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More Thoughts on Forgiveness

It’s okay. But even if it wasn’t okay, what am I supposed to do?

Raymond Carver, Cathedral

Tonight, I will try to write my own body apart. It is tired of waiting. It wants to belong. Perhaps, in mere pieces, it finally can.

Fingertips stained with nicotine: grown tough like cypress. Jaded lines of a knife-point along my hips. Half-healed burns in a cosmos up my arms. Hair torn out at the roots. Guitar strap slung like an albatross around my neck. Crescent scar on my upper arm. Eyes like a child’s, lashes growing in a rusted tangle. Bones that shift like a scourge beneath the skin.

Even now, like this, I am better off than I was however many weeks ago. My skin feels less bruised and fragile. My veins drip no ichor, but still thrum dimly. My form curves like music, a notation: I command more attention, demand more space. These wounds are closing off, retreating. With nothing left to dampen my pulse or thin my blood, I walk through the world like an ordinary woman. I go to work. I read the papers. I think of my friends in faraway places. I linger and exist, wishing that my heart could ring out in pieces, or echo like so many shards of light.

I have been left disappointed and resentful and, above all else, alone. Whatever was wrong with me before is fastened to the underside of my mind. Try though I might, I was unable to exorcise its presence. I can still feel it breathing inside of me. Honestly, I am beginning to think that the only thing to do now is to go back and try again. Perhaps I can find some strength this time around; recall the weird luck of my childhood; live. 

In the dim reflection of the doctors’ frightened eyes, I can see plainly what was done to me. If I forgive them all, for everything, can I mend my troubled ways? Before I try, I should focus on making it through tonight. 

It has just been too hard, remembering all of the things that I had buried so effectively, laid to rest like bones still aching with unrealized breath. When I was twelve or thirteen, scarcely more than a child, I fell down the unpolished wood of my garage stairs, trying to escape my father’s wrath. I had sought to wrench away from his horrible words, the livid vein that pulsed in his temple: but my foot caught fast on the threshold of the door, and I crashed down like a small burning star, frightened and hurting all the way.

Those were the days when there was a child left to save. But she died, you see. The girl that I was, she expired swiftly and painlessly, inspiring my present self to try for the same. But all of us know how this story ends, or doesn’t. I will not ask you to read it again.

It is so hard. I can taste the bitterness and grief rising up in me like bile. I write for the people who are not listening. Can I forgive the ones who shattered my tedious self-assurance? Can I forgive the causal figure of that scar on my arm, where it was dragged along the memory-edged stairs? Can I forgive the community that left me stranded on its periphery, driving its edges into my skin? Can I forgive the thing that fed from my mind and my chemicals and my body for half of a year, and then grew disinterested and departed wordlessly, leaving me with a catastrophe that he never cared to learn of?

These, all of these, are acts of violence. Sometimes I feel like people around me are letting me exist this way: because it is convenient, because they know that I can withstand it. Whenever they expect me to suffer quietly, and I do, it feels like proving them right. That makes me want to stop surviving. You who did this, who let me down, who disappointed me, who made me feel like shit about myself, who left me to hurt myself and recover on my own–what are you thinking now? Who among you will read this? Do you count yourself among the number?

I am trying, I am trying to forgive. Because maybe then, I can be forgiven too. I did what I thought I had to, and then ran. I am not sorry yet, but on the day my life and my habits catch up with me, I will be. And I will need forgiveness then, like a scorched forest needs the rain. I never learned to look after myself, to walk like something precarious and rare. Because some part of me will always be twelve or thirteen, and falling down that flight of stairs. Someday I will lose what little of my health remains, and that deterioration will murmur like a toxin through your veins. When such a time comes, it should bring you no surprise to find me down among the ashes. Go on, then. Let’s see just how much it takes.

But maybe not. When I was young, I used to love the autumn. It is the only season by which I can really abide. That time is coming fast, coming now. I am wringing out these hours, like bed sheets drenched with blood. And he knows what that looks like: what I gave to him. When I lay back today in the hospital bed, my thin gown and thin form all restrained, the doctors came to know what he and I had made of one another, in the days before he let me fall.

This is all that I have left to work towards now. I will try for the impossible, I will try to forgive everything. Because in spite of all my anger, my adoration, and my pride, I never belonged to you–not any of you. I will not be enthralled by your apathy any longer. I will not yield, nor accept the harm that was done to me at your hands. These costly mistakes will be repeated no longer. The cycle ends with him and me. Either I am courageous, or I am very, very weak.

I cannot forgive you yet, but know this: I am trying to. You were as clever as you were cruel. You might have anticipated all of this from the start. But for myself alone, I must do this. I must forgive it all. I must find some way to love the memory. I must find some new way to feel.

Just remember this, darling– you never owned me.

And I?

I do not kneel.

Chances

I have had my chances. I have tried and tried.
I have stitched life into me like a rare organ,
And walked carefully, precariously, like something rare.
I have tried not to think too hard. I have tried to be natural.

Sylvia Plath, Three Women

I have spent some time traveling, existing in untethered motion, that old respite of my childhood. I reduced my world to the backseat of a car. I saw everything. I felt whatever I could. Such perambulatory endeavors, like the events that precipitate them, are scarcely new to me.

