Update!

A couple of weeks ago, I wonked out my shoulder and it’s one of those situations that you just have to wait out. I managed to keep up with my writing and exercise for ages, but last Sunday I just had to give in and take it easy for a while. By Tuesday, my shoulder was improving, but the progress made me realize that more rest was in order. So, my Story-A-Day May went on hiatus so I could continue to let my shoulder heal. It’s not 100% now but I am doing much better, so I’m going to try a few more stories. My plan for today kind of goes against the Story-A-Day philosophy – you are supposed to just let go of the days that you miss – but I am enjoying the thought of this challenge I have set out for myself so I’m running with it.

I’ve picked a sentence: ‘I just don’t think I can.’ – I’m going to see how many stories I can write in the next hour that feature that sentence. I’m aiming for 7. They might be very short stories, but let’s see 🙂

Story-A-Day May – Attention.

(I wrote this last Saturday and couldn’t post it right away. I just realized that I never posted it at all.)

         Why is it that you some kids do weird things and you know they are just fully embracing their own weirdness and other kids do weird things and you know they are just desperately seeking attention?

            Ellie could handle the first type of kids but the second ones made her classroom hell. It was easy to keep a lid on the ones who were content in their own oddness, their behaviour might make other people edgy but it didn’t spill all over them the way that the attention seekers’ actions did.

            The attention seekers got a bit too loud, they were a bit too in your face, their performance art lives required audience participation. It wasn’t enough for them to be weird; they needed to know that you knew that they were weird and that they were happy about it.

            They weren’t though. They weren’t at all happy about it. Ellie figured that was what made her so twitchy around them. They reminded her of every last one of her own teen angst insecurities and they took her back to that twisting mess with every shout, with every cry for connection.

            She knew she should just give to them, that if they needed the attention, that it would be a kindness to just shower them with it, but she couldn’t bring herself to do it. There was some validation for her in it, in her refusal to play along, her standing steadfast against the foolishness that they were indulging in. Almost like she were feeling victorious about not being tricked into giving the response they wanted.

            But deep in that smug feeling was a sliver of pain, a splinter, that said that withholding her attention wasn’t serving anyone. It wasn’t helping her in any way and it certainly wasn’t helping the kids. There had to be a way to make it less painful all around, something a little less raw for everyone, but how did you indulge foolishness part way? You had to either fall fully into it, or dismiss it entirely.

            She had to figure it out though. If they were putting this much energy and effort into a cry for attention, their need must run deep.

 

 

Story-A-Day May: What I wanted

       I know what I said, okay? I was there. It’s not like I have wiped my memory banks or something. In fact I am reliving every goddamned second of that day, over and over since it happened. If there was any way for me to unravel it, to take this end and untie every knot until I had long piece of string wound around my finger, no tangly bits, no complications, I would do it in a heartbeat. I didn’t go into the situation with a big plan, this wasn’t part of a greater system, it just happened and now I can’t undo it.

You pissed me off, that true. You do that all the time, but this time was worse. You know how sometimes things just bounce off of you and sometimes they stick? Well, this time your words stuck in deeply, like I was some sort of voodoo doll and you were hoping for a big reaction – like having my head fall off or something. It went deep and it hurt bad. It was like my whole body curled around that hurt and I couldn’t think of anything else but those words and the look on your face.

But the thing is though, I never meant for things to play out like this. I wanted to walk away from you and have you run after me. I wanted you to grovel, to beg my forgiveness, for you to say how wrong you were and how I was some sort of gracious saint for putting up with you. I needed that. If you have done any of those things it would have filled the space that your words had left and it would have healed over. There would have been a scar, of course, there’s always a scar – but you have to know that scar tissue, like a broken bone that’s healed, is stronger than everything else around it. I could have lived with a scar.

I might have even brought it to light every now and then so I could see how it had healed, so I could congratulate myself on my strength in healing the wound, but I wouldn’t have been bringing it up to you, I know better than that.

The thing is though, it didn’t play out like that. I got up from the table and I walked away and I realized that the ground might as well have opened and swallowed me. I could hear you saying to your friends that I could keep walking as far as you were concerned, that you were done. Sure, getting up like that was dramatic, but the situation seemed to call for that – sometimes you have to make the big gesture. But I really thought you would follow me. I thought you would run after me and maybe we’d yell and and say more horrible things, but our anger would burn everything clean and we could start again.

That’s not what happened though. I got up and walked away and you didn’t follow. This isn’t what I wanted. Not at all.

I just wanted you.

Story-A-Day May: In A Snap

I don’t know why they always think that we can’t hear them. Well, maybe it’s not that they think we can’t hear them, maybe it’s something else entirely. Either they don’t care that we can hear them or they are so far from thinking of us as actual people that it doesn’t occur to them that we might be listening. I guess that’s what happens when you’re looking at someone as an assemblage of body parts to be assessed.

