Tuesday, October 8, 2013

The Choice



You’re luckier than most.
Why’s that?
Because I’m giving you a choice.
It isn’t much of a choice.
If I made it one way then you wouldn’t know the difference.
So why can’t you?
Why can’t I what?
Make it one way.
Because then you wouldn’t learn.
What am I supposed to learn?
It depends on your decision.
Can I choose not to make a choice?
What do you mean?
Can you choose for me?
No.
Why not?
It wouldn’t work.
I don’t understand.
It’s simple; either A or B.
Is there a right choice?
No.
Is there a wrong choice?
No.
So why do I need to choose?
The choice is a step. The only way to move forward.
What if I choose not to?
Then you don’t move forward.
Can I move backward?
No.
Can I just stay here?
No.
So then what happens?
I’d rather not say.
Can you tell me what’s at the end?
I can’t.
Can’t or won’t?
Can’t. Just because I know your beginning, doesn’t mean I know your end.
Why?
Because it’s your choice.
Do you know which I will choose?
Yes.
Can you tell me?
No.
Why not?
Because then it won’t be your choice.
You said before I was lucky.
You are.
Because I have a choice.
That’s right.
And others don’t get that choice.
Yes.
Why don’t they?
They aren’t ready.
And I am?
Yes.
I don’t feel ready.
No one ever does.
Is that supposed to comfort me?
Does it?
I’m not sure.
You need to choose now.
Can you tell me the next step at least?
What do you mean?
After I’ve made the choice.
Yes.
And neither choice is wrong?
Correct.
Why is this important then?
That’s the next step.
What do you mean?
The next step is finding out why your choice is important.
Oh.
Have you made your choice?
Yes.
Are you ready?
Yes.

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Rules

It seems as if everyone else has a book
Where they are neatly told
How and when and why and where
And what
I missed the day when that book was given out
I wish I could say that I didn't 
Really care
That if I had that book
I'd rip and tear
Each page into pieces
And let them fly away 
But I would have read it first
So I could at least know what rules I was breaking
Every day it feels as if I am in a game
That everyone else has been playing 
For years and years
And while I've been playing the same game
The rules are always changing and I am eternally
It
And whenever I try to pass the torch
It's changed and the torch is mine
No one else has to freeze or jump or dance
Or fly through hoops
Ringed with fire
And when I've screamed out that it wasn't 
Fair, the worst thing of all
Is when they say to me
But you've known the rules all along
I guess that's it
And that's the way it will
Forever be.

