Brian Arundel

THE THINGS I'VE LOST

Fleece hat and gloves: in the backseat of a Boston cab in 2002, before driving back to Maine. Round, purple sunglasses: in an Atlanta pool hall over drinks with Ashby, whose wife was determined to save their marriage by having a baby. A measurable dose of self-skepticism: at about 14, when I realized I was very good at both playing violin and baseball, while not necessarily everyone else was. A school-wide presidential election in sixth grade, after I was drafted to run by Mrs. Sticoiu, the most frightening teacher in the school, while I was out of town. A copy of The Little Prince, in Mrs. Sticoiu’s class the previous year. A floppy disk that contained my paper on ideological subversion in Wendell Berry, the first essay I’d written after returning to graduate school following a four-year respite. A black scarf from Pigalle: somewhere in Maine before moving west.

The chance to kiss Leslie Wertmann, and, later, that redhead in seventh grade with a smile that could buckle steel—Kim, Christine, or Kathleen maybe—and the blonde at the freshman dance because I couldn’t recognize flirtations, even when told that I looked like Bruce Springsteen. My virginity: in 1980, a couple weeks short of 16, in a ritual so brief, awkward and forgettable that I have, in fact, forgotten it. My heart, or so I thought, in 1985, when Susie dumped me; my naivete, three months later, when I learned that she’d slept with at least three other guys I knew while we’d been dating.

...The chance, in 1986, to meet Raymond Carver...

Belief that my mother was somehow more than human: in 1972, the first time I saw her fall down after getting drunk. Belief that my father was more than human: a few months beforehand, after learning that he’d had an affair and was being thrown out of the house. The belief that my sister was stable: 1976, when she began pointing at random objects and saying their names, a few months before getting arrested, the first of many times, for disturbing the peace by refusing to leave a Western Union office until they gave her a job. A ten-dollar bill on a DC subway in 1985, on my way home to my friend Tommy’s, where I was staying after leaving my father’s house—after he’d moved back in, once my mother remarried and moved south.

The chance, in 1986, to meet Raymond Carver: the only person invited to sit in on an interview, I instead drank all night with friends and overslept. A quarter-inch off the tip of my left thumb, in 1987, while slicing Muenster cheese on an electric Hobart slicer. My shit, figuratively, that same summer when Bob Weir sang “Looks Like Rain” just as my acid trip was peaking at a two-night Dead stand in Roanoke, Va. The Buick a friend had given me as a tax write-off in 1996, which I let someone take for a test drive without holding collateral.

The thought that officials were somehow more evolved than those who elect them: in 1972, listening to my father explain the Watergate burglary. Faith in politics—particularly a two-party system relegated to fundraising contests perpetuated by shallow sound bites, mudslinging and outright lies for the Mindless American Voter so that each party can pursue a majority with which to repress the other, with complete disregard for actually trying to improve the lives of citizens: gradually over time, culminating in 2000. Fundamental hope that Americans really would overcome their vacuity, fear and greed to evolve beyond sheep determined to re-elect George W. Bush: 2004.

The ability to drink until late at night and go to work the next day without feeling like I need to be zipped inside a body bag: sometime in my early thirties. General insecurity and inadequacy: during the past seven years, as I’ve tried to allow myself to be loved without guilt or judgment. Self-pity and -importance, at least most days, while striving to look beyond the borders of my own desires in a steady ascent that some might refer to as maturation. The desire to remain in this country: since 2004. A black beret: in a Minneapolis bar, just a few days before relocating to Georgia in 1993. A taste for soy sausage patties: inexplicably, sometime in the past six months, leading up to a Saturday brunch three weeks ago.

Brian Arundel has published fiction and non-fiction in magazines like The Strange Fruit, Bryant Literary Review,Under The Sun and Mid-American Review. He lives in Seattle with his wife, where he works as a magazine editor.

The photo is by bitpuddle, whose flickr page announces, "I believe these are the end times. I'm documenting the apocalypse."

For years I used to have dreams about looking for stuff I'd lost; I could never remember what it was I was looking for, either. This story first appeared in Dinty W. Moore's fine magazine Brevity.

7:15 AM - 14/10/2006 - post comment


Last Page Next Page
A growing collection of narrative non-fiction miniatures




£8.99 incl. p&p (UK only)

Outside the UK email UnMadeUp for details.



MORE! Send me MORE! Un-MADE-Up eats stories. If you've enjoyed the work published here on Un-Made-Up, maybe you'd like to add to this collection. If you have a true story that you would like to submit to Un-Made-Up please send it to me. The stories don't have to have a punchline, they don't have to be dramatic, they don't have to be funny, they don't have to make a point, they don't even have to be autobiographical; they must be under 1,000 words long, they must tell a story of some sort - however small - and above all they must, of course, be true.



If you are an illustrator or photographer who would like to add your take to one of the stories, please get in touch with me, William Shaw.
.



Home
Unmadeup Editions
Un-MADE-Up story archive
RSS
Widgetize!
Subscribe with Bloglines





Enter your Email


Powered by FeedBlitz

Palimpsest
Maud Newton
Ready Steady Book
Chuck Palahniuk
Studs Terkel
Litro
Brighton Writers
Alan Emmins
Skint Writer
Grumpy Old Bookman
John Baker's Blog
The Monkey Puzzle
Short Term Memory Loss
Alasdair Gray
Brevity: A journal of creative non-fiction
Blogzira
A Spinster's Quest
A Beautiful Revolution
John Barlow
Guyana
little.red.boat
Crack Skull Bob
Atlantic Terrace
A Case of Brain Fever
Ted Conover
Asylum
217 Babel
In Other News
ducts.org




Recent Entries
- Nik Perring
- William Shaw
- Emma J. Lannie
- William Shaw
- Nik Perring



Public Service Announcement: Un-Made-Up becomes giddy with excitement at the prospect of publishing short, beautifully wrought pieces of non-fiction writing. Submissions may be edited but will only be published with the final approval of the author. For local colour - or color - local spellings are retained when appropriate. All copyright belongs to the authors, illustrators and photographers.






COMING SOON

• A story of teenage love and coffee

• 41 Places

• The one-legged man on the beach






Powered by NSBlog.co.uk - Free Online Blog
(c) 2006 NSDesign Web Design Scotland