Read Writing Is My Drink Online
Authors: Theo Pauline Nestor
Tags: #General, #Reference, #Writing Skills, #Personal & Practical Guides, #Self-Help
room. The phone rarely rang. The occasional car rumbled by.
There was nowhere we were supposed to be; we were at the cen-
ter of a universe of two. Nothing competed for our attention.
During the JoJo weekends stuff got
made
: batik sheets, tie-
dyed T-shirts, apricot jam, wool spun from dog hair, elaborate
stories about assertive princesses, crazy stitching on homemade
pillows in the shape of fish, pictures with crayons melted on wax
paper. Many afternoons at JoJo’s were spent in the backyard mak-
ing batiks. JoJo made me believe that it was the most normal thing
in the world to be painting designs with hot wax onto old sheets
9 2
WritingIsMyDrink_i-xiv-1-258_1p.indd 92
6/7/13 8:19 AM
W r i t i n g i s M y D r i n k
stretched taut across wooden frames. Much of this stuff we made
together most would call
art
, but JoJo resisted the word “artist.”
“I make art,” she corrected. “Everyone can make art. Some
people choose not to.” She was the same grandmother who told
me sternly when I was nine: “You can have things or freedom. If
you don’t deliberately choose, you’ll be stuck with things.”
JoJo modeled for my childhood self the sheer joy of creativ-
ity, but I’d spent most of my adult life forgetting what I’d learned from her, focusing on the merit others assigned to my work instead of the pleasure it had to offer me. The competing roles of
creator and critic forever split me in two. In the book
What It Is
, cartoonist Lynda Barry describes the problem perfectly when
she contrasts the “floating feeling” she had as a child, drawing
and creating stories, with the doubts that have plagued her as a
working artist. Barry says two questions have beleaguered her
and interrupted her enjoyment of her creative process: “Is this
good?” and “Does this suck?” “The two questions,” Barry says,
“find everyone.”
The moment I decided I would apply for MFA programs for
my sabbatical, I became seized with the all-too-familiar doubt
about my writing abilities. Though I was in a better position
than I’d been a decade earlier when I applied to UC Davis with
just my one or two completed triptychs, my doubts had basis.
Besides my obvious lack of finished product, my static idea
of “talent” also held me back. I viewed the world of talent as
divided into the haves and the have-nots. As much as people
offered perspective with comments such as “Of course, the se-
lection process
has
to be rather subjective,” part of me believed that one was either talented or not, and that talent was as obvi-9 3
WritingIsMyDrink_i-xiv-1-258_1p.indd 93
6/7/13 8:19 AM
T h e o P a u l i n e N e s t o r
ous and tangible as trees and mountains. It didn’t real y occur
to me that talent, or a germ of talent, was just a starting place,
that it could be fostered or not. Or that, in fact, the very point
of participating in a writing program was to
improve
as a writer.
Was my work good? Did it suck? To me, it was one or the other,
and I had to wait to find out the answer.
When JoJo died, my husband, Kevin, Natalie, and I drove
out to California to meet up with family to clean out her house.
While Kevin drove, I studied for the GRE (yeah, I thought I’d
take it seriously this time). I would soon apply to MFA pro-
grams, most of which still required one to take the GRE. As we
drove through the wasteland of Nevada and the irrigated green
of California’s central valley, I tried to drill myself with flash
cards but soon grew restless. I stared out the window and the
movie of JoJo and me played out: I remembered the weekends
at her house, making art, drinking black cherry sodas, singing
along to “King of the Road.” I thought of how in her presence I
grew visible, like a Polaroid picture coming to life. Indeed, JoJo
had been the person who’d insisted one afternoon in the spring
of 1969 that I not lose sight of myself.
My fall from the grace and nirvana of early childhood came
in elementary school. In the cocoon of my girl family—as lop-
sided as it was with my twice-divorced mom and no dad or male
relatives in sight—I was fine, the family baby of whom little was
expected. Show up. Be cute. That was plenty. As a result of di-
vorces and the age gap between siblings, I lived mostly as an
only child. With no one to measure myself against, it never oc-
curred to me to measure at al .
