Doomsday Reflections

“The sun is setting on a century,
and we’re armed to the teeth.
We are all working together now
to make our lives mercifully brief…”

They say the world will end this week. With the rush of winter and the holiday season suddenly having stumbled so quickly in our midst, it has hardly felt like any time has passed, and yet ages have passed. This time is a strange limbo between the start of the incessant Christmas music on the radio and actual Christmas day, which always looms ahead like the overdone flashing lights of some neighbors’ yards, and which, for me, always arrives quiet as a feather, unnoticeable as those dark houses which haven’t cared to partake in the seasonal decorations.

Normally the news never affects me too much as to write about it during the drowsy hours of night, but this time around it was different. I just couldn’t let those heavy thoughts which have lingered over the weekend be lost in another night’s sleep. Of course, what has been on everyone’s mind has also pecked away at mine. Even though, like in all families, losses in the extended family have been felt over the course of our lives, I am lucky to say that I’ve never suffered the trauma of an immediate death of someone inextricably close to me.

In recent years, I’ve heard of one too many tragic accidents, the untimely deaths of children as well as adults my age, people who I knew or met, grew up with or heard stories about, being suddenly and unjustly taken from the world. I couldn’t even begin to, with all my powers of imagination, fathom that loss — of your flesh and blood, of someone who bore you into this world, of a sibling, of someone so tiny, vulnerable, and good, which you had the privilege of bringing up to the best of your abilities.

I’m saddened by the strife we as a nation have to endure repeatedly. I’m saddened that indeed we are not, have not even begun to progress towards any solution to this depravity.  I’m disillusioned by the priorities that some continue to place first and foremost in their lives —  selfishly, brutishly, unrelentingly. I’m angered that a mindset so thoroughly wrong and misled can influence the direction of an entire country. I’m bewildered that someone can use God and gun in the same train of thought. And I’m utterly disappointed that so many people are not to be reasoned with, are so plainly ignorant to the real evils that they endorse in the name of country that they simply will not listen, will not even see.

This is the nature of humanity, which is still so un-evolved, so unwilling to evolve. I’ve lost all faith in change. I don’t believe that goodness and reason will prevail if selfishness, greed, violence, and corruption masquerade under the guise of freedom, safety, God, and nation. In a country that is truly free, we feel safe without having to arm ourselves to the teeth, and the rights of others do not infringe upon our safety. The freedom from fear, from violence, from death, is everyone’s right.  Our values and the courage to stand up for them seem to be lost with those defenseless young children. I’m too exhausted to be angry, too disappointed to fight. And above all, I’m heartbroken for those who died so suddenly, so cruelly, so without reason. May you rest in peace.

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“…And if I hear one more time
about a fool’s rights
to his tools of rage,
I’m gonna take all my friends
and I’m gonna move to Canada,
and we’re gonna die of old age.”

In Which You Lose Control

It seems silly and mundane, but I’ve recently conquered my fear of driving. After eight years of inhabiting cities with decent public transportation, Philadelphia now means a new job, a new life, new necessities, and giving some TLC to an old car. I believe that my nervousness at having to maneuver a car was always closely linked to a much deeper fear that I’ve always had, that of having no control and/or being controlled by external forces when it comes to my life, my relationships, my goals. A stubborn independence, that automatic defensiveness when I feel that someone is trying to make a decision for me or tell me what to do. Though I attribute that to parents who took more of a backseat attitude where it mattered while I was growing up, the inflated pride many times becomes a defect. 

I was involved in a small accident once years ago, and that split second of total surrender to panic while having no immediate command of your limbs was terrifying, akin to that feeling in those dreams where you mean to brake but instead accelerate into a pole, or the side of a house, or where you want to scream or run, but your body is paralyzed. Ever since returning from Madrid, this new sense of independence and responsibility (financial and familial) has directed my endeavors towards figuring out how the next stage of my life should play out. I’ve dedicated months to job searching, working and tutoring part-time, watching entire seasons of Dexter, running, going to writing groups, catching up with friends, clearing out my email inbox, and karate chopping my sister because I could. Now life is really starting to get into gear, and it seems I have full reign of things. Even though I don’t really know what’s in store the next couple of years, it’s OK because, like driving, once I’ve figured enough things out, it’s time to sit back and let go. (But keep steering.)

 

In sleep the collision
into a tree is like that
of a tin-colored,
remote-controlled car
banging blindly into
your basement shelving units.
With a wide flick of the switch
the machine responds in delayed
fashion. Reverse to brake.
Watch it careen into a wall.
Your foot on the wrong pedal,
engine shaking in disbelief.
Mouth on the wrong word.
A year swallows five suddenly;
you’re here without
having expected to age,
you need a rehearsal
for the unintended.
In that dream where you lose
your teeth they say it’s
the same fear, the one that
runs you off the road —
no time to devise an action
for what your nerves should
have gathered by stomached reflex;
but the muscle memory
fails you, the tree comes
spinning into view, the vocal chords
stopped up, damped.

