Archive for category A yarn

Regret

I don’t have many regrets.

That may sound trite but it’s true. First, I am more likely to regret something I have done than regret something I haven’t.  When I’m in doubt about whether or not to do something I usually do it. Second, I don’t usually regret the maybe-less-than-optimal decisions I’ve made  because I tend to believe that all the flubs and mis-steps got me here, and here ain’t bad. Sort of like that Poi Dog Pondering song, “Thanksgiving.”

But I was thinking about this the other night, trying to come up with some things I regret not doing and I landed on a few.

The first is easy. In the mid-90s I was living in San Francisco with an office job and roommates and a boyfriend. A typical mid-20s existence that I desperately wanted to escape. I wanted to be a real writer, a journalist, an adventurer — really anything that had to do with exotic locations and the romance of words.

So one day I received in the mail an amateurish type-written flier inviting me to join a group of writers, rogues and literary-types for heavy drinking and a  Liar’s Dice tournament in North Beach. It was something close to those exact words.

I held it in my hands, it was printed on sea foam green copy paper.  I was fascinated: not only did I dream of hanging out with writers, rogues and literary-types, but I adored Liar’s Dice. I was good at it. I all but looked over my shoulder as I read the invitation again. Who was it from? How did they get my name, my address? There wasn’t a clue.

The thing I loved most about living in San Francisco was the possibility that anything could happen on any given day. It was foggy and expensive and, granted, I’ve never lived in New York, but San Fransico had glamor lurking on every block, legends both established and emerging and just enough intimacy to throw people together in unexpected ways.

The Liar’s Dice invite vibrated with potential. I pictured a clubby dive bar packed with all the best writers in town, dice rattling and pints draining.

And I didn’t go.

I didn’t even go.

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My Escort

Chapter One

My older sisters (2) will tell you that the fact that my parents bought be a car when I was in high school proves that I was, perhaps even am, spoiled. I would counter that at least 50% of my sisters did not receive their drivers licenses until well beyond high school.

The fact was that my parents were sick of negotiating with me for the use of the family cars and/or carpooling with me to work/school/whatever else. The solution came in the form of 0.9% financing and a gently used 1983 Ford Escort that was a screamer of a deal at the dealership owned by a guy who went to the same college as my dad.

So it was announced: I was getting a car. I could use it to get around during my senior year in high school and then sell it when I needed the money for college.

Chapter Two

I went to college in Santa Cruz, California and when I decided I needed my car there, I flew home to get it and my parents bought me one of those lunch box pull-out car stereos (so the robbers wouldn’t steal it, get it?) I drove the car from Fairbanks, Alaska, to Santa Cruz. But to give myself a break from the driving, I took the car ferry between Haines, Alaska and Prince Rupert, British Columbia.

When I first got on the ferry, I loved it. It was like a cocktail party with outdoorsy types and whales on the starboard side. I met a bunch of nice people including a chatty old guy who was getting off in Juneau. While the ferry was in port he suggested we visit a local bar, one of those places where you can throw peanut shells on the floor. So I climbed into his pickup with him and went driving off into the evening light, listening the gun rack rattle behind my head. I remember vaguely questioning my judgment.

We went to the bar, enjoyed a beer and stopped at a grocery store so I could buy some provisions for the balance of my trip. Then he drove me back to the dock where we found the gangway up and the ferry preparing to pull away. I bolted from the cab of his truck with a “Thanks” and a wave and bellowed to the guys untying the ferry. I could picture my Escort in the hold, loaded with all my earthly belongings, including a small cardboard box of cassette tapes and the lunch box stereo hidden cleverly beneath the passenger seat to thwart robbers.

The dock guys swung me on board, my provisions under my arm. I ran up to a family of brothers from Round Lake, Minnesota I had met on the fist leg of the trip and was about to launch into the fresh tale of my close shave when a voice over the loudspeaker stole the punchline. “Will the girl who just jumped ship please come to the bursar’s office and show your ticket?”

I kind of dated one of those brothers for a while. He drove with me for a while after we got off the ferry. He made fun of my John Denver tape.

Chapter Three

As it turns out, the 1983 Ford Escort was one of the worst cars ever made. Something was constantly wrong with it. I lived in San Francisco after college and the car would die without warning or explanation and I would have to pull over and wait until it would start again. It became a joke among my friends and once when I was stranded and it wouldn’t start, I had to call the boyfriend I was in the midst of breaking up with for help. The car had to go.

