—Nice Lady
Dear Nice, Yes. Get a new therapist. And stop abusing the obese. It is protected by the First Amendment, but one day some fatty will fall on you in anger and you’ll need back surgery and physical therapy every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon and you’ll fall into deep depression and turn to baked goods for comfort and not just the occasional cheese Danish but whole crates of sugar donuts from Krispy Kreme that you sit in your full-size car and devour greedily until one day you see a porker in the mirror trying to avert her eyes, and you can say, “Hey, for a fat lady, you don’t sweat that much.”
Meanwhile, I was putting on the pounds myself—in days past, when I strolled onto the terrace in my Speedo, binoculars flashed in nearby buildings as women sought a glimpse of me, but no more, alas—I had left my old weight of 195 behind and passed 225 at a dead run and was lumbering within sight of 250. I did not set foot on a scale after 245, I just bought expandable pants. My old skinny clothes hung in the closet, and my Porky Pig outfits were getting tight now and soon I would need to purchase clothing by phone from Hootie’s Pants Warehouse in Tupelo, Mississippi.
Dear Mr. Blue,
I am a radio announcer, fifty pounds overweight, bipolar, with an odd bulbous head. I’m hearing impaired due to the earphones being too loud, but I guess I sound sexy on my all-night jazz show because gals call on the request line and clamor to meet me, which is nice until they actually do meet me and their unmistakeable look of wan disappointment is followed by a few minutes of strained conversation and the inevitable “Well, I’ve got to be going.” I can’t bear this rejection anymore. Don’t kid yourself: looks matter, they always will matter, and women will always prefer an imbecile with a nice chest to a mature guy like me.
—Confused
Dear Confused, Get out of jazz and find a job at one of those AM talk stations aimed at Angry Suburban Males who are pissed off at liberals for causing sunspots. Learn to rant and rave, fulminate and fume, and you will be a big hit on the Right where most people are overweight and have bulbous heads.
I was washed up, no doubt about it. Nothing I ever wrote would be of the slightest interest ten years from now. I was yesterday’s fish wrap. If I died of a massive heart attack my body would lie undiscovered for days. And Iris wouldn’t come to New York to retrieve it. It’d be drained and dried and boxed (XL) and flown in the bowels of a Northwest Airlines flight from LaGuardia, and a few feet above my pale and waxen form, passengers in First Class would sit savoring their bloody Marys and reading the
Times
Op-Ed page and looking forward to a weekend of canoeing the St. Croix with Maureen, and all I’d have to look forward to is a black hole in Lakewood Cemetery, a short hike from the beach at Lake Calhoun where in our salad days Iris and I once skinny-dipped at midnight and embraced, looking at the lights of downtown Minneapolis.
I had a dream in which my prostate was about to be removed by a tall surgeon in black riding boots who took the cheroot out of his mouth and said, “You won’t be needing an anesthetic, will you? A big fellow like yourself?”
I’m okay, I kept telling myself. I am basically okay. Depending on what is meant by “basically.” I still had some dough left and was in reasonably good shape, despite the booze, and fairly alert, and women were attracted to me, at least a couple of them were. I was not what you’d call a tragic figure. No. Not yet.
Dear Mr. Blue,
My mother is married to the man who killed my father. He (Dad) went off to avenge my uncle, whose wife, Helen, had been stolen away by some Trojan people, and then this man fell in love with my mother. When my dad came back, this man killed him, and he and my mom married. Anyway, my brother, who lives far away from here, has vowed to kill our step dad and Mom. He is very upset. I am going nuts. Any suggestions?
—Electra
Dear Electra, Speak to your family doctor or priest or oracle or maybe appeal to a goddess, like Athena, and tell her exactly what you told me. You may have to make some sacrifices. But there is help available.
15
Turkey Lurkey
Writing Mr. Blue was a comfort to me for sure. As rancid as my own situation was, there were Minnesotans who were suffering right along with me.
Still Hurting
was wanting to sue her uncle for leaving the bathroom door open and exposing himself to her when she was eight, a traumatic memory that she’d been dealing with for thirty years.
