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I’ve been eerily calm about everything lately.  I haven’t taken the Clonazepam in a week—ran out—yet I’ve been okay.  A few panic attacks, some low-grade anxiety manifesting itself as strained back and leg muscles, several moments of deep bereavement, but I’m overall peaceful.

That is, in the face of the deaths seemingly piling up around me lately, I’m okay.

In fact, my major stressor has become the fear that my late sense of peace will end.  Because if this ends, then I didn’t learn anything new.  And I’ll struggle to control myself—again.  Then, I’ll know the peace was really shock from Sang’s death.  Then, this is just another turn of the chemical tides.  It’s always—

I’m catastrophizing.  Realistically, it’s more likely the peace I feel is due to the overall peaceful environment I’ve constructed around me.  I have several inspiring relationships in my life.  I have a steady income and health insurance.  I have an able body and a highly capable mind.  True, I recently lost one of my best friends to what boils down to the limitations of science.  Just today I held back tears as I told a Sang story.  Yet, that I was able to exercise that much control surprises me.  My voice only broke a few times, and I had the foresight to lower my gaze to hide the rising tide hazing my vision.  It was a small step but a step forward nonetheless.

Publishing this post tonight is the biggest step of all, actually.  The worst thing a depressive can do is isolate.  So, I’m doing what anybody who’s had effective therapy treatment does: communicating.  Every word hurts, and every sentence feels like a small miracle I alone labored to create.  Even as I write these words, I’m wondering if I’ll have the courage to press the “Publish” button to my right.  If I do, it’ll be a big step out of grief and depression.  If I publish again tomorrow, I’ll have started myself on the long journey back to full mental and physical health.  Writing, my shameless monster, washes me of the guilt and self-disgust that’s too long kept my skin from breathing.  Publishing adds meaning to an otherwise masturbatory skill.

So, in a sense, I give myself meaning by publishing.

I’m sorry.  I’m either extremely focused or disturbingly absent-minded.  This post seems to drift between the two states.  I irresponsibly allowed the Clonazepam to run out in between psychiatric visits.  Though I did have the job of finding a new psychiatrist during that interim, I should have made the matter a higher priority than I did.  I—I’m whipping myself.

Not a new problem.  I know.

I’m trying to scream on paper, but I’m not talented enough to know how to do it.  So too simply put, nothing feels urgent anymore.  Yet, I’m full of all this quiet, distant tension.  Not quite dissociation, I’m compelled to enjoy it.  But I just don’t trust it to be good.  There’s an anxiety whispering from there.  It’s creeping up my throat, and I want to let it out.  If I let it out, maybe I’ll be able to take a deep enough breath.  I can stop this yawning.  I’m always so exhausted, lately.

I just have to press “Publish.”

I’ve been avoiding you—and myself.  I wrote the following during Sang’s wake as a Korean preacher took the podium in front of what must have been his whole congregation.  It’s largely unedited.

Bodies long with

fear

on them. standing

room

only. I

can’t breathe

in this

home of

grieving.

the darkness in

me choking

me—sobbing

Surrounded now by the ultimate vocalization of the language that threatened him all his life, Korean—that gave him his first words, that he could never fully comprehend or use, another reason for him to feel less than he was—I’m screaming tears.  The strange sounds are a burden on me.  He was never so strange to me as he is now.  In his life, I understood all his words.

Now I’m reminded I hadn’t heard them all.  All the singing and chanting is pretty.  I recognize the intonations of an Our Father.  But it all makes me very aware of new dimensions to my loss.  There are parts of him and words of his I never heard—and never will.

Time, logic tells me, is what I’m mourning, not Sang.  My self-deprecatory side informs me I’m self-indulgent for groaning so much, as there’s no reason to cry for the dead; it’s all for myself.  Yet, all of me wants him back.  My every fragment acknowledges it.  I feel I’ve lost a life partner.  As much as I would like to always control my emotionality, this is one situation where logic shatters against reality.

As a little relief, I don’t cry as much since the wake on Thursday night.  I knew Sang was gone when I saw his face, peach with make-up, and a wooden cross in his folded hands.  I finished scribbling notes about the service, then collapsed into my grief for the rest of the night.  When I woke Friday, it was near noon.  I had suffered nightmares, and my head ached the whole day from the prior night’s abandoned crying, but I was finally able to hold back crying—usually, anyway.

Only, my leg has started shaking again.  With my wonderful psychiatrist on permanent medical leave, there isn’t much I can do until her replacement can fit me in.

No, I’m being defenseless.  I could have called other psychiatrists.  I even wrote down the contact info to a few in-network doctors.  I didn’t call because I don’t want to talk about my dead sex drive nor, now, Sang.

Life is tiring me out.  What else is there to say?  What will the doctors tell me but to breathe?  I’m screaming wrenching throbbing inside my head.  I can’t tell the difference between grief and depression.  It’s all painful.  I can feel a fear on me.  I want to tear it out by its roots, but its origins are opaque, like a claw reaching through a wormhole.  What else do you want me to say?

I don’t picture him standing up anymore.  Instead, I remember the caked on make-up covering his skin.  The only place the clay mask didn’t cover was the inside of his ear.  The purple-red spot near the ear canal was the only part of him they didn’t touch.  It was a spot they hadn’t bothered with.

I need to know where that spot is in me.

16
Nov

Originally posted here, the following [with little editing] was in response to a friend’s comment.  I’ve re-posted it here to bring attention to this major part of my trauma I’ve been trying so desperately to ignore: men as a whole.

Every day, I struggle to see men as fellow victims. Intellectually, I know they are. I know the patriarchy has claimed them as it’s claimed us.

But then the two men I respect most in the world tease me for the aches and pains my constant anxiety have caused. “It was all harmless kidding,” I tell myself, “and it is kind of comical. I’m always whining.”

A long list of self-deprecations are proven true by their laughter.

I—I hate to admit it, but I feel very much like you do. I still sometimes think, “aw, look at that guy with his kid.” That, however, is quickly subsumed by images of him molesting her.

I’m probably naive, but I just can’t embrace that image, yet. I can’t think of all men that way. I feel that, for me, and I only speak for myself, I would be giving into the trauma and condemning myself to this fractured reality.

I know. I’m a fool for hoping. They keep beating me, and I keep licking their hand. But, as I see it, if I give up on men, I give up on women, too. It’s the nature of a binary. To that point, I’ve dated women. Their good intentions are equally worthless. Even the ones you don’t so much as kiss will caress your soul as they lead you toward their parapet.

No. Forget what I said. My argument is flawed. None of those women damaged me for years: stole into my mind, ripped apart my anatomy, and irrevocably harmed my sexuality.

You caught me, bradamant. I’m having some difficulty accepting my feelings against men. I know it doesn’t end. I want to say there are exceptions, but every man I’ve thought was an exception has proven to actually be damaging in a way so subtle, his damage is more perverse than the last one’s.

But I’m afraid to hate men, bradamant. I’m afraid to leave them forever. I fear I would be letting the Andys win.

Not letting them win is the only thing that drives me.

Oh, God! That’s an ugly realization! They’re at the essence of my every motivation. They define me.

Have they already won?