![]() |
A Period of Unemploymentby Martin Green...I’ve had certain indications in recent years that I was becoming an old guy: a young lady offering me her seat on the London underground; a supermarket clerk asking if I needed help putting my purchases into my car; my sons’ friends calling me “sir.” It wasn’t until I had my 75th birthday that it came to me that I’d been around for a long time and that if I wanted to make any sense of my life it was not too early to begin. I live with my
wife of some 40 years, Sally, in a When I submit a short story to an online magazine I describe myself as a retiree/free-lance writer. Shortly after retiring I starting doing free-lance articles for what was called the Neighbors section of our local paper, the Sacramento Bee. I did about 150 of these before Neighbors was subsumed by the Bee and no longer took free-lance work. Right now I do two monthly features for the Sun Senior News, a paper that gets sent to our retirement community so I’m still an active free-lance writer. Also, to my surprise, I’ve had over 150 short stories published on the internet by online magazines. As with many Californians, the real estate boom has made me, technically, a millionaire. Anyone who knew me in my early years would be very surprised. * * * My period of
unemployment began in the summer of 1963.
I was 29 years old. I’d come
out to San Francisco from my native New York City four years before and
obtained a position doing market research for a long-established local paper
company. After a couple of years
in These twin blows
left me a little shaken. I made a few
attempts to get another job, but my heart wasn’t really in it. As viewed from my little balcony from across
the bay, During the week,
I usually arose at nine, had breakfast, then went out on my balcony to read the paper and look at My
View. I’d then walk along Bridgeway, This was the
1960’s so * * * My body was out of control. I tried to stop myself but I fell and came down hard, bumping my head and then landing on my right elbow. I’d been playing tennis with George Jackson, a writer, actually published, I’d become friendly with and had been chasing after one of his shots. For a minute, I was in a daze, disoriented; my head and my elbow hurt. When my head cleared, George was standing over me and asking if I was all right. I said I thought I was. He helped me to my feet. “I’d better drive you to the clinic,” he said. I protested that I was okay, but he got me into his car and drove me anyway. * * * Some of the girls
in our George Jackson visited me one day to see how I was doing after my fall. The hairline fracture had put an end to our tennis playing for a while. I took advantage of his visit to ask him to look at some of my stories. He read while I looked out over the Bay. Finally, he said they weren’t bad but not commercial. “You’ll never make it as a writer,” he told me. * * * . While I was waiting for my elbow to heal, I spent a lot of time sitting out on my balcony and looking out at the Bay. I could usually see sailboats, like white birds, on the water. Gulls swooped back and forth and I could sometimes hear their calls. It was a nice scene, one that I’d shortly be leaving. Looking at a
large body of water had always seemed to focus my thoughts. Maybe it was the knowledge that this body of
water has been there long before me and would be there long after I was
gone. So all of the things that usually
cluttered the mind faded into insignificance and I could see what really
mattered. At any rate, here is what I
thought. With Ellen gone and no real
friends there, as well as no job, I had nothing to keep me in In * * * “It’s okay,” said Madeline. “I don’t know what’s the matter,” I said. “Don’t worry. Here, let me help. How’s that?” “I don’t know.” A little later, I said, “I think it’s helping.” “There, I told you.” We were in
Madeline’s apartment. Earlier, there’d
been a kind of good-bye party for me at the bar next to the bookstore. I didn’t really know how we’d gotten here
and I was a little surprised. The
next day, in the first week of October,
I said good-bye to * * * My parents then
had a two-bedroom apartment in the Once again I had
to create a structure for my life.