Bummed Out
was in love with her gay male friend and got angry and jealous when she spotted him with other guys.
Jaded
was tired of life, period. Ready to move on.
Curious
was in love with her doctor.
Angry
wanted to put sand in the gas tank of her cheating boyfriend.
Shocked
was engaged to a woman who (he found out) did not shave her underarms.
Dear Mr. Blue,
I grew up in Midland, Texas, and went to Yale though I am no reader and married a fine woman who supported me through my Lost Weekend years when I goofed around in the oil business and got high as a kite on weekends and went around making a fool of myself. With the help of dear friends, I was able to sell my bankrupt company at a handsome profit and then obtain a major-league baseball franchise and get public financing for a ballpark, whereupon I sold the team for a fabulous profit. What a lucky duck. Now that I’m off the sauce, I am considering taking a stab at politics (my dad was a politician though not a very good one, IMHO,) but I hate hanging around with dull people who yak about the fine points of public finance or Whatever! And my wife says, “Why don’t you try writing? You have so many good ideas.” What do you think?
—Curious George
Dear George, Writing is not as easy as you might think. You’re required to sit in a little room by yourself for periods of time and the English language can be darned frustrating sometimes. But there’s no harm in trying. I’d recommend that you try writing a book for children. Not so many words and the story line can be pretty basic. How about the story of Pecos Bill? He was a Texan. Or an aviator story that doesn’t involve bloodshed and gore. Perhaps a group of friends who get together and fly jet warplanes for the sheer fun of it. You’re the author! You decide!
I told Salinger I was writing an advice column and he gave me what appeared to be a wry smile—Salinger sometimes wore a fake beard and dark glasses in public so it wasn’t easy to read his facial expressions—and said, “That sounds like wisdom talking, Larry. Advice to the lovelorn. I envy you. You must learn a great deal from that.” I do, I said. I do.
Dear Mr. Blue,
I’m a faded number from St. Paul, living high and dry in New York, a writer who had one big success and then a lot of little failures—yes, that old story—no pals to tell my troubles to, so I’m filled with dread. Pacing my terrace on the 12th floor, looking out over the rooftops, thinking dark thoughts about failure and disgrace—writing is what makes me happy. But I can’t write. My wife is busy helping crazy old people. I am fast becoming one myself. Is it all over for me? Is the arc of my life unalterably set? Where is the joy, where is the incandescent beauty?
—Big Fat Loser
Dear B.F.L., A gloomy guy can decide not to be and take the stone out of his shoe and walk straight. So do it. But don’t expect to do it tonight and tomorrow. Impatience is the luxury of youth. The rest of us must take things in steps. If you don’t know this, life itself will teach you. Life is a relentless instructor. Gloom and dread are dispelled by making slight progress; progress, even slight, leads to more progress; and gradually the glacier shifts, the ice jam breaks and things move in the direction of your dreams. Keep trying. PS The Mr. Blue cure for the blues is a good night’s sleep. Anytime you feel bad and it isn’t your fault, just curl up and go to sleep. It will be better in the morning, especially if you go to sleep expecting so.
It was the easiest writing I ever did. It just squeezed out like toothpaste out of a tube. It came winging out of the blue like a stork with a baby in a sling. Lorna at the
Star Journal
sent me an e-mail:
Everybody loves it. You’ve made me a heroine here at the paper. Nobody thought I could ever persuade the great Larry Wyler to write for us, and then I did, and now people are stopping me in the halls to say, Thank you. I hope that Mr. Blue isn’t taking you away from your other work, though. I haven’t seen anything by you in *The New Yorker* for a coon’s age. Are you busy working on a new book? I didn’t get a chance to read
*
Amber Waves of Grain
*
yet but understand that it’s quite special.
