dear Journal Companion,
I'm not going to tell my burn story today, Ima telling this one instead.
I had foolishly told my burn story to my foster sister. We were pretty good friends by then.
I thought it would be okay to trust her with it. Her reaction surprised me.
She goes over to the kitchen cabinet and pulls out a box of matches. The long kind, with the red striped box.
She lights it and hold it out to me menacingly. "Afraid of fire?" I'm going to burn you." she says.
I ran. She runs. A lap around the first floor. Still after me
I stumble upstairs, she's right behind me. With the match. Giggling with glee and anticipation.
"Not funny, not funny, Quit it! Quit it! " I beg.
I start up to the third floor, getting desperate then suddenly I stop. I whirl around.
And blow that match out!
Her face crumbles and falls.
Blog Manifesto
Blog Manifesto
This blog is dedicated, as the title would suggest, to the qualities of being young. We are young writers. We are playful and sensitive, fluid and changing. We are unashamed with our art. We wonder at the world, puzzle over the meanings of things and twirl in delight at images and ideas that float by, grabbing at them as they pass. We are curious and constantly inquiring and prying concepts open and taking assumptions apart. We are on the ground, close to the earth. We have bare feet and wiggle our toes into nature. We carry our blankies still and wrap up cozy and comfy with each other and tell ghost stories and shiver at creepy things. We laugh and we cry and we take a lot of naps, drained from our outings and exertions.
We write as gifts to each other, tying them up in ribbon and leaving them around for each other to find, hiding and waiting for the person to wake up and read. Surprise! We weave our stories together to create a bond. One writes, then the other. then another again. We have a shared reality that we have crafted, bit by piece by patch, by string. We write simple, honest authentic things, with our unique voices. You can tell each one of us from the other, without knowing who wrote what. Our voices are clear and gentle and original. We whisper and our personalities roar! Like children, our feelings are strong, our passion for what we write shakes us. We are moved and sometimes left breathless, by our own words or the words of each other. We cannonball into each others spaces. We fall backward into each others writing, like into a pile of leaves or a soft bed. We gobble and grin and ask for more. (footnote kudos to JC)
Then we go to bed, wake up to a new day and do it all over again!
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
He and I
His knee buckles out..
dont touch me
He says
I CAN DO IT
He trips up the steps..
dont help him
she says
He needs to learn to do it himself
can we get a picture of just him?
no
she says
you WILL include my other son
two matching toe heads
exuberant
wisps of hair flying unkempt
breathless
He props his leg on the handlebars
and ZOOM
Hes off
and Im running far behind
I dont have it
that picture
it is forever lost in a moldy pile
in some god forsaken dump out in BFE
its engraved in my mind
He is hopping across the high dive
after He proves to the life guards
He could swim two laps.. no stopping
He could climb the ladder.. no hesitation
hoards of friends
always His
I could sing and dance and act a fool
no one cares
its ok
Im smart
f*ck.. so is He
its ok
Im talented
f*ck.. so is He
there is nothing so special about me
He is pale in a hospital bed
pins in his stump
excruciating pain every quarter turn
pretending to be.. unphased
found beaten and knocked out
car door ajar
in the walmart parking lot
no explanation
__________________________________________________________________
peel back another layer
rip it back hard
I have said I celebrate humanity in all its beauty and all its ugliness
today I just cant tell the difference.
its all a blur
and I sit in this pile of unshed tears
stoic
I sit looking at this life I have built
all that is wonderful
and I cant even enjoy it
its mine but I dont own it
my knees buckle..
dont touch me
I say
I CAN DO IT
there is no one to rescue me
Rescue me.
Oh shit this is supposed to be a poem LMAO
Rescue me, please.
Whisk me away.
take me as your own.
Fold me in your arms.
Mmm, I feel safe and secure next to your heart.
==============================================================
When I was little, I got to go to the store 'in town' with my mom. That meant seeing people and toys and fancy magic doors that opened when you walked up to them. It also made me nervous, so I would twist the hem of my dress and generally act like I had never seen anything in my life, which was usually true.
One day this nice lady walked by me in a store and I left my mom's side and followed her. I stood behind her in line and tried to get up the courage to take her gloved white hand in mine. I was hoping that she would take me home and let me be her little girl. I tried to go out the front door with her but was stopped at the threshold and scolded. I dreamt about her that night. She had put me in a quilted bed all my own, and fed me little sandwiches and tiny finger cakes in the morning and brushed my hair and told me I was pretty..
Reality was different. In third grade, my teacher asked me to ask my mom if she would allow me to stay over night at her house. If things went well, she would ask my mother and I to come live with them, to give my mother 'opportunities' and perhaps to 'rescue me' though it wasn't said like that. It was said tactful and carefully so my grandfather would not be angered.
It was a pretty big deal to stay with teacher. I had to lug a suitcase to school, with night gown in it and what nots that my family deemed necessary for this unheard of new fangled thing of sleeping at someone elses house.
I didn't have the heart to tell her that my mom was the one I needed rescuing from. Any way that plan floundered; a story for another time. But the seed was planted at an early age. I did not have to live this way, someone thought I was in danger. I was not doomed forever.
I got up the gumption when I was fifteen and rescued myself. I maneuvered into a foster home by simply not taking no for an answer.
It was a start.
September 1954
A twenty year old mother sat on the side of the bed in her one room living space, nursing her four month old daughter and watched her three year old whirr and bang around around in ceaseless activity and play.
Her much older husband was off arranging for them to move to a larger place. He had found one down on the river, in the flood plain, rented cheaply in the winter time from the summer folk. He had been gone most of the morning and she suspected he has stopped off to get a drink and not rush back home to the chaos and his responsibilities.
"Oh god, this child is slow," she thought. "I lose half an hour every time she is hungry." Sheila couldn't afford to sit for long, her daughter Rosie kept her very busy, and she still had most of the packing ahead of her. As she nursed, she drifted off to sleep. She was so very tired and had not slept well the night before. She woke up with a start. The door slammed shut as her daughter climbed up and into the small shack after sneaking out doors to play while her attention was on her new baby.
"Here Mama, Here! Jewie is hungry too."
Rosie had climbed on the bed in her muddy shoes, her very dirty sock monkey's big red lips thrust out to get a drink from Mama's breast.
"Get off, get off, get off, "she wailed, as the child pushed at the baby's head and left a brown hand print behind.
"What did you get into?" the child had taken her woobie head first through the silt and river slime. She had drug sand and weeds and seed stickers onto their white chenille bedspread. A few wet spots and a puddle at her feet told her mother that Rosie had not stayed in the yard, or even in the graveled area next door.
The baby began to cry as Sheila pulled her off of her nipple and dropped her into the chest of drawers placed on a chair that served as a bassinet.
This was all too much for her, she fought back the impulse to cry. Grabbing a sodden rag, she started to scrub her little firecracker and peel off her drenched coveralls. Too wet to go into the hamper, and no where to hang it up inside, she carried the clothes off to the porch to hang on a rail. She kept a firm hand on Rosie, not wanting her to get out of her sight till she got her dressed.
It was a cold day and the pot bellied stove glowed a comforting warmth, but outside it was raw and the wind blew up from the river and whistled into the chinks of the walls. No place to raise one baby, never mind two.
"Look at your shoes." She pulled the damp things off and stuck them by the stove to dry out.
"Look at your monkey. I can't clean this thing right now. He's filthy! He's going to have to wait till Sissy is fed." And she pried precious monkey out of Rosie's hand and grabbed a foot stool and put it up above the sink on the nail coming out of the roof rafter.
Sheila then washed her hands as best she could in the cold water basin, brushed the bed off as best she could with the whisk broom and picked up her baby to resume the feeding.
"YOU, stay inside and be quiet.!" She latched the high hook on the front door after taking a look outside to see if John had somehow made it home.
Sheila crawled back into the bed, the only free spot to sit in the little room and watched Rosie with one eye as Sissy latched on gratefully and began her slow sucking ordeal, taking big gulps as if it had been hours instead of five very busy minutes since her last drink.
Rosie sat on the little green stool that her grandpa had made for her. It was exactly her size. She looked at Mommy, she looked at her Monkey, she looked at the awful noisy monkey at her mom's breast.
"I want Jewie, Mama."
"Not right now."
"I can wash him Mama."
"Not right now."
Rosie screwed up her face, her light curls wet with effort and fought back the tears. Sheila knew that face, she knew her little daughter, her wild thing offspring that she didn't know how to handle, couldn't keep up with, couldn't keep quiet enough or busy enough in a day. She considered carrying water from the spring, heating it up on the stove and attempting to soap up and wash Jewie, but it was such a disgusting rag of a doll. And around the new baby. Rosie had a habit of putting the doll into the bassinet for the baby to have. That had to stop.
"I think Jewie is too dirty to wash."
"Wut?"
"Too dirty to wash. You shouldn't have taken him outside. YOU shouldn't have gone outside. You could have drowned. you could have been stolen. You could have gotten lost."
"Would not!" And Rosie kicked the stool and scuffed her bare feet in her passion.
"Yes you could have!" and suddenly Sheila was overcome with guilt and fear and pink eared anger at the house being so close to the river, the disobedient willful daughter who ran every chance she got, ruined all her clothes, drug back disease and filth. It was all just too much, too much for such a young girl alone to handle.
Sheila broke. She got up and fetched down the monkey holding it by one corner of a foot, baby still at her breast.
"Monkey is too dirty to clean. It has to go.," She took it over to the trash can.
"NO Mama NO". Rosie jumped up to grab him.
Mama did a terrible thing then. She grabbed a potholder and pitched Monkey into the pot bellied stove.
"NO MAMMA NOOOOOOO!!! NO!!!"
Mama looked at her daughter. "Maybe next time you will stay put. Maybe next time you won't sneak out. Maybe next time you won't come home looking like a little nigger child.!"
Sheila turned away as her daughter shrieked, but she wasn't prepared for the high pitched screams that followed.
Rosie had opened the stove with her bare hands and burnt her fingers on the door. She had reached in and drug the monkey's charred body out onto the floor. She had soot and ashes everywhere. and she screamed and sobbed from the burns and the grief.
The baby wailed.
Sheila felt sick with horror and dismay. What will John say? He will blame me for this. She had been exhausted before. Now she was beyond it.
Rosie's hands were blistering. She wrapped them in a wet wash cloth and sat her on her stool. Don't move. she said. Rosie was beyond hearing her. She was convulsing and gulping in her sorrow.
She grabbed the stove shovel and the ash bucket and emptied the ashes into them, cleaning out the stove of any signs of a recent fire. She scooped up the remains of Monkey and dumped them in it too, His red fez cap was still recognizable. She took the ashes and coals and dumped them around back behind a bush.
She went and carried a bit of water in to scrub the floor where the ashes had spilled.
Rosie's stool was empty.
Another set of screams pierced the encampment. Rosie had climbed on the ash pile and burnt her feet on hot coals rescuing what was left of her doll.
When John got home, Rosie was bandaged, both feet and both hands bound up in gauze sitting on the bed, very quiet.
and no one was talking.
copyright all rights reserved
Her much older husband was off arranging for them to move to a larger place. He had found one down on the river, in the flood plain, rented cheaply in the winter time from the summer folk. He had been gone most of the morning and she suspected he has stopped off to get a drink and not rush back home to the chaos and his responsibilities.
"Oh god, this child is slow," she thought. "I lose half an hour every time she is hungry." Sheila couldn't afford to sit for long, her daughter Rosie kept her very busy, and she still had most of the packing ahead of her. As she nursed, she drifted off to sleep. She was so very tired and had not slept well the night before. She woke up with a start. The door slammed shut as her daughter climbed up and into the small shack after sneaking out doors to play while her attention was on her new baby.
"Here Mama, Here! Jewie is hungry too."
Rosie had climbed on the bed in her muddy shoes, her very dirty sock monkey's big red lips thrust out to get a drink from Mama's breast.
"Get off, get off, get off, "she wailed, as the child pushed at the baby's head and left a brown hand print behind.
"What did you get into?" the child had taken her woobie head first through the silt and river slime. She had drug sand and weeds and seed stickers onto their white chenille bedspread. A few wet spots and a puddle at her feet told her mother that Rosie had not stayed in the yard, or even in the graveled area next door.
The baby began to cry as Sheila pulled her off of her nipple and dropped her into the chest of drawers placed on a chair that served as a bassinet.
This was all too much for her, she fought back the impulse to cry. Grabbing a sodden rag, she started to scrub her little firecracker and peel off her drenched coveralls. Too wet to go into the hamper, and no where to hang it up inside, she carried the clothes off to the porch to hang on a rail. She kept a firm hand on Rosie, not wanting her to get out of her sight till she got her dressed.
It was a cold day and the pot bellied stove glowed a comforting warmth, but outside it was raw and the wind blew up from the river and whistled into the chinks of the walls. No place to raise one baby, never mind two.
"Look at your shoes." She pulled the damp things off and stuck them by the stove to dry out.
"Look at your monkey. I can't clean this thing right now. He's filthy! He's going to have to wait till Sissy is fed." And she pried precious monkey out of Rosie's hand and grabbed a foot stool and put it up above the sink on the nail coming out of the roof rafter.
Sheila then washed her hands as best she could in the cold water basin, brushed the bed off as best she could with the whisk broom and picked up her baby to resume the feeding.
"YOU, stay inside and be quiet.!" She latched the high hook on the front door after taking a look outside to see if John had somehow made it home.
Sheila crawled back into the bed, the only free spot to sit in the little room and watched Rosie with one eye as Sissy latched on gratefully and began her slow sucking ordeal, taking big gulps as if it had been hours instead of five very busy minutes since her last drink.
Rosie sat on the little green stool that her grandpa had made for her. It was exactly her size. She looked at Mommy, she looked at her Monkey, she looked at the awful noisy monkey at her mom's breast.
"I want Jewie, Mama."
"Not right now."
"I can wash him Mama."
"Not right now."
Rosie screwed up her face, her light curls wet with effort and fought back the tears. Sheila knew that face, she knew her little daughter, her wild thing offspring that she didn't know how to handle, couldn't keep up with, couldn't keep quiet enough or busy enough in a day. She considered carrying water from the spring, heating it up on the stove and attempting to soap up and wash Jewie, but it was such a disgusting rag of a doll. And around the new baby. Rosie had a habit of putting the doll into the bassinet for the baby to have. That had to stop.
"I think Jewie is too dirty to wash."
"Wut?"