But once I hit the real world, all my failings came sharply
9 4
WritingIsMyDrink_i-xiv-1-258_1p.indd 94
6/7/13 8:19 AM
W r i t i n g i s M y D r i n k
into focus, and starting on the first day of kindergarten I saw
myself anew. Within the first few hours of the school year, we
were asked to recite the alphabet, which I figured other kids had
learned from doting parents or
Sesame Street
and I had not. I found myself in my first act of fakery as I moved my mouth in
silence while other kids belted out, “A, B, C . . . !” My new self-
image was something like the
Peanuts
character Pigpen, a child caught in the center of a swirling cloud of dirt. School was about
doing
, and all the things we did were either right or wrong. Write the alphabet. Recite the alphabet. Say your numbers. Now in
Spanish. At recess: Catch the bal , throw the bal , defend your-
self. Whatever the task, I felt that I was not doing it right or as well as other kids, and each day, each week, each school year,
that feeling of incompetency was seared into me more deeply.
Anxious erasing ripped apart my math worksheets. The ball flew
past me as I stood with eyes scrunched closed. I fell off the curb
watching the girl with the perfect braids fly down the street on
her purple mustang. Other kids possessed essential knowledge
that eluded me. I was so behind, I’d never catch up.
In the third grade a letter arrived stating that I’d been placed
in the class for gifted children. Thus began my first case of im-
postor syndrome. I knew a mistake had been made, and once I
was in the class messing up, I would be swiftly placed back with
the commoners. One of the girls in the new class—I will call
her Kimberly, for at her essence she
was
a Kimberly—had long been the object of my competency envy. And of all the things
she could do—keep the objects under her desk lid looking fresh
and organized all year, swing across the monkey bars like a real
monkey—I envied Kimberly the most for her painting.
9 5
WritingIsMyDrink_i-xiv-1-258_1p.indd 95
6/7/13 8:19 AM
T h e o P a u l i n e N e s t o r
In this world in which competencies were measured and
evaluated, I suddenly realized that art was something that could
be compared. I’d once drawn and painted with abandon at JoJo’s,
but now I knew that some art was
better
than others. I knew with certainty that Kimberly’s art was better than mine. Original
images and bold colors filled her paintings. She always seemed
to have a plan, a subject in mind—a valley vil age, a symmetri-
cal family of four—that seemed important and was nothing that
would’ve ever occurred to me to paint. The subjects of my paint-
ings were solely determined by which paintbrush I happened to
pick up first. Pink = heart. Green = grass or, in season, perhaps
a Christmas tree. Although no one had ever said so, I
knew
that each of my paintings possessed a fatal flaw, a flaw not always
locatable but still inevitable and indisputable.
On one particular day, we were standing as usual before our
easels in our blue vinyl aprons, our white papers clothes-pegged
to the easels, our wel s of green, red, yellow, blue, and black
lining their troughs. Suddenly, a golden butterfly appeared on
Kimberly’s white paper, and inside each wing concentric lines
mirrored the wing’s perimeter, the lines of pink, orange, and yel-
low growing closer together until they final y closed in on the
center of the wing: a slender flame of fire-engine red.
We were just miles from the epicenter of the Summer of
Love, and butterflies, toadstools, and lackadaisical daisy chains
were everywhere. But Kimberly’s butterfly seemed especial y hip
because of the genius addition of the concentric lines that were
also very much a part of our Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test Cali-
fornia. At eight years old, she had her finger on the pulse of the
culture. And I wanted that finger to be mine. If my fairy god-
9 6
WritingIsMyDrink_i-xiv-1-258_1p.indd 96
6/7/13 8:19 AM
W r i t i n g i s M y D r i n k
mother had landed in the classroom at that moment and asked,
“Would you like to trade places with Kimberly? Would you like
to
become
Kimberly?” I would’ve said, “Do it.”