I have walked, in my short and troubled life, the winding alleyways of a thousand vivid cities. New York. Paris. Boston. London. San Juan. Honolulu. Oranjestad. Dublin. Toronto. Oxford. Amsterdam. Los Angeles. Chicago. Montgomery. Phoenix. So many others, now forgotten. Back then, I was restless and always awake. I was invisible and engaged. Now and then, in such places and times, I met those who lived fully and well. They knew a peace that I had never believed possible. And so I gained my glimpse into worlds where people did not hurt as much. And eventually I came to learn, as I would time and time again, that this bored me. There are some things you can only feel alone.

Those were the strange and lovely days of my earliest imaginings, when my world was all rainwater and starlight and things still to come. Every day, those memories fade out a little more. I lost them to tongues of flame and keen silver edges and rich, low notes of scotch: to the nicks and scars along my hips that now forge a kind of quiet farewell to unsustainable instances of fascination and false joining.

It was a long year. They were not right about me, and him least of all. I was flawed and I was wanting, but I was worth more than nothing. I was strange and unearthly and harmless. I loved well. I did not deserve to be cast off once more, left alone on the other end of an ocean and a discourse, with half of my memories and all of their horror, with madness and some life inside of me, with decisions that nearly undid my form, with things he should know that I can no longer bring myself to say. This is my virulence, my insurrection, my voiceless indignation. I deserved better. I owe him loss.

Wretchedly grieving or righteously incensed: I could be either now. Those are the boxes that I am meant to curl up in. But I will not comply. Instead, I will just be this. I am not okay with what was done to me. I cared, and even now, I can barely bring myself to stop. But that was known. It was always known. It was exploited. Why ask to stay in touch, after all, when it would have been more practical, more humane, to remove my efforts with surgical precision, to undo me like a lobotomy, rather than leave me to wait and wonder and write down reasons to freeze to death until I was as stoic as ice, with nothing left to obscure or defend? I should have been left alone from the start. It would have been better. So I will remember, and I will move past this, and I will hold fast to the forlorn conviction that not every figure I care for will follow the subhuman path of my father—even if this one did.

I had a dream, just the other morning, when my mind was cold and still. Even now, I cannot remember what it was or what it meant. But I know that it mattered. I know that it left me with some fortified conviction to live more adamantly than I have of late. And I know that I awoke to a wild summer storm, the lightning hissing and crashing, the world turned silver in driving sheets of rain. I was alone. It was mid-afternoon. I realized then that I was not designed to survive a world such as this one. I want too much. I feel too much. I live too sincerely. People like me do not die when we want to; nor do we exist in perfect motion. Instead, sometimes, we linger on, waiting for better and more painless days. That is what I am doing now.

This all might be reduced to a sort of ongoing, answerless question. How on earth do we determine who is worthy of our love and endurance, and what exactly we can justify forgiving, when our suffering comes at their hands? And how do we manage such forgiveness, when they have hurt us with such deliberation? Maybe I was right from the very start. Maybe we really must wait until all of our scars and our memories fade—until either our wrongdoers die, or we do—to find at last the peace that eludes us in life unending. And until that sweet and far-off day, maybe we simply learn to withstand the lovely and remorseless methods of those we live alongside. I do not want to be angry anymore. Not at my dad, not at anyone. But unrepentant fury is how I survive. I have never known redamancy, and I likely never will. I have all but stopped hoping. I do not cry anymore.

And yet, I am the luckiest person that I know. I have not died. I get to try again. I still have my younger brothers, so full of life and promise. I know no silence to be sorry for. I have people who love me even now.

Yes, I have had my chances. My father had his too. And so have infinite scores of others. But I will not be as my parents before me. I will know myself better than that. And if I live to see the other side of this fast-approaching year, I hope to have more to remember than the people who allowed me to care for them, and then took their leave with the summer. Because I want something to matter. I want to matter.

This is the only promise I have left to keep. This is a dimly burning prayer. Hear it, please, if any of you can.

I am trying. I am trying. I am trying.

One more chance is all I ever need.

What Doesn’t Kill You (Someday Might)

Some things you’ll do for money,
And some you’ll do for fun.
But the things you do for love are gonna come back to you one by one.

(The Mountain Goats, “Love Love Love”)

HB and 6B graphite. august 15, 2016. (unfinished). 

just keeping myself busy with drawing

August Litany

Remember nothing; resist all. 

You have tortured me too deliberately for me to be able to forgive you at this moment.

Fyodor Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karamazov

I have spent much of this summer listening to the hum of my car’s battered engine, surviving on unlit cigarettes and stolen whiskey. My home is more disparate than I am. My indictments fall upon a blank expanse of form. I am so much better and so much worse than whatever I was before.

I am desirous life incarnate. I am a meaning without a cause. I am dragging myself out of bed in the mornings. I am confronting the world that makes me so very afraid. I am drawing, when I find the time. I am learning the violin. I am trying to write novels again. I only kiss razors in my sleep. Most peculiar of all, I have no one left to write for now. As I have learned at least twice before, you can amputate the things that love you. With precision and without mercy, you can render them so that they might never have existed in the first place. But now, I am not the surgeon; I am the severed limb. How very strange that feels.

