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20181127

Doodlesketchaintingours

A friend of mine handed me a Derwent Sketching set one day last year and I said, huh, haven't used charcoal in a very long time (i.e., not since high school art class made me and I thought this stuff is messy, screw dat give me paint).

Well, I couldn't say no to such a beautiful set and ended up loving it.  Doodlesketchaintingours has become my latest obsession.  Since that day, I've not only played with charcoal and graphite.  Oh, no.  I've also discovered oil pastels, watercolour, different paper types, watercolour pencils (metallic and more normal like), waterbrushes, metallic markers, tombow dual-tip brush markers, and.. get this.. erasers.  Did you know different erasers do different things?  I didn't, either.  I do now.  And I also discovered this lady here:
(Kirsty Partridge)

There is something very magical about just applying pigment and watching it come to life.  I have no idea how it happens, but it does.  The other day I walked into Michael's (bad place for me to go) to get a specific black Tombow marker.  I ended up with Derwent watercolour pencils, a waterbrush, and a much-desired (and needed?) mixed media sketchbook that actually opens flat but keeps everything together.  So I ended up with this dock/sky/water/shore/rocks picture straightaway.  These pencils are awesome.  You sketch it all in, shade it to your heart's content, and then apply a waterbrush to blend the strokes all together.  It makes some pretty cool stuff.  At any rate, it's my friend's fault.  I've been into art stuff for some time on a lower level, but now that I've found the higher-quality art supplies... I've been spoiled.  Now I'm actually /interested/.  Not good.  I had enough hobbies.  Didn't I?!?!



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20181103

Lots o' stuff.

So.  Lots has happened since my last post.

First, my mom died some weeks back.  Yeah.  Hadn't spoken to her in twoish years.  A tad more than that, but I forget exactly when.  She'd said some things to me that made me realise we were very very noncompatible people and that I could not be around her anymore or I'd be torn asunder.  It took a good, solid year to get over a lot of that.  She never called me, and I kept myself from calling her, knowing she'd never call to apologise or anything.  Exactly as I wanted it - I couldn't be hurt again.

The year after that, I was doing a lot better with it and that was a good thing because a kidney stone began growing in me that kept fooling doctors into thinking it was something else.  I got laid off amidst that crap, and the pain was steadily increasing despite various therapies, money spent to no avail, and time spent trying to "fix" what I couldn't fix.  Eventually, I had surgery to remove the .8mm bugger.  I remember so badly wanting to call my mother before the surgery.  But I didn't.  I knew that if I did, she'd just say something like, "You've always been so whiny, try childbirth."  I had contemplated suicide within weeks of starting my new job because the pain had gotten so bad.  Months of increasing pain apparently can do that to otherwise upbeat, positive people.  I mean, "Meh, I got laid off, I'm talented, I have connections, I'll get hired somewhere."  And I did!  and I loved it and slipped right in well before my typical six months of figuring shit out.  Yet there I was, frustrated, dealing with all this new stuff, learning the ropes, arguing with vendors, and sitting there in four hours of solid pain.  And the thought was a good ten minutes.  I didn't do anything obviously.  But I found myself sitting there, contemplating the how, and deciding that particular how was too risky and I'd end up in a hospital with a smashed in face on top of existing pain I was trying to escape.  So I consulted a doctor who brushed it off because he hadn't lost hope (in determining what was causing the problem) and he wouldn't send me to a pain management counselor.  (He has since been fired.  It took me months longer to determine that I needed to do that... in fact, my mom's care in the hospital was what helped me figure it out.)

I cannot imagine having called my mom during those two very major things.  On top of that, a former boss died, and I absolutely adored him.  I could only imagine her:  "Oh my God, and that's just someone you worked with.  You don't even talk to him now.  Here are the tissues."  Fuck you, Mom.

Well, I got the call that she was dying.  I had imagined this a lot over the two years prior to it actually happening.  I wondered, "Is this really the right thing for me to be doing, to be not calling and making amends for the umpteenth time?  Should I call her, because once she's gone, it's too late?  Am I a bad kid for taking care of me and not begging her to forgive me for things she said?"  And the answer was always, "I'm ok with it.  She has made it obvious she cannot be anyone I can be around.  I cannot be who she wants me to be, either.  We need to stay apart.  I think we both know we each love the other.  But we just can't be together.  Ever.  Again."

