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.

The Escape Closet

The Escape Closet

The Escape Closet

“If I leave, will it go away?” You’re sitting on your king-size bed with the polka dot duvet set  while I go through your clothes. It’s been raining all morning, the sky is grayed out, and your room is dark, so your bedside light and the floor lamp cast a soft glow. You light a candle on your dresser, and its soft lavender scent gently fills the room. Spotify plays Daily Mix 4, with Saint Motel, The Strokes, and Phantogram. “Dance Yrself Clean,” by LCD Soundsystem, is inspiring us. Your closet is color-blocked by category: every shade of blue tops, blue bottoms, and blue sweaters on the shelf above. I pull out a stack of skirts hanging in fives. Your hands can’t clip them back on the hangers anymore, so we’re moving them to a drawer.

“I hope you can escape. Wouldn’t that be wonderful? To start over fresh.”

You lean back against the pillows, grabbing one to hug. Your closet is immaculately organized, but the furniture tops are gathering clutter. Ah, too bad, the first sign, I thought to myself.

 I hold up the first hanger with five skirts. First, the yellow and blue striped one, “No, too big.” The denim skirt with the zipper and button, “No, I can’t do that button; it’s too tight.” The A-line navy blue pleated skirt. “No way, look at all those buttons! Soon, it’ll all be elastic waistbands. But if I ever go out in public with sweatpants, will you shoot me?” You rest your elbows on your thighs and rest your head in the cup of your hands. 

“Hahaha, nice try. What about this teal and black lace one? It has an elastic band waist,” I suggest. The sun poked out behind its cloud and streamed through the window, highlighting your face.

You scrunch your nose, “I haven’t worn that in 10 years. Is lace in or out this year? I stopped keeping track.” 

“You know better than I do. Do you still watch Project Runway?” 

“No, do they still make that show?” 

“I have no idea. No matter. So… is it in or is it out?” I ask in my best Heidi Klum accent, holding up the lace skirt. 

You cast aside your joyful pillow and hug your knees tight.  “I guess I should keep it. After all, I can pull it on and take it off myself.” 

“Yeah, that’s practical,” I say. 

You scrunch up your face. You never wanted to be practical.

You scan the closet; you see puff sleeves, circle skirts, bright patterns, kitschy patterns, polka dots, and stripes. “What will happen when I go away?” You rest your cheek on your knees.

“You aren’t going anywhere. We’re just decluttering your closet, getting rid of the things that don’t serve you anymore. There’s no reason to have these things in your closet if they don’t work or fit.”

“But I don’t want to get rid of it all. That’s so depressing. These clothes are a part of my history.”

“If you really love something, then put it in a storage bin; you can always sort them out later when you’re ready.” I smile at you. There’s no rush.

You stand up, reach for the lace skirt, smile, and say, “Maybe I’ll wear this to my doctor’s appointment on Monday.” You fold it and put it in the drawer. “It won’t wrinkle, will it?”

“Wrinkles are OK, they’re better than struggle, right?” I say, reassuring you as best I can.

“Yeah, no more chaos. I just want ease now.” You walk over to me and hug me. “Thanks for being here, I love you.”

I hug you back, “I love you, too. I always will.”

“Me, too, always.” You rest your head on my shoulder.

 I Don’t Know How You Do It

 I Don’t Know How You Do It

 I Don’t Know How You Do It

People have always said to you, “I don’t know how you do it.” Solo parent your two kids, take your kid to all their doctor appointments, produce a multidisciplinary arts festival, work, and run a household.  You thought you could, you felt fine, if not a bit stressed and worried, but now you say, “Well, I guess I didn’t.” Look at me, I’m crying. Maybe doing it all, didn’t cause this for you, maybe it’s a coincidence. “There are no coincidences,” you tell me, annoyed by my diminishing statement. But you were on top of your game.

You saw other people, their ambitions solidifying into success and stability. But yours, without a solid foundation—or maybe Foundation—seem to have crumbled. Any words of wisdom? I wish I knew what to say, you can’t look at it like that, maybe it did take its toll on you, and this is how it chose to, not by heart attack, cancer, or stroke, but by attacking your nervous system. It’s a cruel irony, isn’t it? That your strength and perseverance would be met with betrayal by your own body.

You thought you were a bundle of nerves, but then you realize that they aren’t working, so maybe it was something else.