During the week, when not looking for work, I’d walk on Fifth and
Madison Avenues. I found that a new
library had opened near the Whatever its
faults, On this fall
day I was sitting on the bench by the lake in “Damn!” I said. I quickly pulled off my shoes and socks, rolled up my pants, waded out into the lake and retrieved the boat. “Here,” I said, handing it to the boy. The au paire girl burst into laughter. “You’re a hero,” she said, “but you’re very wet. You have to come with us and get dried off.” I told her I’d be
fine, but she insisted. She took me to
one of those tall buildings bordering the park, guarded by a uniformed
doorman. The elevator took us up to the
20th floor. The apartment was huge and
furnished like a palace. There was a
grand view of the park. Trudi, that was
the au paire’s name, gave me a robe and demanded that I take my wet things
off. The pants and socks went into a
dryer. John and Mary, the two children,
showed me their rooms, both three times the size of my own bedroom in the Just before winter started, when the leaves in the park started falling, I found a kind of a job. It was with a fund-raising agency which was gearing up for a big drive after the first of the year, and it was temporary with a possibility of becoming permanent. * * * The temporary job
unfortunately didn’t pay enough to allow me to have my own apartment so I
continued to live (rent-free) with my parents.
I took the subway from the I won’t say too much about the job; the truth is that after these years I don’t remember too much about it. I do remember that the fund-raising agency had a file for each donor or potential donor and that I did some clerical work, putting them in order, creating new ones, making phone calls, setting up appointments, even calling some people cold, like a salesman. My immediate boss was a tall, thin man in his 40’s named Isadore Bodkins, who took an immediate dislkike to me. He seemed to think that my being unemployed for so long meant that I was a slacker and that be taking this temporary job I was also taking advantage of his agency. Fortunately, Bodkins couldn’t be too nasty to me because his boss, I.S. Waterman, liked me, or at least was impressed by my marketing research resume. Whenever some question that might possibly involve marketing came up, he always asked my opinion, and he began to give me little research assignments to do. This infuriated Bodkins, but there wasn’t much he could do about it. That winter was
one of the coldest in After my near-failure with Madiline, I’d been a little apprehensive the first time Trudi took me to her bed, but I needn’t have worried. Whether it was Trudi’s exuberance or the passage of time, I was over Ellen. Other than these outings, I did a lot of reading that winter. I also spent a good deal of time with Oscar, the turtle that John and Mary had presented to me fir rescuing the sailboat. * * * In February, I
went to a family wedding, one of my cousins, in As we were leaving, one of my cousins, a large overweight fellow named Frank, came over. “Still working at that piss-ant job?” he said. I didn’t think this required an answer. My mother and father by this time were standing next to me. “What’s it like to have a son who’s a loser?” he said to them. I remembered from when we were kids that Fat Frankie had a susceptibility to bloody noses. I hit him, not as hard as I could, but a nice stiff jab. He still had that problem. As we left, my father said, “Nice punch.” * * * In April, my temporary job was coming to an end. Bodkins asked me what I’d be doing afterwards. “Bumming around again?” he sneered. “Don’t worry about me. I’ll be okay.” “I heard you’re supposed to be a writer. I don’t supposed you’ve ever had anything published.” “I have done some writing. And I have a story in this month’s Atlantic Monthly.” I.S Waterman had seen the story and was
impressed.. A few days later he called
me into his office and offered me a permanent job. I’d be the agency’s marketing research
specialist. The pay wasn’t bad. I’d be able to move out of my parent’s
apartment into my own place in In the spring, Sailboats floated placidly on the lake. Children played in the grass and their squeals and chatter filled the air.. The sky, above the buildings, was a clear blue. Pigeons came up to the bench, looking for a handout. Why was it that I was always leaving a place just when it was as its nicest? * * * I’ve said before that looking out over a large body of water always seemed to focus my thoughts. I didn’t know if I was thinking exactly, but I knew what I was feeling. I was far from the place where I’d grown up, far from my family. I had no job and no money to speak of. Yet for the first time I felt that I’d come of age. I’d made my choice and I looked forward to whatever lie ahead. Madeline, who’d been running in her bare feet along the waterline told me to take off my shoes and socks. I did so and rolled up my pants, then she reached out her hand and pulled me into the waters of the Pacific.
|
||||||||||