"Too dirty to wash. You shouldn't have taken him outside. YOU shouldn't have gone outside. You could have drowned. you could have been stolen. You could have gotten lost."
"Would not!" And Rosie kicked the stool and scuffed her bare feet in her passion.
"Yes you could have!" and suddenly Sheila was overcome with guilt and fear and pink eared anger at the house being so close to the river, the disobedient willful daughter who ran every chance she got, ruined all her clothes, drug back disease and filth. It was all just too much, too much for such a young girl alone to handle.
Sheila broke. She got up and fetched down the monkey holding it by one corner of a foot, baby still at her breast.
"Monkey is too dirty to clean. It has to go.," She took it over to the trash can.
"NO Mama NO". Rosie jumped up to grab him.
Mama did a terrible thing then. She grabbed a potholder and pitched Monkey into the pot bellied stove.
"NO MAMMA NOOOOOOO!!! NO!!!"
Mama looked at her daughter. "Maybe next time you will stay put. Maybe next time you won't sneak out. Maybe next time you won't come home looking like a little nigger child.!"
Sheila turned away as her daughter shrieked, but she wasn't prepared for the high pitched screams that followed.
Rosie had opened the stove with her bare hands and burnt her fingers on the door. She had reached in and drug the monkey's charred body out onto the floor. She had soot and ashes everywhere. and she screamed and sobbed from the burns and the grief.
The baby wailed.
Sheila felt sick with horror and dismay. What will John say? He will blame me for this. She had been exhausted before. Now she was beyond it.
Rosie's hands were blistering. She wrapped them in a wet wash cloth and sat her on her stool. Don't move. she said. Rosie was beyond hearing her. She was convulsing and gulping in her sorrow.
She grabbed the stove shovel and the ash bucket and emptied the ashes into them, cleaning out the stove of any signs of a recent fire. She scooped up the remains of Monkey and dumped them in it too, His red fez cap was still recognizable. She took the ashes and coals and dumped them around back behind a bush.
She went and carried a bit of water in to scrub the floor where the ashes had spilled.
Rosie's stool was empty.
Another set of screams pierced the encampment. Rosie had climbed on the ash pile and burnt her feet on hot coals rescuing what was left of her doll.
When John got home, Rosie was bandaged, both feet and both hands bound up in gauze sitting on the bed, very quiet.
and no one was talking.
copyright all rights reserved
Monday, January 30, 2012
take my hand
no woobies for me. didnt need em. my comfort was far more compact and concealable.
i was a thumbsucker. mhm. an ear tugging thumbsuckin' cuddler. grins
right now.. i dont really want to write. i want to be the next room over giving moral support. giving a woobie to my journal companion.. who could use one right now as she writes..... her pain........
what is a woobie.. a thing of comfort. a cherished item.
as adults.. we outgrow thumbs and woobies.. or so we like to tell ourselves.
we just replace them with different things.
food.
fancy cars.
snazzy clothes.
women... or men.
we seek comfort in a world that is often cold and inexplicably cruel. we seek solace from the dark.
all this week.. you writing alongside me, has been my woobie. you holding my hand as i stick my timid neck out, again and again.. your friendship and kind words.. bolstering me.
right now.. i wish i could do the same for you, my friend.
though, i know you are resilient and strong..
im ready and waiting, with a warm hug and a box of tissues..
i was a thumbsucker. mhm. an ear tugging thumbsuckin' cuddler. grins
right now.. i dont really want to write. i want to be the next room over giving moral support. giving a woobie to my journal companion.. who could use one right now as she writes..... her pain........
what is a woobie.. a thing of comfort. a cherished item.
as adults.. we outgrow thumbs and woobies.. or so we like to tell ourselves.
we just replace them with different things.
food.
fancy cars.
snazzy clothes.
women... or men.
we seek comfort in a world that is often cold and inexplicably cruel. we seek solace from the dark.
all this week.. you writing alongside me, has been my woobie. you holding my hand as i stick my timid neck out, again and again.. your friendship and kind words.. bolstering me.
right now.. i wish i could do the same for you, my friend.
though, i know you are resilient and strong..
im ready and waiting, with a warm hug and a box of tissues..
Woobies wobble but they don't fall down.
I greeted each foster child that came into my care with a soft new teddy bear, and they could choose a hand crocheted 'blankie' from a pile to add to their bed. Even the teens were given a woobie to love on, talk to and cherish.
I know that the dark scary first few nights in a foster home are made easier with comfort items. Those poor children are often removed without any of their possessions. It's as if a great fire had come and burnt their lives away. I can only imagine what it can be like to lose everything familiar in a blink of an eye.
A child asserts her independence from her parents by attaching herself to a favorite doll, a blanket, in some cases a binkie. They boost our souls. When we have our item in hand, all is right and we are safe.
My son had a special quilt that I had sewn and a matching clutch ball of the same calico pieces. It was a bright and sunny starburst done is yellows, reds, whites and blues in the joining pieces. We still have it, put away for his children to use.
I fashioned Soft Sock monkeys for children to have, the type with the big red lips and the long tail, made from workman's red heel socks. I made monkeys with costumes and accessories and branched out into dogs with floppy ears and elephants with long trunks and wobbly back legs and teeny tiny baby animals made from sock scraps, small enough for a young infant to hold.
I did this to honor a feisty little girl who had lost her funny little monkey in a fire a long time ago, and who had risked life and limb to try to save it from burning. She was such a brave little thing and so fierce and strong of spirit. Every doll I made I tried to fashion a bit of her spirit into it. To give children something to hold on and to start to heal.
I know that the dark scary first few nights in a foster home are made easier with comfort items. Those poor children are often removed without any of their possessions. It's as if a great fire had come and burnt their lives away. I can only imagine what it can be like to lose everything familiar in a blink of an eye.
A child asserts her independence from her parents by attaching herself to a favorite doll, a blanket, in some cases a binkie. They boost our souls. When we have our item in hand, all is right and we are safe.
My son had a special quilt that I had sewn and a matching clutch ball of the same calico pieces. It was a bright and sunny starburst done is yellows, reds, whites and blues in the joining pieces. We still have it, put away for his children to use.
I fashioned Soft Sock monkeys for children to have, the type with the big red lips and the long tail, made from workman's red heel socks. I made monkeys with costumes and accessories and branched out into dogs with floppy ears and elephants with long trunks and wobbly back legs and teeny tiny baby animals made from sock scraps, small enough for a young infant to hold.
I did this to honor a feisty little girl who had lost her funny little monkey in a fire a long time ago, and who had risked life and limb to try to save it from burning. She was such a brave little thing and so fierce and strong of spirit. Every doll I made I tried to fashion a bit of her spirit into it. To give children something to hold on and to start to heal.
Halloween
On Halloween, for three years running, during the tween years, I gave my son over to my friends' loving care and he and his friends all went off, at a fast run, with the parents following in a slow moving van. A gang of black kids in a mostly white neighborhood. My son was the fastest, and the most determined, I was told. He broke the "Use the Sidewalk" rule and leaped from lawn to lawn. They were all dark skinned children and I tried to get as much reflective tape and bright light colors as I could manage onto his costumes.
What I did, every Halloween that they were out, was go have a standing date with my buddy, Anne. She was the secretary of our cub scout troop and I was her assistant. She and I would take our chairs outside, and sit and relax and hand out candies. and talk. Every year we would spend the night gabbing. Oh we talked a lot anyway, but the night time air made it special to me and to her. We treasured it.
She had a special needs son too and thought I was a saint. She was a good Catholic girl who had married a shy very bright engineer, who was quirky and a cub scout leader as well. We had met in gymnastic class where her awkward timid 4 year old who lacked comfort and confidence in his body followed my 5 year old dynamo around. One was learning to touch his toes, while the other one did front flips into the ball pit.
I had hugged her, folded her into my arms on the street, the day that she got the diagnosis that her son was Aspergers, and she had burst into tears about it. She had come and sat with my son the day he threatened to kill himself if I left the house to go to an School Meeting about him.
Halloween was our peaceful time, where the scariest thing we thought about was the little ghost in front of us wanting a candy treat.
What I did, every Halloween that they were out, was go have a standing date with my buddy, Anne. She was the secretary of our cub scout troop and I was her assistant. She and I would take our chairs outside, and sit and relax and hand out candies. and talk. Every year we would spend the night gabbing. Oh we talked a lot anyway, but the night time air made it special to me and to her. We treasured it.
She had a special needs son too and thought I was a saint. She was a good Catholic girl who had married a shy very bright engineer, who was quirky and a cub scout leader as well. We had met in gymnastic class where her awkward timid 4 year old who lacked comfort and confidence in his body followed my 5 year old dynamo around. One was learning to touch his toes, while the other one did front flips into the ball pit.
I had hugged her, folded her into my arms on the street, the day that she got the diagnosis that her son was Aspergers, and she had burst into tears about it. She had come and sat with my son the day he threatened to kill himself if I left the house to go to an School Meeting about him.
Halloween was our peaceful time, where the scariest thing we thought about was the little ghost in front of us wanting a candy treat.
halloween
my ma loved halloween.
was her favorite holiday.
she decorated and bought candy and little toys and trinkets and dressed up
we had a lot of kids come into our neighborhood to trick or treat
they came in droves.. hundreds
we would put my brother's old wooden legs out front.. buried and sticking up out of the ground next to fake gravestones..
my ma and sister would set up the pup tent on the front porch
hang colorful scarves inside
my sister would dress as a gypsy and hand out fortunes (which she handmade.. even yellowed the paper and burnt the edges) with the candy and stuff
when we were all out of the house
my ma would make up special bags of candy and gifts for the neighbor kids
now i carry on the tradition.. here 600 miles from the little town i grew up in
i buy a buttload of candy.. because this neighborhood gets hit hard
i decorate.. though i have no wooden legs to strew about..
i am usually a zombie with nasty teeth..
i moan and grr at the kids.. they scream and giggle..
sometimes i tell them to remember to brush their teeth.
last year.. i even followed a group of rowdy kids down the street a little ways.. dragging my leg behind me.. just to see what would happen. they freaked! that was fun
as much fun as i have with it
halloween is bittersweet
i miss her
was her favorite holiday.
she decorated and bought candy and little toys and trinkets and dressed up
we had a lot of kids come into our neighborhood to trick or treat
they came in droves.. hundreds
we would put my brother's old wooden legs out front.. buried and sticking up out of the ground next to fake gravestones..
my ma and sister would set up the pup tent on the front porch
hang colorful scarves inside
my sister would dress as a gypsy and hand out fortunes (which she handmade.. even yellowed the paper and burnt the edges) with the candy and stuff
when we were all out of the house
my ma would make up special bags of candy and gifts for the neighbor kids
now i carry on the tradition.. here 600 miles from the little town i grew up in
i buy a buttload of candy.. because this neighborhood gets hit hard
i decorate.. though i have no wooden legs to strew about..
i am usually a zombie with nasty teeth..
i moan and grr at the kids.. they scream and giggle..
sometimes i tell them to remember to brush their teeth.
last year.. i even followed a group of rowdy kids down the street a little ways.. dragging my leg behind me.. just to see what would happen. they freaked! that was fun
as much fun as i have with it
halloween is bittersweet
i miss her
01:51 pm July 8th, 2003
I like this journal to write in, my friend
I really do, you know!
It keeps my thoughts in a basket to mend
And all my ducks in a row.
Swimming, splashing, diving they go
And then come back safely to shore.
Did I ever tell thee, ami J'adore
else
Many thanks my dear
Journal structure rich and round
Thoughts swim in safe pool
I really do, you know!
It keeps my thoughts in a basket to mend
And all my ducks in a row.
Swimming, splashing, diving they go
And then come back safely to shore.
Did I ever tell thee, ami J'adore
else
Many thanks my dear
Journal structure rich and round
Thoughts swim in safe pool
Sunday, January 29, 2012
gift
closes my eyes.
blank.
receives whatever comes.
the word gift encompasses so much meaning for me.
the people who pass through my life.. all gifts.
the ones who stay, are the most precious.
closes my eyes.
blank again.
receiving........
i have been given many incredible gifts
i am blessed
a good upbringing
parents who supported me when i wanted to be a .. gulp .. musician
talent
a voice
some of the greatest gifts have been the people in my life
the ones who stay
they are few
the ones who share knowledge and spirit i cherish most.. my teachers in life.. those who trust that the knowledge and wisdom and craft imparted will be honored and respected and loved when given over.. and so willingly.. this, i do not take lightly.
i am blessed
i have received much in my life
many many many gifts
the most rewarding of all
giving
blank.
receives whatever comes.
the word gift encompasses so much meaning for me.
the people who pass through my life.. all gifts.
the ones who stay, are the most precious.
closes my eyes.
blank again.
receiving........
i have been given many incredible gifts
i am blessed
a good upbringing
parents who supported me when i wanted to be a .. gulp .. musician
talent
a voice
some of the greatest gifts have been the people in my life
the ones who stay
they are few
the ones who share knowledge and spirit i cherish most.. my teachers in life.. those who trust that the knowledge and wisdom and craft imparted will be honored and respected and loved when given over.. and so willingly.. this, i do not take lightly.
i am blessed
i have received much in my life
many many many gifts
the most rewarding of all
giving
Gift
Blank look...
This might be twenty minutes of thinking and no writing. I have a very hard time about gifts.
....
Tears
Frustration,
Foggy glasses.
A drink of water.
Wipes eyes
Smiles.
When I was about 30 I wrote my favorite Great Uncle Dalton and told him in an hand written letter how much I had appreciated his kind words growing up and how important they were to me. I thanked him for them. And I thanked him for teaching me how to whittle.
He wrote me back a nice letter thanking me and said, "You were my favorite of all the kids"
He enclosed a hand made jewelry box with my name inlaid in the lid in wood. It's absolutely the most precious thing I own.
Brother
Names redacted at family's request.
=================================================================
What a dumb-cluck Danny's brother was getting into such a scrape and bringing FBI hounds down on the family to search and harass them in 1971.
They were born 9 months apart, which means that there was a baby growing in his mother's womb right after he was born.
She was overwhelmed. I was told that Brother was such a handful and Dan was so quiet, that she would leave him in the bassinet so long that his head developed a flat spot.
Brother was rolypoly as a baby and was so round and overfed that he had difficulty walking at 18 months. Dan was skinny and long legged and looked slightly undernourished in photos. I do know that in that family you had to eat quick or the food would be gone off your plate. The four older children ate hunched over, guarding their plate the first Thanksgiving I ever spent with them. I had never seen a holiday meal treated like timed trials at a speedway.
