1. "Today, I called myself by your name. When I realized this, for a moment, I couldn't quite remember mine."
2. There was that aware, irrevocable regret as the kid reached the door. She did not turn the knob, but put her hands palms-down against the wood. Bean watched her. Something in them both fell, though her hands ascended, ascended, until they finally conceded that, yes, there was this invisible weight. However, just as quickly, she turned and fell on him with a smile.
Bean thought more of getting her out, how cold it would be, and smoothed her jacket.
The kid sort of hung and bowed, and they both stood until it seemed more like the time to say goodbye.
She laughed, looked up at him, and said,
"I just wanted to be punk like you."
He smiled and she went out into the reveling streets.
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Saturday, November 6, 2010
meh
“I don't want to shower here,” she said.
Bean glanced up. Not even so much as a sardonic murmur, did she get. She stood over Bean, observing its thin little form on the couch. A scarf tied around its neck, it staring up with those mildly annoyed eyes. As if every attempted conversation were an interruption. She looked at Bean's legs and the way its thighs curved in so as never to touch each other, and she felt equally jealous and attracted.
“I said I don't want to shower here!”
Plainly, Bean said, “Why?”
She knew that it didn't really care “why”, and only answered her because it knew she only wanted it to say something so that she could get angry.
“You seem like the type that has to masturbate to fall asleep.”
“Do I really?” Bean asked.
“I mean, you seem that fucking repressed and miserable that I bet you have to do it to shut out all those thoughts at night, just furiously masturbate until everything's okay again.”
“Nope.”
Bean watched her for a moment, perhaps paused in case she had anything further to say. When she didn't, when she just stiffened her shoulders and turned her eyes this way and that, Bean again ignored her.
Bean's hair---short or long, depending what your thoughts are---stuck out in pieces, so that no matter which way she came at it, she was confronted with black knives. Though she noticed, today, how faded its hair had gotten; the dye leaked out through its fingers, swirled around the drain and went down, down, down that stack of bones, down those thin legs, against those unmoving feet, and was washed away.
As she thought about leaving, she pondered the back of its neck. But this was what made her say, “Do you know why I...?”
Maybe Bean had stopped listening.
It took a large, calm breath, and said again, “Why.”
“Because,” she said, almost satisfied, “No one loved you ever.”
“Okay.”
But she knew that wasn't true. Someone had loved it, after all. When they looked at one of its earliest sonograms and called it “Bean”.
Bean glanced up. Not even so much as a sardonic murmur, did she get. She stood over Bean, observing its thin little form on the couch. A scarf tied around its neck, it staring up with those mildly annoyed eyes. As if every attempted conversation were an interruption. She looked at Bean's legs and the way its thighs curved in so as never to touch each other, and she felt equally jealous and attracted.
“I said I don't want to shower here!”
Plainly, Bean said, “Why?”
She knew that it didn't really care “why”, and only answered her because it knew she only wanted it to say something so that she could get angry.
“You seem like the type that has to masturbate to fall asleep.”
“Do I really?” Bean asked.
“I mean, you seem that fucking repressed and miserable that I bet you have to do it to shut out all those thoughts at night, just furiously masturbate until everything's okay again.”
“Nope.”
Bean watched her for a moment, perhaps paused in case she had anything further to say. When she didn't, when she just stiffened her shoulders and turned her eyes this way and that, Bean again ignored her.
Bean's hair---short or long, depending what your thoughts are---stuck out in pieces, so that no matter which way she came at it, she was confronted with black knives. Though she noticed, today, how faded its hair had gotten; the dye leaked out through its fingers, swirled around the drain and went down, down, down that stack of bones, down those thin legs, against those unmoving feet, and was washed away.
As she thought about leaving, she pondered the back of its neck. But this was what made her say, “Do you know why I...?”
Maybe Bean had stopped listening.
It took a large, calm breath, and said again, “Why.”
“Because,” she said, almost satisfied, “No one loved you ever.”
“Okay.”
But she knew that wasn't true. Someone had loved it, after all. When they looked at one of its earliest sonograms and called it “Bean”.
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Monday, September 27, 2010
revision. hate revisions.
Dear Phillip,
The second-to-last time I saw you, you called me "Judith" and sexually assaulted me in my own bed. But don't worry; I never told anyone. I know how much you wanted my friends to like you.
I've been well. Right now I'm trying to rid myself of my self-injuring tendency to always be moving “faster and faster and farther away”, yet I don't think I've ever been happier than I am now. I live a sort of special, quiet existence as of late. There. Now I've given you kind of an idea. And... what else? I have cherry-red hair and sleep a lot later, if I can. Today I couldn't because I got restless, so I decided I would write to you.
This letter concerns yesterday:
I had a bicycle accident on my way home. Holes in my clothes, fresh scrapes in my skin under those... And it was raining, so all the mud unloosed, stinging as it went down. And, regardless of everything else, I still thought about it---
The population of Boulder, Co. is 102,800. I suppose something like this should have been among my expectations when I chose to move here, knowing you made the same decision a whole year and a half ago.
