You Can Go to Hell and Back

You Can Go to Hell and Back

You Can Go to Hell and Back

Finally, you were boss. Your quinoa-powered brain gathered all that information over the years. You were ready to make a deposit, ready to ease into an easier life—your ideal life. You pulled into your knowledge bank. But shit. You arrived at 5:05 and the bank was closed.

There was a handwritten note on the door:

We’ve taken your sponge cake mind and put it in a safe deposit box—don’t worry!

We’ll leave you with the leftovers so you will still appear on the outside to have it all—all the responsibility you craved at 15 years old.

But now the gremlins have climbed inside your brain, and they’re sliming your nerves. They’re actually dying out—the nerves, not the gremlins.

Watch out, your joy has been put in a jar, next to laughter on a shelf.

As you walk to make yourself a cocktail of happy thoughts, the ground beneath you pulls away. You’re standing—if one can stand in these situations—reaching up, falling down. The shelf is out of reach.

Now you’re standing in a very hot room—you’re pretty sure you landed in the rumored place called hell.

“It’s real,” you mutter. The air is heavy, a sulfur smell overwhelms you. And then you gaze around, looking for signs of life. You see long, dark shadows with dark corners in the room.

Suddenly, your hand goes weak and starts to wither away. You drop the sugar that you didn’t realize you were holding. It turns into a thick syrup and now you can’t move your leg.

You shout, “Help!” but your voice is gone. Your mouth gapes open, trying to push the voice out, and a bug flies in. You start coughing. Stuck in syrup, your hands are the size of a baby’s now. You feel the tears come. They sting. If only you could have made that cocktail. That’s why procrastination is your downfall.

A man walks into the room—it’s more of a cavern, you decide. He’s tall and skinny, wearing a black denim coverall, fitted. His shoes are engineer boots with a pointy toe. He wears a scarf that reads,

Deviling is hard work.

You look at him, a knot churning in your abdomen. You notice pulsations in your arms, legs, and torso. You lift your arm and wipe your brow with your forearm.

“Hi, I’m Tom, I’ll be your concierge.”

He smiles at you like a toothpaste ad.

“I’ll be right back,” he says.

But wait, you mouth, your eyes plead. You stand in your spot, your legs starting to feel weak.

He comes back a moment later pushing a heavy cart: a wheelchair, a BiPAP machine, a ventilator with tubes, a feeding tube and pump, bottles of medication, adult diapers, piled high.

The coveralled man picks up an object—a rollator—and hurls it at you. You duck, the whirring sound goes over your head, and the rollator lands behind you.

Next he puts the medication in a zippered tote bag along with a plastic bottle of water. You suddenly notice a pile of empty water bottles discarded in the corner. He tosses the bag to you and it lands at your feet.

“Open it, and take the meds. They might help. They might not,” he adds, shrugging his shoulders.

You crouch down, your knees feel stiff. You attempt to open the bag but your hands won’t work.

He rolls his eyes. “All you neuro-degenerative disease people are such sissies.”

Your cheeks get hot, anger rushing through your body. He walks over and unzips the bag.

“I suppose you’ll need me to open the bottles and water,” he says, taking a small plastic pill cup. He empties the meds into the cup, opens the water, and hands them both to you.

Quickly, you grab for the medicine but your hands won’t open. The man opens your hands and puts the medicine and the water in them.

You swallow all the pills, your hands start to open. You want to thank him, knowing you wouldn’t have a voice, but you do.

“Thank you,” you say, your voice raspy but audible.

He goes back to his cart and lifts the wheelchair, lifting it over his head. He gets ready to throw it, digging in his feet and bending at the knees.

“What are you doing?” you shout.

Ignoring you, he throws the wheelchair at you. You flinch, but it lands several feet away.

He goes back to the cart and continues to throw everything until it’s empty. He wipes his hands together, then walks back to you.

“It’s not your time yet,” he says plainly, “so I’ll be sending you back with this gift.”

He pauses, then says, “You’ll need most of this eventually.”

“Eventually? What does this mean? Has there been a mistake? I feel healthy,” you say.

“Feeling healthy and looking healthy don’t mean anything. They’re superficial. You’re not healthy. And no, it’s not a mistake.” He blows some debris off his fingers.

“But why me? This has never happened in my family,” you cry.

He rolls his eyes again. “Give me a break. It can happen to anyone. Plus, I checked, and you have the genetic form, so you were bound to get it.”

“The genetic form of what?” you ask. You stretch your arms out straight and uncurl your hands.

The man with the scarf starts to usher you to the middle of the room. There’s a pad there that you don’t recall seeing before. He grabs your arms and puts you in the center. Then he efficiently—

Is it only 20 seconds later?—surrounds you with the stuff he threw at you.

“I’ll be seeing you again. Remember, the name is Tom.”

He turns around and walks out of the room, snapping his fingers and humming.

You’re back in your living room now. You are surrounded by the items the strange man named Tom gave you.