Brother used to pound on Dan. He was an angry difficult child, and did not like sharing the space with Dan. Dan was a quiet defensive one who learned to be passive aggressive to survive and to get around Brother. I had talked to one of Dan's high school friends who told me it was disturbing how verbally and physically abusive Brother was to Danny.
When we were first married and learning to sleep together, Danny would have night mares, and scream Brother's name, and punch out into the air or sometimes land a blow onto me or the pillow I would wedge between us for buffer. As time went on, those dreams stopped and we could snuggle, but the first two years were rocky. Danny is still a bit passive and won't venture forth an opinion or make a decision unless you patiently coax it out of him.
======================================================================
skipping
Father as ww2 decorated hero, compare/contrast
FBI and trial
visiting the federal penitentiary
skipping to the farm
=====================================================================
Dani and I bought a secluded farm in a very rural part of Missouri on the Arkansas border. Even though it was secluded, we soon noticed that people in town knew of us and were curious to find out if we were Amish or what, because of Dan's long hair and our homemade clothes that we wore.
So it wasn't much surprise when this clean cut young fellow walked into our place, with a knapsack and asked for a place to stay.
Gosh we were trusting.
How did you find us back here?
Asked around...
okay. Why is your hair so short? Man it's pitiful.
My last job made me cut it.
Oh okay. and that was that. Come on in. our food is your food, Let's get you fed.
So he stays. and we talk and shoot the breeze. There's not much to show him on the farm, we're keeping bees and gardening a bit. We don't exactly work up a sweat and don't expect him to.
"Do you guys ever get into politics?" he asks, tucked in with a bunch of other questions and stories. Like what's your family like?
Oh hell no. we tell him. Not anymore! We got a dumb-cluck brother that keeps us from getting anywhere near politics. We are done with protesting. War ended. Brother was just here visiting, (right after his release from prison) but we couldn't let him stay. He's out in Colorado working explosion details in the mines.
That fellow was real handy. He taught us how to screen dirt for stones and helped build a compost pit. After a few days he left, walking out the way he came in.
Turns out to have been an FBI agent. They followed Brother for ten years after his release, just checking up on him now and again.
Shared places
This shared blog is a safe place. I feel protected here. I'm sure
it's all illusion, but it's a nice illusion. When we were little we
used to call crawling under the branches of a fallen tree and vines, our
hidey hole.
When I say 'Thanks for sharing." It is the old kind of sharing. the shared place of safety and warmth.
When I say 'Thanks for sharing." It is the old kind of sharing. the shared place of safety and warmth.
Alphie
I always say I dont play well with others.. of course, in jest. I play really well with others.
When I was a kid.. my sister had cool stuff..
she had all my ma's old records
and art stuff
and games
and she had an Alphie robot
she didnt share. she didnt have to. she was the only girl.
we had to share everything we had.. us boys.
we shared a room and clothes and toys and up til dad built us our bunks.. a bed.
so I was curious about her stuff
and I didnt care if she got mad that I was snooping around her room
I stole her Alphie and hid it in our closet
I played with it when no one was around..
I dont know how long I had it before she noticed it was gone.. but it was days
I remember the day she found Alphie..
she let out a blood curdling scream and ma went running up the stairs.
I creeped up the stairs slowly, curious what was happening.
my brother didnt flinch, just kept watching TV.
I peeped in the doorway to my room, and there was my sister bawling her eyes out in ma's arms.
poor Alphie was in a pile of screws and nuts and bolts and springs and stuff, all over the floor of the closet.
I swore to her I didnt do it. I didnt.
she never believed me.
that night, my dad put a hook lock on my sister's door.
it didnt matter, I would never steal from my sister again. Im not saying I never snuck in her room again.. lol.. I just never left anything out of place. Im fairly sure my brother and I had discussed dismantling Alphie at some point together. apparently he didnt want to share either.
When I was a kid.. my sister had cool stuff..
she had all my ma's old records
and art stuff
and games
and she had an Alphie robot
she didnt share. she didnt have to. she was the only girl.
we had to share everything we had.. us boys.
we shared a room and clothes and toys and up til dad built us our bunks.. a bed.
so I was curious about her stuff
and I didnt care if she got mad that I was snooping around her room
I stole her Alphie and hid it in our closet
I played with it when no one was around..
I dont know how long I had it before she noticed it was gone.. but it was days
I remember the day she found Alphie..
she let out a blood curdling scream and ma went running up the stairs.
I creeped up the stairs slowly, curious what was happening.
my brother didnt flinch, just kept watching TV.
I peeped in the doorway to my room, and there was my sister bawling her eyes out in ma's arms.
poor Alphie was in a pile of screws and nuts and bolts and springs and stuff, all over the floor of the closet.
I swore to her I didnt do it. I didnt.
she never believed me.
that night, my dad put a hook lock on my sister's door.
it didnt matter, I would never steal from my sister again. Im not saying I never snuck in her room again.. lol.. I just never left anything out of place. Im fairly sure my brother and I had discussed dismantling Alphie at some point together. apparently he didnt want to share either.
Saturday, January 28, 2012
embarrassed..
ah embarrassment.. i should be used to it. we all should. we all do embarrassing things.. say embarrassing things.. yet we still manage to feel the sting.
earlier i felt shame. worked thru it a bit and now im just embarrassed. i think i can live with it.
i have caused myself a lot of embarrassment. and i could share a story about me.. but i want to share a story of embarrassment that taught me about the cruelty and injustice of others, about humility and compassion.
there was a girl in my gym class, my freshman year in high school. she struggled to do all that was asked of her. she was fairly athletic and strong for a big girl. she struggled through volleyball, softball, running the monster, and basketball.. but then she hit an obstacle she just couldnt seem to overcome. gymnastics. our gym teacher was our school football coach. a real hardass. Jenny tried her hardest. she tumbled clumsily, tried cartwheels, walked the balance beam with trepidation. no one ever made fun of her. she was such a nice girl. and we were good friends.. even though back in third grade i had snapped her bra, and told her i could see thru her shirt. she forgave me.
Hardass told Jenny she would be given a failing grade if she didnt complete the parallel bar routine.
He told her this in front of the entire class.
She had tears in her eyes as she walked to the parallel bars.
She reached up.. and tried with all her might to pull herself up.
He could have just given her a chair to help.
He watched her struggle. We all did. The hush was deafening.
She must have tried five times.. before he stepped in and said it again..
'You will fail if you do not complete this.'
He called out to Bob and Chris.. and instructed them to help Jenny up onto the bar.
They pushed her up from behind.
She started to cry.
No one was doing anything..
I looked around.
I walked calmly over to Mr. Hardass.. and asked him to please stop.
But the damage was already done.
She flipped once over that bar.. and fell to the floor.. in a heap.
He failed her.
I quit the class and took summer gym with her that year. was the best time ever.
earlier i felt shame. worked thru it a bit and now im just embarrassed. i think i can live with it.
i have caused myself a lot of embarrassment. and i could share a story about me.. but i want to share a story of embarrassment that taught me about the cruelty and injustice of others, about humility and compassion.
there was a girl in my gym class, my freshman year in high school. she struggled to do all that was asked of her. she was fairly athletic and strong for a big girl. she struggled through volleyball, softball, running the monster, and basketball.. but then she hit an obstacle she just couldnt seem to overcome. gymnastics. our gym teacher was our school football coach. a real hardass. Jenny tried her hardest. she tumbled clumsily, tried cartwheels, walked the balance beam with trepidation. no one ever made fun of her. she was such a nice girl. and we were good friends.. even though back in third grade i had snapped her bra, and told her i could see thru her shirt. she forgave me.
Hardass told Jenny she would be given a failing grade if she didnt complete the parallel bar routine.
He told her this in front of the entire class.
She had tears in her eyes as she walked to the parallel bars.
She reached up.. and tried with all her might to pull herself up.
He could have just given her a chair to help.
He watched her struggle. We all did. The hush was deafening.
She must have tried five times.. before he stepped in and said it again..
'You will fail if you do not complete this.'
He called out to Bob and Chris.. and instructed them to help Jenny up onto the bar.
They pushed her up from behind.
She started to cry.
No one was doing anything..
I looked around.
I walked calmly over to Mr. Hardass.. and asked him to please stop.
But the damage was already done.
She flipped once over that bar.. and fell to the floor.. in a heap.
He failed her.
I quit the class and took summer gym with her that year. was the best time ever.
Embarassed
Embarrassment is a light temporary emotion that causes us to blush. Here's a well written link on how to overcome it. Shy people who empathize easily with others feel it more deeply.
One day hubby and I were hiking, back to our campsite and he had to pull up his support hose. That required dropping his pants and getting them pulled up from his thigh, and he didn't wear any underwear in those days.
"Don't do that here" I tell him, "Go off to the side of the road behind a bush."
"No one will see," he says, "there hasn't been a car all morning."
He drops his jeans, bends over in the road to get his stockings in hand.
and around the bend comes a loaded car of a family with kids, they had big O's with their mouths and big eyes and swiveled heads as they crawl slowly by.
===============================
For a smart person I am a bit of a dope, Years ago, I was talking to our priest and assistant priest at St. Mary's by the Sea Episcopal church. I was introduced to Canon Peabody.
"What an unusual first name I said. , Canon. but I know one at St. Peters too." They all break out in laughter.
Pretty funny.
=================================
I walked my kid home from preschool when he was four. I was having some pretty bad memories problems at that time.
"Hold on sweetie, we have to go back..." I said at the door.
Why mommy?
Well mommy drove the car there. ...
....
One day hubby and I were hiking, back to our campsite and he had to pull up his support hose. That required dropping his pants and getting them pulled up from his thigh, and he didn't wear any underwear in those days.
"Don't do that here" I tell him, "Go off to the side of the road behind a bush."
"No one will see," he says, "there hasn't been a car all morning."
He drops his jeans, bends over in the road to get his stockings in hand.
and around the bend comes a loaded car of a family with kids, they had big O's with their mouths and big eyes and swiveled heads as they crawl slowly by.
===============================
For a smart person I am a bit of a dope, Years ago, I was talking to our priest and assistant priest at St. Mary's by the Sea Episcopal church. I was introduced to Canon Peabody.
"What an unusual first name I said. , Canon. but I know one at St. Peters too." They all break out in laughter.
Pretty funny.
=================================
I walked my kid home from preschool when he was four. I was having some pretty bad memories problems at that time.
"Hold on sweetie, we have to go back..." I said at the door.
Why mommy?
Well mommy drove the car there. ...
....
The Body Remembers.
I used to puzzle myself. I wanted to know why my neck stiffened, why my hands go weak and wouldn't work. This can't be normal. This pain, these seemingly random failures on my body's part.
I went to a generalist. He patiently explained to me about ligaments. and tendons stretching and pulling apart. He went over my list of places that were killing me and he told me. When we have pain that is widespread, like yours is, we sometimes need to look at the effects of stress, of mind and body together. Medicine doesn't explain everything, he said.
I have IBS, almost comically so. Big grin of acceptance. If you want me to make a decision about something, make sure I am near a bathroom. After many years of not knowing what in the world would trigger such dramatic reactions, we tracked it down to decision making and driving in a car. Even tiny decisions, like what color ribbon should I put on a present, would set me off. That is ridiculous. What a way to live!
note to self. talk about ben hur movie. re decision.
The car thing bugged me for ever. I really wanted to be able to drive a car. But many times I would have full blown panic attacks just riding in the car. Often on two lane country roads and sometimes during thunderstorms.
What is that all about? I would tackle the issue multiple times over the years. I would force myself to drive. I hired a driving instructor, she bullied me into it. I passed the driving test, much to my husband's horror, and had a license. Occasionally I would be able to drive. Rehearsed routes and simple turns. Every time it would take all my gut bravery to do it. I had to bank the proceeds from our business, one year. It was a one stoplight town. I would go in. Go through the drive-through, drop off the money, make it back home. Whew! It never got easy or routine. though I did this seemingly simple thing every dang day for months with terror in my heart.
When I had my foster children, I would drag them around town on buses. It was a hard way to live. When I got my last little guy. I said No more. I told Dan; we are going to conquer this driving thing once and for all. I had been to the psychiatrist getting therapy and I knew I had the support to delve down into the inexplicable why of it all.
He and I set out in a car. Me driving. The panic was so strong, I had to pull over in a parking lot near our house. IBS was kicking in too, Strong feelings of nausea. What was that? I was furious at myself. I searched my memories and held my stomach while it panged and tore at me.
Suddenly this idea popped into my head.
I had been in a car with a drunk driver when I was little. a lot. My father was a drunk. He had me in his car all the time when I was a preschooler. I have no memory of these terrors. the swerving, the horns honking the fear and confusion. It's a blank. but now i know why I panicked. and panicked and panicked.
the body remembers.
I will get to my hand in a minute. grins.
I went to a generalist. He patiently explained to me about ligaments. and tendons stretching and pulling apart. He went over my list of places that were killing me and he told me. When we have pain that is widespread, like yours is, we sometimes need to look at the effects of stress, of mind and body together. Medicine doesn't explain everything, he said.
I have IBS, almost comically so. Big grin of acceptance. If you want me to make a decision about something, make sure I am near a bathroom. After many years of not knowing what in the world would trigger such dramatic reactions, we tracked it down to decision making and driving in a car. Even tiny decisions, like what color ribbon should I put on a present, would set me off. That is ridiculous. What a way to live!
note to self. talk about ben hur movie. re decision.
The car thing bugged me for ever. I really wanted to be able to drive a car. But many times I would have full blown panic attacks just riding in the car. Often on two lane country roads and sometimes during thunderstorms.
What is that all about? I would tackle the issue multiple times over the years. I would force myself to drive. I hired a driving instructor, she bullied me into it. I passed the driving test, much to my husband's horror, and had a license. Occasionally I would be able to drive. Rehearsed routes and simple turns. Every time it would take all my gut bravery to do it. I had to bank the proceeds from our business, one year. It was a one stoplight town. I would go in. Go through the drive-through, drop off the money, make it back home. Whew! It never got easy or routine. though I did this seemingly simple thing every dang day for months with terror in my heart.
When I had my foster children, I would drag them around town on buses. It was a hard way to live. When I got my last little guy. I said No more. I told Dan; we are going to conquer this driving thing once and for all. I had been to the psychiatrist getting therapy and I knew I had the support to delve down into the inexplicable why of it all.
