Tuesday, March 5, 2013

What if the kid writes back?

Say you’re writing to your 12-year-old self. What do you do if the kid writes back?

I’m not the first guy to wonder, “If I were to meet another version of myself, my kid self, what would I say to him?” Richard Bach explored the idea in his novel, One. A couple a' Joes battled it out in the movie, "Looper."  Amy Pond in "Dr. Who."

I’d dreamed up my own version. In a bubble of overlapping timelines, I met my boy self on a winding road in rural Marion County, the summer before his 8th grade.


I was editing that story the other evening, bringing it down to size to meet the word-count for a submission. My gaze was intent on the conversation occurring at the close of the story: the boy and the man holding onto each other as the world around them vibrated and shuddered, timelines stretching and about to snap back to whatever “normal” is.

As the end is near, they speak of their connection, their oneness:

“Will I see you again?” the boy says.
“Yeah, Joe,” the man says. “We’ll find each other. Until then, take time to be still and listen. The silence is where we can hear each other.”
"I promise!" the boy responds. 

I took a break from editing the story and bounced over to Facebook to see what was going on. There I found an entry by Chris, a grade-school friend, who'd just posted a photo with the comment:

“For St. Lawrence alums, I found this at my parents'. An 8th grade report card and its envelope, signed by some of you.”

I'd come directly from a conversation on the page with my 8th-grade self. I looked to my computer screen at what Chris had posted and saw there -- that boy’s signature in his very own hand.  


Somehow, in writing this 12-year-old boy back into life, wearing his faded Notre Dame jersey and carrying his plastic canteen, we'd made a bridge between our worlds, him and me.  

And from 1975, he was reaching forward across time to tell me, his older self: “You were right. Look! I’m here! Can you see me?”

2 comments:

Jill said...

Coincidence and serendipity do have a way of finding you. I like it, and I like the story...this one and the complete one. I still say it's the best you've ever done. xoxo. me

Joe said...

I have no explanation, Fruit. Other than being accepting that they can occur. xoxo back at you. me