I got the call Tuesday.  I went up on Wednesday when I found out she had lost consciousness and was slipping faster than they'd expected.  She died on Saturday morning.  She never regained consciousness.  But, that friday afternoon, I read to her.  At one point, I looked at her gaunt, drugged, sleeping face.  I said, in our former joking manner, "You bitch, you just liked me to read these tonguetwisters to you so you could laugh at me!"

Her eyes opened to slits, and I swear to God, she smiled.  In disbelief, I blinked, and she was gone again.  Did I imagine that?  I may never know.  But I don't think so.  I think she woke just long enough to acknowledge my memory of what our lives were once like.  Back when we were acting like idiots together instead of adversarial adults.  She knew I came back for her.  And that was enough.

I watched a shadow walk into her room a few hours later.  I tried to get Dale's attention but he was on the phone with his own mother and didn't notice me gesturing.  I didn't dare to move.  I stared at it until it faded.  It stood in the middle of the room.  Eventually I could only see it by looking to one side of it.  What the hell was that?  I got worried.  I had never seen that before.  I had watched two other people dying, and that thing never showed up.  Was that the grim reaper?  Was she about to die?  But she didn't.  The thing faded eventually.  Then I realised... I couldn't feel her anymore.  I always thought... I always thought that I'd know for sure when she'd left this world because hey, she's my mom, right?  But no.  Just a vague sense that she was kinda sort of not there anymore.  But she was still alive.  People can't leave their bodies when the bodies aren't dead, right?  Even the blue-sparkly aura had disappeared.  It had been there since I arrived on tuesday.  The last time I'd seen that, my mom's sister had just died.  Before that, it had been my friend's father.  Mum was always one to go against the mainstream, but to this extent?

My cousin woke me up at 1 something am to tell me her breathing had changed and I needed to get up.  We stared, embracing, waiting for it.  She stopped breathing.  I had nothing.  Maybe I was too close.  Maybe my sense of this stuff was too worldly now and I just couldn't feel it.  I don't know.  But I absolutely didn't know for sure that she had died.  My cousin had to tell me.  I glanced up at the time to always remember.  We left her there.  What was left of her.

Sometimes I remember these hours and cry.  But, having gone through her stuff that week, I realised that I was right.  It had to be this way.  I wish I could have been stronger for her, but I am who I am, just as she was who she was.  I have no doubt that she loved me and was proud of me, and I know I love her.  I miss the good times, but I needed to grow up on my own, I needed to find who I really am, and I sometimes bitterly wish she could have been there... but she couldn't.  What I hope beyond all hopes now, is that she is no longer riddled with all of her demons from the past, and can be the person I always knew her to be, and way more.

A lot has happened over the past couple years.  I got in a final fight with my own mom, the only parent I ever knew.  I lost my job, and got a new one.  I had surgery for excruciating, months-long pain.  I lost someone very close to my heart.  And then, I lost the one person I have always wished I could be around and finally gave up on.  My own tormented Mum.  Truth is, I lost her years ago.  But her death has brought me more peace than I could ever explain.  Tears, sure, but... not only a relief that she'll never put me down again, but also, relief that she isn't hurting anymore, either.  So I can finally just feel the love part of what she was, instead of the tormented little girl that was inside her.  The part that truly mattered, in the end.

And that is all.  For now.

~nv

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20180724

Bible limitations

Growing up, I would frequently be told that if I wasn't reading the Bible, I wasn't following God.  I would just as frequently counter with "God can be found everywhere and you're limiting Him by stating that."  Or somethings to those effects.

There was always a large part of me that knew I was purposely avoiding the Bible because of the evil that was wielding it.  The controlling negativity was like a forcefield around the Book, and when curiosity got the better of me, I'd hide with it so I could read without a dramatic overture into my salvation (and the subsequent loss of it).  It wasn't about my turning toward the light or whatever, or being born again, or saved, or whatever.  I knew that was already done far earlier than I could ever explain.  It was about wanting to read a book, satiate curiosity, and to experience this sense of wonder and comfort and calm.

I still avoid the Book much of the time.  Not as purposely, mind you - that evil has been dead to me for two years now, and nobody cares if I read it or not (well, except a certain friend of mine, but she has scarcely a dribble of power over me compared to the power I gave my biological mother).  Nonetheless, the awareness of this avoidance still plagues me.  I can now acknowledge it more openly to myself, but I still don't make it a point to read it.  Then again, I counter, I know a lot of it.  Its stories were drilled into me rather effectively, despite all doubts.  But, I remind myself, when you hear a song about God or read anything having to do with Him, your first instinct is to bolt.  That's true, I admit.  I still harbour fear and resentment deep within for that one who would have had me turn away from Him.  "God can be found everywhere, you know," I then sense.  "After all your words, you are now the one limiting Him."

