I have always had trouble with transitions.
And I’m talking about good
transitions.
“Your foot fell off.
You’re going to have to learn to hop.”
Nothing like that. No
“New Normals” replacing the old “Normal” you took for granted and would now kill
to have back.
“I have to breathe through my ear? What is my nose now, a hat rack?”
I’m talking about “Good
News” changes. Graduations. Promotions.
Milestones, celebrated with a cake and a party. (Or for those with more rarefied tastes, “A
shmoke and a pancake.”)
All transitions are difficult, explains the man about to
list perceived fortuitous opportunities he consistently treated as “trouble”,
his demonstrable motto:
“I like it now.”
Homeostasis.
Or as the sea captains who don’t know what homeostasis means
– “A relatively stable equilibrium” – say,
“Steady as she goes.”
I have always been chronically resistant to change. Camper to counselor. High school to college. Writer to show runner. My voice, bleating the habitual question:
“Couldn’t I stay here?”
“Sorry. Time to move
on.”
“No-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o!”
Here’s why I’m writing about this. It came to mind, after recalling (and
subsequently recounting) a remembered unpleasantness, working at the venerable CBC Radio Building. I guess this story was next door to that in
the “Brain Library.” (The way I once
told (now Senator) Al Franken his books will always be shelved next to Anne
Frank’s. I know he’s in trouble, but I’m
keeping this in.)
This is a more resonating story. I feel the CBC Radio Building deserves that.
Why? Because barring that unfortunate
“blip”, I had great fun there. I am not
sure if it’s still standing. If not,
somebody give them a “Head’s up” in “Edifice Heaven.”
I do not know what I was doing there that particular
day. Nor do I recall how I encountered
the president of CBC Radio, whom I
had barely spoken to before and wound up chatting in his office. Which is embarrassing. So many holes in the narrative. If this tale were a boat, it would go under in
two minutes.
“What do you call your boat?”
“The Sieve.”
I do, however,
remember the main thing. And that’s all that matters. (Claims the man who cannot recall anything
else.)
Background:
I am leaving imminently for Los Angeles – my first big time Hollywood
assignment. (A Lily Tomlin
special.) I am terrified. Because…
SEE: ABOVE… it was different. Better,
but different. For some of us, this is upsettingly
similar to “Worse but different.” The internal jumpiness is detectably indistinguishable.
So I am sitting in his office, thinking, as I have on many previous
paralleling occasions,
“Couldn’t I stay here?”
Which came out, specifically,
“Give me one reason not to go and I’ll stay.”
Do you hear what I’m saying to this guy? I am urging the president of CBC Radio (whom I had barely spoken to
before), “Give me a radio job and I won’t move to Los Angeles and write a TV show
that will be seen by more people than are living in Canada.”
… is what I am beseeching a virtual stranger.
Because I was so terrified of change.
Do you know what the president of CBC Radio said to me?
“Of course not. We weren’t there.”
(Note To Myself:
That one never works. “You know
who I saw today?” It’s just stupid!)
Confronting this knee-shaking Hollywood neophyte, begging
for a rescuing lifeline the sage president of CBC Radio replied,
“You have to
go. You’ve done everything you can in Canada. It is time to move on, and see what you can
do.”
The man shakes my hand, and I leave, feeling like last-minute
Christopher Columbus saying to Isabella, “Are you sure you don’t need the ‘expedition
money’ for anything else?” and hearing back, “Set sail, Christopher
Columbus. And we shall see what befalls
you.”
Well, it worked out. (For both of us.)
Though there were no guarantees.
Sometimes, you just have to go.
When every cell in you body cries,
“Couldn’t I stay here?”
3 comments:
Maybe it is just me but over the past while I get the sense that you are preparing to go from being a blogger to being a non-blogger. Am I wrong? I hope so.
Dear Mr Pomerantz:
I am writing to express our regret that due to an unexpected rush of orders at Thanksgiving we will be unable to fulfill your annual order of gum resin. As you know, it is one of our most popular products, ordered by at least two-thirds of our customers.
We would suggest that next year you consider placing your order much earlier to ensure that you - and your giftees! - don't miss out. In the meantime, could we suggest that a dozen pine cone firelighters make a very nice gift? We are well supplied with these, and more are dropping - I mean, arriving - every day.
wg
I didn't care much for the transition from youth to Geezer. I'd have rather "stayed there."
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