Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Fall - Final Short Story Project

I decided to work on something that had not been workshopped in class and is something new. I will turn in a hard copy of this story on Thursday.
~Blythe Donham


Blythe Donham
Professor Cupolo
Final Project – something new

Fall
            Sitting in a small bagel shop drinking his large coffee, eating his egg, bacon and cheese sandwich, he looks up from his book out at the slow streams of rain falling on the glass. James could not help but think of his first visit to this small town and his first face to face with Grace; her tall, strong body, and all of her quiet confidence, how her dark brown hair fell across her face and how her hazel eyes burned into his every time she looked at him. He could have spent his entire life in the kindness and beauty of her smile and her joyful, honest laugh might possibly have been the sweetest and loveliest sound he had heard in his 40 years of life. It’s on days like this, he goes back four years, to the time they spent with one another. And back to the day that he would regret for as long as he lived.
#
            James was always a complicated man. He was a man who believed words were important and believed that you don’t just say something just to say it. “You say what you mean and you mean what you say, was his motto.” James was a 36 years old man in the middle of a divorce, with an autistic four-year old son, when he met and fell in love with Grace.
 Grace was a dear friend with James’ older sister; Cheyene and the two were brought together by the wonders of Facebook. The two began exchanging e-mails and after a few days of random chitchats about nothing of any importance – other than where Waldo really was – they eventually exchanged phone numbers. As the weeks passed, they would spend hours talking on the phone about his divorce; his wife had an affair with another man and as much as he had tried to forgive and forget – to make it work, he always found that the he could do neither. He and Grace would talk about his son's autism; Jeremiah was a high functioning autistic child that was an incredibly intelligent, loving boy who had difficulties with noise, animals, and of change. The two of them would talk about his dreams to some day open a restaurant and to write a book for his son and other children with autism – to reassure them that they weren’t alone. That they would never be alone. They discussed her desire to become an elementary school teacher – “to have a positive impact from early on” – she would say. They would spend hours talking and even more hours not talking; they could sit in complete silence with one another and not say a word and they both knew that the silence oftentimes said more about them and how they felt about one another than their words ever would be able to. He knew that there were no words that would ever be able to describe how he already felt about the woman whom he had up until that point, never even met yet.
#
It was October 16th 2008 when James took the six hour and nineteen minute drive from Orange County, California to the Bay Area to spend the weekend with someone he believed was one of the most amazing women he could ever hope to know
            He drove down the interstate with his windows down, singing to John Mayer, Trapt, Jack Johnson. With each mile that closed the gap between them, he felt something that he had not felt in a very long time; a longing and an excitement that he could not put into words. He never expected for something to occur between the two of them and for this woman to be everything he never knew he wanted in his life. He never imagined that he would ever feel this way about anyone again. He knew how he felt about Grace and how Grace felt about him and he didn’t care about what other people thought. From their conversations, he knew that she was a kind woman, a woman that was honest to a fault, a caring woman, a woman that was incredibly selfless. He knew that she was someone that he wanted to go on adventures with; he believed that she was a beautiful woman inside and out.
            It was 5:45pm with signs of the first rainfall of the season, when he pulled into the parking lot of the Tri-Valley Inn and Suites in the small East Bay Area town, Pleasanton. Seeing as Grace was a friend of his sister’s, he did not want to presume that he could stay with Grace, so he elected to stay at a hotel. The first thing that went through James’ mind was that this town seemed like a lovely place to spend the most perfect weekend with someone he cared so much about. He checked into the hotel, got his keys to room 106. Checked himself in the mirror and ran cold water over his face as he smiled at his reflection, “this is it,” he thought.
            He took out his phone and though he was eager to call her right away, he waited and stared at her picture for what seemed like minutes, found her number and pressed send. As the phone rang, he could not help but be excited, nervous, and even more so ready. Ready to have this woman standing right in front of him so he could look at her, touch her, feel her warmth; it gave him goose bumps just thinking that he was just minutes away from that. Grace answered the phone in her cheery, upbeat voice, the voice that he had come to know, rely on, and seek comfort in.
            “Hey you!” She said with warmth and a hint of longing that it took his breath away.
            “Hi, love. I am here. All checked in.” He managed to let escape.
            “Wonderful. I will be there in about five minutes. What room are you in?”
            “106”
            “On my way!”
