Sunday, November 29, 2009

it's just us.



You said those magic words in the shadow of a mountain, underneath a lamppost, surrounded by lights and hundreds of thousands of people. Eyes wet with tears, saturating my lashes, dropping off like full, beautiful ripened berries of crystal, those words jarred me out of everything, out of this world, leaving me in darkness, with only your voice still intact. And after all the days we'd spent together, after everything we'd been through, it finally, finally came together and I knew it was true, at least for that moment.

I cried again, this time not for some misunderstanding, for horrible feeling of being abandoned, but rather for myself, because I now realize that all of my insecurities in people, everything I doubted in you was what I really doubted in myself. And how I may someday come to abandon you, just as I fear with as much terror as anyone can feel that I will be as well. Thinking back on the past, I hate myself, but I cannot change, or at least I don't know how. I hope to god that you do.

But I'm not sure. It does not matter for now, right? You are a good person. I have known many good people, and I am thankful for that, thankful to have loved them and been loved by them. And maybe there's something strange with me, where I can't be happy, where I have to hurt myself and leave everyone and everything behind me, I have to keep moving, running. I have to be alone. I have to be able to cloister myself and just feel surrounded by nothingness. I don't know why, but at least I have such good memories of the world outside my head. With your words, I am jarred into a place somewhere between consciousness and unconsciousness. It's just Us.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

The Revelation

















It was fucking hot around 11 AM on All Saints Day, November 1, 2009 when I drove down Harbor Boulevard in Anaheim, CA to the run down house that the Psychic operated in. The neighborhood in this area is amazing. The not-so-carefully-preserved 70's architecture, paint peeling, colors a faded garish golden hue, and homeless guys sharing a drag while loitering in the local park, sweltering in the California autumn heat. My car was heating up quickly, the smell of antifreeze and water emanating from the hood. Damn mechanics.

I thought I had gone too far, but the sign loomed ahead on the left, and, making a quick turn I parked down a residential street. There was a house for rent right next door, the lawn of which I walked through. There were turquoise wrought iron screens and gates with the Chinese Double Happiness symbol worked into the design in front. I thought about how grand it would be to live in a suburban palace like that.

Coming to the front door of the Psychic's house, I rang a bell and paused. After waiting several seconds, I thought about ringing again when a shadow appeared. All psychics look the same. They are older, cordial ladies that smell like incense, and dress in very comfortable clothing. They are in a state of perpetual relaxation. They are like bodhisattvahs, the way I will be someday.

She tells me lots of things. I will live a long life-- I knew that-- but that I will have a brush with death. This scares me because I am very afraid of killing myself, and her next revelation, about the dark cloud that hangs above me chills me even more because the odd experience of having your life completely dismantled has definitely been on my recent afflictions list. But then she tells me that God is on my side. God, who I thought had abandoned me when I was 11, when my parents' marriage fell apart, my brother declared his atheism, the other started dealing pot, and I realized that I couldn't trust anyone ever again.

But she really made sense. She told me that it was a curse, that someone had put this on me and my family. And that the source was human, human malice. What a shudder that went through me on that muggy day. I couldn't stop thinking about it. I thought hard about my life, my future, about the old dreams I had of becoming something, of helping people and loving them. And how I barely felt anything nowadays. I wanted to be a regular girl again, who was silly and drew pictures all day and thought of whimsical ideas. Was my life really so far fucked?

I thought about it that night, watching the lights from late night traffic race across the ceiling filtered through Venetian blinds. I sobbed a little because of how sad it all was. How pain and bad feeling could kill you. I didn't want to wake him, but I did on accident, and when he held me I felt better. The caresses and soothing words pulled me upwards, the way you might claw your limbs through water trying to reach the light of the surface, but every moment of stillness saw me sinking further. And I suddenly had a most vivid and terrible image of myself as a living corpse in his arms, emotionally, mentally dead from misery.

On the Day of the Dead, I was reborn. I remembered things, remembered myself. And I knew what I had to do. I had dreams again, but I also had a divine obligation. I had been struggling to find meaning and figure out what it was that would fulfill my psychological needs in this world, but now I know also that I have intense spiritual work to do as well. Somehow I will lift the curse on myself and my family, and I've no doubt that this will elevate me to Buddahood by the end of my life. Saving everyone else... that will come later, but for now, I will find the root of the evil and charge through it with eyes of fire.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Take a Breath



I'm going to take a deep breath right now, and not worry. I don't need to change. I don't need to run all the time. The future is there, it's waiting for me patiently. I can be happy here and now, even though it's not here. I want to just think of You and be happy right now. I want to eat candy and curl up in my chair and read a good book and take a nap and listen to some awesome fucking music and think about crazy things and make up stories in my head. I'm going to not be so serious. I will practice all of that whimsical bullshit I preach and climb fences and go on bikerides and pretend to speak Spanish.

So now the question is, what to do, now that I'm okay with things. Hmmmmmmmmmm....

Blue Night

While the sun sets, the silhouettes of trees forming a natural swampy skyline fly past, ancient and towering. Yet the sun glowing orange sits stationary, silently warming me with lingering rays filtering through the branches, solitary and unshakeable, even as it dips below the horizon, dappling my skin with an ever changing pattern of light. Scratchy folk music wafts through the air in waves emanating from the radio of Your pick-up, and taking a calculated breath, I sigh.

We met again for the first time in years on the cusp of a huge boom in the music scene in our little county. I have become a bonified band-aid tailing my friends and their bands from shitty venues to dusty garages to white trash neighborhood backyards. And my sharp tongue and snappy personality has become quite renowned among the scene. Fluttering about like a butterfly in colorful vintage dresses and soda-pop can ring necklaces jingle jangling about my neck, hovering about in the Floating World on cigarette smoke and laughter.

I stopped by Your garage on a hot day around 1 after work with a friend coming to visit a band mate of Yours during practice. Your name, so familiar to me repeated across my brain countless times since I learned it is suddenly connected to Your face as my eyes adjust to the darkness of your garage as I enter from the bright burning noontide sky. There is sweat on the back of my neck and I'm wearing something old but I forget everything as memories of You flood back into my head. Old gray memories that have frayed at the edges but whose images still retain an accurate likeness to their counterparts in the real world.

And it is apparent that We are going to happen, that there exists that bond between Us that has tied Us together through the years and the centuries and the millenia and through all of time and space.

I am shy at first, so very uncharacteristic. But I have been waiting for this moment for 8 years, 17 years, thousands of years, and am not about to begin fucking around.

You are inexplicably handsome. Boys and girls alike notice it, acknowledge it, and yet you have a certain subdued dynamic, you fade in with the crowd, even though you do not walk among them. You laugh with some hardcore kids from a couple towns over who are high and toting ill-gotten forties, sleeves rolled up to Your elbow, strong, graceful fingers grasping a bottle leisurely. I flash a vaguely naughty smile, which You return, and I know You read into it because I can feel Your eyes on my back as I wade through the crowds charming the masses. And I can feel the tension between us surrounding you like a cloud, a tangible atmosphere that I can feel, flowing from your body and rising up into the night, mixing with the moths and the golden lamp light and the blue night.

