Wednesday, March 1, 2023

Figure Eight


I'm pretty sure there are people who come into your life as a re-awakening to who you really are - those who feel like you've known them forever. The ones who you would swear can see into your soul, and vice versa. Maybe they are here for a moment, a day, months, years... You never really know which length of time you'll have with them, but you can feel when there is something underneath what could be the simplest passing - an energy that feels like you're spinning in an infinite dance around each other somehow any time you interact. Even if it's only once. This sense of a deeper connection to something isn't just with people (could be animals or a rainbow or a pretty rock), but it's especially intense when it is with people. Something inside of you shifts, and you feel transformed, like a butterfly. It's such an odd shift in awareness - like crossing a dimension into some new reality. A (hopefully) better version of yourself.

You also never know what it will be that brings about their departure. Will you fight? Will they move away? Will they meet someone else they have a stronger connection to? Will you find things about them that you cannot accept? Will you change in ways they disagree with? Will they die? It's a Chance card on the great Monopoly board. You can strategize away how to keep them for as long as possible, but in the end you have no control over the cycle. You're still going to lose the game. Oh... shit, I just lost the game. Dammit. 

Ok that got dark and somehow simultaneously dorky. If we don't know what happens when we die, then how would anyone have any idea if you've won or lost the game? Maybe you win the game - why not play like you do, right? Ok, tangent, my bad. 

Anyway - recently those who are in any proximity to me (physically or mentally) may have noticed I've been a bit... energized... lately. I post more on social media. I write a blog post (OMG it's been a while, but truth be told, I had two drafts I never actually published, because I got distracted by something, because squirrel). I talk about my feelings more, if that's even possible. I laugh more, again if that's possible. And I talk about whatever it is that is energizing me. And I mean, sure that's pretty common - people love to talk about what inspires them. Unless they're embarrassed about it, but then it just takes about 2.1 questions to remove that fear and learn a whole lot about what that person loves most. Some people are inspired by art, or sports, or a project, or, as in my case is most common, love. And here we are.

A man has come into my life that I have felt at a loss for words for in the way he makes me feel (contrary to this very extensive blog post). So unexpected. He's kind and smart and ridiculously silly and sweet. He's younger than I am, which isn't a thing that would come as a shocker to anyone, I'm sure. When we talk that age difference doesn't exist. He's simply lovely inside and out. And he is one of those people. We connect in a way that transcends a lot. It began as a small moment in time that felt more significant than it was the first day we met. Well, we didn't really meet officially - I made him a drink. Always paid cash. It took me 2 months to ask his name, though I'd wanted to know it from the first time our eyes met. We've known each other about 4 months. He asked me out for my birthday. We finally got to spend time together 3 days before Valentine's Day. Since then it's been a space of discovery, and that familiarity that comes with those people I mentioned with the unexpectedly deep connection to you that defies understanding. It feels the way it does when you hear a song that speaks to your soul, so you listen to it 500 times in a row because you can't get enough of it. That's what he does to me. He inspires me just by being who he is and doing the things he does. Being in his presence turns me into a sparkler. He's simply a shiny starlight I can't take my eyes off of.

Now this isn't meant to be a love letter to said man that the universe has so obviously special ordered for me. (Sorrynotsorry, Finn) It's meant to be about that sense you get about a person. Like you've known them somehow before. They feel comfortable in a way that you can't explain. Like when you're out and see something that you feel was simply put there for you to notice and cherish. It's a common experience in my life to feel that way about random occurrences or fleetingly with strangers. It's much rarer with people I'm getting to know, because people, unlike objects, hide from those connections. I never hide. I was told once that it's an awareness of the beauty of God's design/plan. Someone else told me that it's awareness that you're on the right path, which I guess would make sense if the path you're on is destined to happen. Hmm. Then we get into fate versus free will, and I'm firmly of the "every path is destined, but the one you're conscious of is where you find your free-will" school of thought.

Usually in my experience when I have this feeling upon first meeting a person, there is also an intuitive sense that the timing is wrong to dive too deeply into the connection - but I can sense it's there. Sometimes for years, sometimes perhaps it's never the right time to explore that space. It's a very rare occurrence where a new character steps on stage, and it's as though something in the universe has shifted with this arrival. The stars align (well, it was actually the planets that aligned, but pretty damned close), and things just flow. Everything seems as though it should feel it's moving too fast, but you both are just flowing with it. And in that current a thousand lifetimes could pass in one 5 second gaze. Being together just feels "right" in every possible timeline you can imagine. You know that there is no other way that this could possibly be other than what it is here and now. There is a confidence in that feeling that doesn't make logical sense, but whatever is happening is as it's meant to be. It's a welcoming sense of shared vulnerability. It's love.

I've realized somehow that a part of me has been hibernating for a while. In the past three weeks I've awakened to the romantic heart within me on a level I've felt detached from for too long. Sure I've had crushes and even acted on them sometimes, but this is the sort of kindred spirit energy that happens so very rarely. I've been creative and driven and focused on every intellectual and artistic pursuit, but I was missing the thing that keeps the fires in me burning - a romantic love. Sure maybe it's the joy of infatuation. Maybe it won't be an epic romance. Maybe writing a blog post about where you're at will derail this minecart, because "you're too open about your life." Maybe it's just serotonin and dopamine and all that bio-chem stuff. It could be that I've not paid this part of my heart/mind/soul/body much attention so it's atrophied and any amount of focus on it is hugely impactful. But perhaps there is something deeper truly at play in these connections we have with a moment or a place or a person. This is honestly one of those areas where I don't care about the science of it all - at least not at science's current stage of development. I trust my intuition, even if we don't have a rational explanation for what that "gut feeling" is. I  just know he moves something in the deepest parts of me. (Get your mind out of the gutter, Kevin.) I want to lean into my romantic heart a little bit... or a lot bit... at least for as long as he'll let me. Most of all I hope he gets to stick around a while - a good long while. He looks at me like I'm magic,  which in part is a reflection of how I'm looking at him. I want to keep looking, figuring out what this connection is. I haven't seen enough yet. Hopefully that's what the universe has in mind too. 

