The Life Within One Raspberry, Mira Winograd
In the gray light coming through the barbed wire, she saw the hazy, oily smoke lazing up into the sagging sky. She could see the lines, the endless curve, of razor sharp, dingy figures wafting up dust with the drag of their calloused toes. She could see the vacant, pinched look on the dirty faces of those beside her. Yet suddenly, she heard a forgotten but once familiar sound approach her. It was the sound of padding feetâfeet with the momentum of something she used to call lifeâbeing liftedÌę from the earth as if the owner of those feet were going somewhere, doing something that perhaps held some sort of âwhat was the word, happiness?âfor her. Out of the haze of dust and bodies came Ilse holding her two hands clasped gently, lovingly, in front of her. She dropped down onto the grime and opened one hand above the other. Out dropped, from that ragged plane of her withered flesh, a flash of red. It was a flash of light, a bolt of heat, a gem. Later, when she would be known as Klein, she would remember something that, to those outside the wires, would seem so insignificant that it could not possibly leave even a lingering breath of memory on their being. But to her, it would remain bright in her mind, as ripe and red as the day it landed with a soft ping in the palm of her hand.
Sometime after the tangy juices had long evaporated from its crevices, her palm that had once stopped the soft bounce would scrape across the icy air as she struggled to run with whatever was left within her. She would fuel herself with nothing but that grey ice and the dread of what was to come while they forced her from their Polish labor camp to march across their wasted lands, their wasted lives, to their final resting place. Her Final Solution was to be in the Czech Republic. Later, that palm would caress the cheek of her beloved friend Ilse, a cheek that had, for one moment, lit up with a light of its own when she kneeled in the billowing ash to deliver her gift. She brushed the snowflakesâflakes they say never fall twice, that are unique and pure in formâfrom those closed and frozen lids for the last time. Ilse would be left to freeze and thaw with the rest of the earth in that unknown, indistinct place and time. Her palms would once again have to push the self she was left with from that frozen earth. But beneath her flesh, she would feel that red, that fire, now burning inside her and pushing her on. Ilse, her friend, whose lashes were now coated with white, had not only pressed her ruby light into her palm, but into what was left of her soul.
When the nightmare had begun to withdraw from Germany, as she sat in Czechoslovakia staring at the lines etched across her flesh, an American soldier would appear and say he had come to save her. Her only response would be: âYou know, I am a Jew.â In return, he would look down at his own lined flesh, this man named Klein, and simply whisper, âSo am I.â
Klein would go on to be married to the man who had come to save her, she would have children and take trips to Paris, France where she would stare up at the stars under the arches of the Eiffel Tower, but through all of that she Ìęwould forever remember Ilse, her ruby friend. And she would make it so her friendâs gift, her humanity, was engraved as her depictionâas the one aspect of her experience in the Holocaust that she would want the world to knowâon a shining wall in America at the Boston Holocaust Memorial. ÌęSo people would not forget again and leave hope, and love, and goodness behind to be buried in the ash.Ìę Klein would make it so that that tiny spark which landed in her hand so long ago would be forever remembered. She did this so that the world, and those who shared the memories burned and etched into the walls of her mind, would thank God, or whatever magic they believed in, for the gift of life. Her friend who still remembered her humanity even though that was what was easiest to forget, would now never be forgotten . She would instead be forever remembered in these small, almostâbut just almostâinsignificant lines:
Ilse, a childhood friend of mine, once found a raspberry in the concentration camp and carried it in her pocket all day to present to me that night on a leaf. Imagine a world in which your entire possession is one raspberry and you give it to your friend.
â Gerda Weissmann Klein
Ìę
Chances Are...,ÌęLexi Evans
Thereâs no place like Vegas. The combination of neon glow and shapeless music lulls you into a trance-like state all the way to the bar. By the time you realize just how much the free drinks have impaired your fine motor skills and decision-making capabilities, youâll be too far gone to earn back the money youâve just lost. And since you canât decipher 2 AM from 2 PM (for the lack of clocks and windows), thereâs really no reason to leave. So you might as well take your chances, because odds are you wonât be able to stop, not now. Youâre in too deep, and the casino gods know it. They have you in the grips of some terrible panic, and the only way out isÌędown. This is a high-speed chase to the depths of the American Dream. Donât let go.
