When I was a very young man I savored the rhythms of Ernest Hemingway’s luscious sentences in The Sun Also Rises while I tried to make sense of the Hemingway Code.
When I was a very young man I savored the rhythms of Ernest Hemingway’s luscious sentences in The Sun Also Rises while I tried to make sense of the Hemingway Code — the life rules the writer and his characters strove to embody.
Somewhat self consciously, I tried to tell the truth because that was one of the prime tenets of the Code and it seemed more manageable to me than rushing into war or hunting for elephants, other endeavors the great man advocated.
Hemingway struggled to write true sentences. Whenever a line read false, he crossed it out. I was deeply influenced by this simple idea, building a house of art with small radiant bricks of truth. I still try to work this way and become irritated whenever a false note slips into a paragraph.
As a young man, the connection between truth and art was electric and seemed to shine a light in the direction I wanted to go. Hemingway, Kerouac, Ginsberg, Kafka, Dostoevsky, Mailer, Anais Nin: all of them wrote from the heart, thumbing their noses at conventional mores. The writers I admired most rushed into the fire exploring their madness or admitting unspeakable sexual impulses or even murderous fantasies. Or worse. Norman Mailer stabbed his second wife Adele in the heart (she survived), and later turned this blasphemy into art when he wrote An American Dream. My hunch is that soon after he plunged in the blade, Mailer envisioned art pouring from this grotesque wound. A great writer doesn’t easily forgo such provocative material. And if he does, he suffers greatly for missed opportunity.
My own early writing was dark and confessional, perhaps too dark and too confessional; but to the point of this little essay, in my twenties, when I was still thinking and talking about writing more than doing it, my social life was informed by raw impulses that I admired in literature.
In my circle of friends — some of them shy boys — confessional conversation quickly became our religion. We smoked weed and listened to John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, Billy Holiday, Janis Joplin. Their hurting music spurred shared intimacies, pulled us together and made life seem urgent and mysterious.
There was no subject off limits. Telling the truth was challenging, provocative, painful, sexy, informing, noble. Shame became art in the alchemy of our talks, or so it seemed. We never knew where the night would lead. When we weren’t talking until dawn — admitting, confessing, sometimes criticizing one another to the core — life felt flat and without purpose.
Skipping ahead decades. Okay, I’m trying to tell the truth here without hurting anyone’s feelings. I used to say everything to the people I cared about most. Now I watch my words.
I was recently having a discussion with a friend, one of the old crew. We were talking about theatre, books, grandchildren, sports, carefully avoiding health issues and his son’s drug problem, and then we turned to politics. His conservative point of view suddenly infuriated me. What about the poor and hungry? While he spoke about his clever investment strategy and the fortune he would leave to his family, my mind flashed to a Viet Nam vet who sits in a wheelchair on my street corner 12 months a year. I couldn’t wrest my eyes from the image of him without a leg, in filthy clothes, sitting out his remaining days. We should give some of the fortune to him, so he can survive decently. That’s all I could think of. I was about to leap at my friend’s throat (and would have years ago) when the ardor just emptied out of me. He is a dear man. Who am I to challenge the pillars of his life, the dream of leaving his family living on Easy Street?
It is easy to forget that grown children have their own dreams and priorities, and that their own wives and children and the passage of years have taken a toll on our shared passions. Candor with grown children should be carefully considered. Their tears are like mortal wounds. So when my kids bring their families to Martha’s Vineyard this summer, swallow your critiques, Waitzkin.
What I cannot mention looms much larger in my consciousness than what I can say. I need to use euphemisms all the time as if learning to use my left hand to eat or throw a ball. I am still drawn to the bliss of empathic conversation, but now I weigh it carefully against remorse. I’ve become adroit at making narrative and thematic revisions to match my audience and the ever-shifting herd of elephants in the room. For example, it is often better to leave ugly wounds from the past out of enthusiastic lunch conversation. I’ve even learned to enjoy doing this, like revising paragraphs in my office. Such flexibility would have been an appalling notion years ago.
Still, it is very easy to mess up horribly and let the truth slip out. About six months ago, I told the truth to a friend without holding back. He was devastated and I didn’t know what to say after that.
Years ago when I occasionally wrote book reviews for The New York Times, I was scrupulously honest as if I’d been sanctioned to make the Lord’s literary decisions about immortality. I spelled out strengths and weaknesses as I saw them, although like many reviewers I felt the temptation to take out my blade and cut deeply into the failures. These days when writers give me manuscripts to critique, I often tell lies. Of course I try to be helpful, but also I try to feel warmly about work and say something positive and encouraging even if I think it’s awful. I don’t want to break any more hearts.