Saturday, January 15, 2022

Hey, Hi, Remember Me?

I may have to port this blog over to my other email address, given I never really use the one it's linked to anymore. It's been a while, hasn't it? What have you been doing? Have you gotten married? Had kids? Stopped eating animal products? Started? Moved to a new city or state or even country? Hey, maybe you moved to another planet or won the lottery, had a car crash, or joined a cult. Possibly maybe, probably though.

So much has happened! My loving home at The Speakeasy SF closed down, so I took one of my bestie's offer to move to Kona on the Big Island of Hawai'i. We have a pandemic that's going on year two due to a novel coronavirus known as COVID-19, which if you're reading this when it's published and don't know, I have a condo on Mars I'd love to sell ya. I've gone back to school to finish my degree in performing arts. I never completed it because I bought into the "a degree in theatre is a waste of money" bullshit I was always spoon fed in my youth. I'm not one to feel much regret about my life choices, but the level of naive gullibility I always had (read: blind trust) in people most of my life has definitely led to some paths I would have otherwise followed being a bit delayed, if the door hadn't closed already by the time I arrived. My sweet kitten Copernicus is alive and well, and has taken up the position of "island cat" like it was his dream role. I still work in theatre, which is a blessing amidst this pandemic. I'm aching to buy a house. The market is bonkers right now, but it will happen, probably in Hilo. That's a feeling I've never experienced before - a desire to own a home. I think I finally found where I'd like to be for at least a good while. Life in paradise is pretty... well... pretty much like living in paradise. I've been spending a lot of time and energy learning about the indigenous heritage here out of respect for Hawaiian 'Oiwi culture. The last thing I want to do is be another mainlander who doesn't know anything about the history of this place, even if it's humiliating to read how awful some of my ancestors have been in their time here (and everywhere really). It's led me to some interesting thoughts that I'm still exploring with the help of some amazing Hawaiian History classes at the University of Hawai'i at Hilo.

Oy! I have meandered off my path again, and was brought back by the call of the local pueo (owl) that flies by my window every night and calls out with the backdrop of the waves crashing. Why am I here today, you might ask. Well, one of the things about being a university student is we have a little thing called homework. And when you're a theatre major said homework involves things like dancing in your bedroom for a video to post to your class, or running through scenes with your fellow classmates on Zoom (the new staple in remote communication), or writing a monologue. Today involved dancing, and now it's monologue writing time. So just what does the quintessential wandering butterfly spirit that I am write about? Um, obviously it's about a little thing called L-O-V-E. Or Halloween. Ok, ok I get two choices. Love or Halloween. Given who I am, it's a toss-up which one is of more importance in my over-embellished, poetical, costume-ridden and hopelessly romantic existence. Why not both? I figured I'd have some inspiration here on my blog. Can confirm, inspiration sought is inspiration found.

I'm hoping the playwriting class I'm currently enrolled in will add some artistic direction to the poetical proserific writing I've been doing in the form of journal keeping for 3 decades. It seems the only time I write anything is when I'm dealing with emotion that is making me feel (more) insane. So you guessed it - it's almost always about love. Misguided or unrequited or ridiculous as it is. That's the thing that I am the most impacted by: that romantic passion that is being in love with another human being. Even if I don't think I've been in love with anyone since 2015, except maybe a ghost or two. I think I'll always be in love with a ghost though, thanks Elijah. Just trying to rid myself of a couple others this year, which is proving harder than one might think. Nostalgia is a hell of a haunter.

So... let's give it a Halloween twist, and set the scene at a seance, and it's an actual ghost the character is talking to. Or ooo! Better yet, it's a ghost talking through a medium, and the character for the monologue is the medium. Saying all the things they always wanted to say, and perhaps had said at some point (I have source material), but perhaps some things that they always wished they'd said (where I can get creative). Sounds like a good setting for a Valentine's performance or a Halloween performance. And that is where you might find it in the coming semesters should you visit the University of Hawai'i at Hilo's Performing Arts department either online or even in person around those two holidays. Who knows! Maybe someone will perform it next semester. Hell, maybe I will.

See you on the flipside. Cheers my dears!

Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Soulmates

Yesterday brought many thoughts bubbling to the surface as I connected with a person who I would have never thought I'd have such resonance with - and yet, I always knew I did somehow. I often say he's the most attractive man I've ever met. If you've met him, you'd probably agree, but the basis for that initially would be primarily external. The really amazing thing is that the person inside is just as lovely, if not more so (how unfair, right?) *wink. We're colleagues, friends, and apparently.... soulmates. Well that's pretty freaking wonderful - go team!

A lot of people get really serious about the word "soulmates." I think this is based mostly in the idea that you have one soulmate somewhere out there that you're destined to be romantically involved with for the rest of your life, happily ever after, the end. Thanks, Disney. It's never been a narrative that made sense to me. When I got married (the first time) in Thailand, my mother asked me if I believed in soulmates. At the time I said I didn't, but mostly it was out of a sense of not believing in them in the way that she was asking. In retrospect, that man was most absolutely not a soulmate, and I knew it even then, but I was naive and scared of looking bad for backing out of marrying him - so I did it anyway kind of to save face - how shitty is that? What a terrified thing I was of looking bad to the people I sought approval from. It didn't end well - there's a story reminiscent of "Fight Club" I can't tell without laughing if you ever want to hear it, but that's for another time - we're talking about soulmates here, dammit.

I asked something like this once in a blog post several years back... Have you ever had a person who you maybe only just met, or you'd only known peripherally, or you'd talked to a couple times that you immediately knew you loved? This person is someone who you felt like you already knew, and you couldn't explain why. And then from that compulsory courageous vulnerability that exists when confronted by a soulmate, you connect with that person and find they feel the same. They share that explosive feeling of recognition and fireworks and peace and like you've known each other much longer and more deeply than either of you are aware of. The feeling of "home" - that is what a soulmate is for me.

