If I was to turn back the pages of my life, to the first calm months at my stepfather’s house, my days would appear wonderfully simple and sweet, and in truth they were. It was a time when a gentle thread of calm and security weaved through my days. A brief moment I fondly remember and continually reflect back upon, perhaps in an attempt to regain some semblance of normalcy or to remind myself there was some good.
There weren’t any worries about money. My stepfather Drake was an attorney and helped the city officials acquire land for approved projects, which sometimes meant property owners had to give up their homes. It was rumored much later, when I was an adult, that Drake’s firm was actually responsible for my great-grandmother having to abandon her house in Monterey, California for demolition, to make way for a multi-level parking garage for tourists…
The rest of this story is in the book Everyday Aspergers
Except for the light from the slivered moon the road was black. My foot hit the pedal and I sped up faster and faster towards the tracks. Mangled is what I wanted. But I wouldn’t have the nerve to stop, to wait for a train. There would have to be another way. Perhaps a motel off the interstate, perhaps some pills and a forever sleep. I shook away the thought and breathed a prayer. “Please, help me.”
The ache of the past had become my own Siamese twin. So much so, I didn’t know where my pain stopped and my true self began. I was pain. I was the past. We shared the same blood. Everything and anyone could conjure up bitter memories, especially certain sounds and smells. Everyday was yet another rerun of all the misery I’d viewed before. The scenery and characters might change, but the plot and outcome never altered. I knew all the psychological jargon, the self-talk, the imaging, meditation, and so on; and they served as my air so to speak, the invisible space which kept me temporarily afloat as I waved back and forth in a stormy sea clinging to an inflatable raft filled with holes…
The rest of this story is in the book Everyday Aspergers
The accident had happened fast. No one had expected it. I hadn’t meant to let go.
I had fallen headfirst, a good four feet, onto the unforgiving concrete. Riding atop my babysitter’s shoulders, I hadn’t thought not to bend my head back and look down. I was only having fun. No one had ever told me not to bend over. And I’d only had the chance to view my backyard upside down for a minute or two, before I lost my balance and fell.
Smack!
After the fall, the sitter screamed and rushed me indoors to the dining area. Her teenage friend was there, too—her screams equally loud and bothersome. For some time everything echoed and twisted and turned in the chambers of my ears. Blood rushed out of my head in every direction, staining all the bathroom towels. I was on the dining room table, up high, as everyone scurried about in nervous circles. I glanced down and spotted my Labrador Sugar. Through my tears, I saw she was panting and pacing, and whining some. My small hand met the warm oozing blood at the back of my head. So much blood.
I awoke, wet and hot, to discover myself trapped beneath a heavy blanket in some unknown place. Nothing looked familiar. I turned quickly and tried to rise up, but some force pushed me down. I was inside a nightmare… (The rest of the story is in the book Everyday Aspergers)
You are either going to love this post or say to yourself (or perhaps your neighbor): Look how long this fricken post is!
Here’s some easy listening music to get you through the first 5 pages.
No. I’m not kidding.
It’s a soundtrack song from one of my favorite shows of all time. If you haven’t seen the movie, you haven’t lived!
Love Actually: Christmas is All Around song, by Billy Mack
This is NOT connected to the story in anyway. But this post is so fricken long that I don’t have time to look for other images that aren’t copyrighted.
I did what would be the equivalent to my very first “unfriending” of an individual yesterday.
I pressed the button on the social network site and PRESTO-MAGICO (said in a French accent), they are gone from my life.
Through this unfriending process, I realized that I have NEVER once un-friended a person!
I mean real, walking, living breathing life—friends I hang out with, who I touch regularly…okay, that just didn’t sound right.
Today I reached the massive conclusion that I did not come equipped with an un-friend button. Whomever or whatever force created me, forgot to install the un-friend button. (And I don’t mean my mom and dad.)
I’m also missing the whole and complete manual that explains the workings of friendships.
Luckily, through sweat and tears (literally lots of tears), I’ve managed to recreate my own friendship manual that looks fairly equivalent to other people’s manuals. Of course, MY manual is written in some obscure language only Crazy Frog can read.
I’ve lost a number of friends due to my quirkiness and lack of friendship manual. Not so much now, but a fair number in my early years, and a recent loss in my late thirties.
There are two that stand out.
One loss happened with a friend I was close with for a good four to five years. And then one day, she just stopped returning my emails, stopped returning my calls, and un-friended me on Facebook. And her brother in England, he un-friended me, too! No explanation. No closure. No reason. Just erased me from her life. And at the time, she only lived a block away from me.
