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A magnificent life of impoverished leisure
Augustus McCrae

I realized I had a problem with excessive leisure when on Tuesday afternoons I’d start concluding all my e-mails with, “And have a great weekend!”

Tuesday around 4 p.m. seemed to me to herald the start of the weekend.

I guess it was because Tuesday mornings were really productive. Mondays were not. Wednesdays I’d kind of wind down from that whirlwind of Tuesday activity. Thursdays we’d golf and Fridays, well, who the hell works on Fridays? 

There have been times when I’ve been really busy. There hasn’t been one of those since 2007.

I remember hearing someone expounding about their workload and an endless string of 18-hour days.

I said, man, I don’t think I’ve worked 18 hours this year.

It was March.

One of my favorite one-panel cartoons -- I think it was Bizarro and it sounds like Bizarro -- is where a sidewalk bum says to a passing business gent, “Here I’ve got all this time and no money and you’ve got all that money and no time.”

I’m that bum only with spiffy Tommy Bahama shirts and a better haircut.

Really, who would argue I’m not better off being so magnificently underemployed?

Our daughters (almost 10 and 4) are precocious delights right now. My golf game is improving, we enjoy time with family and friends. Life is great.

Just one problem. 

Care to take a wild guess what that is?

Yes, it’s no money.

I look back at the last three years and am astounded I’ve been able to skate along on the thin ice that is what for lack of a better word I call my career.

I’ve done some teaching, written carefree features for various publications and systematically been wiping out what was left of my paltry life savings to pay for things like golf, Steeler tickets, sushi and fifths of fine bourbon whisky.

I still do enough travel features for credible publications I’m still showered with invitations to fancy resorts. So the time of my impoverished leisure coincides with opportunities to travel for free to some of the world’s most glamorous destinations.

I recently read Larry McMurtry’s biography, “Literary Life: A Second Memoir.” In it he says every time he visits a fortune teller, and he says he frequently does, the seers always tell him the same thing: you’ll never be rich and you’ll never be poor.

I don’t believe it for a minute, but it’s such a colorful lie I’m thinking of thieving it for myself.

Really, it applies more to me than the author of one of my favorite books, the Pulitzer Prize-winning “Lonesome Dove.” He’s certainly rich by any writer’s standard.

I mention all this glorious leisure because I’m rubbing my aching muscles from what may have been the hardest I’ve worked all year and it happened on Labor Day.

I trimmed and mowed the lawn, chopped wood, sanded four chairs my wife wants to refinish, made a half-assed doggie gate for the new pup, and assembled from scratch an enormous trampoline for the kids (Day 1 tramp tally: four hours of fun, one split lip, one bruised forehead, and about 28 combined tears from pain and trampoline tantrums).

I have four book proposals that are getting interest and I’m optimistic one or more will soon bear fruit. I don’t consider any of my writing labor. Right now, it’s a kind of like a hobby, like butterfly collecting.

Who knows? Maybe one of the books will be successful and I’ll be drawn into a world of literary activity.

But for now my life on this day after Labor Day, about six hours from the launch of my weekend, reminds me of an automotive analogy. I’m barreling down a winding interstate with the accelerator floored, the gas gauge hard on “E.”

It’s scary, but there’s an undeniable exhilaration.

I’m hopeful one day I’ll become a conventional success with stable income, a vast readership and lavish literary perks.

And I’m reasonably certain if that day ever comes, I’ll look with satisfaction at all I’ve gained after so many lean years.

Then I’ll think back in wistful melancholy at all I’ve lost.

 

Comments
4 Comment count
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Any writer who buys Steeler tickets is a friend of mine!

Delightful post! Your writing is inspiration and so is your leisurely life.

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Thanks so much, Rhonda!

The tone and wording of your flattering comment really gives me a lift. Hits me right in the heart. I always say that comments like yours are almost better than a paycheck. And I mean it.

And a Steeler fan, too!

I invite you to visit my home blog, www.EightDaysToAmish.com, for a leisurely browse of posts by a most leisurely man.

In the meantime, I hope someone does or says something to you that'll make your day the way you've made mine.

Best,

Chris R.

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Your home blog was/is just adorable!

I read your blogs and they made me smile, laugh and think. Not necessarily in that order. To keep it brief, I loved it! I re-posted your blogs about the "beautiful reporter" and the "questions" to Twitter. Thank you for delighting us with your words.

When I grow up, I want to be like you! No, really! One day, I hope to write for magazines and free lance for a paycheck. I think it is the one of this life's greatest gifts. Good for you Chris!

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Good luck!

Well, Rhonda, I wish you the very best of luck. It's great work when it works. It's been dreadfully slow the past three years, but I have been able to keep scratching along. I spent most of that time growing the blog up and sharpening and pitching various book proposals.

My fingers are crossed on those counts.

I guess if I could give you any advice it would be to pitch and pitch and pitch ideas until you're getting at least one rejection letter a day. That's a real grind, but that'll be a solid indicator that you're working hard and people are seeing your stuff. Plus, pitch all over the map, from local magazines to big national slick ones.

Thanks so much for tweets! I sheepishly ask you to sing on as a www.EightDaysToAmish.com follower in the "coerced, cajoled and outright bribed" section.

And let me know if I can ever be of any help or if you need any friendly encouragement. I've got plenty of that, my friend.

Best,

Chris