 If your body is telling you it’s too much, then it probably is. But you didn’t have a choice. So many things landed on your plate, and you received them with grace and patience. Your attention to detail, for so long, went unnoticed. Reading medical journals to inform yourself about health issues with loved ones, your websites, the clothes you wear. I wish I had your drive.

I don’t have advice for you, I’ve never been through this. Don’t give up. I remember you saying you were dead inside, maybe you were right, you said you felt lonely and that nobody held you, but you I’m holding now. I hope it’s not too late.

Could it have been different? It’s so hard to know, after all ,this could be epigenetics.But you spent most of your life fighting those inner battles, telling yourself all the go-to pep talk phrases, but deep down, you knew it was just lip service. Don’t let yourself spiral into blame. This isn’t your fault. 

What if it was…? What if I could…? What if I didn’t…? Your lists are a mile long and counting.I don’t know if you should have regrets, but you have so many. Regrets are an awful thing.

Sometimes these things happen. It isn’t the choices you made; it’s just bad luck, I suppose. 

Don’t forget your gifts. Let’s focus on what’s ahead, let’s make your bucket list.

  • Get published.
  • Land on the New York Times bestseller list.
  • Publish your plays and have them picked up by Broadway.

With all your imagination, it’s bound to happen. Oh, and go to France? I’ll try to get you there—but the economy, the political atmosphere, the money, the dogs… There are a lot of obstacles, but let’s get there while you can still walk. 

You’re wasting away here, let me feed you. I made you some nourishing food. How else can I help? Did you take your vitamins? What about your medications? Of course it still matters. You’re here now, and that’s what we’ll deal with. You look fine on the outside, but I know the truth—that it’s creeping up on you, quietly, insidiously.

And when you’re too tired to get out of bed, I’ll bring you my acoustic and sing your favorite songs. I know, you want me to sing “Creep” by Radiohead and “Waltz #2” by Elliott Smith.

How’s the chicken? I made it your favorite way. I know you love vodka sauce. And next time, I’ll make you eggplant parmesan. Don’t worry, I’ll make it gluten-free and slice the eggplant nice and thin. I’ll use tomato chunks so there’s lots of texture and taste.

For now, we’ll take it day by day. I’ll hold you, cook for you, and remind you of everything you still are—and everything you still can be.

Tears of a Dragon

Tears of a Dragon

Tears of a Dragon

You used to never cry, and now you cry every day. At the drop of a particular word or phrase, at a chore or errand you struggle with now. I know why you’re crying now, but why didn’t you cry before?

“I think I was numb to it. Maybe I had to be strong? Maybe I couldn’t give that person the satisfaction?”

There are dozens of reasons why we shut off our water pipes. But you’re firehosing it now. I’m drowning in your tears. Come here, let me hold you tight. I know you’re scared. I’m scared, too. If we face the dragon together, will we win?

“How can we beat the dragon?” you ask. “I really want to know.”

It’s as if somehow my reply would have the right answer. I didn’t have the answers or solutions. But I’ll try to sneak you into its cave, along the edge, and then sneak up beneath its purple skin and towering head, stories above us, and you jab it right in the jugular. I’ll help you thrust it; I know you’ve lost strength.

“The dragon’s blood holds the antidote,” I say with a smile. You lean into me on your teal blue couch. “Oh, your feet are cold, here, I brought you a gift.” I reach into the bag I brought, sitting at my feet. “They’re slipper socks, made of the softest wool,” I tell you and your eyes get wide and a smile sneaks past your lips.

“Polka dots,” you say, and I gently put them on your feet.

And lean forward and give you a healing kiss. You smile at me and hug me tight. I hold you and hold you, I’ll never let go.

“I don’t know how to do anything anymore. And the waiting on doctors, orders, and referrals isn’t helping anything.” Your smile fades. Your eyes settle back down to their sad resting position.

“I know the waiting is intense,” I say, putting my hand on your thigh. You lean back, your face tightens, your eyes crush your eyelashes, and the tears appear in the corner of your eye, wait to make their debut, then drizzle down your cheek.

“What’s going to happen next?” you implore. You wrap your arms around your ribs. “How am I going to get it all done?”

“Does it all have to be done? With your timeline? I’ll help as much as I can.” I reach out and hold your hand. “Let’s just worry about one thing. Let’s prioritize.”

“It’s also overwhelming.” You look across the room, looking for answers. “They’re not there,” you say, your voice so quiet.

“No, the answers aren’t there. But we’ll battle the dragon together.”