He and I set out in a car. Me driving. The panic was so strong, I had to pull over in a parking lot near our house. IBS was kicking in too, Strong feelings of nausea. What was that? I was furious at myself. I searched my memories and held my stomach while it panged and tore at me.
Suddenly this idea popped into my head.
I had been in a car with a drunk driver when I was little. a lot. My father was a drunk. He had me in his car all the time when I was a preschooler. I have no memory of these terrors. the swerving, the horns honking the fear and confusion. It's a blank. but now i know why I panicked. and panicked and panicked.
the body remembers.
I will get to my hand in a minute. grins.
muscle memory
my neck is KILLING me. who knows why. ok ok.. i have an inkling as to why. i had an extremely stressful week. one which i would like to forget.. yet my body wont let me.
the body has a physical memory.. the muscles.. beyond the mind.
repetitive motion.. creates a groove.. creates a habit.. and we are all habit forming in nature.
singing is all about muscle memory. for so many of my students, singing is a release. they feel better when they sing. both mentally and physically.
for me it is work. i enjoy it. but it is work. and when tension creeps in, im incapacitated.
im trying to work out the kinks. heating pad.. ibuprofen.. kneading fingers and thumbs.. ice.. repeat..
nothing is working.
my mind is trying to work out kinks.. internally.. circling round and round. but this merry-go-round aint so fun. i try to imagine why people do and say the cruel things they do. why someone would want to take advantage of my good nature. like i dont understand people, when i do. i am deeply wounded by stupid bullshit words. i tell myself they are bullshit. and i know that they are bullshit. i even deleted all the bullshit. but still i feel the venom. and i feel guilt. intense searing guilt.
shame, denial, guilt.
i betrayed Self.
swallow.
breathe.
try and turn your head.
this is emotional muscle memory. i worked long and hard at defeating myself.
it's gonna be a while.
the body has a physical memory.. the muscles.. beyond the mind.
repetitive motion.. creates a groove.. creates a habit.. and we are all habit forming in nature.
singing is all about muscle memory. for so many of my students, singing is a release. they feel better when they sing. both mentally and physically.
for me it is work. i enjoy it. but it is work. and when tension creeps in, im incapacitated.
im trying to work out the kinks. heating pad.. ibuprofen.. kneading fingers and thumbs.. ice.. repeat..
nothing is working.
my mind is trying to work out kinks.. internally.. circling round and round. but this merry-go-round aint so fun. i try to imagine why people do and say the cruel things they do. why someone would want to take advantage of my good nature. like i dont understand people, when i do. i am deeply wounded by stupid bullshit words. i tell myself they are bullshit. and i know that they are bullshit. i even deleted all the bullshit. but still i feel the venom. and i feel guilt. intense searing guilt.
shame, denial, guilt.
i betrayed Self.
swallow.
breathe.
try and turn your head.
this is emotional muscle memory. i worked long and hard at defeating myself.
it's gonna be a while.
Friday, January 27, 2012
Favorite Body Part
Who thinks of these themes?!
My favorite body part is ... So many to choose from. I like them all quite a bit. They seem to work together to get the job done.
I do like my belly button a lot. *Looks down at it.* Yep its a cutie for sure. and merely ornamental. It doesn't do anything. doesn't get fatigued. doesn't get infected (often) or sore or lumpy or withered.
It makes no demand on me. My back does. It wants to be rubbed. My lungs want to breathe. They never stop. My brain whirs and my feet swell.
But ole belly button just sits there. Unique on my body self contained and reserved.
It's an inny.
grins.
My favorite body part is ... So many to choose from. I like them all quite a bit. They seem to work together to get the job done.
I do like my belly button a lot. *Looks down at it.* Yep its a cutie for sure. and merely ornamental. It doesn't do anything. doesn't get fatigued. doesn't get infected (often) or sore or lumpy or withered.
It makes no demand on me. My back does. It wants to be rubbed. My lungs want to breathe. They never stop. My brain whirs and my feet swell.
But ole belly button just sits there. Unique on my body self contained and reserved.
It's an inny.
grins.
of body parts.. theres one
hey.. what's not to love? ;)
my favorite body part.. could be my icy blues
my favorite body part.. could be my grin
my favorite body part.. should be my vocal cords
...or my mind..
my favorite body part.. could be my big toe..
but no
my favorite body part is my heart.
i have a big one.
get to know me.
you will soon see..
im all heart.
my favorite body part.. could be my icy blues
my favorite body part.. could be my grin
my favorite body part.. should be my vocal cords
...or my mind..
my favorite body part.. could be my big toe..
but no
my favorite body part is my heart.
i have a big one.
get to know me.
you will soon see..
im all heart.
First Date
Reaching back 39 years in my mind, to my husband's and my first date. He showed up the next day at the door. I was dressed this time and answered it.
"Oh hi, Gary's not in."
"I didn't come here to see Gary, I sort of came here to see you. Are you doing anything today?"
Anything I had planned got thrown out the window. This was one cute guy I wanted to tackle.
We took a bus out to the Arnold Arboretum that Dan wanted to visit and show me. In future dates, he would always have his constant companions along, his 35 mm camera and his dog, but on this date we went alone.
We climbed up to the top of one of the four impressive hills that make up the park. The view was stunning, the sky was Springtime blue and it was a glorious day. Crocus were in bloom and so were we.
"We should roll down this hill together." I said to him. "It would be a great idea."
"What?" he says to me, looking a little panicky.
"Roll down this hill. you know, entwined, sideways like logs, have you never done that before?"
People will look. he says.
uhuh. silence from me.
Um. I don't do stuff like that in public.
There's no rule against it is there? I ask.
There might be dog poop..., he looks worried.
You could scout the way down if you like, just to be sure. I think it will be fine.
....
I think it's really important that we roll down this hill on this day right here right now. I hold firm, but sweet.
He goes down the hill. looking carefully around for messes, comes back up and says, the path is clear.
He takes off his glasses, and sets them near his backpack, I show him how to lay, and we start.
When we get going, and it's a long slope, we go faster and faster and hold on for dear life till the ground flattens out, we are out of breathe from laughing, screaming, squealing and exhilarated.
"I'm so glad you decided to do that with me." I say as we trudge back up the way we came...to collect his stuff and go on back to my house to continue our date.
This needs work, critique requested.
"Oh hi, Gary's not in."
"I didn't come here to see Gary, I sort of came here to see you. Are you doing anything today?"
Anything I had planned got thrown out the window. This was one cute guy I wanted to tackle.
We took a bus out to the Arnold Arboretum that Dan wanted to visit and show me. In future dates, he would always have his constant companions along, his 35 mm camera and his dog, but on this date we went alone.
We climbed up to the top of one of the four impressive hills that make up the park. The view was stunning, the sky was Springtime blue and it was a glorious day. Crocus were in bloom and so were we.
"We should roll down this hill together." I said to him. "It would be a great idea."
"What?" he says to me, looking a little panicky.
"Roll down this hill. you know, entwined, sideways like logs, have you never done that before?"
People will look. he says.
uhuh. silence from me.
Um. I don't do stuff like that in public.
There's no rule against it is there? I ask.
There might be dog poop..., he looks worried.
You could scout the way down if you like, just to be sure. I think it will be fine.
....
I think it's really important that we roll down this hill on this day right here right now. I hold firm, but sweet.
He goes down the hill. looking carefully around for messes, comes back up and says, the path is clear.
He takes off his glasses, and sets them near his backpack, I show him how to lay, and we start.
When we get going, and it's a long slope, we go faster and faster and hold on for dear life till the ground flattens out, we are out of breathe from laughing, screaming, squealing and exhilarated.
"I'm so glad you decided to do that with me." I say as we trudge back up the way we came...to collect his stuff and go on back to my house to continue our date.
This needs work, critique requested.
Thursday, January 26, 2012
if i could fly..
if i could fly.. i would soar miles out over the ocean.. and just hover among the clouds.
taking in the scent of saltwater.
i would race dragonflies over the surface of the delaware.
i would fly so high.. all signs of life.. tiny specks.. only the sound of the wind in my ears.. just to be alone with my thoughts.
i would buzz the nasca lines..
i would visit my dad more often..
if i could fly.. i would sell my car.
i would fly south for the winter.
if i could fly.. i wouldnt.. i am afraid of heights.
taking in the scent of saltwater.
i would race dragonflies over the surface of the delaware.
i would fly so high.. all signs of life.. tiny specks.. only the sound of the wind in my ears.. just to be alone with my thoughts.
i would buzz the nasca lines..
i would visit my dad more often..
if i could fly.. i would sell my car.
i would fly south for the winter.
if i could fly.. i wouldnt.. i am afraid of heights.
If I could fly...
I'm so tired and stressed right now. I ache in my shoulders, I ache in my feet, my knees give out when I walk. My stomach hurts and stabs and my heart aches and nerves snap and crackle under pressure.
If I could fly, I would walk our dog, fast around the block, me skimming the trees and her on a long leash before me.
If I could fly, I would jump off high cliffs and plummet head first to the ground only to break off at the last minute and loop de loop.
I would circle the town where my son is hanging out and drop water balloons on him if he misbehaves.
I would pack a long lunch and fly across country and back again before my husband got home. And when he said, what have you done all day, I would say, "Nothing"
If I could fly, I would sew myself a long gown and appear in hospital wards hovering above beds telling people to not be afraid.
I would fly up into trees all dressed in black and hide quiet in the leaves outside windows and watch.
I would clean our roof and get the Christmas lights taken down early..
I would glide on warm air currents and pick the ripest peach on the highest part of the tree.
If I could fly, I would climb straight up till the air got thin, and the earth got small and i would sing the most glorious song.
If I could fly, I would walk our dog, fast around the block, me skimming the trees and her on a long leash before me.
If I could fly, I would jump off high cliffs and plummet head first to the ground only to break off at the last minute and loop de loop.
I would circle the town where my son is hanging out and drop water balloons on him if he misbehaves.
I would pack a long lunch and fly across country and back again before my husband got home. And when he said, what have you done all day, I would say, "Nothing"
If I could fly, I would sew myself a long gown and appear in hospital wards hovering above beds telling people to not be afraid.
I would fly up into trees all dressed in black and hide quiet in the leaves outside windows and watch.
I would clean our roof and get the Christmas lights taken down early..
I would glide on warm air currents and pick the ripest peach on the highest part of the tree.
If I could fly, I would climb straight up till the air got thin, and the earth got small and i would sing the most glorious song.
jerry
i always said that one day i would see someone i knew on the jerry springer show. i am not sure exactly why i always said that. most of the people i know are of sound mind and judgement.. or so they seem.
so im in my apartment in trenton. tv blaring in the living room. cooking in the kitchen.
i hear the chant. JER RY JER RY JER RY.. background noise..
cooking and just listening.
and then i hear Jerry announce his first guest. Anthony.
hm..
what are the chances..
nah..
i peer around the corner at the television. and there sits my student. grinning from ear to ear.
i drop my spatula.. hop around the corner and slide onto my couch.. the storyline " honey, i slept with your three girlfriends" .. or something like that.
i was appalled.. but yet i couldnt stop the deep rumble of laughter that was starting to erupt from me.
a couple days later, Anthony had his lesson with me. i couldnt stop laughing all the way to work. a two hour drive. by the time i got to work my sides hurt. i had no idea what to say to him or how i would react. im laughing now as i tell this.
in walks Anthony. medium build, dark haired italian dude.. always with a smile. i shake his hand, slap him on the shoulder, and say..
so.. does Jerry pay well?
i didnt think he could smile any bigger than when he was sitting on Jerry's stage.. i was wrong.
he says..
yes.
btw.. i burnt my lunch that day.
so im in my apartment in trenton. tv blaring in the living room. cooking in the kitchen.
i hear the chant. JER RY JER RY JER RY.. background noise..
cooking and just listening.
and then i hear Jerry announce his first guest. Anthony.
hm..
what are the chances..
nah..
i peer around the corner at the television. and there sits my student. grinning from ear to ear.
i drop my spatula.. hop around the corner and slide onto my couch.. the storyline " honey, i slept with your three girlfriends" .. or something like that.
i was appalled.. but yet i couldnt stop the deep rumble of laughter that was starting to erupt from me.
a couple days later, Anthony had his lesson with me. i couldnt stop laughing all the way to work. a two hour drive. by the time i got to work my sides hurt. i had no idea what to say to him or how i would react. im laughing now as i tell this.
in walks Anthony. medium build, dark haired italian dude.. always with a smile. i shake his hand, slap him on the shoulder, and say..
so.. does Jerry pay well?
i didnt think he could smile any bigger than when he was sitting on Jerry's stage.. i was wrong.
he says..
yes.
btw.. i burnt my lunch that day.
How I Met My Dan. :D
The Vegetarian Restaurant Commune lived in 64 1E and the entire basement. Carol King before she got her record contract had allegedly lived in 60 3E with some guy. A drug house with runaway child prostitutes including a senator's daugther lived in 60 1W. I lived in 64 2E with three male roomates, or so in one of those shotgun setups where people had made bedrooms out of the dining room and to get to the back bedroom or living room, you had to go through my room.
For privacy, I had set my bed six foot and then some high up off the floor, a steel box spring, wired to metal milk box crates that I had commandeered from alleyways and behinds stores. and brought home to stack up almost to the ceiling. I could climb up there and be completely alone and read or write or think.
I wasn't a big fan of clothing in those days. So I didn't wear any at home. I wasn't wearing any the day that a knock sounded on the door and I told whoever it was to come on in. I was up on my bed, face down, propped up by my arms, draped in a sheet reading Thackeray's Vanity Fair. I wasn't about to climb down to open the door. Besides it was an open apartment. We were cheerful and easy going.
In walks the tallest, cutest guy I had ever seen. He's only inches away from my face as I point to the back room. I actuallly peered over to see if he had brought a box with him to stand on. No box, just 6' 9 " of cute as a scarecrow hippie longness. Long hair, long lashes on his eyes. long, long legs and arms. and a big long grin on his face.
Hi, I'm Dan."
Hi, I'm Rosie, Gary is in the back. Through the double doors and past the beaded curtain.
He leaves, I throw on a silk wrap of some kind, comb my hair, pinch my cheeks.
He stops on the way back out, having bought his nickel bag...
Nice meeting you Rosie.
and I say: Tee hee hee.
We both agree that I actually said or chuckled or giggled, Tee hee hee.
