A Beautiful Day in December & Thoughts of the Holidays

After the rain of the past two days and the incredibly awful fog of the day before where, I had to drive my dad’s car through it on the Jackie (which I’m not fond of to begin with), I woke up this morning to a beautiful crisp winter day. Now, I’m not a fan of winter, but I have to admit, I am in love with this weather and I definitely missed the sun.

December marks the beginning of the holidays. This year, I have decided to start a collection of ornaments. The ornaments that we had growing up were never anything special to me. Sure, there were the occasional favorites of mine that I fought with my brothers over to be the one to put them on the tree, but they were all different. I’m not sure why that was, I have a feeling that this happens with a lot of people unless you really take the time to pick out a theme and stick to it. Ornaments may seem cheap, but you have to buy so many of them that it adds up. I have always loved silver, so I am going to start a collection of different silver tones and white. Below are ornaments that I am buying, the graphite balls can be purchased at Crate & Barrel in sets of three where the snowflakes are from Pier1 Imports and sold individually.

The weather is going to be pretty consistent from now throughout this weekend (and into next week, though I really only care about the weekend for the moment), so I am going to take full advantage of it. Of course there will be the ornament shopping which will commence tomorrow, and the tree shopping. This year I want to get a real tree because I love the smell of pine and I have seen teeny ones for only $20, and they are cute! Also, since I live by the water, there is nothing better than grabbing a bottle of wine, or in this case perhaps a latte (or maybe insolated thermos of tea) and driving out to the jetty. The view of the water and the Whitestone Bridge is just spectacular, especially when the sun is starting to set. Normally I go there in the summer, but I think I’ll start a new tradition this year.

Where is Home? (excerpt)

Kate quietly walked upstairs to the comfort of her room, and closed and locked her door. At least her room was still safe, however small it might have been, or rather, as long as the door was locked she could escape the danger that lay on the other side. It was all wrong; your home was supposed to be your haven, not your hell.

It hadn’t always been like this. When Kate’s mother had moved her and her brothers next door in the middle of the night, things had been different; they had been looking up. By that point, Kate’s parents had been fighting non-stop for a while and in the process, her mother had made friends with the guy next door. Sure, Russell had been a little rough around the edges; he drank too much, had a wood shop in his garage and owned one too many plaid shirts, but he had piercing blue eyes, a warm smile and the ability to charm a married woman and her three children. Who could have known the type of monster that laid beneath his inviting exterior.

For a while things were great. Russell had welcomed them with open arms. He seemed to bring Kate’s family together in a way that they hadn’t experienced in a long time. Russell could never replace their father completely, but he quickly became like a second one. Kate, being ten at the time, would sit on his lap as everyone watched television together; how she had always done with her father. When Kate had been younger, she had gone through a phase where she hated brushing her teeth. Her and her dad had invented a game where she would sit on his right knee – his MacGyver knee – and brush her teeth while her father sang brush, brush, brush, brush over and over again. It was also the same knee that she would sit on to watch MacGyver with him, hence the nickname. At that age, there was no possible way that Kate could have really understood the show, but it had become a father-daughter ritual and she loved it. Given all of that, she thought nothing of treating Russell the same, and neither did her mother.

Kate wasn’t sure when the change had occurred, but things weren’t right anymore. Her innocence was gone and Russell had taken it away from her. The change had been gradual, so slow in fact that she never realized what was going on until it was too late.

Starting December off Right

You know the night was a success when you wake up in the morning with your girlfriends and, despite all being hung-over, you break out in laughter. Oh, and your thankful that the neighbors didn’t murder you in your sleep.

This weekend, I packed my bags and headed down to Philly with Z to celebrate our friend R’s thirtieth birthday. This had been in the works for a few months now, and we were looking forward to partying it up and making it a night to remember.

As always, Z and I rushed to the West Side to catch our train, which thankfully was not crowded. We both had brought magazines and the likes to pass the time, but in strict Z and S fashion, they were never opened and we spent the whole time listening and talking in circles over each other about our lives and, pretty much everything…and, taking turns giving stares of hatred to the seats in front of us as the women were talking so loud that we would lose focus. Really, there should be a noise level cut off, even if you don’t care about the people around you, do you really want everyone to hear your personal conversations? I know I don’t. In the end of course, we abandoned our seats in search of new ones a little farther away, though, they turned out not to be that much better.

