In the 1970s a group of poets called the Actualists loaded typewriters with paper-towel rolls, then sat in the middle of a busy intersection on the longest day of the year, typing from sunrise to sunset. They wrapped a building in butcher paper and gave pens to passersby. The most famous Actualist went on a late-night television talk show and wrote a poem on the body of his girlfriend. “This is not poetry,” some people said. The Actualists smiled, then shrugged their shoulders and said, “Be actual.” Years later I’m at a friend’s house. He’s dying, and we’re watching television. A handsome actor comes on, and my friend says, “Do you think he could love a man who spends all day in bed?” “You were up just yesterday,” I remind him. “To take a shit,” he says. “And I couldn’t even do that.” For the last two months he’s been writing on the walls with a thick black marking pen. He’ll get a burst of energy and drag himself from room to room. When I come over he asks me to read the day’s efforts aloud: “Religion must include not only longing and need but anger.” That’s true, I say. “Oh, God,” he groans, “how could I be so boring?” Now I’m pissed at him and, almost shouting, say, “It’s not boring. Even if it’s crap, boring’s not the issue.” He smiles, apparently happy to have a little phony drama in place of the strangely less-compelling real one in which he plays the tragic leading man. I read on: “Traveling between two worlds, I find I am mute in both.” “Can we love what isn’t wounded? Can we love what is?” “Name three things that are essential to life.” And finally, “What’s the difference between the day before the diagnosis and the day after?” The writing starts at the floor and climbs the walls. “I wasn’t thinking ahead,” he says. “I’d lie there and write, and now I’ve filled the low parts so that if I want to write more, I have to sit up. After that, I’ll have to stand up. I can’t stand up. If I’d started at the ceiling, I could have worked my way down as I got sicker.” “Don’t worry,” I say. “We’ll get a foam pad and put it on a scaffold. We can crank you up so you can write as high as you want.” “To heaven?” he wonders. “Yes, to heaven.” One night I couldn’t sleep. I was lying in bed thinking how short life is and what is the best thing to do with it. I’d never mention this to my friend, who has grown increasingly less patient with banality. I got up and walked around the house, looking at my wordless walls. I turned on the television, and there was a cable rerun of that talk show, the one where the man wrote poems on his girlfriend’s body. “Oh, my God,” I said to the empty room, and the host, speaking happily from twenty-five years in the past, said, “Stay right where you are. We’ll be back in a minute with more from the Actualists.” Then he winked, a sarcastic little wink to make fun of his guest and to invite the viewers to make fun, too, and he said, “Remember, be actual.”
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