Monday, March 24, 2014

Confessions of An Ex Factor

You’re the kind of guy that could make something as simple as crossing the street sound like a phenomenon that everyone was missing out on. A smooth talking stoner in an Abercrombie hoodie, you spoke in cryptic messages our first summer meeting and smirked while we talked about Nujabes and drank sangria on stone steps.  I swore I’d never fall for someone like you, gorgeous be damned.

Maybe it was the way your eyes lit up when you told a story, your hands moving and your attention locked solely on me in a crowded space. Or maybe it was the fact that you took my lifeless guitar, tuned it like clockwork, and made melodies that had my brothers begging you to come back. Nevertheless, I ended up spell-bound and in no time at all your hand felt like it had always been weaved with mine. My stories turned into love anthems, my guitar rattled in my attempts to make you a song, and your ringtone going off at night sent energy from my fingertips to my toes. Dinners together felt magical, even if they were just sandwiches. Your kiss, no matter how light, kept me clinging and pulling you back through the door, regardless of curfew.

My husband without a ring, my partner in crime; I’d never been more happy to tell people we belonged to each other. You swirled through every aspect of my life and regardless of that one bad quality you had, I shared anything and everything I could think of with you. I went back north reluctantly, cried alone in my car on the last night with you for what would feel like forever, and for the next few months yearned your hand and struggled with not being near enough to provide a shoulder to lean on for the rough moments you were facing.

I won’t say you mainly broke my heart. Timing and mileage was a thirty-percent and twenty-perfect factor, respectively (At least I tell myself that to feel better). You slipped through my fingers and I tried to hold the rope that tied us together close, but there are some things that are just out of our control. You weren’t bad to me like other guys I’ve heard about. You’ve never abused me in any aspect. But the stone wall that you held in place was hard to break down with just a plastic hammer. I tried as hard as I could, but I couldn’t do much. I snuck home when I shouldn’t had. I wrote a book for you, even. But in the end I lost it. I lost you. I called it quits, worn and teary-eyed and hoped that we could help each other until the time was right where we would be together smoothly.

I spent the next year drunk, calling you every moment I could to say I loved you more than I could comprehend but never saying I wanted to be your girl again. No matter how much I wanted to scream it every phone call, my pride was too strong. I cried in showers and swang in hammocks in silence. I dove into my studies to forget, though I’d stare at your picture when my friends weren’t around to lecture me. And somewhere along the way, I thought I was over it and I’d be okay. But, I still can’t help but miss you. I still worry about you more than I should. I still want to watch movies again.

I’ll probably always regret my decision and though the intensity that I felt for you has dwindled down to friendly terms, I still have moments where I yearn for you. They’re as fast as they come, but they rock my core all the same and, sometimes, I hide under my blankets until the emotion sinks into the mattress and leaves my skin.

You probably have a girlfriend by now--you’re too charming to not have girls flocking for you--and the idea makes my stomach drop, no matter how I know you deserve someone as special as you are. She’ll give you all the things I couldn’t when our roller-coaster ride ended. You’ll give her all the things you can muster up, even though sometimes it’ll be hard for you. Maybe one day we’ll sit down for drinks and we’ll toast to your newest girlfriend, or your wedding even, and bask in success and how silly everything in the past was.


In the end, I guess I just want you to be happy. That’s what selfless love is about, right?


ZM.

Monday, March 17, 2014

Exceprt from "Nature's Best"

(title is not finalized)
The sound of snow crunching alerted me that I suddenly wasn’t alone in this clearing, but I refused to turn my head and acknowledge their existence. I’d never seen another person out in this clearing in the three years I had lived in Idaho. It had always been only me, my thoughts, and the trees to keep me company. How had someone found this place? I was so lost in trying to find a solution that I was late in realizing the soft crunching had stopped right next to me.


“Good evening, miss.” the low tone in his voice slightly startled me--perhaps it was because I’d always come out here and never made a sound. Or maybe because I was still wondering how he even found this place. Nevertheless, he told me good evening.