What does this all mean? you wonder.

You walk over to your couch, grabbing your laptop. You start googling everything that happened, what type of neurodegenerative disease causes…

You wait for Google AI to spurn out its answer.

Your jaw drops, your stomach tightens, tears stream down your cheeks.

“Tom!” you shout.

All the Places You Couldn’t Leave

All the Places You Couldn’t Leave

All the Places You Couldn’t Leave

Traveling through memory for the unhappy place. From a school bus turned home in humid, mosquito and snaked rural Tennessee, to being forced to move into your big girl bed when your baby brother stole your crib, climbing in and kicking until your parents rushed into see why the baby was crying, to hiding from your third grade teacher under the dark, cozy, quiet table with the half-wall behind it, to trapped in the kitchen with your drunk Nana slurring her words, to the loneliness of junior high + high school, loud hallways, screeching lockers, and the overwhelming scent of puberty. 

Feeling trapped. That’s your unhappy place. The 7th grade guidance counselor’s words stuck on repeat: “There are two ways to look at things. Glass half full or glass half empty. You’re a glass half empty person.”

Thanks for the update. How could it be anything else when that unhappy place is in your mind?

Don’t forget your childhood home, trapping you in dependence. Sneaking out the window to nowhere. Skipping school to drink coffee and smoke cigarettes at Classé Café, in complicit Amherst, MA, hanging with college students who exhibited their freedom.

Runaway to Boston one school morning only to call your grandpa to pick you up. Visits during the summer and on weekends. The chlorine smell from Nana + Grandpa’s pool, crisp, burnt grass dry and poking under your footstep, the burn of the hot July sun. A constant, Nana’s cigarettes, smoke filling the air, choking your senses.

The sacrifice of friendships and relationships where you put your needs last, to classes, courses, and jobs, and being bored by the mundane, to looking 14, using a fake ID to get into a 21+ club and not being allowed to go in. You yearned to feel the beat thumping through your body, as you dance the night away, with friends, elbowing some men away, sometimes making a sultry connection.

Those were your formative years. Threads through time: tangled in relationships where you often lost yourself, drawn into patterns you didn’t know how to escape. Longing for elsewhere, always carrying a quiet ache. The overwhelm that creeps in, unannounced.

That unhappy place actually follows you, sorry to say. 

Never satisfied, disappointed, overwhelmed, frustrated. It arrives in a moment as the inviting aroma of brewing coffee turns sour when the half & half separates, your face cringing, knowing the taste will be sour, not sweet from the cream, as it should, filling your taste buds with heaven. 

Unhappy when in those moments of love, lust, and bonding to a misunderstood word turning into a fight through a bed of sweat; loud, angry words piercing your ears, your heart.

Struggling to pay bills, loneliness, never reaching a goal. But you thought you knew your unhappy place— but it all changed when you read in your portal the EMG spurted out a suspicion of a terminal disease.

All of a sudden, all of those unhappy places became memories to hold onto —deep, ingrained memories to reexplore.

How everything changes when the worst thing happens. Now you know your unhappy place lands in your body as it dies away, with the twitches and pulsations on your body, the slow dissolve of muscle memory.

Finding New Paths: My Tale of Discovery

Finding New Paths: My Tale of Discovery

Finding New Paths: My Tale of Discovery

What is etched in clay is my story.

I saw a glimpse of it one day. I walked, in solitude, into the forest when I came upon it. A tablet with my story. I didn’t like what I read. I panicked. I felt unsafe. No; who wrote this for me? I wouldn’t have. Did I land here on this Earth accidentally and come upon a life already etched in clay?

My eyes darted. I slowly turned myself in a circle, my eyes looking up and down, my ears pricked for any noises, my skin for any reaction, and smell. What was that smell? It was damp. I am in the woods, and it has rained. The sun does not find me.

I found a stick, too flimsy. I found another one. Yes, this will do. Its tip is damp, jagged, broken from its branch. It told me it didn’t belong in this forest either.

Together we walked to the inscription in the clay. With all my determination, we tried to scratch the words, change the meaning, tell a new story.

The stick continued with all its might, with my strength behind it. My feet firm on the ground, pushing, my legs strong for balance and to provide additional support. My torso leaning, my shoulders, arms, hands, fingers holding the stick, pushing against the clay.

But the stick broke and fell to the ground. “I’m sorry I let you down,” we said simultaneously.

Then it told me, “Find the stream, but you must find a way to gather its gift.”

“But how?” I respond, my eyes searching.

Desperately, I get the urge to move. An anger washes over me; how can my life be already written, I did not plan it. I kick the tablet with all my might. Kick, kick, kick. Three times.

Then I walk over to it and move behind it. It’s resting on a fallen tree, so innocent, so naturally.

Who am I to change it? And still, I must.

I look around. A skinny tree is behind me, fighting for its place in the forest, reaching for the sun. It is not too young. It can help.

