All posts by jackster06

an excess of metaphors.

I feel like if you looked hard enough, even if you hadn’t known about the storm on Tuesday, you’d have known something tore things up around here.

Summer, almost twilight, and finally, a few more kids out in front yards. I was a little distracted by my music ((we’ll get to more of that later)), and quickly inched over as an SUV sidled up from behind. It was very much like things were stirring. And then, I looked up.

Above, the beaten ring of a basketball hoop hung halfheartedly from its backboard. A group of tattered, bruised balloons were draped at the edge of the ring, a tangle of dingy, graying ribbons bunched around the knots. One of them was red.

When I looked up at the street, I saw so many more of these street hoops scattered along the block than I have in the last few months. Some were missing hoops altogether. Others had remnants of ripped rope hanging limply from the hoop. One was on its side on the lawn, the pole bent in a slightly grotesque manner.

Further down and around a corner or two, the golf course was surprisingly empty for a night this nice. One man stood too many yards away from me for me to see if he was looking at his phone or if he was just staring out at the course. I looked up at the trees that line the other side of the fence, noticing their silhouettes were more jagged. And then, everything smelled like pine.

The fence was torn open. Just behind, the stump of a tree, a jagged cut about 10 feet up, exposing the pale belly underneath the bark. I remembered its other half lying across the road. It was gone now, but not without a trace—the entire stretch of grass and walkway was littered with branches, sticks, twigs, tufts of pine needles. I didn’t know one tree could produce so many pinecones. All these dejected things, like they all knew it wasn’t time for them to be on the ground just yet.

There was a literal metaphor strewn around the neighborhood.

It felt like there was a ton of potential a couple of weeks ago. Like all of our individual globes might start spinning again, even if a little off-kilter at first. Now, the hoops are broken. I don’t know about you, but I most certainly looked forward to seeing more of my friends. Now, I’m back to staring at my phone or staring into nothing at all, wondering where the hell everyone is.

Wasn’t this all supposed to be over? Can we not figure out what’s wrong because maybe everyone is wrong? Why does the whole place look different? Like you looked up and you’re in some thick forest and you can tell no one’s walked through it in awhile?

Tonight’s walk felt necessary after one of the worst weeks. I don’t just say that personally—it seems like everyone’s week sucked. It’s disheartening. Summer is supposed to be like magic. I know I’m biased because it’s my favorite season, but things just usually feel better here. But it’s starting to not feel so much better.

I’ve been staving off what will likely be an inevitable storm of tears. Attempting to stave off, anyway. I’ve been mostly successful. But it’s not if it’s coming—it’s when.

Why does that sound familiar?

I’m listening to my brain argue with itself. So far, we’re still relatively neutral in the tug of war. So, I took a walk. Because those help. And I knew I’d listen to a podcast ep that I hadn’t yet finished, because it was already hilarious and the hosts are my fav. But before I flipped to the episode, I put on Taylor Swift. I’ve been listening to “folklore” for two weeks, nearly nonstop. Fucking Taylor Swift. I was never an insane fan. Girlfriend could write a good song. Could take or leave. Now? Just fuck you, Taylor Swift. I was basically teenage-girl-level obsessed with “Lover.” The songs on that album were just so good. Like even if I didn’t love the melody or the chorus, the lyrics were all just so good. Like I wanted to stamp my feet and bitch about why I never thought to put those phrases together like that. “Lover” was still on my regular rotation when homegirl went and dropped this “surprise.” Surprise, indeed, motherfucker.

Again, I like almost every song on it, but there are two or three that I continue to replay. When I looked up at that basketball hoop, “cardigan” was playing, and I figured out why I keep hitting repeat.

“cardigan” sounds like depression.

Like if there were a tangible metaphor for what mine feels like, anyway. Maybe the mood is overall a little somber, even if there are some charming upbeat details in its background. And even when I can’t decide how it makes me feel, I still have favorite parts that I love to sing. To me, that song feels like teetering. Nope. Oh, we aren’t going to start thinking about that.

Teetering.

I swear, if I could run away from my brain sometimes—not even just the Scumbag side—I would. Too bad there’s literally no escape. Too bad I suck at running, anyway.

Teetering.

Is that what’s happening? Is that why I keep trying to push back that one emo breakdown? Or has the overall tone of the last week just been more overwhelming to me than I thought? Because it’s sad, what I feel. But when I try to pinpoint why, all the other reasons why I am still good keep bubbling up. So it doesn’t quite feel as all-encompassing…yet?

Do you think there’s really a breaking point? Like, for everyone? If there is, will we always wind up at its precipice? Is it inevitable that, at least at one point within your lifetime, you’re going to tumble over it?

This is the idea I’m grappling with today. And I’m paying more attention to my distractions. Times when I let you overrun the conversation because maybe you need to, and it’s easier to think about what you’re talking about than what I’m feeling. Flipping on comedies I’ve seen a billion times and looking forward to the parts that make me laugh the hardest. Taking too long to decide what book I’m reading next. Thinking over and over and over again about the words I’m going to put down on paper, the characters who I’m going to finally lead to their endings. Behaviors I might try changing.

And blog posts that I should be writing.

I don’t want to talk about my feelings.

This is the story of a Scumbag Brain.

I fumble around the nightstand and hit “snooze” on my alarm while barely opening my eyes. I press it a few too many times more before I find my flip-flops and basically stumble from the bedroom, where Nico chirps, trills, and mews the entire time I’m getting his breakfast. What I don’t know yet is that this is the happiest I will be throughout the day.

The shower is usually turned on before the bathroom door closes and this is where the best of the mood starts to flicker. It’s Monday, or a day back after a long weekend, or a morning after a bad night of sleep, and all I can think about is that by the time Friday gets here, this moment will not even be a memory. I won’t even remember what outfit I’m going to put on, and I probably haven’t even figured that part out yet.

Everything takes such a long time. My hair needs to be mostly dry by the time I leave, or it’ll just stay damp and flat in the wrong places. I never feel like putting makeup on. By the time I’m finished, I will be scrubbing curl cream and cover cream and eyeshadow off my hands and scrambling to pack breakfast and coffee. I promise Nico I’ll be back and I remind him to be good, even though he always is.

I think of how many times I will have to do this drive by the time it’s Friday. I might not be paying attention to the podcast I found so interesting twenty minutes ago. The walk into work isn’t memorable, but it’s usually windy. If I’m alone in the elevator, sometimes I slump against the wall and hope the ride takes a little longer.

I start my to-do list. I sort emails. I check my personal email and my Facebook notifications. And I start on whatever project is the most pressing. Add comma. Delete hyphen. Hyphenate here. Cut ordinal.

I think about how tired I am. Sip coffee.

Cap headline. I’m really bad at writing headlines.

Change format to match other emails in set. This content is so repetitive. I would drag my feet so hard if I had to write this set. Our team does a great job. But I wouldn’t.

I’m so tired. Sip coffee. It’s still super hot, which I love, but sometimes the roof of my mouth suffers.

Initial page. No edits. Which is great. Maybe. Unless I didn’t catch something huge. Did I check the subheads? Factoids? Do I remember proofing this page at all? Should I check it again or should I just drop it off and worry a little more?

There’s chatter behind me. I’m glad they’re laughing with each other and enjoying themselves. But writing and editing are solitary, and I’ll be lucky if I have one conversation throughout the day. It’s okay. I don’t think I have anything good to talk about today, anyway.

If I close my eyes, I will sleep. So let’s go walk up and down the stairs a few times and maybe that tiny burst of energy will get me through to lunch.

In the afternoon, I’ll go visit Nico again. I eat something at my kitchen table and then stare at my bed, wishing I could crawl in and take a nap for the rest of the day. I am so tired. I probably haven’t had enough water. I never really do. It’s just another thing I can’t remember to do. Or I don’t want to do.

