Un-Dying is Hard

Some losses are so big that you can’t even cry. Or you cry and you can’t feel. Or you feel but you can’t compute. If you compute you wish you were too daft to see the thousands of connecting consequences. Some losses are so big that they defy the logical steps of grieving and you jump straight from shock to insanity. In the past eleven years – seven years – six months – three weeks, all of the above, I have vacillated between all states of grieving. I held what I cherished, or the idea of it at least, in my hands and watched in slowly leak between my fingers until all that remained were the sticky remnants a death I couldn’t delay. Talking about it fixes nothing. Neither does spending money, but lately I’ve chosen the latter. I’ve given up on a human who failed me and taken to things that can’t.

I can afford to do that these days, medicate myself with mustard tunics and television stands. I can level this back-country carnival of emotions out on my credit cards, and watch me. My creditors thank me for it, actually. Every day a new credit card offer arrives in the mail. I am beginning to wonder if they know something I don’t. Can they see that there are more spiral cut french fried roads in my future? If I load my wagon down with enough crap, I might just stay on the road, eh? I’d buy an anvil, but I already have one.

Maybe that’s it, an epiphany in the midst of my meandering thoughts. I have carried someone’s baggage, since I was a teenager, before maybe. Every man I’ve ever dated loaded down my wagon with so much that I never had a void to inspect. Before those men it was my dad and before my dad I lived without care. Now that I am loosed of their things, their sufferings, the constant gut-punching of their acrid existences, I am left feeling like I’ve lost something integral. An arm? Can you buy an arm on Amazon?

I’m in a type of neither-world. This is not the place you go after death, nor is it the place you go in life. It’s the place where you sit quietly on the porch, your PTSD slowly inching away but still well within biting distance. This is the place you go for neither joy nor sadness. I just accidentally inhaled cinnamon, but in this place, your senses are just a hair above mute. Mace me and I may blink. People have tried to join me here, but the door isn’t well defined. You can be a foot away, but you cannot sit with me in the neither-world. It takes years of sifting through garbage days, finding things less redeemable by the minute, for you to reach the bottom where your hopes and dreams have withered into some perverse monument of what will never be. You find your joy, a mangled twisted mess of corrosion. You toss it aside, you lift your dead dreams away, cast to the heap, and then suddenly you have found the floor and in it a door to the neither-world. It takes all remaining strength to wrench the door loose. You claw at it, the beds of your nails bleed, hands crack, face contorts and it is not until your tears have swept away the seal of dirt that the door gives way and with it, your ability to feel anything.

I don’t really know what to do here, though I’ve been here before. Every face looks strange, every word seems empty. I am perched high above my life, now seeing how small it all really is. Someone out there is looking for me, but I can’t be found. Someone is calling me, but my voice has taken leave. I suppose I am the undead, and it feels dangerous.

Some people don’t know what they want, so they spend years wandering down every alley looking for a thing they might not recognize. Some people want what they aren’t willing to work for, others what they don’t understand and couldn’t appreciate. For me, it’s so simple. All I wanted was to have, as an adult, the family, the home, the type of secure cloaking that I didn’t have as a child. I wanted a quiet study, a neatly decorated hearth, warm sweaters, a man who would grow with me, or better yet, a man who would inspire me to grow with him. I wanted that for my children too, to avoid instilling within them a sense that everyone in the world is unreliable. I guess I want magic, but the kind found in cozy low lit corners instead of well choreographed movies. And even as the undead, I still believe.

I don’t know the way out of this place. I’m feeling blindly for the door, calling out silently to all things for a way, a psychic embrace, a tether to the outside. To my hearth.

Long Departure

I was born a ship, island, salt
I was born to be the whip, bear and halt
I came intent to wear a thing to its least
I am the winter without a feast

There’s an unraveling hem that is undoing the thing that was born within
Learn where the blood travels
Go where the blood pools
This is the cry of a dull tool cutting into things that won’t be mend

Discard me now
All my love is spent
Wondering where you go when my ship is moored
And patience lent
On God

By day I’m a desert, by night a well
Unwell, well you see
The looters grasp upon me
Bough bent
Adrift tilt
The seas of lover’s hilt

The anchor draws me
And no one forbids
My departure

Lament, lament, lament

The Day My Engine Stopped

I used to think that saving my own life was the hardest thing I’ve ever done, and would ever have to do. That’s what I get for thinking. I’ve since learned that watching someone else destroy their life is much harder. However out of control I felt to stop my own suffering was illusory, but the inability to stop another’s suffering is soul-crushingly concrete. When you are the conductor, you can stop the train at any point. Yes, you can, lying brain. But have you tried to stand on the tracks and stop a train? I’ve smiled at that train, wagged my finger, reasoned with it, prayed for it, screamed at it, greased it’s gears, held it in a loving embrace. Every time it went off the tracks, I used my might to set it right, saying “Now, you go slow this time.” I supplied diesel, new paint, sign posts, warning signals, and always a push off when need be. “Good train! Good train. You go be good now, OK?”, ignoring the reality of the man at the controls.  I’ve gone weeks with no sleep, worrying that it would run me over at any point, all the while spending precious resources to build more means for destruction. Then I would lay down on the tracks and wait, as only the most hopefully stupid person could. The conductor is a madman, but the psychopathy is mine.

