Unconnected bits: ew, ah, hm, snork.

Yes thank you I am perfectly aware that one is supposed to separate the act from the person and say "that thing that you did is disgusting" and not "you are disgusting" but you know what? YOU pull a handful of weeks-old bread crumbs and mealworms from your twelve-year-old's backpack and you tell me owning your words is at the top of your list.

I found awesome waterproof mascara that becomes waterproof upon contact with skin. This means that I can weep it off with the same amazing speed that I weep off all other make-up, and then I get these puddles under my eyes that will not come off without elbow grease, special pads, under-eye make-up remover, and scrubbing.

I spent nearly an hour re-reading old love letters today. I was looking for a specific one but I fell down a hole in which I had shouted "I love you" over and over again and 20 years later it was still echoing around. Very weird, that young woman who was very much me, with the same humor and the same way of unfolding thoughts, and also so… naked with her feelings.

The cat snores. That's unusual, right?

I’ve got three elephants.

  1. One thing I'm not writing about because I've said all I can say.
  2. One thing I'm not writing about because I feel like it makes me angrier to talk about it.
  3. One thing I'm not writing about because I don't know what I think, and I tend to not discuss feelings until I've made up my mind.

The result of this being that every time I sit down to write, these things are uppermost in my head. Yay.

Squire left for "school in nature" this morning; Friar and I fought last night over who got to make his sandwich for the bus because we totally aren't going to miss him at all.

It is raining and cold again today. The petunias are falling apart.

do
not suggest reading about Harry Harlow's experiments on rhesus monkeys
as it opens a very unpleasant door in the brain and continues opening
more, and yet you do not learn much that you didn't already know.I suggest that you skip ahead in the thought and just hug some people that you like. I  would hug you right now, if I could.

three

ONE
It's a white room, I think it's white, and I think that either all the edges are perfectly squared off or maybe they're all slightly rounded since the devil hides in corners. There is nothing in the room but a bed, and the bed is very comfortable and the sheets are cool and crisp at first and then soft around your body. The pillow is perfect. The room is room temperature. There are no pictures, no furniture besides the bed. There is a window in the ceiling so you can see the sky and get natural light if you want, and there are perfect shutters if you decide you don't want natural light. There are no windows in the walls so there is nothing to see when you look straight ahead but the walls that are perfectly square or maybe rounded. There's a door with a slot and through that door come three bland but nutritious meals a day, and they come and you eat them or don't sometime before the next meal comes. I haven't worked out the bathroom yet because this is imaginary but on the fly I'm going to say there's a small room off to the side and there is a shower that runs hot water as long as you want, but no bath because baths are ultimately unsatisfying. There is soap that doesn't smell like anything really. There is absolutely nothing to do but sleep, shower, and eat. The most important part of this room is that outside the room, time has come to a perfect standstill; you are missing absolutely nothing. You can stay in the room as long as you want. Sometimes it is all I can think about.

TWO
Sometimes I think any story I tell is basically like this video, which is amazing and disturbing. The story starts off all "here's this thing" and then about three minutes in I am so moved by my own emotion that I start crying.

THREE
Weeping through the story that I told only because I thought there was nobody listening is another thing I have in common with Prufrock. That and the growing old. Eliot was only 27 when he wrote Prufrock; if he'd stayed in America he would have had to kill himself like a proper rock star. I had a baby which is how I got out of choking on my own vomit or a shotgun muzzle or whatever else does you in at 27. I think my masterwork is pretty awesome.

North

Cary Grant was so perfect but his hands
look like someone else's as they embrace
the woman, the saint.
Maybe they were Leach's hands,
so out of place,
trying to be anywhere and never
belonging where he wanted to be.

There was the man he was born
and the man he was born to play.
Caterpillar and butterfly,
the one awkward and hungry
and the other too perfect to touch.

You wanted to put it behind you,
your own caterpillar days.
Emerging into a world you invented,
a world you control,
a world that will finally love your
iridescent scales and beauty.