I was leaning against the wall at Ice, that new bar downtown. Well, calling it a new bar is a bit misleading, it’s the same bar as it used to be with a different name. That happens a lot with bars on that strip, they don’t even change their staff, just the name over the door. For a while there, they were just rearranging the hard plastic letters but I guess they ran out of ideas. Anyway, it was Ice for that night and I was waiting for my friends. Normally we share a cab to go out for the night, but I had been working late and decided to come right from the office.

My day clothes apparently drew fire from the fashion expert guys at the booth nearby.

“Look at that one. She can’t relax for a second, I bet.”

“I could make her relax. Get her out of that skirt and she’d be putty in my hands.”

“Whatever, dude. You’re getting nowhere with that one. “

“You kidding me, a drink or two and she’d be begging for it. They’re all like that, the uptight ones. They’re just waiting for the chance to cut loose, the drink lets them pretend it wasn’t their idea.”

“Fine. You won’t catch me at it. Too much work.”

“What do you mean? There’s no work. Show her a few minutes attention, maybe buy her a drink, she’s yours in a snap.”

I sipped my drink slowly, and, toyed with the top button on my blouse. The two chick magnets started whispering to each other. I didn’t need to hear them know that they thought the big plan was going to play out. They really got animated as I started to walk toward them. I was placing each foot carefully so my hips swayed for maximum effect. I let a slow smile spread across my face, I swear I could hear their hamster brains skittering in their wheels.

“Hey, fellas.” There aren’t many women who use the word fellas and mean it, but I thought it sounded like something they’d expect me to say.

“Hey, little lady.” I tried not to laugh at that, no one outside of a cowboy movie ever got anywhere with the phrase ‘little lady.’

I leaned forward on the table, and they both leaned in toward me, the smooth guy wore a grin like he’d won a prize – they still thought they were in control here.

“I heard you talking from over there.” A look of panic crossed their faces and quickly disappeared. “And you’re right, you know, I do lose control when I’ve had a few drinks.” I was trying to sound sultry but it sounded dumb inside my head. They guys were buying it though: smooth guy looked hopeful, his buddy was a bit more tentative.

I dropped my voice a little lower. “ Yeah, when I drink, I lose control of my ability to put up with shitheads like you. The only thing happening in a snap will be me breaking your fingers if you touch me.”

I turned and strode back to my place by the wall. I had an excellent view of them leaving.

Story-A-Day May: Fear

(I was stuck for an idea tonight, so I did what I always do when I’m stuck – I asked my husband for help. This story is based on his suggestion ‘a sailor who’s afraid to go on the ocean’)

I thought I knew his story before he sat on my couch. He had edged into my office, keeping his distance from me and from anything even remotely ‘shrink-like’ in the room. He was nowhere near my notebook, or my pendulum, and he didn’t even glance at my books. His head was down, and his jeans and plaid shirt were rumpled. I knew he worked on the boats – long shifts on, long shift off – and I knew that could wreak havoc on a relationship. I knew his employers were paying for his sessions. I figured he must be a textbook case of a man whose wife had found other entertainment while he was away, and the resulting fall-out was affecting his job.

I was wrong, of course, that was obvious as soon as he started talking.

“I can’t stand the damn water any more, Dr. Grant. I just can’t stand it.” He fidgeted on the couch like a kid in a principal’s office. “Everything was fine, then suddenly I couldn’t stand the sight of it another second.”

“Oh?” It was all I could think to say.

“Yes, I was near the end of my last six week rotation, and I looked out over the rails to the water and my heart jumped clear into my throat. I knew then that I couldn’t do this any more. I went right down to my cabin and didn’t set eyes on the ocean again until we were docking. Even then I kept my back to it.”

“So you don’t plan to go back?”

“How can I go back to something I can’t stand the sight of? I know that Estenhauser wants me to smarten up and get back to to work, but it’s not happening. If I ever see the water again it will be too soon.”

“Okay, but you’ve done this work all your life. Are you ready to try a new career?”

“I’m going to have to, aren’t I?”

“I guess so, but is that what you want?”

He didn’t have a quick defensive reply for that. I looked up from my notebook to see the water pooled in his eyes. He wasn’t crying yet, but it was only a matter of time, a matter of volume.

“It’s not what you want, is it, Mr. Singleton?”

He quickly shook his head before wiping one eye and then the other with the back of his left hand.

“Maybe we should start again, hey?”

He nodded and sat up a little straighter. I smiled and pulled my notebook closer. Now that we had that out of the way, we might actually get somewhere.