[I am back working through my prison journal. It is out of order. Well, the order is as I have opened boxes. The date in the title is the date it was written. I hope this is not confusing. What you are reading is what you get for your tax dollars.
This is a long, long piece written while I was in pretrial detention but is not actually notes about pretrial detention. I quite preposterously labeled it as autobiography. However, the first 36 pages are missing, and so are the years 1978–May 1982.
This is continued from TJ 2010 - Part 4 of 5.
sch 5/4/2026]
In the decade before incarceration, I came to believe that my ambition to prove myself to friends and family by getting to law school created the real harm to TJ and me. That if I had been more flexible with my career choices, we would have stayed together. Not much I can do with that insight at the time. However, that insight might date the beginning of a sincere disenchantment with the practice of law. That conflicted with my need for economic survival. That need meant pushing any resentments about practicing law as far back into my brain as possible,
Music stopped being so important to me as it had been with TJ. I divide my bands into pre-TJ and after TJ. I had my stereo system stolen in the autumn of 1983, and I never tried to replace what TJ helped create.
TJ was the benchmark against what I judged all other women. The cruel, the stupid, or the plain boring never got a bid. Those with kind hearts, a lively sense of humor, and an adventuresome personality were biddable. They were 5'6” or taller, and being in good shape only made them more likely. Exceptions existed on superficial things (a certain blonde comes to mind), but the substantive exceptions reinforced the rule. Even my ex-wife had comparisons to TJ.
I saw TJ three times after January of 1985. The first time was around Christmas of 1985. She was pregnant with Mike's child. (This one did not miscarry, and she should now be about twenty-four years old. Yes, time flies.) All I remember is me telling her that our lives were diverging and we would soon be strangers to one another. I made her cry one more time.
The next time came in 1989, when TJ set me up with one of her neighbors in Florida. I flew down there. After all, who better to trust for selecting a blind date than an ex-girlfriend? I was a flop. The high point was hanging out with TJ and Mike and getting to see Pet Cemetery with the blind date. There was no sex. Nice girl, but the whole exercise degenerated from harum-scarum adventure to ponderously dull discomfort on both sides of the equation.
I last saw TJ in 1995. T2 had taken me along on vacation to Florida. I talked her into driving down to Orlando to meet with TJ and her family. We all went to eat out at a Chinese buffet. T2 was on edage. She could not understand how one could stay friends with a former lover. TJ remained her usual friendly, gracious, vivacious self. I could tell she was happy with Mike. That she was happy made me happy.
But all that came to an end. I represented Mike in a child support case that did not go the way TJ thought it should. She wrote me a letter complaining about the outcome. I read only the first page condemning me and never read any further. Like most clients, anything that went against them was the attorney's fault. Later, her oldest sister told me that TJ had told Mike not to pay child support until he got visitation, and so caused the problem. That was 1996. I never spoke with TJ again.
For all that happened, I never felt any anger towards her. Our failure was my failure. What I had with her was a respite from all the demands and responsibilities imposed by the family, or that I accepted from the family. When I let the family responsibilities intrude, there was a rift between us. Only then did peace escape me.
One memory kept recurring as I wrote this. I am walking south on the fourth floor of Ball State's old East Quad. TJ stands in the corner next to my classroom. I am in a bad mood. I had been wanting this copy of Bob Dylan's "Words and Drawings", and I had stopped by the bookstore on the way to class. TJ's brown eyes are downcast as she listens to my complaints. Then that smile that could swallow me whole lights up her face. Those big brown eyes glitter as she hands something to me. She had been the buyer of the last copy of the Dylan book. I still have that book. When my stepson tore the book's spine, I felt part of me was torn.
[I still have the Dylan book. It is one of the few books surving my incarceration and divorce and various moves before all of that. TJ and I spoke a few times after I was released. She surprised me by knowing I had been arrested; I guess she did keep some tabs on me. I sent her an early version of my "Dead and Dying" stories, and have heard nothing further from her. Messages left on her voicemail were not returned. In the past year, or two, her phone number changed after 40 years. There is no indication she is dead, but I have no means of finding out why she went silent. It would take a personal visit to find out what happened, but I have neither time nor funds to do so. Then, too, if I did have time and money, I cannot find in myself the energy to do so; her disappearance bothers without being an obsession. Another friend gone.
By the way, describing A- as my ex-wife makes me want to put the date of these notes to July or August of 2010.
sch 5/4/2026.]