It was exactly as I forecasted, in the depths of my language and my actions alike. Unexpectedly, inexplicably, I sensed that familiar radio silence. So I waited; then wondered; then grieved; then felt nothing at all. And so it was, that what no one should go through, I went through alone. Prescription doses and medical diagnoses and deathlike decisions became my bizarre and incongruous art. I had not even the crutch of the affection that I spent so long attempting to sustain. No desperation has ever seemed more misguided. I could only understand this once the final, silent indictment had been made.

In the bitter specter of an unrealized promise, I found what I could survive without. And I resent the carelessness and the callousness that he showed me; the necessary cruelty that such a realization inevitably entails. All vanity aside, I was worth more than this. Surely anyone is.

But enough of that impenetrable history. That time in my life is over, and lately, its futility and its imprecision and its aimlesslness bores even me. I do not know when I became this way, all language and longing and only worth whatever loved me. But it is a simple and senseless waste of my time. I did not lose my father, cross an ocean, shed my own blood, to grieve over the memory of men without conscience; of women without conviction; of living things that could not have completed me even if they had tried. I have other things to write about now.

On the final night of July, I left the turbulent respite of my home in thin grey underwear and a faded black coat. My feet were bare. I walked across the summer-dust roads, but no cars came. I lit a match, made to extinguish it against the underside of my wrist. But I did not. I knew the pain would sting like singing; the caustic crescendos; the disparate rise and fall. I wanted to let myself feel this. But I did not.

Then I went to Brooklyn, where meaning emerges like chiasmic dawn, where memories crawl like roaches in the streets. I stood solitary upon a friend’s balcony, the taste of liquor rich on my tongue. I could see distance and depth like a cradle of thought. I watched the lethargic haze of the Manhattan skyline. I wanted to step over the edge of that dim precipice and learn what freedom really felt like. But still, I did not. I did not.

Do you understand the triumph of these simple moments? Could you learn the brilliance and the unbearable enticement of a death so many times delayed? On second thought, I am quite sure that many of you can, and do, know the experience that I write of now. I have spent far too long pretending that I am the only one who feels this way.

I would rather be bitter and still-breathing, than grief-stricken and lamenting and lost. So fuck that. What is next? I will etherize myself to sleep tonight, and wake up in the morning feeling new. I will exist. I will engage. A day will come when this all feels better, and until then, I will try again and again.

I am writing too cryptically, as usual. So I will say this as plainly as I can. I believe now that I will make it through this madness, even when it feels like my own mind is killing me. Because nothing draws you back to self-conception like mutilating your own body for the forgotten sake of a person who, in all likelihood, never cared for you to begin with. I am not apologizing anymore; but I will not abstain from culpability, either. The madness of this year has brought hell upon us all. But this flesh is healing. Its history has lost its poison. The summer heat is fading fast.

I am healing, here and now. And I can say with certainty, for the first time now, that which, in truth, I was not entirely certain of at the start–

I will be returning to England in the fall.

On Mercy’s Heels

Apologies for such a brief and grim post. I wrote this upon waking from a nightmare. It should not be taken too seriously. I will probably delete it sooner rather than later. 

Dear girl! Life is addictive. Yet we must live.

Joyce Carol Oates, Blonde

No one is reading this. I am in a crypt. Inverting like shrieks of a memory-shell, these locusts move soft across the underside of my mind. The result is headless, and bears a kind of flesh: its image festers like carrion. My bent chest cracks with each whistle of breath. Skin, skin, skin, skin: I am writing for the birds now.

Here, in this moment, I am not getting better. Only more scared. This shouldn’t surprise us. Because you can’t spend half your life in the talons of an undue virtue and come out the other side feeling okay. You just can’t. And who knows–maybe we all hold this truth for a reason. Why should my lot be any better?

I write for all of you. How do you feel? Are you well? Is anyone fucking well anymore? Some of you have to be, because I gave you my health, I scattered it upon your minds like leaves on an autumn grave. Surely some difference was made. I lie where the vines clung in crimson-wrought tides, and rifted the bare iron dusk of your eyes. Come on, please: be all right for me. Live gladly again, because I can’t now.

I still love you all. There is no cult of madness more inane than these people, these nets of souls and human society. Every selfless display of concern becomes a sort of violence: sympathy is a more virulent indictment than any barbed rebuttal. It is all so simple and sentimental and cruel: why are they asking this of me? If I were a dog, they would have put me down by now. I have given them cause. Why can’t I just go?

But I stay and I stay. So stop worrying about me, for god’s sake, stop worrying. I am the farthest thing from fine, and yet, by their standards, it is all just as well. This culture does not care if I am merely a corpse reanimated. So long as I walk and I speak and I breathe, so long as I lend them my obedience and language, so long as I pour words across the empty pages of their lives, they are satisfied. By those principles, the crisis is over, my tragedy averted. I am fine, I am fine, I am fine. I am alive because that is what you need me to be. I am not going anywhere. I am not breaking stride. This is just a bad hour. A bad week. A bad year.

