It’s Christmas night, I am thumbing through some old college essays I wrote for English class long ago. Oh boy. These are truly god-awful.
When I first seriously began writing it was during my community college years. All eleven of them. My English teacher read one of my early papers and paid me a compliment by saying, “This paper is terrible.”
“Ma’am?”
“This essay, it’s WAY too polished, Sean. There are NO mistakes in it. Where are the mistakes?”
“I don’t understand, ma’am.”
“I WANT you to make mistakes, Sean. I don’t want perfect papers, why would I want perfect papers?”
I was starting to think this woman had suffered a minor neurological event. A stroke perhaps. I expected to see Allen Funt walk from the back room with a TV crew and shout, “Smile! You’re on Candid Camera!”
She went onto say, “Write how you talk, and don’t be afraid to be messy, make a lot of mistakes.”
So I rewrote my story for this woman. An essay which was supposed to be about childhood.
I wrote about my first bicycle. I was six or seven when I first attempted to ride a bike. My father’s idea of teaching me to ride a bicycle was:
1. Place me on a bike.
2. Drink beer.
Before he let go of my bike my father reminded me “DO NOT TURN LEFT!” Because we were on top of a hill. On the left was a valley that looked like the sloping descent of Mount Vesuvius. And of course, anyone who is familiar with situational comedy already knows what happened next.
I veered left. And instead of learning to ride a bike, I learned how to roll down 3700 feet of treacherous rocks and I lost forty teeth.
After that, I was big-time scared of bikes. Sometimes, I would even wake up late at night to check beneath my bed for bicycles.…