Accidents Waiting To Happen
Feeling unfulfilled. Something is missing, as always. I am not whole. I am fragmented. A million piece puzzle. Outer spaced. Sometimes the pieces fit together, sometimes it’s just one big mess.
Did I ever tell you about my past?
I remember inviting Christian to come home with me and play. After a while I would pretend to get a headache and he’d go home. I wouldn’t really have a head ache, I just needed to be alone.
I remember hating the mornings. I still do. Getting up and out of bed was a struggle. But I’d start to get up earlier and earlier. Because if I went to school early then the halls would be empty. No one around. I could walk to my class room without meeting anyone. I could go inside and sit down and be alone. Until people started coming. It was safer that way. Avoiding a crowded hallway.
I remember sitting on a rock somewhere deep in a Swedish forest. In the middle of a rain storm. Getting soaked, the rain pummeling me. While everyone else was sitting inside drinking warm beverages and laughing.
I remember the first day in high school, all the new students gathered in the big hall. We had to dance. Nobody knew anybody, but everybody paired up two and two. When all was said and done I was left without a partner. A million strangers coupled, me alone.
I remember how summer vacations were like a different reality. Sleeping all day. Staying up all night. Sitting in front of the TV and zapping between channels. Over and over, looking for anything interesting to waste the time. I remember making a pentagram out of paper. Folding sheets of paper together. It was about the size of a steering wheel in a car. I dripped wax from a candle all over it. Brought it out in my back yard. As the sun started to rise I lit it afire. I wonder what the neighbours would have said if they had seen it. Burning pentagrams at dawn. I wasn’t a satanist though. I did buy the Necronomicon, but only the paperback version. I’m not sure why I did all that, I think I wanted to die and I was hoping that somewhere in the darkness of the universe there were demons and monsters and maybe if I was lucky I’d attract their attention and they would kill me. Suicide by demonology.
I remember seeing school shootings from America on the TV. And understanding. It scared me. That I understood those people. I remember lying in bed and imagining bringing guns to school and killing everyone. Not because they deserved it, not because I hated them. But because I wanted so desperately for them to understand, for them to feel my pain. Making sure they would never overlook me, never forget me. I could never hurt a fly though. But I understood. And I wondered what that said about me.
I remember sitting in my window on a Saturday night, looking at the stars above. Listening to the sounds of laughter and bottles clanging. Music playing somewhere. Parties.
I remember “Teardrops on the Dancefloor” as the soundtrack to the few parties I did go to. I remember dancing to Bryan Adams’ “Everything I Do (I Do It For You)” with Sara. Perhaps my greatest wish come true. The only other time I danced with a girl was with Lone. I had to bend down because I was taller than her. I remember being one of the tallest kids in my class. Until we reached puberty and everyone else seemed to growing taller and taller while I only seemed to get shorter.
I remember breaking my leg in a soccer match at school and crying. And Camilla saying “it must really hurt, because Lasse never cries”.
I remember my grandad’s car crashing. One minute I was asking for a piece of candy, the next minute we were crushed up against a tree on the other side of the road. My glasses disappeared somewhere on the floor. Everything a blur.
I remember my physics teacher jamming a knife in his fake leg. A truck ran him over and he lost his leg. He got angry with us the day he returned because none of us dared to ask about his leg or the accident. He always had a temper. I faked his classes for years, got good grades. It lasted until the final exam where I couldn’t fake it anymore and only barely passed. Afterwards he looked at me and asked if that was all? I shrugged.
I remember my french exam. I got the highest grade possible and I felt like I was the smartest person in the world. The only other person who got that grade was Eva. When we went to Gymnasiet we ended up in the same class. She told the others about her french exam and everyone praised her and ooohed and aaaahed and I sat there and thought “me too! me toooo!” but I didn’t say anything. I wanted people to ooh and aah over me. But I couldn’t say anything.
I remember walking down the road with my dad. He said something about a car. I squinted but I couldn’t see the car. We went to the eye doctor and soon after I had glasses. Today I can’t remember what it’s like to not wear glasses really. I remember it was very strange at first, like someone changed me. Made me into a new person. And I didn’t have a choice. “Here, glasses, wear them. That’s who you are now”.
I remember cutting open my wrists and the water turning red. The feeling of doing something that you can never ever take back. I remember the complete horror when I realized it wasn’t going to work. That I would have to live with it.
I remember sitting in front of a doctor and a psychologist. The doctor asking “If you were going to kill yourself how do you think you would do it?”. And I didn’t know what to say, I stuttered a bit. Then the psychologist said “you haven’t thought about that I guess?” and I said “no no” and was relieved that I had dodged the question.
I remember my dad telling bedtime stories. He made them up. There were these two brothers… maybe they were modelled after my brother and I. I don’t remember what they were called. But they had all these adventures together. It seems strange to me now, my dad making up stories. Seems like something he would be too serious to do.
I remember my mother reading bedtime stories. The Silas books. The Hobbit. She seems more like a likely bedtime storyteller than my dad.
I remember vacations in Sweden. We would go there every summer. I remember being amused that Batman was called Läderlappen. That Donald Duck was called Kalle Anka. I remember the year we borrowed my dad’s colleague’s cabin in the woods. It sounds like a good setting for a horror story. And it scared me, this lonely cabin in the woods. All those trees. I remember thinking that if some homocidal axe-weilding madman came after us then we would have nowhere to hide, we’d have to just run into the wood and get lost.