You are the person you created,
the person you knew they wanted.
I'll tell you: I'm likely the only one left
who knows you're the same person.
And sometimes I'm tired of knowing it.

Sooner or later you will be tired, too.
Pretending you were never a caterpillar is hard.
He said they married Cary Grant and
they went home with Archibald Leach.

I am sure it is nice
to be loved for who you want to be.
But oh Archie, I miss you.
Put your hands where they want to go.
We can do this in one take.

like a button you can’t stop pushing

So the metaphor this week is definitely bees. Friar talks me to sleep every night about solitary bees, making home for bees, the wonder of it all. I shaved my head and thought maybe if I dyed my hair black and yellow like the guy from General Public I would seem like the kind of thing you want in your garden, but there is nothing mellifluous about me. I'm mostly bumping against glass next to the open window, dive bombing flower reflections in pools of water and drowning in my errors, and likely to sting anybody who tries to help.

Here are some photos.

This is kind of lame, but hey! Here is a list I wrote in January (It's nearly Earth Day! I'm all about reusing and recycling!)

    1. I regularly crave vinegar and salt and will eat them by the
      spoonful if I can't think of something better to put them on.
    2. I am disappointed in myself for not typing with a dvorak
      layout.
    3. I cannot imagine not having a "wave" keyboard and
      would rather not type than use a regular keyboard.
    4. I am so angry so often that it frightens me sometimes.
    5. I hate talking to strangers.
    6. I still think it's a big deal when someone compliments my
      Czech.
    7. I had an iPod for a year before I figured out how to use it.
    8. I am extremely uninterested in how things work.
    9. I like learning about how people work, though.
    10. I have the rocking chair that my mother rocked my sister in.
      It used to be orange.
    11. I do addition on my fingers but I usually hide them in my
      lap so people can't tell.
    12. I used to fingerspell out everything people said while they
      said it, and I still spell in my head sometimes. It helps me pay attention.
    13. I like the Neutrogena face massaging anti-wrinkle thingie,
      not because I have wrinkles but because it makes me sneeze convulsively.
    14. I am currently persuaded that I have had a headache for two
      weeks now. I anyway am pretty sure I have taken ibuprofen every day for two
      weeks.
    15. I greatly dislike questions about "favorite"
      anything, though I sometimes ask them for lack of another topic.
    16. I can't sing but I know all the words.
    17. I can carry a grudge longer than anybody I know.
    18. I paid off my college loans in one year by living in Japan
      and not buying anything except food and kerosene for that year.
    19. I would rather go back to teaching than live in debt, but
      that is only because death is not an option.
    20. I don't think I have made this many "I" statements
      before in my life and she thinks she should have done it in third person.
    21. When I was little, my teeth were so crooked that I could put
      my thumb between my two front teeth.
    22. At one point in a particularly dissociative insomniatic
      burst, I persuaded myself that all the people I "knew" on the
      internet were actually just this one person who was messing with me. Claudia,
      whose writing skills are such that she could probably pull it off.
    23. I love the numbers 23, 42, and multiples of nine up to 90. I
      like the first two because they are heroes in books that I like, and the nines
      because of the fingertrick. Oh, and I like 6 because it's Bert's favorite
      number and 1x2x3 = 1+2+3.
    24. My favorite game when I was little was to pretend I was on a
      train being pursued by…somebody… and people would come to the door of the
      carriage and I would have to disguise my appearance and voice using only the
      materials in the carriage and persuade them that I was not the person they were
      looking for. This was before Jedis.
    25. Sometimes I am blown away by how old I am.

course you do

So many things. This alternating incredible irritation and then delight and joy and all things good.

How
one day can be thrown like bad dice because the weather is variable and
all I can do is lay on the floor trying not to sit up with my ambitions
because I will surely pass out, and the ambulance screams up the street
so I can't even count dust motes in peace, or the doorbell rings and
it's door-to-door sales instead of packages and I have the parquet
pressed in the side of my face, and then this simple translation that
I'd said I'd do as a favor turns out to be exactly the kind of writing
I hate to read, and why, why. I should have a cave somewhere.