That was March in the middle, we married in June.
Consequences of going dark.
Everyone has a choice everyday, to go dark or to go light. For my own
health and energy, I guard myself against going dark. It kills me
inside. I guard against negative energy, anger, spitefulness. I try pretty darn hard to keep positive and up beat. Mostly I do. The light saves me.
We both had a choice this morning to write light or to write dark. I had picked Dogs. as a theme to keep it light, thinking of that scamp beneath my feet, Bonnie.
Then a memory that had been buried popped up and smacked me in the face. Oh no, do I ever have a dark piece. The day my grand father shot my dog.
Such things do not belong on pretty blogs. Such things do not belong in the front part of my head. They don't deserve to be remembered. They don't belong in a world of love and beauty and fairness.
But Sammy does. I have a right to cherish what's inside my head. I am too old to have to tip toe around and not look into all the rooms. I can make myself sick, churn my stomach over, bring bile up into my throat, hand over mouth, if I want to. I can choose to remember with tears falling down my face, curled up in a ball clutching my knees. I can get it out, look at it, wring some wisdom and understanding out of it. And cover the emotional swelling with compressed compassion. A bushel basket of compassion. I can survive all over again.
It was a choice. That poor dog never did anything wrong to anybody. As Forest Gump would say, That's all I care to say about it.
I forgive you Grandpa. Grandma, you are still on the hook with me.
We both had a choice this morning to write light or to write dark. I had picked Dogs. as a theme to keep it light, thinking of that scamp beneath my feet, Bonnie.
Then a memory that had been buried popped up and smacked me in the face. Oh no, do I ever have a dark piece. The day my grand father shot my dog.
Such things do not belong on pretty blogs. Such things do not belong in the front part of my head. They don't deserve to be remembered. They don't belong in a world of love and beauty and fairness.
But Sammy does. I have a right to cherish what's inside my head. I am too old to have to tip toe around and not look into all the rooms. I can make myself sick, churn my stomach over, bring bile up into my throat, hand over mouth, if I want to. I can choose to remember with tears falling down my face, curled up in a ball clutching my knees. I can get it out, look at it, wring some wisdom and understanding out of it. And cover the emotional swelling with compressed compassion. A bushel basket of compassion. I can survive all over again.
It was a choice. That poor dog never did anything wrong to anybody. As Forest Gump would say, That's all I care to say about it.
I forgive you Grandpa. Grandma, you are still on the hook with me.
My slow dear beagle
We lived on a farm and owned two beagles. A bright smart handsome beagle, perky and sleek and a goofy kinda ugly beagle that looked like a mix. He was slower and friendlier to us girls and I adored him. My grandfather didn't like him much and called him a stupid worthless thing and so we kind of had something in common. He was named Sammy after Sammy Davis Jr. because my grandfather said he kinda looked like him with that one droopy eye.
My favorite pastime was to pick ticks off of Sammy and squish them with a rock. I liked seeing the blood splat out. Another thing I liked to do was throw the ball over the top of our tiny tiny house and run around to the other side and try to catch it before he got it or it hit the ground. But he was a slow thing and even I could get to the ball first. He would kinda bound the wrong way and dodge out of the way to let me grab it
The other dog was twice as fast and if he was around would grab the ball and be off with it. Dang showoff. I left his ticks on him for someone else to pick off.
They were hunting dogs, but my beagle got left behind a lot. He just didn't have that beagle drive to tree a possum or grab a rabbit. One day he brought me a new born rabbit ever so gently in his mouth. and laid it before my feet. I guess he wanted me to tend to it, it was completely unharmed.
One day five years into their lives, my grandfather found his favorite hound dead. He found him in the right of way between our farm and the neighbors. There was a big chunk of some partially eaten carcass and the dog was dead and bloated nearby. He came to the conclusion that he had been poisoned by someone who had left the meat there. probably the neighbor we weren't speaking to.
Grandpa flew into a rage. He swore. He was beside himself with grief. His eyes bulged out and there was spit coming from his mouth.
He goes to find my dog to see if he's all right. He finds Sammy alive and it enrages him more. The poor fellow is unaccountably lying in my grandmother's flower bed. "Why couldn't it be you?!?" he screams at the bewildered dog.
Grandpa goes into the house. Screams at Grandma. "I'ma going to kill that sonofabitch" He gets his shotgun. Loads it. My grandmother doesn't say a word. She catches up my sister and holds her to her closely with her head buried in her chest. I fly at my Grandfather. Don't Don't! DON'T!
I run to the window to watch. My grandmother says "Don't look, Rosie, You will never forget something like that." She tries to grab me from the window, I stay put. Grandpa takes aim and fires. The dog jerks on the ground. I scream. He fires again. This time no movement.
He comes back in and puts the shotgun away. He is covered with rancid skunkish sweat. The house is silent.
"You didn't have to do that." she says to him.
My favorite pastime was to pick ticks off of Sammy and squish them with a rock. I liked seeing the blood splat out. Another thing I liked to do was throw the ball over the top of our tiny tiny house and run around to the other side and try to catch it before he got it or it hit the ground. But he was a slow thing and even I could get to the ball first. He would kinda bound the wrong way and dodge out of the way to let me grab it
The other dog was twice as fast and if he was around would grab the ball and be off with it. Dang showoff. I left his ticks on him for someone else to pick off.
They were hunting dogs, but my beagle got left behind a lot. He just didn't have that beagle drive to tree a possum or grab a rabbit. One day he brought me a new born rabbit ever so gently in his mouth. and laid it before my feet. I guess he wanted me to tend to it, it was completely unharmed.
One day five years into their lives, my grandfather found his favorite hound dead. He found him in the right of way between our farm and the neighbors. There was a big chunk of some partially eaten carcass and the dog was dead and bloated nearby. He came to the conclusion that he had been poisoned by someone who had left the meat there. probably the neighbor we weren't speaking to.
Grandpa flew into a rage. He swore. He was beside himself with grief. His eyes bulged out and there was spit coming from his mouth.
He goes to find my dog to see if he's all right. He finds Sammy alive and it enrages him more. The poor fellow is unaccountably lying in my grandmother's flower bed. "Why couldn't it be you?!?" he screams at the bewildered dog.
Grandpa goes into the house. Screams at Grandma. "I'ma going to kill that sonofabitch" He gets his shotgun. Loads it. My grandmother doesn't say a word. She catches up my sister and holds her to her closely with her head buried in her chest. I fly at my Grandfather. Don't Don't! DON'T!
I run to the window to watch. My grandmother says "Don't look, Rosie, You will never forget something like that." She tries to grab me from the window, I stay put. Grandpa takes aim and fires. The dog jerks on the ground. I scream. He fires again. This time no movement.
He comes back in and puts the shotgun away. He is covered with rancid skunkish sweat. The house is silent.
"You didn't have to do that." she says to him.
musta been pretty thirsty
oli is a good dog. i call him mclovin.. lately, scamp. he is my trouble child. so sweet and lovable and cuddly one minute and the devil the next. he's a lot like me.
his brother, bax, is the sage one. bax the curmudgeon.. my tumorboy. dog never leaves my side. i used to leave collars on the two of them. but oli has a habit of grabbing bax's collar and leading him around the house. bax is a stubborn pug.. you can imagine how well that went over. so goodbye collars.
yesterday i came home to dog food all over the kitchen floor. bax lying on his side in a nearly catatonic state of overstuffed bliss. i tell people all the time, that dog could eat himself to death. apparently, i was wrong.. but he tried!
i should know better than to leave anything on the kitchen table. but on one occasion, i left a case of water bottles.. still shrinkwrapped in plastic on the table, and went to work. came home, fed the dogs, took them for a walk, made dinner, did dishes, sat at the table to write out the bills.. oli hops up on the table to see what im doing..
i look up to give him a swipe off the table when i notice something odd.
every last bottle of water was missing its cap.
hm.
what the hell?
i look closer.. there are teeth marks.
you gotta be kidding me!
i look closer.. there's only a small tear in the plastic. and the caps are no where to be seen.
i look at oli. he looks at me.
i look at bax. i swear that dog shrugged.
to this day, i can not for the life of me figure out how he managed it.
all 24 bottles .. decapitated.
his brother, bax, is the sage one. bax the curmudgeon.. my tumorboy. dog never leaves my side. i used to leave collars on the two of them. but oli has a habit of grabbing bax's collar and leading him around the house. bax is a stubborn pug.. you can imagine how well that went over. so goodbye collars.
yesterday i came home to dog food all over the kitchen floor. bax lying on his side in a nearly catatonic state of overstuffed bliss. i tell people all the time, that dog could eat himself to death. apparently, i was wrong.. but he tried!
i should know better than to leave anything on the kitchen table. but on one occasion, i left a case of water bottles.. still shrinkwrapped in plastic on the table, and went to work. came home, fed the dogs, took them for a walk, made dinner, did dishes, sat at the table to write out the bills.. oli hops up on the table to see what im doing..
i look up to give him a swipe off the table when i notice something odd.
every last bottle of water was missing its cap.
hm.
what the hell?
i look closer.. there are teeth marks.
you gotta be kidding me!
i look closer.. there's only a small tear in the plastic. and the caps are no where to be seen.
i look at oli. he looks at me.
i look at bax. i swear that dog shrugged.
to this day, i can not for the life of me figure out how he managed it.
all 24 bottles .. decapitated.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
hidden talents
note children playing... singing in background.. young girl has a marked effect on the people who cross her path.. they are changed by her.. she doesnt notice and wants more than anything to be good at something. she wishes on a loose eyelash, upon a star, a wishbone, a wishing well, birthday candles, dandelion seedhead,
This old man, he played one
He played knick-knack on my thumb
With a knick-knack paddywhack, give a dog a bone
This old man came rolling home
She squeezes her eyes shut tight, sucks in all the air she can, makes her wish.. and blows with all her might. The loose eyelash floating gently on the breeze, with just a little help. The child wants more than anything to be good at something.. to have some talent that sets her apart from all the others. Something that makes her special. She wishes for a beautiful singing voice, one like that pretty little girl on PBS, who's angelic voice filled her living room last night.
She runs to join her friends in singing..
This old man, he played two,
He played knick-knack on my shoe;
Knick-knack paddywhack,
Give a dog a bone,
This old man came rolling home.
But she can tell by their faces.. her singing is off. Children can be too honest, sometimes. And she leaves them to their singing. Head down, she runs and hides in the cement tunnels at the end of the playground. Holding back the tears stinging her eyes. Stifling her own sniffles, she hears an echo. Someone weeping.. in one of the other tunnels. Crawling quietly to the opening.. she peeps around the corner and sees another little girl, tears streaming from her eyes.
Without a word, Sara sits next to the girl, reaches into her pocket and brings out the sparkly pony sticker she just got from Mrs. Spence. The little girl blinks back her tears, and quietly peeks at the sticker. Sara smiles, and gives it to her.
<<ROUGH DRAFT>>
The recess bell rings.
On her way home from school that day, Sara...
She plops down in her neighbor's front yard, lying back, looking up at the clearest blue sky. A lone airplane jets across the sky leaving its trail of clouds. Sara glances around for the most perfect dandelion tuft, smiles, and plucks it. Squeezes her eyes shut tight.. sucks in as much air as she can.. makes her wish.. and blows with all her might. The seeds waft gently in the breeze. It would be so cool if she could fly.
She spends the next few minutes daydreaming about all the things she would do, if only she could fly. Eyes closed. Then, slowly opens one eye.. she feels she isn't alone. Sure enough, two intensely blue eyes are staring down at her, just inches from her face. Both eyes wide, Sara rolls over and stands up. It's the little girl from the tunnel.. and she isn't alone.
'Whatcha doin'?' asks the little girl
'Making a wish.'
'Whatcha wishin for?'
'I cant tell you. It wont come true.'
'Oh.'
The little girl looks down at her shoes.
'This is my brother.. his names Jason. Im Kasey.'
Jason pushes his sister out of the way .. 'I CAN TELL HER MY NAME!'
'I'm Sara' she smiles and turns toward her house. 'C'mon.'
She climbs the steps of her front porch and pulls herself up onto the brick ledge.. about 4 feet from the ground. Smiling gaily, she tells them.. 'I can fly.' In a flash, the small boy is on the porch next to her. 'I CAN TOO!' he takes her hand.. and they jump.
They fall with a thud. Sara sits a moment, a frown forming. Jason is up ready to go again.
'AGAIN! AGAIN!'
'COME ON, KASEY!'
This time all three jump. Gleeful peals of laughter bursting from each of them. They jump until they cant jump anymore.. til its time for her new friends to go home.
They get halfway across the street, when Jason comes running back. He reaches deep in his pocket and pulls out a shiny rock. 'HERE, IT'S MY AGATE.. YOU CAN HAVE IT.' he says in his loud serious voice, and hugs her quickly.. then runs to catch his sister.
***
The next day, Mrs. Spence calls Sara to take part in a mentoring program, to help tutor younger children. She is set up with a little boy in first grade, who wont speak. It's Jason. In school, he whispers to her.. she coaxes him to speak.. helps him with his schoolwork.. this leads to something!!
My time in choir
We didn't have kindergarten when I was a kid. Parents took the 5 year olds to class to visit. They left them there to get used to school for a day, and each child was assigned to an older child.
I got to go to school for the first time that way. I followed a neighbor kid around and sat next to her whatever she was doing.
One of the things that she got to do was sing in music class. They were practicing for a choir assembly and had the children in rows by voice. I loved to sing. Oh gosh I loved to sing. I stood there in front of the line next to her and sang with her with all my heart.
The music teacher stopped the class and said. "Someone in the front row is really off key. It sounds like a frog croaking." I looked around horrified. Who could that be? My older friend, whispered in my ear. "Just pretend to sing, cause you aren't in school yet. "
"Oh okay, but you better find the froggie throat before the song gets ruined." I whispered back. rather oblivious to who it was.
Fast forward to first grade, Music class. The teacher comes up to me and says. "You are not hitting the right notes, you have to go higher."
'I can't go any higher." I told her.
She comes over and pulls my hair up till I squeak in pain. "Oh yes you can." she said. I cried.
Singing is painful.
In third grade I am put in the bass section with the pudgy boy and the freckled one that smelled of horses. I had to stand near them, It was humiliating. The principal moved me back in with the girls, told me to mouth the words, he said it wasn't proper and that the teacher needed to learn a little ... compassion.
