Humanity, pt. II

I was at a red light last night when Jeremiah’s mom called me.  I was on my way to tour a property in the next town over from her.  Seems like moms always know that sort of thing.
“Hi mama!” I tried to sound like I hadn’t just been scream crying in my car.
“Are you okay?” She asked immediately, “You sound stuffy.”
“I’m okay,” I threw a hand at my turn signal as I laughed.  “I was just crying.”
“Well that doesn’t sound okay to me.  What’s going on?”

I always try to tread lightly when I talk about my relationship with her son.  I try to tip toe around the fact that’s her 41-year old baby boy, and maybe she thinks he can do no wrong.  I try to leave out the parts that indicate I’m still so fucked up from having loved him for all those years.

“He’s an idiot,” she told me.  “No one ever expected you to change him.  You made the right decision to look after your own happiness.  And you need to continue to look after your own happiness.”

o0o

The line rang twice before Carina answered: “Are you here, darling?”
“I hope so,” I laughed apprehensively.  “The gate was opening for a car to exit when I got here, so I just pulled in.  But I don’t see an address number anywhere.  I just parked next to a-“
“I’ll be right there,” she told me, taking control of my nerves for me. “I’m gonna bring a little mule!”
I laughed as we both hung up.

I got out of my car, tossing the keys onto the dashboard.  The sky was beginning to change temperature with the sunset, the mosquitos were coming in from the lakeshore.  The roar of the croaking frogs demanded my full attention.

I heard a little engine revving, getting closer just before I saw her round the corner.   Blonde curls flying behind her in the wind.
Okay so, not a donkey, I laughed to myself.
She pulled up next to me on the dirt road and pointed to the handle on the door, “Let me show you around before it gets too cold.”

Twenty minutes, and three house tours later, we stood on the brand new patio of an empty cabin.
“I was in an abusive relationship in my twenties,” she told me. “Everyone hates talking about it, ya know?  But it’s important to normalize talking about abuse, to give strength to those that haven’t found it yet.”
I tried to hide the fact my eyes were welling with tears.
My trauma responses have been fully engaged for so long, I couldn’t even tell what expression I was making.  I probably wasn’t.
“What’s with your parents?” She pressed.
That’s it.  There was no pretending not to cry anymore.  I had already tried to act cool earlier when her boyfriend asked me where my parents lived?  I should have just replied “they’re dead”, instead of trying to explain that they’d both been local my whole life.

“Yeah, my parents are dirtbags too,“ She took another drag of her clove.  “Moved out when I was 15.”
I laughed at the constant comparisons between our paths, “Yep,” I smiled.  “Me too.”
“You have spunk, you have talent, you have strength.”  She told me, “Everything is gonna get better from here, okay?”
I’ve basically just been leaking tears for three months straight.

“Crank up the tunes, sing like a rockstar,” She told me as my car idled over the threshold of her security gate. “You’re safe, you’re loved, you’re going to thrive.”  She smiled as she patted the top of my door through the window.

I cried the whole way back.  I cried for myself.  I cried for my animals.  I cried for the past me, and the present me.  I cried in an attempt to forgive myself.  An attempt to forgive myself for having gone against my better judgment for a solid two years.  An attempt to forgive myself for ending up here.  I fought so hard to escape Jeremiah’s drinking problem, and then what did I do?  Hopped right into Nick’s.
What’s the worst that could happen?  I remember thinking to myself, It’s just a fling.
Cue in: Police reports.  Slashed tires.  Restraining orders.  Court hearings.  Midnight 911 calls. 

I must have driven past this driveway a couple thousand times over the past two years.
I never knew there was a paradise waiting for me at the end of the dirt road.

Stripped

I took a look around me today and realized I didn’t recognize a single fucking thing about my life.

The car I’ve been driving is not mine. The couch that I woke up on was not mine. The house that I woke up in is not mine. The folks feeding my goats breakfast each morning is not me. The bed my cats are curled up in each night is not mine. I was sitting in my law office, pretending to have my shit together, while I was wearing the same pants I’d slept in the night before.

“You’re not homeless,” Tim poked at his fajitas over lunch last week. “You’re just houseless.”
I wish I could pretend to be as nonchalant about it as he was. I wish I could pretend I wasn’t experiencing one of the hardest times in my life. I wish I could pretend like I wasn’t spending every second of the day imagining how I could have handled things differently in the past to not be in the situation I currently am. I wish I could pretend I wasn’t constantly contemplating forgiving the people that do not deserve it.

Everyone around me has been having a shit time lately, but I can’t help but to wish I was facing their problems instead. There’s something slightly comical and wildly angering about listening to someone complain about the things you’d kill to have.

Maybe it’s jealousy. Maybe it’s lack of accountability. Maybe I haven’t been tough enough on myself.

I’ve been living in someone else’s head, it seems.

“You’re acting self destructively,” Max told me this morning after I’d explained my weekend, right before I’d quickly tried to change the subject.
“Yeah,” I rolled my eyes, “I fucking know that.”
He didn’t let a moment pass before he asked, “SO WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?”

I took a look around me today and reazlied I didn’t recognize a single thing about my life.

I don’t recognize myself. I don’t recognize my thoughts. I dont recognize my voice. I don’t recognize my reflection. I don’t recognize my behavior.

“It’s only after we’ve lost everything, that we’re free to do anything.”
Chuck Palahniuk

neighborhood shit, pt. II

“I’m so glad you were able to come by tonight!” my phone chimed as I pulled the truck onto the main road.
“I am, too!” I quickly typed and dropped my phone into the center console.
The sunset was smeared across the sky. I’d been crying so much these days that I didn’t even feel the tears casually streaking my cheeks.

Queen of taking the long way home on the days that have overstayed their welcome.
What’s the cure for a heavy heart, if not whiskey?

“Hi baby!” I squealed to the brunette behind the bar.
“Hi honey!” She called back to me, counting tips, as she slid her eyes down the bar.
My eyes followed hers, and they landed on a friendly sight at the other end.
“Hey!” I heard him call out to me.

I didn’t see his truck when I pulled into the parking lot. I didn’t see much of anything at all the entire way there, to be honest. Shout out to muscle memory for getting me there safely.

A fleeting memory of the night before crossed my mind.
“I’m sorry things are so hard right now,” he told me, “You’re a tough girl.”
I tried to play it cool. I’m always trying to play it cool.

“How are you?” I sang to Amanda.
“Don’t you dare sit on that stool!” He called to me from 30 feet away.

I swung a leg over the stool between him and another guy, and immediately caught onto the fact he was annoyed with the amount of small talk that was being done by the strangers around him. He grabbed at my thigh the way he always does before he steals a kiss. I pretended to not feel it. I pretended to not feel like I wanted to unbutton his wranglers and gobble his dick in front of everyone in that bar.

“You get a new car?” He nodded towards the keys that had been sitting in front of me on the bar.
I sighed. “No… I’m just- uh… test driving.”
The bartender scrunched her nose at my story.
Most of this bar had seen what happened to my car just a few weeks before.

Just one more, we kept hollering to her.

“So, what do you want for your birthday this year?” He asked me, 4 whiskeys later, “A baby goat?”
I laughed as I caught a glimpse of my contact photo in his phone.
You’re the prettiest girl in my phone, he told me on the couch last summer when he updated it.
“Just your hand in marriage, will be fine I guess.” I pushed another empty glass to the bar mat.
He slapped my ass as he stood up, “Maybe it’s time.”

I tried to play it cool. I’m always trying to play it cool.