The train was slower than usual and we ended up being over fifteen minutes late to catch our connecting train, which thankfully an announcement from the conductor told us that it was being held, though we only made it because I sprinted ahead. According to Z, upon us entering a flight of stairs for our descent to the platform, I almost ran over a couple with a stroller. I cannot confirm or deny this because honestly, I had my tunnel vision on and wasn’t looking, but I’m sure that it happened; I will cut anyone off if I’m in a rush, and even when I’m not, I just don’t have the patience to walk behind slow people. In any event, we literally ran onto the second train as they were shutting the doors and plopped into our seats. An hour later we emerged in Philly.

What does a groups of girlfriends do to get ready for a night of serious partying? Well, first we got manicures and walked around Whole Foods in search of snacks, then the three of us headed back to R’s apartment, where we ordered a pizza, large of course, opened a bottle of wine and started choosing our outfits for the evening. R already had hers picked out, but Z and I had brought some options with us and we helped each other in her decision. I was the only one who ended up in jeans, which is highly unlike me, but frankly, it was colder out than I had thought and I wanted to keep that extra layer against my skin.

We got to the party fairly close to the starting time since, it was after all R’s party, and to our surprise there were already people there. We’re so used to showing up to parties fashionably late that we never expected people to actually show up on time, or as some of them probably did, early. It didn’t take long before the space was packed with people. The only problem, the bartenders were extremely slow. I am not accustomed to waiting so long to get a drink.

As the night progressed, the crowd thinned out a little and we exploded into another part of the venue, creating an impromptu dance party. Girls danced with girls, guys with girls, drinks were spilled and replaced, shoes came off. On a trip to the ladies’ room, I found a glow in the dark necklace sitting by the mirror and brought it back out with me. Everyone took a turn playing with it until its amusement was lost and it was discarded. At some point they called last-call to everyone’s chagrin and we kept partying it up until the very end, needless to say that we closed the place down.

After an irritatingly long wait for our cab we trudged our tired selves back to R’s apartment. After the customary discarding of the shoes, Z and I went straight to the refrigerator for the last two slices of pizza and R happily went into her cupboard for some kind of peanut butter crackers (I think). At some point R also broke out some string cheese to our delight; oh and we poured the remainder of the wine from the bottle that we had cracked earlier in the evening. R put on some music from her computer and a Rent song popped on. We grabbed remotes, 90’s style (there were conveniently three of them) and belted out the familiar lyrics to songs from the Rent album, using them as if they were microphones, while dancing around the apartment in varied states of our party outfits and pajamas. Seriously, we should be filmed at these times.

The next morning we woke up after a few hours sleep in disarray. Aside from the usual hangover effects, our feet were killing us and so were our throats, and it took me a moment to realize why. We turned on an episode of SATC as we started to collect ourselves and tried to fight the hangover, then we met R’s parents for brunch. Afterwards, we made our way to the train station to await the first of our two trains back to New York. Normally, I don’t mind the ride from Philly to New York and the time usually goes by, I guess it must have been the hangover, which equates to a lack of being able to leaf through a magazine or finish my book. When we got to Penn Station, Z left to catch a cab back to her apartment and I continued onward through the LIRR, subway and bus until I was finally back home. I was so spent from lack of sleep and hangover, but it was all totally worth it.

You know you had a great weekend when you are showered, pj’d and in bed before ten o’clock on a Sunday evening.

A Secret Among Friends (excerpt)

Images. Images floating in my head. I turn towards the light but the dark consumes me once again. Once again I am back to that place. The anger, the anguish, the illusion. Pretending that everything is fine when it’s not. The face, the voice, the touch. Forever searing into my memory making it impossible for me to breathe at times. The misery, the pain. Reality. Just when I think I can’t take it anymore my mind returns to me. For years I tried to endure the loss, blaming everything except what was. That was where it all started. My mind playing tricks on me. Stirring up images I’d rather forget. Never freeing me. Always tying me down. Sometimes I find myself running from these images. Until I find out that I haven’t gotten too far. Far away is where I want to be and far away I am. Only that I’m not. It’s too soon. I don’t want to go back to the place. That place of fear, of knowing, of masquerading the pain. The pain that exists deep down inside. That never lies, but never shows. It doesn’t feel real anymore. I need the pain to feel real. Need to feel like there is something to cry about. I feel a sharp sensation gliding across my skin. The pain is released. A stinging starts to set in.

I dry my eyes and look in the mirror. Wondering who the stranger is looking back. The smile that would once brighten a room, gone. Faded. The eyes that would gleam with joy and excitement, lost. The replacement is something less. A kind of sweat sadness engulfs me. Of course the only ones who know are the people I choose to let in. Not many. Just a few. Enough to help me through my dark hours. Enough to keep me on track. Enough to be let in. I stare at the face in the mirror and she stares back at me. A solemn stare. A quick defeat.