Now I can't begin to explain what that means as far as the hows and the whys. All I know is we are in a sea of consciousnesses that we don't have that resonance with. And then, if we're lucky - and more importantly if we're paying attention and willing to follow that intuition - we cross paths with someone who for some reason unknown and incredibly profound, sees us - hears us - knows us - loves us - someone that we cannot help but mirror the same resonance with and reverence for. And there's no logical explanation. There is simply a peaceful understanding between you that you can't help but smile when you think of no matter where they are. I keep thinking of the Wachowski's show Sense8 - it feels like that to me.

Conversations with those people are always the greatest. Silence with them is as well. Sometimes you just sit and stare at each other for a bit, and chuckle at how great it is just being in that moment. You feel like you're on another plane of existence just being around one another. You are your most you in their presence - brimming with gratitude at being seen and seeing. You laugh more. I love finding those people, and although sometimes circumstances may mean I don't see or talk to them for ages, nothing changes when I see them again, or even if we never see one another again. The connection we share is timeless. It has no agenda, no expectation. It simply is. And it's perfect in however it shows up.

This is a bit rambly but I had to share it, because it's been continuing to bubble in my mind since my cafe conversations yesterday. There are people in my world, and you know who you are, that are "home" for me. As one such soulmate once said at the very beginnings of our acquaintance "I love you more than I know you." It's funny now because when I think about it - she knew me, because I knew her. We just had to give our conscious awareness a chance to catch up to something we unconsciously already felt. Sometimes that's how it is - I've said "I love you" to a person the second time we ever hung out once, because I had to - there was no other way it could be, even though I knew he knew. His reply - exactly what you'd expect. "You're fucking crazy!" I kid.

May we all continue to cross paths with those people who are home to us, and fuel one another in being the most brilliant form of ourselves we can be. Soulmates are a definite "fuck yes" in the Fuck Yes or No philosophy for living. Here's to finding those connections and reveling in them.

Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Stories From a Wayward Journal


Comments on precognizance from one of my journals a couple years ago:

"Premonition is part of my blood. When I was 2 years old my mom had us drive through a snowstorm to see my great grandmother because she knew it had to happen then. She died the next morning. When I was 10 years old I fell at a roller rink and broke both bones in my right forearm. My mom suddenly was there - I asked her how she just happened to be there later - she said she just knew I needed her. I've had a couple things other than these happen, but for me it always seemed to be a request and a response. Or even at times like a random statement that could later be seen as either a prediction or like I was causing it.

I was working a medic shift at 3am at a festival and said hours before that it should be a quiet shift "unless someone breaks a leg or something." I came onto my shift just as a girl literally fell in the dark and broke her femur. Who breaks a femur at a party? My friends said I tempted the universe with what I'd said earlier... for me it felt more like some part of me knew it was going to happen.

Then there are the times when I would think of something incredibly random and someone would bring it to reality within a couple minutes. Or the times I'd be out at a concert or a film and say "x is going to happen" and whoever I was with would stare at me in wonder when it did - totally non-sequitur stuff.

There's a part of me that believes I am creating these instances. Then the other part me of thinks that's incredibly egocentric. That's the part that finds it much more likely I'm simply being allowed a glimpse through the veil... A chance to see something most people don't. Lindsay says she thinks it's because I am really paying attention. I'm looking for the magic that most people have either forgotten or ignore.

So I'm on an exercise in being open. In not requesting. In simply being with whatever shows up. There's a part of me that's terrified to make any sort of requests because [of that last time I did that]. But I've been spending a lot of time thinking about what, in the course of my entire life, has been the driving force for me. And it's come down to (at least) two things - connection and music. Unsurprisingly I've been listening to a heavy amount of music. There have been points where I was brought to tears by a song I've heard a hundred times [because it connected to a different point in my experience].

I sat on the shore and cried yesterday. I'm not really sure why. Probably everything. The state of the world. The desperation and overwhelming fear people carry everywhere with them. The longing I have to finally have the connection in my life I so long for. How tremendously huge the universe is and how infinitesimally small I am in it. How I long to see and do and know and understand everything, and yet realize in so doing I'll lose the mystery therein. The downside of knowledge has always been the seizure of magic it seems.

Except I'm beginning to wonder if that's incorrect. It's a different kind of magic to understand how things work. part of me wants to have an understanding of cause and effect enough to be able to predict outcomes at an unprecedented level - but like the concept of being rich, I'm not sure I could trust myself not to become a totally self-absorbed person who stopped using my powers for good.

It's the thing about power in any sense - it destroys goodness a lot of the time - either through annihilation of the self (look at celebrities in positions of power - overdoses and such are alarmingly common) or through becoming an awful being to others (look at many political 'leaders').

So yeah, these are the things I think about in my downtime."

Monday, May 28, 2018

Adventures in Utopia

It's always surreal being in London. I feel like an artist when I find myself here - in this place that feels like home and somehow a sweet morning dream that I'd rather not awaken from. The air is damp with anxious potential, and the skies mottled with clouds. On the streets near Leicester Square today I felt the incoming storm, moments after popping into a loo it was upon us. I found myself stranded in fast food limbo as the first loo I'd come across was American burger behemoth, McDonald's, which had been flooded with newly drenched gawkers whose street performance had been instantly washed out in the deluge. I risked much dashing to the tube station, but the skies were kind in the 3 minutes I chose to take my chances. My camera was safe, though the lens cap had jumped ship several hours earlier somewhere in a street near London Bridge.