I’ve had years to think about these things, to put them in pictures and forms that I can understand. In my experience, everything is much simpler than we estimate and the more we complicate, the farther we get from the solution. It may be comforting in some sense to determine that a solution is so complex that it is nearly unattainable. There is an absolving element to that belief. The truth is, people make choices and we don’t always get a say in those choices. The truth is, our control is limited to our own being. Anything beyond ourselves requires either an act of force or an act of agreement. We can limit ourselves, we can limit our participation, we can limit our resources, but barring force, the final say is out of our control. If you are as willful and determined as I am, this will be a hard reality to accept. As I write this, part of me still believes I can stop a train, if I try hard enough, if I devise the right plan, if I change my approach and hold my tongue just right. I don’t like to lose. I fucking hate to lose. But some games have no winners.

So what do you do? This is the question I’ve asked myself a thousand times over. I just finished reading Atlas Shrugged, and the irony that I am Dagny is not lost on me. I’ve been using the train analogy for so long that Dagny’s focus was almost a foregone conclusion. One of my greatest takeaways was that existing within a destructive society and existing with a destructive individual requires the same approach; total removal of one’s participation. If you haven’t read the book, I highly recommend it, but if you have, you will know that Dagny fought to maintain productivity and normality despite insurmountable obstacles, and she did so until there was absolutely nothing left for her to save. This is what I’ve done, like so many other enablers. I’ve repaired the tracks more times than I can count, forgoing my own well being for the well being of the system which was designed for good but has been used for evil. But a tool is only as good as what it produces, therefore I have produced evil. I have enabled it in every way. Swallow that pill.

I think our primary failure, as enablers, is that we seek to make people into what we need them to be. Sometimes we need them financially, sometimes we need them emotionally. Maybe we just need them to be what they used to be, to restore our faith or sense of security. Maybe we assume they are a reflection of us, of our choices, abilities, devotions. Maybe their failures open up a wound within our ego, causing us to reflect on our own failures, which we don’t want to acknowledge. Regardless, our reliance on these people, on these trains, is our Achilles heel. It is the need to bring about change by which we are held captive. Suffer another analogy. Two men are held captive in an unlocked, unguarded prison. Neither are handcuffed or restricted in any manner, save for their own willingness. One wants to leave, but will not leave without the second. He cannot imagine his life without the other. The second will not leave for reasons which cannot be explained. Both will remain captive, neither will have life. This is not martyrdom, this is submission to death.

I realized recently that my prayers have, for some time, been completely contradictory. I have asked God to protect the conductor, but simultaneously I asked him to make him a better conductor. Assuming God behaved like Dumbledore, this might seem like a reasonable request. He could just wave his wand, fix everything and soon we’d be dancing through the tulips. “Enabler, The musical.” Disney worthy wishes. God isn’t a fairy godmother, though. DominosHe can protect you from your choices and simultaneously protect you from growing through experience, or He can allow you to face consequences, thus allowing you the opportunity to improve yourself. I italicize opportunity because it is just that, a chance, not a guarantee. Remember, there is force or there is agreement. Force removes freewill and won’t lead to growth. The other day I mentioned to a friend of mine that miracles happen when willingness meets opportunity. I fully believe this two-part recipe is what separates successes from failures. My willingness only matters if it’s my opportunity, but no matter how willing I am on behalf of another, I cannot accept their opportunity for them, nor can I force it upon them. I don’t like these truths. In fact, I hate them. I want to be so strong that I am strong enough for anyone whom I choose, willing enough for them also. I want to be able to give my hard earned gifts to people who don’t even want them, but desperately need them. This doesn’t work, of course. Something is only worth what it costs to attain it. Attaining it without cost doesn’t give you it’s worth, it only gives you the illusion of the worth. The worth is in the sacrifice, the resources used, the hours spent, the tears cried and knowledge gained. For this reason, I’ve amended my prayers, removing a plea for protection and focusing solely on growth. Hard won growth. You can’t utter this prayer without feeling deep pangs of sadness. What could be harder than to ask that the world come crashing down upon someone you love?

I, like Dagny, have spent my resources down to the last. I have exhausted all options, waited out all of the others, made ways when there were none and suffered to see one more day, knowing that even one more day was a gift that I would pay dearly for. The lights are out, the world is in ruins and now I retreat, removing my participation. I will not replace one more track, hammer one more nail. I will not waive the lantern or signal the approach. I will not be used to bring about my own destruction. This is the one place where I do have a choice. This is my opportunity to say no, this is my willingness to be unwilling. Welcome to Galt’s Gulch, Rachel.