The next weekend I was at JoJo’s again. She’d just come back
from visiting my dad on his ranch in Mexico and had brought
back a bunch of powdered dyes now stored in squat Gerber baby
food jars that lined the shelves of her studio, the Spanish names
of the colors announced in JoJo’s block draftsman printing on
a strip of masking tape across each jar:
AZUL, ROSA, NARA-
NJA, VERDE,
the colors all the more intoxicating translated into Spanish. I felt a thrill thinking about how much potential was
locked into each jar.
As the hot wax streaked across my sheet canvas, I felt an un-
familiar feeling of confidence in my design that day. I was eager
to see JoJo’s reaction as I boldly pulled the brush up, up, and up, forming the arch of the wings, and then tightening and tightening in concentric lines within the wing. We talked of other
things as we worked, letting the wax cool and then removing
the sheets from their frames and plunging them into the magi-
cal buckets of
rosa
and
azul
. And final y our batiks hung on the clothesline, pulsing in the breeze, as JoJo and I took our break
on her back steps. She smoked her usual Pall Mal , letting her
mouth hang open to let out a gust of smoke, as she stared at
our batiks. I waited for her to say something, but she didn’t, so
final y I asked, “So do you like it?” pointing at my ultra-hip but-
terfly with its devil-may-care antennae.
“It’s okay,” she said flatly.
“Oh,” I said. I hung my head and began to watch a trail of
ants marching along a crack in the cement stairs.
9 7
WritingIsMyDrink_i-xiv-1-258_1p.indd 97
6/7/13 8:19 AM
T h e o P a u l i n e N e s t o r
Final y, she added: “It doesn’t look like you.”
I froze: How could she
know
? The silence rose between us
until final y I said in a small voice, “I sort of got the idea from this girl at school.”
“That explains it. Didn’t think it looked like something you’d
come up with.”
“I know. This is much better than my pictures,” I said, a hot
mix of shame and defeat brewing inside me.
JoJo shrugged. “I like your pictures. This is sort of ordinary.”
“That’s a
great
design!” I said, annoyed.
“I liked that cat you did last time.”
I cringed inside, thinking of the cat with the stupid grin and
huge triangular ears.
“Ugh!” I said. “I hate that cat!”
“Wel ,” she said, stubbing out her cigarette, “you’re wrong.
That cat has the real you in it. And you’re gonna have to get used
to the real you.”
Our magical weekends together ended after I was ten and moved
to Canada when my mother married my stepfather. JoJo never
came to visit, which made sense—my mom was marrying away
from her family—but still I missed her. And then when I was
sixteen, my girlfriend Cate and I came down and stayed in her
guest room for a week, and she let us do whatever we wanted,
including drink her Ernest & Julio Gallo rosé and smoke packs
of Virginia Slims cigarettes. Eventual y, I saw her at least once a year once I was out on my own, passing through California on
9 8
WritingIsMyDrink_i-xiv-1-258_1p.indd 98
6/7/13 8:19 AM
W r i t i n g i s M y D r i n k
the way to somewhere else or on the way back, until my dad’s
funeral when I was twenty-five. He’d been her only child.
It was six months after the funeral that I moved to Califor-
nia with my half-baked graduate school plan. This was the first
time there was a true falling-out between JoJo and me. A family
friend had told her I’d said that I was mad because my dad had
left my siblings ten thousand dol ars and me only five. She was
so mad at me she wouldn’t talk to me, though I’d just moved to
the area and knew almost no one. The worst part of that then
was that I probably
should
have been annoyed that I’d been so obviously designated as less important than my siblings by my
father, but I wasn’t. I was grateful to get
anything
.
But now I’m pretty sure I understand what was happening
with JoJo. She was grieving for her son like crazy. At his funeral
she’d told me that she wouldn’t miss him because she’d always