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 by Drake from Take Care (Deluxe Version)

Take Care - Drake

“I know you’ve been hurt by someone else. I can tell by the way you carry yourself.”

Some part of me much larger than I’d imagined related to this song and this album this past year. Maybe turning 29 or 30 made me realize my own mortality. Maybe my aunt pointing her 9mm Smith and Wesson at my head on Christmas Day, or my dad getting arrested on felony charges of selling 32 marijuana plants made me realize how much I was fighting against. Or maybe my relationship to this album and this feeling started before then, when I realized I’d been shying away from dating for a very long time and decided to put myself back out there. I don’t know.

But I feel it, this something, and trying to write about it is a bit like trying to write about section 50 of Walt Whitman’s “Song of Myself.” Section 50 starts with “There is that in me—I do not know what it is—but I know it is in me.” How do you write about what’s in you when you don’t know what it is but you only know it hurts?

I know we all have baggage (Drake sing-raps, “When you’re ready, just say you’re ready—when all the baggage just ain’t so heavy”), but I never realized I had so much until the past couple of years. I must’ve known in some part of me that my childhood wasn’t happy; my father supposedly moved out several times and I only remember it once. My mother brought me to meet my half-sister’s mother when I was eight and my half-sister’s mother was six-months pregnant, and I don’t remember it; my parents stayed married for ten years after that. And it goes deeper than that: one time, my father’s friend asked me how I felt about my grandmother in front of her, and I said, “She’s crazy!” I meant it in an seven-year-old I-love-you way, or maybe I said it because I was repeating my father’s words. But I certainly never meant to hurt my grandmother. When I called to apologize to my grandmother that night, she said, “I’m not going to forgive you.” I cried so much after that, realizing I’d hurt my grandmother and she’d never forgive me, but somewhere in the last couple of years I realized how fucked up it is that my grandmother couldn’t forgive my seven-year-old words. There’s so much hurt in my family, so many secrets, but all throughout my childhood, I tried to adopt a bubbly blonde personality. I didn’t know any other way of dealing with my family, or even know how to tell anyone about them.

I carried that bubbly blonde personality with me until I hit my mid-twenties or so, and my father shit all over my twenty-third birthday and I started going to therapy. I finally stopped referring to my father as the greatest man on earth, though I still remember now how and why I felt that way. When I was four, I was so attached to my father that I wouldn’t let him put a new roof on our house without me; he had to tie me to the chimney so I wouldn’t fall off. My father said he wanted to be my role model for how husbands and fathers should act, and I wanted desperately to believe him, even when I knew who he really was. For a long time, I blamed my father’s mistresses instead of my father. I wanted him to be good. I wanted to be good.

I don’t know what I’m saying with all of this except that I like Drake’s album. I like how sad it is. When he sings in “Marvin’s Room,” “I’ve had sex four times this week,” I guess he’s bragging, but he’s also really lonely. I get it. I’ve been doing some of the same, too, lately; I’m trying to fill some hole in me with physical intimacy. I’ve been trying to forget how sad it is to be an adult and to realize that the family I’d always hoped for will never be sane and healthy, and I’ll never be supported completely. I don’t know how to fill that hole; I don’t know how to stop grieving.

And I didn’t even know, really, how apparent this shift in me was until one of my students this past semester said, “Something’s happened to you; you’ve been through something.” This was after we finished reading The Sun Also Rises and most of my students wanted Jake Barnes and Lady Brett Ashley to end up together for no other reason than they wanted a happy ending. Despite the fact that I know they are still young and romantic and most of them have never had their hearts broken, I couldn’t stop myself from telling them they’d been watching too many romantic comedies.

Because, really, romantic comedies don’t come true—at least, not for me. The guy doesn’t cross over to your side of the platform to say, “I like you a lot” and especially, “I love you.” He doesn’t meet you in the airport to say, “Don’t go.” Instead, you’ll find yourself staring across a metro platform in D.C., wishing desperately that you had the courage to say how you feel and to figure out how he feels, until his train comes first and you watch it until it goes out of sight and you cry silently on the way back to your hotel on your last night. And after that, you’ll break up with romantic comedies.

So I guess what I’m trying to say is that I understand this album. Take Care. At 30 years old, I think I understand Drake’s sadness, whether it’s genuine or not.

The easiest papers to grade are the really bad and the really good ones.

If they’re terrible, your eyes glaze over, but eventually you realize there’s no sense in reading carefully because it won’t make sense. So you skim, give general feedback, and let it go. Either they’re good writers and were rushed, or they’re terrible and it’s up to them to read your comments, ask questions, and improve.

If the papers are great, they’re easy to read and you are only looking for minor things to make it better. It’s a simple task.

But the mediocre papers are hardest. You know the writer is trying to say something great, but she just can’t seem to get there. You think, “How could you possibly have thought you wouldn’t need to quote the text?” And you read carefully, trying to discern meaning for your feedback. These take the longest. These are the papers where I shake my damn head.

Well, really, I often shake my damn head. Not a single one of my students is dumb, so why am I having such a hard time finding a B paper (let alone an A one)?

