
randomness. I yearned to deliver dramatic hilarity. Something profound and
haunting to inspire the teacher-author to grab me after class and whisper,
“You’re brilliant. I’d like to include that piece in my anthology.” Cat-gazing,
guac, rats and inbreds? Yuck. I couldn’t let it be just an exercise so I
cheated. With a ditty from the ’90’s that always entertained people when I used
to tell it (too much and usually drunk). I’d been on Houston Street near my
Noho loft back when I was cool. Near where I adopted a deli cat. The story
involved me violently shoving strangers
out of the way of an SUV flipping through the air towards us, action
movie-style but not in slow-mo. It landed upside down where we’d stood. Shaken,
we mumbled odd things and left. It was very New York, very Jarmusch. I knew how
to tell it with flair. Knew I’d win the prompt.
I
took a breath. This wasn’t a competition. I was vibrating with desperation and
uncertainty. I calmed my misfitness kitten. Were the window cats not worthy? Or
fellow cat-gazing Brooklyners? I thought back to a breakfast table in Austin
where a family friend, Marilyn had laid out a pad and pen after my parents died
when I was brimming with stories. She’d asked me kindly Mama-Grandma-like n her
Texas twang, “Well, can you just write out what happened? The way you’ve told
me in conversation? Imperfectly?” Marilyn writes for her own solace and
amusement.
Channeling
her, I wrote out what happened earlier. Nauseous, I forced myself to read it
and was surprised to find the class nodding, smiling, laughing. Afterwards they
looked at me warmly like they knew me better. The teacher asked, “All that
happened just now? Wow! It’s so Brooklyn-quirky.” I gained confidence
but something stickier occurred. The “unimportant” encounter once it was
written and shared became part of me. I stopped by the window to see Black
cat’s guacamole eyes before trekking
home through oddball Gowanus but the furry five were snoozing.
“I’m
sorry” I whispered. “For our gawking and bad manners. See you next week.” I
headed down the Slope home, wishing it was under snow and I was on skis. I felt
adventurous.
* * * *
I
visited them the following week. Black cat was gone. I hoped the rat-plagued
man had adopted it despite his allergies. I assumed the blonde hadn’t either.
Golden boy looked bored and ignored. I wished I could give him a little banjo,
that he’d play it like a mofo. No one would ignore him or make fun of him then.
I was near tears. What was panging me? Breathe. Pause. Feel. Ah. Last class’s
prompt was still prompting me. To notice more. To take interest
in the in-betweens. See stories everywhere. I was prompted to care about a
missing mystery cat and now aware that I gaze at homeless animals, relating,
then walk home, assuming someone else will rescue them.
When
I was eight, I insisted I was adopted. My exasperated Mom presented my birth
certificate. There it was: parent & daughter names, birth time and place. I
was a kid. Official documentation didn’t impress me. I was trying to tell a
story about feeling out of place. A year ago, going through an over-stuffed but
awfully empty house, I found my little girl hospital bracelet.
* * * *
I
refuse to say “woke” at my age yet I’m thinking of the Mexican man cooking in
the truck feeding Slope beardies when I leave class at 9 pm. I’m reflecting on the Brooklynite dealing
with rats due to gentrification which I’m apart of, me and my white privilege.
I’m rethinking belonging. I’m not an abandoned cat. I have a good home in a
lovely neighborhood. Winston Churchill’s Mom and Fanny Bryce once lived on my
street, Henry Street. I’m taking a page from caged cats but not by fear. I
haven’t known many with low self esteem. They stretch, eat, sleep, and poop
unselfconsciously. Exposure is their ticket to freedom.
I even felt for the rats. Then there’s my
least favorite character, the blonde with a penchant for Deliverance. I once found that film fascinating and joked
about it as a young blonde not understanding the implications of rape or
stereotypes. I was prompted to google the boy cast as the in-bred. Billy
Redden, who’s never been to Brooklyn, is a local man in rural Georgia.
Discovered by a talent scout in the 70’s, Billy saw little movie money and
ended up working at Walmart.
Writing
on-the-spot unfiltered nonfiction and displaying my truths had sliced me open
and my owie was weepy.
* * * *
Our
next prompt was to write about a scar. I had several with dramatic looks and
origins except for the invisible Brooklyn one since a plastic surgeon had been
on ER duty. If a scar is defined as a mark on skin or within tissue where a
wound has not healed completely, it seemed I had a new one in my mental tissue.
Tender, I avoided writing about it even though it wanted me to. Afraid of any
new literary lacerations, I whipped out an oft-told tale of my childhood scar
strangely still numb. It concerns cutting myself while opening boxes in a new
home. It has intriguing twists: bizarre panicked squeaking, loss of all
intelligent communication (sound familiar?), bleeding on new shag carpet, a 90
mph drive on ice and a truck flying upside down (sound familiar?). Plus my big
tough Lt. Col. dad nearly fainting when they stitched me.
I
wrote the old scar’s story which left me numb like it. I wasn’t exposing. My
new scar throbbed, feeling cheated. After that me and misfitness kitten started
laying our real shit out there, fresh, sometimes smelly. Like the cats do at
NYC Pets on down-to-earth 5th Avenue. Instead of wares in the
windows, the shop displays animals and finds them homes. Slopers love ’em for
it. Come cat-gaze. Get a taco from Morelo’s on Union St. Take a class. Sackett
Street Workshop is awesome. Pick up my teacher’s anthology “What My Mother and
I Don’t Talk about’ with her heart-breaking essay.
I
may never fit in here. Literary circles may never adopt me and trauma lit is
but one. Its courageous expressers don’t need me judging them. They’ve been
through enough. Besides, I owe them and Brooklyn. They’ve taught me a vital
lesson: live prompted.
"Afterwards they looked at me warmly like they knew me better." Same here.
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