Monday, April 29, 2024

Short Story: The Office Party

 


Socializing was never my forte. I usually linger on the border of being an active participant and wandering off to an unknown corner to nurse my drink and hiss at passersby who got too close to my hidden lair. Being the center of attention wasn’t something we reader/writer types enjoyed. We like laughing at a few jokes, contributing our awkward part, and then merging into the shadows of a room while hiding behind a book.
At least I did.
It may be what I’m used to doing because I transferred colleges and now teach with a bunch of strangers that I don’t know and am now stuck at a social function for our department. The two people I know are talking to a slightly larger group I’ve turned away from to scan the room, picking up locations I could go sit in semi-peace; there are two doors to sneak out of and an area where I could probably somewhat comfortably sit and read on my kindle. I just downloaded a new Megan Quinn rom-com and got a chapter into it at lunch since no one needed a conference.
As my eyes scan the room, I come to a jarring halt halfway through and am barricaded by the warmest pair of melty brown sugar-glazed eyes I have ever seen.
They gave me the same feeling as seeing fresh chocolate chip cookies, minus the mouth-watering. We’re in public, and even we bookish writer folk have enough courage and propriety to show up on Book Tok.
What made me most uncomfortable was how he looked at me; the sheer fact that he was looking at me while I looked at him back was unnerving.
No one ever looks at me, like, ever. Well, maybe he isn’t looking at me, or maybe he is, I don’t know!
Cool, I’m spiraling.
I turn back to my group, noticing that the circle had closed off, leaving me to linger with my straw stuck in my mouth because I can’t be trusted not to completely unravel under a gentlemanly gaze set aside perfectly for book boyfriends. It’s the type of gaze I mentally take notation of in the back of my lady's brain to save for future writing expeditions since it caused some butterfly infestations in the anxiety-filled pit of my annoyingly foodless void of a stomach.
Annoyingly, even as I look over my shoulder again to make sure I am hallucinating, my stomach freefalls because mister melty eyes is headed my way. Instantly, I’m trying to determine if I had met him at another function, had food in my teeth, toilet paper on my shoe, or had an impromptu wardrobe malfunction.
Do I embody a manic goddess of overthought? A raw, lonely book-wielding heroine of English department fame!
I haven’t had enough booze to make coherent conversation yet! I am out of my league with his baby browns, wave chestnut hair, and a stylish button-down.
Don’t say anything stupid!
Don’t look at him like you’re stupid, either. You have your master's degree in the art of all things communication. Even though it’s a Master of Fine Arts in fiction writing, you are typing to be understood.
Embody THAT for the love of all that’s holy.
And don’t….
“Hey,” his smile is bright, white straight teeth, his eyes shine, and I turn, gravitating toward him, and witness divine masculinity, “are you— “
“Your next wife?” That was out loud.
Sweet baby Jesus.
Abort! Abort! Run! Existence is futile! I flush to my roots and watch as his grin widens, and he tilts his head back and laughs.

“If you care to know, I would very much like the floor to swallow me up right about now,” I murmur as he wipes the corner of his eyes with his cocktail napkin.

“Please don’t. I don’t want to be the only new teacher here scanning the room for somewhere to hide.” He takes a deep breath, melty eyes shining.
“Am I that noticeable?” I frown, shifting to look behind me, noticing everyone else grouped up and chatting casually.
“I doubt anyone noticed.” He grins. I turn back to him and pucker my lips.
“You noticed.”
“Well, my social inaptitude, noticed your antisocial prowess, and here we are in mutual antisocial, new teacher-ness.” Oh, thank God, I’m not the only dork, which makes me relax and chuckle.

“You must be Rome,” I wipe my hand on my jeans before reaching my hand out.
“And you must be Lacie.” He takes my hand in his, and it’s a nice solid shake, and his hand is warm, gently calloused. “Where did you transfer from?”
“Brown. I finished my degree over the summer.” I smile softly and roll my eyes a little. “Thought New York in fall would be so romantic.”
“Then you get here, and it’s sweating your socks off hot.” He chuckles, adjusting his empty plate as I momentarily eye him.
“You?” I ask, slightly distracted.
“Boston.” He shrugs. “Similar culture and heat issue.”
I nod slowly before looking toward the almost empty buffet line. I swing my gaze back to him.
“Hey.” I perk up.
“Hi.” His eyebrows lift.
“Want to pile our plates full of food, snag a bottle of wine, and hide with me?” I point my empty cup toward the food as he swivels to look at it curiously, then turns, grins at me, and hitches a thumb toward the lineup.
“I thought you’d never ask.” 

