Sunday, June 24, 2007

Not in the eyes!

I've realized that I don't really look anybody in the eye at work. In fact I go through lengths (the jury's still out on whether they're considerable or not, they are however, considered) to avoid eye contact. I realize that this speaks much more clearly as to the manner of person that I am as opposed to the manner of person that the average long-term care resident of a health care facility is.

I find this to be a curiosity because I can count on one hand the number of people that will acceptably hold eye contact with me (I have staring contests with professors to amuse myself in class, they're such amateurs). I've spent much of this shift looking at faces and realizing that it's not something I do here. It turns out that they smile a lot more when I do and that bothers me. When I look them in the eyes and they smile, I have a connection with them.

Now, I'm not some sort of elitist who thinks that I'm more important than anybody. It's just that when you have a connection with somebody, you have to deal with that deeper part of her (or him, I'm not going to argue about gender and certainly not for my hypothetical constructions). So when she accuses you of poisoning her tea you need to peel that connection with something true to her away from this impostor that has stolen her away from you (I imagine it's the mental equivalent of pulling tape off of a hairy arm, which is to say that it stings a little but does minuscule damage).

I assume that it's what people do when they distance themselves from any human contact. I'm afraid of investing myself. I admit this ashamedly since it speaks of a failure on my part (it certainly isn't theirs). I am working on it, though, it's just that I don't really think I have many more arm hairs to offer.

Saturday, June 9, 2007

An open letter to K

I've decided to give myself something else to concentrate on other than the random murmurings of the clinically insane, insanity which may actually be contagious only not in the usual ways. I'm going to begin writing open letters to people. I think it will be a good experience for me and if you feel like gathering some semblance of enlightenment from them then all the better. Don't fear one of them getting around to you, I'll be plucking names from my "random generator" and I'm quite confident that everybody's going to get hit eventually.

Dearest K,
Of course it hurts. It always did and I imagine it always will because I love you. I think it hurts the most because I'm pretty sure you don't realize how far down that love goes. It's turtles all the way down.

I don't think things are going to work out properly between us, which isn't to say that they aren't going to work out the way they should, which I really do believe. I just know that it's going to be awkward bending the paperclips back into shape after we're finished messing with them. And we're not finished, not by any stretch of the imagination.

I can hear you fading from miles away. It's sad but it's necessary. The world will be different because it needs to be. Just as we are meant to be, we are not meant to be. I will not wait for you but I will not be gone. I would say I will miss you but I'm not sure we've ever met. What I am sure of is that I love you, I wish you could trust that

-P

Friday, June 8, 2007

I'm not going to aplologize

This past Friday I was confronted (rather unexpectedly, I might add) by the idea of honour and how it doesn't necessarily fit into my current list of motivations. I will probably lie, cheat, and steal (well, maybe not probably cheat but i don't think I'm going to remove that from my vocabulary just yet) in order to hedge my bets. That I can actually come to terms with, I'm human and am allowed character flaws (if that's what you want to call them). Probably more unexpected, however, is the idea that I don't think I'm sorry about these "lapses in morality". I'm self-motivated and I'm not going to apologize for that. Whether I'm forgiven for that, I've decided, isn't really up to me. If I'm not, I probably don't deserve it (say what you will about the nature of forgiveness, being self-motivated for the time being, I'm not going to listen). This is a warning. Hide your babies and lock up your cutlery. It's going to get worse before it gets better.

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Not a Poem

A little piece of freewriting I spewed out this evening which may or may not find it's way into a larger piece:

I looked up from my book to see a 230 pound blonde woman peering at me from across the desk. I call her a woman without being able to properly pinpoint an accurate age. Weight does that to a person, like each pound of obesity brings with it three months of age along with some intangible sense of height. I put her in the range of 25-42, which I take notice lies directly in the middle of the prime demographic for television watching. Presumably, this was a factor in her weight gain.

"Whatcha reading?" she leaned in towards me speaking 15 decibels louder than I would have liked. I opened my mouth to answer her but she was insistent on carrying on the conversation with or without my consent. "Ohhhhhh, Vonneygut eh? He's funny". I furrowed my eyebrows together in an attempt to take hold of the idea that this woman had not only read anything written by Kurt Vonnegut but understood the nuance of his humour. My confusion wasn't fuelled by any sort of misogyny or judgment on the brain capacities of overweight people, it was more the fact that I knew that the plastic bag she carried in her right hand held a collection of years-old teen fashion magazines which she looked through thoroughly and repeatedly, I also knew that the last book she had read was written by Francine Pascal.

At this point I should probably point out that this woman, Donna, was a schizophrenic. The sudden importance of this is brought on by the fact that the book that I was reading was Welcome to the Monkey House. The thing I should say about schizophrenics is that, generally, they are not scary people. They will spout off all sorts of nonsense ranging from constant giggling to insisting that they were cut into four pieces when they were a child and subsequently sewn back together. They say and do these things passively, and most of the time with the realization that they cannot be trusted with their own thoughts. Being around them means that you cannot trust their thoughts or, by association, their words and they cannot trust yours (or even the fact that you said them or thought them beforehand in the case that they believe they can read your thoughts). When they are scary, though, it will haunt you.

© 2007