Monday, June 17, 2013

The Harvest



This is a story based on The Lottery by Shirley Jackson. It was written for a school assignment.  
On that morning I found myself at my kitchen sink, fighting the urge to vomit. The normally inviting suds scalded and chafed at my raw hands, but I couldn’t avoid pushing my arms into the sink. Anything would have been better on that bright, sunny morning. I think I would rather have drowned. I knew that on this day, if it wasn’t me, it would be someone who I dearly loved, a member of my own immediate family.
Each year, the same feelings warred inside of me, making my belly a mess. I always wanted to vomit, to be laid up in my bed, unable to walk. I knew though, that if it was me, it wouldn’t stop them from coming. I remember too many times pulling a startled face from its bed and dragging it to the official zone. If the body could not move on its own, we moved it. The sacrifice had to be made.
I hated going, but all the same, I felt compelled to go. Even if my presence wouldn’t be missed, I still wanted to be there. I wanted to feel the risk of chance, to escape with my life.
I don’t know if anyone else is truly sure why we still do this every year. I know that some people think they know, and others don’t care to know. I’m afraid to know the answer, to admit that my dark side is not only mine, but is everyone else’s surrounding me as well.
I know that this year will be no different than last year. Whoever it is will cry and scream that somehow the game was rigged, that it shouldn’t be him or her but it should be someone else, someone deserving. And all the rest will turn on that person, and bring him down with a well placed stone. The broken and bloody body will likely be collected and cleaned up, and the family will mourn while the rest of the townspeople drunkenly celebrate their victory in staying alive through nothing more than chance.
I remember once, when the chosen one was a small child, too young to really understand all the events that had just transpired. The black dot held in his chubby waving hand and his ruddy, freckled grin was almost too much to bear. I wish that I could say that I hesitated, but my stone was among the first to strike his cherubic face. I regret that he was not old enough to understand his sacrifice and his importance in the grand scheme of life, but who really understands anyway? I doubt that even our resident grump, Old Man Warner, understands the truth behind the Lottery more than the rest of us.
I was too lost in my own thoughts. Seeing that it was nearly time for the event, I took my hands out of the still full sink and began my trek to the village square. I did not want to be the first person there, but neither did I want to be the last. There was some awful piece of luck whenever someone happened to be last.
We all had our superstitions which grew over the years. A few mothers I knew believed that if they made their children anything except peanut butter and onion sandwiches on the last day of school then someone in their family would be gone by the last of June.
I didn’t think I was that crazy, but still, I had my moments, much like everyone else now waiting for the pageant to begin. We all wished that it would be over soon, but there was still one person conspicuously absent.
You always had the women who laughed too loudly, or the men who would rip the papers out of the official’s hand. It was easy to spot a young girl who twisted the folds of her dress so tightly that she had tangled her fist in it. One of these people, too nervous to completely hide their feelings, was Tessie. She was always nonchalant and boisterous; treating everything like it was a game. But she was also always the most fervent and hateful towards whoever was chosen. It was the same with any of the truly nervous people. They were the most fierce and fervent in continuing the tradition.
I don’t really know how I would act if I was picked, and I hope I’m old and grey before I am made to wear that mantle. I hope I have no idea what’s going on like that beautiful baby boy whose mother wept and sobbed and begged to be taken instead. The officials don’t let people volunteer; because the whole point is that no one can control the lottery for their own selfish needs. Some other, far off villages may let people volunteer, but our village is so small, we all know each other anyway, and hate to drag such a thing out. It’s better to just have done with it.
I saw Tessie run up, and she spoke to me, but I couldn’t remember the words because I saw the black dot that was over her brow. I knew that she was nervous, and that she had a reason to be. I remember the ferocious, vicious hate in her eyes when it was her own mother who had drawn that black dot. I knew other people remembered that scathing look as well, and would not forget it once her own turn came.
I barely paid attention as my own husband came and slipped a stone into my dress pocket. It was his good luck charm against the lottery. He had that tradition since before we were married, and it would probably continue until he or I were chosen. It was only a matter of time.
But this time, it was Tessie. I heard her shrill accusations and her needling tone, and I remembered her disgust when others had begged. Feeling the smooth stone in my pocket, I began to run with all the others, and let forth a ululating shriek of my own. As my voice flew, so did my stone, and we watched the hailstorm descend upon her as if from Heaven itself. The final broken thud of her body was a delicious sound. The woman who was once my friend was now something more, and I was alive. I was healthy, and strong, and not murdered by my friends and family.
I grabbed my husband’s hand, and I looked at him with my frank, shining face. Tonight, much like all of our neighbors, we would have our own primal tradition. We would welcome the New Year and the new harvest, and prepare the way for new sacrifices.
So many babies were always born in February and March in our village. When we were enjoying the onset of new crops, we were laying aside tithes for our personal crops as well. Death begets life, whether it’s the promise of new life yet to be spent, or a life well spent already.

Dreaming

I dream in half spoken thoughts
Of non sequential order
And remember
While sitting at my
Desk
That I was supposed to stay
In bed just a little longer
So I could enjoy my conversation
With a whispering fish
(I am reminded because
The angry man
Who sits in the desk next to
Mine
Looks like a fish)

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

A New Mother's Thoughts (Monologue)




