Zero to Sixty

    Turns out family is complicated. I want to say, “the bigger it is, the more complicated a family is,” but I’m not sure that’s always true, really — some of the most-complicated families I’ve known have been relatively small. I also don’t think the Anna Karenina principle is all that accurate, either: even happy families are complicated and weird. I know mine is.

    My mom’s younger brother died yesterday. We weren’t close. In fact, we were about as un-close as it was possible for two guys who lived 20 miles apart and shared a lot of ancestors to be. This morning, I was on the phone with my mom, and we were trying to suss out when the last time we saw him was. She said she’d seen him three years ago, at a funeral. It was his birthday. The encounter was brief. Me? I think the last time I saw him was at a wedding, in about 2003 or ’04. We were both a little drunk.

    Why weren’t we close? Part of it is that I’m just not close with people, really. Part of it is that he teased me when I was a kid, I think because he noticed I was extremely suceptible to teasing and the whole galaxy of older-male behaviors that it lives in; I would turn red, and yell, and eventually come to the point of tears. I still don’t like it very much; when people feel like they have the right to fuck with me it pisses me off. I’m not completely sure on the chain of causality there, but the waters run swift and deep on that one. And then, beyond my own borderline sociopathy and our fraught relationship as young people (he was still in high school when I was born), there was some very heavy business between him and the rest of his siblings, business I’ve never quite understood. I’m not going to go too deeply into that, because it feels disrespectful to plumb those depths so soon after his death, but suffice it to say that I was not unique in being largely estranged from him.

    When I was young, and he still lived at my grandparents’ house, my uncle had a cat he’d named Cookie. Cookie is also my mom’s name (well, nickname, really, but it’s what everybody calls her). This was no mere synchronicity. In the way of many big families, the older kids in my mom’s generation were tasked with stewardship over younger ones, and my uncle came under my mom’s care. They enjoyed one another’s company so much that when a stray cat wandered up to the back door, my uncle named her in tribute to my mom. I’ve been told that when she came home from college, the first thing she would do was huddle with her little brother and exchange all the important news of their lives. Maybe that’s why he teased me so relentlessly — I took his place. Or maybe that’s reading to deeply into the business. I don’t know. Anyhow, I’ve tried to put myself in my mom’s shoes, and in my uncle’s shoes, to understand what it would be like to have a relationship that was once so close go poof one day. And then to have the possibility of ever getting it back foreclosed. I have the good fortune to have difficulty imagining that.

    This is all by way of saying that I can’t properly eulogize the man, because I didn’t really know him anymore. When he was young he was famously devil-may-care about everything — money, time, goals, girls, you name it. In pictures he has a big shock of wavy, reddish-blonde hair, and is usually in some surreptitious way having a joke: in the one I remember best, he’s riding shotgun in my dad’s convertible VW Bug, smiling along with the rest of the crew . . . with his right hand dangling down below the door, so that only the camera can see his middle finger proudly extended. I always thought that picture was funny. There was an aspect of the lovable scamp about him in those days. He was often grinning in a way that indicated he knew something you didn’t.

    I can’t imagine that being a fun-loving rebel was the easiest thing to do in the house he grew up in; he was the only son of a big, tough, difficult, and very successful father, who was known to have little time for bullshit and time-wasting. In that kind of an environment, actively pursuing bullshit and time-wasting becomes something noble, I think. There actually is value in letting older people know that you don’t care about their rules and refuse to live by their standards. Even if you eventually become one of them, as my uncle did, as I am doing, as we all should be so lucky to do.

    Funny how I asserted at the beginning that Tolstoy was wrong about happy families, and then went on to detail the ways in which my family, which I think of as mostly a happy one, was in some ways not happy at all. I don’t know. I guess don’t think happiness is binary, or something.

    But anyway, today I’m remembering my uncle, who died yesterday, aged just 53. He was an imp and a joker, the son of a tough father, the younger brother of five sisters, the father of two daughters. I always believed that our estrangement would end one day; today I mourn the fact that it didn’t. Super perfundo, RWC. You are missed.

Autumn

    A tall man in a dark jacket comes to take my grandmother to the doctor. Except he doesn’t.

    In reality, the man who takes my grandmother to the doctor is a small man in a colorful jacket — my dad. But when you ask her, she’ll tell you of the tall man in the dark jacket. It’s hard to say whether this is an hallucination or a failure of her brain to properly describe what she experiences, but either way, it’s troubling. Everything about her life lately has seemed troubling to me. I must admit that I haven’t been to see her in a while, because the last time I did, it was pretty obvious that she didn’t recognize me. I’m worried, sort of, about frightening her. But really it’s just convenient. Her misery is so palpable in the little house where she lives with my uncle Victor. It scares me a little.

    I think my grandmother was a better grandmother than a mother. I think that’s true of a lot of people, especially people who survived the Depression and the War and spent a lot of the 50s and 60s trying to sort themselves out. My dad was largely raised by his own grandmother, Ma Quigley. He was only a few years younger than his uncle Lanny, so when his mother turfed him there, he was easily folded into the brood. At times he would live with his mother, and at times not, but there was chaos there. His stepfather was an Air Force mechanic, and an irresponsible reprobate. They moved around a lot. He ended up back at Ma Quigley’s sometimes. He went to high school in a little logging town in southern Oregon, where he lived in an apartment with Ma Quigley, who slept in a walk-in closet. He didn’t talk to his mother very much, I don’t think. He had been with my own mother for years before he introduced them. It was a complicated relationship. My dad and my grandmother loved one another, but I’m not sure they liked one another very much.

    By the time I was born, much had been settled, I think. The stepfather was long gone, wandered into the United States of Alcohol on the back of drunken horse, and my grandmother lived a short drive away from us. I don’t know how they related to one another, but she and I had a fine old time together. We ate popcorn with butter on it, which wasn’t freely available at my house, where my mom was often on a diet. We would go out behind her house and climb Pilot Butte, the big cinder cone that used to mark Bend’s eastern edge, and she would listen to me speculate about the possibility that we would end up in the newspaper for this feat of endurance and strength. She never pushed religion on me, which had been one of the sticking points in her relationship with my father. If I had a nightmare, she would sing me to sleep, in a high, trembling voice that made me feel safe.

    When I got older, we had less to talk about. We didn’t really have a lot in common other than our genes: she was religious, conservative, constitutionally inclined toward small towns and environments with as many people as much like her as possible. I was atheistical, liberal, from a city and always looking for a bigger one. For a while we bonded over a mutual suspicion of George W Bush and a mutual love of cats. When I lived in Bend in my mid-20s, I would go to her house once a week to visit, and that’s what we would talk about — her cat, Gus, a gigantic Maine Coon who had wandered into her yard one day and taken up residence; my cat, Phoebe, a less-gigantic Maine Coon who had been my companion off and on for ten years.