I try to remain honest on the page. At least this sanctuary remains. Except, recently I wrote an essay called A War in the Family about an unpleasant incident that took place over the holidays. I think it was an honest piece of writing that wrestles with questions of self-delusion and hidden restive violence that resides in all of us. And to me it seems particularly relevant today while neighbors are butchering one another all over the planet. But I didn’t send it off to my editors. My children felt the essay would hurt the feelings of people that we love. This was a close call, but I think my kids were right.
Fred Waitzkin is the author of four books, including Searching for Bobby Fischer. His most recent novel is The Dream Merchant. Fred and his wife Bonnie live in New York city and West Tisbury.

Comments
Fred, you are mellowing in
Dan Rattiner East Hampton, NYFred, you are mellowing in your old age, that's all. You're going from here's the truth to what does it matter anyway? But what a beautiful piece you have written. The truth.
Thanks Dan.
Fred WaitzkinThanks Dan.
The written word must be true
Andy Boyar Eldred, NYThe written word must be true, no matter how many rewrites it takes to get there. The spoken word, particularly to family and those closest to us, must be both kind and true as it is not subject to rewrite or edit. It is the bell that can't be unrung. Wisdom is more required than craft. Looks like Fred is there.
Yes, I'm learning this.
Fred WaitzkinYes, I'm learning this. Thanks Andy
Thank you for writing and
Catherine Norr Glenville, NYThank you for writing and communicating this experience...brings clarity and confirmation to my own.
I love this piece. It brings
Ginger McIntosh Tucson, AZI love this piece. It brings into clearer context an issue I too have been grappling with: kindness versus honesty. I turn 65 this month and, as I age, I appreciate kindness more and more. Perhaps my increased vulnerability, as age-related health problems come to call, has heightened my awareness of the value of kindness. But suddenly I know that broadcasting truth is simply not worth the destruction of a smile. A soft voice, gentleness, seem to be so much more valuable.
Thank you for your thoughts; you have provided fuel for my thoughts.
Thanks so much Catherine and
Fred WaitzkinThanks so much Catherine and Ginger for your comments and observations. One of the wonderful things about writing such pieces for the Gazette is that readers often weigh in. With many publications usually you put thoughts out into the world and it's like sending off a message in a bottle. I mean, it is rare to get a response
. Thanks again.
This is both a smart and
Dick AquinnahThis is both a smart and thoroughly enjoyable article. However, I'm a bit concerned about the "conventional morays". Are these the little green ones dressed in top hats and three piece suits I saw dancing in the Hemingway look-alike contest in Key West this past year?
Would it help to say our copy
EditorsWould it help to say our copy editor was feeling eel? Thanks, we've made the correction!
This is true wisdom and hard
Jan Joseph Oak BluffsThis is true wisdom and hard earned over many years... It reminds me of George Saunders's piece about kindness. I gave his book out to all my friends who graduated this year with the hope that they might come to this a bit earlier in their lives. Thanks for sharing such an honest take on honesty. Irony at it's best.
It is no wonder that Fred is
Jimmy Burgoff Pelham, MassachusettsIt is no wonder that Fred is dealing with this moral quandary at this stage of his life. After all, as a young boy, his dear Mother Stella, the great artist, whom many people loved and admired, including her son, made whimsical three dimensional installations of fake fiberglass resin bookcases (physically very heavy I might add). So, in effect, during his formative years, had no other choice than to judge a book by its' cover!
An old friend once said to me
Frank NYCAn old friend once said to me, "Words are like bullets, once they leave your mouth you can't call them back." Great piece. Thanks for sharing.
I can't begin to number the
Avon BellamyI can't begin to number the times in life where the impact of my words caused far more damage than my dedication to truth could justify. The feeling that came with knowing that someone had been unjustly hurt for my "principles" was not one I could ever become accustomed to. These days, unless telling the truth in as constructive a manner as possible will save greater pain for someone in the future, I have learned to keep my own counsel. However, if asked to be completely honest, I cross my fingers and hope the other person really means it. Personally, I value the harsh truth, even from those who are trying to use it to hurt me - much more from those whom I trust and whose opinions I hold in esteem.
Wonderful piece Fred. It's
Andrew Fruchtman Westchester, New YorkWonderful piece Fred. It's nice to have someone who can give voice to our aging sensibilities, a kind of freelance reporter on the advancing front line of life. Thank you.
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