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I wrote a memoir covering 28 years of constant moves and changes of occupation. I chose this 28-year span because it is about a journey in search of a home. I make occasional comments questioning the wisdom and judgment of my decisions along the lines of “why did I possibly think that was a good idea?”
Here it begins--
Too many mornings I woke up in different places because I kept moving.
I lived in Kansas, Chicago, Mississippi, Texas, Los Angeles, the Skagit Valley in Washington State, and Boston. Then I moved back to the Skagit Valley one more time.
It doesn’t make much sense to move around like that. It was poor thinking on my part, but at least I got out of Oklahoma.
We had done a lot of traveling, hitchhiking around the country and riding freight trains,but in February of 1976, Susan Simple and I got married. We decided to settle down and live like normal people in a house and have children and get jobs.
That was our plan, but it didn’t work out that way. We tried to stay in one place, but we kept moving anyway. I can’t explain it, but I can tell you what happened.
Too many mornings I woke up in different places because I kept moving.
I lived in Kansas, Chicago, Mississippi, Texas, Los Angeles, the Skagit Valley in Washington State, and Boston. Then I moved back to the Skagit Valley one more time.
It doesn’t make much sense to move around like that. It was poor thinking on my part, but at least I got out of Oklahoma.
We had done a lot of traveling, hitchhiking around the country and riding freight trains,but in February of 1976, Susan Simple and I got married. We decided to settle down and live like normal people in a house and have children and get jobs.
That was our plan, but it didn’t work out that way. We tried to stay in one place, but we kept moving anyway. I can’t explain it, but I can tell you what happened.
The theme is the writer's failed attempt to settle down, and so the title is Too Many Mornings. He kept moving. Wife, then two kids, didn't matter, kept moving anyways. No home. Got to be a dreary habit. The dull and sad existence of one more trip down the road. That's why I liked writing this memoir -- because it's a sad story, and those are the best stories after all.
And
why read it? Because you will like this man, and you will be on his
side and want good things for him and share his sorrow. This man does
not give up, and when you read his story, you will not give up on him.
Or formal courtesies? "While I respected and admired my ex-wife in many ways, yet the silence grew between us and we wondered if our lives were headed for separate destinies" ---- that is so fake, the truth is we fought like wild animals for 12 years, fought to exhaustion.
So
here is what happened. I'm sitting at the coffee shop on Abbot Kinney
Blvd in Venice. Lots of people come in here. Players and posers. People
who are working, people who act like they are working. I sit with Eric
the godfather. He is 76 and all the players come to him -- he never
lies, he doesn't need to lie.
In
comes Adam, a scriptwriter -- not a famous writer but he makes a
living in a very tough business. Adam takes a seat on the bench next to
me, says hello, and then talks to Eric about this project and that
project and why he is so busy doing various projects.
Adam
is bragging, but slowly, and softly, not like he's the only guy in the
room. He even looks over at me now and then and pauses.
This
is my fucking chance, for Pete's sake. Adam is giving me a chance. He
looks at me again and pauses. This is my chance to brag about what I am
doing, and my projects and how busy I am and what difficulties I have
over come.
Flog the
manuscript, you dummy! This is your chance! But no, I feel shy. I feel
embarrassed. Why would Adam want to hear about another dumb memoir? Why
would he care about what I wrote?
So I said nothing. Networking fail. Adam continues to talk with Eric.Then he gets up to leave. I'm kicking myself.
This
was just a small thing, and I will have other opportunities -- but it
was a chance to know somebody who knows somebody who can get things done
and that's how things get done around here.
It's not over. I will flog this manuscript. The words I wrote compel me to make it known. I just think it's a pretty good story.
--
My writing blog is Frog Hospital
send mail to:
Fred Owens
35 West Main St Suite B #391
Ventura CA 93001
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