    Last winter, she caught the flu and almost died.  She hallucinated then, too, including mistaking me for the pastor of her church at one point. But the signature feature of my grandmother’s life has been a complete refusal to be crushed by forces larger than she. She survived the Depression. She weathered the home front in California during WWII. She endured after her first husband, my grandfather, vanished. She didn’t give in when her second husband turned out to be a drunk. When her oldest son didn’t speak to her for years, when her oldest grandchild was killed by a drunk driver, when her youngest son returned to live with her in adulthood, when her favorite brother crashed his Cessna on Christmas Day 1996, when her older sister withered with Alzheimer’s, when another brother wasted away from emphysema — she bore up. Often she performed heroic work. She was always good in a crisis. In the crisis of her own influenza, she refused to die.

    And now, though she believes that a tall man in a dark coat comes each week to take her to the doctor, when in fact it’s a small man in a colorful coat? I don’t know. Eventually one of these things will mean her end. In the long run, you always take the field. But any individual thing — I have no doubt she’ll outlast those. The tall man in the dark coat may take her to the doctor for another ten years.

    It is the autumn of her ninety-fourth year. Today I noticed the tree in the courtyard next to my building has flushed pink, as though embarassed by the spinning of the globe. I will have to go see her, and trust that she will deal with the crisis of my presence as well as she has dealt with every other crisis so far.

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The Loneliness of the Middle-Distance Cyclist / Oh Yes, You Waited with Baited Breath for Me to Speak of the Tennis

1. The Loneliness of the Middle-Distance Cyclist

    I started getting fat right out of college because I had no idea how to take care of myself. In school my friends and I played basketball and soccer — not well, but competitively — and the food was at best fair in the cafeterias.* I’ve always tended to portly, especially as a kid, but puberty had done a pretty good job of leaving my body issues mostly in my mind by the time I graduated. Then, suddenly, I was underemployed, drinking too much, and expected to feed myself. I ate a lot of burritos. I ate a lot of pizza. I sat on my ass a lot. I think I must have gained sixty pounds in just three years. I do know I quit weighing myself when I saw 240 on the scale. (I’m 5’9”, for reference.)

* Jesus, we complained about that food a lot. Sometimes I remember the things I used to say or think when I was in college and I kind of shiver. To bitch that the free, twice-daily buffet didn’t taste good enough? I was Marie Antoinette’s spiritual heir. I’m lucky nobody chopped my head off.

    I was a 24-year-old kid whose knees creaked and popped when he crouched down to pick something up off the floor. I got winded walking up the one flight of stairs to my studio apartment. I had the sort of back pain that usually plagues men in their 50s. It was a bad scene, man. Pretty pathetic.

    There was never a moment when I decided, I am no longer going to be a fat sack of crap. At some point, I acquired a recumbent exercise bike and would ride it, very slowly, deep into the night — sometimes while drinking beer at the same time. Then, one day in the late spring of 2004 or 2005 (I no longer remember), I tipped my fat ass onto a bicycle, and rode it down my driveway, out through Little John Lane (my neighborhood was, for reasons that still escape me, Robin Hood-themed, as though I lived not in Oregon but at Disneyland), and fifteen miles over the rolling scrubgrass of the high desert. I stopped at a little market in an unincorporated town — really just a house, a church, and a gas station — called Alfalfa.** I bought a Payday bar. Then I rode home. Three or four times a week, all through that summer, I would ride this same route, so often that I came to know intimately everything about it. I knew the good spots to stop and pee. I knew the blind corners. I knew which hills were murder in the summer heat.

**Edited to correct the spelling. My mom texted to let me know I'd got it wrong.

    It was an act of sheer will, done without planning or cunning. Often I rode through 95-degree heat, guzzling water, stopping in almost every shady spot to catch my breath. Sometimes I weathered the furious swoop of self-righteous truck drivers who took pleasure in terrorizing cyclists who had the temerity to ride out along that road. I saw some dead squirrels. I saw a stray cat kill a bird. I saw a dead steer, being consumed where it had fallen by a swarm of flies and a hopping, cawing flock of crows. A few days later I saw some young men hauling its torn carcass onto the back of a truck.

    I don’t ride that route very often anymore, mostly because I moved away and only come back to visit my parents. When I do I find I still remember it. I also find, having lost the weight, I no longer have the will I once did. I rode that route — a version of it, anyway — this morning. I left early in the morning to avoid the heat. Onceago, as a fat young man pointed at fitness, there was something self-flagellating about riding through hot afternoons; there was a weird way in which I got off on the sunburn, the exhaustion, the near-delirium I experienced. Today, riding through the morning, with temperatures twenty degrees lower, I suffered, and I did not like it. Next time I get on my bike I won’t be going nearly as far. I saw some dead squirrels. I saw an osprey in a nest high upon a telephone pole. I did not see the body of a steer. I saw myself, ten years older, and I mourned the passing of the years.

I AM A GREAT PHOTOGRAPHER!!!

 

2. Oh Yes, You Waited with Baited Breath for Me to Speak of the Tennis

    I haven’t watched the Federer match yet, so nobody say anything!

    I don’t have much in particular to say about the tennis — Serena won, Andy won, despite having a bit of a scare thrown into him by a seven-foot-tall scarecrow with a 135-mph serve. I will say that I don’t like watching tennis with people who obviously don’t care about it, who would like their television back so they can watch something — anything — else. I was watching the Murray-Karlovic match at my parents’ house and I could feel my mother’s boredom, to the point that it started to infect me. She would leave the room and come back and say, “What’s happening?” After a while, I couldn’t say. They were trading games. Karlovic was massive and awkward and just skilled enough to keep up. Andy was fast and dazzling and volatile and frustrating and frustrated and all the things that make him my favorite player and everybody else’s least favorite. (I have a sneaking suspicion that he and I have similar personalities. This is why I like him.) In the end, Andy’s brilliance proved too much for Karlovic’s plodding power-serve-and-volley game. One wonders, however, how a player reaches #3 in the world with such a terrible second serve. What the hell, Andy?

    Throughout the proceedings I kept going out to the back yard to visit my father, who has developed another quixotic hobby. For years, he walked the streets of Bend and made it his mission to pick up as many empty bottles and cans as he could. These he would throw away or take back to his recycling bin; then he would mark them down in a notebook. Ask him and he’ll tell you how many he’s collected. It is many thousands.