I think up until yesterday you may have been dead. But I saw you and you even look like dirty laundry.
Phillip, was this accidental, or will I be seeing a lot of you?
If you want, when it happens, we can again feel the tiniest moment of utter panic and pretend not to recognize each other. I'm not even going to look up your address and mail this letter, if it makes you feel any better.
Before you left our city of origin, you called me by my full name, and then you called me “whore”. No one ever calls me either, and I've been mulling the truth of these things since.
J.
-C
The second-to-last time I saw you, you called me "Judith" and sexually assaulted me in my own bed. But don't worry; I never told anyone. I know how much you wanted my friends to like you.
I've been well. Right now I'm trying to rid myself of my self-injuring tendency to always be moving “faster and faster and farther away”, yet I don't think I've ever been happier than I am now. I live a sort of special, quiet existence as of late. There. Now I've given you kind of an idea. And... what else? I have cherry-red hair and sleep a lot later, if I can. Today I couldn't because I got restless, so I decided I would write to you.
This letter concerns yesterday:
I had a bicycle accident on my way home. Holes in my clothes, fresh scrapes in my skin under those... And it was raining, so all the mud unloosed, stinging as it went down. And, regardless of everything else, I still thought about it---
The population of Boulder, Co. is 102,800. I suppose something like this should have been among my expectations when I chose to move here, knowing you made the same decision a whole year and a half ago.
I think up until yesterday you may have been dead. But I saw you and you even look like dirty laundry.
Phillip, was this accidental, or will I be seeing a lot of you?
If you want, when it happens, we can again feel the tiniest moment of utter panic and pretend not to recognize each other. I'm not even going to look up your address and mail this letter, if it makes you feel any better.
Before you left our city of origin, you called me by my full name, and then you called me “whore”. No one ever calls me either, and I've been mulling the truth of these things since.
J.
-C
Thursday, September 23, 2010
I liked this better before I expanded it to 250 words.
Dear Phillip,
The second-to-last time I saw you, you called me "Judith" and sexually assaulted me in my own bed. But don't worry; I never told anyone. I know how much you wanted my friends to like you.
This letter concerns yesterday. I crashed my bicycle on my way home thinking about how I'd just seen you. As I achingly stood, the rain washing-the-mud-stinging-the scrapes-through-the-holes-I'd-just-ripped-in-my-skinny-jeans, I still thought about it. The population of Boulder, Co. is 102,800. I suppose something like this should have been among my expectations when I chose to move here, knowing you made the same decision a whole year and a half ago.
You even look like dirty laundry. I think up until yesterday I thought you were dead. But, no, there you were. In one of my comfortable little places. One of the places I go late in the afternoon, this one a bake shop. I tried not to hurry. I paid for my some-stupid-thing and shoved the change in my pocket. I think it was a cherry turnover, but it got crushed in my backpack anyway.
Before you left our city of origin, you called me a whore and said you wanted nothing more to do with me. So I want to ask. Was this accidental, or will I be seeing a lot of you?
If you want, we can feel the tiniest moment of utter panic and pretend not to recognize each other again. That way, none of this makes any difference. I'm not even going to look up your address and mail this letter, if it makes you feel better.
J.
The second-to-last time I saw you, you called me "Judith" and sexually assaulted me in my own bed. But don't worry; I never told anyone. I know how much you wanted my friends to like you.
This letter concerns yesterday. I crashed my bicycle on my way home thinking about how I'd just seen you. As I achingly stood, the rain washing-the-mud-stinging-the scrapes-through-the-holes-I'd-just-ripped-in-my-skinny-jeans, I still thought about it. The population of Boulder, Co. is 102,800. I suppose something like this should have been among my expectations when I chose to move here, knowing you made the same decision a whole year and a half ago.
You even look like dirty laundry. I think up until yesterday I thought you were dead. But, no, there you were. In one of my comfortable little places. One of the places I go late in the afternoon, this one a bake shop. I tried not to hurry. I paid for my some-stupid-thing and shoved the change in my pocket. I think it was a cherry turnover, but it got crushed in my backpack anyway.
Before you left our city of origin, you called me a whore and said you wanted nothing more to do with me. So I want to ask. Was this accidental, or will I be seeing a lot of you?
If you want, we can feel the tiniest moment of utter panic and pretend not to recognize each other again. That way, none of this makes any difference. I'm not even going to look up your address and mail this letter, if it makes you feel better.
J.
-C
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Intruders
-C
In case this is illegible:
"It's always that last look---You're trying to say goodbye in the right sort of way, in the manner that seemed owed... It is always that look---the last one, after you've made the utterance, "Goodbye"---that is the most telling. You're only trying to sound sincere. You must sound sincere, but, no matter what, your voice betrays you, even if you're telling the truth. When you and she both nod, your eyes are black, both of you---no, no, hers are green, I know... But they are just black and lit in white circles by the streetlamp above---though its color is yellow. You don't walk away just yet. You stare, and then you've agreed upon a whole history of yourselves, but as told by an outside illuminator; the street lamp's talking... And you look away because you feel you should. And all of this takes place within the span of five seconds. 9/21/10."
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)