Friday, April 26, 2024

Poem: At the End of the Day

I chose to walk away

At the end of the day 

Tucking my shattered heart 

Away once again

Hiding the shards that refracted the light

That refused to warm

My once calm and mellow soul

Hoping for better 

Has done much worse

Instead of guarding my own heart

I left it open from the start

Because at first

I was positive I was good

Open to take those in

Who were treated like me

When I was a kid

If I just showed love

And acceptance too

Maybe one day

Somewhere

I’d be accepted, too

Time only told a separate 

More sad tale than mine

Causing calluses 

To form on soft parts

Of my soul 

Now withered and corroded 

With harmful observances

Of malicious intent

Words piercing my hardened heart

and war-weary soul

And on that last lonely note

No matter what I did

No matter what I do

I’ll never be strong enough

To get past you 

And who

You thought

I was

At the end

Of

The

Day 

Poem: Insanity is Doing the Same Thing Over and Over

Your good intentions smiled with blood on its teeth

No one knew how to bleed quite as pretty as you 

With blood on your hands

From scratching the walls

The asylum erected

To keep you sane

And uncorrected 

Monday, April 22, 2024

Poem: Good Intentions

The trail of good  intentions 

left behind a hollowed-out shell of a girl 

Who picked weeds 

And turned them into daisies 

That later died in window sills

Good intentions filled the empty halls

Becoming a barricade 

Holding back ruthless thoughts

They paved a road

And filled the holes

But left her out of the loop

She held back her sorrow 

While holding dead flowers

She watered to an inch of their life

Because good intentions overfilled the bowl

And made her gasp for breath

On a windy summer day 

Enjoyed by others as she hid away 

She sewed good intentions into seams

And wordlessly slipped them back 

Safely into the closets

Of those, she had hope for the most

Smiling at the stories

She helped unknowingly unfold

Being sidelined for better gifts 

And ignored at all cost

She backtracked along the paved roads

That good intentions, once fixed

Noticing cracks in the pavement

She laid with bare hands

Tucking stones back in

With tears in her eyes

The further she moved away

Because the road to good intentions 

Had no good intentions left for her

Where growing up, her roads were weathered

They left no stone unturned

No flowers in the weeds  

She cultivated with sad tears

Patching the damage others left

With pieces and parts of them

Thinking they had good intentions, too

Yet, good intentions taught her

Valuable and bitter lessons 

Of being so uncomfortably aware 

Where others are blissfully not

To leave the dying flowers

In under-watered pots

Friday, April 19, 2024

Lyrics: In Honor of The Tortured Poets Department Release!

Speak your mind

But always stay kind

That’s what they used to tell me

Now kindness bruises dirty knees

That spent too long kneeling

Hoping you would see me

But no, I’m still the fucked up no one 

Too messed up to be known by someone 

Hoping blinding to be seen by somebody 

But being ghosted like some unknown nobody 

You underestimate my misunderstanding 

Of the lack of understanding you command

When communication is only a key player

If you only understood what was being said 

Then maybe you wouldn’t misunderstand 

The misunderstanding you blame me for

But sure, I’m still the fucked up no one 

Too messed up to know somebody 

Hoping blinding to be seen by someone

But being ghosted like some unknown nobody 

Instead of breathing breath, you take for granted

I choke on words I left unsaid 

I rather suffocate than waste my breath 

On precious words left on read 

When I’m the last one left caring

What good will it even do?

Then to supply more cannon fodder

That makes me look like the guilty party 

When I stand up for my truth

Cementing me into my roots, as some lonely nobody 

Yeah, no, I’m still the fucked up no one 

Way too messed up to be known by someone 

Hoping blinding to be seen by somebody 

Still ghosted like some unknown nobody 

Monday, April 15, 2024

Making Myself Cry Writing Nonfiction - Blurb

     As I work on my rough draft for my upper-level college creative nonfiction class, I find myself at this point, with all my ducks in a row, with a story I didn't think would ever reach this level of clarity. I'm absolutely, pleasantly shocked that I've almost hit my word count.

    Not only that, I wrote the last paragraph and sat a moment after re-reading it, and I began to tear up. This topic has been something I have thought about for several years, and here it is written down on paper, in Microsoft Word, and it gave me hope. While everyone is working on personal essays, I guess I also did that with my piece because I'm crying as I type up my blog post. 