I don’t want to go back to work. I don’t want to figure out dinner. I don’t want to go to therapy later. I don’t want to go to the gym. I don’t want to go do laundry. Does Nico have enough food? I don’t want to go to the grocery store.

I’m so tired. I can’t think about staring at any more words on any pages. Forget about writing my own. I’m not even sure why I leave the tabs open for the two stories I’m working on. I probably won’t ever finish them. I get excited when I write one paragraph. Yeah. Really big accomplishment. I’m embarrassed to tell anyone that my dream will be realized the day I see a book with my name on it on a shelf in Barnes and Noble. I’m embarrassed because I can’t make it happen.

I’m so tired. So tired. But it’s too early to go to bed, because then I have to get up and do it again. All of it. But isn’t this the kind of job I wanted? I’m lucky, right, that I get to spend all day proofing, since I love it? Didn’t I work really hard for this? And I’m going to be tired anyway, so what does it matter what time I go to bed?

Crawl into bed. Why do the pillows not feel like my own? Why is it only Monday? How come I can’t formulate a specific plotline? What else do I have to do this week after work? What can I get away with not doing? Why am I awake again after two hours? How much longer until my alarm goes off?

 

Just recently, I explained to someone that I go through these bouts. Sometimes, it lasts a day. Or the whole week. Or multiple weeks. This, my fellow quasi-adults, is Scumbag Brain. It’s when everything shiny turns tarnished. It’s doubt, and deceit, and horrendous grumpiness, an overwhelming sense of unfulfillment, and a loud, loud echo of uselessness and negativity, topped off by inescapable fatigue. And it’s my own brain doing it, like my ultimate foe is locked in there and just ceaselessly rattling the bars on his cage.

My brain hates me. Whether it’s genetic, or environmental factors, or situational, or a combination of a million things, it is a freakin’ fight every day. This is one of the first things I’ve said to people when we talk about mental illness. It isn’t just therapy or meds–both of which can be unbelievably helpful; don’t get me wrong–it’s something you have to be cognizant of, every single minute of the day. And sometimes, I am just so tired.

Sometimes, my brain has run the track so many times that I don’t even want to talk about how I feel. “I don’t know what to talk about today, Dr. Psychologist.” I’m not sure how to answer the question ‘how are you?’ — to be honest, I don’t want to. I don’t want to talk about my feelings or how I’m going to distract myself from them for now. Because that’ll work, sure, until the next time my brain-foe decides he’s bored. I don’t want to decide whether or not this is just situational, because I’ve been thinking about bad things all day/week, and it’s just one big damn unperfect circle.

I don’t want to think about all the things I should be doing differently. The ways in which my life is changing seemingly without my input. The echoes and the distractions and the sense of coming up short, and the inevitable “what the hell are you even complaining about?”

This is the story of my Scumbag Brain. And I’m not writing it to garner sympathy or attention. I’m writing it because, more often than not, when I explain the concept of Scumbag Brain, eyes widen and voices raise an octave and there it is: “That happens to me, too.”

And so, I’ll read a chapter. I’ll find some crazy question under the “Ask Reddit” subreddit and waste half an hour. I’ll swallow my three pills and my vitamins, carry my water bottle as a reminder to drink more, hug Nico because he knows when I need it. Maybe write a note or two in my phone and remind myself that it might only be Monday, but Friday will get here. It will. And maybe my brain won’t be so scummy tomorrow.

 

the little things give you away.

I most certainly had not planned to abandon this endeavor. But when I come to think of it, I often go long, dusty stretches of time without the scratch of a pen to paper ((or keystroke to a blank page, per se)), no matter how many promises I make to myself.

When do you turn to writing–or reading, or drawing, or crosswords, or CrossFit, or Sodoku, a.k.a Who Decided Math is Fun? When do you go to your outlet?

There are several instances when I go to mine. Sometimes, it’s during the times where I feel so lit by creativity that everything around me gets brighter and the words crowd for a space at the front of my brain. Sometimes, a long stretch of writing follows a long stretch of tears.

There have been a great number of those lately.

I was going to write about the other type of brain activity I’ve been experiencing over the last few weeks. There are things fighting for a space in front, sure, but they are words of derision, disappointment, despair, deceit, and distortion. There have been a lot of tears.

I was going to write about the sense of loss I feel about the passing of Chester Bennington, a man who I had watched perform multiple times, who was one of the few artists who I felt like took some of those derisive and distorted words from my own head and made them into something real. I don’t want to say “beautiful.” While Linkin Park had some beautiful songs ((“The Little Things Give You Away” and “My Dsmbr” come to mind)), much of their music was very real to me – real words, tangible feelings, unapologetic darkness that I could shout along with in my car or appreciate as it pumped through my headphones. It was crafted well, and still resonated like my own heartbeat.

I was very much looking forward to their concert with Blink 182 this Friday.

I have cried a mass of tears, and it has left me silent, enraged, unfulfilled, incredulous. So instead of writing about those kinds of tears, I’m going to share something about a different type of tears altogether.

Copyrighted 2017

https://www.dropbox.com/s/4nwuwnwr0cs1hzn/Tears.docx?dl=0

the element of fear.

The dust hasn’t yet settled, but I have some things I want to say about this year’s presidential election.

I was scheduled to work a full day on Wednesday, so after I got home from visiting my family, I turned on channel two to see what the election results were showing thus far, thinking that it was close to midnight and I was sure the polls would be leaning one way or another.

Like many Americans, what I saw was not what I expected. I couldn’t change the channel as I texted back and forth with my boyfriend, the two of us exchanging disbelief. As 1am rolled around, I knew I had to go to bed if I expected my brain to function at all the next day. But sleep did not come easy, and at 7am, I opened Google on my phone to see what the official results were.

Like many Americans, I buried my face in my hands, and I actually cried.

There are a few things I want to make clear before I continue with my post. I was a Bern-er through and through. I’d been watching him on Bill Maher for five years and I had always been a fan of his demeanor and his ideas. To me, he was a politician who had real people in mind, and wanted things to be better for younger people than they had been when he was young. I was SO excited to see him announce his candidacy for president. Was he idealistic? Of course. Did I think he was going to be able to do absolutely everything he claimed he wanted to do? Of course not. But I was proud as fck when I bubbled in his name during the primaries.

Did I actually think he’d beat Hillary? No. But I hoped, and when he didn’t win the nomination, then I took the next option. I have never been one of the “I’m-With-Her”s. There is a lot I don’t love about her. A lot. But she had a ton of political experience. Her husband had a successful presidency, despite personal scandal, from what I learned later. I was still pretty young during Bill’s presidency. And watching the debates made her look worlds more professional, organized, and composed than Mr. Trump.

So, I experienced complete disbelief in the election results. There was no way our government was going to allow this man, who had said and done such deplorable things and who had absolutely zero political experience other than accusing President Obama of not being an American, to become our leader. How could they have let this happen? Especially when Hillary had won the popular vote, despite it being by a small margin?

When I learned more about the demographics of voters in respect to the results, I thought to myself, “Okay, what is it that I don’t know? What am I missing?” I posted a question on Facebook, asking my Republican friends what drives them to identify as Republican. While it was incredibly interesting to hear other people’s points of view and personal reasoning, it really only solidified that I didn’t really need to question myself and my choices. Some people brought up interesting points, but I’m pretty sure I will always be a Democrat. If people are going to call me a bleeding heart liberal, that’s fine with me. I’m never going to feel ashamed about having empathy for other people.

Which is why I have to write this post.

I am truly appalled at the amount of people who I’ve seen on social media mocking others for being upset about our president elect. People who post memes about how 18-year-olds stormed Normandy beaches and now they need counselors because words hurt their feelings. People who keep saying that others “need to get over it and accept what happened.” This entire “get over it; you’re just being silly; we clearly know better than you” mentality. I am really disgusted. Truly.