My vision becomes blurry. The girl can no longer be seen. I feel the streams running down my cheek. The pain comes back within. It doesn’t feel real anymore. I need it to feel real again. The images are coming back. I need to focus at the task at hand. The gliding sensation comes back to me followed by the stinging. Relief. I take a gasp of air and release it heavily. The pain is real again. My head is free. The images no longer haunt me. I look at the mirror once more. Stone. Expressionless. The face no longer looks back at me. She looks down. Down at the object held tightly in my hand. Down at the red lines on my ankle. Down at the blood stained tissue on the floor in front of me. There will be no more weeping for the moment. All is well again. A free mind has been achieved. It is through pain that we grow in strength. And through strength we are able to achieve anything. Almost anything.

I crawl slowly across the floor. Softly. Not a sound can be heard. Not even the beating of my heart as it pumps through my chest. Silence is the key. If no one can hear, no one will know. The better for me. I peer at the vent that is shining light through my floor. I see nothing. I press my ear to the cool metal. I hear nothing. No one is there. I walk softly to my bed, grab a pillow, and return to the old heating vent. I cover it until there is no more light. The only light that exists comes from and old nightlight. I reach on top of my desk and pull my phone onto the floor. I feel for the plug and insert it into the jack. I move back. Away from the vent. Slowly sliding across the floor. The object still tucked away in my hand and the phone in the other. I find my spot in front of the mirror but do not look up. I have another task at hand before courage fails me and the darkness returns. The light is waiting for me at the other end of the phone. I take one more listen to see if anyone is awake, then pick up the phone.

I hear the dial tone through the receiver. The buttons glowing in the dark. Slowly I dial the familiar number. The phone starts to ring. I wait for the voice on the other end to pick up. I know it’s late but I need to hear the voice. It comforts me. Like awakening from a nightmare into the arms of a loved one. The voice heals me. Not many a day can I go without it. The ringing continues. With every new ring I feel my heart beat louder. Pounding in my chest. The voice picks up.

“Hello,” says the sleepy voice.

“Hi.”

“How are you?” There was a pause on his end. “That’s a stupid question. What happened?”

“The same thing that always happens.”

Another pause followed by a deep sigh. John was taking it in. Taking it all in. He does this sometimes when he doesn’t know what to say. I hate it. The silence can be numbing.

“I’ve change my mind,” I say.

“About what.”

“About tomorrow. I don’t want to do it.”

“Why.”

“Because it’s too hard. And the outcome will not be good.”

“You’re overreacting.”

“Am I? Am I really?”

John didn’t know anything. His knowledge came from the information that I chose to share with him. He didn’t know what was going to happen after. He didn’t have to see their faces. I did. I knew exactly what was going to happen. Exactly how it would be. How everyone would react. The out come would not be good. John didn’t know. He wouldn’t have to live there. He wouldn’t have to see the look of hatred and disbelief in everyone’s eyes. I would.

“It’s the right thing to do, Liz.”

“Right for who?”

“Right for you.”

I tried to speak but words faltered me. How could I make him understand? I couldn’t. There was no way he could understand. To John, he was looking out for my safety. I was grateful for that. But there had to be another way. I wish there was.

“I don’t know what to say.”

“Then don’t.”

“I don’t want to do this,” I paused. “I’m scared.”

“Why? It’s the truth, Liz. You shouldn’t be scared of the truth.”

“But I am.”

“Don’t you think you’re better off with things out in the open?”

“No.”

Things were better off the way they were. I couldn’t possibly hurt anymore than I already did. It wasn’t possible. If things stayed the same, nothing would change. I wouldn’t loose anyone I loved. If things changed, things would be different. I would loose everyone. I would have nothing.

“It’s not your fault, Liz.”

“I know.”

“No, you don’t. You say you do, but you don’t believe it.”

“I hate that you know me so well.”

“I’m glad somebody does,” John paused slightly. “You shouldn’t have to go through this alone.”

I shouldn’t have to go through this at all, but I am. Everything should be alright. But it’s not. I go through the motions of my day-to-day life like a canister. Hollow. Every gesture I make, every expression I have, is a facade. An illusion. I am all alone in this. It’s my word against his. I know how things will be. What the truth will bring.

“You know, if you won’t say anything, I have to.”