I grasp its trunk. Its deciduous leaves greet me with a gentle song. It’s a birch, I realize, my favorite tree.

“I come in peace, my friend,” I say to it and bow my head. “This tablet has a story etched on its face, claiming to be my life unfolding. But I do not like what comes next. I’ve never belonged, you know, but there is cruelty in its script.”

The tree’s leaves rustled and stood strong, and still. I leaned in and gave it a kiss. Its papery surface felt smooth on my lips.

“Thank you,” I whisper.

I put my hand against it again and push with my foot, pulling all the strength from body and the birch tree’s steadiness.

Yes! It falls to the ground. I pat the tree and smirk, then walk back over to the tablet. The words are now hidden.

So, what does this mean? I look around for an answer. I stand in front of it, legs spread out, my arms both outstretched, and I close my eyes.

I see a stone come into view in my mind’s eye. I open my eyes, bring my feet together and lower my arms.

“I’ll be back,” I announce, then pivot and walk away.

The ground beneath me is soft. The composted leaves and needles cushion my steps.

From the corner of my left eye, I see a set of rocks stacked in front of the trunk of an old oak tree. I immediately go over. I kneel before it.

“Thank you. I’ve always believed in rocks. I love you. You’re magical.”

I pull out my shirt to create a pocket to carry.

I take one stone at a time, until I could hold no more.

“I’ll be back,” I say and walk back. But where is it? I’m sure it was here.

Carrying my rocks, held in my shirt, I walk around. But now I am lost.

How far did I walk?

How could this be?

I look for my birch and the fallen tree.

My arm feels tired. I look for a place to sit.

In the near distance, I see another fallen tree. I walk to it, my legs feel heavy. I’m dragging.

I crouch down and gently place my rocks on the ground. I sit on the tree’s trunk and rest. I notice the light. It is fading. I must exit the forest. I search for a clearing to walk toward that is yet unseen.

Can I really leave my story behind?


Author’s Note: This story emerged from a moment of reckoning—a time when I questioned the path that seemed laid out before me. I wrote it as a way of exploring choice, resistance, and the quiet possibility of renewal.

Today’s Horoscope: A Great Day for Pissaedae (Lat.)

Today’s Horoscope: A Great Day for Pissaedae (Lat.)

Today’s Horoscope: A Great Day for Pissaedae (Lat.)

In today’s horoscope, the astrological sign Pissaedae (Lat.) is going to have a great day. It’s a fresh start for a predictable life, which is just what the grumpy sign wants.

Wash away those cobwebs and sorrows, because tomorrow you’re going to Europe with your secret lover. Your clothes will be perfectly pressed, without a wrinkle or a speck of dust in sight when you open your suitcase.

You’re not going to be outed in Amsterdam today or anytime this month. Whether you’re 20 or 75, your belts are always keeping your pants up. And don’t worry, Pissaedae (Lat.)—your bootstraps are pulling you up for the month of May.

Watch out for muddy shoes! Keep those treads clean and it will be azaleas all day long.

This, of course, all depends on whether there is mud on your shoes—because if there is, you’ll trip on the shoes left in the hallway and get a bump on your knee. It will swell, and you’ll shout in agony. You’ll shout until your lover hears you and whisks you away to a cabin in the Catskills, promising to wipe all the mud off your shoes.

You know your luck has changed once you get breakfast in bed, which comprises fresh-picked strawberries found wild along the edge of the lake.

Unfortunately, there was a motorboat crash and oil leaked onto the strawberries and poisoned you. So you violently throw up and don’t know if you’ll survive—as you see fragments of bone and know that’s a sign of death.

You’ll plead with your lover, who has ipecac syrup, and it clears out all the toxins from your body.

You feel so great you strip off all your clothes and run into the lake. But you trip on a rock and break your toe. You land with your face in the water—which thankfully clears away your tears so nobody sees how much pain you’re in. But because nobody knew you were hurt, you start to weaken and drown in one inch of water.

But your lover finds you—and saves you!


Astrological sign: Pissy Days (Pissaedae)
Ruling Element: Damp
Symbol: Muddy Boot with Sunburst
Compatible Signs: Melanchorpius, Virgo Rising (but only when retrograde)

What Are You Waiting For?

What Are You Waiting For?

What Are You Waiting For?

Exactly. What am I waiting for?

I’ve waited long enough, and I don’t want my life to pass me by any longer.
I do not have a day to spare.

I’ll mourn the loss of waiting, but I can’t show up today.

You’re not ready.
Will you ever be?

Haven’t I waited long enough?
Aren’t you asking too much?

I’ve waited and waited.
I am Godot. I am a pebble. I am a mountain.
And now it’s time to move.

Your request for more waiting time is too much to bear; I have no time.
My life is ending, and yet still I wait.

The waiting door has closed, and there are only new possibilities.
It was in the ask that you lost me. It was too much.
No more.

I’ll always love you. This I know is true.
But this time, I’ll love you from the future’s trail.
My waiting time is over.