spider catches fly.

You are angry, and then hurt, and then angry at yourself for being
hurt. And then hurt again. This is pretty much all there is to work
with, and you are working at it whenever you are not
consciously working with anything else. You cannot tell the difference
between licking wounds and picking scabs, and you are doing both. You
spend days working, trying,
but every moment is a reproach, and each reproach is three-fold: what
you heard, what you listened to, what you keep replaying. The shadows
made by cobwebs have
an opinion about you, and they aren't impressed. This is what it comes
to. Not least because of the cobwebs, not least because of the shadows,
the dirt, the secrets and the lies.

This is what it means to
know better. It means that you get five seconds of breathing room, five
seconds of living with knowledge, and then for a moment, really only,
you forget that you know and then you are down again, spiders crawling
in your heart, and hitting yourself with your own fists because you
should have known better. Worse: because you did.

jump

The rope goes up and down and the girls holding the ends swing it out
and around, beautiful arcs, it's perfect. My hands out in front of me,
cupped towards the rope, moving with the rhythm, and at the right
moment I run and jump. I will run and jump soon. Not this swing, but
the next, the next, the next. There's a line behind forming behind me. I don't want to hold things up. I'll go on the next swing. Maybe there's not a line; maybe it's my
own impatience with myself. I can't look because I'm watching the rope. The rope slapping the ground, rising in an
arc, slapping the ground, and my hands cupping the rhythm, and all I
have to do is jump, and all I can think about is the sting of the rope
when it hits my legs, when I miss. Not this swing, then, but the next,
the next.

washing dishes

It's hard to enter a room without soaking up all the emotion in it. If
you watch what you're doing it is okay, because you can absorb amazing
quantities. Just take in what wants to be observed, one quick coast
across the surface, the prepared face. Then slide under the surface of
that to find the secrets. It can be done. But a moment's inattention
and you're taking in too much, more than you can. Or should. Touch of a
hand and you have cleaned the spill and taken off the layer of the
surface and now you've got a mess you didn't mean. Something to cover
up. You shouldn't have seen that, you say, that shouldn't have
happened, I shouldn't know this, it was too secret, but also you keep
looking to see if that's really what you saw. You cannot pretend for
long that you intend the best if you are going to insist on being so
curious, yellow and blue.

And it's hard to remember that most of
what you absorbed was meant to be discarded. You chop insults and carry
grudges all day long, til there is no time left for anything else.
Squeeze the secrets from you and there will be nothing left of you;
squeeze away those things you weren't meant to keep and you will be as
empty as the cracked bowl. In the absence of what you've collected you
would be so empty that you could never be filled; not even suitable for
folded bits of paper. They wouldn't throw you out because of
sentimental value, and that is all.

So this is what you hold: nothing of your own. Nothing you were meant to have.

like a zombie advertisement

I was explaining the suffix -er and how it's a comparative, and then thought it best to mention how the suffix can also mean "one who" since a teacher is obviously not "more teach". Then I thought about the suffix -est and the suffix -ist and started on a riff about how when -ist means "the one who" it is a one who maybe does a superlative job or makes superlative money. A typist is obviously more professional than a typer. A chemist makes more than… uh. And then I was in a chemistry lab and I hadn't done the prep work for the experiment. And then I woke up.

Dear brain, how can you entertain me with such varied things on a Saturday morning and yet forget for a full half-hour that I drank beet juice Sunday night before bed? I do not like my Monday morning to feature panic. That is okay brain I like you anyway.

a few clowns short

In this act, you are the one who doesn't get hit. They throw all kinds of shit at you and the trick is that you knew where they were going. You'd be so pretty if, they say, and the knife lands a millimeter away. You never used to, they say, and that hits below the belt but it's still just a shade off. Four knives, five if you count the one, and every one of them is short of the target, because you were the target and you stood so still; you were always ready.

In the next act, you ride on the backs of lions, or horses in a pinch. It's always glamorous.

And now you conjure. In this world, you create empty spaces where people put their secret wishes and then you fill the emptiness. Flowers, a scarf, a rabbit: the thing that is missing. You return what you stole at the beginning. Or better you give back what they didn't know they lost, and they act like you did them a favor. It is not a surprise given your skills of prestidigitation that you would would always wind up with your own hands empty. You flourish.

And now the crystal ball. There will be a beautiful person, your other half, you say, and they look past your plain face and transparent tricks to this ideal. Elusive. You fill the space until the one they want is there. They trust you, believe you, they could sit at your table til dawn looking at the props you use to tell them what's obvious. When everything you said comes true they say they always knew it anyway. Shove some paper at you, and they are so gone they were never there, and later they swear they were never at the circus.

Then there's the trapeze. So many things to be balanced. And throughout, there are the moments where you stop and wait until they clap, and they clap until their arms ache, though what you love most is the moment before the first applause. And sometimes you do it knowing there will be no applause. That they will wander back into the dark and not even know what a show they saw, thinking that this is just how their lives go.

And then there is a tent, or some space, and there is something to take off the greasepaint, and then you go to bed. And tomorrow is another day.

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.