Kaninchen und Ente

 

This is a drawing of a rabbit. It's just a sketch and doesn't look very much like an actual rabbit; the ears are wrong and it lacks the endlessly curious bunny nose. I won't go on with rabbit details (soft fur, various endearing noises). I'm not stupid, it's not a real rabbit, it's a sketch of a rabbit, and just a rabbit head at that. What's making me personally unwell lately is that for some reason if I say "that's a rabbit" people feel a real burning need to tell me that it's not a rabbit, it's a sketch of a rabbit, or better yet that it's not a rabbit it's a duck. Yes, I see the duck, too. I'm well versed in optical illusions; wait til I tell you the story about that beautiful young woman in a fabulous hat who turned into a hag overnight. But right now for a minute I want to talk about the rabbit. I don't understand why before I get to talk about the rabbit I have to acknowledge all the different ways of seeing it. I know about those, too. I do! But there is something about the particular brand of my fear that is wrapped up with wanting to have the thing I see validated. Maybe it's not there, the creak of the house, the smell of gas, the cold draft from a crack somewhere, and I ask "Did you…?" because if you didn't then I am, finally, crazy. But I don't think I am. Yes, there's a duck there. But… Did you see a rabbit? It's all I want to know. Do you see the rabbit? Because I see it. 

 

medium roast in a medium town

One thing I kind of love about living in a medium-sized town is that there's always something going on. It's never so little that you're at a loss for ideas, and never so much that you can't manage to find what you want to do or choose (though sometimes choosing can be a bit tricky). When I was little I wrote a porquoi story about an earthworm that wanted to be at two parties at the same time, which is funny because my understanding of myself is pretty consistently that I want to be where I am. This indicates that even as a young storyteller I was working on developing empathy for characters quite different from myself.

Another thing that I love is that if there's a thing you want that doesn't exist, you can create it without too much difficulty. Imagine starting a theater in a small town or a big city. In one, you'd be hard pressed to generate enough interest to keep it afloat. In the other, the competition would be overwhelming. A nice medium-sized town and boom, in six years you've done twelve plays despite a pandemic, and each show is on some level better than the last.

One thing I'm struggling with a bit is that competition, which I have never understood, feels pretty personal on this scale. I don't mind if things are created that are different, but I don't like the unnecessary introduction of conflict. I'm not even talking about people who compete with the things that I'm doing, though obviously that's uppermost in my mind. But there are three hairdressers on my block. Within a few blocks of my apartment, there are at least five cafes, not including the hairdressers, which also serve coffee. I like a hairdresser. I like a cafe. And if the market can support it, I guess those are fine businesses to have. But I don't see a lot of difference between the hairdressers (in fact, they seem to all be one big business in three different storefronts) and I don't see much difference between the cafes, either, though I imagine I'm just not cool enough. How did the hipster burn his mouth? He drank his coffee before it was cool. I wish that there was more diversity and less competition. I wish that one of them would be, I don't know, a fancy cocktail bar or something. I wish people would imagine things that aren't in my neighborhood yet and then put them here.

One year I decided to go to a different place for a massage every month until I figured out what I liked and didn't like about massages. Maybe I should start going to all the cafes around until I figure out what makes them different. And maybe in the course of that I'll think of something else I want and either will it into existence or make it myself, whatever it is. I'm not changing hairdressers though. One shouldn't mess with perfection too much.

see what I mean

I guess several newspapers (notably The Guardian) ran articles in the last few weeks about aphantasia, the inability to picture things in your mind. It affects, they conjectured, about four percent of people, though I don't know how they determined that. Three people in the span of two weeks told me they had it, therefore establishing it in my mind as the new ADHD or autism. It's not actually a disability, it's just an inability. I listened to people telling me this and thought "Okay, and?" and then I thought "Can I picture things?" I'm not really sure. I don't know that I need to. 
 