And then how
I can be thrown into bliss because my friend sent me a funny e-mail in
the morning and work went well and the sun is still up at 6 pm and I go
to the wine bar to meet Friar while Squire is home writing a paper on
Einstein and Dusan comes in and says hey, and then this woman I know
b/c her daughter went to 1st grade with Squire and she buys a liter of
wine in the bottle of water I just watched her drink outside and we do
the smile nod where maybe she doesn't know where she knows me from,
quite. And then we go home and Friar makes fish and peppers and then we
play cards, and then board games.

On Monday Squire got dressed in his winter coat and I said no maybe it
was time for a jacket so he put on his jacket but it was tight.
Sometimes I put on clothes from last year only to realize that My How
You've Grown continues even into your forties. His reaction was about
the same as mine: OH NOES. Then he started crying because he looked
like a "dork pencil". I remember the story about my cousin who didn't
want to go to school one day because he had a giant zit on the end of
his generous nose.I let Squire stay home.

I thought I wouldn't recognize puberty, that we would be too caught up
in everything else and that I might mistake the symptoms of one thing
for another, but if you are crying because you look like a dork pencil
then that is actually totally recognizable to me. All I can say is that
first of all, at least it is not pink satin Miss Piggy sneakers that
seemed so cool when you bought them, before they got spit on. And also:
screw them, you know? Those shoes were cool. Being awesome is
simultaneously tempered and built by people too stupid to understand
who you are.

And who you are, if you're lucky, will be a person whose greatest
irritations in life are people who don't know the difference between
"it's" and "its" and don't know why that's a good thing to know; and
whose greatest pleasures in life are watching people grow into adults,
and seventies television references, and the last cigarette before bed,
and more than can be summarized in words like these.

I guess I’m already there.

Last week I went in to the tobacco shop
and the woman who used to run the little grocery was there, and I asked
how things were. She said her husband was getting better and it looked
like the store would re-open on Saturday. Then she left and I bought a
pack of Lucky Strikes, which I cannot bring myself to pronounce
Czechish, which is apparently charming, and I also got a copy of the
Indiana Jones movie with Noah Wyle for a dollar. Then I went to the
wine store. I keep wanting to write the story about how they thought I
had a husband and a man on the side, which is funny partly because at
the gym where my "man on the side" and I go, they think he is my son.
Certain wise people are working hard to find this as funny as I do, how
you can transfer from mistaken son to mistaken lover in just four
blocks.

And then Saturday the little grocery store was in fact re-opened, with
eggplants so pretty they couldn't be real, and we bought some and
traded eggplant recipes, and also bought onions the size of your brain,
and some bizarre nut thingies from Israel. And she said she was
stocking up, that this time they're really going to have everything,
even the foul unfiltered things that Friar (she called him "your man")
smokes. So that's nice.

And we go to the video store and they say that they've ordered
Mission:Impossible because we asked for it, and we go to the wine store
and they're like heartbroken to be out of veltlin, but they have some
chardonnay that might do the fruity white thing right for me, because I
need wine that tastes like spring these days, and oh! I forgot to
mention that on the way out in the morning our next door neighbor was
telling about her son the doctor.

On the way home we walk past an old woman who is prone on the sidewalk
but there are three people around her already and one has a cell phone
so we just keep walking.

And at the pharmacy the Slovak pharmacist has the prescription ready,
and I want to tell him how I am much more foreign than him, and how
it's not his accent that trips me up, but my own stupidity, but I
decide to be happy he remembers us and give him The Big Smile and we
take the box and go.