Let me tell you the first thing I saw when I logged into Facebook after learning about the election results: “I’m scared.” “I’m terrified.” “Truly frightening.” “What is going to happen to us?”

I wouldn’t exactly call that whining, and I wouldn’t exactly say it’s unwarranted. Some people are truly AFRAID. Let that sink in for a few minutes. They are actually afraid. It isn’t an act.

As a woman, how am I supposed to be okay with a leader who says it’s okay to sexually assault women because of who he is? I don’t CARE if you just think it was “locker room talk” or “off the record” — to me, that makes it worse, because those are his personal thoughts that he didn’t feel ashamed of announcing when he didn’t think the world was listening. I don’t CARE about explanations. It resonates ideas of rape culture, which is something human beings should never just brush away as nothing.

How should I feel when one of the first things that has been spoken about is putting pro-life judges on the Supreme Court? That work will be done to ensure birth control will no longer be covered by “Obamacare,” let alone health insurance plans? That steps will be taken to clear the marriage equality act? These are things that are important to me, as I’m sure they’re important to a lot of people, even if they don’t feel the same way as I do.

But it is senseless to me. Some people I’ve spoken to have noted that the “government gives too many handouts.” I guess I understand that sentiment…but to be honest, I would have been homeless months ago if I had not been able to accept government assistance while I was unemployed.

If women go off birth control because they can’t afford it ((would you be able to afford an extra $300 a month?)), and they know they’re not going to be able to support a child, and maybe an abortion is your last resort, but now it’s not so easy to get one, and you have to worry because maybe you don’t work full-time and if you do, you can’t afford child care and food and rent and bills, and you can’t get extra help because the government gives too many handouts….I mean, am I the only one who sees a disaster here? Am I living in a different reality? Where is the solution?

And don’t you dare say, “Well, just don’t have sex.” Because that’s unrealistic, and antiquated, and just stupid, and I’m not sorry to say it. “Well, you have to be responsible about it.” What do you think birth control is for, in that scenario? What about the people, like me, who need it for a true medical condition, on top of its intended purpose?

When is the gender wage gap ever going to be truly addressed? Why do some people view women as baby-making machines, but say that pregnancy in a business environment is inconvenient and since you’ll be taking time off, you don’t deserve to be paid as much? What about the women who have chosen not to have children? What about the people who work just as hard and harder than their counterparts? Why is there a wage gap–simply because there always has been one? We tell girls “You can be anything you want,” when it really means “You can be anything you want, as long as you’re okay with a little bit of inequality.”

This is just an example of the senselessness I see. Repealing marriage equality? Choosing to not recognize the rights of individuals who don’t identify with “traditional” gender identifications? Senseless. How is any of that anyone else’s goddamn business, when you get down to it?

There is never a situation when flag-burning is appropriate. Ever. But are people angry, and scared? Absolutely. And they have every right to be.

During the last election, I was living in Nevada. I paid close attention to the campaigning, and during one of the debates, when issues about women were being discussed and threats to some of these liberties were implied, I turned to my then-husband, and said: “Oh my god. Obama has to win again. He HAS to win again.” And it came from a place of absolute anxiety. This is not an exaggeration. It was the first time in my life when I felt like my rights and liberties as a female might actually be under an ax. It was terrifying then, and I can only imagine how people feel now.

For example, I know several people who are distraught and some even inconsolable after these results. These people identify differently than I do, and their lifestyles and life situations are very different than mine. But that does not mean I don’t understand what that feels like–to feel like you’re just trying to stay safe and live the best life you can and you need an extra set of bravery to do so. To just have a foothold on that and feel like it’s all shaking underneath you.

So, I’m sorry, but we need to stop saying people have to suck it up and get over it. It isn’t that simple; it never will be. People are scared. We need to recognize that, and stop brushing it off like something that doesn’t matter, just like many other things that are being overlooked. Here’s another newsflash: Everyone has a right to their feelings, especially when it comes to fear. People are entitled to them, and if that makes you angry, again, you need to look inward.

Here is another thing with which I take serious issue – the entire “well, this is what happened; you need to accept him as our leader.” While I understand the sentiment, and I will do my best to keep my mouth shut going forward about my personal opinions of this person, asking people to do that is so unbelievably hypocritical. For the last eight years, exactly how much respect has been given to President Obama?

A man, who while not a flawless president, has done a lot in the last eight years. Again, when people say “He’s done NOTHING, this useless guy,” I feel like I must be living in a different reality. Is there something I don’t know?

What is it that I don’t know that made it okay for me to see fake $100 bills with his face in the middle, wearing oversized sunglasses and smoking a huge joint? What made it okay to see an enormous stack of bumper stickers for sale at a rundown antique shop that said “If I knew this was going to happen, I would have picked my own cotton.”

Those aren’t feelings; that’s straight-up hatred, and I feel like mentalities like this feel justified now. This man has said awful things–this man, not the media, not the news, not the Internet–I have heard awful things from his own mouth that have insulted and offended me and my fellow citizens, but I need to show the utmost respect? Where was this mentality eight years ago?

How many children have taken their own lives because of unrelenting bullying? How much reminding do we need of this fact before it actually becomes important? We say that they should have looked for help, that we should have offered more help, that something should have been done to put them first. How is that reflected in electing a man who has been known to be a bully for YEARS?

Listen, I get it. I get it if you don’t like President Obama; if you felt like you couldn’t vote for Hillary; if you were tired of Democrats having control for the last eight years. I understand that there are a lot of things within our system that desperately need to change. I really do. I’ll be honest: If there had been a better Republican candidate, I might’ve considered voting Republican this year. But this man?

I understand that the election has been held, and there’s very little to be done about the outcome. But it isn’t just about being upset that it hasn’t resulted in my personal choice. It’s more than that – people are afraid, and they’re afraid for very good reasons, and it isn’t just one or two of them. It isn’t just a specific group of people; it’s several of them. And those people are in a complete state of uncertainty right now. Maybe none of them have anything to do with you. Maybe you’re not affected by their concerns, so you brush them aside.

But what if you were?

 

 

 

a return in all senses.

I did something pretty awesome today, and I kind of don’t care how conceited that sounds.

I used to regularly contribute to a blog that I helped run with one friend and one now-really-ex-friend. Maybe it was “fluff” writing; but it was so much fun, and I was writing at least two short pieces every week. I was always flipping ideas over in my brain, whether I was driving, or at work, or falling asleep at night. It was a super-creative time, and sometimes, I really miss it…especially over the last year or so.

My creative muse is a fickle little thing, and I fall victim to long, long bouts of writer’s block. Not a traditional writer’s block, might I add. I’ll come up with plenty of ideas, vivid scenes, cool character backstories, and then…I can’t bring it to fruition. I get it on the page and then, “What do I do with this now?”

I never want to admit when it happens, so I try to write, anyway. Sometimes, I’m successful. Sometimes, I have a fluke and I bang out a short story in three hours. Or I participate in National Novel Writing Month for three or four years straight and I wind up having two or three 100+ page manuscripts that I’m afraid I’ll never finish. I think that’s part of the reason why I can’t make up my mind about whether I’m actually going to do NaNoWriMo this year. I know – I probably should have made that decision by now, but the one year I won, I didn’t start until November 8th. So I still have time, damnit.

Okay, anyway, back to the reason for the update. As you’ve likely noticed, I haven’t blogged in awhile. I’ve had ideas, just none that I could really bring to fruition, as described before, so I neglected this place a little. But I have been writing.

I finished writing a short story today. It took me nearly five months to complete, which is probably the longest I’ve ever taken to write one. Not only that, but I decided to write about and from the point of view of someone who might actually scare me. It was an experiment, of sorts, and I had a really, really enlightening and experiential time playing with ideas, and language, and the way certain metaphors could be transformed and how they could relate to others.