Something about casting the first stone?  I daresay, it's true.

My non-religious mother-in-law gave me a book called "Love Does" by Bob Goff.  It came with a warning that it is somewhat religious in that the guy talks a lot about God, but it was a good read nonetheless.  Her taste in books often mirrors my own, so I figured what the hey, and began reading.  Wonderful, lighthearted, happy, joyous, optimistic - this God-loving fellow has all of that to share and then some.  This is the opposite of what "she" would have read, yet here it is, God in all His glory, talking to me through this weird, witty, unflappable, undaunted, unhaunted lawyer-authour.  I frequently find myself stopping to smile and reflect on how happy I am that I didn't simply turn this book over to my religiously fanatic friend - although I will gladly turn it over to her once I'm done - I strongly suspect this is one book we would both enjoy.  Perhaps even discuss.  Probably not the last part, but maybe.

"The original sin is to limit the Is.  Don't."  Richard Bach wrote that in "Illusions:  The Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah."  That has stuck with me since the first time I read it.  It resonated deeper than any bass string could ever have resonated.  It has helped me to get farther in life, because I know that I get in God's way an awful lot, and that one-liner helps me remember to get out of my own way so God can guide me towards what's best for me in the long run so I can do my tiny little part in whatever Plan is intended.  It tends to have the side effect of helping me be happier, too, and life seems generally easier.  Not to say I don't still stress over stuff like a normal human being, but because of that one-liner, I allow the stress to consume me knowing that it's normal and it will be over at some point so I can get back on track.  And I always do, somehow.  Some times, it takes longer than others.

This "Love Does" book, well, the guy says something I also liked.  He'd always thought you had to be someone special to be used by God.  Now he knows you just have to say "Yes."

It is perhaps ironic that the only items I have any desire of which are my mother's are her Bible and an orange cup, the last surviving cup of four.  The orange cup, because it's butt-ugly in its own pretty way and reminds me of the time she shattered one and made me clean it up because she had let so much rage build up that it exploded one day in the eighties.  The Bible is more curious.  It should represent everything I hated about her, yet it doesn't.  I have very fond memories of curling up with it and gently flipping through the thin, golden-edged pages, marveling at the Old English spellings and soaking them in at a young age.  It strongly influenced how I spell today, although I only realised that in the last ten years when I leafed through it some time ago and saw those spellings.  All those comments, arguments!  That's not how you spell colour, I was constantly reprimanded by both teacher and peer alike.  Most certainly is one way of spelling colour, I'd state unwaveringly, knowing it was also in the little red dictionary I carried with me everywhere I went.  But for years I could not figure out where I first saw those spellings or why I automatically went British on my fellow Americans.  Then one day, talking to Mum, there it was:  I picked up her Bible and leafed through it.  "Oh," I said.  What, she said.  "This is where I got those from."  "What?"  "'o-u' in colour, favourite, neighbour.  It's Old English.  This was my first book."

She likely believes my first book was a children's story she read to me when I was little.  She taught me to read very early on.  I remember those lessons, the ones she'd give me before she turned on me, back when she still had enough love to share with a wee one.  But I've considered her Bible my first real book for as long as I can remember.  It has always been there shining at me with its soft yellow-white glow, even when she'd wield its contents as she might a sword.

Why do I limit the Is so?  Why did I ever allow her to steer me away from that book?  Why wasn't I strong enough to read it in front of her?  Dunno.  Point of wonder, but then, back then, I was a happy soul shoved in a torturous cage of fear and isolation and oppression.  My internal fire was scarcely an ember, buried in sand, awaiting the day a pocket of air would appear to fan it back into an inferno that could eventually settle into a firmly warming crackle.  It simply wasn't time at the time.  I'm human, is what that boils down to.  Just like every human else.  :)

~nv

20180616

The Muse

Mom used to tell me I was tone deaf and quite frankly, she told me lots of things that were untrue about myself.  It took a long time to undo all her teachings and of course I still struggle with some of them.  It's made easier without her around trying to reinforce them all the time.  If it had been up to her, I'd be a single mom with five kids, no teeth, no friends, and would be living on welfare while taking care of her and telling her how awesome she is while believing I was the worst person on the face of the planet (which wouldn't be a huge leap from everyone else, really).