All constitutional bullshit aside, the American Dream is about money. In America, freedom is equated with the right to ownership. The more money you possess, the more you can own, the more freedom you have. Thatâs the theory anyways. But money is valued so much that it has become a value in itself, above and beyond its ability for expenditure.Ìę According to crime analyst Steve Messner, the American Dream centers on the goal of material success, yet offers few legitimate means of obtaining that goal. This translates into the high crime rates prevalent in the U.S., and itâs no coincidence that the murder rate in Las Vegas is 34% higher than the average murder rate in Nevada, and 120% higher than the national average.Ìę Las Vegas began as a haven for gangsters attempting to defy convention, with gambling at the forefront. As âgamblingâ became âgamingâ, the social stigma all but vanished, allowing people to rebel against societal standards for obtaining money, all the while remaining within the constraints of supposed legality. When the day comes when a âprofessional poker playerâ is as respectable and mundane as the CEO of the corporation who owns the casino, then Vegas will no longer be the second most popular destination in the U.S.âpeople love Vegas because it allows them to escape the confinements that have told them how to earn money theÌęrightÌęway. For a country whose core value is materialism, this seems like the most painful of paradoxesâpeople go to Vegas to capitalize on the American Dream of private ownership, then recklessly blow their money in the process of trying to reach a financial status equated with freedom.
Overindulgence is a product of the desire for monetary success, and the two together are lethal. When people find something they want, the tendency is to take it as far as it will go, and then aÌęlittle bit further.Ìę Thereâs a reason people canât spend more than three days in Las Vegas: the American Dream self-destructs before it has a chance to materialize because consumption canât be maintained at that level forever. And in a place where the suicide rate would surpass the murder rate if it werenât for multiple homicides, Las Vegas is foolproof; it knows what the odds are, and itâs willing to take that chance.
Ìę
The Stop, Richard Montoya
I am a writer, or at least I like to pretend I am. I wear sweater vests and scarves, thick-framed glasses and even shirts with clever little sayings likeÌęPlotâIt Builds Character.ÌęAt one time, words flowed from my fingertips and through the nib of my pen, conceptualized contractions consisting of concentric scrawl, intersecting lines parallel to each other and to the page and to the ideals they represent, or at least seemed to.
And that worked for a while, the coffee shops I patronized knew my order by heart-
Yes, letâs see here. Can I get a large cup of Half and Half? Oh, you call it 'venti' huh? Very metropolitan of you. Well then, in that case let me get a venti Half and Half. And do you have Irish Cream? Okay, I'll do that. Three pumps is just fine. Do I want you to leave room for creamer..? You bet your fine ass I want room for creamer.
-and they knew that once I had my drink I shifted into writing mode, not to be disturbed and not to be flexed with.
They say good things canât last forever, and, I admit, I ran out. Ran dry, so to speak. Not literally. Iâm a rather moist individual actually, which is not an adjective Iâd readily submit myself to, but there it is.
In my darkest hours I never imagined that I would run out of things to say, or rather, to write, but there I was head in hands, pen tucked behind ear, without even so much as two independent clauses to rub together.Ìę
I donât know what that would do. I only know that I wanted to do it.
I chewed through pens trying to solve my little writerly impotency, and, after that, I spent hours wondering what Freud would have to say about that.
But that was counter-productive.
Then I heard what I needed to hear. I donât even remember who said it or where, I might have even imagined it all together. I needed to quit sitting in front of a blank piece of paper waiting for inspiration, and I need to start living.
And some small part of me knew that I could start at The Stop.
The night starts typically enough. Iâm sitting in the living room before an empty word document waiting for a bootleg copy ofÌęThe Kingâs SpeechÌęto finish downloading when inspiration strikes in the form of my confidant Viz. Twenty minutes later weâre in the chilled beverage section of King Sooperâs trying to decide between Amp Energy and Red Bull. I decide on Amp, Viz goes for Red Bull, and the cashier does a double take when we ask for sixty dollars in ones. I explain slowly (he is working the graveyard shift after all) that I need the dollar bills because I have to send fifteen birthday cards with four dollars in them apiece. He doesnât ask if I want to buy stamps.
Following a short drive, we see the sign: that beacon of greatness heralding our arrival to the North Âé¶čÓ°Ôș Center for the Performing Arts. We are greeted at the door by an awkward man whose beard hair is longer than his head hair. He addresses us as âgentlemanâ tipping me off right away that I am entering a classy establishment. A voice booms from somewhere above, notifying the room that a young woman named Stormy has taken the stage. I make a crack about Sycorax being a more fitting name, an obvious allusion to ShakespeareâsÌęThe Tempest. In response, the bearded man informs me that he once dated a girl named Stormy who tried to electrocute him in the bathtub. Toaster? I ask. No, he says, an iron. I ask why she was trying to iron his clothes in a bathtub, but he doesnât laugh.
Awash with blacklight and mind numbing neon, we three shared a table: Viz, myself, and my pithy inner monologue. There are small circular tables scattered about with cheap red upholstered chairs surrounding them. One long runway with a metallic pole cuts the room in half, and the walls are made of mirrors. The ceiling is reflective tile, and the illusion works: the cramped space is almost doubled, tripled even in the massive mirrored walls. A young lady on stage, Stormy I presume, clicks her heels together as we both yearn for home.