This is the first short story I’ve finished since I wrote “Beneath No Shade,” which was probably about four years ago. I got the idea from a dream – I love when that happens. I knew its title before I even wrote one word. And I knew how it would end before I finished the first scene.

These are all kinds of anomalies. I guess I had to experience a bevy of them before I could get back to my roots. But I think I’m about there. After so many afternoons of just looking at the unfinished words like that Kuzco “70% of editing is staring at the screen making this face” meme. Scrolling back to see if this idea would work. Re-reading and re-reading and thinking, around the three-month mark, that I was never going to finish it and that maybe it was too creepy to finish. That maybe I was out of my league with this genre, and that I was too far away from my comfort zone.

I think this is one of the biggest personal accomplishments I’ve had in awhile, and it makes me excited for new ideas and new words. And I also thought about this: If I’m not sure I can commit to a novel idea for the month of November, maybe I can use the month to write some short stories. See what flops about and winds up on paper.

NaShoStoWriMo?

We’ll see. Anyway, I’ve also decided to take a really big leap and post my new short story here. I feel like it needs to come with a couple of forewarnings. It’s longer than I expected it would be ((nearly 6,000 words)) and the content is both profanity-laced and disturbing.

Copyrighted 2016, All Rights Reserved.

Welcome to The Highway.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/mc9sdedpw81wg8e/The.Highway.docx?dl=0

 

 

the ones who hurt us never really leave us.

I’m a pretty big fan of Adele. She’s one of those artists who I feel like I can always listen to, even if I’m not super crazy about the song – I just really love her voice. The other day, someone mentioned to me that “every Adele song is about the past. That’s all she sings about.” And it’s true, I think, but aren’t all songs about the past? For the most part?

I’d also say I’m a Kelly Clarkson fan. I only have one of her songs on my phone (“Dark Side,” for anyone who is curious) but I always like listening to her voice, as well. I’ve had to listen to the radio a lot lately, thanks to the really shtty person who decided to steal my phone adapter out of my car, and I keep hearing her song “Piece by Piece.” That’s a pretty rough one–I felt decently choked up the first few times I heard it. And, like a lot of her other songs, and like a lot of Adele’s songs, it is about something that happened in her past.

I’m going to leave aside the fact that Taylor Swift is currently usurping my future husband. She’s another artist who writes a lot about the past, but to unnecessary scrutiny. Everyone is always trying to figure out which song is about who, like some giant, all-album-encompassing game of “You’re So Vain.” It had me thinking…I’m pretty sure there are dozens of people who inspire chart-destroying hits and they never even know about it. Maybe these people only had a small impact on someone else’s life, but it blossomed. Or maybe they had an enormous effect to absolutely no avail.

But I think, maybe, the ones who hurt us never really leave us. And I’m going to give three examples of my own to show how.

Number Three. The amount of questioning I impose on myself once a situation like this happens is really staggering. How did I not know; I’m usually better at seeing this; Was this true; Did that actually happen; Had those words been said? My value as an individual–and my value to this person–were shown as two separate perceptions to me, not unlike other situations I’ve experienced before. There are plenty of instances where I think about the bottom lines and the reality of things, and it still feels very raw and very devastating…. but. For the most part, it’s a shredded ribbon. Mostly tattered and then snipped away. I feel as if I should be more upset about it than I actually am. Who knows why I feel that way, and why I do not, but I do know this–it is something that will always be a presence, whether in hiding or forward. It is probably the scenario with the most surrounding triggers, and my reaction to them will be very dependent on a multitude of things, just like the situation itself.

Number Two. This person…it’s kind of funny. I was so absolutely devastated when this person decided to change behaviors so quickly, and I was so busy being hurt and sad that I ignored how angry it actually made me. This was one of those things I thought I would never, ever forget–and I won’t, but for entirely different reasons than I first imagined. This individual and I have a tendency to frequent the same area on a daily basis, and for a good amount of time, I was nervous that this person and I would run into each other. What would THAT be like? Would I get that horrible, omg-there’s-a-huge-drop-on-this-rollercoaster-and-I-had-NO-idea surge of anxiety in my stomach? What would I say? Would I run as pathetically as possible? Thinking about it now, I’d likely behave as usual–as if I did not know this person; as if I had no idea that s/he had ever behaved as horribly and stupidly as s/he did. Because really, when this person does cross my brain, that’s what I think about the most–his/her utter stupidity. Sometimes I think about the conversations we had and I don’t know HOW I didn’t dissolve into complete holy-sht-you-didn’t-really-just-say-that-right? giggles. It’s kind of ridiculous.

Number One. I am lucky to say that this person has far less of an effect on me than in previous times. There were weeks on end when everything was a trigger–patterns on couches in doctor’s offices, movies I’d catch in the middle, the fact that every one of my favorite songs brought up some kind of razor-wired misery. I will not say that it has completely vanished, like some awful smell on a strong wind. It is most certainly still there, a shadow on my foot no matter where the sun is. Even if the stained fishbowl has been removed from my head and I can fully see what the gravity of the situation really was; even though I am far, far less sad than I ever thought; even if recent thoughts make me see how truly pathetic this person is; I will never be fully rid of it. It’s one of those situations that makes me think of “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.” It’s kind of horrific to think about if that type of service actually existed, and how nobody would ever choose to erase someone from their mind…I used to wholeheartedly wish that it were possible, and if it were, I would erase it forever. Now, I hope that after the passage of more time, I am able to think of this person the way I think of Number Two and some aspects of Number One–with complete indifference.

While these three are the most specific instances I could accurately describe in this medium, there are plenty of others–behaviors or actions that I have since forgiven, but still sprout up every now and then. I was talking about one just the other night, and in the middle of rehashing something that happened SO many years ago, I started to feel nauseous. Later, in privacy, there were a couple of tears–not enough to be noticeable to anyone but me. But it was quite a phenomenon–something I’d spent so much time wrangling with, talking about with professionals, analyzing my own feelings over, and coming to certain truths…it surprised me that some of it is still a bit raw in the center.

It’s too bad I don’t play any instruments.

 

 

if it makes you happy.

Last time, I wrote about how sleep had been eluding me. It hasn’t gotten much better. Some nights, it literally takes hours to fall asleep, and then I wake up every hour. Other nights, I fall asleep quickly and I’m up every 20-30 minutes. I’m working on a story, and in one section, my narrator explains how a specific memory is like a well-oiled marble in my main character’s mind. Sleep has been like that for me – I can grab it, but it slips away easily.

While some of this is due to things that are beyond my control, there’s a pretty big part of it that I can control, and that part is what I think about on a daily basis. So, instead of crazily fixating on things I can’t possibly remedy right now, I’ve been trying to think about good things. Happy things. Am I just distracting myself? That’s a fine theory. But it’s hurting no one, most importantly myself.

Last time, I wrote about the one thing that makes me the most angry. This time, I think I want to write about things that make me happy.

Right now, I’m sitting on the back deck of the house in which I rent the basement. The awning and banisters have been lined with strings of both white and colored lights. It is summer, a newborn July, and tomorrow is my favorite holiday. The neighborhood is feeling exceptionally festive–bursts of color light the sky on all sides. It’s both peaceful and exciting at the same time, and I feel grateful that this is where I am, in many senses.

Summer is the season that will always make me the happiest. I think a lot of that has to do with the elongated daylight hours – how the sun gives up slowly, stretching lazily and leaving trails of color behind as it goes. The 4th of July is my favorite for multiple reasons–everyone is outside, grilled food is awesome, and fireworks are pretty much magic. I kind of like that they’re saved for this occasion only, in most places. There’s a lot of symbolism, and I could probably go on for pages describing what my favorite type of firework looks like. I’ve always said I’m going to either write a short story or a scene that takes place on the 4th of July.

