
Wednesday, March 13, 1991
8 PM. Passing Dad’s office on my way from the bathroom just now, I noticed a fax coming through, something from J.C. Penney.
I’ve just come back from the library, where I now take the online catalog for granted.
Yesterday at Wendy’s, I stood on line behind a guy who was talking on a portable
McDonald’s is introducing a McLean burger, 310 calories and 10 grams of fat.
Despite some of the changes for the worse in the world, all these innovations make me glad I’m living in this time.
After sleeping okay, I woke up at 5 AM and began exercising (to a videotape – something I couldn’t have done twenty years ago). I arrived at school early enough to take down the sign announcing my class cancellation before anyone else saw it.
Then I got on the computer (yes, I know) and printed out my assignment for the FAU class and my English 102 midterm.
I see that my old opponent from 1982, Art Lazear, managed to return to the Davie town council again in yesterday’s election. Because I now live in an unincorporated area, I don’t get to vote in March municipal elections anymore.
I
As you get older, life moves more quickly; as Aunt Minnie told me, it feels like you’re having breakfast every fifteen minutes.
While Dad was out, Federal Express brought 11 huge cartons containing the new Introspect line, and so I got them into the garage.
I read the Chronicle of Higher Ed in the office and spoke to Flora. Both her daughters loved attending FSU (where they were active in the band) so much that Flora has become a big Seminole booster.
She urged me to go to Tallahassee soon because students rent all the good apartments by June. I now think I’ll go up during spring break, but I’m afraid to fly in a small prop jet
Anyway, it will be an adventure, and I really should see the place to make my going there seem like reality. Even if my first impressions aren’t great, I’ll feel better after going.
In Food and Nutrition class, we went over our menus for the adult home. I really learned a lot about creating a diet that meets nutritional standards and modifying it to eliminate sugar, fat and sodium.
Ms. Holland asked me to put in the first tape she brought to show us – but instead of the one on herbs listed on the box, the library had mistakenly given her one of those Video Professor tapes I used to use in my computer ed workshops in Miami.
But we did get to see another film, on spices in Indian curry. Our next class, in two weeks, will meet in the House of India restaurant.
Friday, March 15, 1991
But I don’t have to worry since my ideas seem to be nonexistent these days.
I just returned from a walk around Oak Knoll II – the development hasn’t been renamed yet, though the homeowners have already cast their ballots – and onto Nova Drive.
Yesterday, when I took Rabbit at Rest out to the patio, Updike had me hooked by the first paragraph. Where does he get those perceptions, that language, that subtlety?
Updike’s take on the condo scene of Southwest Florida, filtered through Harry Angstrom’s voice, makes me despair of ever attempting to do something like that. It’s a good thing I’m going to law school.
Here’s an ironic idea of March: the closer I get to giving up fiction writing for good, the more I value what good fiction can do.
And another springtime in paradox: now, just as I’m at my peak of abilities as a college English instructor, I’m giving it up.
But paradoxes makes sense, and I do know what I’m doing. All these years I’ve talked a big game about risk-taking, but I’ve always settled for the known and the comfortable.
But there’s no challenge in doing that anymore, and a classroom can make as good a hideout as my bedroom on East 56th Street was when I was 17.
Hm. Last summer Ronna used the words “hiding out” in tandem with “three years in law school.”
Who decides what is and what isn’t “hiding out”? Me, I, myself. (My students use the three interchangeably.)
I know that BCC doesn’t offer me that cold terror in the pit of my stomach, and anyway, I don’t want to turn into Jim or Phyllis,
Anyway, last night I shared Healthy Choice chicken fajitas with China (who went to the canine beauty parlor and was sporting a yellow ribbon, presumably in support of our troops in the Persian Gulf).
After dinner, I read and watched a Fox TV show with a cute young actor.
Yes, I do think about sex every month or so, and last night I started thinking about Shelli and how we used to go to bed every afternoon in the spring of 1971, and about Sean and that red-draped bedroom and king-size bed I had in Sunrise in 1982.
Up at 5 AM, I got to BCC early and marked the English 101 papers in my classroom before the students came. Both classes went well today, and during my morning break, I read the newspapers.
Back home at 1 PM, I was able to do aerobics now that my calves have stopped aching.
Today I felt the need to walk even after a half-hour of low impact aerobics, so I think I need more or harder exercise to keep me going.
Two weeks from tomorrow, it will be Passover already and Easter the following day. And it will be spring even in New York this week. I’ll blink and I will be in Tallahassee, Los Angeles, New York City.
Reading a large print book like the Updike – the only copy of Rabbit at Rest available at the library – is so easy.
Monday, March 18, 1991
Last evening I finished the excellent Florida section of Rabbit at Rest.
Up at 6 AM, I went off to school without a shower because I didn’t exercise till after my 8 AM class.
Luckily, I was home when Federal Express delivered some more packages. While he was
No, I don’t expect they’ll print it, but I also know this comes closer than any previous submission.