Sweet, wonderful, lo-fi plays over the crowd, a mixture of shitty stereo and bad recording but it sounds beautiful all the same to me. And as I talk to a group of kids that went to my high school that are now punk rock, I feel Your hand, Your fingers lightly touch my shoulder. The slightest hint of electricity ignites my skin. There are tons of guys that are into me and girls into you. But time slows down when I turn and our eyes meet, and some hippie girls exhale cherry-apple hookah smoke from their lungs and some guys from the other side of town toss shots of So-Co to the back of their burning throats.

We leave together later that night, laughing, slightly tipsy. The party is still quite lively even though it is late. A few people we know shoot us naughty, knowing glances, and I smile and stick out my tongue coyly. Clumsily tripping over my feet a little, You open the passenger door for me laughing, and Your hands keep on slipping up, touching me, too soon, too soon. I grab them, yet don't remove them; but flash a smile that yearns for You to wait just a little bit longer.

We live more on the outskirts by the old forest, and I see that same skyline of trees, this time in reverse, the moon and stars replacing the sun in a blanket of dark blue as they sparkle and fly behind the ancient branches. Your old house looms in the distance, and I almost don't want to leave the car, You beside me, a foot or two away from my body. There are lights on, but they are just your younger siblings, staying up with the freedom that their summer vacation allots them engrossed in the loud jabbering and blaring lights of an old television set.

We laugh, me hanging onto Your arm for support, and tumble up the stairs. You flick on the light of your lamp, dim, but still warm. The window is open and the summer air fills the room. And as we lay on your bed in the light, our hands searching each other fervently, mouths eagerly tasting, tears stream down my cheeks and soak into your old comforter as I feel all of your love both emotionally and physically coming down onto me. I feel it all, everything, so powerfully, so poignantly. The fibers of your sheets, the fine prints of your fingers on my skin, the light glowing red behind closed eyes, the hot night enveloping us.

And I know, this is the greatest moment of my entire life.

Clawing My Way Out

I'm not going to pretend I was some kind of fucked up ghetto kid from a poor neighborhood growing up. I lived alright, got the things I needed for the most part. Even got the things I wanted a few times. I didn't sell crack or my pussy or anything like that. But I did survive suburbia.

Growing up in a super Christian home would make you think I'd come out with some good ideals. And hey, you'd be right. I think of myself as pretty righteous. But maybe that's just my own innate scrupulousness. And of course, like some stereotypical religious satire, my dad had to turn out to be a freaky pervert and alcoholic. It was a sad sad night when I realized I was the child of a completely loveless, dead relationship. How do you even begin to comprehend that? And then there's the religion. I can understand growing up without a god. But to grow up, 12, 13 years devoutly, and have it all taken away from you, shattered? Witness your preacher father hit your mom who's screaming about divorce, completely out of the fucking blue. Now that's fucked up. I try to fill that gap of faith, that shattered notion that these lives are something more than just a blink of the Earth's eye with other things, stupid things, superstition.

But the worst is my town. How fucking white trash it is. How all the kids drank and fucked each other when they were like 15. I guess that's how most teens are though, I guess. Well, except for me. I felt awkward. I didn't want to do those things. And I felt even worse for not wanting it, for not having experienced it. I felt like I was missing out on something I should have wanted.

I experimented. I was a slut for a year, I'll admit it. Fuckin' a. I went to parties as an older teenager. I suffered fools. I shopped at thrift stores because my mom told me that I was a financial burden on the family. Walked the streets alone at night, crying my eyes out. Jumped out of my second story bedroom window to concrete below over some douchebag guy. Prevailed over the stupid brometal and F-150s with "Froaders for Bush" bumper stickers and Support Out Troops decals. Weathered the shitstorm my brother caused our family for dealing and growing pot in his bedroom.

Watched my parents fight, go to counseling, fight some more. Fell asleep with my fingers in my ears so I wouldn't have to hear. And you know, I guess this is normal. It's just the human drama. But I do know that many people succumb to it. I don't know. Maybe I read into this shit too much. But I clawed my fucking way out of that hellhole. Nowadays I call myself a contemporary artist with influences of Pop art, Impressionism, and Superflat. I study Japanese folklore and learn foreign languages, say I'm a fucking graphic designer and read surrealist novels. Shop at Trader Joe's and Bristol Farms and use a vintage plastic lens camera. I guess I'm just trying to be everything that isn't my stupid hometown.

I feel like I am really coming to know my parents for the first time in 20 years. I talk to my dad, and I tell him I love him now, and I mean it, I am trying to love him. When my mom calls me I tell her when I'm feeling bad. I try to be as brutally fucking honest as I can, with everyone. I've got manners, though. I don't know. When I think about my memories, it seems like such a long time has passed. I feel so old. I'm still surviving my fucking 20's. I wonder what else is going to come along.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Your Eyes are Golden

















The strings come in and start swelling, the bells echo the melody over and over again, and I am positively vibrating with energy. The motherfucking heat of summer is enclosing my body, and as a beautiful little bead of perspiration rolls down my back and along my side, I smile at all of the things I have seen and heard and smelled and tasted in the past 5 weeks. I feel like I have gained a foothold on life again. Not like I had ever fallen, you know. More like... floated away into some sort of amorphous and intangible expanse of nothing. With nothing to ground me I waited, but now I see life ahead, glowing like stone wall, the precious steps up scattered here and there, some vague, others obvious, leading in so many directions.

My god, how I want to climb towards you. But I am not worried because it doesn't really matter. You've never really left me have you? You've never left me at all. And I know that you're telling the truth, that you will always be my fortress, because I can see it in your golden eyes. So come on, let's climb up fences, break into schools in the middle of the night, get drunk off our own high, lay on my bed in the yellow light of my bedroom lamp and listen to the sweetest music ever heard echo off the walls and float out through the shitty Vertical Blinds into the warm night outside my window.

And I'll take you by the hand and lead you to all of the strange places I've been to, and tell you stories about my life and other people's lives and the world and the stars until your head is buzzing and your eyes can't see the difference between anyone or anything-- it's all one, all together, you and me and everyone we know. And I'll lick your salty skin and you'll kiss my mouth and our fingers will intertwine as we melt together, fade into each other. Even as you board the train-- the very same that bourne you to me and now takes you from me-- I know that you will fall asleep to the gentle rumble of the engine, and the setting sun's rays will fall delicately on your eyelids, glowing golden in my heart and keeping me safe forever.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

All of the Goodness and Beauty in the World

Waiting fervently on the platform, I did not see you exit the train as I searched desperately through the crowds. Turning around in circles, our eyes met and I could remember each spot of light in your star-bright eyes. I wanted to jump into your arms, but I restrained my feelings as I ran to meet you, my clumsy body fumbling to meet yours as I toppled into your embrace. And when I looked up I saw green and gold and gray and blue in your magical ever-changing eyes, multiple facets of shades and colors that danced like a kaleidescope with the receding angles of the setting sun.

When I look into them I feel like I am peering into the future, the past, into all of history and time and life's mysterious secrets and I can't help but wonder what exactly it is that you are, that stares back at me, and what it sees in turn. They stare right through me and clear away the hate and the pain and jadedness and draw out my purity, all of the good that wants to come out of me and love you and love the world. It saddens me to think of these things that pollute my mind and my spirit, but at the same time you comfort me with your seemingly infinite patience and understanding.