Unfortunately, that isn’t going to happen now. I am working on something, but it is a stretch from the things I usually write. I’m playing with a personality type and a familiar, but unfavorable setting. It’s off my style in so many ways–I already know its end. Usually, I don’t know I’ve reached a story’s ending until it’s looking at me from the other side of the screen. I’m likely going to post it here once it’s finished, which is another deviation for me. It’s slow going, but it is going, and I spent an hour the other night editing what’s there and adding more. Afterward, I couldn’t sleep, but I couldn’t tell if it was because of the writing buzz or because I was throwing so many ideas across my own brain. It feels good to be writing, and it feels good to not abandon the project to work on a new idea.

Because there’s something brewing–something big, I think–but I’m going to let it steep a little longer before I start typing. I feel like my imagination is lifting weights. It’s gotten scrawny over some time, but now its taking gym selfies in the mirror.

I have a new job, finally – thank all that is holy. I get paid a pretty decently awesome hourly wage that I negotiated up when I was hired. I sit in a very open space, next to a huge window, with a monitor that’s almost television-sized. I switch off between PDF and paper edits. My comments and suggestions are taken seriously, even if they’re not always incorporated ((the bane of every professional proofreader and editor everywhere)). I actually feel like my presence is appreciated, and I find that I actually get excited about certain projects when they’re handed to me. It takes me 10 minutes to get there. I’m working four-hour shifts, which is both ideal and not, but it means I have time and energy to do my own writing. I’m using my brain. And I might still just be a cog in a wheel, but I don’t feel like it, and that’s awesome.

My moods are wonky, but I can say that they switch between content and anxious, instead of just varying degrees of anxiety. The other afternoon, I felt a weird sense of calm while I was driving with my boyfriend–the first time in quite awhile when it was like, “everything’s okay.” Conversely, I was waiting on line at Best Market this afternoon to pay for the ingredients for a watermelon-feta salad I’m making for tomorrow and out of nowhere, I felt incredibly anxious. There was no reason for it, really. The store was crowded, but the line was moving. Maybe it had something to do with the incredibly rude man who sidled up behind me soon after. Here’s a note to the public: I get that I look different from your usual day-to-day redhead. I would probably spend a few extra seconds longer looking at my face, too, if I’d never seen a facial PWS before. But here’s the thing–if I catch you staring with direct eye contact three times over, you’re being an asshole.And just for the record, I don’t think you really have a right to stare when you’re wearing a huge straw cowboy hat, athletic socks and brown dress shoes, and you’re oddly crooning to yourself. Just saying.

So, the night is winding down and hopefully, I am, too. But if not, at least I have some really good things to think about, and tomorrow, if I’m inevitably exhausted, at least I’ll be with some of my favorite people, enjoying one of my most favorite days of the year.

And maybe there will be fireworks.

 

 

 

to a fault.

I had a hard time sleeping last night.

Actually, I’ve had a hard time sleeping over the last more-than-a-couple of nights.

But this isn’t entirely abnormal. It’s the first thing that happens when my anxiety level is even slightly higher than usual. It’s not always something big, either–it could be something small, like, “I’m meeting someone at 11AM; I need to make sure this, this, this, and this is done first.” It snowballs from there, and like a stereotypical worrier, I wind up thinking about dozens of things I have no control over, until I meditate myself into sleep. It lasts a few hours, and then I find myself noting the time on my alarm clock every time my eyes open. 2:02. 3:45. 5:07. 6:29. This morning, it was 7:02, and I knew I wouldn’t be getting any more sleep, really. I tried unsuccessfully to take a nap around 10, but only wound up flopping around on my couch like a fish out of water, the TV babbling in the background.

There are a few things I feel anxious about–my lack of decent freelance assignments; waiting on my job-or-maybe-it-isn’t-my-job-yet-I-think-they’re-hiring-me-but-I-feel-like-they-might-rescind-the-offer-at-any-second to contact me with work to do; the fact that I have less than a month’s rent in my savings; a small road trip with my neighbors this week that I still have to pack for.

I also happened to get angry about something last night. Anyone who knows me remotely well knows that it takes a LOT to make me really angry. I get pissed off just like everyone else, but it’s rare that it’s something that sticks with me. So, this was instantly confusing, because it was a weird type of anger–really intense, and kind of rage-like. At the culmination, I felt overwrought with frustration. I felt like trashing my apartment and I had to stifle an urge to scream. But instead, I just sat there on my couch, wide-eyed and dazed, knowing there was nothing I could really do. And all I could think of was a conversation I had with my doctor in Nevada.

Dr. S.: Do you get mad often?

J: No, not really.

Dr. S.: Well, what do you do when you do get angry?

J: *Pause.* Nothing. I kind of just wait for it to go away.

Dr. S.: Really? You don’t scream or yell, or throw things, punch pillows?

J: No.

Dr. S.: Well, it’s good to get those things out. Sometimes, you really have to.

I understood what she meant, finally, even if it sounded like a simple concept I should have grasped awhile ago. But still, I did nothing, other than cry a little, which only made me angrier. I tried to distract myself with Game of Thrones, but that didn’t help too much either. SPOILER. The Hound came back – he’s one of my favorites –  and I was disappointed that I wasn’t as excited about that as I should have been.

This all sounds kind of stupid, right?

That’s what I started thinking, too. My emotions were just out-of-whack because I’ve been overly anxious. It was silly to put this much stock into something that hurt my feelings. I should just go to bed and wake up feeling better about it tomorrow.

But my brain wouldn’t shut off, even after I’d been lying in bed for more than an hour, and I kept thinking about what had made me so angry–what had really made me so angry so quickly.

When you peel everything back, it all comes down to the same issue. It’s just repeated in different ways. The one thing that upsets me the most is when my negative feelings are disregarded. I have a history with this notion–with not expressing things I should, for whatever varied reason–so when I do, it’s a bigger thing than I can explain. Maybe it all sounds silly to you, but to have those feelings dismissed, or made to be a burden, or immediately deemed irrational is like hitting the detonator. Cue implosion.

Is this a negative aspect of my personality? Like my anxiety, is this a fault? I’m not sure, but just like everything else, I have definitely overthought about it.

Maybe it stirs up a lot of insecurity, which is something I honestly try not to focus on. Maybe it makes me feel like I am not as important to people as I want to be. Maybe it makes me feel like I was right all along, and that I never should tell people things they don’t want to hear.

Maybe it makes me think that everyone knows me as someone who doesn’t get angry easily, so we can just blow this off. She’ll just get over it. She always does.

It sucks, because this is a constant. There are multiple reasons why I’ve chosen to be a bottler when it comes to emotions–some of them are still guarded by the sphinx, but others are no surprise.

And then there are other reasons why this dismissive behavior makes me so mad. Because as soon as it started happening, the first thing I wanted to do was say mean things to this person–to name call and be dismissive in return. But I didn’t, because I don’t ever go looking to say something that will purposefully hurt someone’s feelings. I try to take a second to think about what I’m going to say before I say it, so that I never have to tell someone I said something I didn’t mean.

But not everyone is like that, and maybe I should stop expecting people to behave the way I do, just because I think it’s a better way.

It also makes me angry because, almost instantaneously, I feel like I don’t have a right to be angry. Maybe not so much that I don’t have a right to be angry, but that I don’t have the right to express it. This person has done so much for me; I’m going to sound so ungrateful; he/she has so much to deal with already – do I really need to add to it?; this is going to start a fight, and then I’m going to bed knowing that someone else is upset because of me.

I’ve gotten good at recognizing cycles in my own behavior.

And I’m getting better at realizing that sometimes, something has to be done to make me feel better. It’s the reason why I’ve written so many letters to so many people–some I’ve sent; others, I never will.

But I need to get better at knowing that the behavior of other people isn’t ever really my fault, no matter how much my brain tries to convince me it is. I need to remember that I can’t control how other people behave; I can only control how I react to it.