    "The Creativity of Tortured Poets" is the embodiment of the hope I've been searching for my entire life.

    I want to share a sliver of what I wrote because it punched me right in the feels:

    (On being a writer) 
It's a solitary career choice, with long nights staring at your blinking cursor and wondering why words make zero sense. At the end of every wordless night, it's a choice we make to suffer with our art and our creativity. With that suffrage, we come to find that creating is something we simply suffer with, in the name of art; no, it's something we hold on to with both hands as it transports us to worlds unknown. It heals the past hurts that haunt the pages of text we bleed, in the name of our craft, for the hope of better days and for others, just like us, who read our words and feel that tiny spark of understanding we once felt long ago that started our hunger for understanding.

For being truly understood. 

And what is creativity, if not the extension of our trying to be understood?

Saturday, April 13, 2024

Short Story: Slaying the Demons

 A short story to play on George Orwell’s “Shooting an Elephant.”

Note: This is what it feels like to drown in grief from the past, depression, and an uncertain future. 

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

Short Story: What Doesn’t Kill You Makes You Suffer

     The world I built so carefully collapsed around me in such terrifying beauty that all I could do

 was sit and stare in wonder at the ruins of my life.

  Helplessly, I was in awe at the magnificent beauty of the destruction before me, torn down to the studs by people who claimed to have loved me, and so fast to that it held me captivated and gasping for breath. I picked the wrong people; it was as simple as that, but more profoundly, disturbingly personal when I fell, and everyone looked the other way, clung to lies, and shunned me into myself. My cries were muffled by useless utterances of how I was misunderstood even when I said everything outright. But when you tell people closest to you that they are causing you mental harm, what do you expect?
            You expect them not to continue the emotional barrage worsening the damage, but…
But reality doesn’t work that way. People care only about themselves; they forget about the good things, then drown you in your misunderstandings until you’re stepping off the metaphorical cliff to end yourself and your suffering. To put an end to your hopeless inner reprieve about being a good person to everyone, a better person than most, maybe you won’t be so fucking lonely. Instead, you realize that you thought you meant something more to the same group that buried you, rendering you effectively less than the dirt you knelt into now.
            It doesn’t matter how good you are to others or who you try to help by moving silently and never expecting or needing anyone to notice, except when you quietly ask for help. It’s being told you weren’t loud or desperate enough to warrant a reaction. Some overflow while others gasp for breath in their final moments, having learned that the greatest mistake you can make is showing you're weakness in a time of need. And they prove to you that those assholes were right, the voices in your head, that lies outweighed the good, and then you’re better off dead.
            Unloved.
            Unheard.
            Silent.
            To be loved is to be changed is a quote that still brings tears to my eyes and a tug to my heart.
            When you live life as a problem, you stop seeking acceptance and love. You simply exist in your own little lonely world, talking only to strangers and never getting too close. You become quiet, almost silent, watching or ignoring but never quite knowing if you exist or are a ghost drifting through quiet streets.
            New York City at least left me feeling complete because no one sees you, and there are too many people around to be noticed. In a city as complete and complex as New York, you know precisely where you stand; in your lane.
            You’re a nameless, faceless ghost amongst the others, drifting in and out of others' lives, barely a blip on anyone’s radar. No one cares, and you don’t expect them to. You can spend an entire week not having a single conversation with a single soul and not feel that deep-seated loneliness you run from. It’s exhilarating to exist on a plane where no one cares about you.
            Then there are the sad memories of existing amongst “friends” who don’t hear your silence call you home in a city built for escaping sad realities. And that’s where I stood, on the borderline of past and present, train to platform, stairs to freedom.
Penn Station bustled with the comings and goings of the masses. Most were in their own worlds and avoided eye contact, earbuds plugged in, eyes cast down on screens, books, or dirty subway tiles. I took everything in, eyes wide open, heart elevated at what awaited me outside.
            A new life.
            I rolled my luggage through the station, cat backpack slung over my shoulders with my somewhat dazed and sleepy tortie girl nestled inside, listening to the hum of trains, of dialects, and the click clacks of luggage wheels on tiles and falling helplessly in love each step I took to my new chapter. With butterflies flapping in my lunch-ready stomach, I step into the balmy mid-November cold and into a crowd of city-goers. After a slight pause, staring up at the skyscrapers above, the sun shining, and voices rising, I fall into step and click-clack along with everyone else while in a daze. On the wings of lunch-starved butterflies, my anxieties drift away each step from the station I walk away from.