We hold hands as we cross old brick paths, so well worn with partings and reunions, travel and return, creation and destruction. We are immortal beings who watch over the earth below from the lofty heavens, where dreams float up to us like little birds that play in the sky. I am calm and content and filled with felicity. The clear blue sky quickly dims, and we walk on into the twilight.

And at night you say my name over and over again and how much you love me as we move together, and our hearts and bodies swell with emotion as tears come to my eyes and stream down my cheeks because the thought of being with you and loving you is too beautiful to even fathom. And when I close my eyes there is nothing but blackness and powerful intense feelings permeating everything, straight to my soul, and it is as though I have completely given myself up to my sensations. And all I can possibly think about is how wonderful and beautiful life can be.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

L'Age d'Or

Remember those really fucking awesome backyard shows we used to go to, like 5 summers ago? Things were so so different then, we were such different people then. High school was still fresh, even after graduation. Damn was that ceremony boring. So full of fake-ass ostentation and seemingly random importance placed on a very unextraordinary "achievement." Pomp and circumstance indeed. So anticlimactic and unmoving... not at all the fitting ending to our youth.

Things were so golden back then. It was a hot and humid summer, and it permeated through everything, the blood in my veins, the air in my lungs. We'd swim in the big concrete hole of a dirty suburban pool surrounded by a weed-overrun backyard next to that crazy old dilapidated car covered in rust and spider webs. Sun bleached white plastic chairs that were about to break and dented beer cans littering the environs. Pabst Blue Ribbon and Miller Lite 40's and fucking Natty Ice. And we'd walk to the 7-11 down Mast Boulevard and eat wonderful deep fried Taco Shop and drink Cokes or buy popsicles.

The best part was the afternoons when the sun set and everything was orange and red. And your loosely thrown together band would assemble in various white trash backyards to play into the twilight until the blue evening cooled us all down. I would sit on an amp wearing a flippy little skirt and flip flops watching you set up, sound check, smile at me. I stole your chord cheat sheet after the show, scrawled with a messy hand on the back of a crumpled flyer, studying the movements of the lines and savoring the spontaneity of their strokes with as much appreciation as a Chinese calligrapher. And I'd dance to the music you covered later that night as moths burned themselves on the bare light bulb of my bedroom lamp as they flew in through the open window.

Our hometown was shit, but we didn't care. It was East County, it was So-Cal, and it was summer. Your shitty amps rang out distorted chords that resounded against the walls of the valley, and for an hour or so I could just stare up at the dark sky and let go of everything. A real l'Age d'Or. We kissed on the 4th of July after climbing up to the hills covered in scratchy dry grass, showers of colored light illuminating our vision behind closed eyelids.

The summer and the music was still hot, flowing through my body, but when Labor Day came I was suddenly in the grip of Fall. Fuck, it was cold. And like a tide you ebbed ever slowly away. That was it. The moment when you smiled at me, bidding farewell as you stepped into your mom's van, going away to college, your cheerful words, "Be happy... go find a nice boyfriend" gave me a fucking black eye. That was when I knew I had grown up and that I could never ever go back or even look at this town again.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Late Afternoon Return Trip Streams of Consciousness

Reaching the 405 at 5:04, I realize suddenly how very palindromatic my route is, how every town I pass through is the same, how it stretches into one long patchwork of buildings and walls and hills and fields that constitutes the 144 miles between us. Even the names of streets begin to be reused, an unimaginative Adam of an architect cutting corners. Euclid, Fairview, Main, Broadway, Culver, Mesa, Rosecrans, Harbor. One after the other. O my beautiful artfully artificial Southern California, may your orange sun forever burn into my shoulders. With Bass+7, Treble+3, Fujiya & Miyagi thudding like pixelated scraps of jazz max in your headlights.

A thin film of the beautiful briny Santa Barbara breeze and perspiration coats my body as cities flash by me. I can't think of them as anything else but names, as I have only experienced them as such, though I do hear that Van Nuys is very nice, and that the Spearmint Rhino Gentlemen's Club is quite the place to be in the City of Industry, according to a poorly designed billboard. I keep thinking back to all of the little time we've spent together and how it seems to stretch on forever in my memory, even long afterwards. I know I'm reading too much into it, and your two eyes are too wise for my innocence, in a sense.

A sudden break in the traffic jolts me out of my thoughts at Brookhurst and Fountain Valley. Goddammit, I think. Suffice to say, if shit had gone down, bitches would have been flipped. But the cars start speeding up again, I regain my momentum, and begin velocitating rapidly towards a cool 86 mph in silence. Portugal.the.Man brings me back down into my sleepiness again, and my exit finally floats up to me out of a fog. I keep falling into this dream state, my very secret, very solitary second life pulling me down and enveloping me into blackness. Driving down familiar streets, the music recycles, and I wonder if you have seen me cry, tears like diamonds.

I may be batting a thousand, but a homerun crack at love... This is where I tell you that I know love's what I need to work at.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Hopefully; A Final Lament

I hate waking up in this bed, this bed where I have spent so many sad nights. The summer sun rises early and shines through my East-bound window, waking me from whatever solace I could have had in sleep. The difference now is five years, and now it is time to look away. The foot lingering in the doorway to walk away, another place in my life to go to. I suppose I knew it would happen, but... as you said yourself, life and love are funny that way-- you never do ever fully turn away completely now, do you? But the good news is that I have already tasted the future. It is on the rise as the shadows on my bedroom floor slowly creep West. Oh god how I want to look back! But again, like some bleeding Orpheus ascending out of some dark Hades, I must kill, forget, and leave for dead. Let it die. Hide it under a blanket. Pretend it was all nothing. Lull it to sleep.

I don't know if I can return. Memories are just such powerful things. I think way too much, read way too much into everything. "You're not oppressed, you're just too learned." Sure, I guess. I am stuck in the hyperreal. Nonetheless, I ache, tortured by my mind, a woman broken. And after all is said and done, I know I will always walk away trailing blood-- you uncaring, oblivious or both. You will never understand, you never ever understood. It was all a dream. Even more reason never to see your face, our places, this sleepy town. And so, without further ado, I bittersweetly say Good-bye, (filled, of course, with all kinds of ostentatious dramatism and post modern tragedy) and shall "take this unbound train, and go away." I'm sorry for everything, but mostly sorry for myself, for although the pain has built up for me a wall of mental will and maturity of the greatest might, it still houses a wounded heart.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

The Beauty of Gas Station Architecture

There's never enough time, but I at least wanted to capture a small snapshot of my life, at least for today.

I am currently obsessed with Google images, rollerskating, and my sunglasses. I went from a passionate moment to crying intensely within 5 minutes. I saw a famous contemporary artist give a lecture. I wrote a bit of a story. I am tired as hell. I promise I'll do something more tomorrow, make something more of myself.