The five minutes it took for her to get to him were the longest five minutes of his entire life. As he impatiently waited for her arrival, he called to check in on his son, he had never been away from Jeremiah for this long. As he was talking with Jeremiah on the phone, he would occasionally look out the window, watching the rain stream down, in excited anticipation for Grace's arrival. As he finished his call with his son and told him that he loved and missed him, he finally saw a white car pull into the parking lot and a woman in a grey and turquoise striped dress that hugged all of her curves in the perfect spots, hair pulled back and a nervous smile on the face that he had studied through pictures, step out of the car. She knocked on the door. He waited. Looking at her through the peephole. He did not want to take his eyes off of her for one second. He opened the door and the first thing she did was smile at him. Her hazel eyes looking right into his sad blue eyes. Her beautiful, loving smile brought on a burning desire and a longing in his heart. To see this in person. To have this in front of me. This is what I want.
            “Hello.” Grace said with smiling eyes.
            She took his breath away. He stared at her and finally said, “Hello!” He then ushered her into the room and finally couldn’t help himself, scooped her up with a hug and breathed her in and held her for as long as he could. She smelled of a mixture of sweet perfume and peaches; a smell that he wanted to remember for a lifetime. James didn‘t want to let her go, he just wanted to hold her, to feel her and to know that she was real. And she let him. When the time finally came for them to let go of one another, they both looked into each other’s eyes and smiled sweetly at one another. Again, words didn’t need to be exchanged, they were both perfectly content finally being face to face.
            Eventually the silence was interrupted by the rumbling of two hungry stomachs. They both laughed at each other’s hunger and decided on ordering in some pizza. They ordered a large cheese pizza and devoured it as if they hadn’t eaten in years; something that made them both laugh at each other again. They talked all through dinner about how surreal it was for the both of them to be in the situation that they were in, about how neither one of them was looking for anything but both couldn’t help but agree that they were already very important to one another.
            They spent the rest of the evening talking about books, music, movies, Jeremiah – everything. Looking into each other’s eyes, tenderly touching one another as if both wondering if the other was real or not. When he finally kissed her, he felt weak and vulnerable everywhere. He felt it in his knees, in his heart, his head was spinning and he couldn’t keep a fluid thought in his mind other than the thought that he just wanted to keep looking at her, touching her, kissing her. He wanted to stay up all night cherishing her, talking to her, getting lost in her smile and in her beautiful hazel eyes. James knew that she felt the same way. He could see in in the way that she looked at him. The way she touched him. The way she smiled at him. It was in the way she allowed him to be exactly who he was. Without pretense, judgment, or fault.
            James and Grace fell asleep in each other’s arms and when he woke up the next morning before she had the chance, he realized that felt safe there with her. A feeling because of his past, he never thought he would ever or could ever feel again. He looked at her and tenderly caressed her face. He couldn’t believe that this woman was next to him and how fast she had won over his heart and soul. He was thankful for her. He stared at her longingly and gently tucked her hair behind her ear. Kissed her on her nose. Kissed her forehead. Kissed her on her neck. He couldn’t help himself. Grace woke up smiling at him and touched his scruffy cheek. He knew he had to have her right then and there. She let him. They made love for the first time and he still believed, without a doubt, no matter what happened after this weekend, this woman was special.
            They both got ready for the day, showering separately and allowing each other some privacy; James called Jeremiah to make sure that he had breakfast and to tell him that he would be home in a just a couple of days, it was the one thing in his life that he believed that he had gotten right, his beautiful son. The rain had finally stopped. When they were both dressed and ready, they walked to the local coffee shop to get bagels and coffee. It was one of the things that he adored about her. She liked to be outside. She preferred to walk. He adored the fact that it gave her a sense of peace and calm. They both ordered an egg and bacon sandwich and large coffees and sat in a corner booth eating, staring, smiling, and making faces at each other. She made him feel safe. She made him feel alive. She made him feel special. Just in the way she looked at him and he longed and hoped to make her feel the very same way. They walked back to the hotel hand in hand, talking about what they wanted to do for the rest of the day. They decided on a nap, holding each other, and looking into each other’s eyes. Lunch and exploring afterwards. Grace fell asleep first and James pulled her in closer to him to feel her warmth of her body next to his. Minutes seemed to pass and he finally fell asleep, hugging her tightly to himself.
            Hours later, they both woke up and stared at each other again, the silence between them – the definition of perfect; they could stare into each other’s eyes and feel safe there. Like they were home. The yearning and want for one another took over both of them and they made love for the second time. Getting lost in each other. Feeling safe. Feeling loved. Feeling wanted. They smiled at each other and James kissed Grace gently on the lips as they silently lay on the bed.