“I know, but I wish you wouldn’t. I wish you would respect me and not say anything.”

“Liz, I can’t not say anything.”

So many things are at stake. There is too much to loose. I will not be forgiven for this. My days of living in peace will expire. Forever replaced with conflict. Conflict is something that I try to avoid in life, no matter what the cost. That’s why I’ve lived with this for so long. I didn’t want to deal with what the outcome would bring. I still don’t. I just want everything to go away. I don’t want to be afraid anymore. But I don’t want it done this way. Not this way. If only there was another way.

“Are you still there?”

“I’m here.”

“Don’t be mad at me, Liz.”

“I’m not mad. I’m frustrated.”

“You shouldn’t be. We’re only trying to help you. I’m only trying to help you.”

“I know that. I just feel that it’s being done the wrong way.”

“There is no wrong way for this, Liz. Not for this.”

“Well than, it’s the wrong time.”

There was another awkward pause. John was getting frustrated. He was thinking about what to say to convince me. There’s no way he can convince me. This was a bad idea from the start. I should never have agreed to it. Should never have told him the truth.

“It’s never going to be the right time. There will always be on reason or another as to why it can’t happen. But the truth, Liz, is that those reasons…they’re just excuses. Every last one of them. Don’t tell me that it’s the wrong time.”

I didn’t say anything. I couldn’t. Anything that I thought about saying would just start an argument. I couldn’t have that. It had to stay quiet. My voice couldn’t come above a whisper. I needed to control myself. I needed to control my thoughts. I needed to get off the phone.

“I know you’re scared. But you have me and everyone else backing you on it. You shouldn’t have to live this way. You shouldn’t have to live in fear. If you don’t say anything tomorrow, I will.”

“Alright.”

“Alright, you’ll talk?”

There was a sound of relief in his voice. I know that it had been difficult for him and everyone else as well. What kind of friend would not want to help out another if they were going through what I had gone through? I would be doing the same thing if I were in his situation. Only I’m not. I’m the one who is going through it. I’m the one who knows the outcome. I’m the one whose life is about to change. Not his.

“I’ll think about it.”

“That’s not good enough.”

“I’ll let you know first thing in the morning. Usual spot?”

“Okay. I’ll see you then. Try to get some sleep and not think about it.”

“I’ll try. Goodnight.”

Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Unconsoled

In Kazuro Ishiguro’s The Unconsoled, passageways are ever present. The main character, Ryder, is constantly being led through long, elaborate passageways, no matter where he goes. Even the simplest, most closest place requires much travel. What’s interesting is that most of these elaborate passageways seem to lead Ryder to different parts of the same place. And, with each “road” that he travels, another and another one comes about, almost as if they were planned as such, though they seem to be a matter of mere coincidence.

With that also comes memories, slivers into Ryder’s past and present. Ishiguro uses the physical passageways that Ryder travels through as mental ones that stream through his mind. In fact, one can even pose the idea that the hotel where Ryder is staying at, and therefore the center of all his journeys, could be a physical representation of Ryder’s brain, and all the passageways that he embarks through, the signals that his brain is sending out in order to try to mend what is clearly a disconnect. At first, the memories that Ryder obtains are sporadic and shallow, but as the novel progresses these memories come at a more frequent pace and are much deeper in caliber.

Ishiguro is a master storyteller, and although many have expressed the opinion that this novel is not one of his best, I disagree. The Unconsoled should be considered a brilliant work of fiction. Ishiguro weaves us around and around in the same circle, except that with each familiar turn we learn something new and unexpected. We come to expect the unexpected, although the transpiration is never predictable. Some of the paragraphs are dauntingly long, spanning for pages at a time, but that sort of adds to the character of it.

The point of reading this novel is not necessarily for the end result, but rather the experience of it and that’s what those who find this novel a disappointment do not seem to understand. It teaches you a new way to read and enjoy, and at the same time leaves you with a satisfaction that is insurmountable.

“I stood waiting with some concern. Then finally she turned round and looked at me. Not unkindly, oh no, but she looked at me, it was a particular look. The look of someone confirming with her eyes what she had been thinking. Yes, that’s what it was, and I knew then that she had finally seen through me.”

– Kazuo Ishiguro
The Unconsoled

Work-less Work Day

After a long weekend and previously short work-week, I came into the office this morning, latte in hand, ready for a ton of emails and voicemails to get back to and loads of work. Of course I ignored the fact that I haven’t received an office email all weekend except for a rather weird one asking if anyone was in, on Thanksgiving no less…I was after all home, where cell phonage is sporadic at best. But, upon sitting at my desk, I found that nothing was working. No emails, no programs, not even the internet. What’s a girl to do?