And besides, I still have a few deaths left to spend. Who knows what vampires stalk even now through this childlike nightmare of a mind? Maybe another dark-eyed man will come to drink love from between my lips and lifeless thighs. Maybe another faceless god will bleed me of sight and sanity. Maybe another crowd will jeer at the smoke of a witch’s burning. Maybe another thoughtless friend will tear each tenet of my trust away, seizing upon my faiths in sequence like a set of severed limbs.

To keep the impression of harmony, you need me to hate myself. Right? Maybe not. I don’t care anymore. I am simple and effaced. I want to be purer than the winter. I want this feeling gone from me. I am eating my own darkness: it is tougher than a deadened heart.

And what does it matter? I am remote. I am remiss. I am untouchable. Here is just now. No one is reading this.

Waters of Rose-Quartz & Asphodel

I am undoing you from my skin.

Rupi Kaur, milk and honey

I had lingered too long in the keeping of my own unquiet mind; it was time to start moving again. I boarded a flight to the West Coast, found another world wherein I might incur mirages of meaning; but I was never content to find respite in the crystal depths of the Pacific. I was born of the freakish Atlantic, a daughter of its far-off, forlorn tides. My pulse recalls songs of its salt-bitten winds; a rainswept necropolis in gradients of grey; the nascent floods of brine that cut colder than my bones. I lost my childhood to those sepulchral shores, and returned ten years later to kneel in the bitter currents and pray for my own restoration.

This ontology of decision and desire seems more wrenching now than it ever has before. I have spent so long crushed beneath the foot of my first lover, groveling and gnawing upon exigencies of my own survival. I suffered under his architecture, the monstrous ingenuity of this master builder, my Daedalus: between us, we shared one strange and brilliant soul. I am the consequence of his failed designs, the product of a mind like a beautiful machine, enshrined in its crucible of ash. I forged a double consciousness within those sterile fires: engendered the two-tongued heart that will devour us both in the end.

There was a morning, just one, in my recent memory, when I might have escaped from the labyrinthine past. What a blissful prospect it seemed, to evoke the fate of Icarus: to forsake a foregone body and fall burning into the sea. But I did not succumb to the breathless lure of that desire; for you were there behind frosted panes of glass. Your sleeping form recalled the ecstasy of more blameless days. I could still feel the rapture of our time spent in balance: the effortless joining of two reckless, untamed things, smoking and speaking and making love on the living room floor. You swam the dark waters of my enigmatic needs, traced patterns from my tongue upon supernal strains of music; you lured me, like Eurydice, from self-appointed death. A part of me lingers in the channels of England: unseen, eternal, and imbued with an endless longing. There I lay to rest not only the specter of our lost time, but also the memory of the child I was, immersed in the beautiful beginnings of my madness, when you found me in a smoke-dimmed room and made the first of your efforts towards my heart.

I know that you tried, in your own peculiar way. I know that you cared as well as you could. But I was not fully known to you. A body half-starved, craving tenderness and trust: untethered though my love may often have seemed, each moment took root like cypress in my soul. You were saner than I; you never understood, because you never could feel, how very much those shared months meant to me. I doubt that anyone in your position ever really will.

I have lately written, with such precise devotion, these effigies of what we were, what you are, what I always will be. But our mimetic self-abasement is unfurling still. I wanted to wait for you. Of course I did. But as early as the first glimpses of our distancing, I was already moving towards the threshold of that room; because this, you must understand, is a condition of my survival. I must hold this butchered consciousness together at any imaginable cost. I cannot hope too fondly, or love too fully, or write too honestly now—for though I can endure losing you, I cannot watch you fade. Have you imagined, all this time, that I feared the tragic implications of your absence? Nothing, my darling, strays further from the truth. There is no desertion that I cannot withstand, and this itself is what frightens me: I am reluctant, as ever, to confront the colorless expanse of my apathy. When you go, my narcoleptic mind will relinquish this, and expunge it all with an unsettling ease. You will not linger within me—not even slightly. You will lose your meaning all too quickly. I will forget what it felt like to love you in the first place. That, my love, is the tragedy I sought to defer.

My god, I really have lost you, haven’t I? You really are not coming back. Go ahead, then. Take it all. There is no bitterness left in me. Finish what you yourself began—for you wanted this once, more than I ever could. I blame you for that, you know. But I will survive. It is time to start thinking and loving again. It is time to forge some kind of peace with how very alone I am. So now, if it really is the end of this, I will go without question. My resistance bears the form of an absolute submission: one final testament to the clandestine longings now eclipsed by a reality I can hardly accept. I will know no anger, no remorse. I will simply remember you fondly. I will recall, with gratitude, the mind that once sheltered my own. There will be no grief, no horror, no hurting: just the melancholy ending of another finite and impossibly lovely thing.