 

Wilson, the Low Leaper

I was built for a post-apocalyptic world, but most people haven’t gotten there yet and I hate to wait. 

Trauma has isolated me from much of the world. Maybe this is what it feels like to come home from war. I wouldn’t know. I’ve never been to a war, or at least not in the traditional sense, and I suppose like me, folks who have are isolated as well. Maybe this is what it’s like to be a quantum physicist at a Tupperware party. Maybe this is what it’s like to be an English professor on planet Xenu or a Thomas Sowell ever. They’ve never told me, but I feel like we may all be living within our own unique habitations, rolling around in big plastic balls of experience all over this planet. Everyone is smiling, chatting about obscure foods and the ambience of their stunted emotions, vibrant vacancy, assaulting flatness. “I love dogs. Like, I love them,” someone says and then someone else produces a photo of their corgi, Wilson. Wilson loves to watch birds through the windows and chased a shadow once. They all chuckle and that guy on the left straightens his tie. And here we are, me, Thomas, the teacher on Xenu, General Survivor, rolling around in our awkward plastic balls as we eye these strange creatures. They like anime. Ok? What do I say to that?

I like dogs. I don’t dislike them. I don’t really care, honestly. If a dog was suffering I would help it. I like piercings and cobb salad also, but who wants to talk about that? Who even thinks about that? In 2009 I pulled a man’s false teeth from his mouth so he wouldn’t swallow them as he had a seizure from a heroin overdose. He had just come back in town after spending a year living under a bridge in New Orleans. When he left for New Orleans he persuaded a friend to sell his truck and come with him so he could fund their trip. They both lived under a bridge and every morning they sat at the day labor temp agency hoping to get enough work to fund their habit. Sometimes they would call and ask someone from North Carolina to ship them syringes or buy gift cards. Did you know that Louisiana doesn’t allow the purchase of syringes without a prescription and gift cards are highly devalued? Hepatitis. I don’t want to talk about dogs.

I’ve done my best over the past years to reintegrate back into society, but honestly, I was never very good at it even before I experienced trauma. When situations were dry, awkward or emotionally perilous, I had a habit of commandeering the narrative into my own arena, often to my own detriment. I was arrested for passing a stopped school bus when I was sixteen years old and I plead diarrhea to the judge. “Your honor, I had sudden diarrhea. I’m sorry.” I said in open court. That time it worked to my advantage. That time. Last week I told my coworker that she looked like the type who would be a bridezilla and I was surprised that she wasn’t. I thought it was a compliment. It didn’t land as I expected. I was built for a post-apocalyptic world, but most people haven’t gotten there yet and I hate to wait.

I find it so difficult to entertain mundane conversation about weekend plans and mild illness. I want to change things! I want to be that person I knew from my first recalled memory that I was created to be. I want to shake it up, stir it around, juggle it behind my back and throw it triumphantly to the next. People are dying, I’ve seen them. People are hurting, I’ve been one. Neglected children are on their way to being destructive adults and we love dogs. We love sushi, too and that commute was terrible and Sailor Moon is my favorite. I don’t begrudge you, I just can’t take part. I can’t understand. I can’t form a response. My friends are dead, in prison dying, in the streets dying, clinging to what is left of their souls. My friends are ghosts. I have none. I have what I cling to desperately. I have faith, I have a family, I have proven endurance. I have a wall that is higher than my eyes can see and your dog doesn’t even come close to clearing it.

“You think weird,” I was told. I think like a sane person who was locked in a mental institution for decades only to come out and learn that the world has become the haunting ground for spiritual zombies. I think like a person who has embodied a corpse. I think like a person who has seen beyond the veil. I think like a person who is perpetually trapped in two worlds. I can’t tell most people what I’ve seen. They need safe zones and ice-cream socials. Everyday I want to scream, “You don’t know! You have it so good!” but instead I turn my head and hate Wilson silently. I don’t want a support group, I want a world where people are honest about their experiences. I want a world where we can communicate openly about what we have endured, witnessed — and then get over it. Half of me already lives in this world and if you choose to visit, we don’t require a passport. The other half of me begrudgingly pulls a paycheck.

I know who’s dying and why. I know the status of their wasting and I know how it feels to be left behind. I know how it feels to know things no one wants to know or hear or think about or even believe exists because it makes them culpable. I know how it feels to tell the heinous truth and be shunned for the stun of it. I know what happens when the curtain is drawn and the soul stabbing pain of finality which is so great it makes death seem delightful. I’ve seen centuries of consequences pass before me, I’ve seen the waste of a different kind of war and I’m a better person for it. Those things made me worthy of knowing. Maybe you know a different loss, a different stab and if you do, I want to know it too. I want to know how you got the dirt under your nails and why you have that eye twitch and that thing you swore no one would ever understand because I swear too, I will try.

I want to tell it all true, hear it all true and never, ever have to pretend to care about a single thing that can’t clear the fence.