I can't live in a village, really. I need movie theaters and a ballet
and a train station and an awareness, at the very least, that other
cultures exist. Yet what is most terrifying about a city is that the
anonymity becomes too much, that you feel swallowed. And in the winter
I maybe forgot that that there are people here who watch me because
they are watching out for me, just as I am for them. That I live in a
city that is just a collection of villages. That it is a privilege to
walk to the store to buy arugula and walk past the pizza shop, where I
don't know his name but we're practically ty-kating, and buy pizza with
"Indian chicken" that I can eat on the way home.

your seaside arms*

Here's what I think: I think we start adulthood with some basic materials. What happens with those materials is further shaped by experience and history, by artists and knives, by time. But there's this basic, this fundamental material that is who you are.

Like say you're marble. Hard and cold, and one artist who tried to work with you froze to death at your feet. Chip away what doesn't belong he said, and then he lay beside his tools and never woke up. Or you might be clay, thrown down and raised and fired. But you're still marble; you're still clay. I didn't go with the glass metaphor here, because I think shatter might lose its power if I throw the glass around too often, but don't think I wasn't thinking about it.

My point is that life shapes you, but your basic self remains the same. If you've ever gone to an elementary school reunion, you may start to think your basic self was already pretty clear at age six, but I'll give leeway for an undefined self before adolescence, maybe before adulthood. I don't think adults change. And this is why I don't forgive. I wanted you to be one thing. I believed you were one thing. And even if you stood before me again as seemingly perfectly etched, every line an echo of the words we spoke, the dreams we screamed under trains, there are the promises you broke… even if you looked as perfect as a wedding cake, I can never now forget that you're plaster of paris, and you've never even been to Europe.

I'm not saying nothing's possible. People change, or we are the change we are looking for, or spare some change. I don't mean that change can't happen. But there is a difference between a change in appearance and presentation (which I believe is –which I know is– possible) and a change in the fundamental nature of a person. I thought you were marble until I felt your true measure and realized how fake something could be. You might say nicer things now that you used to; you might even now say you had loved me then. But I believe you're still an imitation, no matter how clever, and I expect that you can never love anyone half as much as you love yourself, and that's why I don't listen to anything you say.

Or another story, because I don't think there's nothing but betrayal in the world, you know: I thought you were gold. I wouldn't have traded you in the worst crisis; you were too precious to think of trading, though I knew your weight and its worth. You have changed shape, have been beaten and reformed and worn as one woman's decoration, one man's teeth. But I saw you shiny in the river and my history was changed by your glint in the light. And days or years cannot tarnish you. I know this much is true.

*"your seaside arms" is a phrase from the song "True" by Spandau Ballet; it was meant to be an allusion to a line from Nabokov's "Lolita" about a girl's "seaside limbs" ("“But that mimosa grove the haze of stars, the tingle, the flame, the honey-dew, and the ache remained with me, and that little girl with her seaside limbs and ardent tongue haunted me ever since.") The songwriter made the allusion to impress the woman who had given him the book. She reportedly missed the reference. This is the problem with making obscure references. I wouldn't know anything about that, though.

poem

Freshman year in high school, poetry class, and I was reading through
the book, and the teacher asked me a question and though I could
normally answer a question without even one ear half-cocked ("It
concerns man's inhumanity to man" was always good), the poem I had just
read had so torn me that I couldn't speak. If I opened my mouth, I
would start crying and I would never stop. I knew it. So I just shook
my head at her, poor teacher of poetry to freshman girls, ever so many
hormones and so much angst, and she blinked at me and I put my head
down on the desk, where it stayed for the rest of the class.

I've thought about that poem a lot in the last couple decades. I
can't describe it to anybody without crying afresh, and that makes it
hard to track down. Anyway, via the magic of the series of tubes, I did
manage to find it finally. And it is as good as I remember.

This story has three morals:

1. If you have created something, it meant something to somebody even
if you never hear about it. Whether you draw pride from breaking a high
school student's heart in a freshman poetry class or whether you have higher
ambitions doesn't matter. What matters is: it mattered.
2. If you keep looking, you will find it.
3. If you are at your desk when you read this, it is okay to put your
head down and cry (If it doesn't make you cry, I don't want to hear
about it, because you are talking to 14-year-old me and you will break
my heart AGAIN).

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