            The sun decided to come out from behind the clouds as Grace road shotgun and was navigator as James drove his silver Ford Lightning down Interstate 680. Windows down, music blasting through the speakers. They drove to an even smaller town that had more history than most big towns – Danville, CA. She took him to Sideboard CafĂ©, her favorite little coffee house that had wood tables, mismatched chairs, small Christmas lights hanging from the ceiling, acoustic music softly playing over the speakers, and coloring books with crayons on every table. James felt more relaxed and more himself with her and in this place than he had ever felt with anyone, in any place in a very long time. They spent hours at the coffee shop talking, holding hands, stealing kisses, and looking into each other’s eyes, occasionally sipping coffee.
            When they were both ready to leave, Grace suggested that they go for a walk. His heart skipped a beat again – he knew how much she loved to walk and explore. To be a part of the world. Something that he never longed for until he met her. Things were different with her. He believed in himself. Saw the goodness in himself when he was with her. Up until they met, it had been years since he had seen or felt any kind of light. Darkness. Perpetual darkness is all her saw. It was all he was capable of feeling. It was a place he felt comfortable. James and his sudden burst of light and goodness explored downtown. Its old feel. How most of the shops and restaurants were in old Victorian style homes. How calm and peaceful he felt just being there with her, walking hand in hand. He couldn’t believe that there was such a place like this. A place that seemed to be hidden away – a hidden treasure. A place with large, beautiful trees, vibrant flowers, brick buildings. A place where for the first time in a really long time he felt calm in his heart, in his mind, and in his soul. A feeling that not only had to do with this place, but because of Grace. Because of her beauty. Because of her kindness.
            As they were driving back to the hotel, James couldn’t help but to think how he has never felt safer with anyone. How he has never laughed as much with someone as he does with Grace. They only have one more day to spend with one another before he leaves. A thought that made his whole body ache. It was then that he began to question everything. How could he leave her? But then again, how could this work? How could he go back to his life as it was before her? These were questions that James kept asking himself and the answers, to him, we simple yet complex at the same time; he had to leave her. He had a son and a job in Orange County. She had a life and a job in the Bay Area. He didn't know if it could really work. The distance hadn't seemed to be an issue at first, but it wasn’t until he really thought about it. He knew coming into this weekend that there would be that devastating when he came to the realization that if they tried this long distance – they would be spending more time apart than they would be together. He wasn’t sure that that was something that he wanted. Especially not with her. But he also knew without a doubt that he would not be able to go back to his life as it was without her. She began to make him feel that anything was possible. She had captured his heart in such a short period of time. He had a difficult time remembering what life was like before her. The thought of life after her, after their weekend together – thoughts he wasn’t ready to face – only entertain. For the sake of his son he had to think rationally instead of impulsively and emotionally.
            “Are you ok?” Grace asked as she reached over and tenderly caressed his neck with her hand. He couldn’t answer her, he just smiled at her, grabbed her hand, kissed the back of it and refused to let her go. Squeezing her hand in his – as if saying, you’re mine – I will never let you go.
As they reached town, James decided that he wanted to explore more of the town she grew up in. The place that she called home. As he drove – she navigated – they drove past her high school, her elementary school, Fair Grounds. He was delighted to hear her stories. Listen to her talk about her life. Her friends. Her beautiful memories of the place she grew up. It was quite the task to get her to actually speak to him – he knew she preferred to be writing whatever it is that she wanted to say so much more. As he was watching her tell her storied he began to fall in love with the town she called home. All because it was where she was and wherever she was, was the place he longed to be. They decided to park and walk through downtown, walking past the Veteran’s Memorial Building, where she told him stories of all of the plays she used to be in. They walked past the small, yoga studio where she does yoga twice a week. As they were walking, talking, laughing, the clouds decided to open up and rain began pouring down on them. They ducked into the nearest building, laughing at how fast and clumsily they were able to escape the downpour. They looked around and realized that they were in a restaurant and suddenly they both remembered that they hadn’t eaten anything since breakfast and how famished they both were. By some sort of miracle, on a busy Friday evening, the restaurant had an open table and they were seated right away in a corner booth. After a few minutes of looking over the menu, they decided on calamari as a starter. Sesame crusted Ahi Tuna and a beer for him. Lemon and herb marinated roasted chicken breast and wine from a local winery for her. As they were waiting for their food, James stole glances of Grace. Her make-up free face. How her hair fell across her face. How she looked beautiful in her simple green t-shirt and jeans. Their food came and they both dug in, eating and exchanging glances. Occasionally feeding one another and making faces at one another.