    Anyhoozy, now they’ve moved out to the country and there isn’t nearly so much litter available. Instead, he hunts animals that are called, locally, “scrub rats” — actually, two kinds of varmint, one of which is a vole and the other one of which is not a vole.*** They’re tearing up the yard out there, digging holes and leaving mounds all over, so that the place looks, to use my dad’s colorful comparison, “like Verdun”. So he spends his afternoons out on his back deck with a book and a high-powered pellet gun, waiting. The things are brazen, all right — I’ve seen him get within two or three yards before pulling the trigger, and they don't seem to care.

***This second animal looks exactly like a vole.

    He is as yet to hit one. My mom is blaming the sights on the gun. This is possible, I suppose, but I suspect mostly it’s a lack of experience that impedes his aim. We were city mice, my family. It’s funny to go out to the middle of nowhere and find them doing country things. It seems to me that his bad aim is for the best. What happens the first time some tiny animal’s brains are spattered all over the lawn? I mean, who knows, maybe it’ll be fine — this is a man whose grandmother used to wring the heads off chickens’ necks and set their golem-bodies shivering around the backyard. But that was a long time ago. Mostly I’m glad I won’t be there to see it.

The Mortal Winter.

1. On Winter.

The days are short here. It’s hard to believe that we’ve already passed a month since the solstice, because the sun still fades in the afternoon, and it’s hard not to walk around the city feeling absent, as though your winter clothing has insulated your very being from the world. Thin. When I was a kid, that was the word I used to apply to these dark midwinter days, and I believe I found le mot juste way back then: Portland in winter is thin. Day upon day of it and you starve.

I missed a plane this weekend, and have had to spend a couple of extra days, stolen days, here in my hometown, in its thin afternoons. I don’t mean to complain: there is often no place I’d rather be than here, and at the very least the sun has not spent its time hiding behind an impenetrable sheet of clouds for the last few days. But it has been strange, the way it has affected my mood. I feel slightly hungover all the time. I realized just now that I haven’t spoken a word aloud since yesterday. I kind of like it that way.

2.  On Phoebe.

They tumbled over one another in a wood crate outside the neighborhood market, a half-dozen kittens who had been born of a surprise litter. Gray, with phantom black stripes down their haunches, white jaws and chests: to look at, indistinguishable. A basket full of kittens is almost certainly the most adorable thing in the world, and of course we wanted to take home all six of them, but my parents were just regular cat people, not Cat People. We could take one home.

My brother Andy squatted down to play with them, and one immediately latched onto his arm. He gnawed harmlessly on his fingers, and then climbed his way up towards his shoulder. The others were cute and friendly, but this one: this one was obviously special.

“I like him,” Andy said. “He’s feisty.”

So we took this kitten away from his brothers and sisters and named him Archimedes. It was a dumb choice — nobody could pronounce it, and there was no convenient diminunitve form to help people out — but I liked the idea of naming a pet after a scientist, I think because I had watched Back to the Future too many times. Archimedes spent his first night in my bedroom, prowling. He was unafraid. He also didn’t have much interest in letting me go to sleep.

When finally we took “him” in to be neutered, we discovered that “he” was, in fact, a she. Cats, in this sense, are both complicated and simple: it’s hard for the layman to tell what their gender is, meaning that a lot of cats get misidentified and some live years of their lives as boys until one day they turn up hugely pregnant; but they also don’t carry with them the gender complexities that people do, I guess because they can’t talk — your female cat can’t tell you if she feels like a tomcat in the wrong body, or what have you. Anyway, Andy, who was eight, decreed that we couldn’t have a female cat with a boy’s name. We tried out a few different things, but finally landed on Phoebe, after Holden Caulfield’s younger sister in Catcher in the Rye. It fit her. It’s hard to say why: it just did.

Phoebe, in her youth, was beautiful, regal, majestic. One of her parents had been a Maine Coon, which is just about the largest domesticated breed of feline there is, and she grew to be quite long and tall. Her favorite way to get attention was to wait until I was doing my math homework, and then wander into my bedroom and stretch her body across my calculus book and gaze up into my face as if to say, Who are you to deny me? She ruled over our other pets with the ferocity of a warrior queen, and her combination of size and quickness made her dangerous to my mother’s dog as much as she was to my dad’s cat. Suffice it to say, I loved her immoderately, and though in theory she was a family cat, she belonged to me much more than everybody else. She slept in my bed at night, after all.

3. On Mortality.

An aleatory collection of things I remember about Phoebe:

-

One night I snuck out of my parents’ house and went for a walk with a girl. Phoebe snuck out of the house with me, and then tagged along on my date, as though chaperoning us: she owned me much more than I owned her, that’s for sure. She was the adult in our relationship. Eventually, however, we got separated, and when I snuck back into the house having failed to pluck up the courage and kiss the girl, Phoebe didn’t come with me.

She was gone for days. We thought she was dead. In a panic, my brother Mickey and I ran off a thousand fliers with a photograph of her and my parents’ phone number on it, and stuck them up all over the neighborhood. I’ve never been a good sleeper, but I don’t think I slept at all for those few days. I stayed up all night, staring out the open window of my bedroom, hoping she’d jump through it soon.

Then one day I came home to find a message on the machine: someone had found a cat that looked an awful lot like the one of the fliers I had been putting up, but much, much skinnier. I called her back, and it soon became clear that this was, indeed, Phoebe. Mickey and I drove over to the woman’s house — all of three blocks from home — and collected Phoebe, who looked like a detail from a danse macabre painting: bony, gray, strange.

A lot of things have happened to me in my life that have made me happy. Athletic triumph, academic accomplishment, even falling in love. I still think I’ve never been happier than the day I got to take my skinny cat home and feed her for the first time in a week.

-

She grew quite enormously fat after that incident, and though she retained her queenly air, there was more privilege than power in it. I don’t know if she grew fat because we overfed her in guilt or if she just ceased to believe that there would be food around all the time, but either way, she came to resemble the middle-aged Henry VIII, corpulent, happy, dangerous: she could still beat up any cat on our block, even if she couldn’t climb to the top of the dogwood tree in our backyard anymore.

-

Another time, I thought she was lost again, this time on the coldest night that Portland had seen in a decade. By the standards of other places I’ve lived, this was nothing, but it was all I knew at the time. I wandered the neighborhood, snapping my fingers and making the strange clicking sound with my mouth that she liked, but she never responded. I remember finally getting home and sitting down on the back porch, freezing cold, and imagining her out there somewhere. I cried. I was eighteen years old, and crying wasn’t the done thing at the time, but nobody could see me and my cat, as far as I knew, was out in the winter night, dying.