My classes today were casual conversations about research. One student called it “chatting with Richard.”
In the men’s room, I ran into this guy who was in one of my English 101 classes last
He told me that he now has Al Lemaire, who grades much lower than I do and takes off points if the margins are over or under the specified length.
While I sometimes suspect that students need that kind of discipline, I know I can’t provide it because I don’t give a damn about margins.
Basically, we’ve got five weeks when we come back from spring break two weeks from today, and I’m going to be away in California for one of those weeks.
I noticed a letter from Mick to Alan Merickel in the outgoing mailbox and saw that Alan now lives in Tallahassee. He was an intelligent guy who left BCC to move to Massachusetts, and I could tell I shared values with him and his wife, so I think their living in Tallahassee is a good sign that it’s a place I’d like, too.
*
9 PM. When I got to Patrick’s office at 5 PM, he introduced me to Marie and Diane, the students who were going to interview me. After I admired Patrick’s new Mac SE, he left us alone to go to a recital at his daughter’s school.
Diane asked intelligent questions, all prepared in advance after reading my books and some criticism of my work.
We covered the usual subjects: fiction and autobiography, writing and teaching, the influence of writing programs, my publicity stunts, censorship, etc.
Patrick had filled them in quite a bit. Though you’d never know it from the way he treats me, I guess he must admire something about me.
Diane ended the interview with this question: “What’s next for Richard Grayson?”
“Probably chow mein for dinner” was my reply.
This issue of P’an Ku won’t appear until after I’ve left Florida, but I know they’ll send me a copy and I feel good that former students and colleagues will see it.
I don’t have a black-and-white headshot, so they’ll send a student photographer to take a picture.
The interview with Kyra in the last issue took up four pages, so I expect that only a fraction of what I said will make it into the magazine.
Anyway, I got home at 7 PM and had dinner, after which I called Delta and was quoted a
I’ve called FSU and I’ll see what I can do about housing from here.
Perhaps tomorrow I’ll try calling another airline, but as of now, I’ll probably spend all of spring break at home catching up on my schoolwork and the rest of my life.
Wednesday, March 20, 1991
6 PM. With no FAU class this afternoon, I can relax for the rest of the day.
At 142, I’m heavier than I’ve been in nearly a year, so I probably need to cut back my calorie intake, which has crept over 1900 to 2000 on some days.
While I see only the slightest bulge in my belly and I don’t want to become anorexic, if I can prevent weight gain from getting out of hand, I can avoid worse problems later.
I doubt I could ever get like Marc, because I’m so conscious of what I eat and I write
Last evening’s American Lit class wasn’t that good because fewer than half the students had read Ethan Frome although they had an extra week due to my absence.
Not showing annoyance, I plowed ahead, and it ended up being mostly a lecture. I got the midterms from the students who showed up.
The plot seemed okay but typical network TV, and I didn’t bother watching after the first 15 minutes.
Wes was only one of three names listed in the “created by…” credits, and he didn’t write the opening episode, so I’m not certain what his connection with the show is, whether he’s actively involved or they just took his
Mom said, “Oh, maybe you can give him an idea or you could write for this show.”
That made me wince. If there’s one thing I’ve always abhorred, it’s all those people hankering for Hollywood and determined to use any connection to worm their way in. To me, that’s pathetic.
While, like anyone else, I’d like a wider audience, I’ve got no desire to write for TV or the movies.
There is no way anyone in the film industry would consider Tom’s script, and I’m certainly not going to bother Wesley with it.
I don’t mind popular culture (remember how down Tom got on me when I said TV wasn’t that awful?), but it would be hypocritical of me to try to write the kind of show or movie that I’m more comfortable satirizing.
I would never, ever trade in on the success of any of my friends.
Probably I feel that would be an admission that I need their help, and I hate to think they’re doing that much better than I am.
Envy is ignorance, says Emerson in “Self-Reliance,” an essay I tried to read with my noon class. They couldn’t get past the nineteenth-century prose and the unfamiliar vocabulary even with my “translations,” so I gave up after four pages.
Between classes, I did aerobics, showered and read the Times, and then I listened to Dad complain about all the samples he got in and all the faxes coming over.
Thankfully, Mom is at the flea market with Jonathan today.
More and more, I am looking forward to law school.
The one student in my American Lit class who’s an FSU grad – she’s getting her teaching credentials so she’s taking my course – raves about what a
Lately, I’ve become conscious of the popular images of lawyers, like on Eddie Dodd.
And I notice that when someone discusses young people becoming productive and important, they say, “They might become doctors or lawyers.” They never say “teachers, college professors or writers.”
Also, when people talk about high-paying professions, they always mention law and business.
People always seem to think they could be writers or teachers themselves, but I’ve never heard anyone say that about lawyers.
Anyway, after five months at BCC, I’m getting burned out. If I’m nervous about keeping up with my first-year law school classmates, that’s great; I’d like to be intellectually challenged. And I need to embrace change and take risks.
