Monday, June 27, 2005

Hey Andy will you toss me a little scrap of something that I can taste instead of dust from all the leaving & the smell of summer lying here to waste?

I drove home on Thursday night to help my sister get ready for the prom. Actually, it wasn't really that I helped her do anything--she was a whirlwind of activity--I think I was just there to press the buttons of the camera and fix her eyeshadow. I applied make up to a face that was already glowing and zipped her into a beautiful light blue dress. I thought of a time in the future when I would have to get that dressed up...and failed, realizing that the poofiness factor of my life was slowly dwindling.

Fastening her necklace, adjusting the halter top, she was a sight to behold. There she was in front of me--18 years old, all grown up. My sister, tough as nails and yet so delicately beautiful--small in stature and with fragile features, fierce blue-green eyes and a unique way of laughing at herself so hard she would cry at the same time. At the sight of her, tears sprang into my eyes. I told her she better watch out at her wedding, I was liable to be a bawling baby the entire day. Inside, I secretly prayed I wouldn't lose her to marriage for years and years.

Even more startling than the young woman before me, was the image of a girl I knew four years ago, in the same place--myself. Unlike most prom stories that are filled with dramatic limousine mishaps and girl-on-girl catfights, my prom was simply storybook. I had, for one night, thrown away my typical cutesy fashion sense and opted for a hot pink fitted ballgown which I am still very much a fan of. I'm sure that in a few more years, I will look at the pictures in disgust but just four years later, I still think it's pretty.

Besides my lovely dress, in my opinion, I was on the arm of the best thing in the whole world--a boy who I was completely and utterly in love with. It's a feeling I can't recall now, even if I sit and reflect, which I often do, eager to know what it felt like. As hard as I try, I am always stumped to remember exactly what first love was really like. I just know that I looked up to him and adored him. At 18, in hot pink, the real world had not touched me much and in my eyes, he had not yet fallen to earth as a regular person with faults. To me, he was perfect.

My sister pins the rosebud on her boyfriend's tuxedo and he slips the corsage on her tiny wrist. I think it's a gawdy terrible tradition but I remember doing the same. The difference was that my date had my corsage made especially for me. My favorite flowers were daisies and he had ordered a beautiful little arrangement of tiny tiny daisies among a pink rose. Up until that point, it was probably the nicest thing anyone had ever done for me.

In fact, he was always one-upping himself in terms of gifts and affection. I still have not found a boyfriend who has romanced me the same way, if at all. Flowers of course or a nice piece of jewelry but never in the way that he did. His was always personal and well thought out. Here was a person who knew my favorite things, my dislikes, my loves. He had always found a way to spin them all together into something that was magical. I still listen to his mix tapes in my car.

My sister takes pictures in that cheesy pose with her boyfriend behind her and his arms around her waist. The classic "prom pose" I have so often recreated in cheesy pictures in college when I had a little too much wine. I laugh but it's so adorable that it doesn't matter. We take pictures on the grass, in front of flowers, in the backyard, in the kitchen. Even with her silver heels on, she barely towers at 5'2. Her hair is curly and deep dark brown except for the front few streaks of blonde--natural highlighting from the sun, enough to make any girl jealous.

I hop in the car with my dad and we drive to the high school for more pictures. They take a group shot of everyone standing awkwardly on the bleachers. I run into an old high school friend and her engagement ring is blinding. I'm so happy for her that I jump up and down and she firmly declares that I have not changed one ounce since high school--I am still very hyper, very happy and that physically, I am the same. She is slimmer, more mature, almost married. I tell her how pleased I am with the news of her impending wedding, her possible teaching position, her put-together life. I am actually surprised that I feel absolutely okay with it all. I am genuinely excited, thrilled and touched. Four years have passed?

I stay by her side, catching up with her and stealing glimpses of my sister who is glowing with excitement. Her boyfriend stands by her, in a simple tuxedo, letting mothers and daughters gush over her. I admit to myself that they are a very cute couple. And naturally, my sister is the prettiest girl in the room.