I remember the sound late at night. The clock. Tick-tock. Sometimes it felt like it got louder and louder. In my head. Tick tock. I couldn’t sleep alone for a long time. I slept in my parents’ bed until I was past 10 I think. And when I was younger I had this.. compulsion. I had to keep saying goodnight. I had to say goodnight and have my parents respond with a goodnight. And then 30 seconds later I have would say goodnight again. I don’t know why. I think it was because I was scared to be left alone. I had to keep reassuring myself that I was not alone. My mother would have to get up early to go to work and I kept her awake with my constant goodnights. My dad sat up late, he would bring me into the living room and I’d sleep on the couch. So my mother could sleep in peace. I wonder how my life would have turned out if they had taken me to the shrink or something. How could they think it was normal for a kid to say goodnight a hundred times like that? I still don’t really understand that they just accepted it. Didn’t they wonder what was wrong with me?
I remember almost poking out a classmate’s eye with a needle. I was so close to hitting him in the eye. It was an accident of course. But later on it would scare me for years when I thought about it. How close I was to blinding him. How random it was. How different everything would have been for me and for him if my hand had slipped a little, just a little bit more in our pretend-fight.
I remember getting an obscene phone call. From a guy who said he was a doctor. He wanted to know if I touched myself. Later that day my parents were going out and I asked if they couldn’t stay home. My dad was surprised, he asked me “but you’ve never been afraid to be home alone”. That was after I had gotten used to sleeping and being on my own.
I remember developing this whole grand fantasy about the smurfs living in tree stump in the back yard of my kindergarten. I was trying to impress some other boy with my collection of smurf figures and I decided to just wander home and get them without telling anyone about it. They called my house, and everyone was very upset at me. And I didn’t understand it because I just wanted to get my smurfs.
I think that’s enough for now. Always fragments.
you do it to yourself, you do, and that’s what really hurts
February 26th, 2006 at 17:03
Oh, almost forgot, want to see something awesome?? ^^^^
jealous?? it’s a little bit dirty but so am i. last year we had a huuuge snowstorm and i thought of you and all i got was a lousy t shirt and these pictures taken a couple of days after it when all the snow was getting gross and melty and untouchable.
February 26th, 2006 at 17:03
also your guestbook is broken
February 26th, 2006 at 19:19
I’m quite jealous. My guestbook isn’t broken. Why must you lie?!
February 27th, 2006 at 16:13
You know memories can be both happy and depressing. I tend to look back and remember a great deal too. You know, though I don’t think I’ll ever be completely content or happy in life, but i have gotten a lot more accepting of that fact and just try to enjoy what is there in the moment…and to be honest i am a little happier and things have been easier to take, not always, but overall things feel better. Hopefully things are well with you.
February 27th, 2006 at 22:12
Hi :) Plume, you know, I read through your memories and I just thought to myself… you are special. Because you see things in a different way, in a different light. You have a great imagination. I am also a dreamer who lets her imagination run wild and it’s sometimes hard to fit into the world, it’s rules, it’s pace. I also used to say goodnight to my parents more times than necessary. I remember perfectly how I’d say that going to the bathroom, then once again on my way to the kitchen for water and so on & it would disturb me if they didn’t answer or say ‘ok, ok, goodnight!’. And I can’t really explain it either. And when I was little I’d constantly ask my parents if they loved me or run little tests on ‘will they notice if I got lost?’. I also had moments in my life when I had so much to say being in a group of people and it seemed that my voice was trying to break through some imaginary wall that was in me, like it was trapped. My heart would start beating faster and I would get short of breath, but I would just stay quiet and then the right moment would pass me by. But now it seems that it’s all a question of practice… now I kinda have to force myself to speak at lectures, but once I hear my own voice get stronger with every word I say it makes me feel more confident. I learned to accept the fact that sometimes people just don’t agree with what I say or I sound funny, but I still try to bring my point across.
Since you were kind to share memories of your past, I shall share a bit of mine. I used to be a real cry baby when I was little, but that was a good way of washing away any anger or discomfort. Going to school changed that, my funny classmates made me get the idea behind the saying ‘take it easy’. At the age 12 I went to live in USA for a year. That changed my life. I skipped the 4th grade and went to the 5th. Had trouble with adjusting. Went back home & leaped straight to the 6th grade. Too many changes, so little time. Found a best friend that was also against the crazy world. We weren’t popular, but we didn’t care as long as we had each other. two years later my friend realized she missed being called cool and left me and our dream behind. I felt rejected. Would often put on my headphones and walk around town on my own, watching leaves fall down and children play in parks. I felt that I needed company, but I would rather choose the company of myself, because it was easier. I needed a change, but I wanted for it to come knocking on my door. One day I stopped and told myself ‘I need to accept myself and realize that I have a lot to be grateful for, that this is my life and my gift’. I started seeing my mom’s friend who’s a psychologist & getting to know myself. It was a enlightning process… but I was forced to move a couple of steps back, because my mind & point of view needed a restart, just like a computer. My wizard of Oz called it depression. I call it rebirth. A struggle, yes. But not the end, only the beginning. And now… Back to the drawing board :) Because the process is what counts.
I don’t know what you’ll say to my idea, but… I think all those things in the past were normal stages of you getting wiser and challenges that were meant to be there. We are the sensitive types, but in a way I find it charming. Feelings deep and wide as the ocean. Let it wave for some time and then it becomes still and crystal clear again :)
I’m also feeling a bit crappy these days. My mom calls this ‘the time when the wrong clouds are above you’. It doesn’t really translate from lithuanian to english, but hey, you probably get the point ;) So we just gotta wait for ’em clouds to pass. Be strong!
Huggs, admiration and luv,
Mills