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Authors: Rebecca Schiff

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“We've been over this before. The research is inconclusive.”

“Why don't they fund more studies? This is an important issue for idiots who use the withdrawal method.”

“I couldn't agree more,” I said.

I stopped at a drugstore on my way back to work to buy a box of condoms. I wasn't sure if it was for me or for them. I could give her a few as a token goodbye gift, then use the rest to resume sleeping with the reluctantly urban, sous chefs and wine dealers, cognitive behavioral therapists, divorced programmers with one son. They all had erectile dysfunction.

“Thank you for taking me with you into the world,” I would write on L's letterhead. “Please be safe. I'm staying here.”

Or I could get back in the car with her, convince her to ditch Arlo. There would be other Arlos, though, Arlos after Arlos, miles of Arlos, whole stretches of highway sponsored by Arlo.

I left the salad in front of my boss, trying not to interrupt what looked like a stream-of-consciousness Motion to Dismiss. Inspiration struck him legally. I liked having no idea what was going on. Somewhere in my gourmet suburb, they had been preparing us for L's career, for file folders and logic you could monetize. I had done all the work as a means to no end. L looked up, waved me away. “You'll hear this all later,” was the message. “I don't want to spoil it for you.”

I sat down to a pile of folders and a tape, a time capsule from the last half hour. L got a lot done by not taking a lunch. The work ethic was alive and well in America. Some people spent their lunch hour whoring. Others fetched lunches for people not taking lunches. Lunch kept the city employed, an entire industry of boxed salads and rubber-banded soups. Mindal would say we had been separated from the land, from growing our own soup. I agreed, but I didn't want to plow. Farmers from our socioeconomic bracket usually lasted a season before returning to the city with phone memories full of radish pics. I was hungry. Men like L could subsist on flowers. He would live forever in the absence of a moral compass. I was going to die young, not from falling off a rope, not from melanoma, but from something grayer that I couldn't yet name.

Write What You Know

I ONLY KNOW
about parent death and sluttiness. What else do I know? I know about the psychology of Jewish people who have assimilated, who dye their hair, who worry about bizarrely specific allergies: Does the Mee Grob have soy sauce? The Mee Grob is fine. Melissa had it last time and she was fine.

I know about liberal guilt and sexual guilt and taking liberties sexually, even though I haven't actually done any of the liberties I know about, except once something with a very small dildo, it hardly counts. I know about unrequited love, and once love that was requited, but not for very long. I know about baseball—it didn't take that long to learn it. I know about relief pitchers, and which guy switch hits. When guys know other guys, they know something I'm left out of. Guys know about towels—towels are a big part of how they know each other, in the locker rooms where they only use each other's last names. The first name is what the girlfriend calls them, when she calls them. She's got a ponytail, she's got boots, she's got chlamydia. No, she doesn't got chlamydia. She's got a mom and a dad and a bathroom at home with a rug on the toilet seat. She's got a ponytail.

I don't know about the rug on the toilet seat. Jewish people who have assimilated rarely keep rugs there. They won't hang a flag. They will get a tiny Christmas tree with irony, or a bigger Christmas tree if they are more serious about assimilating and less serious about irony. I know a girl whose parents ruined her. They had a tree. They even had a wreath. My friend knew how to play the piano, and how not to eat any meal except breakfast, and eventually she knew how to trade stocks, and then how to give up trading to start a food blog for former anorexics, with recipes, and then I didn't know her anymore.

I know how to lose a friend for not caring enough about Unitarian Universalism, and how to lose a friend for not attending her adult bat mitzvah, and how to lose a friend for telling her to dump her Catholic boyfriend, not because I abhor Catholicism or think it is the worst religion, but because he is dumb. I know how to get that friend back by telling her it's none of my business if she wants to marry a dumb man—leaving out the word “dumb”—to get her back by apologizing for pretending to know things I can't know, saying that only the two people inside a thing can know how dumb each other are, to get her back by waiting until she knows what I know, and I can stop pretending I don't.

Acknowledgments

I wish to acknowledge the editors who first published these stories: Carla Blumenkrantz, Keith Gessen, Ben Kunkel, Ben Marcus, Halimah Marcus, Lynne Tillman, and Rebecca Wolff. Thanks to my book's editor, Diana Miller, for her patience and insight, to Sonny Mehta, and to everyone at Knopf. Thanks to my agent, Peter Straus. Thanks to Jackie Delamatre, Andrea Donnelly, Nora Friedman, Patrick Gallagher, Tom Grosheider, George Loh, Kara Levy, Sam Lipsyte, José Miguel Palacios, Lilah Ringler, Rachel Schiff, Freida Schiff, Erika Scott, Rachel Sherman, Tom Drury and Alex Waxman. I couldn't have done it without you. Thanks to the MacDowell Colony. Thanks finally to my dad, who loved books and taught me to love them.

A Note About the Author

Rebecca Schiff graduated from Columbia University's MFA program, where she received a Berg Fellowship and a Henfield Prize. She lives in Brooklyn. Her stories have appeared in
The American Reader, Electric Literature, Fence, Guernica,
and
n+1.

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