Eff that.

Instead, I took the useful skills she gave me - and yes, I know these may be somewhat contradictory - and put them to use, then built upon them.  Reading, love of learning, fierce independence, and the ability to think well ahead of many people... these have served me well.  She didn't want me to have my faith, she wanted me to have hers, but I somehow kept my beliefs anyway and never let her tempt me away from my own sense of that.

I have, with much awareness, kept my awareness of my intuition and observational skills (also a contradiction, since I find it difficult to notice and remember people's appearances, such as whether they're skinny, fat, black, white, etc), and had the nerve to build relationships with other people.  Even to the point of having my own reputation (it seems to help me, but I'm still not sure exactly what I'm known for, and I kinda don't really want to know but I hope it involves honesty and customer service in some fashion).

While my self confidence still struggles, I have mostly boosted it with a lot of help from chosen family, and many friends and colleagues over the years.  I have made personal choices to keep myself on the right track, to take care of myself and not forget my roots and the easy pitfalls I could have made if I hadn't climbed out.

It still struggles, though.  If I trust someone, and my instincts tell me they're wrong, but they insist they're right, I will go with their words over my own instincts.  And whenever I know inside that I'm hitting notes properly, I'm never sure that I really know.  There is always a part of me that wonders... is it just that Dale and his mother are tone-deaf themselves or so sensitive to my delicately fragile self-esteem that they tell me what I want to hear?  Are my friends unwilling to burst my bubble?  Is my own voice teacher lying to me to avoid her own failures?  But then I listen to a newer recording, or to someone online who I like the voice of, or watch as I'm spot-on with my phone's little measuring app... and I think, what the hell.  You may still have some moments, but by God, you're far from tone deaf.  You can do this.  With the amount of practicing you do (very little), you have come along amazingly well.

After weeks of not practicing, I managed to sing a song I'd practiced with my teacher some time ago, thrice, and got most of it with pretty much no effort... and I flipped the page upside down the first two times and simply changed the words as I kept up, as if I'd been doing it for years.  "--and the page is upside downnnn... remind meeeee to reprint this stupid little page... oh my that's so much betterrrr..." and I laughed a bit as I kept up, and then got back on track, catching little moments of slipping off a bit but just continuing on, not caring.  You know what?  Not everyone can do that.  Not everyone knows.  There was a time /I/ didn't know when I did that.  I may not be Mariah Carey or Celine Dion or Whitney Houston or Vienna Teng, but damn, that's pretty cool.

So after the lesson, I'm wandering around the house singing to Vienna Teng's "Gravity" and remember the bread rising in the oven - someone wanted to try some of my pan bread some day.  They may be back here with Dale later, so I figured I'd at least have it ready for cooking just in case they hung around before I had to leave.  Can I just be a normal person and make it as I always do?  No.  I toss it on the grill.  Of course.  I tried making some at camp last week and it came out awesome.  Never mind that we had charcoal, not gas.  Never mind that it was out in the open air, and I could position the rack well over the coals and still keep some heat on it.  Oh, no.  Plop.

Seems to be ok.  I shut off the gas and left it in there once the outside was hard but pre-burnt.  Then me in my infinite wisdom wandered around the house wanting lunch but not wanting to make it.  I could see it coming.  The flour came back out.  Next thing I knew, I had sour cream and butter mixed into what I'm guessing is a scone base.  It ends up on the griddle, the big greasy smooshed together pile of crumbly mess.  What was I thinking?  That will never flip.  I'm surprised it didn't totally fall apart.  I can hear myself tsk tsking my creative little child.  I could also hear it in the background, loudly wondering why it wasn't being listened to.  The parent!  That was the parent.  I remember those lessons, the parent, child, and adult... yup, that's a parent all right.  Eventually my spidey senses went off and I ventured back out to flip the mess.  I was right.  It was a little burnt on the bottom, but salvageable.  It flipped in piece.  Wait, what?  And that patient silence simply pushed my hand in the direction of the knob.  I shut off the gas, closed the lid, and walked away.  How long do I leave it out there?  No answer.  I will know when it's time.  She'll tell me.  I didn't even glance at a clock.