Free Bird - Lynyrd Skynyrd

“I’m as free as a bird now, and this bird you cannot change.”

I hate to get sentimental or sappy or foolish or whatever you get whenever you post Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Free Bird” right after you say that you’re leaving Georgia in two and a half weeks, but I cannot stop myself. I can’t stop thinking about how often I move. This seemingly-brief—but in the middle, interminable—three-year stay in Georgia for graduate school is the longest I’ve been in one place since I was 22. And even then, I only spent one summer here, and the other I was in Greece and Michigan. Why do I keep moving? I don’t think it’s a bad thing except for the fact that at its heart, my moving stems from the need to keep proving myself, and the need to escape my family. (And maybe my fear of being loved.) I don’t want to be always on the run, always afraid, but I’ve said before and I’ll say again that moving back to Kentucky for anything more than a couple of weeks while I look for a job would kill me. Maybe literally.

And I don’t know how to explain this to people who don’t need to move, other than to say that I congratulate you on being able to stay put but I can’t. And I don’t think we can date. Because the guys I’ve been dating lately just don’t seem to realize that no, I’m not from Georgia and no, I don’t plan on staying. Not even if we’re dating. And maybe that’s a fear of intimacy (and probably there’s no “maybe” to it), but I’ve been alone for much/most/all? of my adult life, really alone, and I’m used to doing things my way. And my way means moving, leaving, starting over.

And so the thought of moving to New York (or Chicago, but probably New York judging from my marketable skills, etc.) terrifies me, but that terror is a comfortable place. I don’t have a job lined up, or a place to live. I don’t know how I’m going to get there. But just as Hemingway tells himself he’s done it before and he’ll do it again (writing), so I tell myself. After all, I showed up in France with two suitcases and nowhere to stay for the night, and nowhere to live. If I can do that, I can do this. Watch me.

Apparently my aunt found out today that I was upset with her for pointing her gun at me and sent me a facebook message. She said she didn’t remember pointing her pistol at me. She said it wasn’t loaded, and anyway, she thought we were close enough that I would’ve told her I was upset. Right. Because it took her four months to talk to me since Christmas, other than clicking “like” on my pictures on facebook. Right. Because I was keeping it such a big secret. Right. Because if you’re close with someone, you send them a facebook message rather than calling, or even emailing, or even text messaging. Right. Because if you’re close with someone, you point your 9mm Smith and Wesson at them—even as a joke. (My father once shot a hole in our oven because he thought he was cleaning an unloaded gun. I was standing only a couple of feet away from the oven.) Right. Because I’d want to go anywhere near an aunt who pointed her gun at my head—even if it was unloaded. Right.

She “heard through the grapevine” that I was writing a “story” about it. It’s not a secret, and I refuse to feel bad about it. I don’t feel bad about uninviting her to my graduation, either. Do you know the stress of it? Do you know that since then I’ve started to feel like my family is like Oscar Wao’s family, with a fuku attached to us? I’m terrified I’ll return to Kentucky and be like them. Terrified that’s my destiny. And even more stressed out about graduating next month. I can’t return home, can’t return to anywhere near my family. Especially my aunt. So no, I don’t feel bad about writing a brevity about my aunt pointing her gun at my head.

You point your gun at my head on Christmas Day, you get to deal with the repercussions.

“You know,” someone says, “I heard Tommy Lee’s dick is so big Pamela Anderson Lee can sign her whole name on it.” 
“You know,” he says, “I let a girl sign my dick once. Do you want to?”
——
This is just one part of an essay I’m working on about being a “Good Girl.” I gotta give mad props to Motley Crue for playing on VH1 at just the right time (“Dr. Feelgood” at that). And mad props for the idiot boy who asked me that question, because he’ll be in my manuscript/thesis, his words saved for posterity.
In other words: Publish me when I get done with this essay/manuscript. You won’t regret it.

“You know,” someone says, “I heard Tommy Lee’s dick is so big Pamela Anderson Lee can sign her whole name on it.”

“You know,” he says, “I let a girl sign my dick once. Do you want to?”

——

This is just one part of an essay I’m working on about being a “Good Girl.” I gotta give mad props to Motley Crue for playing on VH1 at just the right time (“Dr. Feelgood” at that). And mad props for the idiot boy who asked me that question, because he’ll be in my manuscript/thesis, his words saved for posterity.

In other words: Publish me when I get done with this essay/manuscript. You won’t regret it.

People do strange things. For instance, I couldn’t possibly explain to anyone passing me by at Barnes & Noble in Lexington why my feet are up in a chair, in a shorter-than-should-be dress, with a giant bruise on my arm, or why I’m eating a tomato caprese sandwich while watching the Gilmore Girls (I’m taking a break to type this). I couldn’t explain how I visited my father today to do some research for an essay on addiction I’m writing in my thesis and, because, I can’t seem to quit him. Because we used to be so close that I wouldn’t let him put a new roof on our house without going up with him, and he had to tie me to the chimney so I’d be near him (that’s in my thesis, too). I couldn’t possibly explain in one breath how I realized today that my father is one of those liars who tells you part of the truth and then, based upon your acceptance of that moral gray area, tells you the whole truth. Or how destructive he is, how he takes one bad thing and makes it worse. Or how I still love him and yet feel absolutely afraid of the parts of me that seem like him. And I also couldn’t explain that I wrote for three hours earlier today and now I am tired but my thesis is so very behind schedule (also cue my father’s arrest, and my sickness this semester) that I have to write right now, too. And I’m behind on grading. And it’s all just pretty damn hard, so I have put my feet up in this chair and I am watching the Gilmore Girls until I can make myself write again.

