Showing posts with label mother. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mother. Show all posts
Saturday, July 7, 2012
I had graduated from college in December 2010, and lived with my mother until the end of August. Classes resumed in a week, and how did I know this? My sister was still going to school.
That week, I stayed with her in a hotel and considered my options. I spent hours every day looking for jobs online, calling local places, sending out more resumes and cover letters. I took a taxi to the local mall and picked up as many applications as I could. I emailed a few of my past design professors, telling them my situation and asking them for advice. Unfortunately, there was no advice to give.
I had a brother who lived a few miles from campus. I considered staying with him. I began to change my mailing address for a few of my subscriptions. But I knew it wouldn't work. My brother was possessive of his space, and difficult to get along with. And I knew I would wear out my welcome very quickly.
When the week came to an end, my sister and I both knew what was going to happen. She moved into a dorm and started another year of school. I moved back home, into my father's house, where everything began.
I can't say exactly how long I was in disbelief. The days and nights melted together into one endless chain. I gave up looking for jobs. I played video games when my father was home. When he wasn't home, I would take a few Benadryls with a glass of brandy and fall asleep. This wasn't new, really. I had been taking Benadryl for a long time.
A few summers ago, when my sister left, I started to take Benadryl. I was already familiar with the effects of diphenhydramine; I had a brief flirt with allergy pills my senior year in high school. A few years later the head nurse at the university health center prescribed me Prozac and Clonazepam. The Clonazepam was intended to help me relax until the SSRI started working. I fell head-over-heels in love with it.
My birthday wish for years was to have my memory completely erased. I knew that was impossible. But Clonazepam and Benadryl were the next best thing. Not only did they help me forget -- they made me stop feeling. They put my body and mind to sleep. And as long as I was asleep and numb inside, nothing could hurt me.
One night during that summer my sister left, my father began talking to me about the past, and about my mother. I had taken Benadryl. To my delight, it made my spirit coil up and sleep. My ears heard the words, and my mouth responded with vague, reassuring phrases, but nothing touched me. I sat there, watching the patterns of the living room rug bleed into one another, slowly stroking the dog, until one in the morning. That was when he stopped talking. And I stumbled into bed and fell asleep.
Sometimes I would take so much Benadryl that I would wake up in the morning forgetting that I was alive. For a few moments everything looked unfamiliar, and I was unfamiliar to myself, and the whole concept of "life" was unfamiliar. It was as if someone had cracked open my egg and I was seeing the world for the first time. But then things would come back.
Now today I am here wondering if I took so many Benadryls that part of me never woke up. Inside, I feel fragmented. I feel like a part of me has been shut down, or isn't there, or is asleep. I don't feel like all of me is here. Inside, everything is empty and blank.
So, I said that for two years I have been wandering in the desert. I would tell God that. "I'm not sure why I am in this desert right now, God. But I know I will get out of it."
Yesterday night I realized that I wasn't in the desert.
I am the desert.
I have been wandering in the desert for over two years now.
When I graduated with a Bachelor's degree in Design in 2010, I was 23 years old. I didn't have a job and I didn't have a home, so I moved in with my mother. My plan was to secure a design job within the state, during which time I would work a small job and save money.
But for reasons I can't explain, everything just went blank from that point on.
For one, I never ended up securing a job. The few companies that bothered to respond to my resume and cover letter always had the same answers for me: "We love your work. You have a very impressive portfolio. But we don't have the financial means to hire anyone right now."
In the meantime, I got my driver's license and (after five months of searching) got a job at a retail store. I only worked there for two months. One day, I just didn't show up for work. Besides, my mother was moving to another town. And seeing that I had no funds, I realized I would have to move with her.
So, two hours after everything was unloaded from the truck into the new apartment, I left.
I had called my sister (from whom I had been estranged for a year), and she called my father (who I hadn't seen for a year), and shortly they found me sitting outside of the apartment complex with a small trunk of my belongings. I didn't care about what I left behind in the apartment.
It was surprising to see them pull into the complex. I hadn't seen my father and my sister together for years.
"Oh Katie," they told me as I climbed into the backseat. "You look like hell...."
My mind was slowly replaying the argument my mother and I had less than an hour ago. I had expected her to beg me not to leave, to apologize, to ask me to stay. But she sat there silently, tears rolling down her face. "If you think that's what you need to do," she said.
I exploded. "I don't know what I'm supposed to do, Mom! I don't know why the hell I am here, or where the fuck I'm going, or what the hell I'm doing!" I hurled open the door and hauled my bag into the hallway.
"I don't even know why I'm still alive!" I told her.
And those were the last words I told her.
When I graduated with a Bachelor's degree in Design in 2010, I was 23 years old. I didn't have a job and I didn't have a home, so I moved in with my mother. My plan was to secure a design job within the state, during which time I would work a small job and save money.
But for reasons I can't explain, everything just went blank from that point on.
For one, I never ended up securing a job. The few companies that bothered to respond to my resume and cover letter always had the same answers for me: "We love your work. You have a very impressive portfolio. But we don't have the financial means to hire anyone right now."
In the meantime, I got my driver's license and (after five months of searching) got a job at a retail store. I only worked there for two months. One day, I just didn't show up for work. Besides, my mother was moving to another town. And seeing that I had no funds, I realized I would have to move with her.
So, two hours after everything was unloaded from the truck into the new apartment, I left.
I had called my sister (from whom I had been estranged for a year), and she called my father (who I hadn't seen for a year), and shortly they found me sitting outside of the apartment complex with a small trunk of my belongings. I didn't care about what I left behind in the apartment.
It was surprising to see them pull into the complex. I hadn't seen my father and my sister together for years.
"Oh Katie," they told me as I climbed into the backseat. "You look like hell...."
My mind was slowly replaying the argument my mother and I had less than an hour ago. I had expected her to beg me not to leave, to apologize, to ask me to stay. But she sat there silently, tears rolling down her face. "If you think that's what you need to do," she said.
I exploded. "I don't know what I'm supposed to do, Mom! I don't know why the hell I am here, or where the fuck I'm going, or what the hell I'm doing!" I hurled open the door and hauled my bag into the hallway.
"I don't even know why I'm still alive!" I told her.
And those were the last words I told her.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)