You quieted my mind even as I tore it to pieces in front of you. You helped me to heal, and you wounded me past endurance. When you kept yourself distant, averted your dark-eyed gaze, you forged, implicitly, the fresh scores of scars that shower now across my skin. But if these myopic inclinations mutilated my reason, then they also made possible your most miraculous act. Through your gentle pragmatism, you came to learn the nature and the chaos of my form. You derived rhythms from its tremors and blood. You achieved precisely that which I had never believed possible. You revived this body. You restored its life. You knew what I was, and you saved me all the same. Now, at last, I can breathe again, and for as long as I live, I will be thankful for that.

My friend, my love, you were well met. You were enduring. You were adored. I will miss you unrestrainedly: I will endeavor to feel the fullness your loss in every corner of my being. Someday, I will find the courage to only want what is best for you—but lately, I have been too afflicted by desire to see beyond the shadow of an inexorable ending. And so I will not write of you any longer. I will not gnaw upon the bones of an irretrievable past. It is time, I think, to learn the value of solitude once more.

I write here an ending to these uncertain days. This is your farewell and your freedom. I ask nothing of you; I cling to the illusion of your affections no longer; I release you from it all. I hope that you go where you will, and love as you choose, and remember this well—but you have no obligation to me anymore. I suppose you never really did. And in the end, it would scarcely have made a difference. There was never any health left in me for you to protect or preserve.

Darling, you should understand by now that I always, inevitably, survive. I see no other option but to live and to live on. So take your leave of me entirely. There is nothing left to know.

I love you. I miss you. I’ll be fine.

Now, go.

Untitled #2

…yes, in spite of all,
Some shape of beauty moves away the pall
From our dark spirits.

(John Keats, “Endymion”)

charcoal, #2 pencil, and HB and 6B graphite. july 16, 2016. 

A Confession.

Or: How My Latest Diagnosis Changed My Life (Again)

How odd I can have all this inside me and to you it’s just words.

David Foster Wallace, The Pale King

The summer has passed me by quietly so far. I am realizing lately that I rarely, if ever, write in my authorial (rather than narrative) voice. What I mean is, I don’t write in the same way that I talk (so to speak). What does that say about how I see myself in a social context? (That was rhetorical: don’t answer it).

Do not misunderstand me: my narrative voice is notin my eyes, at leastcontrived. It is not an obscuring of myself, but an actualization. I use language, become as verbose as I feel necessary, in order to engage with content that I otherwise regard as nearly unspeakable. It feels organic. It feels like a truth. Even so, I am a person and I write about people. When I allegorize each experience, I am only providing half of the story.

Every now and then, in some conversation or another, someone (and I can tell you every name and what they said, because these are some of the most humbling moments it is possible for me to have) will reference my blog while talking to me. Sometimes they mention specific phrases or images or ideas. Once, an attendant at a house party quoted a piece verbatim (that really tickled me). Every single time this occurs, it never fails to astound me—and I mean literally astound me—because with the exception of a few scattered “likes” on Facebook, I genuinely can’t believe that people actually read this blog.

And that might be for the better: I think I have to believe that. My literature (so to speak) is a full-on, unflinching chronicle of a mental state that sometimes seems to be deteriorating at a rate that frightens even me. What might it mean to know this, to see myself as being seen this way, as a thing that has spent half of this year one wrong word or thoughtless action away from a complete breakdown? I could hardly stand knowing that people knew me in this way. I have to believe that, as I work towards regaining much of my health, many of you are choosing not to look.

Do “people,” in the abstract—that is to say other people, people outside of myself and those that I know intimately—understand how much I like them? Not just as individuals, but as a notion, as people-who-are-not-me. I am fascinated by this whole living, breathing, thinking network of human bodies that all seem to know what they’re doing when I don’t. I want to be fond of it. I want to break down all of the unspoken barriers that seem to impede my relation to some greater world.

But to really grasp the difficulty of achieving this, one would first have to understand why I built up such remarkably effective walls in the first place. And I’m not sure even I really understand that.

I don’t think I was all that well-liked as a kid. I’m fairly certain that has something to do with it. Losing my relationship with my dad probably didn’t help either. But I never realized just how bad things were until the end of my first year at university. Now I am trying to remember the last time I felt completely comfortable in a social space full of other people—the last time I did not feel an implicit need to justify what I perceive as the inherent detriment of my presence—and I honestly cannot.

To be clear, this is not a new issue for me. One of the clearest and earliest memories I have of this, outside of family events and classroom settings, occurred when I was thirteen years old. I was enrolled in a summer theatre program that was, in my eyes, the single most wonderful place on the planet. I had never been more excited. It was not always easy for me: with a nonverbal disorder, chronic anxiety, and some symptoms of potentially being on the spectrum, I was unable to navigate the fast-paced and exhaustingly social atmosphere of the camp as easily as I might have liked to. Sometimes I spoke too much or too loudly. Sometimes I was too nervous to speak. Nevertheless, I was extremely happy. I was so thrilled to be there, in spite of its challenges, that to this day I am not completely sure what I was doing wrong.

But I must have been doing something, because one day, the program director asked to have a “conversation” with me. My memory has expunged most of the encounter—to protect me, most likely—but I remember that she said something about behavioral complaints. Then she asked me, very seriously and sternly, if someone was making me come to the program every day. That question hit me much harder than I am sure the poor woman had intended for it to. To her utter surprise and confusion, I began shaking, then crying hard.