            Once finished, they walked out of the restaurant, hand in hand, back out into the rain and to James’ car. They didn’t want to spend one of their last days cooped up in the hotel – even if that meant spending hours holding each other – they wanted to experience what life would be like if they were a real couple. They decided to go to a movie, with John Mayer playing through the speakers, they drove to the theater, parked and walked hand in hand up to the ticket counter. As they were walking, James noticed how enamored he was with her. Everything that she does. Everything that she is. How she walks. How she carries herself with such assured confidence. How he feels more himself with her than he has ever felt. Once they got their tickets, they walked in to the concession stand, bought Sour Patch Kids, Junior Mints, and water and headed in to get their seats. James let Grace pick the seats. She liked sitting in the middle of the middle – the perfect middle – a quirk of hers that made him laugh and adore her even more. After she chose the perfect middle seat, they both sat and enjoyed the movie and one another’s company. James noticed every time he sat forward in his seat, Grace would reach over and gently rub his back. He could sense that she reached over to touch him simply just because she wanted to and not because she knew that he wanted her to – even though he did, he always wanted to be touched by her or to be touching her – it was a feeling that he never knew he would crave so much.
            The movie ended and the rain stopped. They walked sleepily hand in hand back to the truck never letting go of one another. When they reached the truck, James opened the door for Grace – like a gentleman – before she got into the car, she turned around and looked James in the eyes. She smiled at him. Crinkled her nose. Touched his cheek as she leaned in to kiss him on the lips. James put his arms around her and pulled her in closer to him as he deepened the kiss. He didn’t want to let her go. They broke the kiss at the same time and looked deeper into each other’s eyes. Held one another in the cold, midnight blue abandoned parking lot. It was just the two of them. Even if people were around and someone was to walk by, it wouldn’t have mattered. The only thing that mattered in that moment was them. How they felt about one another. How much they both knew they wanted one another. They let go of each other, got into the car, and drove back to their weekend escape.
            James got the hotel key out of his back pocket, unlocked and opened the door as they both walked sleepily back into the room. They gave each other some privacy while they separately got ready for bed. Brushing teeth. Washing faces. Checking any missed messages and e-mails on their phones. Though they were both exhausted and ready for bed, neither one of them could sleep. They wanted to spend as much time together as they possibly could. Their weekend was slowly coming to an end. James didn’t want to close his eyes and not see her. Even if he saw her in his dreams it was never the same as having her right in front of him. Seeing her in his dreams would never be enough. He knew that it made her uncomfortable – how much he liked to just sit and look at her – it was an insecurity of hers. She always let him. They sat on the bed face-to-face gazing into each other’s eyes. Smiling and touching each other. Grace reached up and caressed James’ face. Tracing his ear. His nose. His lips. Smiling and crinkling her nose as she did. She looked at him longingly and lovingly, in such a way that he always longed for someone to look at him. Like he was the only man in the world. In turn, James traced her lips with his fingers. Traced the shape of her face from her eyebrows, down her nose, her prominent cheekbones, her chin, and her neck. He planted soft, tender kisses on her neck. Her nose. Her lips. He stopped and gazed into her beautiful eyes. He could get lost in those eyes. A thought that excited him more and more with each minute he spent with her.
Grace scooted closer to James and put her forehead to his. They sat quietly on the bed. Breathing each other in. After a minute, she kissed him softly on the lips. He pulled her in closer so they were as close as they possibly could be. They slowly undressed one another and started to make love again. Each time is different. Each time, the feeling of their bodies together and the outpouring of their heart and souls. Leaves them both breathless. Always wanting more. Never wanting to let go. They fell asleep in each other’s arms and woke up the next morning the same way.
            As they both stretched and looked out the window to see the rain falling, James pulled Grace closer and breathed her in. Though her back was to him, he could still feel her smile and hear her take a deep breath. She turned around, looked him in the eyes, crinkled her nose, and smiled sadly at him. He almost asked her what was wrong but then he remembered that this was their last day to spend together before he was to drive back home. They look at each other and touch each other in silence, the silence that just keeps getting more and more perfect with each moment they spend with one another. They got up to get ready for the day. To go out and get breakfast and coffee at the bagel shop they had gone to the day before.