It's hard, getting used to life again.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Learning How To Live Again

I've been dead a long time, and it's so funny that I didn't even notice it. I guess I just always thought it was a rut. But no, there really is something wrong, and it's with me. I can't see or hear or taste things the way they were. The entire world is a shadow of itself. And life was one vaguely less mundane and depressing engagement to another. I'm trying to open my eyes and breathe again. I'm buying rollerskates, and not taking things so seriously anymore. I'm listening to music and drawing dumb pictures over and over again the way I did as a child. And I'm thinking more, trying to put thoughts into words, even if they don't make sense or have no meaning.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Nighttimes

Frequently, I would come running up the steps to my porch in the green twilight, dirty from the swampy forest, looking for a bite to eat. My ever-obliging mother would fix me something as I counted the little stones and twigs I had collected on the checkered woven tablecloth. The evening would become dark blue, and the yellowed fluorescent kitchen light would illuminate the room like a miniature sun. I take my time eating my vegetables. Time, after all, is nothing to me. Nothing in the world matters, except that I am a child and I can think and play and be whatever I want. Running up to my room on the second floor after dinner, I flick on the lights and hop onto my bed before the wide open windows. The night is warm and dark but a faint twilight lingers on the horizon, and the moon and stars are bright.

You come running up my front porch and my heart pounds as I hear your footsteps on the rotting wood. The promise of an evening with you makes me shudder with excitement as I put on dusty rose lipstick. There's a tear in my dress, but I know you won't notice or mind. Handsome as ever you smile when I come downstairs. You lightly touch my back as we head out the door... innocent and fleeting, but of course I put meaning into it. Your truck is parked outside on the carpet of dead leaves that constitutes my driveway. Slamming the car doors I breathe in the night air through the open window, and close my eyes as the light from my front porch fades from behind my eyelids as you pull out. As the crackling radio softly plays, I smell your scent from a few inches to my left and imagine it on my skin.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

A Really Long Sentence

'Kay, so, I was driving home from work one day, it was probably like 5:07 or something because I didn't clock in from lunch on time 'cause I was playing foosball with a coworker and so my lunch ran a few minutes over, and the sun was setting and all that jazz, and it was really really hot since my car had been sitting outside in the sun all day, so I turned the air to cool without actually turning it on, so that just the air that filters through would be somewhat cool, without having to waste gas since I was kind of strapped for cash at the time, and anyways I was kinda pissed though because as soon as I rolled down the windows it suddenly got ass cold and I was like "wtf?" but then this song came on the radio, which turned out to be "Black Sand" by Jenny Lewis, but at the time I didn't know what it was but I had heard it before and really wanted to download it so I scrambled to find something to write some of the lyrics on so I could Google them later to find the song title and artist, but the only thing to write on was an old fine tipped sharpie that I stole from my old job before I got laid off and an old lotto ticket that my friend bought me jokingly when I bought him a Monster or Rock Star energy drink at the grocery store, I forget which, and in any case there was a ton of text on it but I used it anyways, but the trouble was, I was in the left turn lane at the time and I had to turn left because one, there were tons of cars behind me, and two, this intersection was a pain in the ass to turn left at because the goddamn light gives you like 3 seconds to do it, so I was turning and writing and I needed to be in the center lane after turning but just as I had completed the turn and was getting over, I saw that another car had merged into the lane and we collided-- just a little!-- and there was the gentlest tap but the other car, this really dumb black Toyota Corolla with a stupid license plate frame that said something stupid like "#1 Grandma" with a "Support Our Troops!" sticker on the bumper started freaking out and honking and flashing lights and stuff, and so I had to pull over to settle it all, even though I really didn't want to, and even after I did, this old couple got out of the car and started having a fucking seizure over-- and get this-- absolutely no scratch or dent, even though they were positive (and actually I'm pretty sure we did, too) bump each other, but still, they were super overreacting and being real jerks about it, and then I remembered how my horoscope told me to be assertive that day, and it just sort of inspired me to take this bitch-assed attitude and I was totally like, "No, fuck you!" to the old people and they called me disrespectful and all this shit, but luckily I was able to come up with some pretty witty retorts to their bitchings that were actually quite relevant to the topic at hand, finally I was like "Fuck it" and just got in my car and drove off, 'cause I was pretty sure they were in such a state of disorientation and frenzy and general senility that they hadn't gotten my license plate number or anything, but I still went to the Mini Cooper dealer down in San Diego that weekend immediately and got the cute red Mini Cooper I've always wanted, but didn't really want to get so soon because I haven't actually paid my mom back all the money I loaned from her over last summer, but in any case, yeah, that's how slash why I have this sweet red Mini Cooper now, but it's also kind of ironic because I just realized that I was in the right most of the left turn lanes and those damned old people were in the leftern one so therefore I technically had the right of way... lame, huh?

Monday, May 11, 2009

a poem about a boy i met in april on his 17th birthday

O Emmanuel
You are no April Fool
Meet me by the railroad tracks
on a Wednesday after school

Call out names you do not know
Come peer through the chain link fence
Take ladybugs from my fingers
and come to know me thence

Tear a page out from my sketchbook
Sharpie the likeness of your face
Promise you spray paintings of
robots from outer space

You have everything ahead of you
As the sun sets you walk home
Who knows if you'll remember me
Who knows who you'll become

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

East Coast Motel Room Feng Shui

I'd only been in Boston for two days and already I wanted to shoot myself. It was a Tuesday in early April, and it was freezing. The wind, the snow, the rain... I could feel it all soaking through my clothes and shoes the second I set foot outside the scratched up glass doors of my gloomy third-rate motel. I was pissed at my boss for sending me to this place and even more pissed at the city for enhancing my already darkened mood. Snide and sometimes violent thoughts ran through my mind like some sort of mantra, scrolling across my eyes like an LED marquee with Tourette's. This was going to be one shitty week.

The people that I encountered were either extremely polite or insanely douchey. The former made me feel bad about my cynical remarks and the latter just pissed me off even more. It was a real pickle. Avoiding human contact was the best idea. And yet even that depressed me. I was so lonely. I should have been at home, perhaps not with Him, but at least in the same town in case He decided to have the decency to contact me. Shaking my head, I told myself to stop being an idealistic little fool, and muttered a sarcastic remark to my mother who had told me this trip was going to be "an experience."

I wiled away the many hours alone in the dark of my motel room, attempting to entertain myself while not freezing my ass off. I succeeded in neither. The gigantic radiator below the dusty window sill was on its last legs. In fact, nearly every electrical appliance in the damned building seemed to be at least 25 years old and in barely passable condition. This was not counting the alarm clock that woke me every morning at 7 A.M. sharp with a most univiting and piercing siren that I quite possibly hated more than anything at the moment. It signaled the beginning of another cold, miserable day, and tore me from warm sleep, my one escape from having to live my life.

Hailing a cab whose driver fell into one of the two aforementioned categories, I would arrive at my client's office structure, which seemed to still be running the A.C. on full blast despite the season. Cold fluorescent lights, cheap fake plastic potted plants and that signature office smell-- stale coffee filters and slightly damp carpet-- would greet me. And again, the contact with other people! Actually, I must say, my client did not fall into one of the two descriptions, but rather was the most oblivious and bumbling person I have ever met. He was short, balding, and rather rotund. And even though he was quite large, his faded gray suit still seemed too big for him and hung loosely about him, especially in the jacket. And he wore the thickest horn rimmed glasses I'd ever seen... the lenses were so thick I couldn't help but wonder if the things were actually made from two miniature magnifying glasses. He seemed to be in a constant state of confusion, whether I was asking him a question in an attempt to clear up some work-related topic, or inquiring about the weather. I'm sure I wouldn't have been in a much better state than he though, if I lived here.