“No one’s making me come here” I choked out, “I want to be here. This is my favorite place in the world.”

I will never forget that feeling. I was hurt and I was humiliated, but worst of all, I was crumbling beneath a sense of woeful and staggering inadequacy: not only, in my thirteen-year-old mind, could I not get these people to like me—I had somehow also failed to communicate how very much I liked and admired them. When I went home that day, I had cried all of the shock out of me, and so I sat in my room for hours and did nothing at all. When my parents came home, I did not tell them that anything (or everything) had gone wrong. I spent the next day stammering out explanations to anyone who would listen. I spent the rest of the summer apologizing everywhere I went.

But the conversations continued. Things just kept happening. And it all hurt tremendously, but how were they to know? They were all so well intended. They were trying to help by fixing me. But I didn’t need fixing. I needed someone to like me. I needed one goddamned person to understand how confused I was by the world. But that person never appeared, and at some point, I think that I just started assuming my own inevitable isolation. I wanted to become untouchable, and thus, less damageable.

So I got smarter. I worked my ass off in high school, and better yet, by the time I reached eighteen or so, I learned how to make it look as though I was not trying at all. (That’s bullshit, by the way. I am always trying very hard, and usually just in the interest of keeping my head above the water). I got angry. I started smoking, mostly so that my hands would stop shaking every time I tried to make conversation with a classmate or a shopkeeper or a stranger. I inked my skin. I shaved my hair. I learned how to argue with, dismiss, and mistreat other people. You could say that I learned to make them feel how they used to make me feel.

But that is the problem, isn’t it? These people aren’t all the same person; yet I began, ridiculously, to forego their demarcation by the inevitable virtue of their not being me. I saw everything in a manner that was almost explicitly oppositional: there was Myself, and then there was Everyone Else. And I was in equal parts envious, suspicious, contemptuous, and admiring of Everyone Else, simply because They were not Me. I still struggle with this.

Not all of the changes were detrimental, of course. Some of them were revelations, rites of passage, my means of coming into a better and fuller sense of personhood. The issue arises, I reckon, when I am no longer confident in my ability to differentiate between the protective spectacle and the unrestrained self. Because when your mind falls apart and your fingers are always twitching and you wake up one morning and realize that you have lost just about every trace of the optimism and vulnerability that you used to have in abundance, it is easy to be bitter and resentful of the world.

Is this helpful, though? Am I healing? If the last year is anything to go off of, then the answer is absolutely fucking not. The unhappy moments I describe have been internalized, by me, as lasting and deeply harmful parts of my psyche. They compounded with early strains of my depression, and years of verbal and psychological maltreatment, to such a damaging extreme that my therapist and my psychiatrist and my team of doctors finally produced another diagnosis to add to my nightmarishly accomplished mental repertoire. They gave my paranoia a new name, they called it Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, they wrote a few new clinical notes, and provided some impassive words of sympathy that dripped into my skin like anesthesia. It made me feel so fucking low.

Now, I am desperately seeking someone or something to hold onto. I am pushing away everything that I do not want to hurt, or that I do not want to lend the power to hurt me. I am not always doing the right thing. But if there is one thing I will credit myself for, it is that I did at least try to communicate what I was thinking and feeling. Yes, sure, maybe it was not enough. Maybe people really did not know the full extent of the damage they inflicted when they leveled unfair and untrue accusations, when they left me alone in the worst parts of my life, when they failed to stay in touch, when they made me start hating myself again. But they knew, they must have known, that I was violently ill. I wore it on my arms and my protruding ribs. I stopped laughing. I stopped working. I stopped going outside. And most unmistakably, most explicitly, I allegorized, documented, and published it all here. On this blog.

Does this read like I feel sorry for myself? That might be because I have nothing left to lose from self pity. I did everything I was supposed to. I “got help.” I tried to be honest. I fought back when I had to, and when I saw no other option but to be angry and unrepentant, that is exactly what I was. (Why is that so often construed as fucking funny, by the way? Why does it amuse people to see me so obviously upset: online or in person? What difference is there between aggravating my fears for entertainment and kicking a goddamned dog? If I remember the last incident correctly, there are 27 of you who might explain that difference to me sometime). I was ill to the point of incapacity, and it was overridden and ignored. My needs were overlooked and displaced in favor of a more greater and more comfortable social narrative wherein I was making some active choice to feel this way. But that wasn’t true, it just wasn’t. A half informed conception of my personhood was projected, perhaps inflicted, upon my scars and my episodes with a relentless and unforgiving precision. 

Is it my fault, then? I know that it might be simpler, less painful, to comply a bit more. But I don’t see that it’s any better to kill myself slowly, in pieces, by behaving like a thing I am not, rather than simply taking care of it all in one permanent action. With any luck, this will remain a choice that does not need making. But do any of you really understand, for a even a goddamned second, what really compels me to write the way I do, and as often I do, and using the subject matter that I choose? I am not all that talented or thoughtful or insightful. I am just trying to justify my own presence, because I don’t think my presence is, on its own, justifiable. And I did not come to feel this way needlessly.

