I was at Starbucks yesterday morning and the line was very long. I was tinkering with my wallet, wasting time, when the lady behind me decided we should have a conversation. Seeing as how I was going to be there for another ten minutes (at least), I thought, sure, why not. She started by telling me how pretty I look. I should have known right then that any conversation which starts this way is just going to get even more awkward. I thanked her, thinking that was the end of it. I mean, what else is there to say? That is generally how these things go. You complement someone, they say thank you, and then you walk away. Or in the case of having to stand behind them in line, you just continue standing there. Right?
Author Archives: Christene
The Rubik’s Cube
The problem with fantasy is actually just that. It is not real. Even worse, when juxtaposed with reality it evinces just how brutal it is. It reminds you of what you were trying to escape. And it is no gentle reminder.
It also reminds you of why you cannot escape. You did this to yourself. What’s that saying? You’ve made your bed, now lie in it? Oh the irony.
Unfortunately fantasy is pretense, and you can only play pretend for so long. You can’t live in your head forever.
What’s worse, other people don’t want to live in your head. They want reality. So you try to create a reality for them, but you mangle it somehow, and it ends up incomplete. It is like creating a Matrix, except your are missing walls, and the ceiling looks like it is going to collapse. And then it all does. It is like the Rubik’s cube from Hell – you don’t know how to put it back together.
After your fantasy crashes, you are still left because you were always real. And now you have to remain in reality, but all you want is to bring your fantasy back and make it real. The impossible Rubik’s cube.
Reliving Memories
That last time I spoke with my dad I told him about the kids, and I could see his face light up at the prospect of seeing them again. Then I realize that my kids will never get to know my dad. Ally will have vague memories, but Ducky won’t even have those.
When they get older I will show them the things he wrote, and the things that were written about him. I will show them the few pictures I have. And I will share with them my own memories. But these are only parts of him. There is so much more that they will never know, and that makes me incredibly sad. You can never really know another person, but you can get to know them, and they won’t have that opportunity. He was an amazing man, a great father, and he would have made a wonderful grandfather. In fact, in the short time he had with the kids, he did make a wonderful grandfather.
I remember how he used to chase them around the living room, take them outside for walks around the neighborhood, buy them chocolates and then feign ignorance when they refused to eat their dinner. I remember all the things he has done for me, too many to enumerate. One day I will detail them all out, and relive them on paper, but for now I will just let them scamper through my head, fragmented.