Mourning Well-Meaning Males

 

In June you walk across divine ground. You tunnel your way to the altar that will carry you to an ending, a long-awaited breath of self-acceptance. As your voice dances around the room, tickling familiar hearts on this, the evening of its closing performance, your eyes collapse on an eager surrogate family. While the woman who birthed you sits between sisters—a trio of matriarchs—a monsoon of fathers floods the pews of this sanctuary turned auditorium. For more than a decade you traveled, parched, in search of what you once had within arm’s reach. Confessions, apologies, promises to do better, each proving only to be its own form of mirage. But here in this sea are those who uplift and encourage, bringing life to a species born to bloom. As words take their bows, the spotlight widens, along with your gaze, acknowledging the fervor in balconies above you. The moonish faces of urban Romeos seduce you with their blushing, joining hands in a paired procession to express a love beyond themselves, passing both over and through you. Later in the night, the same hands will fashion you into a castle, beautiful and befitting a king. Admiring the dawn from the base of the Brooklyn bridge, you will be thankful to have one more sunrise before your journey into solitude. With your first admirer beside you, you think of who he will make art with in the days following your departure. Who will make of him a castle? 

May is a sip of adulthood, or rather, a glass of it. Your independence is marked not only by your recent induction to the Independence party, but also by your new home on the road. You’ve busied yourself these last three months with the task of relinquishing control over the steering wheel. Your turns are smoother when you allow it to re-center itself without the overbearing force of human hands. You should have been perched in the little red stick-shift that is now rotting in the driveway, but single parents paid the country’s deficits in taxes this year, so Alicia remains in her ailing condition, lacking the TLC only a mechanic can provide, and you’ve reluctantly come to embrace the joys of automatic living. 


April brings nostalgia for cocoa butter and knucklehead sandwiches. Now you’re eighteen, and little girls on the subway with their daddies tear you up, even during your one week of sanity out of the month. Your father’s one reliable action comes in the form of an annual call, mid-afternoon on April 22nd, but you don’t receive it because you’ve had a new number since Christmastime. An iMessage that you do receive follows, and you throw him a bone for the first time since Thanksgiving. It is thin and crumbles like a wafer cookie, but you refuse to speak the words that have been collecting dust in the pink journal on your bookshelf for the last six months and for years before their conception and birth, in the folds of your cerebrum. You attend a dinner thrown in your honor at a friend’s apartment on Remsen Street. You sit at the head of the table as you did two years previous in a house in Bedstuy. Many of the same faces occupy the seats that surround you, but now they are accompanied by those you wished had been there at that sweet Saturday soiree. Those whose subtly sylvan and distinctly masculine affects throw the feminine essence of the room into a flirtatious game of tag. All at once the occasion seems the epitome of and an homage to childhood. Maybe it’s not so scary growing old. 


In March you grieve the loss of a favored admirer. History repeats itself, but in this iteration he reincarnates in Europe not South America, and it is with a goodbye even more incomplete because there isn’t one at all. You express your intense emotional reactions to the melancholia of life to the holistic acupuncturist. He is described by the friend who referred you as a “douche.” Nevertheless he listens to your cries for help as though they are the scores of Satie’s Gymnopedies and Gnossiennes, and you wonder why it’s always men who see your potential. Is it because women are catty and envious of one another, or because men are the only ones given the power to validate? He tells you to stop taking your birth control pill, and you don’t protest because you aren’t taking it for that reason. He prescribes some supplements and asks you to return in three months. You prepare to spend the final weeks of high school how you’ve spent most of the last four years, in a hormonal frenzy, panting in an effort to keep up with your wavering emotions, exploding at your inability to control your appetite, acne, and faltering self-image, and falling in “love” with every peer who lends you their eyes for more than three seconds. On Saturday mornings you walk to clear space in your mind for the projects on a freshly drawn to-do list. Your neighbor offers to take over your driving instruction, and your mother says it would be good to learn from a man’s perspective. 



By February you’ve come to conclusions about why you go cold on people. You became collateral damage in your best friend’s transition into adolescence, just as you did in your father’s transition into his sister’s apartment, and his ongoing depressive episode that followed. Suddenly you’re 130 pounds and praying it’s just muscle. You put your plate in the sink after your first serving, a gentle way of saying “no seconds.” You remind yourself why you’re staying in New York and not carpetbagging your way to LA after graduation: Hollywood is for the pretty faced and faint of heart, Broadway, like the city by which it is encompassed, is for the children of grit and true passion. Yet, you know not-so-deep-down that it is a choice you make out of necessity, not desire. You’re not pretty enough for Hollywood—at least not at this moment in time—but to evade its becoming a pipe dream, you remind yourself of a moment when you were. How ungrateful, you think, scanning your kindergarten headshot. You shutter, knocking up against memories of the involuntary humility that comes with living in a white suburb. You become dependent on the hope of a second chance and have dreams about driving and your teeth falling out. In therapy you admit to being crushed by the weight of a successful career, the partner and family of your dreams being the hand that doubles newtons each day. 