The next morning, I got up to get dressed, and when I opened my closet she came sprinting out and immediately headed for her box. While I was being maudlin in the back yard, she was just wishing that she could find a place to take a leak.

-

Her knees went bad. We put her on a diet, and she lost the weight. Her knees never recovered.

-

When I moved to New York, I had to let her move in with my brother. She had always been, and would always be, a cat who lived for her time outside. As she aged, her personality softened, and she came to love people — all of them, really — a great deal, but she was never happier than when perched in a shadow, surveying her domain. She was a cat who owned the world, even as she began to limp and complain, and her life was incomplete without lording it over her serfs.

-

I used to call her Gimpstein.

-

She used her feces as a form of protest sometimes. When I had the house we were living in together remodeled, every morning she very carefully found her way right into the middle of the construction area and relieved herself. For this reason, I began to call her Turd Bucket.

-

She loved to be carried around.

-

She slept under the covers with you, and when she wanted to be fed in the morning, she politely poked your nose with her paw.

-

If you talked to her, she talked back.

-

In the end, she lost control of her bladder, as cats do. I was 2000 miles away, and she was living with Mickey.

The night she died, I was at a concert with my girlfriend, and I received a text message. It was from Mickey. It read, “It’s done.”

I excused myself, and went outside. I didn’t really know what to do with myself. It was hard to imagine a world without Phoebe in it. After a few minutes I sat on a bench and allowed myself to break down. There’s a difference between thinking someone is dead, and knowing it. Here it is: one encompasses hope, and the other destroys it.


4. Ashes, Ashes.

Mickey had her cremated, which is good. She lives inside a little oaken box now. The box is tiny, given how big she was. This afternoon I sat in the car with the box in my lap, and tried to imagine her in there. I didn’t know whether to be terrified, amused, or devastated.

It had been a long day. A thin one. I spent most of it in search of an Andre Dubus III book: I had walked up to Powell’s on Hawthorne, but they didn’t have it; I drove down to Wallace Books in Sellwood, my old neighborhood, but they didn’t either. My last-ditch effort was to involve going up to the old Looking Glass Bookstore, a few blocks from where Phoebe & I lived together for years. I moved away from Portland four years ago, and I’ve found that I have difficulty remembering how to get around it sometimes these days. Too much has changed.

The Looking Glass Bookstore was housed in an old caboose, painted candy red and planted in a little urban shopping district between a sandwich shop and a Thai restaurant. It used to be that I could walk there with a blindfold on, but as I tried to find it this time, I found myself peering at the streetsigns and businesses, trying to remember where it was. I kept passing things I thought I knew, only to find that they weren’t where I thought I remembered them being. Memory — mine, at least — isn’t a map: it’s a dream.

Finally, I saw it, the little red caboose, and I pulled over and plugged in my headphones. I mounted the steps, thinking idly about how the day had been strange and melancholy and how disconnected I felt from my actual life at the moment. I didn’t really look at the caboose other than to see that it was there. When I opened the door and stepped inside, the first thing I noticed was the smell: not paper and ink, not dust, but curry, and tea. Alarmed, I looked around to find nary a book: the Looking Glass had become some tea shop. People sat at tables and tapped at laptops. I wanted to say: What are you doing here? How could you possibly be here? What’s wrong with you people?

They weren’t sitting in the carcass of a bookshop, but I was standing in one. It was a little bit hard to fathom. I walked back outside, vividly feeling that thing that we all become more familiar with as we age: death, tripping along beside me, slowly wiping the slate of my life clean, one bookshop at a time.

When I got into the car, I found the box with Phoebe’s ashes in it sitting on the passenger seat, and, being in my old neighborhood, I thought: Let’s scatter these fuckers. It’s hard to explain. Did I, or didn’t I, believe that Phoebe was in there? Was I angry or sad or what? I can’t say. I do know that I drove back to the house where she & I had lived for years, parked the car, and examined the yard for changes.

There was a tricycle on the lawn, and an SUV in the driveway. Some of my vegetables had been ripped out of the garden and been replaced with flowers. And Phoebe wasn’t parked in the shadow of the rosebush, in total possession her surroundings. I held the box in my lap, and tried to yank off the top.

It tuns out that they don’t just cremate a cat and put her in a little box with a removeable lid on it: that thing was screwed shut. I yanked, pulled, cajoled, but I didn’t have a screwdriver and there wasn’t going to be any way to get it open. So I set it in my lap, and put my fingertips on the lid: she was in there. Is there an inflection point at which something becomes so sad it can’t be funny anymore?

Aw, fuck. Things change. Pets die. People die. The days are thin, and my life is a million miles away.

A Bunch of Stuff I Don't Usually Say about My Tattoo.

So, that DFW post is still in the offing; reading More Flesh than Not has turned out to be more of a time-consuming activity than I thought. As a substitute, I offer this essay, which I have concluded I will never gather the energy to be able to hammer into saleable shape. (As usual, follow links for footnotes.)

***

1. Deathly Hallows

People ask, Oh, what’s your tattoo? I used to work behind the counter at a coffeeshop in the back of Housing Works Bookstore in SoHo, Manhattan; on weekends, or in the late afternoons, these were often pretty girls — skinny, younger than me. I learned to flirt with them, but when they asked, What’s your tattoo, there was this inflection point: they would judge me, one way or the other. It’s a triangle on my left forearm, encompassing a circle, bisected by a straight line. A rune, I guess you’d call it. I’d tell them what it was, and they’d say, Oh. Or they’d say, I thought so! I noticed a pattern: the younger they were, the more desperate to be sure you took them seriously, the less likely they were to like it.

2. Order of the Phoenix

I’m remembering a time when my father and brothers and I went to Falls City, Nebraska, the little town near the Missouri border that my dad still thinks of as home, more than fifty years after he last lived there. Four thousand people, down from six, cobblestone streets and a little downtown consisting of hundred-year-old buildings only about half occupied. When you order a salad there, you get a bowl of shredded iceberg lettuce smothered in ranch dressing.

I think I was twenty-four. Wait, I can check this for you … nope, twenty-three. You know how I know? It was the summer of Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. We stayed in a motel on the edge of town, and mornings I would come out to find one of my brothers sitting on the picnic bench by the dirt parking lot, reading in the rising heat. Falls City was stifling, unlike anyplace I’d ever been before. I had spent four years in a part of Southern California where temperatures regularly touched 110 in the summertime, and nothing I’d experienced had prepared me for a 90 degree day with 100 percent humidity in Falls City.

