
Tuesday, May 11, 1982
7 PM. If happiness means anything, I’m happy tonight. I spent an idyllic afternoon in bed with Sean. I’m relieved to have finally finished the Coda article. And I got a rave review in Best Sellers.
School is also going well. Somehow I feel this will all explode in my face soon.
If I had any doubts about Sean’s feelings for me, today dissipated them. He’s more affectionate towards me than anyone I’ve ever known, and that, in turn, has made me more affectionate than ever.
We haven’t gotten very sophisticated in our sex – our orgasms tend to come from mutual masturbation – but we’re always hugging and kissing one another. We were in bed for four hours today, and it was hard (really) when Sean left.
I saw him before class last night. I had just gotten the mail at my parents’ and found the rave review. Odd how Sean has been the first person I’ve shared all my reviews with – Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, and the Orlando Sentinel Star before this one – starting long before we were lovers.
Lovers. An odd word. Stacy writes that she’s happy for me but she worries
Last night I tried to be just as friendly to everyone else in the class. There are a number of out-of-town students home for the summer, working adults, and high school seniors, as well as two former students I really like, Ken and Lottye.
We had a pretty good opening class as I lectured on the elements of fiction. I had them all call me Richard and I gave the class my home phone number, so I didn’t feel I was giving Sean special preference. He seemed more comfortable than he had been on Friday.
In my office after class, we talked a little while; he kept rubbing my back and holding my hand. When we parted at the parking lot, I said, “I’d like to kiss you, but I can’t.”
“I’ll imagine it,” he said. On University Drive and State Road 84, he honked at me as he turned off to visit one of his friends.
I have looked in the mirror to see if I appear or act any different, but I’m positive it doesn’t show. “It”?
Well, one thing Sean has done is made me more secure in my gay identity. Still, I can’t say that sex or intimacy with Sean is better than what I remember lovemaking with Ronna or other women was like.
I’m certain my flabby body isn’t Sean’s ideal, and his body isn’t mine – his arms are so skinny – but I love him and that’s what’s important (just as it was important with the women I loved, whose bodies were – obviously – not my ideal, either).
I’ve spoken with Brad about Sean, and I’ve written Stacy and Miriam and Ronna, but I haven’t said a word yet to Teresa or Alice or Josh. I don’t know if I
They are close friends, and I don’t want to keep secrets from them, but I’m concerned about their reaction to Sean’s being a 17-year-old boy.
There seems no reason to tell my family; they don’t want to know about it. I’m relieved my parents aren’t angry with me over Sunday at the Jockey Club, so I’ll leave it at that.
My morning 101 class is going okay. Yesterday was library orientation and today I began facts and inferences. Since I’ve had no papers to grade, it’s been relatively easy so far.
I leave BCC right after class, taking my chances about getting into trouble for not holding office hours. But who could possibly see me during office hours in the summer? Before class ends, I ask anyone if they want to see me, and if they do, only then I will stay longer.
I slept only four hours last night, but I didn’t feel tired all day. Before class yesterday, I found that Best Sellers review, the second rave in a row. It’s probably the best review I’ve ever gotten from a stranger:
These twenty-two fictions display a versatility which commands attention. And they are very much in the American grain – that vein of autobiography which has been a constant from the beginning of our literary history down to the confessional mode of the recent mode of the recent past. The title tale, which is certainly captivating, pretends to be the biography of Lincoln’s doctor’s puppy who grows up to be elected to a state governorship and achieves fame as a
Richard Grayson has been found, at least by this reader, and found-out, too. From the evidence he is serious and comic, charming, given to outrageous puns, and a sharp-eyed observer of and participant in life’s absurdities.
I might as well die now; I’ll never get a better review. Woweee.
Wednesday, May 12, 1982
1 PM. After tonight’s lit class, the rest of this week should be a breeze since I have only the morning class on Thursday and Friday. Next week will be more hectic, with an extra night class on Friday, the book party, the TV taping, and a dental appointment.
Last night I phoned Josh, who was in the third hour of wearing his brand-new
I had difficulty getting to sleep and so I’m kind of tired right now. My 8 AM class went okay; we’re going through You Can Write, which I feel I know by heart already. Their first essay will be due on Friday, so after several free weekends, it’s back to working again.
I got three paychecks today – for the end of June and all of July – and they added up to $1212 for my savings account and $50 for my credit union. I paid Mom $45 for my Network-One long distance calls, and now I have, all told, about $2,800 in the bank.