Fourth grade. we all had to participate in choir competitions at the local high school. Consolidated elementary schools from all over came to compete. Notes were sent home. White shirt. Black skirt. Black shoes for the girls. Mandatory. Well my mom had no money, and no resources to go get things from a used clothing store. I had one pair of saddle shoes, black and white. and that was it. My mother took the shoes and tried to paint them with some sort of bootblacking. They came out a battleship gray. The closest thing she had to a black skirt was a green jumper. with a bib on top. She sent me to school in that get up.
Oh the class was horrified. I begged to stay home. I begged to not sing. I really didn't want to go on a bus to a competition and sing in front of all those people. it was going to be broadcast live on the radio. I was numb.
I couldn't get out of it. Teachers were appalled, but some were cool about it. We went. I stood out like a fly on rice. We lost. Some of the girls said it was my fault.
I still love to sing. but I hate green jumpers.
I got to go to school for the first time that way. I followed a neighbor kid around and sat next to her whatever she was doing.
One of the things that she got to do was sing in music class. They were practicing for a choir assembly and had the children in rows by voice. I loved to sing. Oh gosh I loved to sing. I stood there in front of the line next to her and sang with her with all my heart.
The music teacher stopped the class and said. "Someone in the front row is really off key. It sounds like a frog croaking." I looked around horrified. Who could that be? My older friend, whispered in my ear. "Just pretend to sing, cause you aren't in school yet. "
"Oh okay, but you better find the froggie throat before the song gets ruined." I whispered back. rather oblivious to who it was.
Fast forward to first grade, Music class. The teacher comes up to me and says. "You are not hitting the right notes, you have to go higher."
'I can't go any higher." I told her.
She comes over and pulls my hair up till I squeak in pain. "Oh yes you can." she said. I cried.
Singing is painful.
In third grade I am put in the bass section with the pudgy boy and the freckled one that smelled of horses. I had to stand near them, It was humiliating. The principal moved me back in with the girls, told me to mouth the words, he said it wasn't proper and that the teacher needed to learn a little ... compassion.
Fourth grade. we all had to participate in choir competitions at the local high school. Consolidated elementary schools from all over came to compete. Notes were sent home. White shirt. Black skirt. Black shoes for the girls. Mandatory. Well my mom had no money, and no resources to go get things from a used clothing store. I had one pair of saddle shoes, black and white. and that was it. My mother took the shoes and tried to paint them with some sort of bootblacking. They came out a battleship gray. The closest thing she had to a black skirt was a green jumper. with a bib on top. She sent me to school in that get up.
Oh the class was horrified. I begged to stay home. I begged to not sing. I really didn't want to go on a bus to a competition and sing in front of all those people. it was going to be broadcast live on the radio. I was numb.
I couldn't get out of it. Teachers were appalled, but some were cool about it. We went. I stood out like a fly on rice. We lost. Some of the girls said it was my fault.
I still love to sing. but I hate green jumpers.
ask me
dont ask me my opinion. i have one. i just usually wont share it. i will make a joke.. think long and hard about what you are asking.. and then take a tentative step forward. stick my neck out only a little. then i may just retract. i dunno <see there i go again.. i DO know. inside my head, when you ask my opinion, i do not hear that you are asking me because what i think matters.. i doubt.
i doubt that my point is relevant.
i hear my ma's voice again. 'dont worry about what other people think, it doesnt matter'. she is right.
but.
i know a lot of indecisive people. i can be at times. for instance, ask me where i want to go for dinner.. if there are other people involved, i will leave it up to them..
if it's a date.. i make the plans, no hesitation.
do i lack in confidence? always questioning myself.. no im confident. hm.. i do believe in myself.. interesting to note. i believe in myself, just doubt my voice. but i am a singer. i use my voice every day.. confidently. i teach. that takes confidence.. right? this theme of self doubt has so many layers. what about humbleness. the more i think about it.. to be humble is a bunch of bull. it has stifled me. rosie is right, my writing is riddled with self doubt, second guessing, uncertainty.. because though i have a voice.. i have yet to hear it, uncover it for myself. im not quiet enough inside my head. i dont listen to myself.
i find it terribly annoying when someone else exibits self-doubt. how dare they! i asked what they thought for a reason!! dont hold back on me. apparently, thats my job. well that just sucks. it all comes back to self worth.. i am worthy. i think.
ask me my opinion. i will try very hard to share it. i will try not to make a wisecrack. and i will say the first thing that comes to mind. no retractions.
deal?
i doubt that my point is relevant.
i hear my ma's voice again. 'dont worry about what other people think, it doesnt matter'. she is right.
but.
i know a lot of indecisive people. i can be at times. for instance, ask me where i want to go for dinner.. if there are other people involved, i will leave it up to them..
if it's a date.. i make the plans, no hesitation.
do i lack in confidence? always questioning myself.. no im confident. hm.. i do believe in myself.. interesting to note. i believe in myself, just doubt my voice. but i am a singer. i use my voice every day.. confidently. i teach. that takes confidence.. right? this theme of self doubt has so many layers. what about humbleness. the more i think about it.. to be humble is a bunch of bull. it has stifled me. rosie is right, my writing is riddled with self doubt, second guessing, uncertainty.. because though i have a voice.. i have yet to hear it, uncover it for myself. im not quiet enough inside my head. i dont listen to myself.
i find it terribly annoying when someone else exibits self-doubt. how dare they! i asked what they thought for a reason!! dont hold back on me. apparently, thats my job. well that just sucks. it all comes back to self worth.. i am worthy. i think.
ask me my opinion. i will try very hard to share it. i will try not to make a wisecrack. and i will say the first thing that comes to mind. no retractions.
deal?
self doubt is my second skin.
Fear and distrust are survival instincts. I am wary of motives and suspicious of looks. I had to be in order to survive an early abusive chaotic environment. I had to duck and hide, watch and be wary. I still duck when there is no blow and wince when no slight is intended. To excel is to invite notice and I prefer to stay hidden away and safe.
I swim in self doubt. I drown in it. I cover myself at night with recriminations for blankets. It's in my DNA now because it entered so early. My self was fractured and burnt as a toddler. My self was derided and devalued through elementary school.
Ah, but I was a fighter. I worked on building my own foundation. I dug my own trench. Poured my own concrete in. I built my Self up bit by bit. I refused to go down. I had faith in myself.
I hugged the few kind words that came my way to my heart and fought my way up and out. I have a glued together Soul, with cracks and missing pieces and hard scars that won't bend. But it is a serviceable one.
Light spills through the cracks. Missing pieces allow me to fit others in. And the Scars, they give me the strong will and force of character to do hard things, to handle hard choices and not be broken down when I have to nurture abused and needy children.
I am hard when I have to be hard, and soft when I need to be soft. and hesitant avoiding danger where none exists. and brave and fierce when me or mine is threatened.
I sweep doubt away daily, like the pesky voice that it is.
I swim in self doubt. I drown in it. I cover myself at night with recriminations for blankets. It's in my DNA now because it entered so early. My self was fractured and burnt as a toddler. My self was derided and devalued through elementary school.
Ah, but I was a fighter. I worked on building my own foundation. I dug my own trench. Poured my own concrete in. I built my Self up bit by bit. I refused to go down. I had faith in myself.
I hugged the few kind words that came my way to my heart and fought my way up and out. I have a glued together Soul, with cracks and missing pieces and hard scars that won't bend. But it is a serviceable one.
Light spills through the cracks. Missing pieces allow me to fit others in. And the Scars, they give me the strong will and force of character to do hard things, to handle hard choices and not be broken down when I have to nurture abused and needy children.
I am hard when I have to be hard, and soft when I need to be soft. and hesitant avoiding danger where none exists. and brave and fierce when me or mine is threatened.
I sweep doubt away daily, like the pesky voice that it is.
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
stroking my denial
it could be said that i live my life in denial. heh. i deprive and deny myself of a lot of things..
i go without a lot of material things.. but that isnt the crux of that last statement. i deny myself a relationship with my brother. i am in denial about my dad. i continue to deny myself a very promising international career. i deny myself emotional fulfillment... happiness. not sure happiness is all its cracked up to be. i laugh a lot. but its rare i laugh in a deep wholesome.. gawd that felt good.. kind of way. laughter, the best medicine, is merely a placebo.
i have a voracious appetite for life
i think my appetite is for a fix.. a fix to feeling like im worthless. today was the first time in a long time i felt like i was worthy. i am in denial that i am a good person.. in denial that i have talents..
i know in my head that its all lies.. that i have talent and i am worthy. that i am good.. that i deserve good things.. but the part of me that denies.. has a very loud and insidious voice. i could completely succumb.. but i am not my brother.
i seek to fill the void
why am i so empty.. my life is rich.. rich with denial
i go without a lot of material things.. but that isnt the crux of that last statement. i deny myself a relationship with my brother. i am in denial about my dad. i continue to deny myself a very promising international career. i deny myself emotional fulfillment... happiness. not sure happiness is all its cracked up to be. i laugh a lot. but its rare i laugh in a deep wholesome.. gawd that felt good.. kind of way. laughter, the best medicine, is merely a placebo.
i have a voracious appetite for life
i think my appetite is for a fix.. a fix to feeling like im worthless. today was the first time in a long time i felt like i was worthy. i am in denial that i am a good person.. in denial that i have talents..
i know in my head that its all lies.. that i have talent and i am worthy. that i am good.. that i deserve good things.. but the part of me that denies.. has a very loud and insidious voice. i could completely succumb.. but i am not my brother.
i seek to fill the void
why am i so empty.. my life is rich.. rich with denial
it could be said that i live my life in denial.
" it could be said that i live my life in denial. heh. i deprive and deny myself of a lot of things..
i have a voracious appetite for life"
At first glance these sentences seem to contradict themselves. Yet upon reflection I can see how they could exist inside the same person.
I find life to be emotionally and physically demanding and exhausting. Recently I had been living my life like a cloistered nun. Quiet, alone, with a rich inner life, yet besieged by chaos and demands. I retreated into myself after a series of stressful situations that seemed to have no solutions. I sat frozen in time. Missing seasons, not noting holidays. Empty appearing.
But inside I am buzzing and happy, wandering the net, curious and exploring. My horizon expands and I land on a hive of activity and gaiety. Appealing and diverting and so comfortable. A friends list? what joy. How amusing, I have 'friends' again. Not the complicated troublesome ones that worried me so in real life. These are simple superficial friends. GG. GG to you. so clean and unconnected.
Or so I thought. Turns out wrong. My voracious appetite for life has led me into delightful real connections. I can't escape from chaos and demands and stressful situations that have no obvious solutions. Nor do I want to. I don't want to live a life deprived myself of the pure joy that people are.
i have a voracious appetite for life"
At first glance these sentences seem to contradict themselves. Yet upon reflection I can see how they could exist inside the same person.
I find life to be emotionally and physically demanding and exhausting. Recently I had been living my life like a cloistered nun. Quiet, alone, with a rich inner life, yet besieged by chaos and demands. I retreated into myself after a series of stressful situations that seemed to have no solutions. I sat frozen in time. Missing seasons, not noting holidays. Empty appearing.
But inside I am buzzing and happy, wandering the net, curious and exploring. My horizon expands and I land on a hive of activity and gaiety. Appealing and diverting and so comfortable. A friends list? what joy. How amusing, I have 'friends' again. Not the complicated troublesome ones that worried me so in real life. These are simple superficial friends. GG. GG to you. so clean and unconnected.
Or so I thought. Turns out wrong. My voracious appetite for life has led me into delightful real connections. I can't escape from chaos and demands and stressful situations that have no obvious solutions. Nor do I want to. I don't want to live a life deprived myself of the pure joy that people are.
denial.. wtf
im in de nile.. up shit crick without a paddle.. <<cliche
denial.
i was never one to deny anyone much of anything. i would give the shirt off my back. yet.. when it comes to me, it could be said that i live my life in denial. heh. i deprive and deny myself of a lot of things.. but thats not the kind of denial we are talking about. this is serious stuff. life altering stuff. and right now.. i wanna deny even writing about it. i will prolly spend these 20 some odd minutes writing a bunch of fluff.. just so i dont have to look at myself.
interesting.
life altering.. in a good way. but we avoid pain at all cost. even if the end result could be.. more than likely will be.. good. my grandma apparently was full of wonderful cliches.. one being 'everything happens for a reason'.. but there are some things you have to work at. i dont know if i believe everything happens for a reason. i believe we have to try.. not let some fate work its magic. that is denial. i dont want to do the work. im lazy. but just by sitting here writing.. i am working at it. baby steps. like.. really.. a slug's slither.. but its forward momentum.
i dont know that i am in denial. <<this is denial at its best yall! i just dont want to deal. i see myself. sometimes i dont like what i see. but thats not an uncommon thing. denial.. isnt that for people who refuse to look? i look all the time. and i seethe. and i laugh. and i cry. and i feel.. its painful to look.. i dont know why. im not so different than other people.. not really different at all.
hm.
im missing something. something i havent looked at perhaps? prolly what i am in denial about.
denial.
i was never one to deny anyone much of anything. i would give the shirt off my back. yet.. when it comes to me, it could be said that i live my life in denial. heh. i deprive and deny myself of a lot of things.. but thats not the kind of denial we are talking about. this is serious stuff. life altering stuff. and right now.. i wanna deny even writing about it. i will prolly spend these 20 some odd minutes writing a bunch of fluff.. just so i dont have to look at myself.
interesting.
life altering.. in a good way. but we avoid pain at all cost. even if the end result could be.. more than likely will be.. good. my grandma apparently was full of wonderful cliches.. one being 'everything happens for a reason'.. but there are some things you have to work at. i dont know if i believe everything happens for a reason. i believe we have to try.. not let some fate work its magic. that is denial. i dont want to do the work. im lazy. but just by sitting here writing.. i am working at it. baby steps. like.. really.. a slug's slither.. but its forward momentum.
i dont know that i am in denial. <<this is denial at its best yall! i just dont want to deal. i see myself. sometimes i dont like what i see. but thats not an uncommon thing. denial.. isnt that for people who refuse to look? i look all the time. and i seethe. and i laugh. and i cry. and i feel.. its painful to look.. i dont know why. im not so different than other people.. not really different at all.
hm.
im missing something. something i havent looked at perhaps? prolly what i am in denial about.
Denial hurts
Today I took a scratch shot to allow Journal Companion to win a pool game. It is a defense mechanism that I do without considering the cost to my own self. I deny self for the greater good. Or so I say to myself. That's all bullshit or denial.