O my dear lady, you don’t distract me from my work. Mr. Blue is my work. I looked half my life for this work. The meaning of life is, first, to earn a living. You may be digging your own grave, but if you dig it straight and deep and they pay you, it’s honest work. Work is redemptive. I was wasting time being lonely and drinking and making late night phone calls to friends and writing long weepy letters to my darling Iris and suffering gruesome hangovers and getting crushes on waitresses in coffee shops and enduring writerly paralysis and yet—I am still in the game. I am Mr. Blue. It is humble work, but one day, lo and behold, there was a note from my old friend Katherine seeking my help, and I don’t mind saying: I was gratified.
Dear Mr. Blue,
How important are schmoozing and politicking in getting one’s poetry published? I’m the author of two collections of poems, and when I show my work to people they say, Oh that’s nice, but there’s no real respect, as there would be if I had a major publisher instead of Thistle Blossom Chapbooks of Minneapolis. (Don’t print that, please.) I’ve read most of the “major” poets and frankly I think I’m in that league. I have a very strong suspicion that if I went to New York and attended the right parties and stood around drinking Sauvignon Blanc with the right people, my stuff might get published pronto. No? Am I kidding myself?
—Moonflower
Dear Moonflower, Enjoy the craft of poetry and leave the art of sucking up and schmoozing to others. But if you want to suck up, don’t apply suction to lower middle management, which is who drinks white wine. People with real power to get a book of poems into print are gin or bourbon drinkers. Don’t kiss the wrong butt.
And two hours later, she wrote again:
Dear Mr. Blue,
I am the poet who wrote you asking how to get published. Please destroy that letter. I don’t want it to appear in the paper. Everybody I know will know it’s me. Could you print the following instead—
Dear Mr. Blue,
I am single, 45, attractive, fun to be with (according to friends), and well educated, and my life is going nowhere. I want to fall in love with the right man and settle down. I dated a Norwegian and he was so taciturn it took me six years to find out that he was married with children. I joined a church and got involved in community activities, and now I know a lot of other single women in their forties and fifties, but I want someone to come home to and snuggle with. Is that so impossible?
—Moonflower
Dear Moonflower, The supply of available heterosexual men who are psychologically sound is small. You’re hunting for mountain goats, basically, so you probably need a guide, someone who knows a goat personally. The truth is that men hate to be single. So they hang on to a mate until another comes along. They hate to be at sea, so they hug the coast, and a woman in search of one is forced to become a pirate, drifting through the knots of married couples, letting the men appreciate her charms, her openness, her lovely skin, her in souciance, her availability, and letting the women loathe and despise her. I don’t recommend that, but it’s been practiced successfully by many women who thereby became somebody’s second or third wife, and there is an advantage to buying a horse that’s already broken and accustomed to the traces. But never mind. You are not that sort of person, thank goodness. But just in case you should change your mind, be sure to pay attention to your physical person. “Attractive” isn’t enough when you’re 45. You need to be a knockout. A woman men look at and think, Wow. Don’t waste your time on the subtleties—you have two powerful assets, located on your chest, and you’d be a fool not to use them. A little décolletage—or a lot, what the heck, Christmas is coming—can work for you. If you want to attract a man, unbutton your blouse. You can discuss books afterward. Boobs come first. I could lie about this, but why?
Dear Mr. Blue,
For several years, I lived with a fascinating woman from a world very different from mine, a Zoroastrian from the Minor Rawalpindi archipelago who weaves white cotton garments on a small loom and lives on lentils and yoghurt and speaks very little English. Her name is Nhunu. I’m a civil engineer turned professional turkey caller and a major Vikings football fan and a barbecue guy and I love to grill a whole hog’s hindquarters on my motorized rotisserie and toss back a double Scotch on the rocks and shoot down balloons with an air gun. For all of our differences, we were fairly happy together until one day she became fearful and agitated. Either that, or she was asking to take swimming lessons. (We communicate mainly through hand signals.) Then she upped and flew back to Rawalpindi, leaving me a note saying that she had shackles on her feet, twenty-nine links of chain, and on each link an initial of her name, and that she was not sick, she was just dissatisfied. She also said something about the water tasting like turpentine.