“Evening.” I could hear his feet shift and the rustling of hands sliding into pockets, the feel of his eyes on me slightly unnerving. Why was he staring at me? Why is he so close? 

The proximity between us was beginning to make me uncomfortable and it annoyed me that he decided to stand this close to me. We were strangers layered in gear, there was no way he was getting heat from standing in that spot. The colors of the sunset were beginning to dull from their vibrant pinks and golds into the blues and purples of twilight.


I guess the sun got tired of showing off what it could do in its grand exit from our side of the world.


“Can I help you, sir?” I asked making sure to push irritation into my voice. A long moment went by and he let out a soft sigh.


“I’m sorry if i’m creepy, It’s just... I’ve never really seen anything like this before.”


“Seen what?” It was after this I finally decided to look at him. In the blue light of the sky his brown skin was darkened by the lack of real sunlight, but it didn’t take away from the soft angles of his face that represented manhood. His lips were curved in a smile reaching all the way up to his eyes. My strange companion was tall, about six-foot-three, and his dark green jacket didn’t do much to cover the broad frame of his shoulders.


“This,” he said with a sweeping of his arm to the clearing around us. “This world we’re in.”


I arched my eyebrow at him before looking around. I didn’t see anything special. It was the same clearing with the same snow that fell every year. The same snow that would melt in a few months and go back to being green and muddy and rampant with mosquitoes in July. It was hardly something special to be in awe about, in my opinion.


“Just, wow.” he breathed as he shifted his stance, his black and blue hat covered head tilting backwards as he deeply inhaled the crisp air that made my lungs normally freeze painfully. “Isn’t it amazing?”


The irritation I felt earlier at his short, cryptic answers was coming back full force and I narrowed my eyes at him as he brought his head down and smiled even larger than before. “Isn’t what amazing?”


“How beautiful this all is in the twilight...” Why was he so fascinated by this? It’s just snow! Natural occurrence by the water in the clouds freezing and all that shebang. It happened every year at least four times during the season. What was he seeing that I wasn’t?


“...Are you not from here or something?”

“Lived here my whole life.” he replied without turning away from the path ahead of us. “Still never ceases to be breath taking in its shapes and forms.”


“It’s just snow, sir,” I haughtily replied. “Happens all the time, every year.”


“You don’t understand,” he responded back, the softness in his tone causing me to look up and observe the love and respect for the scenery in his eyes.


“Don’t you feel that connection? That balance between you at the earth beneath your feet? Almost as if you could lay down in the snow and become one with everything, even if just for a little while?”


For a moment I looked around, but I felt nothing. No pull, no spark, no true satisfaction at the world living and moving around me. If I laid down, i’d just be cold and annoyed and gravity gave my feet connection to the ground. This was just another factor that added to my worthlessness, I guess.


“...No, I can’t say I do,” I finally replied, though my voice wasn’t as strong as I would’ve liked it to be. The man shook his head a little, that smile never leaving his lips, and he looked at me. The look transfixed me and almost felt like he was trying to peer into my soul. Cliche, a hundred percent, but what else can you call it when the intensity seeps into your bones?


I’d never had someone stare at me this way. I hated it.


“I’m sorry you don’t share the emotion.” he said with a hint of sadness. He then turned his head again towards the sky.


“Wow,” he exhaled. “The miracles that he spreads across his canvas for us to live in. God is such an artist.”


With that final statement, the crunching began again and he started to walk further down the path.


“Take care miss.” he called over his shoulder, that infuriating smile still plastered to his face as he looked behind at me. “I hope you make it home safe.”


His humming hit my ears and, oddly enough, angered me. I wanted to yell at him and demand more explanation, to tell me why he felt this “pull to the earth,” and why he was so fascinated over stupid snow after living here his whole life, but my words caught in my throat and I closed my mouth instead. Who was I to try and beat him down because I was too shallow to see what was in front of me?


At this point, Mr. Nature was gone from sight and I was here, alone with just my thoughts... and the trees... They were just trees; here before I was born and here long after I die... Why can’t I appreciate them like he did in that split moment?