            They sat and talked about everything. Writing. Dreams. His restaurant. Family. Life. His impending divorce. Her distaste for her cruel and cold boss. Everything except the elephant in the room. Neither one of them wanted to face the reality that James was leaving in less than 24 hours. They laughed and smiled at each other and decided to go into San Francisco for the day. They drove out to the city – to visit the Aquarium of the Bay. They spent the day walking around. Taking the ferry out to Alcatraz Island. They spent the day eating, not being able to let go of one another, looking at each other, dancing and singing down the street, and having an amazing time just being with one another. They found a place along Pier 39 where they sat and watched the sunset. They sat in complete silence stealing sweet kisses, holding hands, touching each other, smiling at each other, but never talking. No – no words were needed. James never could have fathomed how beautiful and how seemingly perfect it was to sit in silence with Grace. He got lost in the thought that this was the most magnificent woman that he had ever met. How this was the place that he had never known that he had always wanted to be. The place he needed to be. Anywhere with her is where he wanted to be. After the sun went down and their stomachs were empty and rumbling, they found a small family owned Italian restaurant that was still open. They talked about food, wine, told jokes, and laughed. They could always make each other laugh. They looked at each other with sad eyes and smiled at one another as James paid the bill and headed back to the last few hours of their magical weekend.
            It was late and raining as they arrived back at the hotel. Both completely exhausted from the day. They slowly and sleepily walked into the room and got ready for bed, They both got under the covers and held each other so tightly that neither one of them could move and neither one of them wanted to. They stared into each other’s eyes, smiled, let some tears silently shed between the two of them, as they kissed and touched one another and fell asleep in each other’s arms.
#
            As the alarm went off the next morning, they both woke up to see that it had stopped raining. Grace got slowly out of bed. Walked into the bathroom. Closed the door behind her. Started the shower. Quietly put the seat on the toilet down. Sat down and began to cry. She knew she loved him. She knew even after only spending a few days with him. She had never felt stronger about anyone before this man had come along. She knew he had changed her life in more ways than just one. And in such a short period of time. She could not imagine not having, seeing, touching, kissing, making love to this man every single day for the rest of her life. After crying for a few moments, she picked herself up. Got into the shower. She did after all have to get to work and had a life that she had to get back to.
#
            Grace got out of the shower. Wrapped herself in a towel and walked out of the steamy bathroom, back into the room. James was up and had just finished speaking with his son and was sitting quietly and stoically at the edge of the bed. He looked up at her. Sadly smiled at her. Got up. Walked over to her. Kissed her passionately on the lips. Dropped her towel from her wet body. And they made love for the last time. He couldn’t help but feel that he was completely whole when he was with her. That he never wanted whatever this was, to ever end.
            When they were finished holding one another and looking into each other’s eyes, they reluctantly got up and got ready for the long day ahead of them. Grace had work and James had a long drive back to Orange County that he had ahead of him. Watching the clock, they both realized they still had a little time before Grace had to be at work. They drove to the bagel shop that they had been frequenting over the past weekend. Bought cheese, bacon and egg bagels, and coffee. They sat inside the bagel shop. In their usual booth. Ate quietly and smiled at one another. Finally Grace broke the silence when she said,
I fell in love with you in the simplest yet complex way possible. I want you more than anything and wished for you before I even knew you existed. Simple because it all just made more sense for me to love you than to love anyone else. Complex because of everything else in between. The distance. Your divorce not being final yet. You can’t be here, which is understandable. I would never want you to leave your son. But I love you and I want you more than anything. And it’s up to you, if you want me too. The decision is yours.
#
She waited for his response for what seemed like long, agonizing minutes. Like time was standing still. He sighed. Rubbed his face. There were so many thoughts going through his mind. He thought his brain might explode. He thought about how much he wanted to be with her and how he just wanted to make things work. Then he thought that he still wasn't a completely free man. His divorce was to be final at the end of the next month. He thought about Jeremiah and how all of this would affect him and the progress that he had made. Once that thought came to the forefront of his mind, he knew that he would have to make the decision that he so dreaded having to make. He continued to sit in silence – not wanting to say the words that needed to be said.
Tears ran down his cheeks. He watched her slowly get up. Walk around the table. Plant a gentle kiss on his cheek. Before he knew it, she had walked out the door. Out into the world. He couldn’t bring himself to go after her. No matter how much he loved her and wanted her, he had to let her go. He had to let her go because he knew that right now – where he was at in his life – where she was at in her life – he couldn’t move and he couldn’t and he wasn't at a place to be able to ask her to move to be with him. A decision that he had always regretted.
#
            Though there had been other lovers since her – some he truly did love – no one ever quite made him feel the way that Grace did. They lost touch after their weekend – her decision, not his – though for a few months after he still tried to reach out to her – without ever getting a response. He knew it was time to let her move on. And he needed to do the same thing.
#

