Monday, April 30, 2012

Toothbrush full first draft


Toothbrush

          When I was in eighth and ninth grade, I had two toothbrushes. One I used to brush my teeth, and the other I found one day buried under empty cans of shaving cream and broken combs in a drawer of the guest bathroom. I took it to my room and hid it in the cupboard under my sink, tucked safely in a clear plastic cup I had gotten from the Ordway Theater. I threw the toothbrush away a little while ago because I couldn’t bear to look at it anymore. Which in retrospect is pretty stupid. It was just a toothbrush. It was a faded blue color and had some split and broken bristles. It was the really cheap kind that you buy at a Super America in Wisconsin because you forgot to pack one in your suitcase when you were going up to your cabin in Minong for Fourth of July weekend.
    After several months of struggling not to use it anymore, I finally took it down to the big brown trashcan in the garage one night. The concrete floor was freezing because I hadn’t bothered to put any shoes on. I was cold and I usually hated being in the garage alone, especially at night. Who knows what psycho rapist clowns could be lurking behind my father’s old recumbent bike and the giant plastic snowman we put on the porch for Christmastime? Nevertheless, that moment, throwing the toothbrush away, was one of the biggest reliefs of my life. Because for nearly a year, that toothbrush was the representation of a lifetime of self-loathing.
    The first time I used the toothbrush was in May of 2010. It was getting very warm, and all the girls at my school were doing this thing where they would tie their shirts above their midriffs at recess. Even my friends, who were certainly not the preppy blonde tennis players that St Paul Academy was known for, were lifting their t-shirts over their belly buttons and tanning on the big grassy hill overlooking the football field. I had always been very self-conscious in middle school. I felt out of place next to the stick thin girls with their spray tans and blonde highlights and butt-hugging short-shorts. So when this belly-bearing trend spread among the eighth graders, I was suddenly overcome with powerful anxiety. If I didn’t do it, I would look like a baby in my knee-length Capri pants and long-sleeved Old Navy shirt. But if I did join them, I would no doubt be even more mortified. Everyone would see my jiggling baby belly protruding over the waistline of my jeans. The insecurity built and built, until suddenly, I had stopped eating. This kept me going for a while, until the pressure to be perfect had completely taken my mind over. I felt like the action I was taking wasn’t providing the immediate results I needed. That’s when I got the toothbrush.
    Finding that I didn’t have enough courage to stick my finger down my throat, I opted to use an implement to ease up the task. A toothbrush seemed like the most logical and least messy option. I waited until after dinner that night, to make sure I had accumulated enough food to expel a decent amount from my system. When I had made sure both my parents were downstairs and therefore out of earshot, I went up to my room and turned on my radio full blast as an extra precaution. Then I entered my bathroom, a small room I could enter from my bedroom, and knelt down awkwardly on the floor mat in front of the toilet. It felt strange, like I was getting down to pray. I had prayed a few times before, but always about silly things, like getting the big part in a play or acing a test the next day. I was never big on religion. So doing this felt different, solemn. I carefully inserted the toothbrush into my mouth, butt end first, and committed my first purge, the first of many to come.
    After I had finished, I rinsed the toothbrush off and hid it away. I flushed the evidence of what I had done and washed my mouth out with tap water from a Dixie cup. It was all a very organized ceremony, very step-by-step. I felt a lot better afterwards and slept soundly that night. After a few weeks of doing this, I had lost some weight and felt comfortable tying my shirt up with the other girls. I felt like I had found a solution to everything.
     Of course, it wasn’t a sustainable system. The crying jags, drastic weight fluctuations and long periods of depression and guilt that followed should have been enough of an indicator that what I was doing was wrong. But I kept doing it, through the summer and well into the next year. The occasions became less frequent, once or twice a month instead of every day, as my hair had begun falling out along with other unpleasant symptoms. I told my parents in the winter; mostly because I had already told my friends and they pressured me into it. They took me to therapy, which was generally ineffective. I lied and said that it was so effective that I never felt the need to vomit anymore. I did though, saving it for special occasions; bad days and periods and the like. I wasn’t cured, and the toothbrush remained in my cupboard. 
    By the summer of 2011, the purging had faded to an infrequent handful of occasions. I felt like that was good enough. As long as it kept me thin when I needed it, I accepted it as a perfectly healthy lifestyle. People throw up, I reasoned. Why should it make a difference if I just do it on purpose sometimes? I had gotten loads of support from my friends, and I was in what I thought was a pretty good place. But one night, I was at the wedding of my cousin Christopher and everything fell apart. 
    I had been having a really good night. I had been eating pretty normally, only limiting myself a bit, and enjoying myself at the reception, dancing like an idiot with my aunts and cousins. I was, however, sick with a slight cough. I went to the bathroom and had a minor coughing fit on the toilet, then came out, unsuspecting and content. The next day, my mother told me that my cousin Cassie’s girlfriend had heard me vomiting at the wedding and that she was going to take me to the Emily Program to get help. I was hysteric and furious. Out of all the times I had thrown up without my parents knowing, they pick the one misunderstanding to take drastic action? I tried desperately to explain it to them, and I could tell that they wanted to believe me, but to be fair, there was a lot of proof against me. 
    I was taken to the Emily Program the next day and something amazing happened. For the first time ever, I was completely honest about what had been happening to me. I felt like there was no need to lie about it this time, and frankly, I was tired of hiding it. The therapists I talked to actually listened to me and believed what I was saying. I didn’t feel like I needed to pretend I was happy. I realized how unhappy I had actually been this past year. And for the first time, I truly believed that maybe, just maybe, I could get rid of this habit completely.
    It didn’t happen instantly. I went through several months of anxiety attacks, relapses and near relapses and prescribed medication. But I got better. The purging became inconstant, then very rare, and finally, in an unceremonious way, stopped for good. I haven’t knelt over my toilet since November. The feelings are still there, of course. There are times when I feel fat and ugly and worthless. But it’s better than feeling like that all the time. I don’t think I’m going to go anywhere but up from where I am now. I have amazing friends and a beautiful house. I have an excellent father and a wonderful mother and a sister and dog that love me and my own room and a closet full of pretty dresses and only one toothbrush. 





