Posted by jessica on Aug 14, 2010 with
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Yesterday
Yesterday I went to the bookstore to buy a book that my therapist recently told me to read. Actually, what she said was, “Have you read this?” And simultaneously handed me a tiny post-it note with a title scrawled across it. I looked at it and then looked at her and asked, “I assume you’re referring to a book, and not just these four words? Because, I did just read this,” and I motioned to the post-it, “And you’re right, I do feel better now.”
And then she started laughing. And then I did too. And I guess it was a good moment, both my therapist and I laughing together like life is just the funniest thing. But she assured me that no, it is a book that she was referring to. But wouldn’t it be great if a post-it note could make you feel instantaneously better? Or actually, it’s more of a combination of a post-it note and the right four words, I guess.
But this is why I was at the book store on a Thursday evening. And I will tell you that I do love the bookstore. I love basically everything about it. The rows and rows you can seclude yourself in; the few chairs you can find if you look hard enough, one of which you can actually sit in, if you’re lucky; the idea that you are sharing space with so many things smarter than you. I am not so great at figuring amounts when it comes to numbers of people or objects (but animals? man, I am spot-on when it comes to sizing up how many animals are in any given area. okay, not really, but I thought it was funny that I didn’t mention animals, but mentioned everything else). But anyway, I figure so many things is an adequate way to describe all the books in a bookstore, right?
But the only time I don’t love a bookstore is when I have to find one specific book. I feel like it is the perfect equivalence to finding that dreaded needle in a haystack (but why are you sewing among the hay, anyway?). And I get overwhelmed. I feel like I’d have a better chance at winning the lottery or going off and writing my own version of the book I am trying to find before I actually find it among so very many things (which is how I am referring to all those books, if you’ll remember).
And usually, I just go up and ask for help. I really have no trouble with this kind of thing at all. I ask people for directions all the time. I ask salespeople in stores for my size, without hesitation. When I was living in New York, rehearsing ACL, I really wanted to go to Bryant Park and I knew that it was super close, I just didn’t quite know how to get there. So I conjured up my best British accent in order to ask a passerby where the park was, so as not to make that person think I was actually someone who had been to New York before, let alone as many times as I actually had, and still didn’t know how to get to Bryant Park. And good thing, too, because I do believe that the directions I got were something along the lines of, “Just keep walking that way.”
But see, this particular title. Well, it’s a doozy. And I will say that it’s not exactly the kind of book you want to let everyone know that you’re reading. Or, for that matter, why. But after searching for it on my own and coming up empty handed, I marched straight to the information booth, cause I was done looking.
Luckily the man behind the booth was very kind with a smile that does wonders in terms of customer service. If he had had a tip jar, I think I would have used it. I asked him if the store had the book I was after, and he told me to come to the computer and type in the title. And then, I don’t know why, but I got really nervous. He was watching me, and already I was embarrassed that I was looking for this particular book, and so I started typing like I had never even seen a computer before. And like I had never even spelled a word before, either. And in my confusion, I completely messed up the title, swapping one entirely embarrassing word for another one.
And that’s when nothing came up, over and over again. And he was all, “Are you sure that’s the title, sweetie?”And “Maybe it’s something else, honey…” cause nothing would come up, and even though it was kind of nice to be called so many terms of endearment, what I really wanted was that book and then to get the heck out of dodge. After paying for it, though, don’t you worry.
But then I finally remembered the actual word that is in the title, told him of my mistake right after I had my epiphany, and we laughed a long time together about that one.
And that tiny little post-it note is still on my dashboard, in order to remind me to buy that book. And I guess I’d better remember to put it somewhere else, because that’s gonna be an interesting conversation with whomever is in my car with me next.
I was getting carded the other day.
And the bouncer was looking back and forth from the real me to the little me that fits nicely into the square on the left side of my license:
And I could see him wondering if that dark and spiky haired person in the photograph was really me. There he stood, taking his time, until he finally gave my longer blond hair one final sweep and said, Big change, huh? as he handed my license back to me and let me in.
And I merely nodded my agreement as I thought to myself, You. Have. No. Idea. And yes, I thought it like that, each word standing alone, my agreement with his nonchalant statement felt that emphatic.
Because seriously, big change is an understatement, I think.
And that’s just it: I do think. I think about it a lot. Not obsessively anymore, but it’s still on my mind sometimes, I guess. Just tonight, I was walking under the cover of the stars, the moon having gone wherever it likes to go when the universe tells it to please take its ten or the union is gonna start to complain again, and my mind was turning to the events of the past that have led me here.
And I was listening to the bullfrogs talk about how great they are. Or at least, that’s what I assumed they were saying. I’m not what you’d call fluent in bullfrogese, but I know it was some sort of mating call and a lot of the time that seems to sound like a resume of all the reasons why you should just choose me, already–or him, rather. What the bullfrogs don’t seem to get is that if they would just quiet down for a few minutes and listen–really listen–to whatever it is all those lady frogs might like to discuss, then they’d have a lot better chance at getting Frogette to reciprocate that mating call.
But what do I know? I’ve never been a frog. But I have been a girl for some time now and I know that I like to listen as well as talk and be heard; I know that people can sound so great, making noises in the dark, but then the light comes on eventually and you see what’s really going on and that’s when the contrast can feel shocking, to say the least.
And this is when all the bullfrogs are like, Um, look, we’re just trying to perpetuate the frogs, is all; no need to be so deep and introspective, Miss Human.
And that’s when I’m like, Good point, bullfrogs. Carry on, then. Hope you get what you wanted.
But all this to say, I was thinking about a friend of mine and how she dated a guy for a pretty long time. And they did what you’d expect people who say they love each other to do–held hands in public, went on romantic get-aways, hung out together all the time, and gave each other costly presents.
But see, sometimes I’d get sad for the girl. Because I’d catch him looking at her with something dangerously close to disdain in his eyes. And then I’d see him making fun of her in such a way that she was not in on the joke. And I would think, She deserves so much better than that. And I’d also think, Never ever ever! in terms of me and my relationship.
And it’s funny. Because no matter how many times you say never ever ever! about a certain situation, those words aren’t actually some sort of fool-proof incantation; they don’t prevent you from realizing one day that never ever ever! came anyway.
And then it’s weird to suddenly be the girl of whom everybody else says, You deserve so much better than that. Weird, to say the least.
But you know, agreeing with that sentiment is something else entirely. I think it’s empowering. Eventually, anyway. I think it’s like the time you finally admitted that you didn’t want to be a ballerina; that there were too many songs to sing and words to write for you to wear your hair in a bun every day and only dance, though dancing is still a favorite of yours. I think there was freedom in seeing the truth and then making room for a life lived in agreement with the truth.
Well, it’s like that times 10,000000, I guess.
And something else that’s interesting is that Never ever ever! came and went–or at least is going–and I am still here. I never thought that could have happened. I never thought any of it could have happened. Not the bad stuff and not the good stuff that has since flooded my soul like the kind of cleansing rinse that smells of better stuff than pine.
So yes, Sir Bouncer, it’s been one heckuva big change.