When I was in university we used to talk about things like this all the time, what was reality and how we perceived reality and what that perception might mean, how it might affect how we feel about it. Are we all seeing the same blue? Then I guess I started thinking about other things. When people tell me "picture this" I understand it as "I'm setting a scene for you" but not as something I'm actually expected to visualize until it comes to life. I understand that I'm expected to imagine something and I sort of do, but it's not, like, an image. It's a shared metaphor, or at least I thought so. Dunno. It's not a medical diagnosis (I'm not even sure it can be diagnosed — parts of your brain would fire up, I guess?). 
 
I have monopsia, meaning that I only look out of one eye at a time, and therefore only see things as two-dimensional. I didn't realize this was a thing (I thought everybody saw what I saw) until those "magic eye" books became trendy, early 90s I guess. I had a moment where I realized that quite probably a lot of things that I thought were a "personality" for me (like "not liking sports") were just the result of not seeing distances (so, for example, being unable to track a ball well enough to catch it or hit it or whatever I was expected to do). Also, a dread of uneven walking surfaces, such as stairs. It didn't really bother me until 3D movies were everywhere. Suddenly people were grabbing at the air in the theater, which was annoying, and the movies all looked out of focus to me. 
 
I think it's cool that, partly through the magic of the internet, we are able to learn things about ourselves without too much effort. I used to go to libraries more (I believe that I learned that I was only seeing out of one eye in my 20s, before computers were standard, though how common this was and what it might have affected came later and probably from the comfort of my own lilypad jumps across screens). I do worry at the amount of self-diagnosis that goes on, and more importantly the amount of conclusions that get reached. If I've made it this far seeing out of one eye and seeing very little in my mind, does it matter particularly? Not to me. Probably not.
 
I do note that I get a little impatient with some of the self-diagnosis going around, which is not particularly nice of me because empathy and patience really take so little effort. But I feel like sometimes we use these things to excuse us from doing things we might not particularly want to do, rather than as a reason that those things might be difficult and we might take a little longer to learn how to deal in a society set up for people to not have those challenges. Like being left-handed or something I guess. Less visible.
 
I thought I'd have more to say if I let this marinate but it has a ways to go. I'll put it here to remember that I was pondering ability and disability and inability in April 2024. 

birds of a feather

The birds came back to start roosting in the trees in the courtyard behind the apartment. There are several large trees and by the middle of summer every branch will be heavy with them, I don't think they're supposed to be there but they are. They fly around the city during the day and I'm sure it causes actual problems, but for me personally it's just the noise. When they return in the evening the sky is Hitchcockian, the sound of wings beating, the blockage of light, the sense of something impending. They start calling to each other at the first light of day so in the summer it's a full cacophony by 5 a.m. A few of the neighbors have strung shiny paper across their balconies, I assume to keep the birds out, though it's also quite pretty, the flashes in the light. The weather keeps going back and forth between winter and spring, like it is also not quite ready to put away its jacket even while it is definitely longing for the sun. Everything resonates to me with the cusp of change. Two of the trees in the courtyard are in full bloom, white petals. Others are still bare from winter. The building next door is having the facade repaired and the workers all took a long-cut through the courtyard to get to the back rather than go through the building's own doors, so there's a slippery mud slope now where grass might have grown. They were pretty tidy about it, though, considering. Our facade was freshly redone right before we moved in, which means 23 years ago I think; it now looks pretty worn down, though less than most buildings did when I moved here and fell in love with the crumbling beauty of this town, which looked like a black and white photograph, filled with implied meaning where it lacked color. Someone yesterday said that our moving to this neighborhood was gentrification which while I am very gentrified is not, I think, what that word means. The neighborhood I'd been in before translates as Kingsfield, although no kings were present. The neighborhood I've lived in since was filled with students living four to a room and with lots of old people who had lived here through it all, the Velvet Divorce, revolution, before that Communists, Nazis, one woman in our building even before that. There are marks on the walls in the cellar from when they hid from Allied bombs, when they were occupied. But then one of the old people died, and his widow found the place too big for one person and she sold it and we moved in. When we fixed the broken holes in the floor we found newspaper scraps from when it was built. An article about talkies and whether they might replace regular movies. And now we have lived here for decades, longer than I've lived anywhere. I recognize that it is very funny that I will move to a different place on the same street but I do love the street and the neighbors, the convenience of the tram stops and the trolleybus, and I love the life that goes on in the courtyard. To which, by the way, I now have a key. With which to open doors to places that always belonged to me, so to speak. It's not bad.