Without ever letting her know, on the same weekend every year, he makes the six hour and nineteen minute trek from Orange County to the Bay Area. Just to be closer to her and to remember her and to feel again what he had lost the day she walked out of that bagel shop. One year he actually brought his son with him and told him the story of the woman that changed how he saw the world. And as he looks back on that cold, rainy October day – the day that changed his life forever – he can’t help but shed a tear and secretly hope that she will walk in and everything will be as it always should have been. It will be him and her; her and him and Jeremiah. Secretly hoping that it will be them. All of them; the way he always longed for it to be.

Art Response - When the Adelpho's Put on a Show

About a month or so ago, I was talked into going to a charity fundraising concert that was hosted by the  Chapman University Adelpho's. I don't normally go to fraternity or sorority events, because in all honesty, I don't really believe in the concept of organized friendship/brotherhood/sisterhood. But a friend of mine was putting the event on for wounded Vets so I decided to show up to see what it was all about. They actually did a good job with organizing the event. They had a line up and list - and though the show was running late - like most do - it was actually really nice. Some of the talent performing that evening were Chapman students. One in particular stood out to me. I think mainly because she wrote her own music and lyrics - no cover songs. They were so relatable and she was incredibly unapologetic about the song lyrics. She didn't care what people thought of them and I really liked that. I suppose it's because so much of what she was singing about can be relatable- whether you are a male or female.

I didn't stay very long. Just long enough to see a few acts. The act after was a heavy metal band. I am not a huge fan of screamo music - mainly because I can't understand what they are saying and why anyone would want to hurt themselves by getting in the middle of a most-pit, but the overall sound quality of the performance was great. I suppose it didn't hurt that one of the kids' parents was in the back rocking out and having the time of her life.

Iranian Poet Visit

I wanted to originally write my response on the Iranian poets that came to read for us. I was fortunate enough to get to see them twice during their stay here at Chapman University.
I do not remember her name, but her poetry and her response to some of the questions that students had for her. It was the one poet/writer who also does a lot of translation - of poetry and other works. One thing in particular that stood out to me was when she said that though she liked the idea of people writing everyday and that she believed that in order to grow your craft, you should write everyday - but sometimes what you write is just "shit" (her words, not mine). I think one of the most profound things that she said was that if you need to, leave it. Don't touch it until you are ready. Or rather until it is ready. That it's okay to live your life and to do what you are doing, because if you are truly a writer, that's in your blood. That doesn't just go away. Take some time to walk away from something so that when you come back to it, it will be fresh and new.

Something else that really struck me during the readings later in the afternoon is just how amazing the writing was. How even though some things didn't make sense - and sometimes that's what poetry is, it's not supposed to make sense - every word counted. Every word was meticulously chosen and used and had a purpose. And I know that is something that we have been learning in this class. To choose every word and make it count.

