Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Does the beginning foreshadow the end of things?
"So yeah, we broke up." I notice she isn't clutching a drink in her hand and find it odd.
"Oh really...I didn't realize that you guys were together", I reply and immediately remember that it isn't true. There was this one time at a ladies night at Dominicks on Beverly ("Ladies night" are nine times out of ten held at Italian restaurants for the excuse to order carbs and cheese. Sushi spots are the second choice if we're feeling especially virtuous but then we get crispy rice and spicy tuna and that really isn't low calorie now is it ladies) when she walked by us on her way out with his beefy self following close behind. The lack of hand holding was immediately obvious to everyone and after a brief hello she sauntered away, him following her dutifully like a bodyguard.
"Yeah it was a couple of months", she sighed and raised a perfectly arched eyebrow and brushed aside a few honey colored strands. I get distracted by her perfectly colored hair (or heaven's is it REAL?) and then remember to focus, she's probably still feeling a little bruised.
She continues, "It's funny. Last Saturday night? After the party? We ended up in the same group that went to a strip club."
"A strip club?"
"Yeah, Crazy Girls. An asshole was this far from my face", she measures a six inch space from her eye for effect.
"Jesus."
"Yeah, the funny thing is...is that that's how we started...we both ended up at a strip club and afterwards I went for it."
Turns out beautiful women get their heart broken too. The ex in question runs with a notorious circle that seem to revel in fraternity/Ari Gold cliches- measuring their worth by the circumference of their bicep and the prestige of their client list.The sad reality is that just the facade of alpha masculinity is enough to fool most.
"Those guys are the worst", I reply. I can just see them now, flipping off dollar bills from their latest bonuses at naked women thinking that because they pay they have the power.
"Yeah, the funny thing is that is they are so loyal to each other. It's their ladies that get screwed over."
"They're probably secretly fucking each other."
We share a mournful laugh. I look into the bottom of my vodka-cranberry-soda for answers. Finding none, we avoid eye contact and look at everyone else, having fun.
Sunday, April 7, 2013
deprived
My body is betraying me. Saturday night sleeps are always an unreliable lot- they're either disrupted by too many glasses of Sauvignon Blanc drying out my bloodstream or other festivities extending way past my normal knock out time leaving me fitful and restless once I hit the pillow. But not this time. There's something that's unsettling me and as much as I crave an escape of a couple of hours of unconsciousness, my body clearly sees fit to remind me.
It's not the ring. It's not him. He's fantastic- my curly haired, rap-loving, cradle of support. He pushes me to be the best version of myself and let's be honest, I've always been a book in desperate need of a thorough edit. Maybe gold stars are to blame. Maybe the trophies that accompanied every minor accomplishment in childhood built up this lofty gnawing need for recognition. I still want my purple "Good Effort" ribbon.
Maybe this is a humbling spoon of reality. Maybe it's good not to have everything I want, to allow an area of my life leaving me wanting. Maybe I need to not want. Maybe I should become a Buddhist.
It's not the ring. It's not him. He's fantastic- my curly haired, rap-loving, cradle of support. He pushes me to be the best version of myself and let's be honest, I've always been a book in desperate need of a thorough edit. Maybe gold stars are to blame. Maybe the trophies that accompanied every minor accomplishment in childhood built up this lofty gnawing need for recognition. I still want my purple "Good Effort" ribbon.
Maybe this is a humbling spoon of reality. Maybe it's good not to have everything I want, to allow an area of my life leaving me wanting. Maybe I need to not want. Maybe I should become a Buddhist.
Thursday, March 21, 2013
beached
Every morning I wake up, brush my teeth, slip into something gauzy, and walk downstairs.
Even though all the doors are closed and the air conditioning is blasting something fierce, you can still hear the cacophony of insects and birds clamoring to be heard from their tree podiums. I've always been unnerved by complete silence so this tropical symphony rocks me into a gentle state of constant calm.
I pour Costa Rican coffee which is slightly sour but enters my bloodstream at breakneck speed and sip it until my body is humming. I crack and cook eggs which are carrot orange and slip them on top of pillowy pieces of buttered toast. Once fed, I pull open the sliding door and feel the thick, rich, perfumed air seep in.
Our view overlooks a cove where even from our perch on top of a hill, we can still hear the waves roar as they smash into the sand. Once in a while, Squirrel Monkeys or Capuchin Monkeys will jump onto our balcony from the surrounding palm trees and we reward them with a banana or two for their inquisitive nature and cartoonish pratfalls. Lizards are everywhere but you don't realize it until you walk in their direction and they scurry away like little children caught eavesdropping. One of our guides once told us, "You have no idea how many eyes are watching you from the jungle". You get the sense that this is true and wonder how many silent witnesses are watching you from amongst the palm fronds.