This is what I imagine she would say, if she were asked to explain why she dumped me. Remember I had no idea I had Aspergers at the time, and neither did she.
She freaked out a lot over things.
She was needy.
She obsessed about her health and writing.
She worried a lot.
She was very intense, too intense.
She talked too much about her church.
Oh, and she insulted my husband one too many times, like when she said, in front of his whole poker gang:
“I bought you these specific low-salt chips because your wife told me your blood pressure was high.”
And another time at a party when she said, “I told you that you should have gotten that mole on your forehead checked out a long time ago!”
The other friend, was the only friend I made the first four years of college. This college friend simply disappeared. She stopped returning my calls. And when I phoned for the tenth time, her father informed me that his daughter was too upset to talk to me and no longer wanted to be friends. I’m still clueless on this one. But I imagine this person would have said something to this tune:
She talks about spirits and ghosts all the time.
She talks about precognitive dreams.
She dates men out-of-town she hardly knows.
She obsesses about men she just met.
She talks nonstop.
She’s odd. I mean who has never once bought themselves a soda?
And how could she not know I was dressed as Mrs. Bundy on Halloween? Doesn’t she watch Married with Children?
Interestingly enough, these two friends both have the same name. I’m not super fond of that name anymore.
I try to keep my blog PG-Rated, but these stories are probably PG-13, some strong language.
Vignette: The Bleeding Napkins
The thing I remember most about Renny, besides her over-sized nostrils and cooked-spaghetti-like hair, was the bleeding napkins.
“We show them at the county fairs and other places,” Renny said, one afternoon in her dingy kitchen. Squeezing my face together, I covered my mouth and nose with my hand and stared out at the pile of gray and blue cat carriers stacked high in the corner.
“You’ll get used to the smell in a few minutes,” Renny apologized.
I smiled. “I like your orange wallpaper,” I offered.
Renny pulled down an enormous bag from the pantry shelf and proceeded to fill up five bowls with cat food. Nine cats and three kittens came running. “Mother and I show them at the cat shows,” she announced, and pointed to a shelf laden with dusty ribbons, plaques and miniature, gold trophies shaped into cat faces.
“Do you get money?” I asked from behind my hand.
“No,” Renny frowned. “We only get the prizes.” She pushed aside some dirty dishes in the sink and filled up a large water bowl. Then she wet a stack of napkins.
“Oh,” I said, sinking my hands deep into my jean pockets. I breathed in. Renny was right, the smell was fading.
“I used to have thirteen cats when I was little,” I said. “But only for a couple weeks. We had three cats and two got pregnant, and soon there were thirteen. But I like the number thirteen. It’s my favorite. So that was pretty cool.” I was rambling. I rambled when I was nervous. “But then one day I came home and there was only one cat left, Ben’s cat. That’s all. And I asked Mom what happened and Mom said that she found them all good homes. But I knew she hadn’t really, because it was only one day. And no one can find twelve cats homes in one day. So I knew they were dead.” I peered out at Renny who didn’t seem to be listening. “Did I tell you ten of them were kittens?”
Renny glanced up and smiled. “Come in here. I have something I have to do,” she said. The water dripped off the napkins, making a trail from the kitchen into the living room. Renny kicked an empty soda bottle out of her way and tossed a clump of her sister’s clothes onto a chair. “It’s a good thing we don’t have carpet, my mom says. But they still find their way to the couch, mostly this couch. That chair over there isn’t so bad. You can sit there if you want.
“I’m fine,” I answered. I picked at the green alligator appliqué I’d sewn by hand on to my old shirt, an alligator I’d plucked off of a ten-cent, stained polo shirt purchased from the local thrift store.
Renny stopped moving, and asked, “I do this everyday—well most days. Do you want to try?”
“No, thanks,” I said with shifty eyes.
Renny set the pile of wet napkins on the arm of the couch and began separating them from each other. One at a time she spread white all across the seat of the couch, until there appeared to be a long line of paper ghosts.
Like magic, the napkins began turning red, bleeding out from the center to the edges. I twisted my face in disgust. “What’s that?” I asked.
“Flea poop,” Renny said quickly. “It’s one of the downfalls of having cats. But it’s worth it. You saw all those ribbons.”
My eyes widened. I gulped. “I guess. Do you think I can use your bathroom?”