I've been in London since last Wednesday - tomorrow will mark a week's time. In that time I've ventured to the 1940s during wartime, 2019 in the age of replicants and off-world promised utopias, the competitive ballroom dance studios of Australia, and the world of superheroes and villains you would find in printed paperback picture-books. I've had 3 different haircolors in the past week, and donned a variety of costumey bits and bobs. I've been arrested by the LAPD and told I was a Nexus 6 with 11 months to live, only later to be threatened with "retirement" by a crooked detective. I've worked undercover monitoring the Blackout movement, and played the Foreign Secretary for the United Kingdom. And all this while battling the worst cold I've had since the epidemic scale flu that took me out of all the ballgames on New Years Day. I lost my voice nearly completely in 1941, and still managed to make it back to the place where a love story that's been drifting in the abstract had begun 3 years ago. The wardrobe still leads to secret worlds I'd visited once before with a dashing guide at my side who I miss on the regular. It's a story I've told many times that's met with always the same starry-eyed whimsy by all but one who've heard it. On the way to drink my Love in Idleness the sky had erupted into blue-purple spectacle, soon followed by yet more summer rains. My favorite weather for a jaunt from the last to the first places my heart fell to my sleeve. How incredibly apropos. My world is nothing if not poetic. I wouldn't have it any other way.

And now, I sit on my hotel bed with fan oscillating the warm night air. Laptop placed in the proper position, I write of my journey thusfar in that same sing-song poetical way that the universe sings to me. I've been pondering the meetings that've appeared in this Transatlantic excursion - a sweet Chinese-American lass who joined me as a detective at the World Terminus, Los Angeles and spent the day touring much of the West of London, with a jaunt up to the top of the Eye. We live on opposite coasts of the United States, but have vowed to visit should we find ourselves simultaneously on similar shores. And a Scottish performance artist jack-of-all-trades I've known virtually for two years who suffered injured abs and 500 Harley Quinns for the opportunity to put a real-life face to our textual connection. I do hope to see him again, although I am well-acquainted with how generally intense I can be with my gaze and wonder if I won't have frightened him away. That and my coughing fit during our riverbank rendezvous painted a lovely image, to be sure. Ah well, the ones who stick around get all of it, even the crunchy coughs. But also the creative catalytic capers that are the crowning jewel of this curious creature that I am. Maybe. Que sera sera. I tip my hat to you, fine sir, even if we shall never meet again. Your stories are superb.

With only one day remaining in my adventure this time around, I have Dr. Frankenstein and the world of the somnabulist to visit. Lunch may be in order with an old friend I have much envy of for moving to this mecca of mine, and potentially more time with lads of the land of Scot, one of which became a father since last we've met face to face. But we shall see what happens. This seems to be my phrase of choice of late - We shall see. For now - relaxation and a cold Magners are the tune of the evening... And perhaps a shower to remove all signs of my Nexus 6 origins from my body. I thought this tattoo was temporary. So far, it's proven to have some staying power - just like this cold and quite unlike this Magners. The good things never seem to last as long as we'd like, do they? Maybe that's what makes them so good.

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

The Impact of Our Actions


Trigger Warning - I've never told this story before except verbally to a couple people. In the era of #metoo and all these talks about sexual assault, I feel like maybe it's time to share it in full. A lot of people are taken aback that I don't fully side with anyone who comes forward with a story of assault. And for me - it's not about choosing a side - it's about learning how to 1) let go of the trauma and 2) give the other side of it an opportunity to learn from their mistakes and 3) give us all a better perspective in which we make better choices and communicate more clearly about our wants and needs, because that is how things get better. That is how we all grow.

I was 16 years old, and it was a hot Midwestern summer at my grandparent's house in Illinois. It was the year that the rivers were flooding all over the country, and my uncle, who still lived with my grandparents, was down in St. Louis helping sandbag the flooded banks with the National Guard. Before he left he said I could use his computer if I wanted, and taught me a couple of things in this tween-era internet where the BBS was king. It was the first time I'd ever been "online" and I found a BBS that was local with something like Maelstrom in the title. I don't recall much of my time on it outside of talking to this one person who went by some name that had to do with the Terminator or something. I honestly can't recall his username - just his actual name, which was James.

James and I talked a lot - for hours on end. He was 23; a musician; wrote songs on his keyboard (he played piano). He'd been thinking about joining the Navy - Born and raised in the town I was born in. He was personable and kind, and we seemed to have a lot in common - though it doesn't take much when you're 16. We talked for probably two or three weeks, and then he mentioned that the carnival was in town. Maybe he could take me? What a sweet thing, right? A boy wants to take me to a carnival here in my birthplace in rural Illinois. I was young, and this was a whole new world to me - boys wanting to take me out. As a nerdy, dorky, skinny blonde, I was too surprised and naive to give the risks of meeting a stranger from online much thought.

I want to say off the bat that I recognize most would think this story is super traumatic for me, but to be honest it's not. I forgave him a long time ago, and I want anyone reading this to know that before I go into the story of our date. I don't believe that James is unkind or malicious or had any intent to hurt me. I think a lot of people hold onto trauma for reasons that are self-serving. What exactly they're serving I don't really know, but there's got to be something we get out of holding onto trauma. For me... often it has to do with keeping a link to something I don't want to lose. Like holding onto the sadness of a failed relationship allows you to keep some link to that person you lost. I don't feel hurt or pain when I think about James. What I do feel is sorry for him.

The night of our date he picked me up in some cliche sort of car - a Transam or a Firebird, I can't recall. I just remember thinking it was a typical 20-something 'cool' guy car. He was cute. Slightly taller than I was, slim build with messy brown hair and a sweet smile. We went to the carnival, rode some rides, played some games where he tried to do the sweet 'win me a prize' thing. He may have done so, I honestly don't remember. Then as we were on the ferris wheel he asked me what I wanted to do after the carnival. He could take me home, or maybe we could go for a sundae. He said he'd love to play some music for me that he'd written recently, but that would mean we had to go to his house. He had a piano. I recall having a moment's hesitation (probably intuition that wasn't a smart move), but he seemed sweet and had this radiant smile that made me feel beautiful - that smile was genuine. Even in retrospect I know it was.

