Dreaming

Dreaming

drowning

“I had that strange dream again.

I was drowning.

It was the same as the other times. I was 16 and visiting the ocean for the first time. I didn’t know how to swim but I let my friends drag me on a boat ride. But they’re not really my friends. I don’t think. It was a group of girls. I was sitting on the sand with a group of girls, and suddenly we’re all taken for a boat ride. We stop for a bit, far from the shore and everyone jumps off to swim around.

‘Jump in, Genesis,’ they yell at me. ‘We’ll help you swim.’

I tell them no. I don’t know how to swim. I’ve never been in the ocean. It’s scary. There’s sharks and what about jellyfish? They can swim and I’ll watch. But they keep on and on. They don’t stop pressuring me.

‘Jump in! Jump in!’

I can feel the judgement in their eyes. ’16-years-old and doesn’t know how to swim. How fucking lame.’

They laugh at me.

They’re laughing at me, doc! I didn’t do anything. But they’re fucking laughing at me. The jackass driving the boat starts laughing at me.

So I jump.

There’s cheering and then I can’t hear anything but the roar of water in my ears. I keep sinking. My arms are flailing. Reaching for a hand or a leg or a part of the boat. Reaching for something to hold onto. Something that will pull me out of the water. Something that will tell me I’m okay.

But there’s nothing, and I can’t breathe, I’ve swallowed water. My eyes are burning from the salt. I can’t see anything.

I try to hold onto what little breath I have but I can’t, I can’t. I clench my eyes closed and I try to scream.

And I wake up.

I’m breathless and sweaty and exhausted.”

Dr. Kein looks at me as she takes notes.

“What time is it when you wake up from this dream? Is it morning already? Middle of the night?”

“It’s usually happens in the morning when I have this dream. Right before I have to get up for work. Usually leaves me drained. I can’t function on drowning days.”

“Have you been able to figure out who the girls are in the dream?”

I shook my head. “They seem so familiar. Like I knew them, but it seems like a lifetime ago I was a teenager trying to fit in with girls who hated my guts.” I grimace and bring my legs up onto her cream couch. “I’m such a fucking cliché, doc. ‘Ooh I’m a teenage outcast desperate to fit in with mean popular girls who tease me and make my life hell.’ Sounds like a shitty coming of age movie. Except my movie didn’t get better, I just finally broke. I’m still a loser, and all the mean girls are just grown up now and we all live in the same fucking town and I don’t know who’s more pathetic, me or them.”

Dr. Kein smiled. “You are not a loser, Genesis. Remember that.”

“I’ll try.”

“Say it.”

“Please don’t make me.”

“Say it. ‘I am not a loser.'”

I hugged my knees. “I’m not a loser.” I mumbled.

“Again.”

I breathe deeply. “Please doc.”

She arched an eyebrow at me.

Sighing and raising my voice just above a whisper, “I. Am. Not. A. Loser.”

I look up at her hoping that was enough.

“Better. How are the new anti-depressants I prescribed working? It’s a lower dosage. Are you still nauseous?”

“No. I’m not nauseous. But I still feel a little lost.” I scrunch my eyebrows as I try to explain how I feel. “Like, I’m me, but fuzzy. I guess that’s better than how I was feeling?” I wasn’t sure. Before, I knew I was sad. I knew I was hurting. I knew I was a piece of shit and I could wallow in it, because it was the truth. The pain was almost delicious. It was mine.

But now? This was a drug-induced dullness. I could function without breaking down, the darker thoughts were under control, they were at bay. It was weird though. I didn’t know who I was anymore without my pain.

“Tell me more about the fuzzy feeling.”

“Like, every feeling, every emotion, are very dim versions of what they were. Which I can appreciate, I dunno. I just don’t feel like myself. I guess, I’ll get used to it.”

“Stay with it, just remember, if you start to have any suicidal thoughts, stop taking them and call me immediately.” A timer goes off. “You made it Genesis. Another full session. Good job!”

I smile sheepishly at her. There was a time where I’d just walk out, 10 minutes into our session and not appear for weeks. Dr. Kein called my mother– my emergency contact, and she started bringing me to my appointments and staying in the waiting room until I came out.

“Is there anything else you wanted to bring up before we finish?”

I shake my head and bend down to pick up my black boots and slide a foot inside.

“Okay Genesis. Remember, you are not a loser. You are not broken. You are healing, and you are doing your best.” She handed me a little note.

In the process of healing.