The reality is that I am afraid, deeply afraid to lose friendships if I win.
When I was little, like 8 and my mother was 25, I didn't know that she was not yet a truly mature adult. I knew that she loved to win and did win every game, any game, every time. I didn't mind, I kept playing her and trying to learn the strategies and watch her moves so I could excel. She was so smart.
One day in double Chinese checkers. I had hit upon a strategy that was brilliant. I had watched her many times maximize her attack on the board, not wasting any single shots but hopping a well built ladder across the board then bringing her men home in an orderly fashion. I decided to copy her work but I left one man behind blocking her win. Not only did I block her win, I managed to bring my men home in a devilish motion around her men, truly boxing her in.
I was one move away from victory. when she looked up at me. "If you win, I will hit you." I was taken aback. I had this game. It was a done deal. I looked at her and I thought for a minute. another minute. The clock ticked in the silent room.
I moved my man a step out instead of hopping over and I let her win. But in that moment. we both lost.
The reality is that I am afraid, deeply afraid to lose friendships if I win.
When I was little, like 8 and my mother was 25, I didn't know that she was not yet a truly mature adult. I knew that she loved to win and did win every game, any game, every time. I didn't mind, I kept playing her and trying to learn the strategies and watch her moves so I could excel. She was so smart.
One day in double Chinese checkers. I had hit upon a strategy that was brilliant. I had watched her many times maximize her attack on the board, not wasting any single shots but hopping a well built ladder across the board then bringing her men home in an orderly fashion. I decided to copy her work but I left one man behind blocking her win. Not only did I block her win, I managed to bring my men home in a devilish motion around her men, truly boxing her in.
I was one move away from victory. when she looked up at me. "If you win, I will hit you." I was taken aback. I had this game. It was a done deal. I looked at her and I thought for a minute. another minute. The clock ticked in the silent room.
I moved my man a step out instead of hopping over and I let her win. But in that moment. we both lost.
The zen of Yo
In 1962, Duncan started a promotion to make Yo-Yo's popular again. They made television commercials that blitzed Saturday morning and during Huckleberry hound hour at suppertime. Armies of Yo-Yo specialists were sent out to convert the baby boom children. They came to schools and put on shows.
And one talented tall fellow came to a small Illinois farm town of 500 and did a show in our school in the gym. He was handsome and charismatic, and sold yo yo's out of the back of his sedan. Soon all the boys and most of the girls were yo-yoing, before school, during recess, on the bus, they knocked and slept and went round the world.
oh I wanted a yo yo. I really wanted a yo yo. I asked my mom for a yo yo I talked about yo yo's I was crazy to get one. She said no. Of course she said no. I didn't really have much hope for yes.
I stole into my mother's purse and took 3 dimes. I took those dimes to the small gas station across from the school, my only mercantile outlet. They were all gone. I went to the school yard and let it be known I wanted to buy a spare yoyo . A boy sold me an older wooden blue one, not the new butterfly shaped one, for twice what the going price was. Children exclaimed I was being cheated, he was shoved a bit, but the deal held.
I was part of the faze. I had stuff like the other kids did. I had this precious thing for my very own. Sticky stringed and scuffed a bit from being walked on the floor. it had done amazing things for its previous owner.
I wind it fresh, oh so carefully and prepare for my debut. I fling it down with all my heart. It goes to the end of its tether and bops back up into my face. I fling it down. harder. It recoils and twists harder still.
I unknot the string, spread it out, rewind it and try again. and again. I try again at recess. I try again on the bus. I go home and tell a bold faced lie about being given a yo yo by a boy who didn't want it anymore.
After watching me for a while with it. my family agreed they could see why. No one to help me with it. This mystery of yo was out of my reach.
Years went on. With no one to help me I eventually learned how to ride a bike. sort of. I made myself learn to swim, sort of. Not really, but I tried. I crashed into bushes. I sank to the bottom. but as an adult I tried. and tried.
More years go on.
I get a son. a beautiful boy. He's healthy and active and he wants a yo yo one day. "I want to try it Mom."
I buy him a yo yo. I will learn this skill. He will not suffer like I did. It is the age of the internet. I google how to yo yo.
Place the string around your finger... got it.
Allow the yoyo to fall from your palm past your finger tips.
Fall? Just let it fall? Allow it to slip out?
I do this. Effortlessly. It goes to the end, hits bottom and snaps back up for my hand to catch it. Effortlessly.
I yo yo and yodel in glee.
I yo yo all over the house.
I yo yo over and over again till my son pries the precious thing from my fingers and is taught.
He yo yo's like a champ.
In the age of youtube and google, no one need suffer alone.
Just let it fall.
I was part of the faze. I had stuff like the other kids did. I had this precious thing for my very own. Sticky stringed and scuffed a bit from being walked on the floor. it had done amazing things for its previous owner.
I wind it fresh, oh so carefully and prepare for my debut. I fling it down with all my heart. It goes to the end of its tether and bops back up into my face. I fling it down. harder. It recoils and twists harder still.
I unknot the string, spread it out, rewind it and try again. and again. I try again at recess. I try again on the bus. I go home and tell a bold faced lie about being given a yo yo by a boy who didn't want it anymore.
After watching me for a while with it. my family agreed they could see why. No one to help me with it. This mystery of yo was out of my reach.
Years went on. With no one to help me I eventually learned how to ride a bike. sort of. I made myself learn to swim, sort of. Not really, but I tried. I crashed into bushes. I sank to the bottom. but as an adult I tried. and tried.
More years go on.
I get a son. a beautiful boy. He's healthy and active and he wants a yo yo one day. "I want to try it Mom."
I buy him a yo yo. I will learn this skill. He will not suffer like I did. It is the age of the internet. I google how to yo yo.
Place the string around your finger... got it.
Allow the yoyo to fall from your palm past your finger tips.
Fall? Just let it fall? Allow it to slip out?
I do this. Effortlessly. It goes to the end, hits bottom and snaps back up for my hand to catch it. Effortlessly.
I yo yo and yodel in glee.
I yo yo all over the house.
I yo yo over and over again till my son pries the precious thing from my fingers and is taught.
He yo yo's like a champ.
In the age of youtube and google, no one need suffer alone.
Just let it fall.
Dog vomit as metaphor
I stepped in it this morning, second step of the day. Cold wet, swishy, I had rolled out of bed, early with the clatter of Shaun's return to school. Had the water bed sprung a leak? I explore with my toes. I reach down in the dark and bring some to my nose. "wtf" is made for such moments. Years of parenting has made me a quick decisive efficient machine. The mess is cleaned in an instant, no more repulsive than removing a lizard from a shoe. And then there's another pile a few feet away. This one has chicken whole undigested in it. wtf?
I clean that up just as easily. carpet sanitized, I go to the hall to talk to son. "Hi, Good Morning, Your dog threw up chicken."
Don't yell at me!
I wasn't yelling.
"Dad told me to give Bonnie the chicken."
wtf? I go to ask him about this forbidden thing.
Dan is sitting on the couch, sick, defeated, overwhelmed, burdened, guilty. On his way to work while exhausted.
I decide to walk the dog myself. semi naked, I sneak out into the street to give her relief.
Family is made of Dog Vomit moments.
I clean that up just as easily. carpet sanitized, I go to the hall to talk to son. "Hi, Good Morning, Your dog threw up chicken."
Don't yell at me!
I wasn't yelling.
"Dad told me to give Bonnie the chicken."
wtf? I go to ask him about this forbidden thing.
Dan is sitting on the couch, sick, defeated, overwhelmed, burdened, guilty. On his way to work while exhausted.
I decide to walk the dog myself. semi naked, I sneak out into the street to give her relief.
Family is made of Dog Vomit moments.
gathered thoughts
ok, lemme gather my thoughts here...
(original post Wed Jun 22, 2011, 3:51 PM)
fiction or not, intriguing. i cant help but wonder if pushing boundaries is an experiment in humanity and its often tiresome but MORE often wonderful complexities. hmm.. artists often push boundaries.. looking beyond the seemingly obvious. i could write for days on that subject alone, but that isnt any new idea. i am willing to trust that what you want is just to know me. not such a stretch of the imagination. refreshing, actually. interesting that you are willing to push your own boundaries, not just others'. interesting that you are tempted to risk an amicable friendship in the pursuit of answers. looking only on the surface, one could easily assume you might not care at all about friendship or people's reactions.. adverse or otherwise.. but one who is willing to risk alienation, for lack of a better word at the moment, can only be a person who cares deeply about humankind... asking questions most people are too afraid to ask themselves, speaking unspeakable truths. as i said, this is courage.
i dunno, maybe i am crazy, but i think at the heart of this conversation lies one simple truth... people live in fear. its not so important what we fear, but that we are so willing to live with it.. accept it. WHY? your blog didnt make me not talk to you. instead it opened the door to conversation. but it wasnt the blog that made me speak, it was what you said about people not talking to you anymore. and dont think i spoke to you out of pity. i spoke because something dormant awoke inside me.
maybe i am questioning fear and its ridiculous stranglehold. i awoke. and then wrote my little piece about the deer. why? i dont really know.. maybe because to laugh is easy, but reading that entry cant have been. it certainly was painful to experience firsthand.
i did draw and scrapped it all. much to my own chagrin. why? fear.. lol im still reading and still talking... so push onward.
(original post Wed Jun 22, 2011, 3:51 PM)
fiction or not, intriguing. i cant help but wonder if pushing boundaries is an experiment in humanity and its often tiresome but MORE often wonderful complexities. hmm.. artists often push boundaries.. looking beyond the seemingly obvious. i could write for days on that subject alone, but that isnt any new idea. i am willing to trust that what you want is just to know me. not such a stretch of the imagination. refreshing, actually. interesting that you are willing to push your own boundaries, not just others'. interesting that you are tempted to risk an amicable friendship in the pursuit of answers. looking only on the surface, one could easily assume you might not care at all about friendship or people's reactions.. adverse or otherwise.. but one who is willing to risk alienation, for lack of a better word at the moment, can only be a person who cares deeply about humankind... asking questions most people are too afraid to ask themselves, speaking unspeakable truths. as i said, this is courage.
i dunno, maybe i am crazy, but i think at the heart of this conversation lies one simple truth... people live in fear. its not so important what we fear, but that we are so willing to live with it.. accept it. WHY? your blog didnt make me not talk to you. instead it opened the door to conversation. but it wasnt the blog that made me speak, it was what you said about people not talking to you anymore. and dont think i spoke to you out of pity. i spoke because something dormant awoke inside me.
maybe i am questioning fear and its ridiculous stranglehold. i awoke. and then wrote my little piece about the deer. why? i dont really know.. maybe because to laugh is easy, but reading that entry cant have been. it certainly was painful to experience firsthand.
i did draw and scrapped it all. much to my own chagrin. why? fear.. lol im still reading and still talking... so push onward.
choked up
in lieu of morbid squirrel stories..
(original post Tue Jun 21, 2011, 5:41 PM)
today, as i drove along an all too well travelled road in new jersey, i saw something that set the tone for my entire day.
i often see deer as i drive.. and, of course, many are hit and left as "roadkill". in all my years of driving,
i have never hit an animal. i swerve and break to miss squirrels and even birds. today, as i was driving,
i see a small lump in the middle of the road. and slowing down, i see a tawny coat of brown speckled with white..
a fawn.
sad as i was to see this tragedy, i looked up and who should i see pacing up and down the side of the road.. mama deer.
(original post Tue Jun 21, 2011, 5:41 PM)
today, as i drove along an all too well travelled road in new jersey, i saw something that set the tone for my entire day.
i often see deer as i drive.. and, of course, many are hit and left as "roadkill". in all my years of driving,
i have never hit an animal. i swerve and break to miss squirrels and even birds. today, as i was driving,
i see a small lump in the middle of the road. and slowing down, i see a tawny coat of brown speckled with white..
a fawn.
sad as i was to see this tragedy, i looked up and who should i see pacing up and down the side of the road.. mama deer.
of expectations..
(original post Thu Jun 23, 2011, 5:43 AM)
i have none. or at least i try not to. expectations only lead to disappointment. it takes me a while to digest things. to think. to read what is really truly being said. i try not to ever just read on the surface. though, in retrospect, maybe i am too careful.. not raw enough. in my experience, my gut instinct is almost always right, but the rational irrational mind kicks in... and well.. i am left second-guessing myself. again, fear. riddled with it. not sure why. and yet, if i continue to ask these questions, i may well figure it all out one day. and then i will die and it wont have mattered.
i read and re-read (several times) what you said, and i wanted to look beyond and move beyond the feeling of having been deeply flattered. because i realize this was not your intent, that there is so much more to what you are saying. and for the record, i am still going back and reading... to find clarity in my own response. but there has been so much said i just dont even know where to begin!
i want to point something out that i find amusing on one hand, because it is so instinctual and familiar a feeling to me and saddens me deeply on the other hand, because of the same reason. you are an expert at taking back what you have said, when what you have said has relevance and meaning. at least in the moment you have said it. and really beyond.. because i cant stop re-reading.
in chat, we have a backspace, but for the most part, what you say is just out there and
you cant take it back.. much as you may want to. and yes.. the proverbial LOL thrown in here and there, of which i am a huge culprit... yet another device to negate significance. but here, you have time to think and re-think what to write... i dunno where im going with this (and yet i do).. cobwebs.. but im trying to write off the hip and not overthink. maybe that is how i will write next time... just completely put myself out there and type. then, you may re-think, altogether, having this conversation with me. but i say, why second-guess? i say this, and yet, as i look back over my ramblings, i see myself doing the very same thing. taking back what i have said by negating my own relevance. i just happen to do it while im writing and you after having put it all out there. i guess what im trying to say here, is that you shouldn't second-guess yourself. your gut instinct is truth. and there is so much beauty in your truth. i guess i just wish that you wouldnt take back anything you have said or even re-think it. just be. if that makes any sense. and in many ways, i wish the same for myself. so, i ask... would this make us more or less authentic?
you said you hope that my grammar will never stop me from writing.. i write basically how i speak, informal yet formal... i could spend an hour going back over my grammar and correct it all, but i would much rather spend the hour going over the content of my blah blah blahging. you asked me if i want to get my ideas out before i forget them... yes! yes, yes, a thousand times yes.. and then i think, is it so important what i have to say? i cannot truly express myself in typewritten word,
because i cant possibly type as fast as i think and make clarity of it all. which makes me think about the many ways in which people express themselves. i express through music, therein lies my genius. we all have genius. some are lucky enough to find it, others, not so much. and here is where i would like to thank you. you make me think. in ways i dont usually. i dont know you, but i see genius. i see in you a person who makes a difference. makes an impact with words. and yes..
words i could read all day. you speak of sublime.. and well.. yeah, actually being given the opportunity to converse like this IS sublime. im glad you reposted... and im glad i didnt erase. not that anyone is reading this.
