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maybe hopeless.
I’m having a hard time processing what I am supposed to believe, or if I’m even supposed to. There is too much information, and I don’t like a
lot of it.
And yet, for some reason that al scienti c evidence real y should make impossible, I feel like I real y do hope. I hope that global warming wil
go away. I hope that people won’t be homeless. I hope that su ering wil not exist. I want to believe that my hope is not in vain.
I want to believe that even though I hope for things that are so magnanimous (good OED word, huh?), I am not a bad person because what I
real y want to believe in is purely sel sh.
I want to believe there is a somebody out there just for me. I want to believe that I exist to be there for that somebody.
Remember in Fra
how Fra
someone told her about? And even though neither her brother Zooey nor her mom understood what Fra
Because I would like the meaning of life explained to me in a prayer, and I would probably ip out, too, if I thought the possibility of at aining
this prayer existed, but was out of my reach of understanding. (Especial y if being Fra
although I’m dubious on whether I’d want the Yale boyfriend named Lane who’s possibly a bit of a prick but people admire me for going out with
him; I think I’d rather be with someone more … er … arcane.) At the end of the book, when Zooey cal s Fra
Buddy, trying to cheer her up, there’s a line where he talks about Fra
walked, because she’s making it to the other side. She’s going to be okay. At least that’s what I took it to mean.
I want that. The get ing younger with each step, because of anticipation, in hope and belief.
Prayer or not, I want to believe that, despite al evidence to the contrary, it is possible for anyone to nd that one special person. That person to
spend Christmas with or grow old with or just take a nice sil y walk in Central Park with. Somebody who wouldn’t judge another for the
prepositions they dangle, or their run-on sentences, and who in turn wouldn’t be judged for the snobbery of their language etymology inclinations.
(Gotcha with the word choices, right? I know, sometimes I surprise even myself.)
Belief. That’s what I want for Christmas. Look it up. Maybe there’s more meaning there than I understand. Maybe you could explain it to me?
I had continued writing in the notebook when the train came, and nished my entry just as it arrived at Fifty-ninth and Lex. As the zil ions of
people, along with me, poured out of the train and up into Bloomingdale’s or the street, I concentrated hard on not thinking about what I was
determined not to think about.
Moving. Change.
Except I wasn’t thinking about that.
* * *
I dodged Bloomingdale’s, walking straight toward FAO Schwarz, where I realized what Snarl had meant by “payback.” A line down the street
outside the store greeted me—a line just to get into the store! I had to wait twenty minutes just to reach the door.
But no mat er what, I love Christmas, real y real y real y I do, don’t care if I am sardined in between two mil ion panicky Christmas shoppers,
nope, don’t care at al , I loved every moment of the experience once I got inside—the jingle bel s playing from the speakers, the heart-racing
excitement at seeing al the colorful toys and games in such a larger-than-life set ing. Aisle after aisle and oor after oor of dense funfun
experience. I mean, Snarl must know me wel already, perhaps on some psychic level, if he’d sent me to FAO Schwarz, only the mecca of
everything that was Great and Beautiful about the holidays. Snarl must love Christmas as much as me, I decided.
I went to the information counter. “Where wil I nd the Make Your Own Muppet Workshop?” I asked.
“Sorry,” the counter person said. “The Muppet Workshop is closed for the holidays. We needed the space for the Col ation action gure displays.
”
” “There are action gures for paper and staplers?” I asked. How had I not known to include these on my list to Santa?
“Yup. Just a hint: You might have bet er luck nding the Fredericos and the Dantes at O ce Max on Third Ave. They sold out here the rst day
they went on sale. But you didn’t hear that from me.”
“But please,” I said. “There has to be a Muppet workshop here today. The Moleskine said so.”
“Excuse me?”
“Never mind,” I sighed.
I worked my way past the Candy Shoppe and Ice Cream Parlor and Barbie Gal ery, upstairs past al the boy toys of guns and Lego warlands,
through the mazes of people and products, until I nal y landed in the Col ation corner. “Please,” I said to the salesclerk. “Is there a Muppet
workshop here?”
“Hardly,” she spat. “That’s in April.” She said this with al the contempt of Wel , duh, who doesn’t know that?
“Sorry!” I said. I hoped someone’s parents sent her to Fiji next Christmas.
I was about to give up and leave the store, my belief in the Moleskine defeated, when I felt a tap on my shoulder. I turned around and saw a girl
who looked col ege age, dressed like Hermione Pot er. I assumed she was a store employee.
“Are you the girl looking for the Muppet workshop?” she asked.
“I am?” I said. Don’t know why I said it like a question, other than I wasn’t sure I wanted Hermione knowing my business. I’ve always resented
Hermione, because I wanted to be her so badly and she never seemed to appreciate as much as I thought she should that she got to be her. She got
to live at Hogwarts and be friends with Harry and kiss Ron, which was supposed to happen to me.
“Come with me,” Hermione demanded. Since it would be dumb not to do what a smarty like Hermione instructed, I let her guide me to the
farthest, darkest corner of the store, where the stu no one cared about anymore, like Sil y Put y and Boggle games, was. She stopped us at a giant
rack of stu ed gira es and tapped on the wal behind the animals. Suddenly the wal opened, because it was in fact a door camou aged by the
gira es (gira e-o- aged?–must OED that term).
I fol owed Hermione inside to a smal closet-like room where a worktable with Muppet heads and parts (eyes, noses, glasses, shirts, hair, etc.)
was set up. A teenage boy who looked like a human Chihuahua—excitably compact yet larger than life—sat at a card table, apparently waiting for
me.“You’re HER!” he said, pointing to me. “You don’t look at al like I expected even if I didn’t real y imagine how you’d look!” His voice even
sounded like a Chihuahua’s, quivery and hyperactive at the same time, but somehow endearing.
My mother always taught me it was impolite to point.
Since she was in Fiji on her own covert mission and wouldn’t be here to scold, I pointed back at the boy. “I’m ME!” I said.
Hermione shushed us. “Please lower your voices and be discreet! I can only let you have the room for fteen minutes.” She inspected me
suspiciously. “You don’t smoke, do you?”
“Of course not!” I said.
“Don’t try anything. Think of this closet as an airline lavatory. Go about your business, but know that smoke detectors and other devices are
monitoring.”
The boy said, “Terrorist alert! Terrorist alert!”
“Shut up, Boomer,” Hermione said. “Don’t scare her.”
“You don’t know me wel enough to cal me Boomer,” Boomer (apparently) said. “My name’s John.”