It was 1977. A couple of years
into running a bicycle shop after college, I discovered that
the most intense satisfaction at my job came from the personal
conversations I had with customers. I began to wish for a job
like doing therapy, where talking to customers was the point
instead of something squeezed in around the margins of the
real work. Some of the customers I’d come to know best
had taken repair classes from me, and one of them had loaned
me her copy of The Making
of a Psychiatrist when she’d learned of my interest
in doing therapy; I think that the way she took me seriously
helped me take myself seriouslyI'd gotten a lot of help
from my own therapists at the various
student counseling centers where
I'd gone to school: playing the kindly old
guru, soothing and guiding the
distressed who found their way into my office,
seemed like an honorable enough
way to make a living. But whenever I imagined
myself entering someone else's
private world of pain, I froze. My own
wounds seemed like a burden
I could scarcely manage: how could I cope with
anybody else's? Sometimes
I virtually sleepwalked the whole day, reverberating
with past hurts, or hating myself
for something I'd done or simply for who
I was. In tense or intimate
conversation, where I encountered other peoples'
fear, anguish, sorrow, or pain,
I felt claustrophobic—I would now call it an
undifferentiated kind of desperation.
I felt as if wanted to dash to the rescue,
and as if I was going to begin weeping
myself, and as
if I needed to flee the
room. It would become difficult
to keep up with the conversation because
most of my attention went into
maintaining my facade of composure.
Boston winters in the bike business
were pretty dull. We signed the letters
to lay each other off, and we
collected unemployment. My girlfriend,
who temp’ed 30 hours in
a glass and steel office building, seemed resentful
when she came home to find me
deconstructing soap operas in the middle of
the afternoon. At that time,
in order to collect your check, it was necessary
to bring in a list every two
weeks of places where you had applied for work.
Unemployment was high, and I
had no work experience relevant to anything,
so I was in no danger of being
hired. I used to pick themes for the work places
where I'd apply. One week
it was Ivy League: Yale Lock, Harvard Books, Columbia
Deli. Another time it was colors:
Green Construction, Brown Hardware,
Black Rentals. Highlighting
absurdities in The System seemed like a
just another urban guerrilla
art form to us at the time.
Spring and summer, however,
were hectic, and we were usually at the shop
—Mystic Cycle—until
late at night, always at least two of us, trying to catch
up on the work. We had a lot
of strange characters who were all partners in
the early phases of our worker-owned,
worker-managed collective. It was
your basic socialist, anarchist,
feminist, Cambridge counter-culture cottage
industry, which meant that we
had long meetings and intense discussions that
accomplished nothing tangible.
Among our partners was furtive
Monica, who could eat only when locked in
the bathroom where no one could
see her, and we had Allie, who smuggled so
much dope from Hawaii that she
and her Boston College boyfriend followed
elaborate telephone signaling
procedures each time they left the building to
make sure they weren't
being followed. There was Alex, who had learned mechanics
in the Peace Corps while posted
in Pakistan. Alex griped bitterly as he
loaned the business more and
more money to keep it from going under; still,
he became furious when anyone
suggested that he stop, because he wasn't going
to be a selfish capitalist with
his inheritance. Aaron once tried to convince
me that the almost invisible
punctures he found on his skin in the mornings
were because Alex had been infecting
him with rabies while he slept. "You
haven't proven that it's
not true," went part of his
paranoia-laced argument
with me. Aaron was actually
pretty reasonable most of the time, but he had
stiff, slow movements from cerebral
palsy, and powerful, overdeveloped muscles
because they fought each other
all day. He was always dropping tools and
parts while he attempted repairs.
Even his speech was labored, as if his tongue
were too thick for his mouth,
and it seemed his voice was always hoarse with
the effort that doing everything
in life took from him. Aaron"s worst problems
were in tightening and loosening
long bolts, where precisely the same movement
must be repeated many times.
I can still hear his slow raspy explanation
to me that with the single exception
of sex, his nervous system couldn't
perform repeated, rhythmic movements. "I
can do regular sex pretty well," he
warned his prospective partners, "but
if you need a lot of heavy-duty finger
fucking, I'm not your
man."
There was Cynthia, who retired
from the shop on the award she received
from the makers of the Dalkon
Shield; she managed to get a man whom she
didn't even like to testify
that he wouldn't marry her because of her possibly
reduced fertility. There was
Allen, a veteran, who was so repulsed by the
violence he'd experienced
in Vietnam, that he dedicated every facet of his life
to extreme pacifism. He became
a self-made milquetoast, who had been so
effectively humored and admired
by our group that he was actually surprised
when a judge ordered him to
undergo psychiatric evaluation during his petition
in court to change his name
to Cute Little ("C.L.") Ducky.