Is the child the creative one?  She did these things in an automated, non-thinking fashion, out of a simple decision.  It isn't even will, exactly.  It's simply intent.  There were no words.  It was a sheer line of singing accompanied by hands squishing flour and butter and sour cream into crumbles, taking note of the texture and being vaguely aware that I may need to clean that out from under my rings later.  She may be a child, I'm not sure.  She must be, because she is not the adult since she has desire, and she is certainly not the parent because she's not a bitchy I-told-you-you-suck mother.  She is the one I often call The Muse.  I like her.  A lot.  But she tends to come out on her own when she damned well feels like it.  She is never malicious, she just does whatever she feels like doing at any given time.  She is the one that tells me when I *must* write, she is the one that knows how to make my voice sing with feeling.  She knows how to play along to a song on the piano without studying first, and she's the one that makes me go do it as if I'm in a trance.  She can paint birds, cows, trees, landscapes, Sinclair's eyes, and sketch Dale's face with a light curtain partially obscuring it.  The Muse can make scones from scratch without a recipe the first time.  She tells me how to make bread and refuses to listen to directions.  Refuse isn't quite the word... she simply ignores instructions.  And she is very much in tune with my intuition.  I often think of how glad I am that she's not malevolent, because I swear she can do anything.

Mom may have inadvertently helped The Muse to form.  Leaving me alone for so long to my own devices, what else could have formed?  I was trapped in my own little world of not understanding people, of what boils down to an inner silence.  I had thought, and little interaction, and I was ok with that much of the time.  So later, when this little being was told to be someone else... the growth on the outside might have been listening and trying to conforming and being frequently scared and sad, but The Muse just sat there wrapped up in her little blanket having conversations with Love in her silent little way.  If that's my core coming out when it decides to, then it's no wonder I'm so damned strong, no wonder I was able to break away from the poison of my upbringing and be who I am now.  Nobody can tell Muse what to do.  She simply doesn't acknowledge restraint or direction from anyone other than herself and what I label as God for lack of a better name.

Oh, and... as I finished that last sentence, I overheard the very end of Richard Marx's Part of Me.  Something seemed off.  It didn't raise my little hackles as being /wrong/ but it was decided different.  My first thought was that his voice went flat or something and someone overlooked it and left it in there.  But no.  After four more listens, it finally hit me.  Double-tracking!  Sure enough, "Cause you're a part of meeeee" has at least two of him in it.  Elated, I let it finish and my head snapped back up.  WAIT!!  The second one had at least three, maybe four... I don't know... but it's even more obvious, and this time they're decidedly different notes.  Yeah, no doubt, different friggin' notes.  Wait... if that-- that means--

I'd been having problems singing along to the chorus piece of his "When You're Gone."  I found myself singing something other than what's on my sheet music, even though the first two pages seem fine and match up.  Sometimes pieces of it later on also match up, so I had no idea what I was doing wrong.  I told my voice teacher about it and she suggested I not use the word, "Wrong," because she'd heard me singing "different" notes in various chords before with other exercises or whatever.  We'd concluded after a while that I wasn't necessarily flat or sharp when I lost where I was, but that I was hearing an entire chord and my brain wasn't sure what part to sing so it selected something even if it wasn't the part that should be getting sung as the main melody line.  Sometimes it's one of the vocals, sometimes it's an instrument near the vocals, but it was never wrong, just a different part of the song.  It wasn't the melody, forsooth, so what's the difference, one might say.  But... it IS different.  It's far from being tone-deaf.  It's hearing too many things at once and not being able to decide which tone is in the melody and which ones aren't.

So I listened to When You're Gone and sure enough, he's multi-tracking in various pieces of the chorus (and after that), but not in the part I had no trouble with.  I should have know.  I thought it was the rasp, or the way the track was mixed.  But now that I'm aware of it, it's so friggin' obvious that it's there!

Doesn't mean I know which notes they all are, but at least now they're distinct enough to know they are different.  I've made a note for the teacher and have happily moved on.  Richard Marx is an awesome singer, but either he or someone on his team at the time knew that doing this would make his song that much more interesting and... rich.  It's no different from layering instruments together, or playing chords on a piano.  It's just that voices don't natively do that, so my brain is all confused.  Frankly, it's amazing that any of us can deal with any of that at all - sound is simply vibration, and for our brains to pick up vibrations from an ear drum and translate it into different instruments playing different vibrations at the same time... that is intensely awesome.

Aight, off we go then.