On the evening of my fourth day, Thursday, I wondered if I could walk back to my motel without freezing to death completely. It was only raining lightly, but it was still frigid as hell. Buttoning up my trench coat to the neck I breathed out a few steaming clouds of breath as though to test the temperature. I figured that I could end it all that way, but I was also too lazy and tired to go through with it. Instead I walked across a bridge wrapped in a shroud of fog, headlights from the sparse traffic emerging and fading in and out like glowing ghosts.

I walked for a while and after some time, I felt like I had no control over my body. I felt like I was in a daze. Perhaps because I was numb from the cold, or perhaps because I was just numb with purposelessness. I somehow descended the icy steps of a subway station without slipping and found myself at a platform. I had the vague impression of a few other people around me, but altogether I felt quite alone, like I was floating in some shadow of the world I once knew. When the car arrived I boarded like some automated machine, sitting down at one of the dingy turquoise upholstered seats.

And then, quite abruptly, a feeling of calmness floated over me. Then again, there's always been something about riding in vehicles that's been comforting to me. The feeling of moving while you are at rest, watching the countryside, or in this case, the tunnel lights flashing by in the window... I felt a bit better. And the lights, though fluorescent like those in my client's office building, were a lovely golden color that made me feel like I was warm for once in this city.

I felt like clouds were being lifted, and then I happened to look up and notice a man sitting on one of the benches about ten feet from me. He was about middle aged or so... I'm really bad at gauging ages. There was really nothing terribly extraordinary about him at all. He was perhaps a businessman on his way home from work, accustomed to the drudgery of a long hard day. But I did feel a kind of aura about him that was calming, like the gentle vibration of the car we were riding in. And his face had an expression of dull enduring pain that I somehow related to immediately. I felt like I was looking into a mirror of a man who reflected all of the sorrow I had ever felt.

And, well... I can't really explain it well, but though our eyes met for only a brief instant and nothing more, I felt like I had told him everything about myself and my thoughts and my feelings in that one glance. As if in that one instant I had poured out all of the frustration and bad feeling I had ever experienced, which in turn evaporated then and there into the flickering fluorescent lights. And even more strangely, I felt like he had done the same for me.

Though we didn't speak or look at each other again, I felt like I had made a connection with a person for the first time in a long while. I know all of this sounds corny or cheesy, and I guess it is in retrospect. But you know how things are when you're caught up in a moment. Where it doesn't matter if things sound good in writing or to other's ears, all that matters is how you felt and how you perceived it at the time. Even I have to admit that I feel a bit silly writing about it now, but that's life, that's just how it happened.

It only lasted for a minute or too, and then, as if on cue, the car stopped at the station nearest my motel, and both he an I got up to exit. Again, no words, nothing, but I departed the car and ascended the stairs again into the wintry urban landscape. The cold drizzling had by now turned to pouring rain, but I didn't bother to run the few streets to my motel. The warmth of the moment on the subway lingered with me, and I was drenched by the time I arrived at my old gray room.

As if to make the moment last, I set about rearranging the furniture in my room to mimic my own childhood bedroom while I was growing up in my parents' house. The dresser on the south wall, the desk on the north, and the bed on the east wall, just below the window. And as I sat on the bed cross-legged the way I used to as a child, passing the time peering outside at the world through my second story window, I thought how much better the energy flowed through the room now that I had rearranged things in accordance with proper feng shui.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

The Cupid

He has long hair, which I find pretty sexy. He keeps it tied up usually, with a rubber band. I wonder if the harsh rubber hurts, and if so, if I should offer the old pony tail hair band I wear around my right wrist constantly. He is unmistakably and yet subtly handsome. The first time I was with him in a room, I barely even noticed him. And even after I did, I still wrote him off. It took a course of a few days to notice the little things that were so attractive about him. He is tall and well built, but has something feminine about his face. I can't remember if his eyes are blue, brown, or green. His hair is long, but seems dirty and kind of greasy, and yet somehow I don't find this unappealing. His voice is low, slow, slightly drawling, which I'm sure comes from his backwater hometown. He is very quiet-- never says too much, the way I do. But sometimes I try to joke with him or flirt and when he smiles, he smiles like a boy. It's really quite adorable.

I want him to kiss my neck and lick my skin, and use his voice to seduce me. I want to suck on his fingers while he feels me, slips his hands under my clothes. And I want him to take me, but sensuously, at his leisure. I fantasize we are playing 7 Minutes in Heaven and we make out in a closet while groping each other. I want him to want me. He has an incredible understated magnetism.

And at the end of the day, I go home and he is no more. When I wake up in the morning, I do not think of him first. He's just one of hundreds of Adonis's who will stir my heart and my body before dying and being reborn again and again and again.

I Love

I love how you notice and gently rub the little scratches or bruises that appear on my leg every now and then. I love how you say, "I missed you," with a sincerity and emotion that melts my heart when we haven't seen or talked to each other in a couple of days, even though we've only known each other a couple of weeks. I love how I don't even notice that I haven't gotten dressed up or put on any makeup when I'm with you, and you don't either. I love how you neatly fold your clothes, even your socks, when you change into something older just before we're about to wash the car. I love it when you say, "I like that dress," with just a hint of something naughty in your voice. I love how we knew each other when we were kids.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Nice To Meet You

I remember when you first came to our small little town here in Georgia. You moved here from Pennsylvania with your father shortly after your parents divorced. He took a job at the mechanics' and you moved into the house down by Cicada and Plum.

I can still remember how calm you were on your first day of fourth grade here, which happened to be in early June. Though you spoke, like your Georgian born and bred parents, with the slow drawl of the Dirty South, you had a distinct tincture of a Yankee's accent in your voice... very exotic to the rest of us and pure enchantment to me. I wore my prettiest dress the next day, a pale blue one with a very full skirt. I hoped to God that you would fall for me the way I had fallen for you. I had recently been having some success with my first forays in the world of the opposite sex, thus signaling the very beginning of my lifelong addiction to the chase. I had already started to develop what I might now term my "feminine prowess," that uncanny ability to read, manipulate, coax.

Of course, it was still all very innocent at the time. I've learned (much later) that men vary widely in their emotional functioning. Some boys have crushes very early on and pursue love and romance keenly. Others think very little of it, or perhaps have almost no interest in passion at all. The latter has always struck me as very sad. I just can't picture a life worth living without that thrilling beat of excitement deep in your core.

But you didn't seem to really notice me that day, just as you didn't really seem to notice anything at all. I wondered if you were in some sort of stupor at your sudden relocation into the South. Dazed like that, you probably would have done bad at school, but luckily for you, there was only a month left in the year. I was a bit disappointed when the last day came and went. I was feeling the pangs of unfulfilled attraction already. But by some stroke of luck, you became good friends with J that summer.

It wasn't taboo to hang out with the opposite gender yet, and I had become quite familiar with J over the last year. We had sat near each other in class because our last names began with letters that were consecutive in the alphabet. Strange how a mechanism for teachers' convenience can so drastically affect relationships. I was taking a walk through some neighborhood streets around 10 or 11 in the morning about two weeks into summer vacation.