I don’t want to say that my reaction is never wrong. My brain is going to tell me that, no matter if I’ve done the wrong or right thing. It’s always going to be a cycle, but that doesn’t mean I should pump the brakes on it altogether.

Sometimes, you do need to know if you’ve hurt my feelings. I can’t always save it for the journal, or for multiple pages wrought with everything I want to say, folded up as small as possible and hidden away somewhere in a box.

I get that you have a lot going on. I understand that maybe your life doesn’t solely belong to you, and that I just might not understand some things. I realize that things are said out of anger. I realize that anxiety gets misdirected. I don’t want to hold it against you that you’re tired or you’re not in the mood.

But sometimes, I have to come first.

 

 

 

celebrating vbf international day of awareness

I remember the day I started researching the Vascular Birthmark Foundation, and the first time I discovered its International Day of Awareness. Not only did I love the idea of a day dedicated to encouraging people to ask questions, but it just happened to fall on the day before my birthday.

Every year since, I’ve tried to do something on my own to promote awareness, even if it’s just something small. One year, I posted facts on social media about my type of birthmark; another year, I shared letters I would’ve written to my younger self. There was one year when co-workers went without makeup to show support; the same year, I had people privately message me to ask me questions they were always a little too shy to address before.

I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do this year, so I decided to focus on another aspect of VBF International Day of Awareness: Bravery. People are encouraged to ask questions, but they’re also encouraged to be a little more bold about their experiences growing up with birthmarks. So, today, I’m doing two things that I’ve never really done. I’m going to post several makeup-free selfies on my Instagram and Facebook accounts, and I decided I’m going to share something I wrote.

A little background: I wrote this personal essay a few years ago for a competition, and other than the judges, the only person who has read it is my best friend. It centers on some things that happened about four or five years ago, when I was married and was living in Nevada. While it isn’t one of my most favorite things I’ve ever written, I think it’s an honest piece and it addresses a lot of important things, for me.

So, here’s to being brave.

 

 

Red

            Should you be lucky enough to witness the rarity of lightning striking sand, you will watch as the sand is transformed into a deep gray, uneven glass formation.

I found myself thinking of this notion often, as we traveled down the single-lane road flanked by dunes of sandy soil, always bathed in sepia behind my favorite aviator sunglasses. But here, in the northern Nevada desert, there never was any lightning. There was barely any rain.

Heaping mountains flanked us on all sides. At night, under the unnaturally large, bright moon, they looked like the humps of sleeping dragons. I thought of tiptoeing past, a jingle of a zipper on a suitcase, wild eyes and snapping jaws shepherding me back to our second floor apartment. I spent most of my days alone. Sometimes I enjoyed the deep silence. Other times, I longed for the sounds of traffic.

Here, in the desert, I uncovered secrets that others had hidden away behind tumbleweeds and ancient rock. “You’ll love it,” they cooed. “Tell Jason to take the transfer.”

“There are no bugs!” I remembered, as I eyed a large black widow spider weaving her horizontal net in the rock garden outside our apartment block.

“You won’t have any allergies!” I woke every morning with a headache and stuffed nose.

“So, you’re naturally curly,” someone remarked. “You’ll love that there’s no humidity. There’s barely any moisture at all.”

The patches started on the back of my neck. Then, the inside of my right bicep, a cluster of itchy, angry red bumps. Then, my wrists. Scalp. Ankles. Belly. Eyebrows. Eyelids. Shins. Thighs.

The eczema diagnosis had come a few years earlier. I remembered rubbing moisturizers into my skin, and watching the itchy patches fade. Here, in the desert, the lotions dried instantaneously. I sat in tea baths, sometimes three times a day, watching sprigs of chamomile and nettle leaves floating past on water that smelled more chlorinated than the water on Long Island had. I listened to “Good is Good” by Sheryl Crow, echoing on the tiles in our large master bathroom, and I cried, until the tears made my eyelids itch even more.

And then, I’d get out, pat dry, and go to bed. In my sleep, I’d scratch. I woke up to tiny bloodstains that ruined more than a few pillowcases. Tiny gouges appeared on the backs of my knees. I got so tired of the sight of my own blood.

I bought expensive eczema lotions. I bought apple cider vinegar that seared the raw patches and made me walk around the apartment smelling like dirty feet. Our dog would not come near me.

I stared at myself in the mirror and hated my skin.

Again.

 

 

My mother said that she knew something was wrong when the delivery room went quiet. And after, when the nurses tried to deter her from visiting the nursery. Only research that has been recently released explained the true cause of the deep, reddish-purple masses on my foot, calf, back, chest, scalp, and most notably, nearly the entire left side of my face and jaggedly bordering the right. Nevus flammeus.

“A port-wine stain birthmark,” she explained to me. “Because the color looks like that type of wine. But if anyone asks, you can just tell them it’s a birthmark. Just say ‘I was born that way.’”

And I was. Genetic tests show a randomly single change to just one gene after conception is the root cause—a mutation that occurs with the rarity of a lightning strike.

But this lightning strike touched a lot of the sand. It stretched to distort the way I related to people I did not know—ones whose stares made me feel small, and that reduced me to nothing but the red target on my face.

“Redface,” an older boy hissed at me on the school bus.

“It’s the girl with TWO faces!” Another boy shouted on a class trip.

“You have Fifth disease!” A boy said to me at the town pool.

“No, I don’t,” and even I was surprised at my incredulousness.

“Yes, you do,” he replied. Who does he think he is, telling me what I have?

            There were the more benevolent.

“How did you get burned?” A girl asked me.

“Oh my gosh,” another exclaimed. “Do they hurt? Your scars?”

“What happened?” Someone else whispered, and gently gestured to her own face, in case I needed the clarification.

And then, there were my favorites—the ones who behaved as if I were like everyone else. The ones who did not look twice.

The girls in the bunk during our fifth grade trip to Greenkill, who looked me in the eye as we passed around a book of scary stories to read by flashlight. My friend, Lisa, who smiled brightly instead of uncomfortably, as we were introduced.

My mother, whose reassurance was constant, who showed me that there was no need for shame.

I remember going into the city for the “test spots,” my parents explained. I wore a dress and met Dr. G., and put on oversized, protective goggles with red lenses to protect my eyes. I lay on my right side as he gently pressed a laser beam behind my ear, three spots descending, like tears. I remember hearing an odd sizzle. In the days that followed, my parents showed family members and friends, folding back my ear to show them where the laser had touched me.

“Can you see? Do you see how it’s lightened?” My mom asked, as she held down my ear in front of the mirror. And I nodded, even though I couldn’t.

She’d wake me while the sun was still asleep, and before I knew it, I’d be getting into the backseat of the car. I’d watch the dotted lines of the highway out the window, and eye the hem of the dress I was allowed to wear, even though I’d be changing out of it soon. I’d slink down as the car would approach the Midtown Tunnel and feel a surge of nausea—I wasn’t allowed to eat in the 12 hours before surgery.

The outside world would be swallowed by shiny, graying tiles and muffled tires over the span of road, everything darkened even though the sun had risen. My dad told me that we were under water.

“So if there was a hole, there’d be water coming in?”

“Mhmm. It would be coming in fast, too.”

Sometimes, I’d keep my eyes on the curve of the tunnel through the windshield. Other times, I’d lay flat against the seat, so I would not see the reflection of the sun on the tiles as we approached its exit. When the light broke out over the car, it meant that we were almost there.

There are parts that get fuzzy.  The “Day Surgery” sign suspended from chains in the hallway.  Clutching at the waistband of the hospital pajamas that never fit, no matter what size the nurses gave me.  The itchy covering stretched over my head.  The scratchy paper booties on my feet, through which I could still feel the cold emanating off the floor.  The head covering and the booties they would put on my teddy bear.  The anesthesiologist, who was so tall that his head nearly brushed the ceiling. My dad, ever trying to bring laughs, pointed at his clunky rubber clogs behind his back.