A number of us lived in a group
house where we had dinners together,
sang songs, and played guitar
in the evenings. The house was owned by small,
slender Liz, who wore teeny-bopper
short skirts and tight, shiny, knee-high
boots, and had black hair down
her back. She was a nurturing soul and our de
facto den mother. She was much older
than she looked, and was permanently
exploited as an adjunct English
instructor, specializing in film. Her passion
was astrology; she read my chart
and told me I was destined for great things
much later in life, when I would
be in my mid-twenties. Liz was hopelessly
stuck on a tenured professor
who never quite left his wife, though for years
he trooped upstairs with Liz
to her little room for sex. If she took the boots off
then, it was the only time.
Debbie, on the other hand, was often seen comfortably
lounging barefoot, in fact in
no clothes at all. She was a delivery room
nurse so obsessed by babies—the
walls of her room were covered with baby
photos—that not even her
zeal for sex enticed a suitable man to help fulfill
her obsession and stay with
her.
At the emotional hub of the
shop, and firmly in command, was Julie Diane.
First name Julie, last name
Diane. This was the thoroughly feminist era, and
there in Cambridge, where we
sustained the very epicenter of the American
Left, women dropped their surnames
(last names were presumably all from
some man after all) and used their middle
name as a last name. Julie was a
blond earth mother from Madison
(which we all knew was as hip as Cambridge,
though none of us had been there).
She walked in hiking boots all
winter and sandals all summer,
and even the hairs on the tops of her feet were
blond. She had a melodious,
calm voice, a level gaze, and wore flowing farm
wife dresses. Her limitless
patience allowed her to explain to the Irish, Italian
and Portuguese men in the neighborhood
how to be reasonable, fair, and
respectful to women. Like all
the males in the shop, I myself was respectful,
and eager for instruction whenever
she addressed me about anything, and
when her pregnancy began to
show, I felt chivalric impulses so intense they
were physically painful. Julie
had a husband who did biomedical research,
and she also had Alex—the
put-upon capitalist who supported our shop—for
a lover. I'll never forget
watching her casually fellate his finger while they sat
on the porch steps one evening
after dinner.
Like all business conducted
at Mystic Cycle (did I mention that it was
collectively owned and managed?),
the store opened behind schedule. We
had installed and polyurethaned
a lovely hardwood floor, but had been too
rushed to apply the same coating
to the plywood repair benches. As a result,
they were grease-soaked and
always peeling with splinters. One evening Julie
came back to the desk where
I was working away at the payroll taxes, my
mouth full of cherry and cheese
Danish from the bakery next door. She was
pregnant, she was radiant, and
she looked right at me.
"Jon, I need your help."
I swallowed the pastry.
"I have a splinter under
my fingernail and I need you to take it out."
"What?
"Its in my right
hand or I'd do it, but I doubt I can really manage
the
tweezers with my left."
"Let me see."
Julie and I were alone in the
shop so I got the first-aid kit we kept under
the sink, and found the tweezers.
We stood at the desk, where the flourescent
ceiling light was strongest
and where the last of the day's sunlight filtered in through the huge exhaust fan
ticking in the back wall, producing a mild strobe
effect. I stood over Julie's
hand which she pressed palm down onto the desk
blotter. I dipped the tweezers
in alcohol, and started probing under the nail.
She winced. I could see the
end of the splinter, black with grease. I pushed
a little harder, and Julie kept
her chin firm, and her hand flat on the desk. I
started feeling terrible, imagining
and actually experiencing what it felt like
to her, the piercing under the
nail, the burning, the tearing. Sweat drenched
my brow, I became nauseous.
Although I somehow made myself squeeze the
prongs together, the splinter
was still just out of reach. The delicate muscles
around Julie's eyes tightened,
and her lids were nearly all the way down. I
was watching myself cause pain
to someone that millions of years of heterosexual
evolution had formed me to protect.
I couldn't stand it. The room began
spinning, but I knew I'd
have to push even harder to reach the splinter.
And then something in me snapped.
I couldn't stand it any more and so—I
just didn't. I stopped
feeling Julie's pain. I returned to my own body, which
was of course in no pain at
all. That was her finger down there, not mine. I
could do whatever I thought
best to that hand. My pulse slowed, the creepy
background music went silent.
I simply pushed in under the nail until I could
grasp the splinter, pulled it
out, and disinfected and bandaged the nail bed
which was bleeding a trickle.
She was fine, and I was fine. She thanked me
with the same polite poise she
used equitably for everyone. The episode was
over, but I was changed.