Sunday, April 29, 2012

Personal Narrative first two paragraphs


Toothbrush

          When I was in eighth and ninth grade, I had two toothbrushes. One I used to brush my teeth, and the other I found one day buried under empty cans of shaving cream and broken combs in a drawer of the guest bathroom. I took it to my room and hid it in the cupboard under my sink, tucked safely in a clear plastic cup I had gotten from the Ordway Theater. I threw the toothbrush away a little while ago because I couldn’t bear to look at it anymore. Which in retrospect is pretty stupid. It was just a toothbrush. It was a faded blue color and had some split and broken bristles. It was the really cheap kind that you buy at a Super America in Wisconsin because you forgot to pack one in your suitcase when you were going up to your cabin in Minong for Fourth of July weekend.
     After several months of struggling not to use it anymore, I finally took it down to the big brown trashcan in the garage one night. The concrete floor was freezing because I hadn’t bothered to put any shoes on. I was cold and I usually hated being in the garage alone, especially at night. Who knows what psycho rapist clowns could be lurking behind my father’s old recumbent bike and the giant plastic snowman we put on the porch for Christmastime? Nevertheless, that moment, throwing the toothbrush away, was one of the biggest reliefs of my life. Because for nearly a year, that toothbrush was the representation of a lifetime of self-loathing. 

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Monday, April 23, 2012

A Letter to my Humbert draft two

Bad man
Rough hands
A beard like Santa Claus
But Santa doesn't like little girls, does he?
Not like that
Not like you


Black eyes
Black as dirt under the fingernails of a madman
Sitting in his corner, playing with his dollies
Frothing
Popping off their heads
And flicking them into his tall, inescapable tiddle cup
This is just a game to you. 


Don't look at me
don't touch me
o god no don't
pleasepleaseplease
don't stand so close
don't laugh when you do it
when you take me
drain me out
suck me dry
you can do what you want
but please
don't laugh

Sinking down
Down, down, down in that chair
Hoping maybe you won't see
That today I am a wounded deer
Wearing that shirt you like
Because you told me to
I've outgrown it
The sleeves are too short
And I have to pull it back down all day
Because it rides up the front til my baby fat shows

I was twelve years old.



Which maybe isn't wrong to you. 


After all, Dante fell in love with his Beatrice when she was eight.


But guess what, fucker?


This isn't love.


This is just sick.


Not old enough to know why
But I was old enough to understand
That you were bad, bad, bad


Pleasedon'tpleasestop
Pleasepleaseyoucan't
WhywhyyoutoldmeIwasyourfavorite
So why 
Are you
Hurting me?
HelphelphelphelpPLEASE.


Books clutched to my chest, but you stared right through
Bad man, bad, bad
No mister
That's not allowed
Science is the only thing
that you're licensed to teach me

Don't look at me again
don't touch me again
i won't be your nymphet today
hop hop lenore
off to class
you're the reason I hate being touched now
I was helpless then
But now
I'll never be yours

Thursday, April 19, 2012

A Letter to My Own Humbert (1st draft)

Bad man
Rough hands
A beard like Santa Claus
But Santa doesn't like little girls, does he?
Not like that
Not like you

Don't look at me
don't touch me
o god no don't
please
don't stand so close
don't laugh when you do it
when you take me
drain me out
suck me dry
you can do what you want
but please
don't laugh

Sinking down
Down, down, down in that chair
Hoping maybe you won't see
That today I am a wounded deer
Wearing that shirt you like
Because you told me to
I've outgrown it
The sleeves are too short
And I have to pull it back down all day
Because it rides up the front til my baby fat shows
I hate it
And you say you love it
So I hate it more

I was twelve years old.