Monday, March 16, 2015

He and I - reworking of a story from a previous prompt

He and I
            We meet here. We always meet here. Under the orange tree in the circle, in the middle of town. It’s safe to meet here. No one knows that he and I meet here. Our tree is in the corner of the circle. I know how that sounds. Circle’s don’t have corners. But in this world, in the world where there is no one but him and me, me and him, there is just this one corner. We made it ours. The orange tree bares the names of many young lovers that came before us. We know that. Lovers that most likely made promises to one another. Most of those promises were never kept or forgotten about. We were going to be different, he and I. Our love was going to be different. It was going to last forever. We knew that. He and I.         
            There were days when we would sneak out. We were just sixteen when we first me. He and I. We met under this orange tree. I was sitting, reading a book on one side. He was sitting and writing on the opposite side. We made love for the first time under the orange tree. Late at night when no one was around. We snuck out. He and I. He picked me up in his father’s beat up truck. It was raining. It wasn’t the most comfortable place we had ever made love. But it was the most special place. This was our place. It smelled of oranges – it was perfect. We were perfect. He and I.
#
            Today, it’s windy. And as I close my eyes and feel the breeze caress my face, smell the fresh cut grass, and the chlorine from the fountain – I know this is the place we belong. He and I. This is where we will stay. He and I. But there may be no coming back after. He’s going to fight a war that is not his to fight. It isn’t his battle. It shouldn’t be his battle. He shouldn’t be leaving. But he is.
            He won’t even tell me what is going on. He just wanted me to meet him here one last time before he leaves. I hate him for leaving. It’s the first time I have ever hated him. But I do. I love him and I hate him. I never knew that was possible until this very moment.
            A monarch butterfly flies around me. She circles me. Leaves. Come back. Leaves again. I name her, Madam Butterfly. She deserves a name. I laugh as she lands on my shoulder. Like she has a secret that is only for me. Does she have a secret for me? I ask her. She floats off. I make a wish. I wish for the unwishable. I wish that the wishes we made – he and I – when we carved our initials in our tree were to come true. They have to come true. Don’t they?
            I look at my watch. He’s late. He’s never late. I call. Voicemail. Did he just leave? Did he just leave and not tell me? No. No, he wouldn’t do that. Would he? No. No he would not. I leave him a message. He could be stuck in traffic.
            Sirens. Where are they coming from? I hear them. But I can’t tell which way they are coming from. They get closer. Closer. They enter the circle and go through the roundabout. There’s a feeling of emptiness in the pit of my stomach that I cannot place. I call him again. No answer. Ambulance. The sirens are so deafening, I have to cover my ears. My eyes tear for reasons I cannot fathom. Is it because of the noise? Can my ears just not take the noise? Can my eyes just  not take the sun light shining down on me today? It’s hot. For winter.
            Madam Butterfly floats by me again. This time frantically. Like she has a message for me. It’s been twelve minutes since the firemen and the ambulance have driven off. Twenty minutes since he was supposed to be here. Madam Butterfly lands on my shoulder. She does not move. I try to nudge her. Still, she does not move. I gently touch her again and her lifeless body falls from my shoulder onto the grass.
            My phone rings. It’s his father. Something is wrong.
            “Hello?”
            “You need to come to the house, sweetie.”
            “Why?”
            “Please. Get here as fast as you can.”
I feel the breath escape from my lungs. Like I was punched in the gut. It felt like one half of my heart stopped pumping blood into my body.
            I fell to the ground. I picked up Madam Butterfly. This wasn’t supposed to happen to him and I. We were supposed to grow old together. He and I.

            He decided that he would rather die than to be away from me. He hung himself in his bathroom. He had a not in his hand addressed to me. It smelled of oranges. 

Thursday, March 12, 2015

"Death by Landscape" Reading response.


I have mixed feelings about this particular short story. I love the way that it is written. Atwood did such an amazing job using setting and dialogue and getting me to feel for the character's and even left that sense of mystery - even though I think that we do know that Lucy jumped off the cliff - there still is that sense of "what happened" because she never actually tells you what happens. Which is effective. It makes us think and to really be able to dive into the story and see it and look for things.

I think what threw me off was the fact that it was so predictable. I knew what was going to happen pages before anything actually happened. I think that was frustrating as a reader and as a writer. I wanted to be surprised. Maybe we are all too spoiled these days? That we need to be surprised for something to really capture our attention. 

But there is no mistaking that the imagery in this story is magnificent. 