I step back and actually let myself go back to that place four years ago. It's been awhile but if I breathe in deeply, I can picture myself on those bleachers, smiling. I can picture him next to me. Flashes of our relationship pass in my mind. They are snapshots going fast, small flickers of a candle going out.

We are under a tree in a park, having a picnic. We are napping on the couch, sharing food at a diner, dancing to cheesy music in the kitchen while I do the dishes. Tuna sandwiches, his lanky limbs, the way he could always always make me laugh. My sister must have her own picturebook and I pray as I watch her that she won't have to put it on the shelf one day and try to make a new one with someone else. For whatever reason, it doesn't work out quite as nicely. It is different and startling and tiring to rebuild your life anew.

I have accomplished it. More than once now. I have compiled my own scraps and pictures and flickers and pieces. I shelve them neatly next to each other in my head though the first one is the biggest. My first love is biblical, no longer towering over my life, but fading and still holding many truths and many standards. A corsage made out of mini-daisies, who would have thought such a thing possible?

My sister waves goodbye and they herd the pretty teens on a bus to the prom. I stand on the concrete in front of the high school with flip flops on my feet and a scarf wrapped around my hair. I am the opposite of glamorous. I hug my engaged friend goodbye, take down her number, knowing I probably will never call and that the next time I run into her, she may very well be a wife.

I look back at the building and watch myself in a backpack, trekking to class. Images flash again--Ashley in sunglasses, Karen with a hemp necklace on, Roger with his enormous lunchbag. I am among them, still an awkward girl who loves to learn and talks too much in class. It feels strange to visit this place, stranger still to realize how much time has passed.

The essence of high school and my very first love stay with me throughout the night. I smile on the drive back to the city, thinking of teachers I miss and horrible cafeteria food. I think of prom and of the tall boy who used to play his guitar for me. He still plays, I believe. But for other ears.

For me and him, there is only silence now. But I am blessed to have him still in the corners of my mind. He is implanted there, for eternity and when I am despairing, his spirit shines through and whispers to me that love may find me after all.

Peace.

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

P.P.S.

The high for today is 96 and I can't find my wallet. Credit cards have been cancelled. I have 32 minutes left of daytime minutes on my cell until the 23rd of June. Help.

P.S.

On Wednesday, after happily securing a nanny job, I drove to spend time with friends in Watertown, NY. I was eager to relax and I felt on top of the world having found a means of income after this terrible week. On the drive home on Sunday, I was pulled over right outside of Cortland for going 82 mph in a 65 mph zone. I was sobbing hysterically out of sheer anxiety and the cop seemed concerned. However, not concerned enough to rip up the ticket. He told me to relax and slow down, and get on my way.

I grabbed some tissues and wiped my face and continued on my way, still weepy and letting out the occasional hiccup. Not five minutes into the drive, another cop car descended from a sneaky place atop a grass hill and pulled me over. I began to laugh through my tears at the absurdity of it all and my hands were shaking uncontrollably. He came up to the car and was shocked at how upset I was. He asked if everything was alright and I stuttered out that I had just been pulled over five minutes before.

"For what, ma'am?"

"S-s-s-peeding, sir."

"Did you receive a ticket?"

"Yes, sir."

"May I see it?"

"Yes."

I handed over the yellow piece of incriminating evidence and he looked at it and handed it back.

"You weren't speeding when you passed me."

"I didn't think so sir."

"I thought you were on your cell phone....were you on your cell phone?"

"No sir, not at all. I'm just very upset right now."

"I see that. Calm down. You need to relax."

"Yes, sir, I know but it's just been a very horrible day."

"I see that. Relax. I'm not going to ticket you. Why don't you pull off the next exit and get yourself something cool to drink? Okay?"

"O-o-okay."

"Just not a beer."

He smiles.

"Okay."

He returns to his car and I drive on my way, feeling absolutely miserable. I drove the rest of the way home wondering how I would pay off such a ticket after talking to a friend who assured me it probably wouldn't be less than $300. Something inside calmed me down, I did have a job, I would be able to pay it.