My mind drifts as I sip on the $5.50 ginger ale I so wish was a gin and tonic. I scribble pensive little notes in my moleskine, feeling like a cross between Dashiell Hammet, Ernest Hemmingway, and the sort of pervert that hangs out in a strip club on a Monday morning. I struggle to word an introduction fitting for such a grand establishment. There is something inherently right about starting a story withÌęand then a group of us went to get some strippers. With a certain amount of clarity, an entire epic can be written off the back of such a seemingly lowly sentence. It would seem that most epics start similarly anyway; memorable lines such as, âIt was the best of times, it was the worst of times,â or, âThe best laid plans of mice and men often go astray,â evoke images of prostitution, dereliction, and damn good times.
The sudden tipping of a chair in my general vicinity breaks my neon-induced reverie. His name is Alex, but I like to call him blacked out and heâs come over to stick his face in my personal space. Two fist bump-brograbs later, and heâs offering to buy a round on him. It would seem he has managed to procure the phone number of the girl on stage who, pulling out of an oblivion-seeking nosedive, reminds me of some sort of striptease falcon. He pulls out a small baggy of something that could either be chalk dust or cornstarch.Teacher or pastry chef?Ìęmy inner voice asks knowingly.Ìę I pretend to tie my shoe and wait until he forgets where he is. It doesnât take long.
I take a chair before the stage and remind myself of the social experiment I am undertaking. To properly glean a sense of place, one must partake in all the place has to offer and, besides, Viz reminds me that the women are not actually naked if theyâre wearing heels. Sheâs a nice girl, Iâm sure, and I like her eyes. It isnât until her ankle is behind her head that I notice a tiny whiskered face smiling at me from behind her ear. Extensive research (i.e. Wikipedia) tells me itâs aÌęmaneki nekoÌętattoo, one of those lucky cats you might see on a Chinese takeout box full of syrupy orange chicken and friend rice.
Thinking quickly, I engage her in meaningful conversation about her bracelets. She is wearing silly bands, plastic jewelry common amongst middle school girls that reveal a shape when theyâre not around your wrist. She strips them off, in a non-seductive manner, and displays their shapes to me. Most are phallic rocket ships and bananas, and I ask her if I can have one that doesnât look like a penis. She gives me two, actually, a star and a little man. The little man looks like a penis. I think weâve bonded just now.
She eyes my tie. Iâm not the type of man to typically wear a tie but sometimes I wish I were, if only to have a piece of patterned cloth secured round my neck with which to wipe my careworn brow. If thereâs one thing ladies love more than anything in the world itâs ties. Or maybe one dollar bills, Iâm not sure yet. She crawls across the stage and gingerly pulls me by my red tie so that we are face to face.
I maneuver to whisper in her ear and she leans over so I can impart my message.ÌęYou know, I breathe pausing for emphasis,ÌęI usually donât pay for this sort of thing.
ÌęI havenât stopped writing since, but I think this is as good a place as any.
Ìę
If Worse Comes to Worst, Lexi Evans
I knew it was risky. But then again, when youâre 22 years old and a female, everything is risky at night. I was doing it because the day before, I had seen a magnet at Barnes & Noble. It said, âDo one thing every day that scares you.â And this scared the shit out of me. If worse came to worst, I would blame Eleanor Roosevelt.
âMy life is fucked upâŠâ His voice reaches me from a far off place, as if itâs muffled underwater. When it reaches me, itâs calm, controlled just barely above a whisper. The words scratch against his throat as they come out, comforting me like a grandfather with cigars and leather couches. ââŠso I write.â He motions to his left, and I see a black, Five Star spiral notebook resting on top of an army green pack. A single pen lies on top of it. âWriting is my social life. Itâs how I cope. With a notebook, I can be completely honest. I can try to find hope.â
Josh grew up in Lafayette, only miles away from this very Starbucks where we now sit. âI was raised in a strict, hypocritically religious, and abusive household with my mother. I never knew my dadâhe died when I was just a kid. Growing up, I was the nerd. My mom wanted me to be an engineer, and I was always trying to live up to other peopleâs expectations, but nothing I could ever do was good enough. I used to get my face shoved in the gravel at elementary school; athletics were the only way I could get respect. In high school, I ran a 4:38 in the mile and was a 4.0 student.â Josh was being considered for a track scholarship. That is, until, a genetic spinal disorder fractured his lumbar vertebrae. Now, he limps when he walks.