In the mail I received an application for a job at St. Petersburg Junior College; they’ve got an opening for which they think I’m qualified. So for the fall, I’ve got
Elspeth sent me a thank-you note from her and her boyfriend for the baby’s present, writing that she was “shocked” to receive a gift from me. I was glad to hear that Amanda was able to wear the booties and hat that I sent.
I have four hours before I go back to school for tonight’s class. Sean probably won’t stop by today, which is just as well. I’ll try to snooze and/or exercise.
Publishers Weekly’s ABA issue, like their spring announcements issue, had no ad from Taplinger, and I wonder what’s going on with them.
It’s a sign of my spirits that I’ve got an idea for a novel titled What a Wonderful World; or Oh, What a Relief It Is.
Thursday, May 13, 1982
As usual, Sean met me in my office afterwards. He’d spent the day unsuccessfully job-hunting and seemed discouraged. He said that he was too tired to go out to bars that night. We talked until 10:30 PM, then went our separate ways.
I had trouble falling asleep again and got only about five hours of snoozing in. Still, I was alert enough for class this morning, and I even subbed the next hour for Jacqui.
When I got to my parents’ house, Mom and Marc were leaving, and Mom said that some man had called me and said his organization was giving me an award for excellence in the arts. Huh?
I spoke to Sean today, but he needed to do chores around the house. So I went to the Broward Mall, had lunch, went to the Plantation library (a copy of With Hitler in New York was displayed out on the shelf), and came home to rest and watch soap operas.
The past two mornings I’ve seen Dad running as my car approaches the college: it’s a good feeling, seeing him. As close as I am with Sean, I don’t even know if his father is alive; Sean has never mentioned him, and I don’t want to bring up a subject he shies away from.
Selma is killing her husband with kindness; she no longer seems to have any anger toward him. Selma’s determination will always be an inspiration to me. She’s not happy with her life, but she figures she’s got to make do and so she might as well have fun.
Me, too – though I couldn’t be happier now. About Sean, though: I don’t think it’s at all fair to try to make him dependent upon me; perhaps I should go easy with these daily phone calls.
After all, I’ll be leaving in five weeks; I don’t want him to feel lost then. I’m glad he has other lovers and friends and a full life without me. Unlike Brad, I don’t
I hope he’s able to go off to Gainesville in the fall. Sean would like the academic and social atmosphere of the University of Florida.
It’s not all nobility on my part, of course; now that I know I can function sexually and emotionally in a relationship with a man, I’d like to explore a little, too.
Anyway, I don’t see a disaster every time I contemplate the end of our affair – not most of the time, anyway. Meanwhile, I’ve got a novel growing in my belly, and I think about it so much that I know it will eventually get itself written. I have the confidence to attempt a novel now.
Like Selma, I feel I’m over the worst – at least for a little while. Three years ago,
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if I could look back at today’s me three years from now and think that the 1982 Richie was a baby, too?
Friday, May 14, 1982
9 PM. This afternoon Sean called from Jeff’s place in Plantation. They had done some job-hunting, which consisted mostly of their driving around and talking.
Sean and I had a good conversation, but he said he had to go home and mow the lawn. I was disappointed but I had things to do and began my work. A few minutes later came the familiar knock on my door. Sean. He’d changed his mind.
I guess it’s frustrating for Sean because I’m so inept and inexperienced sexually. I did take his cock into my mouth, and it wasn’t as unpleasant as I expected; I could get used to it. I’m just not really sure I knew what I was doing.
Anyway, Sean tried to suck me off, but immediately I got a sharp pain from a cut from his braces and I told him to never mind. It took a long time but we did manage to get each other off today.
I don’t really care, of course, because I just try to concentrate on the experience
Anyway, during all this, we sure joked around a lot in bed. I like to tease Sean and he comes right back. One thing that is always great about our sex is that we’re constantly laughing and playful. It’s that intimacy that I value even more than the sex.
I think Sean must like me if he keeps coming back. Maybe my lovemaking isn’t very good technique-wise, but I just put a lot of feelings into it and I’m not mechanical. Sean sleeps with a lot of men, but I’m interested in Sean for himself and not his penis or whatever.