I’ve always been the type to change my mind. And it’s not like I entered into something with the thought I was going to change my mind, it’s just that I would. I would enter a decision knowing that this time, this time would be different and I would be able to follow through with it. I wouldn’t chicken out. I remember, once, I was standing in line for a roller coaster. I mean, I was deathly afraid of heights but I was so sick of being afraid. I just wanted to go, so that I could say I did it. I knew there was nothing that I should actually be afraid of; I knew I was safe. But, each jarring step made my stomach drop lower and my heart rise higher into my throat. I still walked forward and berated myself mercilessly for my cowardice. I remember sliding into the cool seat and fastening the harness. My face was dry at that point. The tears weren’t coming, and I was going to ride that damn beast. And then the bored looking girl came to check my seatbelt, make sure I hadn’t fucked up the simple task of tightening it (some people are idiots) and I burst into a snotty groveling mess, and I begged her to let me off. I couldn’t go through with it. I could see her annoyance, and my fellow passengers scowl, and I knew that what they saw was a bratty childish girl who didn’t know what she wanted. I was too scared to go through with it and I didn’t know how else to react. I wanted to stop before anything happened; before I had a chance that I couldn’t say no again.
And really, that’s how I am with anything. I take it as far as I can, til the last possible second, and then I stop it before it’s too late to stop it. I don’t know why I’ve been that way. Before I met, well, him. Before I met him, I was engaged once. He was wrong. He was a short, manipulative dick. I knew I didn’t like him or the games that he insisted on playing. I didn’t like the way that he made me feel, as if I was lucky to be with him and I didn’t deserve anyone who would like me back. I listened to the way he would talk about his ex-girlfriends, and his brothers’ exes, and I thought that I had to stay with him just so I could avoid being a future ex and having someone talk about me in that same awful tone with that horrible look. I remember, that I went to stay with his family, and he was staying in a different house. And he snuck in through the screen door in the middle of the night. And I should have made it clear that that was wrong and disgusting and never had spoken to him again at that moment, but I didn’t. I told him not to do it again, and I stayed, and I hated every advance that he made, and I despised his fat creeping fingers, and his breath, and I hated his touch. I begged him to stop and he said “I know you care about me because you let me touch you even though it makes you uncomfortable and even though you’re asking me to stop”. I was weak.
I broke up because I was too afraid to spend my life with a man I knew I hated, and whose children I would probably end up hating too.
I don’t hate you. I want to tell you before I go on that I don’t hate you. I don’t know how I feel and I can’t describe it, but I know I couldn’t ever hate you because you’re more than me, and you’re mine. I didn’t hate….well, I didn’t hate him. I don’t know how I felt, but I think that I was with him because I was playing chicken with myself. I wanted to see how far I would go before I said no, but when I was with him, I was not afraid so I never said no. But I realize now that’s because it isn’t over, because of, well, you. Because of what that situation is, I still have the chance to back out and to stop everything and to start over.
I wish, that if my mom was confronted with the choice, that she would have chosen differently than she did. Then, maybe, I never would have had to play this weird game with myself, and I wouldn’t have put anyone else at risk. I wouldn’t have felt the need to go walking at 4 in the morning in dark and deserted streets.
I can’t say no, though, because you might say it for me. And this time, I’m not making the choice for myself. Maybe it is too late even though the doctors say it technically isn’t and even though the people who think overpopulation is a threat think that I have no right to you. Maybe if I say yes, and I don’t stop this insanity then I have made the wrong decision.
There’s no right thing to do now, and I just have to muddle through. I need to make some sort of decision soon, and I am so tired of waiting and thinking in circles. But there’s no straight line that makes sense. And I could talk to, well. I could talk to him. But then he’d run because you’re not his the same way that you’re mine. And how could I call you a mistake? I mean, we both willfully committed the act knowing all of the possible outcomes and nothing is ever 100 percent.
If he runs, then he runs. I won’t hold him and I don’t know if I want to hold him. But I’m buckled in and I’m not going to cry to have someone save me from this. I’m tired of running away and I’ve put myself into this. Maybe you’ll end up being one of those “Despite All” stories. And I think I could live with that.
I don’t know though. I don’t know what my mind is, so I can’t change it. I guess that’s something?

