The writer had finally fallen asleep after no less than two hours of twisting the sheets between her ankles and adjusting the pillow multiple times. Her eyelids finally stopped fighting gravity and her mind finally quit racing through the following weeks.
It was sometime around four in the morning. Really too late to be getting to sleep. And far too early to be waking up.
But the gentle hand on her shoulder brought her back up through the dream levels, undoing all of the great effort that it took to get her to sleep in the first place.
She opened her eyes. Slowly. She wasn't sure if she was awake.
"Now?" she asked. So quietly.
"Yes," the Muse gently answered as she brushed hair from the writer's face.
"But I'm so tired," the writer nearly cried. "I don't want to get up."
"But you must," the Muse cooed as she raised a delicate arm in the direction of the computer.
The writer rolled onto her back to look at the ceiling, which she had been staring at before finally sleeping.
"I'd rather rest." But her mind began racing again. And the ideas were popping like kernels of corn inside of her head.
"It's your decision. But I'm here if you need me." The Muse rose from her spot beside the bed, walked over to the writer's chair at the desk, and delicately sat down.
The writer sat up, turned, and placed her feet upon the cold floor. She groggily made her way to the computer and began to write.
And then she woke up.
She had never left the bed, choosing (perhaps not deliberately) to sleep instead of creating.
And the Muse had left her nothing.
The writer prepared for another daytime of searching for ideas, fearing that they would again show up in the night.
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Sunday, June 19, 2011
"It's just a house."
Cooter Brown and I were in the process of buying a house.
A really cool, funky house surrounded by trees and nice people and gentle hills.
The house needed a lot of love, and we were willing to give that love.
But fate, or whatever it is, intervened and we lost our little house. Days before it was officially ours.
And it feels like a death. It's crushing, really, how badly losing a home feels.
A home that, like I just said, wasn't even ours yet.
I pride myself on not being super materialistic. If my apartment burned down, I'd miss my shoes and my jeans and my computer, but I'd live.
I'd mourn for my iPhone, sure, and I'd be sad having to replace my "[Name of High School] Class of '01" coffee mug with something generic from Target. But I'd live.
And I'll live after losing this house. But this hurts so impossibly much.
I'm no stranger to mental pain. I lost a job when the economy was shit, while I was unmarried and living with a guy. And I was frightful that he'd leave me if he had to support me. I've lost family members and friends, and nearly lost my mind at the same time. I even faced being crippled when my surgery went all wrong and had to deal with the fear that I might not walk right, get in and out of cars easily, or run ever again (I still have a slight limp today, but only a few have noticed).
But losing this house hurt in a new way. It was a failure. I failed. I failed that little house and the future we would share. And now it will sit there and continue to rot away and die.
We dodged a bullet, everyone is saying.
It happened for a reason, we keep hearing.
It wasn't meant to be, people have repeated ad infinitum.
Blessing in disguise? Maybe. Divine intervention? Arrogant to think that my life is that important, but whatever. Fucked up coincidence that happened in the nick of time? Most likely, although that blows, too.
Anyway, I'll just keep on keeping on. And eventually I'll get off of this sad little roller coaster and onto the platform of another home. Hopefully a better home.
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
Those aren't words.
In the book "Who Censored Roger Rabbit?" by Gary Wolf (which is where the idea for the movie "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" came from), comic characters speak in word bubbles.
Some of the more famous characters, however, suppress their word bubbles and actually speak. Jessica Rabbit is one of these characters.
During one part, she is so distraught and borderline incoherent that garbled mess appears on busted word bubbles over her head. And her speech is unclear and full of blips and bobs and nonsense.
She's mixing the two together and unable to express her feelings.
I feel like that right now. Just thought I'd share.
Some of the more famous characters, however, suppress their word bubbles and actually speak. Jessica Rabbit is one of these characters.
During one part, she is so distraught and borderline incoherent that garbled mess appears on busted word bubbles over her head. And her speech is unclear and full of blips and bobs and nonsense.
She's mixing the two together and unable to express her feelings.
I feel like that right now. Just thought I'd share.
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