He lived alone, I think. Nobody else was there, so I assume he did. I sat on the couch and he played for me on the keys. He wrote really lovely stuff, and I'd always had a soft spot for musicians who play the piano. I'm sure I was all aglow watching him. He finished the song, and I told him it was really beautiful, and he told me that it was me who was beautiful. We ended up kissing on the couch, and then he took me by the hand and we ended up kissing in his bedroom.

This is where my memory becomes just a blur of images and words - he was passionate, and things kept escalating. I kept telling him things like we should go get ice cream, and we needed to slow down, I'd never had sex, no, stop - typical things one says when they want someone to stop doing something, but they were meek and nervously said. I sat up a couple times, and we would talk for a while and then he'd be kissing me again. There was a point somewhere in all of it that I stopped responding. I know what caused it - I have a very clear memory of a very scary thought: I had no idea where I was. Nobody else had any idea where I was. We were alone in this stranger's house. If I struggled, if I tried to leave, bad things could happen to me. Nobody would ever find me if things went that way. I didn't really know this guy or what he was capable of. So I just stopped moving or responding. I let him do whatever he wanted, the entire time he kept whispering that I was just scared and he would be gentle. And for the most part he was, as I just laid there waiting for it to be done paralyzed by fear and also feeling like somehow it was my fault for agreeing to go to his house with him. For his part he was safe and gentle like he said he would be, but he didn't seem to notice at all that I was playing dead the whole time, pretty much. Which to me was baffling, and still is now in retrospect.

After he was done, I put my clothes back on in a daze. I still had some of them partially on already. He continued to mew over how beautiful I was, and asked what I'd like to do. I robotically said I'd like to go get a sundae still, so we went to a Dairy Queen and after that he drove me back to my grandparents' house. He said he hoped he'd get to see me again before I went home in a week and kissed me goodnight which I dutifully kissed back. I felt dead inside. My will had been broken. I went up to my uncle's room and sat on the bed and cried for hours. What would I tell anyone? How could I tell anyone anything? I felt really stupid and also grateful that nothing worse had happened. That I was safe back in familiar spaces, and I never would have to see him again. I didn't go back onto the BBS after that ever again.

He called a couple times and I dodged having to talk to him. I went back to California and he sent me letters - romantic prose about how beautiful I was with drawings and words about how I inspired him to write more music. He'd gotten my home address from my grandmother, who had no idea that I was mortified talking to him. I acted pleasant every time his name came up to hide how ashamed I was. He sent me song lyrics he wrote about me. He talked about how he wanted to marry me. How he'd never felt so connected to another person the way he had from talking to me all those weeks and then meeting me and having me be so lovely. He was sad we didn't get to see one another again before I left. He joined the Navy, and was stationed in Texas or something, but maybe he could get transferred to somewhere in northern California. I never replied. The letters became less frequent. He didn't understand why I never wrote him back. And then one day, I did.

About a year after our date, I sat down and wrote him a letter detailing my experience of that night with him. Of how afraid I was, and how ashamed that I felt I'd somehow made him believe that I'd gone back to his house to have sex with him. That I'd honestly only wanted to hear him play piano, and that I gave up at some point because it was clear he'd stopped listening to me. That I was a naive 16 year old girl, and he was so caught up in his 'feelings' for me that he failed to consider how any of it was for me - I was in a foreign place that to this day I still have no idea of the location of in the town of my birthplace. Nobody knew where I was. I had no way to contact anyone, and if I'd opted to run away from his house, I would've had no idea how to get home. There were no mobile phones at that time. I said I didn't think he was cruel. His letters had shown me that really, at the heart of it all, he was just completely oblivious. He'd let his desire blind him to the reality of the situation. And I felt pity for him, even in that letter, because I knew that what I was saying was going to be shocking. I wished him a good life, and meant it when I said I was sorry for giving him this burden.

He wrote me one final letter after that. It was the shortest letter he ever wrote me, and it basically just said sorry would never be enough but it was all he could offer me, and how he hoped that I could truly forgive him for being so blind. He said he'd had no idea all that time. And I believe him.

And that's my story of how I lost my virginity. What could have been romantic and sweet ended up being that for one person only because their idea of what was happening was so skewed by their feelings that they didn't notice what was happening with me. To be fair, he didn't know me, so how could he possibly know how I would respond to show I was serious when I said no? We live in a culture, and have for a long time where men believe that women are meek because they are nervous, and they just need someone to guide them through and they'll be happy and grateful on the other side. This goes beyond men and women and is really just Type A and Type B people, dominant and submissive, aggressive and passive. The people who are the more leader-types tend to believe they are doing the right thing and the other party is just scared and wants guidance. And the other type don't know how to say no and be heard. Poor James honestly thought I was just nervous because it was my first time, and as soon as he made that choice in his mind, everything that happened just pointed to how true that perspective was. This is what happens with people in ALL situations, not just sex. We make a judgment call about why something is, and everything that happens seems to justify that perspective because we so want to be right about what we are seeing and experiencing - we all want to trust our awareness is accurate.

I don't think crucifying people who fuck up in their awareness is the blanket cure to fix this problem - especially around sex. There are real predators out there who behave and make choices out of disregard for another person's feelings, but there are also people out there who have simply misjudged a situation as lining up with their desires, and failing to notice all the signs to the contrary based on the learning they have of how people are in given circumstances. The mind is a powerful thing, and often we mistake warning signs as messages telling us to persevere. The challenge is how do we learn to better tell the difference, and I think it lies in communication, and really - in vulnerability. I keep thinking about this story with Aziz Ansari, and to me it seems like he fell victim to his own desires and convinced himself that Grace was just nervous about being with him but really wanted it - that's why she went back to his apartment, right? For Grace - she had her own motivations for why she was there that haven't actually become clear to me from her accounts, but regardless of that, both of their perspectives are valid. The failure is in their communication with one another and the actions they took to back that communication up. Did he fail to listen to her saying she wanted to take things slow? Definitely yes. But her going along with things he was doing potentially gave him a false sense of the situation. Just like I did with James. He had a different world view than I could possibly have had at 16 with his being 23 - just like this girl and this celebrity. Their perception of motivations are different. A girl going back to James' house with him had a different meaning than it did for me as a 16 year old virgin. All the signs he saw said I was just nervous. What I was nervous about... yeah, not what he thought.