I was twelve.

I was only twelve you sick fuck!

Not old enough to know why
But I was old enough to understand
That you were bad, bad, bad
And yeah
I was old enough to know it was wrong
You were wrong

Books clutched to my chest, but you stared right through
Bad man, bad, bad
No mister
That's not allowed
Science and math are the only things
that you're allowed to teach me

Don't look at me again
don't touch me again
i won't be your nymphet today
hop hop lenore
off to class
you're the reason I hate being touched now
I was helpless then
But now
I'll never be yours

The Coolest Ginger I Know, revised

  Ray-Chow
  Rachel
  Rachie
  Ray
  She's the one who helps me
  To keep those feelings thin and shallow
  Whenever those people (what are they called? Mom and Dad?)
  Are gone,
  again,
  and again,
  and again.
  I should be angry, but I'm not.
  I can't be  Because there's sugared dough on my nose
  And sugared music in my ears.
  I should be lonely, but I'm not
  Never, never with her  Because she's dancing like some drunken fairy,
  A mixing spoon her wand that wipes away the emptiness.
  I'm laughing because I love this so much more
  Than being with them; vacant, cold beings with me
  Who light up the minute they can go away
  And forget that they have children.
  I love her more.
  Okay, maybe not,
  But I respect her more.
  My best friend.
  My mentor.
  My substitute mother.
  My sister.  Freckled, laughing, keeping the bad thoughts at bay.
  They're on some island somewhere, tanning aging skin
  And tipping back happy juice
  Looking for the light they lost.
  We're at home,
  In a kitchen in Minnesota,
  Soaking up all the light in the world.

Monday, April 16, 2012

The Coolest Ginger I Know

  Ray-Chow.
  Rachel.
  Rachie.
  Ray.
  She's the one who helps me
  To keep those feelings thin and shallow
  Whenever those people (what are they called? Mom and Dad?)
  Are gone,
  again,
  and again,
  and again.
  I should be angry, but I'm not
  Because there's sugared dough on my nose
  And sugared music in my ears.
  I should be lonely, but I'm not
  Because she's dancing like some drunken fairy,
  A mixing spoon her wand that wipes away the emptiness.
  I'm laughing because I love this so much more
  Than being with them; vacant, cold beings with me
  Who light up the minute they can go away
  And forget that they have children.
  I love her, my sister,
  My substitute mother,
  Freckled, laughing, keeping the bad thoughts at bay.
  They're on some island somewhere, tanning aging skin
  And tipping back happy juice
  Looking for the light they lost.
  We're at home,
  In a kitchen in Minnesota,
  Soaking up all the light in the world.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Cliche' Love Poem, Revised

ORIGINAL


There is a boy
with eyes as blue as the sky
And I think of him in the dead of night
His image brings a flood of tears
I love him to infinity and beyond.

He keeps me up all night
Tossing and turning like the sea
And even when I sleep
My dreams whisper his name like the whispering wind.

Alas, he doesn't bat an eye
At my attempts to bear my soul to him
He loves another girl
With hair of gold and eyes like the sea

But I love him like a love song,
and he's the one that I want,
I would die 4 him,
Cuz' baby he's a firework.


REVISED


There is a boy,
With eyes bluer than a hobo's fingers on a cold January morning
He joins my throbbing brain after the house has gone still.
The mere sight of his holy frame makes my tears run faster than a walrus runs to water after his tusks catch fire
I love him like hipsters love tumblr.

He keeps me awake till my eyes are coated in crusty eye goo
Flailing in my bed like a victim of epilepsy
And even if I'm given the gift of sleep,
My dreams repeat his name until it sounds weird and foreign.

But he looks at me as if I am a braces band on the floor of a middle school.
He loves a girl with hair the hue of a taxicab, and windex eyes.

But I love him so much that I pee a little bit when I see him out of sheer excitement.
I want him so much I could make a career out of it.
I would literally eat anything he told me to on a casual dare.
He's a sparkly photon torpedo.

Cliche' Love Poem

   Cliche' Love Poem
There is a boy
with eyes as blue as the sky
And I think of him in the dead of night
His image brings a flood of tears
I love him to infinity and beyond.

He keeps me up all night
Tossing and turning like the sea
And even when I sleep
My dreams whisper his name like the whispering wind.

Alas, he doesn't bat an eye
At my attempts to bear my soul to him
He loves another girl
With hair of gold and eyes like the sea

But I love him like a love song,
and he's the one that I want,
I would die 4 him,
Cuz' baby he's a firework.