I want to be like everyone else. I want to be treated as normal. But I also need people to understand that, for me, it is a herculean effort to get out of bed every day. I can be wrenchingly honest about the fact that I am angry and sometimes hardly sane. But I am far less forthright in addressing the fact I am just sad, or sick, or scared sometimes, and it is not a cataclysmic tragedy, but a very simple and fixable problem. The “Confession” here, then, is that I am not special. I am just relentlessly sensitive, irrationally melancholic, and chronically unwell. The confession is that I believe, secretly, that most of you already knew that, and that my constructed narrative of feeling misunderstood is just a way of not having to face being understood and yet uncared for. This is everything I was too afraid to say; it is the exorcism of what I was taught not to speak of or remember.

I am trying so hard to negotiate some form of existence that does not feel like it is killing me off. I am trying to live an impassioned, compassionate life. I am trying to be likable. I am trying to love. If there is one action that I must resolve myself to, it is the critical and continued interrogation of my impact on other people; the influence I have by sheer virtue of speaking, moving, engaging within some space that is not my mind. Because that is how I will endure this. And I would prefer not to do so alone.

Chiasmus, First Draft

image1

…and there was the sea between us again.

(Sylvia Plath, “The Unabridged Journals”)

#2 pencil. july 14, 2016. (unfinished).  

Deafening Pleasures, Miraculous Minds

Tell me, how does it feel with my teeth in your heart?

Euripides, Medea

I clawed my way back from a pulse’s periphery, bearing the visage of some creature far from health. I returned to an unwilling existence, feeling so selfish and so sorry. I took a bus into the city, found you amidst the shop-strewn streets. I walked you home. You slept beside me. I let the night run quietly through my mind.

In those hours, I thought that the worst must be over. But it was only beginning—and I, of all people, should have known that. Mine are the botched efforts of an unhinged, half-formed child: I honor my mother with callousness and a trail of broken things. Dim figures break their lingering promises; I break their lovely, blistering hearts; we break whatever sinew still tethers us to sanity; I break myself upon them. I have no innocence, no reverence, I am wretchedly aware of it all. But I am still willing. Oh yes, I will own this. I mean to be a horror-show lover, filled with half-furious remorse—but never to lose twenty-five years of life to a thing that means to leave me. Not another bastard God. Please, please, give me anything but that. I am sick half to death of failed deities and absent Fathers and false saviours: once, I imbibed his brutal adoration like a toxin, anointed in trilemmatic despondency, drinking each sacrament with consecrated helplessness; but I will not be mute or virtuous any longer. I will be faithless in totality. I will know no master but my own will to live. My efforts will likely be successful, but their victory entails my dissent, my infidelity, the unholy utterances of an absolute freedom. I will be secular: I, who wants more than anything to atone. What could be lonelier than that?

In the end, my love, when it all was said and done, I only needed a promise. I only wanted your mind and your time. I only drove you off because I hoped so desperately for to you to stay. Of this, I am unrepentant. You used to like when I acted that way, waking with the morning, pushing my fingers through your mouth, your throat: the muscles moved, the joints unfurled, and thereupon, a language lay inscribed. I wanted and wanted and wanted you: I engendered meaning in diacopes of desire. When you responded in turn, it was ecstasy, a miracle: those words were the genesis of our better days. I imagined, then, that I was free to do and to write as I wished. I presumed that I was justified by the mere act of loving you. I was not.

When the first blood of our carnal clauses was still drying like a cipher between my thighs, you lost the ability to read me. Those movements that you once thought so beautiful, so coherent, were a dead language to your mind. I might never know any skill with which to articulate what uncertain misery then unfolded, what catastrophe born of Babel drank the fluency from your tongue. Your lexicon, your literacy, the longings you derived—they came undone around us, inverting like rhythms of a chiasmus, until we were only the specter of our own discontent: loving what we could not keep, and keeping what we could not love. Our intentions turned in phrases, like hands on the face of a clock: we orbited one another in nameless, effaced wants. But there were not enough moments: I needed more time. I thought that you were coming home, but you never did. The absence of your demarcation flooded me with fear, immersed me in oppressive and somatic plentitude. The idioms faded fast from my many incisions, the agonized intaglios of my need for normalcy, the calligraphy of knotted scars that you once read like braille beneath your hands. Text and body met in incomprehension, showered in shades of your disavowal. Yearnings clashed like prosody. Why did you stop choosing me?

Your gentle mouth with its barbed tongue and clauses slick with chrome, 
Now excavated and bit back the palace of my bones

You gnashed and ground and gouged your teeth all through my sob-torn chest:
The crypt-like, cracking cartilage that caged my dying breaths.

You started then my work for me, the rest I did in bed:
Crouching in the darkness, grief-raw memory rusted red

I held out that feral thing, forsaken, soaked with brine—
And ate of my own heart, for it was bitter: it was mine.