And I’d also like to note that several people reblogged something I posted from MSNBC about Kentucky being second on the list of “Most Miserable States” and said “bye” or something about staying to make things better. And I feel this pull towards Kentucky, feel it deep down in my bones that they’d like to decompose and become part of the ground that has always nourished and then contained my family for generations and generations, like a cycle—and fuck if this is not well written at all, not how I mean it to be. But I can’t stay here, can’t watch my whole family self-destruct, too. Because I’d be not too far behind. So yes, I’m not returning to Kentucky. I can’t.

Today, just before the nurse gave me a shot of amoxicillin/steroids in my hip, she told me that I had a cough drop stuck to me and helped me peel it off of my shirt. And I realized then that I cared so little what anyone thought about me—I haven’t showered since Friday, and I’m not even sure why I bothered to put on clean underwear before visiting the doctor—that I was over some of the initial, intense feelings about my father getting arrested. And the embarrassment. Isn’t that funny? Being so sick I feel like someone is strangling me at night has allowed me to focus on the physical, rather than the mental. I’m not saying that the debilitating worry about my future and my career and the sort-of curse my family seems to have attached to it isn’t looming there, waiting for me to feel better. I’m just saying that as crappy as it has been to only want to sleep, I’m glad at least I don’t have to deal with both things at once. Maybe we only are given as much as we can handle—and I don’t mean that in a Christian way. I mean, our bodies are kind of amazing creatures, willing to shut down all that’s not important in order to survive. And mine, this weekend, has shut down everything but sleep.

23 plays

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]
 by Arcade Fire from Neon Bible

Intervention - Arcade Fire

“Oh, who’s gonna reset the bone?”

Sitting in the back seat of the car, listening to Jurak and Bethany talk about this song while it played against the steady beat of the windshield wipers, I felt content. Like that’s exactly where I should’ve been tonight, watching roller derby and drinking cider in Athens—instead of writing. You can say I need more discipline with my craft, but you won’t ever convince me that nights like these are a waste.

Sometimes I think I’m going to get fired from teaching…in college. That’s pretty hard to screw up, right? But today I told one class that I couldn’t think of an example for a connotation that wasn’t dirty. They said, “Tell us anyway.” I said, “He’s good with his hands.” Am I supposed to talk about sex with them? Or religion? Am I supposed to give them an example of writing in second person (because the author just needed that distance)—and use my own life? (E.g. The beginning of the brevity I’m working on about my aunt goes like this: “When your hands curl around the hard polymer handle of an unloaded .9mm Smith and Wesson, you notice how top-heavy it is. Like a deadly Dolly Parton.” Yeah, I used second-person again. And I’ll do it again.)
I find myself telling them stories, being intimate in that way with my classes. Sometimes I think I see those two classes of 24 students more often than I see anybody these days. My roommate is married and away on the weekends; my friends here are all busy teaching, too; I’m trying to finish my thesis so I can graduate. I’m not saying I don’t go out, and I’m not saying I don’t have anyone to tell these things to. But my best friends are all five or six or seven or eight hours away and sometimes I’m so very lonely living in Milledgeville, Georgia.
Anyway, I got 3.5 hours of sleep last night for a very long and complicated list of reasons and somehow I’m still smiling. Kind of like the town idiot.

Sometimes I think I’m going to get fired from teaching…in college. That’s pretty hard to screw up, right? But today I told one class that I couldn’t think of an example for a connotation that wasn’t dirty. They said, “Tell us anyway.” I said, “He’s good with his hands.” Am I supposed to talk about sex with them? Or religion? Am I supposed to give them an example of writing in second person (because the author just needed that distance)—and use my own life? (E.g. The beginning of the brevity I’m working on about my aunt goes like this: “When your hands curl around the hard polymer handle of an unloaded .9mm Smith and Wesson, you notice how top-heavy it is. Like a deadly Dolly Parton.” Yeah, I used second-person again. And I’ll do it again.)

I find myself telling them stories, being intimate in that way with my classes. Sometimes I think I see those two classes of 24 students more often than I see anybody these days. My roommate is married and away on the weekends; my friends here are all busy teaching, too; I’m trying to finish my thesis so I can graduate. I’m not saying I don’t go out, and I’m not saying I don’t have anyone to tell these things to. But my best friends are all five or six or seven or eight hours away and sometimes I’m so very lonely living in Milledgeville, Georgia.

Anyway, I got 3.5 hours of sleep last night for a very long and complicated list of reasons and somehow I’m still smiling. Kind of like the town idiot.

Mlle Hazelwood

Reader & Writer, Master of Fine Arts, Collaborator on Structure and Style, a new poetry blog.

 

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