So how do we work together, even with those we feel have wronged us, so we all can grow? Because that's the only way to solve this sort of problem, in my opinion. Vindictive and reactively-harmful behavior just compounds the issue, and yet we need to talk about these things. We need to find forgiveness and honest communication with those who are oblivious to the impact their actions have on people - not just for them, but so we can move forward without this lingering trauma over our heads like some cartoonish raincloud. People tell me I'm strong for being able to forgive James. For me it's not about strength. It's about not letting it have power over me and understanding that there are and will be moments where I'm also blinded by my desire for something. Sure it may not be based around sex, but it's not that much different regardless of what it is if I'm not noticing the impact of my actions. It's an easy trap to fall into, and recognition of that - that we are all capable of neglecting the feelings of those around us - is what may very well save us all from repeating the same lame mistakes over and over forever and damaging people we do or potentially could love - including ourselves.

Wednesday, December 13, 2017

Morbid Thoughts on Morning Commute


I wish sometimes that I could port my thoughts directly into text - dreams of some sci-fi future from the 80's that never came to pass, or at least hasn't yet. I compose best in my head. By the time that I go to write or type it all out, it comes out not nearly as creatively as my thoughts had been. This is another attempt to extract meanderings in my mind that I had on my way into work at the theatre today.

Each time one bus leaves, the sidewalk is teeming with little old Asian people. Bus fills, sidewalk clears, bus departs, sidewalk refills... rinse repeat. I find myself singing a Beatles song in my mind "all the lonely people, where do they all come from?" as I board the next bus pulling up, gym bag over my shoulder with a newly purchased Revlon hair dryer that was on sale for $11.99. I hope it'll prevent my post-pool and shower wet hair from making me sick again. The air in San Francisco is too chill in December to be walking around with wet hair.

And then I remind myself again that it's December. Where did this year go? Why do I care so little for holidays that aren't about dressing up as someone you're not? My love of Halloween is probably because I'm so unapologetically me the rest of the year. But my feeling of meh about Christmas and such could be a number of things really... family hasn't ever been a huge thing in my world outside of my grandparents, now deceased, and my Mom. My half brother and I were never really close save a short stint in our early 20's when I was partying like it was 1999... because it was. He doesn't call, but neither do I, and it doesn't seem that big a deal for the most part.

But I digress... I'm back in my mind on the bus. As is a normal thought lately, I'm surprised to find that I am probably the youngest person aboard. And the only one with blue hair wearing legwarmers for sure. The bus pulls up at a stop and a dozen or so elderly shuffle out like geriatric penguins. I've been standing rather than risk the evil eye of someone a generation or two ahead of me when the next wave boards. I honestly avoided taking the 30 or the 45, mostly due to my lack of empathy for people who block the sidewalk, and Stockton being a nightmare of cheap produce markets and all sorts of giant jars of unidentifiable objects labeled in a cryptic language I don't understand. I'm guessing it's Mandarin or Cantonese. I've never been very clear on how to tell the difference between many of the languages of Asia save Thailand, but that's mainly because I lived there for a year. I still couldn't tell you what any of the little symbols sound like by sight.

I take a seat finally, three stops before mine. The little old man next to me gives me the once over in a way that makes me think of zombies, stirring a morbid thought to the surface. It's one I've thought many times in my life, but more and more the older I get. Man, I don't want to be like that.

I've said before I've never had a fear of death. Death is fine - nobody knows what happens afterward. There's a lot of conjecture and some maybe believable experiences that are 100% based on trusting the story you're being told by someone who could very well be full of shit. What I fear is frailty, helplessness and memory loss - the trifecta of what seem like inevitable parts of growing old.

How broken in spirit people seem to be at that age - people my age even, who am I kidding? My mind drifts into a philosophical space that ties back into why I have a distrust of community and by proxy holidays having to do with community. Our world is built on community agreement about the stories we hear and learn and understand. From the start children are lied to about a myriad of subjects - Santa Claus is a good one that people think has no real impact on kids' psyches. According to Steinbeck making something from your life that's outside the wheelhouse you're born into is an impossible dream. We learn that people lie "for our own good." To protect us. And in a way, it tells us nobody is honest. It makes me wonder if that's what breaks people's spirits - that they stop believing; stop trusting. We're spoon fed this idea that if we conform to whatever standard we find ourselves in, then we're doing good in the world - a world that continues to have starvation & disease & war. But don't worry, you're doing the right thing just following the footsteps of everyone generations before ours - they wouldn't lie to you, right? And hey, if you're more financially successful that just goes to show you've improved upon the previous generation. My heart's just never been in it, because I always come back to this other morbid thought - let's call it #2, because it's poopy.

None of it matters.

You hear people say it all the time - that the journey is what matters, not the destination. Why does the journey even matter though? Some people have awful journeys that are entirely out of their hands like being born in a place being bombed by some other more powerful country. Or a place that cuts off parts of your body because it's a purification ritual. Or a place where you're so poor that your single mom, let's say, works all the time and you basically are on your own to figure things out, with your only thought being that you don't want to struggle like that when you're an adult, but the only way you see to get out of that is to also work all the time at a job you hate because at least you won't be poor, but then you find you just can't do it because you feel it's completely meaningless to continue to drudge through and try to follow a path that doesn't feel right for you.

