In Search of Lost Time

The Evergreen State College

Author: warric30 (Page 2 of 2)

Journal Entry 2

April 3

As luck would have it, my little girl Kimbra has shared with me the pandemic plaguing her daycare! Sam and Stacey were having some technical difficulties getting Boyhood up and running. The two coupled together were too much for me to bear! Time to take a Nyquil induced nap. On the bright side, the movie was available to rent on Amazon, and this was a good excuse to lounge on the couch with my wife Jevahly. We both really enjoyed the movie! Linklater did an outstanding job of really linking the world surrounding each time period filmed with the characters’ lives. Just the subtle things like clothing, fads, and music especially. Filming over a 12 year period surely made that slightly easier. The way each person grew/matured kind of hit home with me as well. Now in my late 30’s, I’ve watched myself, friends, and family go through similar metamorphosis and grow up to be a person 180 degrees different than our childhood. I’m glad this was a part of the curriculum because I doubt I would have seen this film otherwise.

Journal Entry 1

March 30

This class seems like it will be far more reading and writing than anticipated. I knew a class titled after this 4000 page novel would require a substantial amount, but this almost seems overwhelming. At the same time I’m excited for the challenge as it can only improve my public writing skills. Even though fishing from a kayak is about as far from Proust as you could possibly land, I feel that the story telling, and writing that will be covered in the next 10 weeks can only improve my finished product. I just hope I can keep up…

Close Reading Pgs 577-588 from Within a Budding Grove

On pg 578 of Within a Budding Grove, the narrator learns the name of “the young cyclist” is Albertine Simonet. This immediately struck me after Trevor’s lecture and shedding light on Proust lover Albert. The feeling portrayed through this passage is very real and familiar of having the desire to meet someone, but you need a common friend to act as your medium. Was this Proust telling the story of his meeting with Albert? We know he was Proust driver. Was the bicycle metaphoric for Albert’s car? He was clearly passionate when he wrote these pages. Referring to Elstir as “a rainbow bridging a gulf between our terraqueous  world and regions which I had before thought inaccessible”. It seems clear to me that he saw Albert, or our narrator saw Albertine as an unobtainable being, and Elstir was his only hope to make this connection.  As for the rainbow; I’m unclear if he views Elstir as a new vibrant ray of hope connecting him to Albert/Albertine, or is the rainbow symbolic of a bridge physically connecting they’re existence, but in a way that’s intangible. You can see the connection, but remains physically disconnected.  Either way, he’s becoming smitten with the idea of Albert/Albertine, and hopes this meeting will result in Elstir inviting him/her in and break down the “barriers” between’ them. When this doesn’t happen, and Albertine merely says hello while passing by, I can feel his tension go through the roof! There would be a moment of deflation because what he hoped would transpire is now continuing down the rd. On the other hand, he’s now identified a common person to make this connection!

As a teenage boy we are often excited to meet girls, but somewhat terrified because we’re really just learning to approach and talk to those we are attracted to. Just to further this excitement, our narrator also discovers Elstir is friendly with the whole band of guttersnipe! Thanks to a very descriptive memory, he was able to describe each of the girls to Elstir and gather their names too. Could you imagine that you not only have a connection to one beautiful person, but a whole group!

But what of social standing? Where did Albert/Albertine and the band of guttersnipes fall in this food chain? Did Proust have this same confliction with Albert as our narrator does with Albertine, or was this written for the sake of defining middle class? What a foreign concept. This was a time of has or has not, so this confusion is completely understandable. Then when he understands these girls’ social standing, he turns to some bold adjectives describing middle class offspring.  He refers to them as nymphs, and further the “social metamorphosis” of this group he found so desirable. I wouldn’t normally take metamorphosis so poorly if not paired with nymphs. They’ve now been reduced to insects. But then refers to the mistake over classification so harsh that it has the same instantaneousness as a chemical reaction, because he put them in almost a smutty realm of being toys of a racing cyclist, or a prize fighters. In reality though these guttersnipes were the likely daughters of respectable parents such as lawyers. His first impressions were so powerful though that when recalled our narrator cannot fully link the actual Albertine with the first impressions of her because his opinion was so drastically different at each of these time frames.

Now for the time being, Elstir has fallen from the pedestal of divinity the narrator had placed him. He’s suddenly become a pawn in this chess match, and the narrator has plans to use him as such. Only Elstir has unknowingly foiled him by remaining in his groove to complete the piece he’s working before taking this walk. While fuming internally about why this is taking so long he fumbles though some of Elstir’s old sketches until he comes to one of “Miss Sacripant”. It’s captivating, but he doesn’t want to alert Elstir to this because it might very well further delay him meeting with the girls. Still he can’t remove himself from it. When he speaks up about it, Elstir tries to play it off as though it was just some silly thing he did as a young man. Until our narrator asks, “What has become of the model?” Then in an almost flustered moment Elstir insist that nothing was ever there between he and the model, but this should be put away quickly before Gabrielle comes. Before putting it away though, Elstir looks at this sketch a little deeper and criticizes his own work.