I distained their book. I was a very serious person in those days, just more than a year out of college. Serious enough to be seriously depressed, drinking too much, gaining weight. I’d had a reasonably good job right out of school, at a newspaper, but I wasn’t any good at it. It wasn’t that I couldn’t do the writing. I couldn’t do the reporting. Reporting involved calling strangers on the phone and talking to them, and admitting when you made a mistake, that kind of thing. I was much too serious, and afraid of embarrassment, for either of those things. I don’t think I had ever been wrong in my whole life.

I realize now that the true Harry Potter mania had not yet gripped my brothers, because Mickey, who’s three years younger than me, managed to wait until Andy, who’s eight years younger, finished reading before he fell on the book. By the time Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince came out, two years later, none of us would be able to delay gratification like that. At that point, these were still just books they liked — anticipated, reread, but just liked, really. Maybe it’s that I hadn’t joined in. Maybe my seriousness really did put a damper on proceedings.

“That stuff will rot your brain,” I would say to Mickey if I found him reading it.

“You’re thinking of TV,” he’d say.

If I saw Andy with it in his hands: “You’re still reading those kids books?”

“They’re not kids books.”

Falls City was the very definition of nowhere. Outside town, corn grew thick on rolling hills. We drove out to Schubert, which had once had a population of about a thousand, but now had a population of one old lady and one kid tooling around on an ATV. Was my grandmother with us? My great uncle Milan? I think Milan must have been, because somebody told the story of having lived in Schubert in childhood, and walking the six miles to Falls City to watch movies projected on a sheet outside the high school.

Milan wasn’t that old — sixty-six, I want to say, maybe sixty-seven — but his body was just about ready to give out on him, like a paper sack that had been used for one too many lunches. He was skinny and hunched, probably had lung cancer though he wouldn’t go to the doctor. He and I both smoked. We would stand out on the lawn of my great aunt’s house, smoking, not really talking. He rode in the back seat of the car with my brothers and slept a lot. He had grandsons who had read Harry Potter. He had more to say to my brothers than to me, because they had something in common. The only thing I remember him saying directly to me was, “Every time I get in this town, I want to cause trouble.” This in the evening, with the lightning bugs winking around us. I had never seen lightning bugs before that trip. He hadn’t been back to Falls City since high school.

One afternoon we went out to Barada, where Milan and my grandmother had both been born. It consisted, as far as I remember, of a couple of tract houses down in a gully, and a graveyard up on top of a hill. There were considerably more dead people in that town than living ones. When we went to hike up to the cemetary, Milan got back in the car to sleep. He was sick, sure, but I don’t think he had any desire to go up among the graves, so close to the dead.

3. Philosopher’s Stone

I’m thinking about brotherhood now, and adulthood. My brothers and I weren’t really friends when we were kids. I was too much older than they were, too much invested in the status quo, too often aligned with our parents on the side of order. I had a bad temper. Once, when babysitting, I put my fist through a window after one of them locked me out of the house. I still have a scar on the ring finger of my right hand from that, twenty years later. It’s probably my fault we weren’t closer.

They fought like blazes, by the way, and though I was too clueless to notice, actively didn’t like each other for a long time. I went off to college when Andy was just 10 years old, and something happened while I was away: they got closer, and farther apart. Andy had been sickly all through his childhood, but was reasonably well by then. Maybe that made him available for physical abuse or something. I don’t know. I wasn’t there. But also he got older, and they started having interests in common. Harry Potter, chiefly. I would come home from school and they would have these unparsable hermeneutical conversations about Death Eaters and what Snape’s role in the whole business was. (This mostly took place during the lengthy lacuna between Goblet of Fire and Order of the Phoenix, from the years 2000-2003, at the end of which Andy was fifteen, Mickey twenty. Snape, in the final moments of Goblet of Fire, is sent off to do something unspecified, probably dangerous, on Dumbledore’s orders.) I felt locked out.

I had been given the opportunity to get in on the ground floor, by the way, at the beginning of the winter holidays during my freshman year of college. Philosopher’s Stone had just been released in the U.S. that autumn. [1] On my way from college near Los Angeles to my parents’ house in Portland, I stopped at my friend Jocelyn’s place in Ashland, just north of the California border, for the night. Her mother had a copy of the book, and Jocelyn, who had flown up and arrived just the day before, had already read the whole thing.

“Read it,” Jocelyn’s mother said, upon discovering that I liked books. “It’s amazing.”

I sat down with it in their basement that night, where there was a spare bed in which I would be sleeping. “Mr and Mrs Dursley, of Number Four Privet Drive …” Ugh, a kids book. Mr and Mrs Dursley, indeed. I didn’t really care. I finished the first chapter, which seemed to be cloying, sub-Roald Dahl claptrap, and tossed the book aside.

Now. Rowling has herself has admitted that the first chapter of Philosopher’s Stone is “not the most popular thing I’ve ever written”, and the fact of the matter is that its tone and content don’t really feel of a piece with the rest of that book, let alone the much bigger, much darker ones to come. Does that mean that I shouldn’t be so hard on the younger me, and admit that maybe I detected what so many other people did in that first chapter, and gave up? Eh. To give up on a book after only one chapter, especically one as brief as “The Boy Who Lived” (17 pages, big type, in my paperback edition from 1999), is the mark of having gone into the reading intending to dislike it. I had heard of this Harry Potter. Other people liked it. I had resolved not to, and that was that.

I got home, and my brothers had joined the bandwagon. I sneered. Children reading children’s shit. Whatever.

4. The Prisoner of Azkaban

My family does Christmas, but not in the go-to-Mass sense, not even in the say-a-prayer-before-dinner sense. My mom’s an atheist, my father would probably best be described as a non-Christian deist, and our Christmas traditions are these: we are awakened by our mother, forced to drive around the neighborhood with her delivering cinnamon rolls to family friends (even the Jewish ones), we open presents, and then we go to the movies. We continued these traditions right up until my parents moved away from Portland, where I grew up, to Bend, where my mother grew up. That happened maybe five years ago. Still we go to the movies every year. Maybe one day I’ll be enough of an adult to set my own, new traditions, but I just had my 32nd Christmas and I still haven’t figured that out.

Anyway, I was going to say that the winter after that trip to Falls City, our Christmas movie was Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, but that turns out not to be true: the movie wasn’t released until the following year. God, what did I do with that year of my life? This was the period I tend to think of as “the long suck”. Depending on how I’m defining it, it usually covers the years from 2003-2005, when I started writing seriously (more on that later), but if I really broaden it out it one could say it lasted until 2009, when I moved to New York in a haze of heartbreak and rejection and started growing up a little, finally. For now, though, we’ll use the shorter time span, during which I was almost entirely celibate, definitely entirely single, drunk most every day, and ballooned up to about 250 pounds. I wasn’t a happy camper, I tell you what. That’s probably why I can’t remember most of what happened that year.