chrysalis

back in the day

I was in my early 20s. At the time I felt like a fully grown adult. I'd finished college, had a couple heartbreaks, lived abroad, worked in real jobs, traveled. At 24, I'd moved back to the US and started working at a sales job. My boss was creepy. During training he had us turn off our tape recorders (tape recorders!) so that he could tell us that if we ever said anything negative about him, we would be fired because he was "in" with the bosses and we weren't. I'd like to say that's why I didn't complain but actually I only connected those dots later, how it felt to know what you might say would be meaningless. Anyway he was creepy. When I'd go into his office he'd close the blinds and ask me to pull up my skirt an inch, another inch. I was young and used to a certain amount of attention from men, which I mostly ignored because it mostly felt like being ogled in a zoo (and this "just ignore it" thing was of course heightened by having lived in Japan, which was very much like living in a zoo all the time, photographed randomly as if I were an exotic animal of some sort). Anyway so he'd be creepy and I'd ignore it. I thought it was about me. We know now that it almost never ever is but that was then. At night when I'd call in my sales reports he'd ask what I was wearing, to describe it; he'd ask me to touch myself. And I would just change the subject but I didn't tell him to stop. I remember when Anita Hill testified I had absolutely no doubt that she was telling the truth, though I also thought she seemed to be awfully upset when what she was saying just wasn't that bad, comparatively. I feel bad about that now, because my boss wasn't up for the supreme court, and any creepy from your boss is too creepy. It shouldn't be that way. Going to work shouldn't feel like hell because of the people you're working with. That you don't even get to think about the work itself because everything is poisoned. Anyway back to me, 24-year-old me, so my boss was creepy and I thought it was about me and then another salesperson, a woman, asked if he was ever inappropriate and we talked about him and that's when I learned it wasn't about me. And then when I went to train with another salesperson in a different town, she told me that one of the reasons she'd transferred there was to not work with him. And then other women told me when I hinted at the subject. And still none of us said anything. I didn't say anything. After about a year I got promoted and moved to a different region and I didn't have to talk to him anymore. At some point a woman from a completely different region came to visit and I was telling her what it had been like to work with him, and that I thought sooner or later someone would complain. And she did, she took it to the head of the company. And he called and asked and I said no it wasn't so bad it didn't bother me. I think I thought that the worst thing was to confess that I was bothered, that I would be weak if I said it wasn't okay, so I said it was fine. And so did all the other women they called to ask, the women who had told me the truth were lying, we were all lying. I can't convey to you what the fear of looking like I couldn't handle something was like. When I remember this I don't also remember that I was 24, that I was different and times were different. A few days later I called the head of the company again and said that my boss had asked me to bring him clippings of my pubic hair in an envelope, to prove that I didn't dye my hair. Carpets gotta match the drapes, he had said. In what world did I think that was tolerable? In that world, apparently. It's hilarious that 30 years later I still feel dirty, still feel guilty. That it happened. That I didn't see that it was wrong. That I thought I'd ruin everything by saying how awful things were. That I thought I was weak, and that I was. 

