I occasionally get these memories that are so vivid, it feels like time collapsed for a second, pushing the past into the present, before it retreats back into the sea of time.
This happened last night, while I was watching The Toys That Made Us, about LEGO, of all things.
I was always a good student when I was a kid. I worked hard to get all As, I did my homework the instant I got home, I participated heavily in classroom discussion, and I never goofed off when it wasn’t recess.
But in fifth grade, something changed. Suddenly, everything was incredibly difficult. I couldn’t focus in class. I didn’t want to do my homework right away when I got home. I still got As, but I had to work harder for them than I ever had to that point.
Except in math. I just did not get fifth grade math AT ALL. I couldn’t wrap my head around it, I couldn’t remember basic things like multiplication tables, and long division may as well have been hieroglyphics.
I’ve been trying my best to remember what was going on at home then, and I have a big blank page where those memories should be. Or maybe it’s more accurate to say there is a dimly lit tableau that I can’t see when I look directly at it. It only gives up shapes and colors, mostly obscured by shadows. I know that, by this time in my life, I had been telling my mother that I didn’t want to go on auditions or be an actor. I remember telling her, almost every day, “I just want to be a kid”, and I remember her dismissing that. She constantly gaslighted me about how I really did want to be an actor. She was so manipulative about it. She would tell me how selfish I was, because she’d sacrificed her own career to support mine. Please note for the record that when I was SEVEN FUCKING YEARS OLD, I did not say, “Mother, please abandon your tremendously successful acting career so that I may have one of my own.” Please also note that, as I got older, my only request, ever, was to please let me be a kid and stop making me work. Until I ended contact with them, they gaslighted me about this whenever I brought it up.
So I can’t remember if anything particularly memorable was happening at home then, something which would have made it hard for me to focus and concentrate when I was in class, but I suspect that I was becoming aware of just how much of a bully my father was to me, and how little my mother seemed to care about it.
In any case, it was fifth grade, and I was struggling like crazy to understand math. I was barely passing my math tests, and when I should have been getting tutoring, or being helped by my parents, my father was busy bullying me, and my mother was forcing me to go into Hollywood three or four days a week for auditions after school, which I hated.
This is where I stop for a moment and I tell you that it’s okay for you to have enjoyed the work I did when I was a kid. It’s unlikely that many of you have seen my work before Stand By Me, because it was mostly in commercials and a few movie of the weeks on television, and one entirely forgettable feature film. I’ve written about how unhappy I was as a child actor, and that’s caused some people to share with me that they feel guilty for enjoying the work I did then. I’m here to tell you that it’s okay, and I’m glad that you did enjoy it. That means it wasn’t a waste of my time, and it means that I was good at being an actor, which I can feel proud of.
Okay, as Joe Bob Briggs says, back to the movie.