What else? Class went okay today; I was refreshed after a good night’s sleep. The National Writers Press said they could do a 24-page chapbook of Eating at Arby’s in a print run of 500 for about $800, and I’m going to have them go ahead with it.
I dedicated the book “To Sean” – which may be a little reckless, but why not? Of all the people I’ve met in South Florida, no one has changed my life more than Sean has.
I realize the expense of self-publishing, but I want a little something to keep me going in the fall just in case the Zephyr Press book doesn’t pan out. Obviously, nothing can top this spring in terms of my career, but I think I can cause some stir with Arby’s down here.
I’ve got paragraphs to grade this weekend and other chores to do as well, but it’s great not to have to teach tonight and to be able to sleep past 6:45 AM tomorrow
I spoke to Jeffrey Knapp, who was reading his poems on a WLRN fundraiser. He’s busy with Miami Poets in the Schools and finishing his masters’ work and teaching at the University of Miami.
Saturday, May 15, 1982
9 PM on a pleasant Saturday night in the middle of May. It’s the more precious because I know that there won’t be many more of these Saturday nights left; in a month I’ll be gone.
This little apartment now seems to be falling apart: one bathroom’s toilet refuses to flush; one shade is down; the light in the kitchen is broken; the bed is, of course, a mess; and the kitchen chairs are threatening to crack under the weight
I expect the Maynards will keep my security deposit. Oh well. The money for this apartment was well-spent. I’ve been happier here at 5960 NW 16th Place, Sunrise, FL 33313 (so much for details) than anywhere else. Of course it’s not just the place; it’s I.
Having just finished the Silverstein/White Joy of Gay Sex (which I finally felt comfortable buying at the Galleria, the gayest mall in Broward), I feel the book is helping answer a number of questions.
It’s going to take me time before I get used to fucking a man or getting fucked by one. I’ve got to admit that it doesn’t feel as natural to me as entering a woman’s vagina. But I think I’ll get there. Compared to two weeks ago, I’ve really come far.
I love spending time with Sean. He’s so affectionate and tender that he brings out the same in me. I feel liberated and yet I feel the same as I always did. Am I sorry that I
It happened at the best possible time with the best possible person. I may have a paucity of sexual experience, but all of it has been positive and loving. As to what happens in the future, we’ll see.
Elihu wrote me a very warm and intelligent letter responding to my queries. He thinks that Sean’s age is irrelevant in a relationship, and “given the climate at your school and the area you live in, Sean’s being seventeen probably would make no difference if people found out.”
As to Sean’s being my student, Elihu said that was a thornier problem, but that it wasn’t unethical if it was understood that Sean would get no special treatment and expect none. Elihu told me to let my feelings guide me.
I was dizzy last night and had trouble getting to sleep, but I did sleep well and didn’t get up until 10 AM.
At my parents’, Dad and Marc were going out to play tennis and Jonny was at work, so Mom and I had a good talk.
Mom said that Bob Lee told Dad that Claude Clement may be going out of business – the status jeans fad is dead – but Bob is planning to hire Dad to help him with his new line, some ladies’ clothing deal with Paul Guez.
I found someone to notarize my application for St. Pete Junior College and then spent the afternoon driving, exercising, and doing a little schoolwork – as little
I spoke to Kevin last night, and as usual, I got depressed by his attitude. He lost one of his courses at Southeastern and will be hard-pressed to make ends meet this summer, although he’s got six courses for the fall.
Lincoln’s Doctor’s Dog has sold very few copies, of course, and Kevin doesn’t expect much more, especially if no Library Journal review is forthcoming. Kevin that is so pessimistic that I find it hard to talk to him. Well, he did give me the lift of another book publication, so I owe Kevin quite a bit.
I have about ten more papers to grade, then I’ve got to see Selma at Poetry in a Pub tomorrow. And then comes a semi-hectic week.
Sunday, May 16, 1982
8 PM. I’ve just finished marking the 101 papers. I gave out a number of D’s – I’m getting tougher.
Well, I can name myself, as well as most of the people I know. Perhaps I can’t judge Scott’s work objectively because I’m envious of his success. But he doesn’t seem to take his good fortune in a cheerful manner.
Anyway (Sean pointed out that I always say, “Any-way,” usually with a sigh), I’d rather be in my position than Scott’s.
Spending today at Poetry in a Pub helps convince me that I’d rather be teaching
I was glad to see Selma, who seems alive with plans and better health, but the poets were dismal. I did enjoy my turkey sandwich aboard The Ancient Mariner, a boat docked in the New River.