Like many summer vacations, this one had been longed for during the schoolyear, but once I had no daytime obligations, I found that I didn't know what to do with myself besides search for mundane ways to entertain my mind. By chance I walked by J's house and saw you two playing with two other boys. J and the other two recognized me immediately and we talked exhuberantly. You hung back, just staring, and my heart raced.

J introduced us, and you said, "Nice to meet you," so gentlemenly. Your eyes had the slightest hint of recognition and interest. And I smiled at the idea that I had already thought of you a million times before.

A Microcosm

Who knows how many little deaths occur everyday? How many people are struggling and laughing and dying right now... I can't help but wonder how other people are feeling as I fumble to put my own life into words. And everytime I think how complex my experience of the world is, it occurs to me that I am but a microcosm among billions of others, trillions throughout history. And yet of course, I must be selfish and think of myself. And can you really blame me? Everyone is the star of their own life. And who better can you understand than yourself?

All of this is so painful. And here I thought I was a strong person. And yet now I can barely feel a thing left for me here. I just feel so ready for something new. I wish I could die and just be reborn. I wonder if we even are reborn in the future. Can you even imagine not existing? I've heard stories about the near-afterlife, which reassures me. Even if I never remember who I was, how wonderful it is to be alive. When I think of things that way, they seem a bit better.

I like to think about how many loves and wonderful things I would feel. How great it is just to stand in sunlight and feel warmth. To look at the sky and the sun and the clouds and listen to beautiful music that makes your heart soar. Perhaps I've just lost touch with all of that...

Monday, April 27, 2009

The Mermaid

The color of my childhood is nearly always blue. Sort of like a Royal Blue, but darker, not as rich, and more antiquated. It gently enfolds everything, like a warm woolen blanket that is a little bit scratchy, coloring the atmosphere of my memories. Brown is also very much apart of my past, as well as other washed out or neutral colors. I'm not sure if my past really was these colors, or if it's just the distortion of the dust that coats them my mind. But regardless, this blue permeates through my childhood. It's not at all a gloomy kind of thing... nostalgic, yes, and perhaps dreary and sleepy like a rainy day, but warm, like when you can see the white light of a cloudy day seeping through the fibers of your sheets on an early morning, but you sigh and let yourself drift off to sleep again because you know you have no obligations for the day.

I find myself seeing these colors more often as I grow older. I wonder if it's because I'm becoming more aware of the amount of time that has passed. I remember realizing how glorious it was as a child, and telling myself that I would never forget the wonderful memories and experiences I'd had. But still, it's hard to recall them all, and sometimes I find myself discovering old memories buried deep in my subconscious like an amnesiac's epiphany. And now, I find myself inexplicable drawn to those colors of old, seeking to reconstruct my past in an attempt to regain something of myself. When I go to sleep at night, I close my eyes and the darkness envelopes me. I think of that blue, a veil over my eyes, and it turns into water, an ocean.

I am a mermaid in that ocean with long hair-- I've always loved long hair-- and a magical boy comes to me in a boat everyday. I love him deeply, and he loves me too. He is completely absorbed by everything that is me. He asks me questions everyday about what I think, feel, dream, and I love his devotion and I love his beautiful heart. I want nothing more than to care for him for eternity. In the morning I wonder if I'll ever have someone like that. It doesn't matter that I am with someone at the time, whom I love or don't, this boy is someone different. I fearfully wonder if he's just a figment of my imagination that will never exist, a proverbial "dream boy." But I don't think he is. Everyone I've ever loved is in him. He is a beautiful amalgamation of them all. And so, it doesn't matter who I'm with, who I will be with, what happens ultimately. Because everyone will always be there, with me always, in him, my love, You.

You

By now, you’re probably wondering who “You” are. Are you? The truth is, I don’t really know myself, exactly. And how could I? I’m not You. Only You are. I’ve speculated that You are someone, or many even, of the ones I stayed behind for. I’m not really sure. I just know that I am here because of You. Even though I’m not entirely sure that I can identify You, at least in this life, or the next. But whoever You are, You know who You are, and I just hope that someday You’ll get to read this.

The Southern Incarnate

Here I am, a dirty little girl, sitting in the sunny dusty South, completely detached from the entire world, seeing my entire life, or lives, rather, from a perfectly objective outsider's view that would make an Indian ascetic envious. Sunlight enters the dreary living room of our gray old house, sweating in the sweltering heat of a Georgian summer. My mother serves me slices of orange and lemonade, but I just go on sitting there, staring at the old knick knacks on the shelves of our living room.
A small, dusty China doll stands, looking out across at me with beautifully painted eyes and brilliant red lips on a faded porcelain face. Her elegant robes are richly embroidered with lacquered threads on faux silk, in gaudy colors that aren't even phased by the layer of dust that coats them. She has a kind of faded glory, reminiscent of the distant foreign empire she came from, once bright and wonderful, but now only a far away memory trapped inside a cheap souvenir in a dilapidated dirty Southern home. I wonder how this China doll, no doubt a cheap gift designed especially for tourists, came from such a faraway land to my little Southern living room. She feels so out of place, and yet so representative of the slow, decaying decadent glory of the Southern empire.
The image fades, and I'm no longer in the childhood of my future life but an ambivalent adolescent. My heart pounds when I think of You. I'm sure You were in my past life. Or perhaps in my current life is a more appropriate way to put it. Maybe we've known each other for our entire series of lives. Only now do I realize it though. Because I see my future life ahead of me, by the time I am actually incarnated, my life already seems old to me, like I am following a familiar path. Only when I see You do I go blank. It feels strange. I am like a bodhisattva who has attained enlightenment, transcending worlds within her mind, understanding and being one with all of the souls in the universe, all while in the body of a young girl in a small town in Georgia. I wish I could understand it all. I see my mother, a completely different soul, perhaps one I may have known in past lives, buying the China doll as a novelty, and placing it in our home. I am born, and she is my mother, but at the same time she is simply a friend, a fellow soul on its journey to Paradise, seeing me as her little daughter, though I am really just another soul, like her, whom she cares for and fosters for the time being. I don't mean to suggest that she or I don't have any love for each other, but it is the love of kindred souls who seek to help each other, going well beyond the ephemeral and superficial relationship boundaries of “mother” and “daughter.”
I run out the front door in a flurry around noon to meet You at the record store in town that you work at. Sometimes I ride my father's bicycle, but it is so old and rickety that I only take it on the hottest of days, when seconds out in the sun can make a huge difference in your hydration levels. I prefer to walk though, and take in the air, which is hardly fresh, but at least less stifling than the air inside my old house. I meet You outside the store, where You have an armful of golden old records whose scratchy old tunes are sure to have me straining my ears to pierce the static mottling their ancient melodies. You smile as I nervously smooth my hair and wipe the sweat from the back of my neck. We drive in Your dad's old Chevy to a friends' house, where You have band practice in the garage. Your old second-hand guitars and amps impress everyone despite their ancient crude models.
The sound of your music rings out clear in the Southern afternoon. Sitting so close, on a stack of old cardboard boxes near one of the amps, I prop my elbows on my knees and my chin in my hands and gaze dreamily into the sunny yard, my eyes temporarily blinded by the contrast of the burning sunlight and the darkness of the garage. The echoing ring of noise permeates through every cell of my brain. I wonder if the millions of neurons are all vibrating with the harmonies emanating from your guitar. I close my eyes, and everything seems gray, as if I am floating in space. Again I detach myself, and I float about, supported by the density of my own thoughts, as a bead of sweat slowly rolls down my temple.

