| In a time of universal deceit telling the truth is a revolutionary act. --George Orwell |
Tuesday, 30 June 2015
Monday, 29 June 2015
Lucky
I want to tell a story, before I get lost in the telling.
She does not see herself at the age of 43, wounded, in crash position
on a black leather couch in the front room of a Victorian townhouse. She does not see the gauze curtains that
protect her from the curiosity of passersby, or the Klimt prints on the wall,
or the gas fireplace that is never on.
She does not hear the howls of pain and rage, does not feel her own hand
slap her face, over and over again, while a voice asks her to stop. She does not yet know how lucky she is,
because she cannot remember how unlucky she has been.
No one other than her much liked the dog. He had a bit of a temper and he liked to pee
on the basement carpet—damning traits in the eyes of the others. But although he’d nipped her once on the
face, she never told. He was her best
friend.
“You want to do this,” the witch whispered into her ear. “His love is only for the worthy.”
But she did not want his love.
She wanted only for the old woman in the crinkly clothes and who smelled so badly of lavender powder
to let her go. Let me go.
He always knew in which hand she held his ripped, tattered yellow ball
with the nobbles, even when she held the ball behind her back. It made her laugh. She thought he was a genius.
“His name was Lucky,” she told him.
“Lucky the unlucky dog.” Her
boyfriend laughed, so she did too.
Because she was still only 19.
She would not be 43 for a long, long time.
Sunday, 28 June 2015
Saturday, 27 June 2015
Diary entry, June 7, 2001
I chose to come
here.
But the sadness
the sadness...
It crackles.
No one told me, you
know.
Friday, 26 June 2015
Thursday, 25 June 2015
Dream Journal, February 16-17, 2005
By the time I went
to bed last night I was seriously starting to lose whatever good feelings I’d mustered
up since Monday night. Thoughts like I’m
crazy, I make things up, I’d rather be dead than deal with all of this…that
kind of stuff.
The dream I had I
only remember a part of. I was staying
in a house—not permanently, I don’t think.
I don’t know if it was a relative or not. A small group of people lived in the house,
including one woman who, it turns out, was a demented serial killer. I was sleeping on the couch in the living
room but everyone else had a bedroom off of one main hallway—like my house growing up. The people living in the house
called the hallway Death Row because every so often someone would be murdered
during the night, while they slept, in a very gory way, I think with a knife. We all knew it was this one woman—she very proudly
announced it, & seemed to take pleasure in our fear—but for some reason we didn’t seem to think we could stop her.
She enjoyed the fact that we didn’t know what
night she would strike. At one point I looked in on her & saw her lying in
bed with a smile on her face, like she was awake & knew we were scared. She had threatened me, too, so I was
terrified to go to sleep, as was one other woman who lived there (although she
seemed to take it for granted that she just had to deal with this). I was tired but doing all I could to stay
awake. I just wanted to make it through
the night & get out of there, although it wasn’t clear if I could leave in
the morning. I just wanted to go back
home.
I don’t really
remember what happened after that. I
might have made it until morning, however.
The dream wasn’t a
pleasant one, obviously. I feel scared
thinking about it.
Wednesday, 24 June 2015
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