I suddenly didn’t feel deserving to be out here in nature’s best. My head was aching from trying to figure out what was wrong with my approach to everything around me and the darkness of night was setting in. The walk back to my jeep was a quick one and I rested my head against the wheel as I gave the car a chance to heat up. My breaths were quick as my thoughts spun faster than I could keep up with and I began to breathe deeply into my gloves.


“It’s okay,” I told myself over and over again. “It’s just snow and he’s a weirdo. Not even that serious.” The car slid into gear smoother than it did on the way here and without looking back, I merged onto the highway and headed back towards the artificial lights.


I wonder if Mr. Nature has a flashlight out there.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Bloom

A ballerina only behind the walls of her room, her posture is ill practiced but crackling with passion. Green curtains are parted enough to allow slivers of light shine directly onto her awkward, yet graceful first position. The silence is thick, even with the vinyl giving soft scratches to find its place, but suddenly the record spins, her soul swells with notes, and her heels lift off the ground.

A young lady stuck between fading childhood comfort and rising sexual awakening, she stretches and bends in skin that now feels foreign to her. Arching out newly swollen breasts, unsure fingers ticking down smooth hips; the indecisive nature of her quiet, yet loud moves are breathtaking. She spins softly, eyelashes batting as she smooths her hands down her sides, hesitates, and removes them as if she’s been caught doing something heinous behind closed doors.

There is no real audience—only her teddy bears and a poster of her favorite boy band on a pale blue wall—but for the moment she’s stepping into the realm of being a figure of desire. Her toes bend a bit as she spins and her head lolls around in a loose circle as she slides her hands up her opposite arm and parts her lips. It’s uncomfortable, it’s nerve wracking, it’s… exhilarating.

She exhales, the melody slows and her eyes, wide with all the uncertainty of the future, drift towards the ceiling with arms wide and feet flat on the ground. For another moment, there is silence. Without warning, the drums pick up pace, the melody goes into a youthful overdrive, and the child comes to light as her lips part in a smile and she pivots with a bounce and gives light leaps in the safety of her room. This is the realm she knows best: the realm of a girl who still loves her bears and playing on the swings and playing dress-up. Laughter spills from her throat into the air and her confidence exudes in her smile and her now playfully dramatic flair.  

She begins to twirl as fast as she can without losing balance, arms inching higher and higher to the music going into full production.  The melody once again begins to deepen, the bass starts to slow, and the reality slinks back to the forefront of her mind. The twirling loses energy, becomes more slow and thoughtful, and her body gyrates as she drops her arms behind her head to lightly grip her neck. Her breathing is labored, but without losing pace she swings her hips to a stop. Her hands slide down her stomach, brushing past her thighs and knees, and slide back up her calf as slowly as she can muster in her last effort of seductiveness until she’s back to full height and the music fully cuts off.

Monday, March 3, 2014

The Brush (A Metafiction Dabble)

This magic in my hand creates galaxies, my love. Meteors and constellations with the flick of a wrist, stars we could walk across if I just wish it. The sun, a creation of the brightest yellows, is hot against my palm, but I hold it and place it in my world so you can have light. I float amongst the stars. Planets arise from the movement of my palm. Rocks on fire shoot across the darkness that the stars haven’t reached. I want to show you the black hole, gaping and swirling with its suction into nothingness. Do not be afraid, dear. The hole cannot suck us in from where we are. I am your defense against the doom it brings. I am the magic surrounding everything you touch.

    I am the master of this world. A god with a canvas. What I want to exist comes to life.There is a milky way, swirling and pulsing with life and when all these planets are here, I will take you on a walk across our moon. My earth swirls with blues and greens. It's enticing enough to leap from this moon and free fall into its atmosphere. Touch a star. Allow it to illuminate your fingertips. Let it give the people of my Earth something to gaze at when the moon shields the sun. Above me, I’ve created a constellation that spells the letters out in your name. If this galaxy I’ve created in the palm of my hand is not worthy of you, then wrap your arm around my waist. Hold the magic in my hand. Let us create a galaxy together. 

-ZM