Tag-Archive for » self-awareness «

I’m sitting opposite myself, wondering when I’ll be okay.  I’m thinking never at this rate, but who the fuck even cares anymore?  Isn’t it always the same?  Aren’t I always dissatisfied?  Aren’t I always fucked up?  I don’t even care anymore; how am I supposed to hope or believe that other people do?

I don’t even care, and that pisses me off.

But I don’t know what to do with my anger.  I don’t know what to say about it or even why it’s happening.

I can’t hear myself in my own head anymore.  My writing voice is gone.  I’m searching my old journals for it, but I’m blocked.  I’m mute.  I am mute.  How do I begin to say anything?  How do I begin to channel a voice I can no longer remember?

I can’t accept it.  That’s a more precise phrasing.  My voice is in here with me, but I’m judging it so harshly…

I’m afraid I don’t know what to say.  I want to scream at the top of my lungs until I collapse unconscious.  I want lively experiences I’ll never have, living the way I’ve been since graduation.

So, what needs to change now?!  What do I need to do to be happy?  Because college wasn’t it.

Grief is a troubling disease.  There are no words for it.  It only seems to be.  Its source only seems to exist, like the dream I had last night.  The raping only felt real.  The suffering was—is only grounded in an unconscious thought or a memory, perhaps, but even that only seems to exist.  Memory is only what we make it.  It’s never grounded in reality.  Much like dreams, in fact.

Much like this depression—ungrounded, unconscious, only what I make it.

But that isn’t true either.  It’s grounded in me.  Its limbs grow limbs in my unconscious.  And it isn’t what I make it.  I wouldn’t make this.  I couldn’t even conceive of this if I weren’t suffering from it from daybreak to dawn.

And all I want is a little rest.  Can you believe it?  I’ve always said I’m a simple girl with simple needs.  I just never really understood how basic my desires really are.

Our desires.  They’re as fragmented as ourselves, but one thing I’m certain of is I’m not alone in my efforts to cure this affliction.  I’m certainly not among the more progressed, either.

Instead, I’m like a child longing for home.  Except, there is no home.  There never was.

Only this nausea deep within my stomach, driving all my guts and heart up my throat.  I’ve always been like this—hoping for happiness, lonely amidst the crowd.  Pathetic, I think, sometimes.  Though apparently not as dramatic as I’ve been accused of being.  “Grieving is a troubling disease,” I began by stating.  I should know better than to minimize this to a mere “trouble” or to empower this thing by calling it a “disease.”

I should know better.  I should know a lot of things.  At the very least, that feels apparent.

A girl is a word without a definition.  I’m born to live as a word no one knows but me.  I have no context, no words around me who understand my definition.  Most other words haven’t even bothered to look me up except to use me—usually, abuse me because they’re trying to tell me what I mean.  But I can’t change my meaning to suit them.  I may not know what my meaning is, but I know it’s not what they’re telling me.  They force their meanings on me, never understanding I’m a new word they’ve never heard before, so new I haven’t even defined myself yet.  I’m still choosing what words I want around me.  I’m still creating a sound and a shape, practicing being something I like, something I can live with, something that sounds strong but sweet and bears good ideas in others’ minds.

Lately, I’m pushing my meaning too far.  As a result, I’m constantly shaky, fatigued, and frightened.  The things I care about suddenly lack significance.

It sounds like depression.  I know this feeling, the desire to cry and the choking feeling around my throat; it’s depression.

I’m floating on an imaginary line      losing

focus and going from

one meaning    the next

to

stop