Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Skin Deep


So here I sit, alone, drinking whiskey. Now some would call this a problem saying that drinking alone isn't healthy and made more so by drinking to drown a memory...but I must disagree. I didn't need a drink, I simply wanted it. It won't be followed by another and actually is the only one I've had in a couple weeks. I would call it more a dulling of the senses...

I'm working on my grandmother's flowers for her headstone. They were sun bleached and seemed sad to me, so she needs new ones. It's depressing really when you get to the point that you think of and do things for people who are gone, and as if being late for a scheduled event with someone still living, you feel the need to apologize to them for what kept you. I wish I didn't have so many people to do that with, especially lately. I've lost nine family members in the last 18 months or so...well nine that were second cousins that I grew up with or closer. The last was my aunt, who was close enough to feel like a part-time mother to my sister and me.

It's funny, everytime I see a military funeral the gun salute always seemed as if it would be so harsh, gunfire when already in so delicate a state. The opposite was true. I cried but not from anguish in the reminder of death at the gunfire...I cried at the honor that my aunt was being shown for her dedicated service to this country. I cried that those men drove 2 hours from their station and told us that they were honored to be able to perform this show of respect for her. Then I cried that it had not been done for my grandfather.

My grandfather was a Korean War vet...air force pilot actually. He missed seeing his fourth child, his only son, come into this world and the first several years of his life. I can't count the number of times as a child he scolded me if i didn't eat every scrap of bread crust. Then he would talk about the war and how men would sit around and desperately long for even so much as bread...or even the crust. He ment it too, and I knew that, even at the age of six and seven, I knew.

I have lost so many family members that I honestly can't count them all without sitting down with family from both sides to help. The beauty of a large family is that there is always somebody around...the pitfall is that somebody else is always dying. So here I sit, drinking alone, scolding myself for not having grandma's flowers done for mother's day, even though my health simply wouldn't allow it. I have tiny cuts on some of my fingers from taking the old one apart...the weather left them rusted stubbornly in place. I'm actually happy for the tiny cuts, twisted as it may be, because every time something hits one and I look down at it, every time that something make one pop back open and burn...I will think of grandma. Next is my aunt's flowers...hers doesn't involve the sharp metal spikes though...I feel torn about that.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Caged


Have you ever felt wild inside your own head? So ready and waiting, so anxious and restless that your mind whirls.

Feet gingerly land , endlessly....Toes come to meet cool tile, kissing...Soft pit pat sounds whisper, singing...Restlessness gnawing, waiting...You pace the floor praying your traveling feet will carry your mind away to another place to no avail. Intelligence struggles and looses the daunting task of grasping tangled thoughts. Like snakes writhing in a mating ball, your thoughts twist, coil, and slither through the cracks.

A piece of you calls out into the cold like a wolf to it's pack, while the rest lies unaware. It knows not what or to who it calls, and it cares nothing for who hears it's cry. There is simply the desperate wait...for an answer. And so as a tiger to it's cage, you pace, glaring through the bars.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Today


Some days you almost forget how to feel. You forget for a moment that you are pushing everything down, holding it in, keeping it together so that somebody else can fall apart. It isn't your turn yet, and somehow a glimmer in time catches you off guard and you forget that...and it slips. That tight, clenching grip on every ounce of what's within you gushes up in a single beat of your heart...it feels as though it might stop beating. Your stomach flips, then disappears all together. Every inch of your body turns hot and flush. This thing suddenly fills your throat, feeling as if some man has just grabbed you against a wall. You can't shake him, can't pull far enough away, can't turn far enough... The tears tumbling down your face feel like candle wax, as if they could blister your delicate cheeks. Tears...tears are actually falling down your face. They cool slightly as they roll over porcelain skin. They land upon your shirt and you see their soon to fade tint darkening the fabric, snapping you back. Wiping feverishly and sniffling a bit as you slow your breathing you glance around looking for a hint of what to do now...but nothing. Uncertain and unsure you rise to your feet and simply go.