Monday, 6 March 2017

Joy, Unexpected


I woke up as a fairy in the empty restaurant next to the woods.  From the time I was a girl I'd longed to live in the dollhouse in the attic.  But not until I opened my eyes and found myself crouching in the furthest corner of the kitchen pantry did I know that my hopes and dreams beat inside of a tiny heart.

Empty



Where is                                  here I am        

gone home without you

when I would rocket from the world
out of an ocean so impossibly asleep                                     

is the rain your final call

because I am wondering what this was for
           
why you ever loved me
why you do not anymore

there is no witness here
only ghosts of words that nudged into breath
  
the shape of a fool      shivering and wet       

your blanket thrown over the bed one cold night too late
 my eyes, heavy with dreams 

but you—                  
very much awake

how I welcomed the chance to be wrong

to never ask why you had to leave
why you had to come at all

was it to drift away from this eroding shore

or was it
not wanting to be sorry
not wanting to be felt sorry for
  
one last secret for memory to keep

Now our half-truths ship out
under cover of a cloud-filled sky
the sun you once spoke of
never any friend of mine
                                   
can you feel it rain
can you?         

Sunday, 5 March 2017

Hand Over the Scissors



The girls sat at the table nearest ours.  Actually, they were women, or almost women, but that was something I discovered only after I got to know one of them.  Until then I had no idea that their illness had trapped their adult selves inside the bodies of lost little girls.

At 21 years old I didn’t understand my own issues, let alone anyone else’s.  The various groups in residence never mixed, except during the odd sanctioned event designed to cheer us up.  Three times a day we just shuffled past each other into the cafeteria, our eyes fixed firmly ahead of us.  No one suddenly leapt from their group’s designated table and dashed across the room, shouting, “FREEDOM!” as they crashed through the invisible barriers separating us.  We didn’t want to know each other.  We didn’t even want to know ourselves.

The cafeteria still managed to be a somewhat cheerful place despite the palpable misery its diners inflicted upon each other.  Light streamed in through large windows, and someone had thought to paint the walls in bright spring colors, providing a kind of warmth we could no longer generate on our own.  Considerable effort had gone into the food as well.  It was nothing fancy, but we got enough and it tasted good.  I actually sort of enjoyed mealtime.  It provided a fleeting break from the non-stop horror show taking place upstairs in our designated corner of the building.

For the girls at the table nearest ours, though, each confrontation with food took on the aspect of death .  The rules of their unit required that they eat a certain amount.  Given that I gladly and willingly polished off every morsel on my tray it never occurred to me that for the thin girls sitting a few feet away, eating constituted a kind of mental violence imposed on them for their own good.  This was partly because the girls currently in residence were hardened combat veterans; they’d reached a grim detente with their food.  None of them seemed exactly happy at mealtime, but neither did they let on just how difficult chewing and swallowing could be.

And then the new girl showed up.

Like the others, she looked young.  Too young.   Ghost-white, swimming in her clothes, and with limp black hair scraped back into a high ponytail, she viewed the cafeteria scene with dark terrified eyes that were too large for her gaunt face.  A woman wearing a sympathetic smile set a tray in front of her.  As the new girl gazed down at the food, teardrops began rolling down her cheeks.  The woman took her hand and held it.  I watched the girl wrestle with something terrible inside of her before I lowered my eyes, embarrassed by my interest. 

Everyone in the cafeteria had problems that felt like a knife against the jugular.  The alcoholics, the drug addicts, the women in my group who recoiled from our own histories—we all bled.  And yet watching the skeletal girl struggle to bring even a forkful of food to her mouth, I experienced a kind of grief for her that I could never quite manage for myself.  The most basic of requirements had become her enemy.  During a joint outing one of the viciously skinny girls who turned out to be 23 years old told me she’d stopped eating to wrest back control of her life.  Except that in the end, the cure for a lifetime of pain had become a potentially fatal condition in its own right.  Irony could feel like the worst kind of practical joke sometimes.