“Jaclyn, look at how big they are! Like clown shoes!”

The “practice” mask they kept in the waiting examining room that I wouldn’t touch.
I used to try not to tremble as I sat on the table, staring at the two doors of the room–the one that led out toward the doors of the hospital, and the other that led into the hallway toward the operating room.
Eventually it would swing open slowly and Dr. G. would come through, in his blue scrubs, wearing the same itchy head covering and booties over his shoes.  I’d want to burst into tears, even though I liked Dr. G.  But I wouldn’t.

“What a trooper,” they’d say. “A little VIP. She never cries.”

I’d smile, someone, either Dad or Mom or Dr. G. would lift me off the table, I’d take Dr. G’s hand, and he’d take me through the doorway, into the terrifyingly stark white room, machinery flanking the solitary bed. I knew the nurses were smiling behind their masks by the way their eyes crinkled. Their voices were soft, and the doctors were always gentle when they lifted me onto the operating table.
My own mask would come then, thick black rubber, fitting tight over my mouth and nose and I’d feel like I was back in the Midtown Tunnel, no air to breathe, no sunlight to see.  They’d try to make it smell like chocolate (and one time, strawberry) and I’d follow the clear, ribbed tube snaking from the end of the mask to the machine. I couldn’t see where it ended.  It only smelled heavy and sweet for a moment before the real stuff came, the thick, suffocating odor of the anesthetic and I’d want to cry again.
Things would start to get blurry. It always seemed that there were more people in the room then; voices got louder and oddly garbled, and I could not understand.  I remember feeling like I was sitting on a runaway carousel, spinning, spinning, spinning me until everything bobbed up and down and my stomach flipped over. I couldn’t say stop. I couldn’t say anything. And then, the end.  The room would go completely fuzzy, like I had my eyes open underwater.  I’d hear one noise—one set of blips and beeps coming from one of the machines. It was always the last thing I heard before the blackness came.
I’d sit groggy in the car on the way home.  I’d watch with one eye, since the other was usually swollen and covered over by the bandage.  My face would feel hot and uncomfortably stiff. I was nauseous, always nauseous, the taste of the anesthetic still at the back of my throat, even when it should have been washed away by the juice they made me drink in the recovery room. Sometimes, I’d get sick. Sometimes, I’d want to cry, but knew I wasn’t supposed to get my face wet.  And I knew I’d have to hide from the sun for a few days.

              It started working. The birthmark on my face lightened from purple to red, and in some spaces, it cleared altogether. I lost count after nine surgeries. After that, I asked if we could take a break.

My mother first let me wear makeup for one of my first dance recitals. She sat me on the lid of the toilet seat in the bathroom and dabbed on her concealer, eye shadow, blush, mascara. I remember looking into the mirror and being shocked at how I looked—moreover, what was missing from my face. I spent the night being careful not to touch my face and wipe it off, as if anyone didn’t know what was underneath.

When I was fourteen, she told me I could wear it all the time, but only if I wanted to. And so, I did.

Lightning struck again, and I was able to go out into the world and not be afraid to look into the faces that were there. I could make new friends without the big red elephant in the room. I wore it to cover up what I was born with, and I wore it so that nobody could see me, unless I wanted them to.

The staring, the whispers, the comments, the aghast faces disappeared. Soon, I could not go out without it. The thought of getting caught in a rainstorm terrified me. I would not wet my face when I went swimming, and I always wore makeup to the beach. Behind it were all of the things I wanted to hide, all of the things I could not say. That it wasn’t fair, that even with all of the nice things people said, all I could remember was the bad. That if I wasn’t so different, then why did so many people behave like I was? That I hated my skin.

That the hospital made everything inside me wobble, that a hand clenched my throat so I could not tell them how scared I really was.

“What a good girl! What a little trooper. She never cries!”

Not on the outside.

 

One thing I knew for certain about an eczema flare up was the elimination. No scented detergents, soaps, lotions, or moisturizers.

No makeup.

It wasn’t like I’d be able to wear it, anyway. My own tears irritated my skin. It was like I was allergic to everything in this desert. Even myself.

Another lightning bolt was snaking through the clouds over my head.

I remember walking through the automatic doors at Safeway—the first time I had left the house without makeup in sixteen years. A lady near the deli counter did a double-take before turning to eye the sandwiches. After that, there was nothing.

I walked through the aisles, latched firmly to Jason, and I counted how many people looked up and walked past, as if there was nothing to see here, nothing at all. After fourteen, I stopped counting.

The next week, I sat anxiously in the office of a highly-rated dermatologist, the familiar unpleasant fluttering snaking from my belly to my chest. Even the sight of Jason, sitting in the chair next to the exam table, did not settle me. It was like I was back in the hospital, waiting for Dr. G. to take me off into the room, away from everyone, swirling out of consciousness as if I were circling a drain.

The doctor was a petite woman with straight hair the color of onyx, and a compassionate smile. She asked me to change into a paper gown and shook her head at the itchy patches covering my arms, legs, stomach, and face.

“The flare-up is likely allergy-related,” she explained. “You’re not used to the dryness, not to mention all the pollens that are constantly blooming and blowing around out here.” After she sent three topical prescriptions to the pharmacy, she retrieved a corticosteroid shot, the needle like a long witch’s fingernail. The eczema began clearing in a few days. The bruise from the needle lasted for weeks.

We went home and washed our clothes with clear, unscented detergents. I traded my beloved flowery-scented lotions for large tubes of thick Eucerin. I wore my hair in my face, my beloved large aviator sunglasses, and a hood when I walked our dog outside.

And then I realized there was only so much time I could spend inside.

We went to a movie on a weeknight, when the theater would be empty. I sat in the dark and rubbed at an itch on my eyelid, feeling relief when there was no film of eye makeup left on my hand. Curious teenagers glanced over in the dimly lit hallways after the movie had let out. I tried a tight smile, even though I still could not look up at their faces.

We took the dog for a long walk around the man-made Sparks Marina on a bright Saturday afternoon, and from behind my sunglasses, I watched the faces of the families that passed us on the path. As people skated, laughed, and chased by us, I wondered what I had been so afraid of, all along.

It was kind of nice getting to wake up and skip over the twenty minute makeup routine—what I had always dubbed “the worst part of my day.” It was relieving to pull a shirt over my head at the end of the day, the ring of tan cover crème missing from the collar.

After the eczema flare-up had soothed, Jason and I went into Safeway to do our weekly grocery shopping. As we stood in the bakery section, an older couple picked up a plastic clamshell container of chocolate drop cookies.

“Those are addicting,” I said to them, over the table. “They never last more than two days in our house.” They were polite, even though they looked a little uncomfortable. I smiled into a bread display. I had forced myself to be brave.

The next week, I made small talk with the friendly cashier at Trader Joe’s. I raised my head and made sure to note the color of his eyes, to ensure I had looked into them.

I nervously text-messaged my hair stylist, Melissa, a pretty redhead with a warm smile and a collection of awesome tattoos, to tell her that I would be sans-makeup at my next appointment.

“No worries,” she had texted back. “It’s only going to be me and you in the salon that day, anyway.”

After I had stepped into the salon, bustling with women under hair dryers, getting fringe cut into long hair, and waiting for dye washouts, she offered a hushed apology that the salon was so crowded.

“It’s really okay,” I said, and I smiled.

“You know, Jackie,” Melissa said later, as she collected payment and set my next appointment. “It really isn’t bad, at all. It’s really much less than you described.”

On the way home, “Good is Good” by Sheryl Crow played through the speakers in my car.

Good is good and bad is bad

            But you don’t know which one you had

I remembered my mother’s voice close to my head, saying it was okay to be different, that it didn’t matter, since I was a good person with a lot of friends.

I remembered the little girl in my dance class, who told me she thought my birthmark was pretty.