            We will never go back, I promise us both.
            I took what I could carry and mailed the rest to where we’d be staying—everything else I sold or donated to escape the past that refused to let me breathe. I pull out my phone and type in the address; the map pulls up and directs me to the subway I need to get to Chinatown. Say what you will about Chinatown, but after living in the Florida Everglades for half my life, I would cohabitate in a cardboard box in Queens to get out of The Sunshine State. Chinatown was charming and sprawling; no one bothered me the last time I visited, and the hectic nature of the neighborhood spoke to my soured soul and sparked a bit of life back into it. It also happened to be the tastiest part of town with its dumplings and dim sum, as well as hipster bakeries and cafes that only served vanilla creamer with crafted lattes. It was afirst timers city dream, and that was alright by me.
            I dipped down the subway access and hauled my luggage down, jarring my poor cat in her bag if the soft growling I heard was her and not a random subway dweller. Once we piled into a car, we swayed along to metallic clings; I set my precious girl on the rolling bag to get a look at her.
            With ears pulled back, I cooed her name.
             “Oh, Penelope.”
            She sniffed as if to tell me what I should do with her given name, but I was caught off guard by someone who sat nearby, opposite us.
             “What a sweet baby, Penelope?” The older woman grinned. I wasn't used to casual chats on city transit, but I couldn’t help but muster up a smile. Of hope.
             “Yes, ma'am. It's her first time in the subway and the city.” The poor old girl had a lot of firsts this week.
             “She looks like she’s at her leisure,” her toothy grin beamed, a balm on my calloused soul, “you’ll both do just fine here.”
            I smile and take her for her word, needing at least that to get through the first week alone. On the plane, I deleted all my emails, texts, and phone numbers. On the train from Albany to the city, I deactivated my social media accounts while Penelope sat in my lap enjoying the sunshine. I checked things off my checklist and then added a couple more, one of which was to change my phone number as soon as humanly possible.
            I cut all my ties because I needed a clean break, with no one available to fall prey to once again, to delete all the evidence of my past life and get rid of the temptation to try again. I wouldn’t fall for all that like I did several times before. When people show you who they are, trust them, then run as fast as you can. It was better to run; I kept telling myself as I lifted a hand to say goodbye and walked back onto another waiting platform full of rushing bodies and the musty smell of the steamy underground.
            Running kept you alive.
            I lift Penelope back onto my shoulders, wedge myself and my large luggage case through the crowd, and let them carry me back to fresh air and city sounds. I have no time to wait; I push through the crowd, wheels clacking when not lurching themselves into a crack.
            I’m tired, my body aches, my feet are worn to the nub. I desire nothing more than a shower, than to let Pen out of her kitty carrier and let her roam our artsy studio apartment with its astronomical rent that would be well worth the peace it will afford and eventually represent.
            Then, in a matter of minutes, in the whirlwind of time, running, movement from all four corners, we were there. Like the crowd split in two and homed in on the door. The metal latticed door with its padlock and Asian menu-covered windows was the entry to my sweet salvation and a moment alone with my thoughts. I glance both ways and realize I look crazy; no one cares that I’m here, a blip of a soul on the sidewalk in front of a six-story walk-up. No one cares as I slide my key in, jiggle it, and open the door. No one cares that I struggle up three flights of stairs with a cat strapped to my back; as long as I’m quiet, the signs up the stairway inform.
            No one cares about the packages piled up outside my door, one of which is a foam mattress compressed to a inch of it’s foamy life. No one cares when I open the door and proceed to slide everything else in because as long as no one knows I exist, I simply don’t.
            So, once I’m inside my third-floor studio, I take Pen from my shoulders and lean against the door before I sink to the floor with Penelope held against my chest.
            Even with the faraway city sounds, the creaks of old oil radiators kicking in to break the chill from outside, and the creak of the floor as I come to sit on it, I couldn’t help the well of tears in my eyes and the knot forming in my chest.
            If I succeeded in anything, it was in the here and now, having effectively run away from everything I once knew. When there wasn’t anything left tethering me to the past or the inkling of a future in my old life, it scared me at how fast I packed and left before the sadness took me out. So we will sit in the city's quiet silence, with its creaky floors and quiet patrons behind closed doors, while my tears flow unfettered.
            I guess the cat’s out of the bag, and it’s true what they say; what doesn’t kill you makes you suffer.
            Or something like that. 