Anyway, Azkaban. Over my objections, it was chosen as our Christmas movie. I’m trying to reconstruct why I would have acquiesced. I can point to only two possible factors: (1) a total dearth of other movies I had any interest in seeing; and (2) the fact that director Alfonso Cuaron was also responsible for Y Tu Mama Tambien, just the kind of serious and adult movie I liked.[2] Anyway, I allowed myself to be dragged to the theatre, and then, somehow, allowed myself to be dragged into the story. It has become hip to nominate Azkaban as the best of the Potter films, I think precisely because it was directed by the daring and respected Cuaron, whose later Children of Men would cement him in the American consciousness as a storyteller to be reckoned with. But the fact of the matter is that the hip opinion is the correct one, in this instance: I’ve seen all the Potter films a half-dozen times at least, and it’s remarkable the degree to which Cuaron managed to coax emotionally complex performances from his 13-year-old actors that none of them would never really equal again, even as they reached adulthood. Aside from that, Azkaban is the last of the books whose story can truly be captured onscreen — even then, it’s a stretch — and the first two Potter films were not just about children but childish, told without the panache or depth that the stories cry out for. The world of Hogwarts is nothing if not decorated, and Azkaban captures that world’s detail, its cold beauty and its filth, in a way that none of the other Potter films ever would (though at least the later ones would try).[3] It is a mystic kismet chord: the story small enough, the palate big enough, to make a real movie happen.

Suffice it to say I was enraptured, unexpectedly, totally. The bleak, rainy, owly world of grief and pain and escape that Harry and his friends occupied was just what I needed in order to embody, and to flee, the long suck. Shortly after Christmas we went down to a cabin my parents owned in Central Oregon, and I spent the entire trip buried in a mass market paperback of Prisoner of Azkaban purchased from the books aisle at the Safeway in the nearest town. Certain things about the story were confusing, of course, without having read the first two books, and reading the tale in this weird, elliptical manner, starting in the middle, would spoil some of the surprises, but also leave little gifts for me upon rereading: the first time I read Order of the Phoenix, for instance, the heartbreaking scene at the hospital in which Gilderoy Lockhart displays his “joined-up writing” ability meant nothing to me. On a second tour, I saw him for what he was: a victim of pride, yes, but fundamentally a person undone by inborn flaws, by insecurity — in short, someone I could recognize.

5. Chamber of Secrets

I have a question about favorites. Why do children and adolescents have them, but adults tend to relinquish the idea? Is it that, as adults, we have too much information, have seen too many things, to pick and choose? Or is it that we have ceased to care the way we once did? I still love books, and (to a lesser extent) movies and music, but nothing I read makes me feel totally shot through with light the way I did when I first laid hands on Rilke’s Duino Elegies at seventeen, or when I first heard Nirvana’s In Utero at thirteen. Like all writers I go magpie-like through my bookshelf, taking this joke from Jonathan Lethem, that sentence structure from Jane Austen — but fundamentally, I will never absorb these things into my core the way I did the rhythms of Dubliners or The English Patient, both of which I read the summer between my junior and senior years of high school.

Perhaps, as adults, it’s that we reserve our favoriting for people, at least if we’re romantics, which I guess I must be. Lovers, spouses, our children: these come to take the place of the works of art we wore as badges in youth. Right? At least if we’re lucky enough to love, and be loved?

I’m thinking about this for a lot of complicated reasons. First, easiest, is that it might explain why my “favorite” Potter book has migrated backwards over time: when first I read them, Goblet of Fire definitely held pride of place, I think because it seemed kind of adult compared to the earlier books — it’s certainly much longer — and also because it didn’t include Harry’s obnoxious moral crisis or the odious Professor Umbridge, both of which stain Order of the Phoenix, if not artistically, then as an experience of pure enjoyment. [4] As I have grown older, however, and better acquainted with the realities of adulthood — its responsibilities, the moral and spiritual and emotional razor-wire one must constantly scale or cut through as one negotiates life — I’ve become less attached to the idea of it. So I began to tell people that Prisoner of Azkaban was my favorite of the books. Eventually even that came to feel too serious, too ambiguous for me, and I now claim Chamber of Secrets as my favorite — but mostly because I have to claim something to be taken seriously in the perpetually-adolescent world of Potter fandom; the truth is, I love all of them equally but differently, which is just the kind of equivocal answer my parents used to annoy me with when I asked them what their favorite movie was or which singer’s voice they would steal if they could.[5]

Second, more complex, has to do with my parents, and my brothers. I’ve known people who have told me that their parents clearly played favorites, and in fact I’ve seen it in action: a sister made to do laundry every day while her brother drinks his way out of college; a jocky son given praise, a nerdy one left to his books. My parents, thankfully, didn’t do this. If they had favorites, they never really let it show in their behavior. But, too, it’s more complicated than that.

I think I said before that my youngest brother, Andy, was sickly as a child. That was an understatement, or maybe an elision for the purposes of efficiency. I didn’t think I was going to be covering this ground, to tell you the truth. Andy, from infancy, manifested a whole constellation of disorders which damaged just about every part of his body other than his brain and his stomach. Though he was born healthy — strapping, actually; his birth weight outstripped mine by a good two pounds — very quickly things began to go wrong. He developed a form of histiocytosis, a family of rare and ill-understood disorders that mystify doctors almost as much as  they do laymen; the upshot, for Andy, was that benign tumors began growing all over his skeleton: I can remember him awakening in the night with his upper thigh in wrenching pain; he had a lesion on his right shoulderblade that stemmed from a tumor there which had shattered the bone and caused him to learn to do certain things (like throw a baseball, or a punch) left-handed; his face became, for lack of a more delicate way of saying it, deformed. At every turn, we were told that a certain thing probably wouldn’t happen, and then it did. He also stopped producing growth hormone, so that, between the ages of two and three, he grew not at all — he weighed a fairly normal 27 pounds on his second birthday, and the same 27 pounds on his third, which put him well below the 10th percentile for children his age. He also developed thyroid problems, and a kind of diabetes that makes it impossible to retain water in the body without the aid of medication. To this day, he has to give himself a daily battery of shots and pills just to keep his systems functioning; in childhood, the treatments ranged from radiation that made his hair fall out to a clear liquid that had to be blown up his nose via a plastic tube. I won’t even begin to go into the various surgeries he had as a teenager, all on his head and face, because they are too gruesome to contemplate and I don’t wish to disturb people.