Yeah that last part may have been a little personal. But I know I'm not alone in feeling completely cheated by how this world is and a bit helpless to change it - one part of the 'old' trifecta, remember? People tell me I've got a sadness behind my eyes... and that helplessness is what it is. We live in a world where anything is possible. And inherently we know that, but at the same time we don't really believe it. We find that it's just too overwhelming - like being born in a red state as a blue voter. You feel like whatever you do doesn't really matter, because the tide is against you. The only option really is to leave, because convincing a million people that their view isn't going to make things better is ridiculous - or in my case, I'd be purple in a red or blue state trying to explain that the whole game is rigged. Nobody wants to hear that.

That's how life often feels to me. People run around the world acting like they know what's best for everyone else while secretly they're doing all the things they tell people not to do. How can one be that way and not understand that means everyone else is probably doing the exact same thing? I feel really alone in that thought. It's why when people ask why honesty is so important to me, I tell them "if I am not honest how can I ever believe anyone else is?" So it goes for everything. But the truth is - I think everyone is a liar and a hypocrite, but I get that it's not their fault they have been that way - it's only their fault if they recognize it and continue to lie. Not that I think there is any saving anyone with that rhetoric. I mean, look at Jesus Christ. Of course he let them crucify him - he saw the pointlessness of it all, and knew this was the best he could offer - not taking part in it. Then of course there are stories about him coming back to life and all, and maybe that stuff happened, but even if he rose from the dead and told everyone "See! It's all a lie!" the impact was and still is: people kill in his name, almost indiscriminately sometimes.

That's where my mind ended up on the bus wishing I could port my thoughts into text surrounded by the aged populace of San Francisco who I can't help but wonder if they ever even think about these things. That in the end, even if you are the greatest being ever to walk to Earth - even if you got everyone to understand how they've had blinders on and can choose something else - you'd be spoken of anecdotally when you're gone at best, and murdered for at worst.

I think that's why spirits get broken. The fight is pointless. Yet I continue to fight it for some insane reason. I continue to be real and honest and give my best at all things. But I wonder if that's out of my fear of being broken - of turning into an old cataract-eyed waddling penguin of a human riding a bus back and forth to who knows where wishing I'd done things differently until the day they find my body and tell stories about what a crazy lady I was. I don't want to be regretfully elderly. And the most morbid thought of all - in all its selfishness is: I hope either I die or the world ends before I become that. Wish for that on your birthday candle. I just wish the world would be different for us all.

And that's a typical morning commute in the mind of me. You're welcome.

Thursday, April 6, 2017

A Key Fitting Into a Lock


For half a moment I considered ridding myself of this stupid obsession I have with love... or with writing about love... or anything to do with that silly romantic notion that has been a driver of every creative thing or random adventure this life has held for me. Everything. When asked what drives me the answer is always love. Always. My understanding of what that looks like is tumultuous and ever-mutating, shifting, growing, accepting. For a moment I thought maybe I needed to shut the fuck up about the topic completely... But then I remembered something someone once said to me - that no matter what happens in my life... "Stay being you. Stay being just you... You are something special."

And then I remembered that I trust this universe to bring forth exactly what I need when I need it most. It always has - for me at an incredibly unusual rate - which I've been told is because serendipity and synchronicity are something I am seeking. Works for me! Sure I've worked hard to have things I want, and I've created possibility & opportunity with that drive. But in this world, I feel it's a balance - you get what you give... like the New Radicals song from the 90's said. So I try to give communication, patience, acceptance, laughter, adventure, and love. Those are the things I want most in life.

All that being said, it's easy to get caught up in the emotions of others and lose sight of yourself and what matters to you. It's also easy to get caught up in the insecurities of others and the misguided perceptions of others and allow those things to tarnish the core of who you are. But tarnish is all they can really do, because the core of who we are is unbreakable. At least that's what I believe. It takes some time to polish that tarnish off sometimes (or maybe a pickax or a blowtorch), but it's always worth it.

I've noticed that on first thinking about things I'm dealing with, I blame the perceiver for their incorrect understanding. Then I tend to blame whatever circumstances may be at play between us. And then I realize that it really comes down to a failure in my own communication, and often in my myopic view not recognizing the impact of my actions or words. It leads me to a place of introspection about how to better land in the world around me in a way that I intend. I talk about "Intention versus Impact" a lot in conversation, wherein I say that the impact may not feel like it's more important, but it is when it comes to how to deal with a problem - or at least it should take priority. Intention can't be understood if someone is so deep in the impact of it they can't hear what you're saying. Whatever happens, every circumstance is an opportunity for growth, and I try to recognize that. To continue on the path of greater comprehension and... kind of an odd sort of premonition I suppose of the future, I have to be more conscious of the impact I make. I have to have a greater understanding of people who are not like I am, because those folks seem to be the ones I inadvertently hit the hardest. I'm not like most people. I'm willing to talk about pretty much everything with pretty much anyone. I rarely feel things like jealousy or regret - I am the eternal optimist, and every struggle - every tear shed - is part of the journey toward being the person I want to be. One with both an incredible passion and an equal measure of humility. It's a very delicate balance between the two.

And of course I digress... Like I do. I've got no idea if anyone even reads things I write, not that it matters, really... Though if you want to understand me, it's a good place to start. I don't even know if it makes any sense, or if my rambling poetic nature causes massive whiplash from eyerolling. Don't worry, it's a daily occurrence at myself as well. I think if I had a day where I didn't consider myself to be possibly the most ridiculous individual I know, I would think something was very wrong with the world.

So, TLDR - I fuck up! It's true. But I'm working on things, and always failing better. Every step feels like a new lock falling away... a new door opening to some new level of understanding. It's funny to me that people think I never make mistakes. That I'm just naturally good at things. I hear it a lot. I can safely say this month: Nope! I make mistakes with gusto. While I can keep a secret like the best of them, generally I tend to put it all on the table. And as I've learned... when it comes to anything to do with my heart, I go blind. It's a lock I haven't quite found the key for yet. But I think I may have it around here somewhere.