I never understood it. Why did you not wait for me? I gave you my reverence. I gave you my rhetoric. I needed you more than my memories, I showed you a longing that surpassed language. Do you remember when the sheets were soaked with my suffering: when I allowed you to rest your head against this heart as it wrenched and raced with a chemical burn? That is what it looks like when, in spite of myself, I try. I always thought that if I held fast to your form, sank my fingernails into your mind, gave you blood and bliss and fortitude, then you might remain for just a little while longer. An astrology of scar tissue; the scorched starlight of my empty soul—I offered this cosmology to you alone. Those bandages, clean and whiter than a narcissus, I only applied so that I might meet your eyes. You saw so little, but did you suspect? You were the only desire I knew in the end. Why did you not wait?

A year or so ago, when I was young and enthralled, when I still had my memories and some reason left to lose, I fell in love with a longing made manifest. Back then, my body recalled cheap hotel rooms and unlit cigarettes and the kind of nights that flow like delirium into the mornings, and I gave it to him, understanding it to be everything. I undressed to my necklace, a bare-hearted girl in a silver chain: shivering skin, narcoleptic memory, undone desires, long ragged hair. I thought I loved him. I can still feel those hands upon me. I wanted him to tear the tarnished thing from my throat. If he had meant to hurt me, then I would have known pain. That was the choice I made. I thought I loved him, I honestly did. I wanted to be pure. What an exquisitely vicious mind I had.

This world was not built to sustain the inclinations of a half-devoured heart. It is too pragmatic. It is too sane. And I, love, wear affection like pathology: I am indifferent when and where it counts. I did not mean to frighten anyone, when I clambered half-conscious and barefoot atop that roof, the wind cutting hard against my scalded arms, the concrete calling out like a promise. I simply sought to be empty: to lie back, skin stripped raw, bare hands upturned beside an expressionless face. I saw nothing wrong with this; even now, I see precious little. But they mean to send me back to those rooms all the same, with their blank walls like blindness, because my dreams are bad, and getting worse. My skin is riddled with bullet holes, a wounded, skewered thing: my body dances on splinters of glass, and treads upon rows of teeth in the earth. Blood falls fatal from your mouth, your flesh undone beneath my touch; you turn away from me. I thought I lost you once before—now I lose you every goddamn night. It is not getting any easier. Yes, the dreams are bad.

I spent a year of my existence in some purgatorial nightmare of social life. I felt unwanted. I felt ashamed. But I cannot do it anymore: I will not comply. I no longer have any use for their scathing standards. Fuck them. I am not writing for them. I am not a fucking martyr. I am not an object of their sympathies. I am not an image of tragedy, and I will not be compliant in another tragic act. I am an ego in constant opposition. I am bitter. I am angry. This world has failed me, it asked too much. I am nothing but a body now. I am this, and only this, whatever the hell “this” is—all else is Other. And how can I tell the goddamned difference? Everything, everything, antagonizes me.

This mind is an enigma, engaged in some perpetuity of motion. It knows so little. It barely even knows itself. But a lifetime ago, however briefly, however intemperately, I know that it knew you. It longs to hear your voice again: your contrapuntal promises, the staccato of your nomenclature, the evasive keys of a symphonic longing, the crescendo of your night-tinged scores. I remember, so fondly and sorrowfully, all of the times when I wanted to hold you or kiss you or fuse my heart with yours: to take whatever parts of you were tired, or hurting, or afraid, and endure it all in your stead. But I did not know how to, or if you would allow it, and so I stayed as mute as the child I no longer am. I wish that I had tried. I wish that I had silenced, with my mouth and hands, every doubt in your unquiet mind. I should have consumed all of that suffering until the only thing you felt was my skin. I should have taken care of you.

Darling, I have had my chances. I know what I am. I know that, in our ending, I lost something that I may not soon find again. But for what it is worth, I adored you. We liked to pretend that this was meaningless, but it was never, it was not. I will not accept even the suggestion of our insignificance. Nothing is without meaning, not in this life, and especially not us. We know that the world is in motion. We see how it births and dies. We feel, in our joined bodies, its constant burning. We were not thoughtless, but overcome by the brilliance of our being. I will always absolve you, by virtue of what you are. I willingly excuse the horrors you inflicted; I take them on gladly; I vindicate it all. I exonerate you of your false promises, your lost language, your perpetual absence, your notched and troubled ways. What did I ever do, in this godforsaken life, to earn such reckless affections? This is me saying that I love you. I love you; and you will never again, in all probability, be loved by a thing like me.

But I never owned you–would that I had–and when the waking spring finally drew to a close, it was I who crossed the distant sea. There is so little left to be written of us. But you do not have to worry about me. You never have to worry, for I am not the dying type. I am merely a parasite, devouring my own longings. I am sustained by the intolerable rhythm of my pulse; by the rust-tinted flood of the summer rain; by the lingering potency of a desire I mistook for God. I am a thing apart from sanity. I am an unrepentant self. It is as beautiful as it is appalling: I eat away at my own heart like some hateful, half-life Eucharist.

And what apostate, after all, has ever shied from a bloodletting?

“I am a wound walking out of hospital.
I am a wound that they are letting go.
I leave my health behind. I leave someone
Who would adhere to me: I undo her
fingers like bandages: I go.”

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