Whoever You Are, You Know Who You Are

Who are you, my love? From what far corner of the sky did you come to me? You floated into my arms on the wings of a warm summer sunset and licked my wounds clean until I felt nothing but content. But it still pains me to think of whence you came. I know I knew you, at some point... but who? Who are you? A dear friend, an old lover, a fleeting acquaintance... or perhaps an amalgamation of all the loves and beauties I've ever experienced in my lives? Perhaps you are just that-- an Adonis, an angel, crafted from the many souls who have touched me and shaped my own, crafted just for me by the hands of God. I wish I knew... I want to cry into your arms and tell you how thankful I am.

You have no idea, though. You just sit there cradling me on the front porch of your run-down Southern home, in our equally run-down Southern town, watching the stars shyly lift their shining heads as the sun dips below the horizon. The trees make a silhouette that casts us in gray shadow. Tears stream down my face but you are completely unaware of the state I'm in.

The Baptismal

I was baptized in a swimming pool in the backyard of a backwater hick town neighborhood home on a summer afternoon. The church congregation my parents belonged to had been organizing the event for weeks, a way to mass-baptize all the kids at once to rid them early on of any sin that may come their way, and instill in them a sense of duty towards their religion. I stood in a long line of dirty children with barbeque sauce stained mouths and fingers in an old oversized t-shirt, and looked up to the sky and wondered if there was a God, and whether or not I truly was delivering myself into his powerful grasp forever by submerging myself in a kidney shaped skyblue painted concrete hole of chlorinated water.

The line slowly dwindled, and my time came. I stepped down into the pool—uncannily cold and uninviting given the situation and environment. As my feet touched the pool bottom, I slowly turned to face the congregation that stood before me watching. If I decided to suddenly refuse, everyone would be there. Not that it had been my decision in the first place. I was much too young for my opinion or desire to ever be considered. Then again, even I didn't know what I thought, let alone wanted. The preacher was reciting a scripture but he was not really talking to me so much as to everyone else, to God. Even as he suddenly turned to address me, he still was not talking to me. But I heard his words anyways, asking if I accepted God.

Could I have really said no? It wasn’t that I didn’t want to. But it didn’t feel right. The preacher pinched my nose hard and all I saw were his large nose with horn-rimmed glasses resting on the bridge as dirty sea green pool water engulfed me. All I could think about was the filthy miasma consisting of the grime that covered the bodies of the children who had been baptized before me dispersing and polluting the water that I now stood dripping in.

The potluck reception resumed afterwards—old stained thrift store Tupperware filled with greasy half cold picnic foods that would leave a caked crust that not even scalding hot water could soak off completely. The delicate skins of old wrinkled corn kernels were stuck between the teeth of the parishioners, cheap beer on their breath. I put my half eaten corn dog down onto the Dixie paper plate and sank to the ground and melted into the concrete dappled with crushed June Bugs.

Other People's Heads

Sometimes I wonder what you think. I wonder what a lot of people think. What they feel and how they see things. I want to get inside of their heads. I worry that I'm the only one who thinks this way... the only one who reads into these things. I worry too much about everything, I suppose. My super ego is off da hook.

I saw a man at this Catholic cemetery on my way home from work one afternoon. The sunlight was very orange, and I was stopped at a red right. I don't know how or by what power it was that compelled me, but I witnessed this man at the cemetery through the wrought iron gates, praying beside a grave. It felt so intimate, such a quiet moment; I turned off my stereo so as not to disturb the peace of the moment. I wonder if anyone else was privy to this moment, and how many people in the world ever witness something like that, something solemn and foreign, yet so familiar to them. I won't say I felt some sort of connection to this man or anything, but I did feel connected at the moment, as if we had had some kind of interaction. I was filled with a sense of awe for a few moments.

I've recently discovered that falling in love is a hobby of mine. I've always known that I felt deeply for other people... not in some lame humanitarian way, more like... I feel like I would want to know everyone, in at least some way. Love, hate, pain, fondness... something. And I regret not having the time to know everyone. There's just something fascinating about learning and loving a person. That's why I love You so much, now. You are all of that, everything that I love about life.

Pure Hell

Thumbing through the finest, cheapest phone line cords at Staples, a glimpse of a red blur from the tail of my eye snapped me out of the trance-like daze I had been in. The blur had merely been the once vibrant crimson shirt of a Staples employee, faded from being worn for too many mind-numbing hours. Shuffling down the aisle, I moved out into the open, away from the solitude of the arcaic phone accessories, and towards the brightly colored children's stationary and office supplies. I attempted to amuse myself with the cute pencil boxes and marker sets with matching scissors and glue sticks, but I couldn't even find the heart to think of a lame excuse to buy anything else.

I told myself that if an employee asks me if I am looking for anything, I will reply no, I'm just milling about, trying to waste as much time as possible so that I won't have to remember living through it. Slowly, I made my way to the front counter. A cashier and someone whom I took to be a manager were standing there, and they suddenly smiled at me in a way that seemed to suggest they were very nervous of being caught not doing so. They asked if I was alright, and I was taken aback, until two seconds later, I realized they couldn't possibly be referring to my mental health.

They directed me to the only open register, where an older Latina woman proceeded to check me out. I barely remembered the encounter, save for a few small details, such as the total of my purchase, $8.07, and having to press firmly on the touch pad in order to input my PIN. I exited, and again, the blinding sunlight greeted my eyes the way a horrid smell or unpleasant sensation or any other stimulus might attack your senses. It was hot, but I refused to take off my sweater, knowing full well that the office that loomed ahead of me shining would render me freezing within minutes.

I longed to go to my car for lunch, but today it consisted of a plate of donuts and a bagel that I had stolen from the lunch room, and the prospect of receiving suspicious and disdainful looks from the receptionists was not desirable to me at all. I shared the elevator with a casually dressed Latino-looking man until the 4th floor. After retrieving my bottle of Arizona Green Iced Tea with Ginseng and Honey, the only thing that was still good and pure left in the world, I returned to my office, not at all looking forward to the interview that I found out I was to conduct in less than half an hour.

Glancing at the clock, which was ten minutes behind, I took a bite of a stale donut and wondered how my life ended up on this depraving track.

The First Day of Summer

Oh, where to begin, where to begin? It was a balmy summer night, one that had followed an exceedingly hot day. Not that the days before this one weren't exceedingly hot, but this day was epic. It was the first day of Summer, and it wasn't enough that the season had already began to show about a week before; today was scorchingly hot, as if to further rub into our faces that the bad could always get worse. This was the day I discovered the godsend of a damp washcloth. Despite much swimming done earlier that day, I sweltered and melted in the stifling heat. Any coolness was mild and disappointingly brief. The night, though cooler, was barely less relentless. A small circle of friends convened, and night swimming was agreed to be in order. I had to scramble home to fetch my bathing suit again.

