FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
The
Day After Sam Rockwell and I Went Fishing
by
Cheyenne Rothman
PAGE
TWO:
And
at some point after turning thirty, the montage of romantic catastrophe
became exhausting and time consuming and sad, and I so decided to
climb back inside this dream to give it a better look so that I
could start to imagine a better ending.
I briefly
entertained the theory that the dream was actually about the real
Sam Rockwell and his destiny as the one man I could love. Not only
did he seem like someone who might agree to have "Double Dutch
Bus" be the first dance at his wedding, it made sense that
only the real Sam could survive the dream Sam, and
it just seemed nice that someone should have to wrestle himself
in an aluminum rowboat in the middle of a lake in order to win my
heart.
But
Sam hasn't shown up at my door and so I have accepted the slightly
more likely explanation that this dream -- in the way dreams do
-- just borrowed his face from the corner of my brain where I keep
things like Degrassi Junior High, Kerry 'The Claw' Von Erich,
and all of the lyrics on Gordon Lightfoot's Compilation Album "Gord's
Gold".
And
really, regardless of how Sam Rockwell got into my head,
what matters is that I see past the borrowed face to who it really
is that commands the demise of love. Because it is not Sam Rockwell
-- real or imagined -- sitting at the stern of that aluminum boat;
it is my nihilistic grandfather whose heart was broken by life's
disappointments; it is my disappeared father whose heart was broken
by his own disappearance; and it is my flightless mother, whose
heart was broken by her own brain chemistry and regret. And all
that heartbreak got folded up inside of me and so it is actually
me sitting at the stern of that aluminum boat. It is me commanding
the demise of love, because in the wake of this dream, I have continued
to choose men I know will not survive Mr. Rockwell's sermons and
it is in that act -- not the persistent recalling of the
dream -- that I have bowed to the legacy of a heartbroken family.
But
what if, instead of accepting this dream as the immutable result
of an unfortunate past, or conceding to it as the fateful orchestrator
of a solitary future -- what if I draw my new ending not from the
dream, but from its source?
Because
in the memory -- in my real life -- I bowed to nothing.
In
my real life, in what can really only be described as a deliberate
act of optimistic defiance, I returned to Lake Sagamore with my
broken-hearted grandfather day after day and summer after summer.
And in what can really only be described as a great act of patience
and faith, I continued to find great peace and great pleasure in
all that silence, so many sermons, and with the exception of that
one bass the length of my torso, very few fish.
Surely,
if I possess only half as much optimistic defiance, patience and
faith in my present life as I did when I was nine, I can manage
to alter the course I allowed this one ridiculous dream to set me
on over a decade ago.
And
so I give up worrying about when and why Sam Rockwell and I go fishing.
I give up looking for final and definitive victory. I do not need
a man as evidence of my triumph over my heartbreak. That I cherish
the memory of fishing with my grandfather exactly as it happened,
and that I continue to cherish my grandfather for exactly who he
was is evidence enough, of triumph enough.
Should
I someday fancy a fellow who is meant to survive Sam Rockwell, and
should I soon after, for the second time in my life, have a dream
about fishing, I suspect I will again be on Lake Sagamore in the
Hudson River Valley, in my grandfather's cobwebbed aluminum row
boat, with the splintery oars and the white fish sandwiches wrapped
in very old waxed paper. And I suspect Sam Rockwell will again be
admonishing me from the stern.
But
in this dream, I will see him for who he is and I will not sit idly;
I will not surrender to the demise of love. In this dream, I will
wrestle the lithe Mr. Rockwell myself and he will end up disappearing
into the black water of Lake Sagamore and I will be left to fish
in peace.
And
the day after that, I will stay in love.
At
least through breakfast.
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