Even though all the doors are closed and the air conditioning is blasting something fierce, you can still hear the cacophony of insects and birds clamoring to be heard from their tree podiums. I've always been unnerved by complete silence so this tropical symphony rocks me into a gentle state of constant calm.
I pour Costa Rican coffee which is slightly sour but enters my bloodstream at breakneck speed and sip it until my body is humming. I crack and cook eggs which are carrot orange and slip them on top of pillowy pieces of buttered toast. Once fed, I pull open the sliding door and feel the thick, rich, perfumed air seep in.
Our view overlooks a cove where even from our perch on top of a hill, we can still hear the waves roar as they smash into the sand. Once in a while, Squirrel Monkeys or Capuchin Monkeys will jump onto our balcony from the surrounding palm trees and we reward them with a banana or two for their inquisitive nature and cartoonish pratfalls. Lizards are everywhere but you don't realize it until you walk in their direction and they scurry away like little children caught eavesdropping. One of our guides once told us, "You have no idea how many eyes are watching you from the jungle". You get the sense that this is true and wonder how many silent witnesses are watching you from amongst the palm fronds.
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
I just thought I would be in a different place.
Everything else is great. And not in the way where I overly post on my various social media accounts to assure the world that I'm sure cares that everything in wonderful, really, honestly, in that desperate, pained way that just reeks of the opposite. I actually do mean it.
But it's human nature, isn't it, to focus on what isn't. Someone in college once told me about how life is like a stovetop with four burners- one representing family, one friends, one love, and one career. Three can only be burning at the same time. See if you can guess which one I'm fixated on.
It's hard because this burner dominates my thoughts, my energies, my survival as an adult person. For a majority of my time, I feel invisible, inconsequential, unrecognized. The skills that I think I have, the skills that people I love assure me that I have, maybe they are just apart of this elaborate delusion.
Yet I perserve. This delusion, this idea of what I want to do, as ridiculous as it is, is all I have to hang onto. There isn't really a plan B. There's shades of a plan C, D, or E but those plans are shades of pleasures that I indulge myself in, not actual pursuits. There's nothing but this. I can't let my upbringing, my fear, my insecurity swallow me whole.
Everything else is great. And not in the way where I overly post on my various social media accounts to assure the world that I'm sure cares that everything in wonderful, really, honestly, in that desperate, pained way that just reeks of the opposite. I actually do mean it.
But it's human nature, isn't it, to focus on what isn't. Someone in college once told me about how life is like a stovetop with four burners- one representing family, one friends, one love, and one career. Three can only be burning at the same time. See if you can guess which one I'm fixated on.
It's hard because this burner dominates my thoughts, my energies, my survival as an adult person. For a majority of my time, I feel invisible, inconsequential, unrecognized. The skills that I think I have, the skills that people I love assure me that I have, maybe they are just apart of this elaborate delusion.
Yet I perserve. This delusion, this idea of what I want to do, as ridiculous as it is, is all I have to hang onto. There isn't really a plan B. There's shades of a plan C, D, or E but those plans are shades of pleasures that I indulge myself in, not actual pursuits. There's nothing but this. I can't let my upbringing, my fear, my insecurity swallow me whole.
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
domestic bliss
how appropriate it is that the emblem of adulthood is owning a house.
adulthood is about finding the one. adulthood is about creating a family and home with that one. adulthood is about introducing new ones into the world. adulthood is about the process of segregating oneself. letting go of the party friends, letting go of the hierarchal social structure that dominated our energies and minds from middle school onward. the people on the peripheral who always could hand you a glass of wine but not the type to pick up the phone past 3:00 AM on a Tuesday night. it's about the drifting away and the moving forward, the desire for satiety and fulfillment on all fronts and the letting go of the frothy, the trivial, the fleeting.
as i get older, i realize that we might die alone but our fantasy is dying with the other holding our hand.
how appropriate it is that the emblem of young adulthood is renting an apartment.
there's always someone within the vicinity. the lack of the plan didn't always result in the death of a night. the nighttime was a blossoming opportunity, a malleable thing that could either result in your greatest triumph or monumental tragedy. you're in love with wanting to change the worst in people; correction- be the one that changes the worst in people. you get off on that period of transience. everything is now, everything is magnificent, everything is terrible, whyisthishappening, ohmygodthisfeelsfantastic, don'tstopdon'tstop.
when i was young, i realized the value of living in the present.
adulthood is about finding the one. adulthood is about creating a family and home with that one. adulthood is about introducing new ones into the world. adulthood is about the process of segregating oneself. letting go of the party friends, letting go of the hierarchal social structure that dominated our energies and minds from middle school onward. the people on the peripheral who always could hand you a glass of wine but not the type to pick up the phone past 3:00 AM on a Tuesday night. it's about the drifting away and the moving forward, the desire for satiety and fulfillment on all fronts and the letting go of the frothy, the trivial, the fleeting.