For a time, things were okay as the Junebug infested pool water cooled our burning skins and left us speechless as we floated like life buoys waiting for liquor to arrive. I floated alone, out of the loop of boring conversation about topics and people I didn't know about, a billion different thoughts flowing into and occupying my mind. I began to quickly see the lack of prospects for the night. Everyone else was content to babble on about some mindless subject, Corona Lite in hand, but I couldn't have been farther away from it all. The kind of depression you contract from an initially exciting-sounding night gone flat all too quickly is definitely one of the worst. Eventually the pool lost its interest, and the amount of people leaving the water correlated with the amount of liquor consumed. I sat on the edge of the pool wrapped in a towel like an Indian squaw, dipping my feet into the lukewarm water. Was it my imagination, or was there something watching me?

There was indeed. I was embarassed and anxious. It felt like nothing would ever make things right again. Sitting apart on a dusty old lawnchair, he left presently. He invited me to leave with him, slightly coyly, but I remained resolute. But the night dragged on depressingly. I couldn't stand watching everyone drone on and on, as thought their lives were so mundane and devoid of purpose. I looked up into the night and wondered where the love of my life was.

He text messaged me and I crept out of the house silently. We met down the street on some old steps. How I loved those steps! They looked out onto the cul-de-sac with a beautiful skyline consisting of old ratty houses and telephone lines criss-crossed with palm trees. It was awkward at first, but we managed to talk at last. He mentioned the new friends he had made, the open-mic nights, the weird indie-goth kids who wouldn't drink beer, but instead nurse a personal bottle of wine throughout the night. How he was going to a friend's tomorrow to learn how to record on a 4-track. Eventually the topic shifted to philosophy, and I yawned inwardly at his valiant but rather pretentious pursuit of lofty concepts. Ugh, how I hated those self righteous soliloquies, as if he were the only one in the world who could think beyond anyone else, and that he was a martyr for it. Only Schopenhauer's paradoxical claim that anyone who reads anything and takes it for fact without interpreting and developing their own ideas is a thief piqued my interest near the end.

Faint strains of chords being strummed on an acoustic guitar could be heard. Above, a street lamp tangled with a telephone pole bathed everything in a faded orange glow when it wasn't flickering. My ass hurt from sitting on the concrete steps dappled with dirt and mottled with indentations like the pocked skin of a middle aged man who survived an adolescence full of acne. The hardness reminded me of the decrepit metal folding chair I was using at my desk at my parent's house for the summer, and that I had been using for the past week since my return home. We turned our heads up the street in the direction of the main thoroughfair of our little town when the headlights of cars would flash into the far right tails of our eyes.

I asked about his future. He smiled weakly and outlined his plans for school and work. I was only half listening-- I'm not sure if I had asked out of curiousity or politeness. Neither of us could beat around the bush. He asked about the other. And I told him about the other. But I didn't have much to say that I felt would be relevant outside of my life 94 miles north, similar to the way Kantian paradigms can never be compared to each other even if they may contain many of the same components as another.

I wanted to come home and write this all down, so we bid good night to each other, and I walked back up the street, into the orange spotlight of the street lamp, and then into the dark abyss that shrouded the northern part of the road. I stopped in at my friend's house to grab my things-- still, was there something watching? Again, probably my over active imagination. Or was it a secret regret and sorrow that I sensed, flashing ever so briefly before relapsing again into the banal banter of the crowd on that balmy summer night?

No Good Can Come of This

I derive a surprising amount of inspiration from my cynicism. This is what you get when you put a white-trash father from a ghetto hick town with a trilingual transplanted South African born Chinese mother together in a too slowly legitimizing backwater town. I listen to music in my room to bask in the daze of my history, the air so thick and humid that when you move, it feels as though your limbs are cutting through something tangible. My room is baking like a sauna because my parents are too cheap to use the thousand dollar air conditioning that we paid so dearly for years ago. Then again, prices for everything have increased, and who am I to battle peak hours?

I am not looking forward to the lunch in my honor that I am about to go to. Everyone is celebrating my graduation, but never have I been ripped so violently from my safe womb of existence, save for my birth, of course. I've experienced more within the past few weeks than I have within the past few years. Why do people celebrate this sudden abandonment of your entire world for one that seems so devoid of purpose and aim? And why the hell didn't anyone think to tell me about it? You get this kind of shit when you're about to go into high school, plenty of support and preparation for the "big school," but they really throw you out into the water when it comes time to end your 17 years of institionalized education.

And now I'm going to sit with a bunch of strangers and treat them to lunch so they can congratulate me on my great achievement, which consisted mostly of me just showing up to certain places at certain times and maybe having to write a bit. Perhaps it's just because my prefrontal cortex hasn't completely matured yet in spite of my age, but even still, with such a strange existence, how do my parents expect me to relate to my relatives? Relative is a strange word... it means close to something, and yet not the same. Most people would take the positive of it, I think, connoting closeness, though. I guess there's a pessimistic and an optimistic side to the word. I don't feel a relation to nearly anyone I meet. Perhaps I don't want to.

Coming Back Again

Just when I think I'm happy, memories of everything I left behind me come back. A letter, or a once inspiring thought that suddenly strikes me as being very selfish of myself turns everything sour. It pollutes the palette for life the way a partially rotted fruit contaminates the rest of the batch. Who am i to think that I can just turn away from everything I've ever known, and leave it for something better? Can anyone truly do that? I never ever thought I'd become one of those people who ends up leaving their home, family, and friends to start over completely, isolating anything and everything that reminds them of the past into a neatly quarantined corner of their brain to just sit, like a convict stuck in a dank prison cell while the rest of our pristine society goes on about their day, content to ignore them, disturbed when reminded of their existence.

I often wonder how I got here. I can trace the steps that lead here pretty far back. it's amazing to think how different my life could have been. There were several turning points. Some of them make perfect sense, were gradual and the result seems inevitable. Some are sudden, irrational changes of mind. But how could I even think that I could abandon everything, my roots, my relationships, just because I tired of them, wanted something else? I'd come to think of this new place as my home, and it's true, I feel more at home here than I ever did at my old house, in my familiar room, in my parents' arms. But am I still, deep down, the little girl who cried at the thought of having to one day move away from her family? Do I even have a family anymore?

I'm afraid to go back home and see all of the old haunted places I used to go to. Sometimes the memories are warm and soft, but sometimes they leave me chilled, a mixture of reupulsion and regret that I could ever have been the person that I was. Have I really changed that much? I sometimes wish I could have stayed happy there, but I wonder, would I really have been much better off there? From this perspective, it seems awfully bleak and depressing. And in the end, I think I am glad that I left. There was just too much pain and bad feeling there to be mended. Too many relationships gone sour. Even I felt sour and depleted of any warmth there, too. And I hated it! I hated feeling contempt for others and I hated myself for being contemptible in turn. I didn't want to be this person, and so I left. I guess I have lost the mutability I once had when I was in school. Even then, though, it was hard. I would stressfully have to change my entire lifestyle every few months, and it became harder to do every time. And when the time came for me to graduate, the time came when I had to choose... and I chose to leave.