Everything is fine.
Do you actually believe that or do you just want to believe it?
Is there a difference?
And when the night took his knee, and the sun grazed his face with her locks long and blonde as she stood, his eyes rested only on her.
It hurts to watch my father split in two each night.
Right down the middle of his face, one half hops to bed and the other to the garage to yell.
The sleeping half is kind, and has never touched a drop of alcohol, and makes big pancake breakfasts on Sunday mornings.
The waking half is cruel, and has fascist memorabilia on his walls, and drills screws in pictures of the opposition to hang.
I can only love half of him, but I cannot stop even that. His image bleeds in my mind, I cannot grapple with the fact that they are the same man after all—that Nazi’s have daughters, too.
If you want to know what someone wants, watch what they give away. Love, time, compliments. People think others yearn the same way they do, and they reveal themselves in these little interactions; the way daylight escapes blinds midday.
Art by Jason Scheier
When I was a child I’d only known depression through medicine commercials, where the depressed person was a porcelain wind up doll that had to be wound over and over again to walk. I didn’t really understand it then, tucked away neatly in my television set. Why wouldn’t they want to keep going, always? Why would they need to be wound? And now as I look down at my porcelain foot, I wonder why it isn’t shuffling in front of the other.
A Bother
I don’t mean to be a bother, I really don’t. I just can’t help but ruining everything all the time.
You don’t ruin everything silly.
Breakfast?
Well yeah but that’s one off.
Mom’s anniversary with dad?
That was an accident.
So I’ve said. If I told you it was on purpose would you be mad at me?
Well, no, I’m not mom but I’d be shocked. Why would you spill wine on her at dad’s grave on purpose?
I genuinely thought it would make her laugh. Because dad spilled wine on her on their first date remember?
Ohh, right. I didn’t think of that. Did you tell her you were trying to recreate that moment? She loves telling that story.
No. I felt so bad about it I threw up behind some lady’s tombstone over the hill. Mary S. Timbleton was her name.
You never told me you threw up on a dead woman’s grave.
Behind it.
Nearly there anyways. Makes for a better story. Dad would’ve laughed.
He was certainly a better storyteller than I am.
I like your stories just fine. You’ve yet to ruin one of those.
Thanks. I think.
Let her down softly, I say. Let her down softly. The little girl that lives in me enduring this world confined by rancor deserves a gentle bed to die in.
'Sunrise Water Nymphs' by Arthur Prince Spear, (1879 - 1959).
I feel the grating fingernails of progress on my tender skin, and wonder how it lead us here. To desolation, destruction. We were supposed to be better, stronger, kinder. But instead we are are weaker, crueler and so poignantly and horribly worse.
How disappointing that evolution does not promise improvement, only difference.
Scales painted like fingernails in an array of cobalts, blacks, and periwinkles danced around me in reflections and refractions in the crystal clear water. She circled me, playing with me, I thought. Though I know now she was playing with the sun, and I was a lowly witness, only in the way of her serenity. I didn’t intend to startle her when we met eyes, it just sort of happened that way.