My shirt remained pleasantly
damp with sweat, and biking home I felt a
buoyant, lifting sensation as
a tailwind carried me in a gentle, warm envelope
through the darkness down a
silent Oxford Street. That was the first time I
noticed the streetlight relay
team racing against me through the city at night.
As I approached each light,
the shadow cyclist pursuing me shortened and
gained on me until, as I passed
the light, he sprinted out ahead. As I approached
the next light, a new shadow
picked up the chase, passed me, and
then he too would extend and
finally fade out ahead into the darkening road.
I knew that night that I could
become someone's therapist because their pain
would not become mine. I could
get cheek by jowl with anyone, while they
revealed anything at all, while
they felt anything at all, and I would still be in
my body, and they'd be
in theirs.
Until then, I had held a romantic,
tragic vision of the separateness of individuals:
separateness means our parents
don't understand us, it means we
have to find lovers, and it
means that we become economic competitors instead
of one community. From the time
I removed Julie’s splinter, I began to
appreciate that separateness
can also give strength and stability to communities
and families, and that separateness
means that we can support and care
for each other. Soon, I found
myself preparing to separate myself from the
community that had sheltered
me since college.
A first step would be to move
out of the group house and live with my
girlfriend. Beth had been one
of the last polio victims in America, and to
get around she needed crutches
and a brace for her small and atrophied leg.
She was direct about her insecurities,
as well as her hopes, and liked to talk
with me. Once, another housemate
had gone on a trip and left her beloved
ancient little dog, who was
really rather senescent, in our care. On a Sunday
afternoon, when we were lounging
on the porch, none of us reacted as the dog
sidled casually past us and
then made a heroic dash for freedom out the front
gate just as a pickup roared
down the narrow street. I saw the dog rolling after
being run over, then get up
to give a couple of yelps before it died. There were
many neighbors on their own
porches who rushed to join us at the dog's body.
One lady, with whom we'd
never exchanged a word, asked quickly "Was it the
crippled girl's dog?" as
if she were sure that the world was so unjust that a life
with one tragedy would attract
others.
On the wall of Beth's
bedroom she had a series of black and white photographs
of herself, nude, outdoors.
Her previous boyfriend had shot some
close-ups of her face, and some
of her entire body, so he could show her the
insecure, haunted expression
she wore whenever she thought her leg was visible.
When she thought only her face
was visible, she smiled and glowed like
a beauty pageant winner. I trusted
Beth, and I felt that we understood each
other. She taught me to drive
her car, I passed the driver's exam, and I was
ready to move ahead.
I had been 5 to15 years younger
than everyone in the group, but my place
in the house was soon taken
by another young one, Adam, whom I never
had the chance to meet. Unlike
me, Adam smoked the pot that the group offered.
And unlike me, he agreed to
go skinny dipping with the group on their
midnight visits to the Winchester
Reservoir. Somebody heard him say he was
tired, and those were the last
words anyone heard him say. The police found
his body washed up on shore
at first light, and eventually his parents appeared
to collect his things. It was
all anyone talked about for a while, but I no longer
really felt a part of the group.
Eventually, I sold my share of the shop, and left
town to study psychology, where
many aspects of the work have proved more
difficult for me than being
close to a person in pain.
I don't know what became
of many of these people who had fascinated me
so much, but I know a little
about some of them. Beth became an activist and
leading consultant in the national
disability rights movement, and had two
children with a blind man who
was more committed to her than I had been.
Liz, our den mother, died in
a freak accident, but not before Susan Sontag
praised one of Liz's reviews
in the New Yorker, and not before she found
someone who really loved her,
someone who still reviews for the Washington
Post. The bike shop closed.
One of us went to medical school, two others
became therapists. Debbie adopted
an African-American child and is having
a wonderful time, though she
may never speak to me again if she reads this.
Allie's Boston College
boyfriend does drug research for GlaxoSmithKline.
Late some nights I Google others
and usually find nothing. The vividness of my memories
tells me what close attention I paid to everyone
from this part of my past, though
it pains me to realize now that I was
so focused on their external
traits, rather than who they really were on the
inside, and I wish I'd
had the chance to know them the way that I get to know
people now. I am left with questions
about them that will never be answered,
though I can still learn things
about myself from reconstructing my own experiences
with the group. It saddens me
to think that we are scattered now,
a dwindling band of people with
our overlapping memories of a shared time
together—some of us cherishing
them and some of us avoiding them—and I
wonder where those memories
will be when none of us are left. I knew as I
lived that life that I found
those people compelling, and that I felt united with
them in some shared struggle
against the world. I even knew that I would always
remember them, but I really
had no idea that I loved them all so much.