The result, anyway, was that a huge proportion of my parents’ mental and spiritual energy was expended on his illnesses and treatments. Though they did heroic work to keep Mickey and I from feeling neglected, the fact is that by necessity we were left to manage ourselves a lot of the time — no one went over my report cards with me, or demanded to know where I was off to on a summer afternoon, or quizzed me about how school was. Perhaps this is because I gave them no reason to. I was a good kid, and secretive to boot; maybe Mickey, who acted out more, received more scrutiny than I did. And I don’t wish to exaggerate: it’s not as though we raised ourselves. My father coached baseball for all three of his sons through the sixth grade; my mother made dinner every night and made sure we all sat around the table together, even if — as it often did — this resulted in a lot of shouting just to make ourselves heard over other people’s shouting.

Perhaps it was just a different time, a time before helicopter dads and tiger mothers, when kids were allowed to spend all summer roaming the streets in packs; I grew up in the 80s, on the cusp of Gen X and another, not-so-easily-defined generation brought about by a baby boomlet that happened when actual Boomers reached child-rearing age. What I remember best about childhood was just how many kids there were everywhere: if you wanted a game of double-or-nothing, or wall-ball, or soccer, all you had to do was wander around the neighborhood with a ball under your arm and eventually you’d collect enough people to play. Nearly all of my friends were oldest siblings, that might have had something to do with it also. We took care of ourselves because we were used to it, all of us, not because our parents played favorites or because our younger brothers were sickly or because our moms and dads had fancy jobs that kept them at work 60 hours a week. We liked our own recognizance.

I’m sorry, I’ve wandered off-topic, haven’t I? I’m thinking about Chamber of Secrets because it’s my favorite of a group from which there can be no favorites, in the way that Andy was the favorite of us brothers: not because he was, but because he had to be. Too, there’s a way in which Harry Potter was a last vestige of childhood, a thing that I could love purely, without avarice or lust, a way out of my adulthood — and so I have picked a favorite, Chamber of Secrets, because Gilderoy Lockhart is the best pure comic creation in the series, because the idea of a diary that both listens and speaks makes me wish desperately that the world really worked like that, because Harry is still a kid in its pages, and because its title is the most poetic: childhood was, for me, a chamber of secrets all its own.

6. Goblet of Fire

I’m wondering about memory now. I wonder about it a lot. I used to believe I had one of the world’s great memories, so full was my head of details and images and stories, but as time has gone on, as I have checked the records to find that the facts often don’t track with the tales I have told myself, it’s come to my attention that what I really have is an extremely vivid imagination. Where my memory fails, my imagination builds worlds — realistic, but not real. I have a memory of a red hat I used to wear sitting on the desk of a girl I dated in college, a lamp fixed over it so that its brim casts a long shadow onto the bed, the floor, her body. If I asked her about that, would she tell me she didn’t even own a lamp? Possibly. I have a memory of rounding second base after hitting a home run in Little League, and in this memory people shout and cheer and it feels like I’m flying — but crowds didn’t really gather for our Little League games, not crowds of the sort I hear in this memory; usually the audience consisted of a couple of parents, a passel of bored younger sisters, maybe the teams waiting to take the field after our game ended.

I have a memory of the moment that Harry Potter began to build a bridge between me and my younger brothers. In this memory I sit on one side of the little kitchen table in the house where my parents lived after I moved out. This is either December of 2004 or January of 2005. I am twenty-four; Mickey is twenty-one; Andy is just about to turn seventeen. They sit on the other side of the table, eating Thai food, and I have Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, the big, hardback edition I’ve borrowed from Andy, spread out before me. I must be about halfway through. I’m speculating on the fate and future of Sirius Black:

“I dunno, it seems like maybe he’s a fifth columnist or something. Like he might actually be evil. That would be really interesting, if it turns out Sirius is bad and Snape is good —”

They smirk. See, they know something I don’t yet know: Sirius Black is dead. Rowling greased him at the end of Order of the Phoenix, which they both read almost two years ago, in the hot afternoon of Falls City, Nebraska.

“That’s interesting,” Mickey says.

“Well, how about it?”

“How about what?” Andy says.

“Do you think I might be right?”

“I really couldn’t say.”

Did that really happen? Were Mickey and Andy and I really so distant from each other that it took this moment, in which they both gave me the great gift of not telling, for us to bond? Or is it just another story I tell myself to make sense of a formless and stupid life that I fundamentally don’t feel very good about?

I mean, we certainly loved each other before then, in a nobody-hits-my-brother-but-me kind of way. I can remember chasing off idiot kids who stared at Andy’s odd looks. I can remember long evenings playing catch with Mickey in the front yard, which we did so often that we wore big dead patches in the grass.[6] I administered Andy’s medications, picked up Mickey from soccer practice without being asked; we went to the movies and played Zelda and stuff. Maybe we were friends before Harry Potter. But then my life doesn’t make much sense. Maybe I’m too invested in a narrative in which I used to be arrogant, callous, unreflective, but am now humble, empathetic, knowledgeable. Maybe I was less the former then, and am less the latter now, than I would like to admit.

Oh, whatever. Whether it was Harry Potter that did it or not, my brothers and I are friends now, and I can’t really imagine a test that our friendship would fail. We live thousands of miles apart; we have lives that no longer include hours spent playing video games together — and yet there’s still a bond, an understanding, that exists between us, even at a distance.

7. Half-Blood Prince

I am put in mind of the long suck again. How to explain it? Until I was 22, I was a machine of being good at stuff, academically successful, the kind of person at whom the word potential was hurled a lot. I was fairly sure I was destined to win awards and change the world as a poet, which of course now seems silly — not only because my poetry wasn’t that good, but because poets don’t change the world anymore, if they ever did. Until time came for me to change the world and be given my awards, I would …

And there’s the problem, you see. I had no interim plans, no sense that things might not go exactly as I expected them to. I got that job on the Menlo Park Almanac, and I made a hash out of it. I bailed. I failed. I went back to Portland and sank like a stone into a life of dissolution, unemployment. I stopped writing. I had been writing since I was five years old, but living in a house in a part of town colloquially known as Felony Flats, I was too fat, too stupid, too spiritually indigent to scribble a poem or a story. This, of course, was a symptom of having always taken myself too seriously: everybody quits a job now and then. Everybody fucks up. But I felt like the only person who had ever bollocksed an opportunity, and I resolved to piss my life away in response.

This I know is true: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince rescued me from my self-pity. The reasons are dumb and convoluted, but in the summer of 2005, when Half-Blood Prince was released, I found myself driving down to that cabin my parents owned in order to sequester myself from people who might accidentally spoil the plot before I could get my hands on the book. Then I bought it at 8 AM the day it came out anyway — drove the 7 miles into Bend, the nearest town, plugged my iPod into my ears so nobody could say anything to spoil it, and purchased a copy I already knew would be redundant within the week. I regret this decision not at all.