But the poets – poets! – from Kirt (no longer heading the group, he got a plaque – and he was so touched that he seemed like a real person) to Mick, from Denis O’Donovan (who at least does have wit) to the humorless and tiresome divorced women who spout banal words about their pain.
It made me feel lousy, like I wanted to never write another word again. Sometimes I don’t know whether it’s better to compare myself with these people
Anyway – (ahem) – it was a pleasant day and I got all my chores done. Sean and I never speak on weekends; it seems to be one of the unwritten rules of our friendship. Probably he has a lover he stays with all weekend.
I keep thinking about Sean and how much he’s given me in just two weeks. Not just hugs and kisses and an introduction to male sex, but the intimacies he’s shared. Of course, he holds back more than I do.
On Friday I gave him several Sasson shirts Mom had given me from Dad’s samples that morning; I don’t think Sean has much money, and while I don’t plan on giving him any cash, the shirts were free, and I have so many of them.
I’ve been seeing gay life differently since Sean. I no longer feel judgmental about promiscuity or gay baths or gay bars. I see now that it was self-hatred of my own gayness that made me so negative about these aspects of gay life.
I don’t think I’ll ever frequent bars myself, but I might go from time to time. I know that Sean is not going to be my last male lover. Though I don’t feel I could ever expend the time and energy on sex that Sean does, I admire him for being brave enough to do what I could not – not at 17, certainly, and not at 30, either.
And the people who would snigger or judge me: I don’t need them. Sean is okay in my book. I’m not madly in love with him, but I feel very deeply and strongly about him.
Monday, May 17, 1982
Noon. I feel somewhat sad today – triste. Even Mom could see it when I came over to pick up my mail and laundry. Instead of her usual nagging, she kissed me and said she hadn’t seen me in a long time even though we had an extensive talk on Saturday.
Part of my discomfort is that Dr. Grasso wants to have a talk with me; we scheduled it on Wednesday, just before the Book Group is to give me a publication party.
I’ll try not to get defensive. Remember, Rich: BCC isn’t the be-all and end-all of your life. Until January, I was certain that I did not want to be rehired. Maybe leaving will be good; it will force me to move on to something new and challenging – or maybe it will get me out of college teaching for good.
I feel sad because in five weeks I won’t be here. And I’m a little scared, too. For months my life has been so peaceful and familiar and routinized; it’s like Brooklyn was in the old days.
Last night I called Ronna on a rather flimsy pretext, but she seemed glad to talk with me. Things are crazy now that Redbook is being taken over by Hearst; Ronna plans on staying and seeing what happens, though she was going through the want ads when I called.
Ronna told me she isn’t seeing Jordan as much as she used to. This summer he’s going to Israel for a month, and I’m pretty sure they will never get married now.
I asked Ronna if she thought I was a fool or a pervert for seeing Sean. “Of course not,” she said, and she was great about it. In a way I love her more than I ever did; I felt very close to her last night.
My class went okay today, and I think tonight will be all right: we’re going over stories by Thurber, Singer, and Hemingway.
I also got a letter from CUNY University Student Senate that acknowledged my application for the job as director. Those USS envelopes used to appear regularly in my mailbox in 1973 and 1974, when I was Richmond College’s Senator.
Mississippi Mud and the Village Voice also arrived in the mail, as did some notices from PEN.
Remember how those last few months in New York, living in Rockaway, were made pleasanter because I knew I’d be leaving? I could savor everything, even the long ride on the A train, because it soon wouldn’t be a part of my life anymore.
I feel that way now. When I first got to Florida, I had fantasies that I’d come here to die, that my life was over. But wherever I go after June – whatever I do – my life isn’t over yet. I refuse to think otherwise.
Tuesday, May 18, 1982
6 PM. Yesterday wasn’t a very good day; I felt as cranky as one of Robert Young’s friends before being introduced to Sanka. I kept thinking about Sean, but I didn’t want to call him. After lunch at Oliver’s, I developed an upset stomach
The only bright spot was a call from Teresa. She, like Ronna, took the news about Sean very well. She did think he was young and wondered if I weren’t “just another notch in his belt,” but after I told her more, Teresa seemed to think it was wonderful for me. I’m gratified to know my friends don’t give a hoot about whether I’m straight or gay.