as i get older, i realize that we might die alone but our fantasy is dying with the other holding our hand.
how appropriate it is that the emblem of young adulthood is renting an apartment.
there's always someone within the vicinity. the lack of the plan didn't always result in the death of a night. the nighttime was a blossoming opportunity, a malleable thing that could either result in your greatest triumph or monumental tragedy. you're in love with wanting to change the worst in people; correction- be the one that changes the worst in people. you get off on that period of transience. everything is now, everything is magnificent, everything is terrible, whyisthishappening, ohmygodthisfeelsfantastic, don'tstopdon'tstop.
when i was young, i realized the value of living in the present.
Monday, January 7, 2013
dissolving into a million pieces in a billion places
her own self is betraying her but she lets it.
what must it be like not to trust your own mind? what happens to a person when their memories so precise in chronological order are shaken up like a bingo wheel and you are left to sort through the broken pieces?
truthfully we've never been close. blood bonds us but little else. i'm too outspoken, too inappropriate, eating with my elbow on the table and knife raised almost like i'm ready for any unseen combat, an obtuse reminder of the schism between ladylike gentility of her time and the abhorrent modern rejection of those values.
yet we've always harbored an affection. i was the first grandchild, a boon to her good genes with her ski-jump nose leaping generations to my face and her translucent skin on my back. however, that deep-seated understanding between generations has eluded us for reasons i can only speculate.
seeing her now, during the only time of year that i have had in the past seven years, breaks my heart in ever increasing unique ways. only the disease crafted by the cruelest hand could possibly create one that lets the infected's mind crumble while those who love them watch the person they knew disintegrate.
of course now, at the likely end of her days, is the time when i want to know her most, to understand her. how typical of the human condition to only want that which is increasingly out of their reach. i'm going to interview her. to sit her down with a cup of herbal tea and some recording device and ask her questions not through the lens of the family member but as someone who just wants to know about her. i'm afraid if i don't do this, she's going to slip away through my fingertips like sand. i want her to be known. i want her to have an impact. i want her life to have meaning.
what must it be like not to trust your own mind? what happens to a person when their memories so precise in chronological order are shaken up like a bingo wheel and you are left to sort through the broken pieces?
truthfully we've never been close. blood bonds us but little else. i'm too outspoken, too inappropriate, eating with my elbow on the table and knife raised almost like i'm ready for any unseen combat, an obtuse reminder of the schism between ladylike gentility of her time and the abhorrent modern rejection of those values.
yet we've always harbored an affection. i was the first grandchild, a boon to her good genes with her ski-jump nose leaping generations to my face and her translucent skin on my back. however, that deep-seated understanding between generations has eluded us for reasons i can only speculate.
seeing her now, during the only time of year that i have had in the past seven years, breaks my heart in ever increasing unique ways. only the disease crafted by the cruelest hand could possibly create one that lets the infected's mind crumble while those who love them watch the person they knew disintegrate.
of course now, at the likely end of her days, is the time when i want to know her most, to understand her. how typical of the human condition to only want that which is increasingly out of their reach. i'm going to interview her. to sit her down with a cup of herbal tea and some recording device and ask her questions not through the lens of the family member but as someone who just wants to know about her. i'm afraid if i don't do this, she's going to slip away through my fingertips like sand. i want her to be known. i want her to have an impact. i want her life to have meaning.
Friday, December 21, 2012
rear window
so there's these neighbors across the way. i'm convinced that they are vampires because as far as i can tell, they don't sleep. they exist constantly in a wakefulness fueled by guinness and diet coke because those are the cans littered on their balcony rim like soldiers left for dead on the battlefield.
it's not that i stalk it's just that they are there. every time i look up from my perch on the couch where you can always find me at most hours when i'm not at work/sleeping/eating, i see their figures moving like lost souls, always moving and searching. logically i know that they are likely constantly on drugs and locked within the expanses of their neurological connections. yet i can't help but wonder what they see when we're all asleep. what they notice, what they hear. do they hear the homeless man who rattles our trash cans every morning looking for recyclables cry at night? do they look up and see those stalwart stars who dare blaze their light, la smog be damned?
i also wonder what they think of us- the neighbors across the way with the glass doors. undoubtedly they will see his curly head and my dirty blonde/auburn/idon'tevenknowanymore hair, usually tied up into a messy bun, out of the way. they will see us holding glasses of wine, usually white, sometimes red, sipping methodically as we consume the entertainment that we work so hard for during the daylight hours. i wonder if they think we are obnoxious- stopping every few minutes to gaze and kiss and touch and feel, still feeling awestruck by the majesty of love.
i wonder if they mistake the warm cocoon of monogamy for being boring. i wonder why i care.
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