Daylight from the bedroom windows wakes me up at 6:00.
My phone is not on my night stand.
The lights are on, and the dogs wander the downstairs freely, not in their crates.
I make coffee but it is too weak.
And I remember what I did last night.
Even my silence is not quiet enough for my past, and I see the same faces that my life grew away from, like a houseplant craning up out of a dark corner.
Some of them are kind, and I wonder whether it is the kindness of good fortune—a happy childhood and a solid career—or the mercy that comes from suffering, from true character.
I refused their civilities, insisting on love. Knowing it would never get better for me, I made it much worse.
I am terrified of the commonplace.
I am Frances Farmer on This Is Your Life, her hair swept back into a brutal bun, a cravat like a silk noose, her eyes hollow and black, crawling back from the delicious excesses and articulate rages—a mannequin in a prim wool suit, her anger itching just below the neckline.
I am still here. And look, I'm just fine.
I have too many feelings.
It is a diagnosis. It is not a respectable status.
I have outlived my personality, and like an old T-shirt it hugs my belly, outlining my monstrosity.
I am a joke, told at a dinner party.
2 comments:
Wow, this is like a thump on the solar plexus. That FF footage is amazing, I could almost HEAR her eyebrow leaping up at 2:00.
Paul, it's an honor for me that you watched this. Thanks. I was attempting to explain why I've been so erratic. I hurt many people and I was trying to discover why. Luckily the worst is behind me. Thanks for commenting.
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