~ off to draw and this time i am keeping even the imperfections... maybe, juuuuuust maybe, i can eek out some genius.
Deafening
T
( original post Sat Jun 25, 2011, 2:19 PM )
i wish that you were reading me.
in all my life, i have never regarded silence as deafening or uncomfortable. i welcome it with open arms because, sometimes, there is just too much noise in this world. funny coming from a musician. i often feel noise polluted.. bombarded.. so i retreat into the solace of silence. but in the silence.. there are thoughts. the mind is never quiet. i relish the mind.
a friend asked me yesterday.. what do deaf people hear? i imagine beautiful things. birds that sing in hues of blue and green.. flowers that whisper and giggle in the breeze.. i imagine they could even hear the corners of the most lovely mouth curl up into a fleeting smile..
what does happiness sound like... or anger... or melancholy?
our silent moments are... well... you know. dont you? havent i told you every day, since the moment we first danced.. do you hear my words in your head... my laugh... my voice?
do you hear my truth..
can you hear love?
today, the silence is deafening. resounding. the same thoughts rage through my mind like a freight train. is it enough to love... to give your heart and soul to someone.. as i write this.. the sweetest sadness i have ever heard, Barber's Adagio for Strings, plays in the background. i opted to actually listen to music now, because the silence is just too much..
i wish you were reading me. if you are.. can you hear me?
W
( original post Sat Jun 25, 2011, 2:19 PM )
i wish that you were reading me.
in all my life, i have never regarded silence as deafening or uncomfortable. i welcome it with open arms because, sometimes, there is just too much noise in this world. funny coming from a musician. i often feel noise polluted.. bombarded.. so i retreat into the solace of silence. but in the silence.. there are thoughts. the mind is never quiet. i relish the mind.
a friend asked me yesterday.. what do deaf people hear? i imagine beautiful things. birds that sing in hues of blue and green.. flowers that whisper and giggle in the breeze.. i imagine they could even hear the corners of the most lovely mouth curl up into a fleeting smile..
what does happiness sound like... or anger... or melancholy?
our silent moments are... well... you know. dont you? havent i told you every day, since the moment we first danced.. do you hear my words in your head... my laugh... my voice?
do you hear my truth..
can you hear love?
today, the silence is deafening. resounding. the same thoughts rage through my mind like a freight train. is it enough to love... to give your heart and soul to someone.. as i write this.. the sweetest sadness i have ever heard, Barber's Adagio for Strings, plays in the background. i opted to actually listen to music now, because the silence is just too much..
i wish you were reading me. if you are.. can you hear me?
W
Monday, January 23, 2012
Insatiable
i'm hungry...
(original post Thu Jun 23, 2011, 11:39 PM)
just ask any of my friends. they will tell you. i am always hungry. what most of my friends dont realize, is that it goes far beyond my love of food. it is my personality. i have a voracious appetite for life... not just a lust. i have been known to read three or four books at a time. i spend hours wandering art museums.. feasting my eyes. the walls in my home are not white, but deep hues of red, blue, yellow, even orange! im so incredibly passionate about the human singing voice, i cannot talk about it enough, though i rarely indulge myself and refrain from bringing up the topic (as my opinion sometimes raises hackles). although my house is usually void of music or any background noise, i am in a mad love affair with melody.. often so taken am i.. i dont hear lyrics at all, even after hearing a song several times. i love freely, openly, and intensely with my entire being, not just my heart.
i dont know why i feel compelled to say these things. i just do.
swept up in my fervor for life, i often misstep and take certain things for granted. that people will understand my intentions are always well meaning. an assumption i should never make. an expectation... of which i need to rid myself. to put yourself in the shoes of another is never easy. tonight i walked a mile, and still have miles to go.
i should have trusted you. i should have trusted in us. i am often robbed of the right words in the wake of your storm.
i do not trust anyone. well, only one person.. myself.. even when i disappoint myself more than anyone else ever could. and yet again, it all comes back to fear. what does fear have to do with the ability to trust? everything. what do i fear? an outcome less than favorable. being alone. rejection. the unknown.
i realize in order to trust, there has to be an absence of fear. in order to be trusted, i must trust implicitly. it kinda works like faith. but i dont have any of that either.
i hunger. but i dont hunger for trust. i hunger for freedom from the shackles of fear.
(original post Thu Jun 23, 2011, 11:39 PM)
just ask any of my friends. they will tell you. i am always hungry. what most of my friends dont realize, is that it goes far beyond my love of food. it is my personality. i have a voracious appetite for life... not just a lust. i have been known to read three or four books at a time. i spend hours wandering art museums.. feasting my eyes. the walls in my home are not white, but deep hues of red, blue, yellow, even orange! im so incredibly passionate about the human singing voice, i cannot talk about it enough, though i rarely indulge myself and refrain from bringing up the topic (as my opinion sometimes raises hackles). although my house is usually void of music or any background noise, i am in a mad love affair with melody.. often so taken am i.. i dont hear lyrics at all, even after hearing a song several times. i love freely, openly, and intensely with my entire being, not just my heart.
i dont know why i feel compelled to say these things. i just do.
swept up in my fervor for life, i often misstep and take certain things for granted. that people will understand my intentions are always well meaning. an assumption i should never make. an expectation... of which i need to rid myself. to put yourself in the shoes of another is never easy. tonight i walked a mile, and still have miles to go.
i should have trusted you. i should have trusted in us. i am often robbed of the right words in the wake of your storm.
i do not trust anyone. well, only one person.. myself.. even when i disappoint myself more than anyone else ever could. and yet again, it all comes back to fear. what does fear have to do with the ability to trust? everything. what do i fear? an outcome less than favorable. being alone. rejection. the unknown.
i realize in order to trust, there has to be an absence of fear. in order to be trusted, i must trust implicitly. it kinda works like faith. but i dont have any of that either.
i hunger. but i dont hunger for trust. i hunger for freedom from the shackles of fear.
Duet
Voices in harmony. purity of tones entwined. listen.. dont duke it out. this aint a competition. sink your teeth deep into dissonance to reveal the release of consonance.
like two bodies in motion.. tethered in melody.. driven by rhythm.. to culmination
a conversation.. a question.. a response..
finishing one anothers sentence.. talking and tumbling over one another in sublime unity.
individual.. yet one.
like two bodies in motion.. tethered in melody.. driven by rhythm.. to culmination
a conversation.. a question.. a response..
finishing one anothers sentence.. talking and tumbling over one another in sublime unity.
individual.. yet one.
Duet also
Over the long years, a couple learns to live their lives entwined but separate. Like a duet, they harmonize. They cooperate. One soars up the scale, the other one follows or counterpoints. Sometimes one solos as the other falls silent and lets one take the lead so that voices do not falter.
Fishin'
you know, my brother and i were a handful. twins. best pals and worst enemies. fairly inseparable from one another. i was the baby, a whole 4 minutes younger than my high-spirited, mischievous older brother. he was only slightly more bent toward mischief than i. and he was often the mastermind behind our shenanigans. Ma would say to him, 'do not pick the strawberries'. so he would tell me to.. because the logic was that.. HE didnt do the picking. i was just gullible enough to do his dirty work. resulting in stained red fingers, stained red faces, and a couple of stained red behinds.
i was the shy twin. happy to lose myself in a book. he, the boisterous extroverted.. 'cmon.. thats boring, lets DO something!' twin. which almost always landed us in some awkward predicament.
one rainy afternoon, we were sent to our room.. instructed to clean up. so there we sat.. looking at this huge pile of laundry in the middle of the floor. Matt grinned, went to the hall closet, and pulled out our fishing poles. for the better part of the afternoon, we went fishing for clothes. at first, this seemed like a grand idea.. and it was a blast. casting.. snagging.. reeling.. and carefully removing the hook. but soon, we grew tired of being so careful and decided that a little snip with the scissors couldnt possibly hurt anything. with our chores done and the sun out, we went about our merry way. later that evening, we were watching tv with Dad and our sister, Viv.. when we heard a scream from the basement.. 'jeeeezus christ, you little sonsabitches!' ..we could hear her come flying up the steps and hollering out our full names. of course, by then, we had totally forgotten our fishing expedition. we just looked at each other as Ma held a few choice pieces of clothing up to the light for our dad to inspect.. it looked like moths had had a feast. we were grounded for a month and forced to go shopping with Ma for all new clothes.
i really could have been angry with Matt for that whole incident.. but well.. i was the one who brought the scissors into the equation.
i was the shy twin. happy to lose myself in a book. he, the boisterous extroverted.. 'cmon.. thats boring, lets DO something!' twin. which almost always landed us in some awkward predicament.
one rainy afternoon, we were sent to our room.. instructed to clean up. so there we sat.. looking at this huge pile of laundry in the middle of the floor. Matt grinned, went to the hall closet, and pulled out our fishing poles. for the better part of the afternoon, we went fishing for clothes. at first, this seemed like a grand idea.. and it was a blast. casting.. snagging.. reeling.. and carefully removing the hook. but soon, we grew tired of being so careful and decided that a little snip with the scissors couldnt possibly hurt anything. with our chores done and the sun out, we went about our merry way. later that evening, we were watching tv with Dad and our sister, Viv.. when we heard a scream from the basement.. 'jeeeezus christ, you little sonsabitches!' ..we could hear her come flying up the steps and hollering out our full names. of course, by then, we had totally forgotten our fishing expedition. we just looked at each other as Ma held a few choice pieces of clothing up to the light for our dad to inspect.. it looked like moths had had a feast. we were grounded for a month and forced to go shopping with Ma for all new clothes.
i really could have been angry with Matt for that whole incident.. but well.. i was the one who brought the scissors into the equation.
Shame
shame.. hmm
shame is regret.. only redder.
i try to live my life without any regrets.. though there are a few. i cross my t's and dot my i's very carefully. but i miss a step every now and then.. and then i learn. i realize if i dont make mistakes every now and then, im gonna run in circles. im a champion circler.
ok so this story pops in my head dunno why..
we were at the mall.. and we were running late. matt was on crutches.. his leg in the 'shop'.. and the entire family is racing through the mall at breakneck pace headed straight for the exit. matt bookin it on those crutches and viv bringing up the rear. mother hen! we race past the arcade.. and i hear some dude shout to matt.. 'hey.. what happened to your leg, man?' matt's rushed reply? 'I LOST IT!'
my sister fell on the ground in peals of laughter.. the dude's jaw dropped.. and we were late to the baseball game.
shame is regret.. only redder.
i try to live my life without any regrets.. though there are a few. i cross my t's and dot my i's very carefully. but i miss a step every now and then.. and then i learn. i realize if i dont make mistakes every now and then, im gonna run in circles. im a champion circler.
ok so this story pops in my head dunno why..
we were at the mall.. and we were running late. matt was on crutches.. his leg in the 'shop'.. and the entire family is racing through the mall at breakneck pace headed straight for the exit. matt bookin it on those crutches and viv bringing up the rear. mother hen! we race past the arcade.. and i hear some dude shout to matt.. 'hey.. what happened to your leg, man?' matt's rushed reply? 'I LOST IT!'
my sister fell on the ground in peals of laughter.. the dude's jaw dropped.. and we were late to the baseball game.
Shame on them.
Today my journal companion felt shame over an incident he witnessed.
I felt deep regret and pity. My cheeks blushed. My eyes watered.
I wanted to get away from the place. I was appalled.
Perhaps they are the same feeling. However I think that shame takes on the burden of responsibility.
No thank you.
I'm wiser now that I used to be. In the past I might have weighed in and gotten muddied in the process.
Now I know better. I am careful how I spend my time.
I've lived part of my life skirting shame, toxic shame, embarrassment,
shyness, till I froze in place.
I cannot and will not have it in my life anymore.
Shame and fear of being shamed stops the creative process. I will not be stopped
Mitzvah
As we were dismantling our house, I had to sell or get
rid of a professional sewing machine. It never really worked right and
it was a beast of a machine.
All the hopes i had for it had never emerged. It was infertile. Impotent, unloved. and yet I mourned its leaving.
So I put it in the paper and a Russian woman and her husband come to look at it.
We have a large community of Russian Jewish refugees that come to our city and start over again.
She tries to negotiate with me for it. I tell her it's broken, she can have it for free.
She becomes angry at me. Gets close to me. Starts swearing in a language, sounded pretty severe. Pokes me a few times on the chest with her twenties.
" I work for everything in life. No one ever gives me anything!" poke poke she goes. "Who do you think you are, insulting me in this way?" etc she goes on red faced and quite angry.
I struggle for words.
"It's a mitzvah" I say scrambling for words. hoping to breach whatever social norm I had broken.
She stop instantly and her face lights up like a spring morning with daffodils out.
This she understand.
She throws her arms around my neck and peppers me with kisses. Money is put away. Her husband ruffles me up with hugs.
They promise to cherish the old beast. It is carried up and out of our house.
My burden lifts every so slightly. and I chuckle at the gulf that was jumped with one lucky word.
Mitzvah is a connection.
All the hopes i had for it had never emerged. It was infertile. Impotent, unloved. and yet I mourned its leaving.
So I put it in the paper and a Russian woman and her husband come to look at it.
We have a large community of Russian Jewish refugees that come to our city and start over again.
She tries to negotiate with me for it. I tell her it's broken, she can have it for free.
She becomes angry at me. Gets close to me. Starts swearing in a language, sounded pretty severe. Pokes me a few times on the chest with her twenties.
" I work for everything in life. No one ever gives me anything!" poke poke she goes. "Who do you think you are, insulting me in this way?" etc she goes on red faced and quite angry.
I struggle for words.
"It's a mitzvah" I say scrambling for words. hoping to breach whatever social norm I had broken.
She stop instantly and her face lights up like a spring morning with daffodils out.
This she understand.
She throws her arms around my neck and peppers me with kisses. Money is put away. Her husband ruffles me up with hugs.
They promise to cherish the old beast. It is carried up and out of our house.
My burden lifts every so slightly. and I chuckle at the gulf that was jumped with one lucky word.
Mitzvah is a connection.
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