At first I thought that it was of course my computer and I tried restarting, but to no avail. Then, since it was rather early in the morning I took out my book and started reading at my desk. It felt weird, but seriously, how am I to do any work when the whole server is down? So, I sipped my latte and read a few pages of my book, that I truly had thought I would have finished over the holiday weekend so I could write about it and loan it to a friend. Alas, I ended up being busier than I thought I would be. Not a big deal, it will be finished by the end of this week and if not, then on my train ride to and from Philly where I will be partying with my girlfriends. Then I will start on my Vogue :).

After a bit I realized that this network problem would take longer to resolve than I had at first anticipated, so, I decided to grab my gear and make a run for the gym. Nothing like a good workout early in the day (I usually prefer gyming early anyway; there’s no crowd and you can actually get a good workout in). Also, I hadn’t been to the gym in two weeks because last week was shortened and the week prior to that I was out of commission with a sinus infection.

I walked over to the gym, which is really just on the other side of Third Avenue and half a block north. After changing and filling up my water bottle with, to my disappointment was warm water out of the fountain, I set off for the treadmills. Now, I injured my knee in the middle of January and sillily kept working out on it for six months until finally going to the doctor to have it checked out, so I can’t run on the treadmill, but I can power-walk…well sort of.

I got onto the treadmill and started walking and soon realized that my knee wasn’t bothering me today. I decided to speed-walk for three miles, call it a day and go back to the gym tomorrow to hit the weights. I ended up doing only half a mile less than my goal which was good, and my knee still was okay, but I, myself was exhausted.

I took my time showering and going back to the office and the network still was down, which at that point was just frustrating. What is the point of being at work if I can’t get anything done? I decided to confer with one of my friends (the one who is waiting for my book) and sat in his office for a good twenty minutes before making myself a cup of tea and trudging back to my desk in hopes that the status of my computer would have changed. I tried opening on program…and it worked, so I tried another and another. They all worked and the internet works again too. My email is still down though.

Going Home

There’s something nice about going to your hometown for the weekend, being amongst family and old friends, staying in the house that you grew up in, sleeping in your old room that, although has changed a lot since you lived in it, still enfolds you in its walls and welcomes you in. You don’t quite resume the role that you did as a child or adolescent, but you don’t quite keep your independent adult self either. You sort of become an in-between.

You have meals with someone other than yourself, you cook together, you set the table together, you clean up together. If you feel like having a drink, there’s someone to do that with too. When you wake up in the morning, you sit in the living-room that, in the colder months boasts a view of the bay, with someone drinking coffee or tea, talking, reading or just staring out at that spectacular view.

You forget about the world that you live in for those few days. You go about everything in a relaxed manner and the outside world doesn’t seem as important as it usually does.

For me, going home for the weekend is like a getaway. It’s easy to take myself out of the world because it seems so isolated. Maybe because my house is on its own separate hill, up a steep, almost cliff-like driveway, where cell phone reception is so horrible it’s not even worth picking up the phone if you hear it ring. I, who am attached to my phone, ok addicted, kind of love that feeling of detachment from it, maybe because that’s the way it’s always been there and I have no choice.

Of course the horrible reception didn’t matter so much when I was a teenager because I didn’t have a cell phone. Anyone who wanted to contact me either could do it when I was online (remember aim) or by calling the house phone. No one calls the house phone for me anymore, but I will use it to call people back…if I want to speak to them.

Then, the real world calls you out of your contentment and the weekend is over. You travel back to your apartment filled with the memories of the last few days, nostalgic because even though it’s nice to visit, it’s not your life anymore. You take your key out and unlock your door. You step inside, close the door, turn on some lights. You throw your overnight bag on the floor and you stare at your apartment just for a second. You take in the familiar silence and inhale deeply, slowly letting the air out. You know that you can always go back to the home that you just left, but you know that you belong in this one.

You’ve come home twice this weekend, both familiar in their own ways and both completely different. One fits your past while the other is your present. The outside world comes back to you in full force. You are no longer able to ignore it.

“He smiled understandingly – much more than understandingly. It was one of those rare smiles with a quality of eternal reassurance in it, that you may come across four or five times in life. It faced – or seemed to face – the whole external world for an instant, and then concentrated on you with an irresistible prejudice in your favor. It understood you just as far as you wanted to be understood, believed in you as you would like to believe in yourself”

– F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Great Gatsby