âMy junior year of high school, the walls caved in on me.â Heâs sitting slightly slumped over in his chair now, elbows resting on his knees, fingers clasped lightly, eyes fixated on something deep in the floorboards. âIt was October of 1998, and I was possessed by demons. It set the tone and pace for the next 13 years of my life: I was removed from my home by social services and moved into a Christian dormitory. But I smoked cigarettes, and Kurt Cobain was my God, so I got kicked out for rebellion.â
âI bought a bus pass and started sleeping on the bus during the day when I wasnât at work. At night I would go to Tomâs Diner, where I would stay awake all night. I was too afraid to fall asleep. They [demonic possessions] always happened at night, when I was trying to fall asleep, and when I was alone. Eventually, I couldnât stay awake at work anymore and was fired. I had nowhere to turn. My grandma kicked me out. My aunt kicked me out. It was always the same story: it would be nighttime. I would be trying to fall asleep. Then the terror would overcome meâI was scared of what was waiting for me in my dreams. So I would ask my grandma or aunt if I could sleep in her room. They got freaked out.â
He only wanted what every child wants: to feel safe. But after a certain age, the monsters in your closet are supposed to disappear. I can see his childhood drowning in his eyes.
Josh stands up without warning. He takes a step backward. âI need a cigarette.â I nod and jot down the last few sentences feverishly. Out of the corner of my eye, I see the navy blue pants poised in front of the counter. I carefully trace them up from the floor. Itâs a uniform. Perfectly blue. Two of them. I spot the guns and look away quickly, continue writing. Seconds after the blue uniforms pass through the front door, Josh enters from the back patio. I can see the outline of his bony frame through his sun-faded blue jeans. Sweat is beading on his upper lip. He gently falls into the wooden chair and slumps over again. He sucks in a pocket of air quietly.
âDemonic oppression is totally humiliating; you have to fight for your equality and your significance, and it completely ruined me. It bruised all humanistic ambition and aspiration I had. I lived on and off the streets for three years, staying with whoever would let me in. Then, in 2001, I got married. She was really prettyâI didnât understand why she loved me. In 2002, the demonic possessions subsided and later that year we had a son. I became a truck driver. We made enough for an existence but not a living. So she became a stripper. We developed a cocaine problem. Then we had a daughterâŠand my wife left us. The kids and I moved into rural housing in Kansas, and I was working 60 hours a week. But my mom didnât trust me around the kids, so she took them. I eventually moved to California.
âI started using meth when I was in California. Thereâs no reward for mediocrity or poverty, but drugs provide a rewardâa way out. Meth gives you pleasure like nothing else can compare to. It also gives you hell like nothing else can compare to. And once it hooks you, youâre fucked. Itâs a scary thing, to wake up one day and realize youâre half-dead, and youâre 27 years-old.
âI eventually got clean, and enrolled in some classes in San Diego. I got an A in every class I took and never had to crack a bookâmy thing is school, itâs the only thing Iâm fucking good at. But in 2009, I started experiencing demonic possessions again and had to withdraw. And now I have heart palpitations from drug use and every time my heart beats, it reminds me that it could be my lastâŠHellfire is just a heartbeat away.
âMy mom called me when I was in California and told me she wanted to put my kids up for adoption: âI donât want these kids, Iâve never wanted these kids,â she told me. I came back to Colorado to try to reconcile things with my family, but San Diego, man, thatâs totally the life I wish I could live. Theyâre all gods and goddesses out there. Itâs like dangling a steak in front of a dog and not letting him have it. Thatâs reality. I just want what everyone else wants: I want to be happy.â
A small, boyishly shy smile slips out of the corner of his mouth. His grin is reflecting in my face and once he realizes this, his lips sink slowly. He stares at his palms, hiding from his fragile smile. In Joshâs weathered face I can see the pain of a thousand lifetimesâall mottled and wrinkled and tear-stained, but tough on the outside, like a hide. As I put my fingers to my own face, I realize thereâs not even ten years between us.
âYou know, there are some people who think homeless people are worse than cancer, that think they should be euthanized because they have no value, but itâsâŠitâsÌęnotÌętrue.â His voice rises for the first time all night. Itâs lost its smooth calculation; itâs desperate and panicked, and I can tell heâs pleading. But then it drops off sharply, and itâs a low, cool whisper again. âIâve met some of the most intelligent, talented, enlightened, and fucked-up [homeless] people. I met a published poet from Naropa, and a PhD from Vanderbilt who was bipolar. Homelessness can happen to anyone and the longer youâre in this position, the harder it is to get out of it. Thereâs no potential for you to be accepted, and it hurts so much to be cut off from society.
âHomelessness is a lesson in humility. If there is a God, and Iâll make a case that there is, it gives people a chance on both sides of the fence to exercise humanitarian impulses, to see if they have compassion.â
For a split second, everything fades out and the only thing left is the gentle scratch of pen against paper and the feeling that the world has been made right again. âWell, I should get back to my writing.â He tilts his head toward his notebook. He begins to push himself up, but he stops. He looks me dead in the eye. âThank you. Thank you for this.â Heâs not thanking me like you thank someone when she buys you coffee; heâs thanking me like you thank someone when she looks you straight in the eye, and she doesnât look away.