Off-Leash Writing / Off-Leash Arts

Somewhere in the Universe, All of This Is True

 
 

(After “Compulsively Allergic to the Truth,” by Jeffrey McDaniel)

I’m sorry.

I was late because I overslept.

 

I was late because I was dissolving in tears.

 

I was late to protest the tyranny of time.

 

I was late because I was sucked into a Black Hole. Fortunately, it didn’t like the taste of my deodorant, so it spit me back out.

 

I was late because I was smelling every flower and petting every dog

I was late because I fell asleep on the couch by the fire, covered in a plaid wool blanket, one dog snuggled against me and two more on the rug beside me, and when the alarm went off—I’d set it because I had to meet you—I thought I hit snooze, but I accidentally hit stop. That’s why I’m still asleep, and what you see here is not me but a holographic projection. The real me is still asleep on the couch by the fire and will sleep there for a hundred years until awakened by True Love’s Kiss.

 

I was late because I was deciding whether to jump from a bridge into the choppy silver waves and let the fish feast on my flesh.

 

I was late because I was frolicking in the autumn leaves.

 

I was late because I’m genetically coded for lateness.

 

I was late because of the rain.

 

Because of the traffic.                                        

 

Because of the traffic caused by the rain.

 

Because a woman with a walker was crossing the street, and I had to wait for her to pass.

Because I was standing at the tippy-top of the world, wondering what would happen if there were no gravity and I were lifted off into space to float around the universe. Would I find another planet with life on it? Would they accept me? Love me? Would I finally feel at home?

Actually, that was yesterday. Today I was late because my dogs were barking, and I went to see what it was about, and one of them had brought a baby rabbit into the house, and I had to wrestle it away from him, and I wanted to save it, but unfortunately it was dead. I buried it in the backyard with a tiny stone marking its tiny grave.

 

I was late because I was cleaning the toilet. Someone threw up in it last night.

 

I was late because I was sick. (It was me who threw up.)

 

I was late because my teenager was rude to me, so I went on strike to protest him and all teenagers who have ever been rude to their parents and all parents who are rude to their kids. I went on a hunger strike against inter-familial rudeness, and no one met my demands, so I got hungrier and hungrier until I was too weak to be on time. If I pass out, you’ll know why.

 

I was late because I was smashing the capitalist patriarchy, and I was sent directly to jail, without passing go or collecting $200. I had to wait for a friend to bail me out.

 

I was late because I was meticulously washing my hands while singing “Happy Birthday,” to protect myself from Covid and other infectious diseases.

 

I was late because I was getting my Covid vaccine and my flu shot and my shingles vaccine, all at the same time. Also a mammogram, which was way overdue.

 

I was late because I was reading Chekhov, which got me kind of depressed, so then I started reading the Compleat Works of William Shake-spear (original spelling edition). I had just finished the sonnets when I looked up and saw that I was late, so I stopped and now I can’t find the book.

 

I was late because the pug took my sock and his sharp bottom teeth made a hole in it, and I had to darn it, and I did a terrible job so there was a bump in it, so I had to stop at Target for a new pair of socks.

 

I was late because I was saying a prayer for the broken world.

 

I was late because I read the world was at peace, and I was celebrating. Then I realized I was reading The Onion.

It was my birthday. I was trying to blow out my candles. One wouldn’t go out. I had to keep blowing until it burned all the way down, leaving a small circle of ash in my vanilla cream frosting.

 

The sun was late rising, so how could I possibly be on time?


I was late because I was doing a séance to bring Shakespeare back and clear up once and for all this issue of who wrote the plays.

I was tickling the Mona Lisa to get her to laugh.

 

I was reading a mystery and had to find out whodunnit.

 

I was standing on the corner with a sign that said “Just Say No to Climate Change.”

 

It’s my son’s fault.

 

My husband’s fault.

 

My ex-husband’s fault.

 

My lover’s fault.

 

My parents’ fault. They were too permissive—it made me irresponsible.

 

I forgot about daylight savings. So sue me.

 

My Wifi was down.

 

I lost my keys.

 

I had a flat tire.

 

I was having sex with the milkman.

I was getting an abortion.

 

I was giving birth.

 

There were complications. I died.

 

I was writing a check to Planned Parenthood.

 

I was waiting out an active shooter.

 

I had jury duty, but I was disqualified because of my bumper sticker that says, “Live Simply, That Others May Simply Live.”

 

I was Saving the Planet.

 

I was giving up hope.

 

Fuck you, I wasn’t late.

 

You were early.

I am right on time.

If you enjoyed this post, you might also enjoy The Woman Beneath My Skin, The Breath of Love, Of Sweethearts and Sperm Banks, and Your Inner Dog.


Are you longing to explore your life through words? Off-Leash Writing Workshops provide a nurturing creative environment for your stories to emerge. And if you’ve got some drafts lying around that you’re looking to polish, the Memoir/Fiction/Personal Essay Workshop provides vigorous, constructive feedback to help you take them to the next level. Join us!


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©Tanya Shaffer 2022, photos and text