I spent a week calling various junk yards and charities finding out the best way to get rid of the car. The best offer I came up with was $10 cash for the car and I wouldn’t have to pay any towing fees. I held off, hoping I could do better.

But then one Sunday, I was walking home from the grocery store enjoying the slanting sunlight of a summer evening when I remembered: Monday morning street cleaning. The car, which I hadn’t driven all week in a fit of PTSD, would have to be moved. I walked toward the Escort weighing the odds of it starting. I perched the grocery bag on the roof, slid in the stale smelling car and turned the key. Nothing.

I got out again. Cursing mightily and grabing for the groceries. I made eye contact with a hapless looking guy walking up the sidewalk trailing his unicycle behind him. I scowled.

“Hey it can’t be that bad,” he said to me with a carefree grin. “At least you have a car.”

I turned on him, I’m sure I was laughing maniacally. “Car?” I sputtered. “You want this car? $10 and it’s yours.”

He carefully set down his unicycle and reached into his pocket. He counted out a stack of one-dollar-bills collected that afternoon from tourists at the wharf taking in his juggling routine. He had 12. “I’ll give you $12.”

The transaction was simple. I ripped a swipe of my grocery bag and wrote a bill of sale. I took his $12, informed him he’d need a tow truck and shook his hand. We parted and I walked toward home, feeling smug.

He had to chase me down. I’d forgotten to give him the keys. And later he called to work out the transfer of the title and told me, post-mechanic, that I didn’t get a bad deal.

I spent most of the money that night on a forgotten movie.

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Rude awakening

I’ll be perfectly honest and tell you that few things in my day-to-day life are really story-worthy (despite the regular benedictions from that Moth podcast guy.)
But Sunday morning I found a stranger curled up next to the infant seat in the family car. It’s funny to think he was there all morning while we padded around the house cooking eggs for the boys, getting laundry going, debating how we might spend the day.

It was decided that we’d start with a hike in Forest Park. It was a pretty morning and given the growing dread that descends on every Portlander on sunny fall days (you know what they say about paybacks, the deluge is sure to come) we intended to make proverbial hay.

I distinctly remember thinking as I corralled my sweet, sweet boy and got him dressed that it was early for Portland, at least my part of town. We’re consistently amazed by the droves of sleep-eyed hipsters lined up for weekend breakfast at places like Cup & Saucer and Jam on Hawthorne when we’ve been up for hours. It’s life with a toddler, not like a conscious choice. And yet I still get a charge of feeling, well, wholesome.

So I’m feeling wholesome as I charge out to the car with the dog and an armful of coats for the coat-shunning toddler. I pop open the back hatch and the dog, excited to be included in the outing hops up. I notice his grimy wool blanket is missing. “Where’s the dog blanket?” I call to Mike who is herding the boy out the door and fumbling with keys. It’s one of those questions you lob at your partner that you don’t expect an answer to.

I step to the backseat door and fling it open, noticing the shadow of pile of crap I don’t remember being there yesterday and that’s when I see him. First the soles of his black loafers. Then his eyes springing wide above the top edge of Seeger’s blanket.

My heart pounds as I shout, involuntarily: “Who are you!”

The young man in the back seat clearly has no idea. He springs out of fetal position and bolts past me out of the car, shedding the blanket. He stumbles and mumbles. He’s nicely dressed — slacks, a button down shirt — has an English accent and reeks of alcohol. “I need my backpack,” he gasps. “I had a backpack.”

Mike, who is tall and thick and somewhat threatening, especially in the morning when his hair stands on end, is bounding off the porch and lunging at the perpetrator who is already down the driveway and tripping up the sidewalk patting his pockets. Mike follows him uttering threats and securing assurances that our young guest hasn’t stolen anything from the car. Tall and skinny, the Brit starts to sound as if he’s fighting tears. “I was drinking,” he whines over his shoulder to Mike, as if it needs clarification.

It all took maybe a minute and then we were back to bundling into the family car and continuing with the day. Mike and I look at each other and laugh. “Can you believe that just happened?”

We used the top of Thurman St. as our put-in for the park. It was a abuzz with earnest runners: droves of them all ropey muscles and flushed cheeks. I had been expecting we’d beat the crowds as we do when we show up early to those breakfast places. Instead I felt like an alien, clothed without microfibers, plodding slowly along with sniffing dog and dawdling 2-year-old.

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