AmLit Fall 2021

Page 65

Fall 2021

Dollar Value Abby Grifno Money has always had a way of finding me, or maybe I’ve always had a way of finding it. Just the other night, I was walking back to a bar where I’d left my scarf. There, on the sidewalk, was a dollar. My boyfriend thought it was a stroke of luck, but I was haunted by a hint of guilt. Someone, somewhere—maybe a few paces ahead or behind me—had lost their dollar, maybe their last dollar. I remember having my first job when I was entering the 8th grade. I was working at a day camp—only five days—but receiving that paycheck, holding it, made me entranced. I don’t remember what I spent it on, but having the choice, truly my own, felt important. I continued working at that camp for several years, slowly working my way up, learning responsibility one role at a time. Since then, filing my W2s and searching for my bank information has become second nature. I make mental notes when I see hiring signs, spread the word casually in case friends are looking. I know what it’s like to be looking, to be too young or too inexperienced for every job you stumble upon. I also know poor planning. There were times too when I lived beyond my means. That day I was headed to my internship and had only single digits in my bank account—almost no money for lunch. I couldn’t afford to eat

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out, didn’t have the ingredients to make anything, nor the planning to find a different option. I had resigned myself to skipping that meal, eating only dinner, when I would have the time to scrounge something up. Yet, when lunchtime rolled around, my stomach grumbled. I felt shaky. Skipping one meal, truthfully, is not a big deal, but it weighed heavy on my mind, as if I was literally starving myself. So instead I walked the half mile to McDonalds from the office so that I could order off their value menu, the dollar menu. I felt full, but pathetic. Shortly after that I picked up a second job. I wonder how I would have felt if I had stumbled upon a dollar on the street back then. Relief, I imagine. But the worry surrounding money hasn’t truly abated—perhaps it never will, as my mother is the same—and neither has my entrancement with a dollar, my willingness to work the graveyard shift, the gravitational pull I feel to pick up more hours. So no, I didn’t leave the dollar on the pavement. And yes, it’s in my pocket as we speak. I will leave it there for now, let my jeans get washed and rewashed. So that maybe at some point, when I really need a dollar, I will search around my room, checking my purses and my clothes, and there it will be.


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Articles inside

the effects of distance: a series of love letters — Sydney Muench

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pages 101-106

Not a Nightmare — Kaitlyn Newport

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page 97

manic pixie nightmare — Olivia Wenke

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page 94

The People in That Car Must Be Dead — Max Robins

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page 93

Mother — Gracie Donovan

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I Love Long Titles But I Can Never Be Clever So, Here It Is You Bastards — Ray Koffink

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Shadow Puppet — Ashley Hocking

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First Supper — Vishwa Bhatt

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page 86

February, 2009 — Gracie Donovan

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Zeyde’s Big Day — Max Robins

5min
pages 78-79

Beautiful Things — Annie Przypyszny

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page 76

the green interlude — McKenna Casey

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page 61

Dollar Value — Abby Grifno

2min
page 65

milk carton portrait — Alexia Partouche

1min
page 59

How Do I Tell You — Rhys Allison

2min
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Dog World — Hope Neyer

1min
page 54

White Dust — Natalie Flynn

1min
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perfect places — Trevor Luciani

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page 51

Dreaming of a Spanish Morning — Lindsey McCormack

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page 45

Mango Juice — Maite Ramos

1min
page 40

if you’re reading this i’m alive — McKenna Casey

1min
page 39

Untitled — Noah Fischer

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page 34

Ghost Story — Vishwa Bhatt

1min
page 36

Finding — Ashley Hocking

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Cicadas Hum Psalms — Annika Rennaker

0
page 28

Call Me Shallow — Liah Argiropoulos

3min
page 31

And So I Do, And So I Do — Ray Koffink

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page 26

bittersweet — McKenna Casey

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page 25

On a Hill in Vermont — Lindsey McCormack

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page 18

Tongue Twister — Jamie Klinger

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page 16

I’m Thinking — Annie Przypyszny

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page 22

Skeletal Remains — Hannah Sjovold

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Ode to the Closet — Jamie Klinger

3min
pages 10-11

At the Wild Reef Exhibit — Annie Przypyszny

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A Premonition of Philophobia — Callie Lau

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Sapphic x3 — Gracie Donovan

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