Carrie Pilby. Caren Lissner

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Carrie Pilby - Caren  Lissner


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Me?”

      Petrov tears off a piece of paper and hands it to me.

      ZOLOFT®

      1 List 10 things you love

      2 Join an org./club

      3 Go on date

      4 Tell someone you care

      5 Celebrate New Yr’s

      “The point’s to help you adjust,” he says. “Not to teach you to do anything bad. But to help you see that there could be positive aspects of social interaction.”

      “I wouldn’t have such trouble adjusting to the world,” I say, “if the world made sense. Which it doesn’t. I’ve seen that time and time again. Maybe the world should adjust to me.”

      “Just try,” he pleads. “When you meet someone new, for instance, don’t…”

      “What?”

      “Don’t pontificate.” He scratches his goatee. “Don’t feel the need to show off everything you know at the same time, or make every argument that’s in your head.”

      “If I’m not comfortable saying what I’m thinking, then isn’t the person wrong for me? And if they don’t like me, isn’t it better I find out sooner? Besides, if I say what I believe, this way we find out right away if we’re compatible.”

      He blinks for a minute. “It’s good to meet compatible people, but you don’t have to hit them with tests all at once.”

      I shrug. “I’ll think about it.”

      He nods. “Just try.”

      When I get outside, I pull my coat over my head to ward off the pouring rain, and I run to the subway. I am dying to get home, slide under the sheets and doze off. But I can’t. I have a job interview.

      As I get close to the subway, a guy in a raincoat seethes at me, “Smile!”

      This makes me feel worse. I was lost in thought, minding my own business, and someone felt he had the right to disturb me anyway. Doesn’t he realize that by making me feel like I was doing something wrong, he only made me feel less like smiling? It actually had the reverse effect he intended. It’s like striking a bawling kid to stop him from crying, and we’ve all seen that done.

      I don’t see what it had to do with him anyway. I never go around demanding that people change their facial expressions. How come everyone tells me what to do, but they would never let me do a tenth of the same back to them?

      The café where I am to meet Brad Nickerson is two stops up. When I arrive, he’s already seated at a table. He’s got slicked-back blond hair and a nondescript face. He’s also younger than I expected, and I’m not so sure this isn’t secretly a blind date rather than a business meeting.

      He stands and smiles.

      “It’s good to meet you,” he says.

      “Likewise.”

      We both sit down. He lets one of his legs hang over the other—he has long legs—and he briefly asks me how my trip up there went. Then he turns his attention to a clipboard. “I’m just going to ask you a few questions about your qualifications.”

      “All right.”

      “Your father says you type,” he says.

      “I have.”

      “Which computers do you use?”

      “In school I used Macs, Dells, Gateways, HP’s, most of the off-brand PC’s, and all of the Mac and Windows operating systems. I wish they were more compatible. If Europe accepted the Euro, why can’t our computers be a little more compatible?”

      His eyes narrow. “How old did you say you were?” he asks.

      “I’m nineteen.”

      “You seem awfully serious for a nineteen-year-old.”

      I don’t know what to say to that. Now I feel bad, just like I felt when the guy yelled “Smile.” As if I was doing something wrong simply by existing.

      Brad doesn’t say anything either, only stares at me and waits. And waits. When they send people to do job interviews, they should at least make sure they’re half as competent as the people they’re interviewing.

      “You could tell me what the job’s about,” I say.

      “Oh!” he says. “Well, it would be, at first, sort of an administrative assistant to the boss, typing things when need be, helping with office work. But eventually it could lead to greater responsibilities.” He picks up his coffee cup. “How does that sound?”

      I don’t suppose he really wants a truthful answer. “Ducky,” I say.

      “Mmm-hmm.” He sips his coffee. “Mmm.” He thinks for a second. “Well, why don’t you tell me your strengths and weaknesses?”

      A relevant question, at last! I say, “I try to figure out what’s right and wrong, and then I stick by it. I don’t engage in activities that are dangerous to others or myself. I try not to make judgments about people.”

      “I wasn’t making a judgment about you,” he says, apropos of nothing.

      “I didn’t say you were.”

      We’re stuck in a stalemate again. He reverts to common ground.

      “How fast do you type?”

      “Sixty to sixty-five words a minute,” I say.

      He doesn’t add anything.

      I ask, “Would you like that in metric?”

      He shrugs. “Sure.”

      “Sixty to sixty-five words a minute.”

      I smile, but apparently, this doesn’t pass muster as a satisfactory attempt to prove I’m not so serious. He finishes his coffee. “Well,” he says, standing and smiling, “it really was nice to meet you. We’ll probably give you a call.”

      “Great,” I say, but I’m really complimenting his discretion in bringing the matter to a close.

      When I’m finally home, I’m incredibly relieved. Thank God I’m out of there.

      I close my bedroom door, drop my purse to the ground and strip off my moist clothes. My pants leave a red elastic mark all the way around my waist. I rub it to obliterate it. Then I drape my clothes over a chair and walk to my bed.

      Now I can engage in my favorite activity in the world.

      Sleeping.

      My bed is a vast ocean with three fat, starchy pillows. Slowly I slide under the covers, naked. I feel the cool sheets around me. The cotton caresses my back. I close my eyes and let each notch of my spine relax.

      My mind is blank now. Every part of my body is sinking and empty. I don’t have to think about anything, hear anything, say anything, feel anything, worry about anything. Everything is distilled until it is completely clear.

      The roof may rain down and shower me with concrete. The forked crack in my wall may creep all the way to the ceiling. Still, I can lie here forever if I choose. There is no one to stop me.

      In my bed, there are no psychologists, no job interviewers, no hypocrites. I do not have to make up lists of ways to socialize. I do not have to smile. I do not have to justify my beliefs. I don’t have to wear dress shoes. I don’t have to pledge allegiance to the flag. I don’t have to use a number two pencil. I don’t have to read the fine print. I don’t have to sell fifty boxes of mint cookies. I don’t have to be over five foot four to ride.

      It is true that lying in bed is not an intellectual activity. It is true that it is nonproductive.

      But when ninety-five


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