“Put it up on a mirror, on the fridge, next to your bed, somewhere you’ll see it on a daily basis. A reminder.” She smiled at me and I finished lacing up my boots and stood up.

“Thank you.” I placed it in my notebook and threw my book in my tote bag. “I’ll see you next week.” I walked out of her office and saw my mom waiting, half asleep, with a magazine in her hand. She looked up when she saw me.

Ya, mija?”

Si, mami. Let’s go.”

NPM 7: Moody Girls and Late Night Walks

NPM 7: Moody Girls and Late Night Walks

We are not well, you and I.

Could be why you’re having a conversation with yourself in the mirror.

You’ve been crying at your desk again. 
You almost cried at lunch.
You are not fine.
Why are you so hard to love?
Why aren’t you like the other girls?
“Is it raining there?”
No. You lie
“Did you walk the dog?”
Yes.  Another lie.
“Are you going to sleep?”
Yes. You spare him the truth of you laying here too apathetic to even want to get up to relieve yourself. You move because even you aren’t that low.
You go out eventually. It’s raining, but you’re too far gone to care.
The rain makes you feel something and that’s better than nothing– even if it’s purely sensory.
Rain is water. Water is wet. You are now wet.
The dog is wet. The dog now smells.
You feel nothing, but that you are slowly getting wetter.
So you walk with the dog trotting besides you, the two of you drowning in April showers. 

NPM 5: Drugged

NPM 5: Drugged

They told me to take it. 

Shhh…it’ll make it better.

Just two a day would make me normal again.

I drink them all.

Two will make it better, all will make it perfect.

I feel nothing now. Everything is clear. Nothing hurts.

Emotionless I lay back and wrap my legs around death. 

“It’s okay if we play,” I tell him.

“I know now that nothing really matters.”

Venus

Venus

Venus is the planet of love.

I read once that the heat on Venus creates a pressure so intense that standing on Venus would feel like the pressure felt 900 meters deep in Earth’s oceans.

Crazy right?

Sounds just like love.

My mother brought me a small potted cactus the other day. “Mira Geni, it looks like a little star.” I placed it on the windowsill of my kitchen, right above the sink.

It’s the only bit of green in my sunny yellow kitchen.

I like to stare at it whenever I do the dishes.

Which is twice a day to wash Butch-Cassidy’s bowl and to clean out the little container of food my mom drops off on Sundays.

She trusts me now to eat the food she brings me without her watchful eyes.

Before she would sit across from me at my bubblegum pink table and watch me as I forced myself to eat.

The color of the table seemed to bother her every time. She’d look down at it like it offended her by being so pink.

Ay mi’ja.” She’d sigh and then order me to eat.

Love.

I miss the company.

There are bread crumbs on the counter from the peanut butter and honey sandwich I nibbled on earlier. I take the crusts and leave them in the bowl for the Wild Bunch, the family of pigeons that took up residence in my pantry. They won’t leave, and I haven’t kicked them out, so I just feed the bread and give them water and it seems like it’s working out okay.

Today I have a full sink, because for some reason I told Steven I would cook for him.

I was sitting on my couch watching a sappy movie and trying not to cry as the main characters finally have their first kiss when Steven called me.

“Are you crying?” He asked.

“No.” I sniffed.

“What’s wrong? Are you ok? Should I come over?” I could hear the panic in his voice.

Panic which is not unfounded given that he was the person who found me in a pool of my own vomit on my kitchen floor. In my sunny kitchen with my lemon yellow walls and my bubblegum pink table and mismatched chairs. My happy little room the scene of my attempted suicide.

Hearing your best friend crying by herself with only the menagerie of animals she keeps to protect her would be unsettling at the least.

“No, I’m fine. I’m sorry. I’m watching a made for TV movie and they’ve finally found love.” I assure him.

“Can I come over to be sure?” No one really trusts me.

I don’t blame them.

“Come over.”

He came over and sat on my couch with me. We watched the end of the movie in silence. I watched. He watched me out of the corner of his eye. I did not look good.

I’d pulled my hair up in two messy buns, rinsed my face and changed into jeans and a T-shirt. But the water couldn’t rinse away the dark circles and hollows under my eyes from lack of sleep and from eating the bare minimum to survive.

“This movie is terrible.” He said. He reached down to rub Butch-Cassidy’s belly. Butch laid next to him after jumping all over him when he arrived.

After me, Steven is Butch’s favorite person in the world. He only likes my mom because she occasionally feeds him scraps.