Five minutes later, after I’d rinsed my hands under the water several times and stuck my head out the open bathroom window, I found Renny atop her waterbed. There were no blankets. Well there were, but the covers were all piled in a corner of her closet. But there was one big orange sheet.
“My mother’s old boyfriend Ben used to have a waterbed,” I said.
“You’re pretty safe up here from the fleas. Here.” She tossed a training bra at my head.
“Yuck. What’d you do that for?”
Renny flashed an unfettered smile. “My sisters have them. I thought it was about time I got one. Plus when a guy goes to feel me up, if I’m not wearing a bra, what’s he going to think?”
I touched my sunken chest and frowned. “Who’s going to feel you up?” I looked up. “Do you think I need a bra?”
Renny jumped down from the bed. I flicked a flea off of my arm and examined the floating green cluster of goop in the water under Renny’s waterbed liner. “Yuck,” I said. “You need water conditioner or to drain it.”
Snatching the bra from my hand, Renny held it up against her shirt and galloped about the house neighing like a horse. I followed, prancing about with a pair of Renny’s floral underwear on my head. We were both out of breath when we heard the sounds of barking laughter.
We peered out the living room window. At the end of the driveway, Renny’s sisters flashed their black bras at two shaggy-haired boys. Renny’s mouth was agape, her pointy ears turning red. I pulled my eyes away and focused on the flea on my sock, catching the parasite with the first try and popping it in between my thumbnail and finger. A drop of blood squirted out.
Renny stepped away from the window, taking the string of the blinds with her. The blinds clanked and scraped against the mildewing glass causing a miniature dust storm. Coughing, I ran to Renny’s bedroom and sought retreat from the fleas under the orange sheet.
Minutes later, Renny lifted the lid of a red and white cigar box, and pulled out a small bud of marijuana. “It’s the expensive stuff,” she said and bit down with a sour face.
I wasn’t too impressed, but smiled anyhow. “I’ve tasted the seeds before,” I offered.
Renny chuckled, set the box down, and pushed an orange tabby cat away. “Mom keeps the dope hidden in her closet but my sisters are always stealing.” She pulled off cat hair from her sock and scanned her slovenly room, the whites of her eyes turning pink. “Sometimes,” she whispered, “I wish I lived with my father.”
Day Thirty-Three’s post was a superb example of me strung out on coffee. I’m assuming that the majority of viewers scanned down the entirety of the post, mumbled, “Crap, this is long,” and got the heck out of dodge. Or, they stopped right around the time I was rambling on and on about how I’d posted a video clip.
Now I’m tempted to copy and paste the bottom portion of Day Thirty-Three (awesome number 33 is, by the way), because the content, in my not-so-humble opinion, is very interesting, like the part when I express how I feel sorry for isolated globs of toothpaste. You might want to see the last part of the post, at the very least. I wouldn’t want you to miss out on the gross-factor. Just saying.
I also am remembering my blog rules; and thought I should, (nasty sh word that it is), remind my readers (my friends, my good buddies, my pals) that there really are no rules in blogging. Just incase someone was thinking my powerful prose, I spat out while inebriated (smashed out) on coffee, was inappropriate in length. (Did you know coffee is not made from a bean but from seeds? Who knew?)
I love that there are no rules in blogging. Still I find myself doing what I always tend to do in walking life: analyze others’ style, breadth, subject matter, and quality. But then I reason, with LV (little voice in my head), that the act of Me breaking full force out of this self-inflicted mold, that of the Jell-O-mold of a fear-based conformist, is exactly why I am authoring this blog in the first place! (Now I’m picturing green Jell-O; now cellulite; now thinking I shouldn’t have had that apple fritter and cheese puff yesterday.)
For today, before I ramble on any further, or let Crazy Frog and Brain escort us on a three-hour cruise to cellulite land—as enticing as that sounds—I wanted to share a bit about my college experience. While you venture down melancholic lane, I’ll be heading upstairs to steal some sips of my husband’s coffee and watch the telly. (LV still has that whole British dialect going on from yesterday.) I’m wiping my tears after this one, so consider yourself forewarned.
A Lonely, Heart-Broken Pillow
Through the following seasons, the sharp point of fear worked its way into me like the microscopic barbs of a seed-bearing foxtail. I was confused and greatly disappointed. I believed with the coming of adulthood, by at last leaving my mother’s house and striking out into a different land, life would somehow get easier. I expected the load I’d carried from my childhood to shed itself in layers, to ultimately fly away effortlessly, to disperse across the sky like the seeds of a dandelion… (The rest of the story is in the book Everyday Aspergers.)