I arrived on campus early last night, and I went to the Financial Aid office to see if I could find any scholarships available for Sean. As it turned out, the Broward County Fair is sponsoring scholarships for high school seniors, which is technically what Sean is.
I sat outside until 6:45 PM, anxious to see Sean. I thought I’d spotted him six or seven times, but each time it turned out be another tall, thin male student. I kept telling myself that he wasn’t coming, that I’d never see him again.
We had a decent class and I managed to go over the three stories by 9:20 PM. Sean met me back in my office, and I let him have the chair because he looked so ill; his allergies were killing him and he kept sniffling.
I gave him that scholarship info and said I’d help him fill it out. He told me he was nineteenth in his high school graduating class of 440 students; also, his grades for last term at BCC were four A’s and a B, giving him a 3.7 index.
We talked until about 10:10 PM. Feeling daring, I kissed him goodnight in the parking lot, then followed him through the one-lane back roads of Davie until he turned off just before University Drive.
Nevertheless, I made it through my 101 class this morning – and we’re making good progress, too, although I’ve had little marking to do so far.
At my parents’ house, I passed Jonny, leaving for his class at FAU, which he says is interesting (American History Since World War II). I should call him Jonathan now, because that’s what he prefers.
Mom and I had another nice talk; God knows why we’ve been getting along so well. In a way, I wish I could tell her about Sean. I did mention that Teresa said that she could definitely get me a job as press secretary to some downstate assemblyman who’s running for the Democratic nomination for controller.
She’s got the house there fully rented for the summer, and she needs only one more person for the Berkshires house. This summer Teresa will be doing a lot of traveling (in state vehicles) and said I could keep the apartment to myself for days on end if I want.
I’m now thinking of forgoing my residency at Ragdale and just staying in New York until July 12 and then going back to the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts.
After shopping at Publix, I took care of eating lunch and getting out my mail, and at 1 PM went to sit out by the pool. I was lying in the sun exactly two minutes when Sean’s tan Nova pulled up.
He’d been to his high school to straighten out his graduation (he’ll get his diploma on June 3) and to get transcripts for the scholarship application. We went inside and played with my Sinclair computer; Sean, with his logical mind, caught on quickly. He’ll be good with computers.
Then we started hugging, cuddling and kissing, and of course we ended up in bed. It was probably the nicest sexual experience I’ve ever had in my life. I definitely enjoyed giving Sean a blow job, and I’m loose enough to want to fuck
I can’t seem to get enough of Sean. We both came twice, each time nearly simultaneously. We held each other tightly and talked. Sean said as a kid, he always wanted a bar mitzvah like his Jewish friends. I sang lyrics to 1950s TV shows. And we laughed and looked at each other.
To me, he’s so damn gorgeous. I am in love with him, and if he didn’t care for me deeply, he wouldn’t keep coming back and acting the way he does. Sean will always be a sight for sore eyes in my mind’s eye, to make a deliberately horrendous mixed metaphor.
At 5 PM, he had to leave to do a paper for his dumb old English teacher, some jerk named Grayson.
Just before Sean left, a student called with a problem he had doing the paper.
“I’ll scratch his eyes out,” said Sean.
Oh Lordy, someday the bill for all this will come due, but nobody, ever, can take days like today away from me.
Wednesday, May 19, 1982
3 PM. They can’t take today away from me, either. Or even last night. I shut the TV and got into bed at 7 PM, hoping to get some much-needed sleep.
At about 9 PM – I must have been half-asleep – I got a call from a 19-year-old girl named Ivy Garlitz, an English major at the University of Florida
Her parents had sent her the clipping of Mike Winerip’s Herald feature story on me, and home for vacation, she took out Hitler from the Aventura public library and wanted me to know how much she loved it.
I was very flattered; she said she’d send me money for an autographed copy of Lincoln’s Doctor’s Dog (“Don’t worry – my parents can afford it”). We had a long talk about Jewish writers, particularly Roth and Singer, and I told her to call again, anytime.
Despite an upset stomach, I felt great. Ivy’s call made me feel that I do have an audience somewhere out there, probably among a particular group of bright, sharp young people.
I told her about my idyllic afternoon with Sean and she told me about the fun she and Doug are having. It was so good to hear that Mikey is getting recognition for his usually thankless job, and it was nice of Teresa to call and tell me about it.