“I know.” The movie ends and we sit there in silence.

“You know what I miss?” He asked me.

“What’s that?” I turned the TV off and shifted to face him.

“When you would get all ethnic and make the sweet mole with rice and homemade tortillas.”

I rolled my eyes. “‘Ethnic.'” He laughed.

“You know what I mean. You get all, ‘my mother taught me and her mother taught her and her mother taught her and the great eagle taught them all’ when you make it. I miss it.”

“‘Great eagle,’ mas pendejo,” I mutter and smile in spite of myself.

“Great eagle or whatever your people believed in.”

“Oh my gosh Steven I’m about to sick Butch-Cassidy on you if you don’t stop.” We laugh as we look at Butch-Cassidy, belly up on the floor at Steven’s feet, snoring.

“Your ancestors demand the sweet brown mole… and handmade tortillas…” He trailed off.

Cooking requires effort.

Cooking requires care and a love for the food and for the ones who will consume it.

Cooking requires a desire to give some kind of shit.

Love means giving some kind of shit.

I exhale slowly. And watch him. He looks nervous. Like he pushed too far. Like the suggestion of me doing anything that required effort may have already mentally exhausted me.

“Well, I am a really good cook,” I whisper.

He chuckled. “I guess.”

“We’ll see if I feel like it and maybe I’ll invite you over.” I smile at him and we sit quietly until he says it’s late and heads home.

Because Venus reflects so much sunlight, it is usually the brightest planet in the night sky.

I wonder if it’s because of this brightness that they decided this planet would best represent love in the night skies. Love makes you glow.

I stir the pot of mole and turn the heat low as I start on the dishes.

13. first kiss, a planet, a type of plant, bread crumbs

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Christmas Musings

Christmas Musings

All is calm, all is bright.

My family doesn’t “holiday” very well.

I do that a lot. Use a noun as a verb. It amuses me.

Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year’s– we seem to mess it up each time when left to our own devices.

I wish I was more festive.

Or that I had more money to force us out of the house to a nice place that knows how to holiday better than we do.

It’s Christmas.

So I walked my dog. More like let him walk me. At eight years old, my senior citizen dog is still stronger than I’ll ever be.

I haven’t walked him in a while. I’m a negligent parent.

Sometimes I like to imagine him as a writer. His first book, “my mommy is negligent and other stories.”

He’s truly my son. Even he enjoys writing short personal essays.

You know, in my fictionalized version of him.

I am not a morning person So I don’t walk him then. I’m also tired and weary of the world by the time I get home.

Depression does that to you.

I feel like I talk about depression a lot.

I’m not a Debbie downer by any means. Only few people in real life know about my struggles with depression.

That’s how it is.

I use humor and a bubbly nature to hide the demons I deal with when I’m by myself. When I am trying to force myself to do things.

Most of the world’s funniest people struggle with depression and addiction. Why do you think we’re so funny?

We have to cope.

Making people laugh and making people happy helps– for a little while.

My friend Steve called me while I was shopping. I told him I finished reading the manuscript he sent me. He told me he was no writer of prose, I told him I was no poet. So we’re even.

I told him it was weird but I like weird. I told him it made me uncomfortable, but good art does that sometimes.

His stories are disjointed, but connected. Does that make sense?

We talked a while, or rather I talked.

I talked about the church leaders dinner where I almost cried because no one wanted to sit at the table with me and my sister. How people only sat there because they got there late and those were the last seats available.

I told him about my love of random decorative wall art, some of the inspirational shit that looked pretty and was supposed to uplift. I rambled about Betsy Johnson and donut purses and how I’d wear it but had to draw the line at a milk carton purse.

I rambled until I realized I was rambling.

And I apologized.

He said it was ok. That’s why he called. So I could ramble.

It stung a little.

So I’m walking my dog and it’s Christmas, but it doesn’t feel like Christmas because my family doesn’t do Christmas right.

Are you following?

I get asked directions from strangers. I am non threatening.

In the city of Chicago, the city of big shoulders, the city of gun violence, the windy city, I am a girl in fake uggs and mittens wearing a wonder woman scarf walking her fluffy dog as he wears his Santa sweater.

I am not scary. I am inviting.

Ask me how to get somewhere I know how to go to all the places.

Maybe this new year I can learn how to holiday. Maybe I can be the one to make home feel like home.

The houses I pass are lit up like the Vegas strip and this brings me some comfort.

Merry Christmas to all and to all a good night.

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