After a co-worker and I worked a
particularly difficult day we hung around for a few minutes talking, or rather
bonding, over the significance of our efforts, or insignificance depending on
which side of the paycheck you’re on. That’s when she admitted something quite
personal about herself, something she said she has always hesitated to share
with others. Since I’m not shy about sharing information, especially someone
else’s, I’ll just come right out and reveal…she sings in the car. Not only does
she sing but when she’s on a long road-trip and plays car tag, you know,
passing and being passed as the miles pile on, she stops singing if the same
car goes by, she doesn’t want the total strangers she will never see again, see
her as back-up for Madonna or Celine.
I laughed, not because it was funny but
because I used to do exactly the same thing. That was way back when AM was
standard and FM an option; I was the fifth Beatle. Now… not so much; NPR
does not inspire auto-dueting.
Our after work conversation went from…since
you revealed something…it’s now my turn. I talk to myself, in my car.
Because I write I sometimes practice
dialog, opening sentences or log lines. If a particular phrase seems stilted I
speak it out loud until it sounds just right. But…here’s the interesting and
kind of weird part, sometimes, I’m interviewed. On the way to work the ladies
of The View might be asking the questions and on the way home, Diane
Sawyer or Anderson Cooper. Yes, I actually practice questions and answers. Why?
I am comfortable talking in front of ten
people or ten thousand; I was interviewed by Martha MacCallum on Fox News once, national studio in
NYC, (they sent a limo for my five minutes of Andy Warhol fifteen minutes of
fame), so amend that comfort level to millions. It really doesn’t make me
nervous, if I am prepared.
Years ago I was invited to be the guest
speaker for a group of writers in New London. Even though I had garnered some
small success I didn’t have a clue what they’d ask or what I’d answer. So I
practiced my speech alone, in the car on the way to work and on the way home,
until I felt comfortable with my presentation and with answering just about any
question I thought they would come up with. One afternoon, as I was stopped at
light, jabbering on and on, I looked at
the car stopped in front of me, it was one of those big old station wagons with
a third bench-seat seat facing backwards. Three young boys were staring at me
while I was being interviewed by Walter Cronkite. I went mute, embarrassed by
those three little boys staring at the whacked-woman flapping her gums in the
car behind them. (This was before cell phones and Bluetooth because it looks like everybody is talking to themselves now.) One of the young
boys pointed his index finger at his temple and drew small quick-circles, the
universal sign for, “lady you are crazy”.
Glancing into the back seat of my car, I
pretended to talk to a child in a car-seat; an action in its self which
qualified me for the funny farm.
Now, I don’t care who sees me being
interviewed by Morley Safer; they’ll just think I’m on the phone.
The next morning when I went to work my
co-worker asked me, “So, on the way in this morning you were interviewed by...”
“Oprah,” I said, “and you sang with…”
“Aretha,” she said.
4 comments:
We all do that in a car.
BTW, I wonder how in heck the world (publishing) has yet to figure out what I already know? You compose words so beautifully.
Haha! I always stop singing when I pull up to a red light or a car is keeping pace beside me!
Oh Patty...from your mouth to God's ear.
THANKS
Jennine, I'm off to work. It takes me eight minutes to get there. I wonder what Diane Sawyer can ask in eight minutes.
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