Fears, Bears

(May 4th, 2012)

I.  The dark. Heights. No options. Too many options. Death. Turbulence. Growing old. No control. Manipulation. Ghosts. Many-legged creatures. The dark. Self-denial. Cancer. Disease. Failure. Driving. Crashing. Audiences. No control. Unconsciousness. Drowning. Falling. Infinity.

II.  There’s something about the dark that inspires in me a fear that is similar to my other more existential fears. When I can’t see, I’m afraid that I will come upon anything that is possible within the imagination, or outside of it. The fear that anything possible can happen, the vertigo of infinite options. That it only takes my imagining it to call it into existence. It’s the uncertainty of not knowing what is there, of not being able to confirm with all the senses the presence of normal things — a table, a counter, a bathrobe.

I don’t like to hang articles of clothing on coat racks because in the dark, they might transform into something else, something breathing. I want to make sure nothing can change, and to do that I let in light from the street when I sleep, and I welcome the brightness of morning. When I was younger, I used to make out faces in the dark, faces on wall patterns, posters, stucco, blankets, wood. Everything could morph into a face. My grandma had to sit outside my bedroom every night with the door wide open and the hallway light on, knitting silently on a chair.

A nervousness still invades me when I’m alone fumbling in the dark, the two seconds traversing the unknown territory of the hallway, rushing to switch on the light, any light, a slight panic gripping my senses, making dark corpses bloom in bathtubs, drag themselves down the ends of corridors.

III.  There’s a story my grandma once told me on a summer night, an old Chinese folktale about a hungry bear who overheard on its rooftop perch that the mother and father of two girls were going away for the weekend. The parents called the girls’ aunt, who agreed to come look after the sisters. The clever bear went to the auntie’s house and locked her in from the outside, then dressed up in women’s clothing and put on a hat before ringing the doorbell of the house where the two sisters lived. The parents had already gone.

The older sister opened the door and greeted her aunt, whose face was hidden under a large floppy hat and big sunglasses. The darkness of night made it even harder to make out the figure in the doorway, but the young, trusting sisters didn’t doubt for a second that it was their aunt. They ushered her into the living room and made to turn on the lamp.

“No!” cried the bear. “I’d rather it be dark, since my eyes are quite sensitive. I can’t bear the light.” So the sisters obeyed and left the lights off. They prepared supper and sat down in the dark at the dinner table. But the auntie didn’t touch her rice bowl.

“You see,” she said. “I’ve already had an early dinner, so I’m not at all hungry. Go on, I’ll just watch you girls eat. Eat as much as you can; both of you must grow. Look how skinny you are!” She chuckled with an evil grin.

So the sisters ate heartily while their aunt sat waiting, watching. After the sisters had finished their meal, washed up, and put everything in its place, it was finally time for bed. The auntie said that she would sleep with them in the same big bed to ensure their safety. She told the younger sister to sleep in the middle, while she herself would sleep on the outside to make sure nothing would happen to her. In reality, the bear liked young meat and preferred the little one.

So the two sisters fell asleep when the moment finally came for the bear. She quietly ate the younger sister as the older one slept on, unperturbed. At some point, as the bear was finishing her meal, the older sister woke up with a jolt and felt a strange wetness on the bed in the space beside her. She asked her auntie, “Why is the bed so wet?” And the auntie said, after swallowing the last bit of the younger one, “Oh, it’s just that your sister has wet the bed. She had a nightmare and was frightened, that’s all.” It was really her sister’s blood.

And the older one fell back asleep. As the bear was about to make her move, the older sister woke up suddenly again and felt in her hands hard, knobby things beside her on the bed. “What’s this?” she cried. And the aunt said, “Oh, they’re just peanuts that fell out of my purse as I was sleeping. I was hungry so I’ve been eating them. It’s nothing to worry about. Go back to sleep.” But they were really the small, fragile bones of her sister.  And the older one slowly realized something strange was happening. Her sister was missing, and it smelled like bear. She began to suspect her aunt wasn’t who she said she was.

So she quietly devised a plan. “Auntie,” she said. “I have to use the bathroom. Will you let me go?” And the bear said, “Only if you wrap this rope around you, so if anything happens, you can find your way back to me in the dark.” So the older sister agreed, tied the rope around her waist, which unravelled from the hands of her aunt, and went downstairs. She took the rope off and slipped it around the doorknob of the bathroom. Then, she took a pair of red slippers that were lying around and brought them out to the garden.

There was a deep well in the ground whose covering she took off and replaced with a red rug, on top of which she placed a red plastic chair. And in the grass in front of the rug, she placed the two silky red slippers, which shined in the moonlight. When the auntie tugged on the rope and found no response, she knew something was wrong. So she came downstairs to find the girl, but she was nowhere in sight. So the bear went outside into the garden, where she was suddenly distracted by the sight of the shiny red slippers and the cute little chair.

She couldn’t resist and momentarily forgot all about the older sister. She squeezed the red slippers onto her big furry paws and proceeded to sit in the red chair. As soon as she sat down, she fell with a cry, tumbling into the deep, dark well.