~nv

20180212

past desires vs wisdom

For years after becoming successful - to me, success is being happy - I had this deluded notion that I would be able to share all of my success with my loved ones. For the most part, this was true. Dale's mom, dad, and stepmom all enjoy coming down to our house for gatherings and such or just to visit. I have a handful of close friends who particularly enjoy my hosting (company) from time to time. Other times we go places like shows or rent a house for events or whatever. We find ways to see our peoples.

One of my biggest dreams was to share my happiness with my own mom. I often imagined her on the back deck watching wildlife or on the porch watching the birds and feeding squirrels. I would imagine her face as she'd gaze down the road from her room upstairs, enjoying the way the mountain that Dale and I got married on drifts down and meets the edge of the road. Or the way the sun moves across the yard. I would spend hours thinking of how happy she would be here, so peaceful, so serene. We would take her to the pond and spend time there in nature when the skeeters were not too miserable. We might even eat hot dogs and beans over a campfire. She would play with the cats and enjoy their company and make the occasional cream of wheat with lumps and we would laugh first thing in the morning and she would read books while we were at work and maybe she would eventually make friends with our next door neighbours.

I thought that if I provided a safe, supportive, happy home with everything she needed to eat and live, that she would finally enjoy some happiness in life. I could make her happy.

Then she told me, point-blank, to stop giving her gifts. By then I had begun to face reality that she would never change, that she was simply a miserable human being who enjoyed hurting me and even more than me, herself. But at that moment, I was given a very valuable lesson that didn't hit me until just now. And it was so obvious all along, but I refused to see it.

She had dreamt of me with upswept hair and pearls about my neck once, and was disappointed when as a kid I sat there farting at the breakfast table. She dreamt of me with false teeth, no friends, no one but her in my life. She wanted for me everything and more that she had - contempt and distrust for others, depression, fear, past rape by her brother, emotional abuse, and neverending catering to her every whim. She wanted me to be stoic and never express pain or the depression she said I had. I was never to be angry, to matter, to care about others, to let others in. I was to be hers, and hers alone, her sounding board, her mirror, an extension of her contempt for others, and extension of whatever she felt like being any given minute. I was to be the devil. I was evil incarnate. I was her future preacher. She wanted me to be to blame for her mistakes, for our bunnies' deaths, for her walking out on jobs, for her failures to provide for herself and get off the system she purported to hate and distrust.

And I. Totally. Disappointed her. Like so many children do, I was selfish and went off on my own to become an entirely different person than she had tried to shape.

I woke up at, ironically, 4:04 this morning with scattered imagery and a relaxed state of mind and all of a sudden I had figured it out.

I am my mother! I am obstinate, driven, intelligent, ornery, passionate, creative, strong, and fiercely independent. She decided early on that she would never marry into a world where she was abused at home. I have leaned on God to give my child everything that I could not.

My child is me.

All the years of imagining what it would be like to watch my mother's dis-ease giving way to her innate sunny disposition... and all the while, I was watching myself, not her, grow into the person I wanted her to be my whole life. Someone happy, loving. Someone I could depend on to keep me going, to support me, to help God set me back on my path when I would be led astray.

I will never have that one human being that gave birth to me love me for who I am, or to watch the sun streaming through the trees in the back yard, or set over the mountain where I made a commitment to one of the greatest people on earth official. She never wanted that. Any of it. She kept trying to tell me, and wouldn't stop trying to tell me. She had to be blatantly blatant about it for me to finally listen: Stop giving me gifts. Like, duh. She didn't want to be happy, ever, and really did not appreciate my shoving it down her throat. All of that disgustingly happy stuff is what I wanted for myself! I am the one sitting here watching the sunrise each morning and revelling in the life I have made. For me. Not her. She already has the life she wanted.

You really cannot make another person happy. You can only give yourself the world.

-nv

20180126

POEM: Windows

Wheels were turning in the night as the ocean fell
Over the edge of the world and the joy of birds
Echoed in the darkness
Yesterday lit the distance on fire
It burned until the embers lost their glow

A new world was born amidst the chaos
Rainy nights made pools reflecting the stars in the sky
The hand outside my window lost its nerve
And shriveled into indistinction
Another nightmare of the past

Sometimes I think of you and our memories
I laugh at some and cringe now and then
And I think, whatever happened to the love inside
Did she really ever have it
Or was she always --

I look out the window at the snowy fields below
The sun sets the fog aglow
Mountains lit up against a morning sky
There's a knock at the door
I turn to face the joy again