I have a few regrets in life – actually, I have a lot, but not all of them are publishable. But among the regrets that are for public consumption, I wish that I would have run on the cross country team in high school instead of wasting my time with football, basketball and baseball. Cross country could have been my ticket to Division I collegiate athletics, but I just never knew it at the time.
I figured I was just too small to be a basketball player and too big to be a runner.
I also wish that I would have studied literature and writing in college. Comparative literature would have been a perfect course of study, but at the time I was interested in history and culture. Too bad there are no do-overs.
But luckily for me, I get the chance to read a lot. Of course I prefer fiction, but over the past couple of days I stumbled over some good journalism and non-fiction writing that I think is just dynamite.
For instance:
I think Charlie was there the day we trapped Pete Horn in a gulley and threw rocks at him at the lower school field at the Country Day School. I could be wrong though -- that day was such a blur and it's hard to keep track of who was there and who did what and who drove the getaway car.
Apporpos of nothing, from where I sit right now I can see that gulley. I see some of those rocks, too. And you should read Charlie's story. It originally appeared in the L.A. Times Magazine and it's really good.