Gabrielle has come now, and our narrator is pissed because he knows it’s too late. The girls would be long gone. As he looks at Gabrielle, he thinks she is well past her prime, and just not very good looking to wear a man like Elstir on her arm. But then he looks closer at Elstir’s work, and realizes that she is truly a thing of beauty. This has obviously become a reoccurring theme, but here it is again. This time Elstir even gets into it though by having somewhat of an out of body experience as he realizes she is in all of his work. She is beautiful, and to have her would be comparable to stumbling across a Titan in your local Goodwill. She is his living portrait.

Turning Point

My eyes open for the first time since being strapped onto the operating room table. I’m sore and nauseous, but these senses have been temporarily overshadowed by severe cotton mouth and blurred vision. The recovery nurse realizes my conscious state and promptly offers the most refreshing cup of water ever to cross my lips. She then precedes to wipe the jelly from my eyes and the room slowly comes into focus though it’s spinning at a sickening rate due to the fading effects of anesthesia. Nausea is now my nemesis… until the first dry heave. The 6 inch incision through my abdominal wall quickly steals the spotlight. I close my eyes to escape the cyclonic world around me. I had a great nurse who was attentive to my needs even without verbal communication past the wrenching sound of me heaving immediately followed by winces of pain. She quickly delivered a pharmaceutical cocktail that settled the overwhelming sickness and deadened the charged nerves just above my groin. Although I was physically bound to bed, my mind was racing to figure out the why’s and what now’s.

It was 70 days to my 23rd birthday. That meant I had a solid 15 years of riding and racing motorcycles. So why did I release the rear brake after it seized the rear wheel fishtailing my 300lb bike to a stop? Anyone with my seat time, or formal riding education knows to ride a rear wheel skid to a stop. But this one time I released it allowing the gyroscopic action from the wheels to violently correct the direction of travel pitching me like a dog shaking water from its coat. I’d had far worse accidents in the past, but something about this one was different. The pain was something I’ve never felt. Not a break or a bruise, but a burn from the inside out. Nothing else seemed out of place other than the pieces of motorcycle now scattered all over the track. I sucked up the pain and gathered my proverbial yard sale into the trailer I used to haul bikes to and from the track. Days turned to weeks, the soreness subsided, and everything seemed back to normal. That’s when I found the bulge of an inguinal hernia.

There was a familiar voice, “Richard, How are you feeling?” It was my mom, but in the moment her significance didn’t register. I make an attempt to speak for the first time, but I’m still uncertain of what really came out. She said “The nurse says we can go as soon as you feel up to it.” I simply shook my head no since removing myself from this bed was the absolute last thing I wanted to do. What scared me even more was my absence of health insurance. I was a server and bartender in those days. It was common to end shifts with up to $1000, but seldom less than $200 cash in my pocket. Florida’s Space Coast was a great place to live virtually tax free on tip money alone. A little charisma and knowledge of who would patronize what establishments during what seasons was all a young person needed to be successful. During the spring and summer I would work the bars on the beach, or near the docks where the gambling ships would offload in Port Canaveral. During the fall and winter I would move inland to more established chains like Outback or Carraba’s and rely on retirees that call that area home, or the northerners who snowbird to escape the harsh winters of whatever state they might call home. This was a great hustle, and 25’ish hours a week made a substantial living compared to my peers. Rent, utilities, and car insurance were all covered within 3-4 shifts, leaving thousands of dollars a month burning a hole in my pocket. Because let’s be honest,  when you’re 22 living in Cocoa Beach, FL, things like healthcare plans and savings are hardly atop the list of priorities. At this particular moment I wasn’t sure if my drugged and injured body, or the ever increasing medical debt I would soon face was the cause of increased specific gravity felt in that bed. From my initial visit to the family practice doctor through the follow ups and prescriptions still to come, I knew significant change was upon me. I felt this had been a conscious thought that flashed before me in a matter of seconds, but it had really been a moment of somnambulism as a sharp pain brought me back to reality. A medical aide and my mother were helping me transfer from the wheelchair to the front seat of her Chevy Blazer. I had no recollection of getting fully dressed, but there I was fully clothed aside from socks and shoes that were instead replaced with flip flops in true Florida fashion.

I wasn’t allowed to lift anything heavier than a gallon of milk, climb stairs, or even drive a car for the next 6 weeks. None of these things stopped the world around me, and I was soon buried in the expected debt with no income to appease the beast of burden. As I convalesced and friends would visit, I couldn’t help but look at their lives from a perspective not before imagined. Most made their living hustling the hospitality industry in the same fashion I did, because you know the old birds of a feather adage. One friend in particular was different. Ryan seemed to have it right. He drove a late model sports car, had a nice apartment where he lived alone, and his gear whether surfing, fishing or whatever was always a step above the rest of the groups. Ryan was a Staff Sargent (E-5) in the Air Force. The more time I spent with Ryan the more I was impressed by the way he frankly had his shit together. By the end of Aug I was driving, and back to work. I was still good friends with Ryan, but just couldn’t bring myself to ask him directly about his existence. Instead I found my local recruiter and less than a year later was on my way to basic training. This was July 2001.

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