Monday, April 22, 2013

Of Thee I Sing

Freedom is a precarious thing
And no more applies to me than it does to you
Ask the shoemaker.
Two plus two equals five
To believe anything else makes you insane
Vanzetti shakes over and over in his grave
Covering his ears
What’s dead can be killed again
In new faces and new terrors
Too many ists
Anarchist, Communist
Spread your legs because what’s mine
Is mine and what’s yours
Is mine.
You’re only a rebel from the waist downwards.
Two plus two equals three.
I reek of ignorance for thinking
Rights exist for the wicked
He’s clearly guilty,
The shoemaking man
Tarred and feathered by his own breath
By his neighbor’s fears
Ignorance is strength
I am sane
I am sane
Two plus two is four
(And one more)
I still believe in a place called
Hope
A place called
America
All animals are equal
But
Some animals are more equal than others

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

The Hesitant Dance

I dance around your words
As much, if not more
Than you dance around mine
Each step soft, unsure
A breathless question
I dare not ask
You dare not answer
We share our dreams but nothing else
Stuck in the dark that
We've chosen
(I'd choose that dark again and again)
I'd willfully lose my chance
For living in light
You are the Jilted Lover
Already
Too far from my saving
Too easily fragile
You'd only want my breaking too
It's safer to be alone
And whole
Then in a million little ---
And if you were to ask
I'd dance away fast
Into the comforting dark
Thick pillows of night
But you won't ask
As I promise it's safer
To dance on a million uncertain unsaid yesses
Then the finality
of a definitive
No
Passion and fire burn too hot
But the frigid winter's night
Is much too cold
Just continue
Continue to dance around me
As I dance around you

Monday, April 15, 2013

Monster-Man


break the broken girl
she's begging
lost and little
already gone
wishing she was alice so she could disappear down a rabbit hole
she's late she's late she's late
You're too late
to save so break
the late little girl sits
staring from her corner
up at the Monster from over her bed
she calls him Daddy
and cries
each new Monster Master Sir
is Daddy
what's new?
run alice run or you
will meet a Monster anew

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Fault



Scene: Boy is alone, sleeping. Suddenly he feels a draft, and wakes up, sitting up in bed. There is a girl sitting on the edge of his bed.


Girl: This time, it was your fault.

Boy: I’m sorry?

Girl: This time it was your fault.

Boy: What was my fault?

Girl: Usually it’s mine, but this time it was yours.

Boy: Who are you, why are you here?

Girl: Those would have been the right questions, but it’s too late now. Your fault.

Boy: Are you on drugs?

Girl: I was one of the times when it was my fault. This time, it was a missed chance.

Boy: I don’t understand.

Girl: Next time, maybe it will work out.

Boy: Next time, what will work out? What’s my fault?

Girl: I’m sure you know.

Boy: I don’t even know who you are.

Girl: And therein lies the problem.

Boy: What are you even saying?

Girl: That it’s your fault. Not mine.

Boy: Yeah, got that. What do you mean?

Girl: I can’t break it down much more. This time-

Boy: It’s my fault. But what are you talking about?

Girl: A missed opportunity. It only comes once in a lifetime, you know.

Boy: Right, well, I’m sorry.

Girl: You aren’t.

Boy: Well, no, probably because you’re crazy, and you broke into my room, and I have no clue what you’re talking about.
Girl: I just wanted to tell you, that this time, it was you who was wrong. It’s usually my fault, but this time it’s yours. 
 Boy: What did I do?
Girl: You waited too long.
Boy: I don’t get it. What did I wait too long for?
Girl: I’m gone now. There’s no second chances this time.
Boy: And I suppose that your being gone is my fault?
Girl: No. You not acting when you were supposed to was your fault. Me being gone is just life acting like life.
Boy: I don’t understand.
Girl: You think too much. You always have.
Boy: Oh yeah, and how do you know this? I don’t even know you.
Girl: We’ve known each other lifetimes.
Boy: What does that even mean?
Girl: Stop deflecting. You know I’m right.
Boy: Right about it being my fault?
Girl: No.
Boy: Right about what?
Girl: You always think too much.
Boy: Fine. Whatever. I guess that means it’s always my fault then.
Girl: No, most times it’s mine.
Boy: And those are the times you think too much?
Girl: No, those are the times I think too little.
Boy: I still don’t understand.
Girl: It’s ok, I can wait.
Boy: I thought you said there were no second chances.
Girl: There aren’t any second chances right now.
Boy: So what are you going to wait for.
Girl: The next time.
Boy: I don’t understand.
Girl: It’s ok, you don’t have to yet. I just wanted to let you know, that this time it was your fault.
Boy: What is my fault?





He turns to look, and the girl is gone. He shakes his head, lays back down, and falls asleep.