Authors: M. Beth Bloom
“Thanks. You’re a good teacher, Mr. Roush.”
“Well thank you. And
congraduation
, by the way,” he says, amused by his pun.
I smile at him and turn to leave, but something catches in my thoughts that makes me pause, and it isn’t just the fact that at that exact moment Mr. Roush says, “Oh, and one more thing.” It hits me that this whole conversation, what’s happening right now, could be a scene, part of a story. Since it’s not fictional, it can’t be false.
“Can I give you a tip for future writing workshops?” Mr. Roush asks, without waiting for my answer. “You might want to ease up a bit on your peer-editing notes.”
“Why, what’s wrong with them?”
“They’re a little harsh.” Mr. Roush reaches for some stapled papers stacked on his desk. “See, here you wrote, ‘There’s something missing from this story, and that something is everything.’”
“Right. That’s just how I felt about it.”
“That’s not the point. The point is to be constructive in your criticism.”
“But Foster has a death in
every one
of his stories,” I say. “It’s like every story’s a dream where it ends with a murder and then the narrator saying, ‘And it was all just a dream.’ Isn’t
that
fake, Mr. Roush?”
“Well, there are gentler ways to express that feeling is all I’m saying.”
I start to say more but Mr. Roush leans over, pats my shoulder, picks up his briefcase, and strolls out the door, as if all this time
I
had been keeping
him
, and not the other way around. But once he’s gone, I realize I have nowhere to be anyway. This was my last class of the day—one of my last classes in high school, ever. I linger in the doorway, wondering what to do. The cafeteria closed hours ago. I’m not in the mood to try on my cap and gown, or prewrite thank-you notes for incoming graduation checks from relatives, and I definitely have zero desire to go study for my European history final tomorrow.
So instead I stand there, letting time drain away.
Just for the sake of whatever, let’s say I
don’t
know anything about anything I’ve written. But if that’s true, then what
do
I know that I can write about? I scan around the classroom for inspiration, and this is all I see: seventeen personal desks on which to write personal (but not too harsh) constructive criticisms; an oversize hand-painted Shakespeare quote hanging above the door (
THE PLAY IS THE THING
); a hardback thesaurus, fat and old, perched on Mr. Roush’s desk like a movie prop.
This is all I know: that I’m young and I’m about to finish high school and I write.
But what else, what else.
UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE
HarperCollins Publishers
..................................................................
COURTNEY’S STRETCHED IN
a crazy yoga position when I go into her bedroom, but my entrance breaks her concentration. She looks up at me, concerned.
“Your vibes are seriously heavy right now,” she says.
“Roush hated my story,” I tell her. “He thinks I’m a phony.”
“Is he right?”
“Are you asking if he’s right that I’m a phony?”
“Yeah.”
“How can I even answer that?”
“Well, do you feel like a phony?”
“No,” I say. “I don’t know. I feel like a regular person.”
“There you go then,” Courtney says.
Then she closes her eyes and lowers her head to the carpet, her legs crossed under her in a complicated way. She’s facing the wall with windows, but she could be facing any direction, she could be facing her stupid mini-fridge, because the blinds aren’t drawn, the windows aren’t open, and it’s almost nighttime anyway. Once my sister turned twenty-one, she suddenly decided she was “deep,” even though she still lives at home and only enrolled in community college so she could take ceramics classes (or “pot,” as my dad calls them) in hopes of eventually switching to an actual university, where she can study agriculture (or “grass,” as my dad likes to say). At least we don’t share a room anymore, which makes me think of our old bunk bed, which then makes me wonder about the new bunk bed I’ll have this coming fall.
The college roommate questionnaire my school sent me last month asked mostly about your intended major and study habits and one’s basic overall level of cleanliness. But the first question was about sex, as in which gender you are, and the last question was about location, as in where you’re from. It made me realize that if the pairings had been chosen solely based on people’s answers to the first and last questions, then I could’ve potentially been matched with someone like my sister. She’s a girl, like me, and she’s from Los Angeles, also like me. But that’s where the similarities stop and the differences begin.
“Courtney.”
“What?”
“Are you already meditating?” I ask. “Has it started?”
“I’m in the middle of
trying
to do it.”
“Can we talk?”
“You always want to talk,” Courtney says.
“So?”
“So try to stop sometimes. Try to just stop talking, stop doing anything for a few minutes.”
“But I’m a Virgo.”
“Well, stop being a Virgo too. At least for a little bit.”
Courtney pats the carpet next to her, and I go and sit down. I cross my legs like hers and stare ahead at the closed blinds without moving, holding my back straight, mimicking her posture. I glance at her out of the corner of my left eye but keep my right eye shut because both of her eyes are closed.
If every girl can be described as having the face of a particular animal, then you’d say Courtney has a mouse’s face and I have a cat’s or kitten’s. That’s one of our differences. She’s also the only Californian I’ve ever known who acts like a stereotypical “Californian,” like she’s from the Land of Fruits and Nuts. She calls Beverly Hills “the nine-oh,” like the beginning of its zip code, and she calls Malibu “the Boo,” or sometimes even “Downtown Boo,” which I think is just embarrassing.
“Keep your eyes closed, Eva,” she warns.
“Okay, sorry.”
“Visualize the number five,” Courtney says. “Not just five things, but the number itself, like the icon five. Okay . . . now let five slowly fade. Now create it in your mind two more times. Five. Five. Do the same with the numbers four, three, two, one, and finally zero. Make the zero three times. Picture them big and bold and defined, one at a time, three tall rings, Oh, Oh, Oh. Now hold the last one and picture yourself standing inside the zero.”
“Okay, yeah,” I say, my eyes closed tight. “I see it.”