January feels like a forever. GAD and SAD and any other pronunciation of hell, have every doctor showing you the way to psychiatry. But you’re timid around things concocted in a laboratory, so you give SSRI’s the finger and start smoking weed because it, at least, comes out of the ground. You can’t distinguish between the pleasure originating in consumption and that borne of the social indication to which it has introduced you, surrounded by new different faces that quietly ring with the hope of reconciliation. It is not a cure, only a rose scented fog that transforms the stench of prohibition into a perfume named possibility. You shed tears over a love you missed out on, and yet everyday torture yourself by dancing in the rubble of your self-sacrificed shrine when he invites you to fill your lungs or your heart with substances so affectionate, but that are perpetually fleeting, substances that leave you islands away from him or anyone. You shut yourself in your room for days at a time, grieving over the tragedies of your past. Your mother, reading Bell Hooks’ All About Love, tells you that abuse and love cannot coexist. Maybe daddy doesn’t love you. You’re temporarily freed by the idea. She speaks of your grandfather who did everything for your family of females, playing chauffeur and fairy godfather through the changing currents of generations. But when lost to the unintelligible desert of Alzheimer’s none of his granddaughters appeared to guide him. Girls can be selfish too. You realize you like dogs more than cats because you like men more than women, but the stray cats that hang around your house have outlasted the dogs you once called family.


You wonder where December is as you board an ambulance in the darkness between dusk and dawn with nothing to keep you warm but the purple North Face you thought would make you cool in the third grade. The liquid from the IV makes your veins jump like children running through the sprinklers in summertime. You haven’t fainted in years, and you’re curious as to why no one stopped it from happening this time. Now it is clear that the people meant to protect you are only concerned with keeping you in good enough condition to get what they want, so you sign away your father’s seat in your college process. You cry about it outside your advisor’s office, equidistant from the boy you’ve fallen in love with again who sits with the current keeper of his heart. Reeking of desperation, you vie for the only attention that has ever made you feel worthy. Yet when he approaches, you can only laugh at his feigned interest, his legs hesitantly shadowing yours as muscle memory propels you back to your nest, high in a tree he is not built to climb. He’s a good actor, but you too, have studied the method.

November is kissing, kissing all the time. You’re kissed more times in this month than in your entire 17.5 years on the planet, but pushing the boundaries between fantasy and reality is not a game for amateurs like yourself. Though hailed as admirable, retaining the facade is only a method of defense. True strength is allowing the bowling balls that tumble from the collapsing racks inside you to roll straight out of your mouth and knock you and your fellow lip-lockers to the cold, hard ground. To acknowledge the past, could give voice to the present, and save you all from the labyrinth of ‘what if’s.’ But it is in your nature to disguise and deceive, and each night as the audience rises to commemorate your performance, only your trio of co-stars knows the true depth of your performance. 


A Florida number calls on Thanksgiving. You have a hunch of its owner’s identity, but send it to voicemail to continue exploring your analytical essay on Ellison’s Invisible Man. Upon checking your voicemail, the hunch is validated: your father has called to inform you of his having a new number. You wonder how long he has had it, and who, had you tried to reach out, would have picked up his old line—if anyone at all. You call him back but only get his voicemail.


October turns you into things—a party planner, a mother, an adulteress—and out of things. Any sense of self you believed yourself to possess evaporates into the ether, and you forget to be a griever when a heart-attack lands your godfather in a casket. Friendships unravel and threads find their way to the hats and scarves and sweaters they are meant to make up, and you are dragged from rehearsal each day begging to be the Baker’s Wife for another hour, another day, another month. When you put your hand to your abdomen it is flat lifeless flesh that rumbles only with anxious indigestion, and a spouse’s warm embrace replaced by the crunchy plastic joints of a seat on the railroad. 

In September you stop trying to be palatable. You’re quite terrible at it, and it makes you hate yourself more. You make the mistake of kissing your date before you go out with him. A mistake hard to place as such because it’s one everybody is making. Over lunch you speak from a hidden stash of charisma that can illuminate any moment, but casts a blinding light on this figure, leaving your truths in the shadows. It’s not until he halts the short-lived fling that your authentic emotion comes into focus, hardly distinguishable from the monotonous, gray concrete of the sidewalk. You cry, but only as a formality, and senior year has barely made an entrance when you prepare to dedicate the next two and a half months of your life to acting in a play.

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Sight's Deception