And every time you hear the rolling thunder

            You turn around before the lightning strikes

I remembered Dr. G. standing in the operating room, and showing me what the laser looked like.

“See that green light?” He smiled as he shined it on his hand.

I remembered the faces of my classmates, in elementary school, high school, even in college, who were interested—maybe even a little awed—when I told them about my surgeries.

I remembered the boyfriends who told me that they preferred me without my makeup on.

I remembered the people who told me about their birthmarks, when they saw mine.

And you could find a rock to crawl right under

            And let your good times pass you by

Maybe it was because I had left everything I had known back at home on Long Island, and I had spent so much time by myself here in Reno. But I had realized that the only voices I listened to were the ones that were terrible—the ones that reduced me, the ones that said I was ugly, the ones that said it wasn’t fair.

There, in the middle of the quiet nowhere, I wondered why the negatives had always been so much louder to me than the kindnesses. I realized that most of the bad things we think are things that we are telling ourselves. I had always had the power to choose which voices were louder.

Lightning had struck in the desert. And it had changed everything.

 

It is not always easy. There are days when I feel more insecure than others. I’m sure I will always feel anxious when meeting new people, or when visiting doctors. Some days, I still look at my feet in public. But the negatives are outweighed by days where I can look at the cashier or the pharmacist with no issue. They are outweighed when my friends and family members express encouragement when I tell them I’ve had more makeup-free days in the last year. I feel kind of awed.

No life is a beach, but if mine was, I’d be able to look back at all of the places where the lightning has marred the sand. Sometimes, I can see a nine-year-old me stomping her feet next to one of the misshapen, gray lumps.

But I can go back. I’d tell her to turn around, and look at the pathway the lightning paved, the route I had followed. I could always follow them back to the start.

 

We left the lonely desert two years after we had arrived, and I decided to bring my new outlook back to Long Island with me. During a makeup-free mall trip one afternoon, we escaped a throng of shoppers by ducking into one of those stores that sells funny little trinkets, placards with inspirational sayings, intricate glassware, rousing board games. A pretty salesgirl came up to greet us, and I instantaneously stared at the floor as I returned her greeting. I could see that she was staring.

When I raised my eyes, she smiled.

“I really love your hair color,” she complimented the deep burgundy I’ve been wearing since high school.

“I’ve always wanted to do a color like that,” she said, after I had thanked her with what I hoped was my most genuine smile. “Red is so pretty.”

And it is.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

labels are for jars.

In his biography, “The Naked Civil Servant,” Quentin Crisp describes the makeup he chooses to wear as his “war paint.” I first came across this intriguing piece of text during my junior year at Hofstra, when I decided that I absolutely needed to take another class with Dr. Sulcer, who was and always will be my favorite part of my undergraduate education.

The class he was teaching that year was titled “Gay and Lesbian Literature” and while I’m sure it seemed off-putting to some, to me, it would provide me not only with another semester of Dr. Sulcer’s mastery, but also what I now see as an invaluable wealth. Taking this course exposed me to an entirely different set of issues that millions of people face, and helped me to understand how I relate to other humans in general.

Back to Crisp. His notion struck a bell in my brain, so much so that I still remember the text more than ten years later. War paint. A type of armor. A form of protection. A show of ferocity. So many ways that showed me people liken their lives to a battle–one where they’re not only being attacked, but the attacks are inescapable.

Whenever I come across a tough spot, or an issue that sparks controversy, I like to ask myself a “what if?” What if it were me on the other side of that fence? What if I were a part of the minority?

What if identifying as gay was the “norm” and identifying as straight was seen as “unnatural?” What if I were born into a body I truly did not feel connected to? I covet my alone time and my most valuable possessions are my thoughts, so these kinds of questions paved the way for a LOT of interesting quiet time. And the conclusions I came to are conclusions that echo during times of “controversy.”

I typed that last word in quotations since I believe it is the wrong word to describe an issue that’s been popping up all over social media lately. In fact, I believe this “issue” shouldn’t be an issue at all.

I’m referring to the idea that people are finding a cause for alarm that individuals identifying as transgender may choose to use a public restroom that doesn’t align with their physical biology.

If I’m going to be flat-out honest, it kind of makes me insane with anger. This is why: One of the most valuable things I’ve learned is that only an individual can label himself or herself. No one can do it for you. We all have, of course — the guy you knew in college who made out with other guys…of course he was GAY, right? ALL girls are bisexual, right? Being into a BDSM lifestyle OBVIOUSLY means you were abused at some point in your life, right?

But when you think about it, that’s all wrong–really wrong. Who are we to stick a label onto someone who hasn’t decided for himself? And I don’t mean that everyone deserves a label or even that labels are a good thing–personally, I dislike them. I’m using it as a blanket term to describe ALL kinds of identities, not just one or two.

If we’re gonna go down the road of biology, let’s hop in and start driving. We all gotta pee. It’s inevitably going to happen when we’re outside of our homes. So, because we’re not wild animals ((at least not most of us)), we’re gonna find the closest facility, do what has to be done, wash hands, and cue credits. In fact, I’m willing to bet most of us spend the LEAST amount of time possible in a public restroom, because again, if we’re gonna be real, they’re pretty disgusting.

So let me ask you: As you’re doing your thing, are you ever wondering what kind of genitals the person has in the stall next to you? Has this thought ever really crossed your mind while you’re peeing?

If it scares you that much, do you think there might be a deeper problem there?

Let me describe a cartoon I’ve seen re-posted several times. In it, we see a mother and daughter at a restroom sink next to a row of stalls, gaping at the doorway. The door is swinging open and a very sketchtastic, creeptastic dude in a trench coat is entering, carrying a camera. “Relax lady,” he’s saying. “I’m transgendered.”

I’m not going to get into all of the ways I found this cartoon highly offensive. I’m going to address what I gathered as its point: Letting individuals who are transgender into any restroom they like gives perverts and pigs the opportunity to spy on women and/or children.

Let’s be clear about two things: 1. It’s likely that most people entering restrooms are going because, well, they have to go. 2. If his or her intent is to spy and/or be disgusting, a pervy or creepy person is going to enter whatever bathroom he or she chooses.

I mentioned earlier that I got my degree at Hofstra. I will tell you that I chose to never use the restrooms in the student center. The reason why? Public safety briefs. I cannot count how many public safety briefs I read explaining that non-matriculated men were discovered hiding in the women’s restroom and removed from campus.

Disgusting people do not need to use the issue of transgender to do what they’re going to do. The only way to keep them out is to assign public safety officers to every public restroom in the entire world.

On another note, if you think about it, the label on the restroom door is a suggestion–a heeded one, of course, but no one actually says women can’t use the men’s room or men can’t use the women’s room. I have been with my best friend on many an occasion when she’s headed straight into the men’s room after realizing there’s no damn way she’s waiting on the line at the women’s room. She’s never been arrested. Or fined. Or even reprimanded. There are no genital scanners at the entrance of each door, so really, who says you can’t?

I also get it that people are concerned about their children’s safety, and rightfully so. But how many parents of younger children do you know who let their kids go to the bathroom in public alone? You’ve probably seen it–a mom bringing her young son into the bathroom with her or maybe a dad waiting outside the door to the ladies’ room, nervously peeking inside. What about older kids or teenagers? Think about the last time you were in a restroom at a movie theater–chances are likely there’s been a gaggle of teenagers waiting on line in the bathroom together.

I’m not insinuating assaults in bathrooms don’t happen–they do, and it’s awful, and no one should condone that. But no one should use this as an excuse to bar women from the ladies’ room, or men from the men’s room. Because at that point, this person has decided on an identity, and no one has a right to tell them otherwise.

It’s likely these people–people–have spent quite some time on a personal battlefield, grappling with all kinds of “what ifs?” and wondering what kind of armor they might need. Can’t we just let them pee in peace?