Monday, March 5, 2012

True Stories of John 19: John's Memory Mocks Him, OR, Returning from the Grocery Monologue


Lita: What was that comedian’s name? On the radio before?

John: Was he a comedian? I thought he was just a storyteller with a nice audience.

Lita: Okay, but what was his name? I want to look him up when we get home.

John: I don’t know. Fredrikson?

Lita: It was not even close to ‘Fredrikson.’

John: Fred, maybe? I don’t know; I suck at names. Okay? Fredrikson? Flintstone? He grew up Catholic.

Lita: Was it Catholic?

John: He said he’d been one for twenty-seven years and… eleven months, maybe. Contrasted that with being a Buddhist for three weeks. He kept making those tired jokes about Catholicism making his personality fear- and anger-based. He converted because he… Don’t look at me like that.

Lita: Don’t look at me looking at you. Keep driving, and keep doing that. Keep emptying your mental pockets. I’m testing something. Why did he convert?

John: He met a Llama who held his hands and touched foreheads with him, and he only articulated that it made him feel good. Blessed his rosaries for him. He needed it because his dad was dying, I think from cancer, and his wife was dying from some lingering injuries following a car accident they were in on I-95 where their car flipped five times.

Lita: You’re sure it was five times?

John: I remember. And he was really angry that both of these deaths were coming up at the same time, and full of dread, and he considered suicide for a minute, and I got pissed at him for looking at life and God like the only meaning was in everyone living forever and never getting sick, which stands as the most willfully naïve bullshit of all time. And his wife had to go to a hospice three times.

Lita: Three times?

John: She was in one for four months, he said, though I got confused since he said you were only allowed there for a few weeks, since they expect you to die. So maybe the four months was actually adding up all her time there, or it was that this case was really that extreme and she kept surviving. And I liked the story where she was high on morphine, and sitting up in bed, and wanted to “surprise” him, but could barely speak, and that this did surprise him. Very funny, though probably only works out loud. I was trying to work out if you could pull that off on the page.

Lita: You remember trying to translate a joke about his wife’s morphine haze from stand-up comedy into writing?

John: Well, yes.

Lita: And what’s his name?

John: Burke? Something longer. Burketson?

Lita: This is eerie. You’re a writer.

John: So what?

Lita: That novel you just finished isn’t five hundred pages of calling everyone “the guy in a car accident” or “the wife on morphine.” You use names to mark and remember everyone in every situation.

John: …But it’s the only thing I don’t remember about him. You’re making fun of me.

Lita: Some days I want to climb inside your head and pedal.

John: This is abstract mockery. This is the Cubist version of hazing.

Lita: You don’t even know what Cubism is.

John: But I know the name!

7 comments:

  1. You at least surround yourself with people who can be funny while mocking you!

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  2. I've had these conversations...

    Your dialogue was excellent. I felt like I was in the car looking at you, oh, I mean, in the car with you.

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    1. Thank you! It comes naturally, especially in these real life cases. Just have to know the people around us who make us ourselves.

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  3. *giggles* I forget my character names. I do call them 'the circus lady' and 'the magician dude'. So as you can imagine, there's no hope I'd ever remember anyone's name.

    Haha you must be excellent company on a road trip!

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    1. I think I've forgotten a character name only once or twice in the fourteen months of novel writing and editing. She was pretty dead-on about how ridiculous it is that names are the last thing I remember in real life. I'm deeply hoping other authors are the same way and this isn't a unique failing on my part.

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  4. There is a wonderful farside cartoon. A dorky child has his hand up in a class room saying 'may I be excused? My brain is full'. And mine is too which is why small details like names will no longer fit. And why big things only fit if something is evicted.

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