The first reading of a new Potter book is best done alone, in a space where one can move around a lot, because the fact is that you’re going to be staring at the page for a goodly period of time. The last few books are very long, and I, personally, am a stupidly slow reader. I know people who gobbled up Half-Blood Prince (607 pages, in the British hardback I have on the table next to me now) in five or six hours; it took me from the moment I returned to my parents’ cabin, about 9.30 in the morning, until well after dark, which would mean something in excess of 12 hours. I lay on the couch, I sat at the table, I stood at the kitchen counter while I made spaghetti, I lounged on the porch swing with the book across my thighs. I’ll admit something now that I don’t usually include in this story: I did all of this completely naked. It was July, and hot out in the high desert, and that cabin isn’t air conditioned. I’m not sure there’s even a fan out there. So I stripped down to my birthday suit and I read Harry Potter, unseen by anybody.[7] That day, 16 July 2005, was an island in the ocean of my depression, and I clung to its shores.

When I put the book down, my mind reeled. I had been calling Mickey and Andy throughout the day, getting updates on where they were; I called them now, but neither had finished yet. I was able to return the favor they gave me the previous winter: I did not tell them that Dumbledore was dead, though I knew, though I was desperate to say. Unable to spew my theories about Horcruxes and the mysterious R. A. B. and the question of whether or not Dumbledore had really died, I found a notebook somewhere, pulled a pen out of my backpack, and began to scrawl my own version of the seventh book. It was the first, and last, piece of fanfiction I would ever write.

The reason for this is not that I don’t find value in fanfiction, or that I didn’t find that project rewarding. As a matter of fact, I pursued it for several days, writing in a cramped hand that became sloppier and sloppier as I poured beer on top of my enthusiasm. It ballooned to some 90 pages, though I had a sense after about page 40 that I would never finish it: I had another idea, an idea with characters I had invented myself, a storyline, a setting — I was going to move away from Portland and write my own novel. And I did just that. That the book was what my friend Peter would call a “practice novel” doesn’t really matter; I was writing seriously, and have done so nearly every day for the past six-and-a-half years. Half-Blood Prince got my dumb ass going again.

I spent a year and a half in Bend, writing, drinking. I won’t pretend I wasn’t bored and lonely a lot of the time. I won’t pretend my drinking habit was healthy. But it wasn’t any worse there than it had been before, and at least I was doing something. I also began riding a bicycle, and all the excess weight began to fall off — a process that continued until, now, I weigh less than I did even in high school. During that period when I lived in Bend, Mickey and Andy and I cemented the friendship that had begun over the spoilers they refused to share with me while I read Goblet of Fire: we all waited with bated breath for the release of the final book, and would call each other with brand-new speculations we had just dreamed up, insights into characters we hadn’t pieced together before, that kind of thing. Through this, we found other passions in common: baseball, Veronica Mars, politics. They would come visit and we would play video games and watch Potter movies and listen to Potter audiobooks and drink beer. Life wasn’t perfect, but it was better. The long suck was over.

8. Deathly Hallows Redux

People ask, Oh, what’s your tattoo? Pretty girls ask as a way to indicate their interest, which is nice — when I was fat, and drunk all the time, I might as well have been invisible — but then comes that inflection point. I never lie, not about this. I tell them: It’s the mark of the Deathly Hallows, from Harry Potter. Sometimes noses wrinkle, usually on the younger ones who still feel the need to reject things in order to gain acceptance. It’s okay. I tell them: It’s also called the Mark of the Three Brothers. Shortly after the release of the last book, which is named after three powerful magical objects once possessed by three brothers, Mickey, Andy and I got the mark of the Deathly Hallows tattooed on our persons: Mickey on his left calf, Andy on his left shoulderblade, and I on my left forearm. So I tell the girls whose noses wrinkle: My brothers and I all have the same one. And usually their noses unwrinkle, and they say, Oh, that’s okay, then. Well, it’s okay whether you think so or not, but thanks. It took me a long time to get it.

Thinking about the midnight disease.

It was in this man’s class that I first began to wonder if people who wrote fiction were not suffering from some kind of disorder—from what I’ve since come to think of, remembering the wild nocturnal rockings of Albert Vetch, as the midnight disease. — Michael Chabon, Wonderboys

I can’t sleep. I’m trying to remember when ever I could. I have a memory of a time when I could lie down and fairly reliably nod off within a few minutes, but now that I think about it, I can’t put my finger on when this might have been. It wasn’t in high school, when I frequently stayed up until 2 AM and then went to school at 7.45. It wasn’t in New York, when I saw the sunrise shining off the buildings of downtown more times than I think I can count. It wasn’t in Portland, where it got so bad that I took to bricking myself out with NyQuil and Tylenol PM. When was it that I could sleep? I can’t tell you.

When we were kids, my brother had these things called “night terrors”. I’ve never had them myself, but I can tell you that from the outside they were the most frightening thing you can imagine: he would shoot awake in his bed, in distress, desperate for our parents. I would go fetch our mom from her rest and drag her into our room, where she would try to comfort him, and he would respond in anger and terror, “You’re not my mom!” I can’t even imagine what this must have been like for my mom, to have her son deny her in fear, but for me, it shook the fundaments of the world. I was probably six or seven when these began, and at that age — if you’re as lucky as I was — your parents are the bedrock of the universe, the font of all love and safety and, above all, rules: there was a level on which I sort of believed that all the universe’s basic forces, like gravity, and heat, had been put in place when my parents invented them for me.

Like I said, I never had these night terrors, thank God. I was only witness. But I grew frightened of them, and I believe that might have been when I started having difficulty sleeping — when I started staying awake so that I could stay on the vanguard of these episodes. That’s the closest I can come to pinpointing their genesis, at any rate.

Too, I find myself wondering: who are these people who can sleep? It’s not as though I haven’t taken measures. I’ve run two marathons. I rise at 6 or 6.30 almost every morning. I take melatonin. Often, I dose myself with NyQuil, though I know it’s not healthy. And yet there I am, hours and hours after having taken to my bed, staring out the window at an empty street, refreshing a browser window with nothing new in it, wondering why the hell my body won’t shut down when I’m so damned tired.

Is it related to writing? Oh, I doubt it. Artful as Michael Chabon’s passage about the midnight disease is, beautiful as the sentences are, I don’t write in the night, and I don’t imagine things to write in the morning: when I’m awake, just about the only thing I do is wish I weren’t.

Sweet dreams.