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Right on Target
by Alyssa Martino
Recently, I was on a mission, courtesy of the six-week writing "Boot
Camp" in which I'd elected to enroll. I was learning not just how to
write, but how to establish a routine, set tangible goals, and turn
my excuses over on their backs. I’d been writing creative nonfiction
since college, but at 23 years old, something kept me back from
fully immersing myself. I had insightful stories, I had vivid
characters, but did I have the guts to write them down and share
them with the world—or better yet, my family and friends?
Then came my first week’s assignment: take a small, incremental step
towards feeling more like a “writer.” I had a vision of my ideal
writing place, getting situated there in an oversized sweater,
chomping on Swedish fish with a pencil behind my ear, soothing music
playing from my iPod speakers. Eyeglasses rest on my nose, despite
having been told several times by a professional that I have 20/20
vision. Hey, anything to convince myself I fit the part of an
author-in-training.

And so, to Target I ventured for items to make this writing life
seem a reality. With me I carried a short list of ideas: markers, a
white board, craft books, comfy clothes, and snacks.
Target is not my Mecca. No matter how many lists I make or pep talks
I give myself, I inevitably become overwhelmed once I enter those
long, automatic doors. I choose the only broken shopping cart in the
entire store, which wails and screeches as I wander aimlessly
through aisles of kitchen appliances I do not need or want. Though I
set out to spend my gift card on useful books and stationary, I feel
defeated the entire ride home while trying not to finish the bin of
variously shaped pretzels now in my passenger seat. When I finally
arrive home, I stare at my new quesadilla maker in bewilderment,
wondering where I took my first wrong turn.
But there will always be those days where you find that you can't
get the words down and decide that the problem isn't your brain or
your creative process but a lack of brightly patterned notebooks or
encouraging stickers. The answer to writer’s block? If not a new set
of pushpins, you’re foolishly out of luck.
While I’m agonizing over the choice between a blue or red notepad, I
notice an Asian boy following me. He can’t be older than 8 or 9 and
is wearing one of those puffy red ski jackets.
He
makes little attempt to be discreet and nearly bumps into my left
hip with the full force of a rugby player. Then, he looks me up and
down, from head to toe.
"She's wearing a North Face jacket and boots," he says, his hand
balled into a fist and raised to his mouth as if speaking into a
tape recorder.
This little kid is cataloguing my every move, I
realize, feeling suddenly self-conscious. I try ignore him as I make
my way to the Crayola aisle.
But a few seconds later, I see his watchful eye following another
shopper.
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"She’s carrying a yellow purse," he whispers into his imaginary
microphone.
I
smile, reminded of my own Harriet the Spy phase, carrying around a
clipboard everywhere I went, writing observant, sometimes nosey,
notes about the people around me: how a friend liked to pick her
wedgies when she thought no one was looking; that a boy in my
fourth-grade class had cute dimples; the way my Nana worked the
phrase “ho hum” into every conversation.
But as a teenager, I decided I was better off living life than
watching it from behind a curtain—probably because I was worried
what others might think of me. Still, I never lost that sense of
cataloguing. And, even now, I sometimes run to the bathroom during
family gatherings to scribble down a note on any scrap of paper I
can find. But unlike the boy in the red coat, I never let my
relatives catch me in the act.
Maybe it’s because I’ve convinced myself they would not approve.
"Nana was so excited to see her name," Mom once told me of an
article I wrote. (I’d been afraid that calling my 85-year-old
grandmother’s cheeks "wrinkled" might offend her.)
Yet this kid was bold—much more courageous than I. He was watching
us and didn't care who knew it or overheard, however insulting or
harmless his insights may be. He wasn't scurrying away to the
bathroom secretly perusing someone else's e-mail account. Here is a
writer; hear him roar.
Surprisingly enough, it's now me that’s following him, peeking
around corners to discover his next victim and what details he’ll
consciously capture. What will he notice about the man in blue jeans
and worker’s boots or the teenage girl in a Miley Cyrus t-shirt? How
will he freeze them in time and essence without thinking twice about
who will care?
The boy's face still materializes in my mind on occasion, probably
because his lesson was the real one that day: being a writer doesn’t
occur in a store or on paper, but out loud. It happens when you
accept that you will be intrusive, you will offend people, and you
will be criticized. You will own pens and pencils and clipboards,
but these possessions won’t be what makes you part of that world.
Because what makes you a writer is actually having the audacity to
carry on as such—to put up with the awkward interviews, rejection
letters, and nosey acquaintances.
After a
few minutes of watching my new friend, I give a nod to him (though
he’s too captivated by his next victim to notice) and return to my
list, now seemingly useless. Will markers make me brave? Will
snacks make me trust that my family is proud?
But there
is one thing I don’t want to leave without. I head towards the
Electronics section, thinking perhaps I'd like a tape recorder of my
own.
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