Today is National Columnists’ Day. Someone just told me. It’s a holiday for honoring those depraved, half-crazed individuals who crank out 500 to 800 words each day beneath rigorous deadlines and still manage to remain, technically, married.
I remember when I unofficially became a columnist. Sort of.
I was a boy. I was in my room, pouting.
My room looked like any little boy’s room. It was messy. It smelled funky. There were underpants scattered on my floor. There were Hardy Boys books, aquariums featuring dead goldfish, and half-eaten peanut butter sandwiches that predated the Carter administration.
I was having a particularly bad day. Namely, because my friends were playing outside and they had not invited me to join them. I could see my pals from by bedroom window. They were having fun, but they didn’t want me around.
When a kid’s father dies in the shameful way mine did, that child is not exactly the hippest kid in the county. I was forgotten. And it hurt.
There was a knock on my door.
It was my mother.
“What’re you doing in here all alone?” she said.
“Nothing.”
She glanced out the window. “You’re pouting.”
“No I’m not.”
“Then go outside and play with your friends.”
“They’re not my friends anymore.”
My mother was carrying something behind her. She placed a gift-wrapped box onto my bed. It was the size of a small suitcase, and heavier than a sack of Quickrete, wrapped in Christmas paper, although it was July.
“What’s this?” I said.
“Open it,” she said.
“I don’t feel like presents.”
Her face tightened. “Well, maybe when you’re done wallowing in self pity, you will.”
Then she left.
Mama always had a way of putting things.
I tore open the packaging. Inside was a vinyl case containing a manual typewriter. Sea-foam green. The spacebar was a little crooked, the S and D keys were faded, the ribbon was new.
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