I slept fairly well and taught my 101 class using the papers Patrick had left me to return to his students in order to show my class what I wanted in their own research papers.
When I saw Dr. Grasso at 11 AM, this is what she had to say: She’s been given four positions by the administration, but she feels it’s too late to set up a search committee and advertise.
I told her that I’d be willing to accept one of the four positions as a temporary full-time instructor for another year; I guess Patrick will get another one. She said she thinks I’m a good teacher and that Dr. Pawlowski has no complaints about my work.
Then I grabbed my paycheck and deposited it (I have over $3,000 in the bank now) and went to the catered lunch at the Book Group meeting in Sunrise at Sunrise Federal Savings.
Everyone – Myra, Nedda, Lee, Betty, Frank – was so sweet about my book. There was a catered lunch and a champagne toast. Rosemary and Lista were there, and I asked Patrick to come. They had me make a little speech, and of course, I had them in stitches.
Patrick said he’s got that business English course at Florida Atlantic University and that he loves it there; they have only twenty students in a class. The job was
He said that FAU’s Communication Department head is considering hiring one or both of us for jobs when FAU goes to a four-year college next year. (Someone sent her my résumé.)
Shit. I cannot believe how beautifully everything has gone. Surely some disaster will befall me in a minute.
Thursday, May 20, 1982
9 PM. Last night’s class went okay. I let them out early. Sean caught a bad cold, unless it’s just his allergies. But he was so tired and sniffly we didn’t talk long together.
But he did get his braces off and now he has a bar across his upper teeth that tends to make him lisp. To me, that just makes Sean even cuter.
My story “My Life as an Old Comic” came out in Continental Drift, and the new Assembling: Pilot Projects, also with a Grayson contribution, showed up in my mailbox. I’ll give more details tomorrow; I’m not feeling very coherent now.
Friday, May 21, 1982
4 PM. Don’t count your chickens. The administration told Dr. Grasso that they wanted her to go ahead and hire four permanent faculty members. This may mean no temporary positions.
Dr. Grasso isn’t thrilled with this, since she’s going to spend her summer on the
Of course Judy Van Alstyne (a great friend of Lista’s, by the way) is taking off a term to write a book, and it looks as though Jacqui will be at Southern Bell next fall, so there might be temporary jobs anyway.
This also will probably mean coming back to Florida for an interview sometime this summer, which is a drag. Anyway, I don’t plan on sweating it out, not even in May in South Florida.
Still, I was in a rotten mood until Sean called today. Poor baby, he’s got such a bad cold. I haven’t caught it yet, but since I spent four hours on Tuesday with him, I’m sure the little Germans are incubating in my body.
What a jerk I am to be so wrapped up in someone, even someone as nice as Sean. But, see, I don’t mean that last line: I love feeling this way, and if anything, I was a jerk not to love anyone like this all these years.
– Bulletin over the radio: the British have just invaded the Falkland Islands. Oy.
Yesterday was okay. I liked seeing the Selkirk Building on Andrews Avenue; it’s the old (1935) Coca-Cola Building.
During the taping, we spoke about publishing hype, the junk culture, and celebrity, and I think I was pretty effective. Perhaps it’s a sign of how far I’ve come that it never occurred to me to be nervous.
I’ve had lots of experience being interviewed and in speaking in front of groups, but not much with TV – just that Brooklyn College TV show when I was an undergrad and the PBS documentary on released mental patients.
That lunch was pleasant. The Riverside Hotel is very Old Florida, with its piss-elegant lobby (wicker chairs, ceiling fans) and elderly blue-haired WASPs lolling about. They have great bran muffins in the dining room.
I got home from the lunch at 2 PM and stayed in for the rest of the day, feeling out of sorts. However, I did sleep well for the first time in a week. (You can’t imagine how I look forward to sleeping late the next two mornings.)
I spoke to Mikey about his TV news appearance and to Gary, who’s still being hassled by his boss and who’s looking to escape to Fire Island on weekends.
This morning I had my 8 AM 101 class, which went fine; I then kept Rosa’s 9:30 AM class for a little while – I’ll have them all next week – and went to the dentist, Dr. Sachs.
Tonight is the second of three Friday night classes: ugh. But it hasn’t been all that bad: I’ll probably let them go a little early. This weekend I’ll have fifty papers to grade, but I’ve had more work than that and survived. Next weekend, a three-day holiday, should be more pleasant.