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Have you? (a stream of thought blog about soulmates)


Have you ever met someone who no matter time or space the connection you have is unchanged - untouched by the wars that ravage around us all? Like you had made a special request to the fantastic band that creates the soundtrack to the universe and they released this song, and it was completely and utterly yours? Someone you perhaps spend a lot of time telling yourself you're ok they aren't in your world more closely, but honestly you hate it more than words can say that they are so far away. Someone who when you see them after a period of perhaps two years you are overwhelmed with gratitude that they still live and breathe, and suddenly feel as though you've been holding your breath for a very long time and the air tastes so incredibly sweet. And you understand their communicative quietude as probably wisdom when they look at you and say yes... yes, they believe in meant to be, but it's not been worked out just yet. And you forgive them for "life getting in the way all the time" because you know it does for you too. Someone who when the two of you find yourselves within reach you cannot refrain from having some part of your bodies in contact at all times - a finger, a knee, a head on a shoulder - it doesn't matter as long as there is contact - as long as you both can sense the realness of the other - and you know that feeling is mutually why your fingers are entwined. And it's never contrived. And it's impossible to focus on anything but that touch and those eyes and that ridiculous Scottish-lilted laugh that cuts through the hidden Scottish pub where you decided Scotch for breakfast was better than nothing because your appetite had vanished the moment you saw one another.... And you chuckle to yourself, because Scotland. And you want more than anything just one moment longer of their fingers pressed into the back of your neck, and their giggling at the fact that you have tears welling up in your eyes. You laugh together at how completely idiotic it is that it's been so long apart, when it feels as though you'd said goodbye yesterday even tho so much happened in those two years. And you promise to both be better about being in touch even tho you know the only way that will happen is if one of you moves... and you know that means you, because it's who you are. And you let that seed start to germinate a little more in your mind. And you know the communication will be as it ever is, because you both live far too much in the here and now to worry too long for anything outside of it.... until you do. "You feel like home to me..." you say. And he says yes, he knows. You can't not tell him the truth always - you told him you loved him the last time you said farewell, which was the second time you'd been in one another's presence. It's always been so. And yes... You feel at home here... in this city... with a silence of the jigsaw puzzle falling into place in a way you can't describe with words... but with gazes and touch and laughter and... can't I just breathe for a little longer here? What does it take to have this not be yet another pause in a story so incredibly... ours. We pinky swear we'll see one another before another two years has passed. Might be in SF, might be NYC, might again be London. But it's a promise I plan to keep. I told my mother once I didn't believe in soulmates... I was lying. I just, didn't believe I'd ever find mine, or perhaps I'd be too dumb to recognize it when I did. I was wrong. Have you met someone like this? I have... once. Two years ago. When I asked the universe for a song I'd recognize. And there he was... the most beautiful song I'd ever heard. And OMG I am the sappiest person on Earth, I swear. He is so significant in my heart... on a level that is mind-blowing to me every time I think of it. Unconditional. Timeless. "There ain't nothing that we need 'cept one thing... and it ain't hope, though that can help I suppose. Stamina. Stamina. Stamina. Stamina...."

Monday, December 19, 2016

"We never change, do we?"

I feel like this is a question I've fought for a long time. The first memory I have of really struggling against what is seen as a fairly normal belief was when we read Of Mice and Men when I was in middle school. It was the first time that I recall being upset by a concept I read in a fictional story, and that was that we can never escape that which we are born into. I feel like I have to re-read it, because it's been nearly 30 years, and the only part of it that I really recall is that dreams are great, but you are stuck with what you have been dealt. I'm sure someone more versed on the story would have further insights into this, but... I'm just train-of-thoughting at the moment, and this concept has been on my mind of late.


Mostly it's been on my mind with regard to the idea of if people can truly change. If once someone shows their 'flaws,' if believing that they can overcome those things and perhaps grow beyond the need to lapse into them again is a foolish belief. Once a tiger shows you they are a tiger, why would you expect them to behave like a fish? It's where my mind is currently given recent circumstances around the concept of deceit and selfishness. When someone has shown themselves to be a liar, can they ever truly be trusted not to lie again? Certainly circumstances exist that create the seeming need for someone to think that is their best option... but, who's to say that circumstance won't appear in some other way, and thus this behavior appear once again, perhaps even worse than before? Once someone has lied, obviously the expectation is that they will lie again. And even when they say "I'll never lie again" - if they are a liar, then that is also a lie, or least... one must assume it is. But I still want to have faith in the potential in people for good things, and I can't help but feel that is incredibly both brave and stupid at the same time.


I was talking today with a friend about expectation, and the attachment to what we expect in a person versus being open to the possibility that is within them. There is a struggle wherein we expect certain behaviors from people and when we don't get them, we are disappointed/hurt/upset/angry, and how the issue there lies within the expectation we create of that person. Now, that's all well and good, but also I think it's important to have boundaries for oneself in regard to health/honesty/respect/etc. If I learn definitively that someone is a rapist, putting myself in a position where I say "Well, it's possible they won't rape me" and hanging out one-on-one with them seems just a bit naive.


So the thing I come back to is... As a person who wants to believe in the best in people, and also wants to believe that people can change if they want it enough and really work hard not to revert to past destructive behavior... How do I continue to have a person in my life who I have lost faith in without constantly fearing that I'm being... tricked? Conned? Fooled? Whatever. How do I continue to support the possibility of change without ending up in a dangerous situation for my personal well-being? I know I can never know if what I am getting is honest... but as a person who holds honesty in the highest regard, I am struggling with how to move forward in a positive way for anyone who has been impacted by recent events. I don't write people off... ever. I believe in redemption, but I don't know what that looks like currently. I don't think anyone is a lost cause. I want to believe we can overcome the circumstances we have been placed into, and be our best selves and achieve our dreams if we truly choose to. How do I stay safe while accepting and supporting with my own choices my belief that everyone is worth fighting for? It's a weird space to be in right now.