“Are you standing in it?” she asks.
“I’m standing in it, yeah.”
“Now breathe.” Courtney breathes. “Whoooooooo.”
I do it too: “Whoooooooo.”
I listen to Courtney’s breath and imitate her, until we’re breathing together. Long inhales and long exhales. In one part of my mind I can still see the zero encircling me, hugging my body, but in another I start to think about what I usually think about when my mind wanders: Making It.
Most of the time when people say they want to Make It, what they mean is that they want to become famous and successful. People like to say to me, “Well, what if your life takes a turn? What if you stop writing, then what?” Well, then nothing. I don’t want anything else. Since forever, since always, even right now, it’s Making It as a Real Writer or else it’s me inside a big, bold, defined zero.
“Whoooooooo.”
A Writer. A Virgo. A Vegan. Two months ago I went vegan after having been vegetarian for about a year and macrobiotic for two months. I know it’s sort of shallow, but labels like Vegan and Virgo and Writer comfort me because they help distinguish me not just from other people, but also from other versions of myself that I could have become, or could one day be. Like how I used to consider Straight Edge another one of my labels because I thought I was
abstaining
from drugs and alcohol, but then I realized I just wasn’t being offered any to abstain from.
“Whoooooooo,” I breathe.
“Let’s go deeper,” Courtney says.
“Okay.”
“So there’s your perfect self, and your injured self. Can you envision them?”
“I’ll try.”
“Don’t picture the injured you getting better, because that only feeds energy to your problems. Instead see the two selves as distinct, separate things. Now gradually overlap them so your perfect self
consumes
your injured self, becoming one. Until you’re healed, and always have been.”
“Um, okay.”
“It’s called visual healing,” Courtney says. “Are you feeling it?”
“I think so. . . .”
I don’t know what I used to imagine college was going to be like before I actually applied, but the one thing I do remember is that for some reason I always pictured my roommate as being a blonde. And then when I finally got the letter telling me my roommate had been selected and I Google Imaged her name, she was.
Is.
But she’s also from San Diego, which annoys me because I want her to be from somewhere far away, somewhere I know nothing about, like how Courtney’s best friend in community college is from New Hampshire. Now my roommate situation feels like just another part of the Roush Problem. She doesn’t expand what I know; she’s what I
already
know.
“Do you see it, Eva?” Courtney says.
“I can’t tell yet.”
What I mainly see is the widening gulf between my expectations and my reality. Like how I totally assumed Mr. Roush would love my short story, and not even just love it like another good short story by a promising senior, but love it better than any of the
other
stories he’d graded the entire semester. But he didn’t love it at all. He saw right through it, and right through me. In my encyclopedia of expectations, I thought I knew more than most of my class and, by knowing more, that I’d be able write about more, and impress Mr. Roush with all of it. But now this expectation seems like the numeral 1 I’m trying to visualize: a puny, thin line, going straight down. And reality looks like the tall ringed 0 around me, fencing me in. Oh, Oh, Oh.
“That’s it,” Courtney says. “You’re meditating. You’re self-healing! Think of a question—”
WHAT DO I KNOW WHAT DO I KNOW WHAT DO I KNOW.
“Got one?”
“Got it,” I say.
“First, as your big sister I have to tell you: there is no answer. Because ultimately, there is no question. You have to see questions and answers as just games that keep us from enlightenment.”
“What kind of games?”
“Games of postponement,” she says. “Every question is already answered. The only thing to do is let go, to know
beyond
knowing.”
“I don’t get it,” I say. “You’re making this up.”
“Don’t open your eyes yet,” she says.
“Too late.”
My eyes peek open and I see Courtney, who’s already looking at me, not smiling. We stare at each other, and I wonder if we lock our eyes together long enough without blinking, whether maybe we can communicate our thoughts back and forth, wordlessly. I try and empty my mind. I throw out my old question, What Do I Know, and come up with a new thought to transmit: Tell Me What to Do. I keep staring at Courtney, exerting all my mind power, but nothing happens. I keep beaming at her anyway, until it feels like there isn’t anything else in my head, until I’m thinking it so hard I realize my lips are pursed, my forehead’s scrunched, and my eyes are just narrow slits. Courtney’s mouse-face stays motionless, in a state of total Zen. I don’t let it faze me, though; I keep beaming and beaming. I visualize my thought filling the entire space of the room:
Tell Me What to Do
.
I’m five seconds from the beginning of a bad headache when I notice a packet of papers on her otherwise empty desk, which means I probably wasn’t meditating very deeply at all.
“What’s that?” I ask, pointing.
“What’s what?” Courtney says.
“On your desk.”
“Just some forms.”
“Fine,” I say, “don’t tell me.”
“Chill, Eva. I’m just applying to study abroad next semester.”
“Are you serious? I could never do that,” I say. “It’s not my kind of thing.”
“You’re seventeen. You don’t have a thing.”
“Yes, I do. I’m very specific.”
“Whatever. What are you going to do all summer while I’m packing for Amsterdam?”
“Amsterdam’s not where you go,” I say, thinking about it. “Paris is where you go.”
“Paris is where
you
go, Ms. Not My Kind of Thing.”
“I guess I’ll get a job,” I say.
“Okay,” Courtney says. “Close your eyes again.”
“Okay.”
“Picture the ideal place you’d want to work this summer, if you could work anywhere. Like, if you could do anything, what would it be?”
“Something in the sunshine,” I say. “Maybe, like, doing some
good
. But nothing too dirty, and it still has to be fun, but I also have to learn about myself and other people and hopefully meet a boy—or a few boys.”
“Got it,” Courtney says. “Easy. Camp counselor. I’ll call Steven at that camp I used to work at, Sunny Skies.”