Monday, May 30, 2011

That story again.

my story - dedicated to nick kelly.



Help. That's what people seem to want to give you when you tell them a sad story, your sad story. But sometimes you don't want help. You simply want someone else to hear your story.

My uncle was molested in the first grade by his principal. Skeletons in the closet.

And now he's dead.

I think everyone has a back story. They have to have one. I guess it's whether or not you're real, if you've toyed with life and it's bitten you back. Sometimes I think people haven't experienced the pain I have but maybe I'm just being selfish.

Sometimes you just want physical pain, because your emotion is long gone. Or maybe it was never there to start.

The best stories told are the true ones.

Pain. Sometimes people turn it into hatred, hatred on other people, inward hatred. It all depends on strength of character. Sometimes they don't even know the pain is there, all the worse.




I have this very vivid memory. I’m 8 years old standing in the hallway of a hospital. There is a nurses station of some sort with all these life monitors. The kind with the green line that goes up and down. Sharp lines, piercing the screen. And I’m there, watching, captivated. And the monitors, a few of them, the lines are barely moving, some of them stop completely. And I'm just standing there, standing, feeling like, I dunno, powerless. People are dying and I’m standing there, just a kid.



There was a time when I was five. Rocking my heels on the step outside my house. Listening to my neighbor after her only child had ended his life. All I remember was the screaming.





Maybe I do more than I think. Maybe I don't. I often wonder if other people are worth the time. Then again, I'm usually so lonely I bother with them anyway. If you can get a person to laugh, it kind of disarms them. Then you get to see they are as fragile as you. Maybe.

I seem surer of things than I am it seems. Some people think I'm smart. It's possible but I don't see it because of all the other people out there smarter than me.

My grandmother used to press her ring finger into the base of my spine to get me to stand up straight. I was always hunched over, muddling over the idea of making a mistake. Apparently, mistakes aren't allowed. Without mistakes, how does one learn?

........

I wonder if everyone cared would that solve things? What if people sat around and wondered what the ant they just killed for ignorant household invasion thought before he was slain. Would it make a difference?

Imagine a world with no obligations, would people become entirely self absorbed?
....

The first anniversary of my uncle's death.

I think about the impact he left on our lives.

It was one of pain. He was in pain, but he didn't fall gracefully when he died like his father did.
My grandfather. The nurses at the hospital were crying after he died. People he never met came to his funeral. He was an unsung hero, touching the lives of so many people. He would always say "personality is half your life." He lived by those words. He knew everyone and everyone knew him. Newspaper articles, news stories. Everybody talked to him. He was such a great influence but I feel like it was wasted on my youth.


He killed a man once. He had too. Murder isn't murder if it's war. Does that still make him a hero?

What is the measure of a man?

I'm not here to define that. I doubt anyone has the right too. Some people feel they have enough degrees to have earned the right.

...

Sometimes you meet someone who takes your mind off things for awhile. A yin to your yang. And then you learn their story. You lock eyes and a moment is shared that can't be expressed in words.




Maybe I do more good than I think. Maybe I don't. I often wonder if other people are worth the time. Then again, I'm usually so lonely I bother with them anyway. If you can get a person to laugh, it kind of disarms them. Then you get to see they are as fragile as you. Maybe.

I seem surer of things than I am. Some people think I'm smart. It's possible but I don't see it because of all the other people out there smarter than me.




My grandmother used to press her ring finger into the base of my spine to get me to stand up straight. I was always hunched over, muddling over the idea of making a mistake. Apparently, mistakes aren't allowed. Without mistakes, how does one learn?


I still slouch

….

I sat in the corner of my graduation party, listening to my family talk about things that didn't concern me: the wine list, the work load, the mundaneness of adulthood. And I glowered at the grim prospects of their definition of my future. I was 18, successful at unsuccess. Art school bound. Not a teacher, or engineer, or speech pathologist, or veterinarian. I listened to the drone of their combined voices. Finally they addressed me, the supposed star of this disarray.
Apparently, they decided I, the one that refused to be what they wanted anyways, have a defined pattern.

Something about how all teenagers, because they know so many, hate and disrespect their parents once college starts. "You think you're so smart and know everything. You're parents are going to look like geniuses once they stop paying for you to go to college." I, the destined to be failure with goals and a dream, was apparently going to fuck it up for myself. This is after getting into college for something they didn't want me to pursue. I like the logic here.


A love letter.

To my not-so-significant other,

I think you're pretty cool. I like you and this could be something that lasts. The problem is that you're in it for the long haul; I'm not. You see, I'm a bit like a cat. I see something I fancy and take possession of it until I become bored. You, my dear, are the current object. Granted, when I see something good I know it.

There is something about you that I can't describe. Perhaps it is your eyes or your disarming manner. Either way, you are special to me, but don't think you're irreplaceable. Yes, that does sound harsh, but so is life. Yes, I took you off cloud nine and gave you a dose of reality. Never did I believe disillusion was healthy; the pain of truth always seemed the better route. Truth is necessary and love is a dangerous game.

I am writing you this letter as a sort of warning. When I first met you I mentioned that unruly temper of mine; you said you didn't notice it. Well, you have been given fair warning. That temper is filled with jealousy and obsession and so is yours. I see it in you, that stubborn, jealous anger and the low self esteem you do your best to hide. I see you falter and I can see through the veil you use to hide your weaknesses. You're afraid of many things, and so am I. I'm afraid that I can't love as deeply as I want, I'm afraid of how possessive you are, I'm afraid that you think of me as a trophy instead of a girlfriend, and I'm afraid of all the things in your head you never say.
Sometimes the bravest thing a person can do is say the things they don't think they can.

If we are to have a future together we must tell each other the thoughts that cross our minds. Silence really can be deafening.

One more thing, and I'm sorry that this sounds like nitpicking, but it is my nature to over analyze. I am very strange and complex. I suppose it could be fun to unravel the mystery. My nature is one that likes to flee to new places. New places provide a different outlook and a chance to reinvent myself. I need that every so often, and it is a pleasure I indulge in. That being said, I need you to let me free. I think the saying is if you love something let it free, if it comes back it was meant to be. That's the best summary I can give of myself. I need you to think of things other than your routine comforts. The danger of routine is it can grow and hinder you from thinking outside the box, and I live my life avant garde. I don't expect or want you to jump through fiery hoops in an effort to proclaim your love, but I do expect you to never try and make me stay put. If you do, I will leave.

It is a lot I am asking from you, but I think we have something good here, and I'd love to make it work. I just feel a danger in your desire to stay with what you've known all your life. I am constantly changing, and growing, and learning new things about my surroundings. My fear is that a distance will eventually grow between us that cannot be bridged. I implore you to embrace the beauty of life, a beauty that exists outside of a day-to-day routine. I'll be waiting for you on the other side.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

My philosophy on life: if it cant be done in heels, it isn't worth doing.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

My distinguished aunt in her navy pantsuit texting on her Trio during my graduation.

His dirty sock that came to life as he tapped his foot to the melody of his mandolin.