"There are pictures of convoluted tree trunks on an island of pink wave-smoothed stone, with more islands behind; of a lake with rough, bright, sparsely wooded cliffs..." (pg. 45)

I don't even have to go on. I can see everything she is describing and it's wonderful. Even the relationship development throughout this short story, between Lois and Lucy is amazing. To think she was able to get through so much history in just 12 pages is wonderful. There is so much about this story that works and that grabs me. There were certain points where I was taken out a little bit and found myself skipping. I'm not sure if that is because I was expecting that ending or if it was because I just felt that those parts were necessary to the story - for me as a reader.

"We Didn't" Reading Response

I really, really liked this one for some reason. I think it is because it read more like prose poetry than a short story. Being naturally drawn to poetry these days, this really grabbed me. I love how at the beginning of the short story, there is a poem called, "We Did" by Yehuba Amichai. This short story almost seems like it is a response to that poem.

"Only the bodies of lovers remained behind, visible in lightning flashes, scattered like the fallen on a battlefield, a few of them moaning, waiting for the gulls to pick them clean." (pg. 459)
I think what really resonated with me while reading this is just the essence of what almost was. What could have been. It seems like such an emotional piece to begin with and even as you read, you can feel the longing in the narrator. What's interesting, because we have been talking so much about dialogue and how to integrate dialogue into our pieces - there's quite a bit as you read on. In the beginning the narrator SHOWS you and as you continue to see the interaction between these two people, it becomes even more apparent.

I still wonder, re-reading now, whether the actually did or if they really didn't. And maybe that is the point? Maybe the author is just that great at describing things and making each sentence take our breath away. One after the other.

Monday, March 2, 2015

"The Disappeared" Reading Response

"But the money meant little to him. It was America he was curious about, attracted by; especially its colorful disorderliness.
'Disorder, of which there was very little in Sweden, seemed sexy to him; the disorder of a disheveled woman who has rushed down two flights of stairs to offer a last long kiss." (pg. 110)"
I really liked this story. I think a lot of the reason is because how obsessed he (Anders) becomes with the woman in the story. Even when she warns him that she is "radioactive" (pg. 116). I like how Baxter makes it seem cosmic - their connection. But it's not real. It really is much more obsession what he is feeling rather than love. Though even he is not sure what he is feeling towards her.

"Happiness and agony simultaneously reached down and pressed against his chest. They, too, were like colors, but when you mixed the two together, you got something greenish-pink, excruciating." (pg. 119)
Even the imagery in the above statement is so telling. Giving the emotions colors instead of saying what they actually are is a very brilliant trick that the author used. You can feel more through those descriptions than you can by using simple words to describe the emotion itself.

I think Baxter did a wonderful job showing how some people "disappear." I am always so pleasantly surprised when with the readings - as in not everything is what I am expecting it to be. At first, I thought this was going to be a story of someone having been kidnapped. But I am glad that this was a story where the woman "disappeared" as in she left all on her own and she knew she was going to and even Anders knew he was going to do as well. Maybe it goes with people wanting to "change" others and maybe thinking that "I'm going to be different." After re-reading it, I have come to think that Anders is very much - "I will be the one she changes her mind for." But even her grandmother says that it is not so. That they almost all think that. That not only does she disappear from these guys' lives, but they disappear from hers as well.
 

"The Fix" Reading Response

My first initial reaction when I began reading this short story was, "tell me more." Even from the very beginning, when the author is introducing the reader to Douglas and Sherman, you get a sense of the place and these characters. And at first, you don't really know who exactly the story is about - whether it's about Douglas or Sherman, or whether it's about both - in the end, it may not really matter. Though I believe it to be about both.

"Sherman paused him with a finger, then, as if feeling the texture if the gum with his tongue, he took it from his mouth and stuck it into the workings of the refrigerator. And just like that the machine ran with a quiet steady hum, just like it had when it was new." (pg. 490)

I think that was one of the first cases of imagery in the short story that grabbed my attention. Just the way the author phrases each word and the way everything is organized, it gives a great sense of tenderness, for some odd reason.

The introduction of Douglas' wife is great and works well within the story. I think it was wise to have a certain voice of reason to cancel out Douglas allowing Sherman to stay at the store/shop.

I think overall, this story doesn't necessarily have to be about "someone" or one character or many characters. I think it's really about being careful what we wish for and what we ask for. And sometimes people can be quite selfish. Yes. Sherman has these amazing powers that allow him to fix things and people. But also, people in their brokenness are taking advantage of him and what he is capable of. And he is left feeling broken down and desperate for a way to escape.