Short Story: Home Is Where the Hurt Is

 

The pencil tapping against the bathroom countertop was complementary to the hallow hissing of the exhaust fan overhead, tucked against sagging ceiling water stains. She sat on the counter, eyes closed, focused on breathing and tapping the metal against the cigarette-burned Formica. As she took another long inhale, she opened her eyes, turning to face herself in the medicine cabinet mirror like she was blowing out smoke from an invisible cigarette—much like a real one that scarred the almost plastic countertop with melted scorch marks.
            She couldn’t take much more of these kinds of days, the ones where she was just too tired to deal with reality, without the taste of escape on the tip of her tongue.
            The hurried pounding of footsteps coming up the stairs caused her to react. She slid off the counter, her heart pounding in her chest, twisting her hair with the pencil and sliding it into place. In one fluid motion, she jerked the door open just in time for a little girl to dart in, closing the door again and pressing the lock button with her thumb.
            Both girls glance at each other, their amber eyes colliding, mirroring each other except for their ages.
            They seemed to wait without speaking, eyes locked. The younger girl panted as quietly as possible while the older girl leaned on the wall opposite. Her eyes broke first and went straight to the door handle, and she watched, waited, almost expecting, what exactly? When the steps didn’t come, they both seemed to untense their necks, settle their spines, and melt into the floor with relief.
            They were safe, for now.
            The monsters only came out at night, the ones they ran and hid from. If it weren’t a nightly act to fight the flames and push back on angry dragons armed with razor-sharp claws, they would never hide another day in their lives, even with the dark ghouls that hid under their shadowed beds. It didn’t stop the older girl's heart from racing because somewhere internally, she knew why nothing but silence greeted them on the other side. It either got worse or stayed the same; it never, ever just went away. She wiped her palms on her jeans as the younger girl ran her fingers through her long brown hair, both staring at the tarnished brass knob as if willing it to stay still or open to another dimension.
            The house was haunted. By ghosts of the past, demons of the present, lined with broken glasses and unexplained bruises. It would probably be best if they moved from their haunted house situation, but she guessed it would cost too much to live in a normal home. One where the noise being made wasn't yelling and screaming and stomping steps up and down the hallow stairs. The monsters grew weary and would rage on and on for days while the girls would seek shelter and hope one day to be old enough to fight through the pain.
            Younger and older sat together, scared of the hall's silence and the house's stillness. They knew the monsters were there, but how long would they make them wait? The older girl wished it would just come so it could be over faster so she could lay in bed and dream dreams of no such disaster. The younger girl closed her eyes tight, hoping it all would disappear. No matter the age, they both were scared of the monsters that haunted their halls, heads, and dreams. Deep down, they knew this wasn’t normal, being haunted 24/7, because the kids at school would tell of family dinners and vacations that went so well. She would stand there quietly wondering what all they meant; by not being haunted, you could have actual family things and them not turn into haunted dreams.
            That moms and dads could be different if ghosts didn't hang around all day, reminding them of better times when the hauntings weren't a big deal and hiding wasn’t a thing.
            As the silence grew uncomfortable, the exhaust fan made an annoying hum that seemed too loud for finely tuned ears. Both girls stood up, quietly turning toward the door before stepping out as bravely as they could, the older shielding the younger. Once the switches were hit, they both darted for their door, but as quietly as they could.
            On tiptoe, they lock it behind them, the youngest in first and the oldest listening at the thin crack of light funneling in.
            A fight would have ensued any other night, with nothing haunting the halls and no yelling from the demons downstairs. Even though grateful for a quiet moment, she worried this might be the quiet before the storm but didn’t know how to stir up a haunting, so they crept to bed instead.
            But as she slipped under the sheets, her bare feet paused, hanging from the lip of the bed, tempting the ghosts from the shadows beyond. When nothing came except cold feet, she rolled until she stared at the door, at the shadow that moved underneath.
She welcomed a ghost or two, maybe a demon with flames ready to engulf; the devil could come knocking at that door. She rather anyone, anything, else than the reality turning at the locked knob because when push came to shove, she would choose fictional violence over the actual bruises she would get tonight when the monsters she calls mom and dad, pull her from her bed on another sleepless night.