I returned home Sunday evening and listened to a voicemail telling me that I was no longer needed for the nanny position, that someone else was found instead. I believe this is the point where I really broke down. If I didn't have a job, I wouldn't have driven to Watertown and spent so much money on gas and tolls. I thought I was secure and I went anyway, wasting at least 4-5 precious days when I could've been job searching. On top of that, I was ticketed, ALMOST ticketed twice.

A week has gone by. I'm back to square one. The heat continues, with no promise of breaking anytime soon. 92 as I sit here. I really can't afford air conditioning now. In fact, I can't really afford anything. I have an interview on Thursday. If it doesn't work out, I will be applying for restaurant jobs come this weekend. One more week, I tell myself, and then I will cave.

God is telling me something. The heat. The speeding ticket. The parking ticket. The unemployment. The continuous let-downs. I'm not really sure what He's planning for me and I'm trying so hard to hope it's something good. It's just that when you're sweating and tired and rubbed so raw that you burst into tears for absolutely no reason, it is very very hard to keep the faith.

Peace.

Tuesday, June 07, 2005

"Excuse me please, one more drink. Could you make it strong 'cuz I don't need to think..."

My apartment doesn't have air conditioning. It is 90 degrees as I sit on the third floor and type. Sweat drips down my body. It is the third straight day that I have wandered around this house in just a bikini. And still it's too much clothing. It sticks to my body until I peel it off, jump in a cool shower, and put it back on.

The Astoria Pool is not filled up with water yet. What is the reasoning? I don't know. I walked 20 blocks there and back at 12:30 pm with the sun blazing on my sunburned shoulders to find an empty cement hole. People were sunbathing on the grass instead. I joined them, trying to cool myself off with just the slight wind.

Lindsay and I went to the beach; together our sunburns make a person--hers on her back, mine on the front of my tummy and part of my chest. I finished a 330+ page novel in 24 hours. Bored and antsy, I rolled around the sheet on the sandy beach and tried to forget that I am unemployed and sweating. I went in the ocean up to my waist. The water was cold and I let it splash against my legs and up to my hips. The waves kept coming, teasing the children who screamed with delight. I did not yell. I stood and watched them, looking down occasionally at my gawky feet and wishing that they were pretty.

I have had 2 job offers; one refused to be flexible around the 9-5 hours (after declaring to me that the hours were indeed flexible), the other is not ENOUGH hours. 1-5:15 pm 5 days a week. Barely $200/week after taxes. Do I have to give in now and be a waitress? I sit and sweat and type and answer classifieds. I cannot afford a desk and so my computer sits on the floor. The carpet scratches my sunburned stomach as I lie on it and type and type. Click, attach resume, click, search, click. Why doesn't anybody want me? Somebody must.

My checking account dwindles. I went outside to discover that my car, which has been safely parked since Saturday, suddenly has a $115 ticket on the windshield for parking 9 feet from the fire hydrant instead of the mandatory 10. Nobody cared on Saturday or Sunday or Monday. Today, at 6:24 am, Officer Tippins cared and left me a ticket. Doesn't he know what $115 means to me right now? 10 ballet classes, 7/8ths of my monthly car payment, 1/5 of my rent.

I guess I can blame the "War of the Worlds" trailer last night that I viewed before "Cinderella Man", but last night, I had a dream that New York City was blowing up all around me. I was going from job interview to job interview and all of a sudden the buildings were on fire. I was running and running and I didn't know where to turn. Should I go back to my apartment for safety? Should I go to my parents' house? And suddenly they were before me, my mother and father. I ran to them and threw my arms around them. I remember my father holding onto me tightly and I just kept screaming "I love you I love you I love you forever I love you" as the buildings fell burning around us.

I wish I had health insurance so I could fill my three cavities and talk to a therapist about how stressed I am lately. For now, I'll just tell you.

Peace.