players gonna play

I have a task manager on my phone where I type in things I want to do and every week I have a fresh notebook page where I write down the things I want to do (different parts of the page for different things) and I also have alarms to remind me to do things I want to do. Like there's work and there's performance stuff and there's just looking after my own well being, like "do a load of laundry" or whatever. Despite all this I often find I don't get as much done as I would like. And yet I do things, I wouldn't say I just sit around looking at the walls, although that is also something that I like doing very much. I am often very tired and I thought for a minute before I started traveling in December that it was because I was doing too much, specifically working too much, and I thought that when I was away from work I would finally get some sleep, and then while I was traveling I sometimes thought that I was tired because I was seeing and doing so many rare and unusual things but that when I got home again I would finally get some sleep and now I am home and I'm not really sleeping. I gave myself a week before returning to work so that I could do things like organize the paperwork that came in December for my taxes and get a haircut and check in with some friends without worrying about the inevitable hangover of such reunions and its effect on my productivity. I've been home a week and one of me says that I'm doing pretty well for just one week in (I am, for example, unpacked, which often takes me a month) but the other of me is a little disappointed that at my age I have learned so many tricks for doing things well and I don't do them. Today I read about knitting a sock for a sense of accomplishment and I really thought "Shit, do I have to take up knitting on top of everything else?" but then I mopped the bathroom floor and I guess that counts for something. I would like to be able to give myself credit for doing things, finishing things, and even doing some things well, even though I also want to hold myself to a reasonably high standard and keep striving though maybe not striving so hard that the striving itself exhausts me. Dude, I don't know. I'm going to practice ukulele for a while. It's the weekend, after all. 

More than 59 probably

Briefly, as I sit in another airport on the next to the last leg of this. I am primarily thinking that it's funny how much humans in general annoy me, for example the woman seated behind me loudly on her phone, and yet how what brings me the most happiness is people. The people I've traveled with, the ones who have welcomed me into their homes, people who took time out of their busy lives to clear a space for me to come in and occupy the whole space for a meal, a day, a weekend. I read a story about someone who used a rosary not for prayer but to remind himself of all the beauty and wonder in his life. There is a lot of beauty and wonder in nature, trees and flowers and for example the moon last night overhead and concealed by clouds, then bursting forth with a host of stars in the crisp night air. But it's people and the beautiful things people do, large scale and small, art and kindness, that would fill most of my rosary. I am so blessed, I am so lucky, I am so grateful.

RE/search

One thing that I remember is that I felt so odd and like I didn't belong, and I met people who also didn't belong but then amongst them there was also belonging and not, an inner and outer circle. Eventually, I didn't care, I understood loneliness as a natural state.

When these books came to us (how?), it was everything. It was an encyclopedia guide to a world of which I inhabited a corner. And then I was not alone.

There is always the struggle to reconcile the attachment to being unique with the desire to find a tribe. These books were the tribes.

Yesterday, we were in Vesuvio and I thought I was going to tell the story of how people take me for granted, how I have granted myself for people to take. I wanted to be anywhere but the room I was in, suddenly ready to cry, and the books appeared on the sidewalk and I was 18 again, running to books, and this time the publisher was there and all I could do is say you changed my life, you saved my life, and we took pictures and my whole day turned around. Books will always save you if you let them.

copy paste

When I was in high school I used to shave my eyebrows and draw them on with liquid crayons. Blue, green, lurid. I wanted to look like a weird and intriguing alien; I probably just looked weird. Some months later, the school newspaper profiled another student who had just started painting her own eyebrows: what a fashion trailblazer. She was cute; she looked cute and intriguing. I don't want to claim that I invented the wheel but it was painful at the time to see someone else get credit for having invented very much the same wheel as I was spinning.

In the heady days of live journal, a young woman copied my blog posts and posted them to her LJ and added provocative photos to them. It was unsettling to see her posting my words, getting gushingly positive feedback. A group of my friends went and posted comments calling her out for stealing and eventually she disappeared but she didn't seem to ever get why what she did was wrong.

A few years ago a man who failed in a misguided attempt to woo me then turned and took my words to try to woo other women. Woo is a funny word. The combination of that and other factors at the same time gave me my first true case of writer's block, a feeling that having my means of expression stolen and twisted meant it was better not to express myself in writing at all.

These aren't the only times this has happened, my words lifted out of context and re-poured from someone else's mouth. I don't want to keep feeling this particular hurt. I suppose if I keep writing, anyone who might matter to me will know who said it first. Earlier this week, I found someone using my words again, uncredited, to promote their own agenda. I'm not doing anything because people who don't intrinsically know that stealing is wrong aren't worth the breath. I will take a moment to wish them crushing failure on the basis of who they actually are, which my stolen words are not enough to conceal.