I understood this because I, too, had just declared war on my own “coping mechanism.”  Which was why I found myself somewhere with pristine green lawns and a so-called trust course and the rule that no one could have any sharp objects in their room.   We had all come to this place technically out of choice, but the distinction between us and those in a psych ward was a fine one.   If you wanted to shave your armpits, you still had to go to the nurse’s station, ask for your razor, and proceed under the nurse’s watchful eye.  Just like how a nurse had to check on you every 15 minutes all day long, to make sure you hadn’t hanged yourself with a bed sheet, or god knows what.  Suicide threats had that effect on the staff.

It was the last chance saloon for those of us on the verge of giving up.   We did our time and went home again, a few of the massive holes in our internal fabric partially mended, most of the others still gaping.  The trick was to either learn how to live with these holes, or to find a way to stitch them up ourselves.   To hope we could pull that off sometimes seemed absurd when we were surrounded by so much agony, but every small breakthrough personally experienced or witnessed in another extended the possibility. 

By the time I checked out of the treatment center, the girl with the high ponytail could eat without the nurse holding her hand.  But these types of wars are never really won.  The best one can hope for is fewer engagements of a less brutal kind.  Although I never knew what happened to her I have to believe the girl is still fighting—that 25 years later she is somewhere eating her dinner, and smiling.


Saturday, 4 March 2017

A Conversation With Her




You want to forget about me, she says.

Yes, I answer.  I do.

You talk to the others.

I know.

I thought you said it wasn’t my fault.

It wasn’t.  Not really.

Then why do you want to forget about me?

Because it’s hard, I tell her.  Very, very hard.

How do you think it feels for me? she returns. 

Worse.

That’s right.  Worse.  You get to be somewhere else, where someone loves you.  You get to see flowers and smell things that are nice.  Everything I ever wanted you have, but you won’t let me share it with you.  I survived.  Why doesn’t that count?

It does.

You think I’m ugly.  That in a way I am as bad as they are, because I make you feel just as bad.  That isn’t fair.

No, it’s not.  I’m sorry.

Thank you.  Now what are you going to do about it?

Friday, 3 March 2017

Fires, redux



Did you tell me I would be broken
when you made me special
Did you call me hopeless
when I begged forgiveness
Because now I am crawling
waiting for tomorrow
With a today so very desperate
that yesterday is hiding
There is no more point here
I shout into the echo
But I can feel nothing
other than this burden
Special for your weakness
Special for my survival
Special is what kills me
I cannot defy it

But I am sane and you are not
and here we are and there I was
when I cannot breathe out loud
lest you hear me moving

Far out of your orbit
spinning in slow motion
Trying to shout louder
than a kitten’s mewling
Will the planets find me
all my silent crying
Now I can feel nothing
only my plates shifting
Into old arrangements
nothing ever changes
If you could have loved me
let me be ordinary
The world would have opened
the stars would have held me
But now I am so special
the goddess of your nothing
What you poured inside me
it was not for growing
It was all for killing
what was only dying
to be loved at all...

Thursday, 2 March 2017

War


Just when I was about to crawl out of my bed and find something to hang myself with, an elderly man wearing a clerical collar walked into the room.

I stiffened.

He held up a hand covered in age spots.  “I know I’m probably one of the last people you want to talk to, so I won’t stay long,” he said.  “I just wanted to sit with you for a little while, if that’s all right.”

My finger that hovered over the call button relaxed when he smiled.  It was not the smile of a maniac.  I knew what that smile looked like now. 

He took a step closer, enough for me to better see his face.  There was nothing special or particularly memorable about it, except for his eyes.  Green and blue swirled together, so that they reminded me of satellite photos taken of the earth from outer space.  “Don’t be afraid,” he said.  “God is with you.  You can rest now.”

He then patted my hand. 

I wanted to ask him where God had been while Vince tortured me in the barn, but the words didn’t come; exhaustion had, for the moment at least, extinguished my rage.  As I heard him settle into the chair next to me, I fell into a sleep so deep that I did not wake up again until the staff member came in with my breakfast. 


Wednesday, 1 March 2017

Fractured


broken bits of song    
tick off planets long gone
as greys and yellows burn from
inside out
melt
into forgotten scream

does it live deep within me
does it breathe alone               
will it break my heart

or just shatter my bones