Still - paper arrives and I don't know where to put it, at least the vague bits - I might use this one day, I might need this in a story, perhaps looking at this postcard in twenty years will make me happy. Let's keep it, somewhere. Perhaps I'll make a new file, put it away and forget about it. Or stack it neatly somewhere in a neat stack with seventy-eight other pieces of paper that have no home but that I can't quite throw out. Ah well. Thanks to my new friend Josh, I don't mind any more. Because unlike him, I can still see quite a bit of the surface of my desk.
I did a new bit of teaching last week - a three hour seminar on "memoir writing for seniors." I wasn't sure how to condense my 25-hour term into 3, but it seems to have worked. At the end, I asked them if their lives were a movie played out in scenes, what would be one of the most important scenes they would write? We went around the circle, and their answers, as always, were moving and surprising. What about you? In the movie of your life, what scenes would you write?
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