Monday, August 26, 2013

Are there Hotels in Hell?

My psychologist kept reminding me that she would be away the following week, that I would have a different therapist.  “Next week?”  I asked.  “Am I going to be here next week?”

“Well, we don’t discharge patients over weekends, and Monday is Memorial Day.  So, if you were going home before Tuesday, we would have to start the paperwork… today.”

“Then we need to do that.”

“Okay.  You should let the psychiatrist know.”

As soon as our session was complete, I was a woman with a mission.  The pills were working.  I could not sit for another four days, drawing, begging for a lousy thirty minutes of supervised guitar time per day.  I needed to clean my apartment, to figure out my work situation, to see Victor…

I found Dr. Swan at the nurse’s station between patients.  He was doing his best to stay on his schedule, and I knew what I was about to do was inappropriate.  I had observed several patients try to engage him ahead of their allotted time before, but I could not care.  I had to get the ball rolling if I was going to be released before the holiday weekend.

“Excuse me, Dr. Swan.  When you have a minute, I need to talk to you, as soon as possible.”

“Okay.  What do you need?”

“I need to start being discharged.”

“Okay.  Is there some reason?”

“It’s time for me to go home.”  The moment I said it I knew it was true.  Instantly I realized I did not belong there. 

The crisis was over.  It was time to start facing reality again.

Dr. Swan was skeptical at first, complaining that I did not have a good support structure available to me in Philadelphia.  I nearly laughed and cried at the same time when he suggested my going to stay with my parents in Airville… Where guns are readily available; where my depression began in my adolescence; where my creativity was stifled.  I assured him that my brother, Sam would come if I asked.

In truth, I knew that Sam could not leave the babies for long.  I had him show up in case there was paperwork to sign.  Then Rolex took over babysitting me.

“You have me for the weekend,” Rolex told me.  “Then I have to go back to Florida.”

When we walked into my apartment, I was distressed to find Patsy’s food bowl nearly filled to the brim.  The litter box that had resided at Victor’s was in the middle of the living room, spilling onto the carpet.  His metronome, his drum, his PA system had vanished.

Before Sam left, the three of us went to eat lunch.  Rolex ordered a beer and went to the restroom.  I looked at Sam,
“I am about to get very mean.  You should go.  Rolex will take care of me.”

“I really can stay.  Or I will go after lunch.  It’s fine.”

“Sam, really- I am about to be very mean.”

As I sat and listened to the two of them talk, all I could think about was whether Victor had made his choice clear in swapping back our belongings, or whether he simply panicked.  I had tried to call him from the hospital only once. 

It rang and went to his voicemail.  I did not leave a message.

I watched Rolex inhaling his usual chicken sandwich and several beers.  I evaluated Sam’s choice of attire; a pink v-neck t-shirt under a lavender zip-hoodie.  Then the mean started to pour out, “Could you dress any more gay, Sam?”

Sam simply laughed, “Oh, you should see me when I take the girls to the park.  Aliyah likes to put on our matching princess necklaces… and look.”  He pulled a pink and purple pacifier from his hoodie pocket.  “It matches.”

We all laughed.  Sam had a wonderful way of spinning almost anything.

When Sam had left, Rolex and I made a plan for the weekend.  I told him that I wanted to stay at my apartment and clean with his company to keep me on task.  He said that was fine, but then he started calling for hotel rooms, claiming his cat allergy would kill him if we stayed in my apartment too long.

It was difficult, given the holiday, but he found a room in a nice hotel near Rittenhouse.  We dropped off our things then wandered out, barhopping, as is his M.O.  He asked me if I wanted a drink at each stop, despite my consistent declaration that I was not supposed to drink while I was taking the anti-depressant.  Rolex was more interested in researching whether it had any recreational purpose.  It did not.

By the time we got back to the hotel, I was aching to bathe.  I stripped and got into a tub of hot water.  With the curtain closed, Rolex came in and talked to me from atop the toilet seat.

“You have to tell your little girlfriend about all of this, you know.  I am not going to be anyone’s secret anymore,” I demanded.  “I was in her shoes once.  I know how it feels to have my boyfriend hanging out with his exes behind my back.”

“I will when I see her.  She’s in Europe with her mom, and I haven’t heard from her in over a week,” he sighed.  “It’s just complicated right now.  She just finished college, and I want her to come get a job in the north, where I can see her more often.”

“Well, if you want her to move in with you, you’ll have to propose.”

“I want to- just, after she’s made up her own mind.”

My mind wandered back to Paul, of the pain he caused, of how I could not find the courage to leave him.  I thought… Perhaps I was being punished then for what I am doing now, bathing with someone else’s boyfriend in the room.  We also shared a bed.  It was large enough that we never touched.  Given our history and my single-minded heartache for Victor, I was not tempted in the least.  The very thought of any other man touching me made my skin burn.

The rest of the weekend spilled slowly; Rolex dragging me to nice restaurants and bars around the city, long walks, long talks, and shopping- just like our hay days.  We both purchased new sneakers.  When I attempted to use my credit card without my identification, the clerk called a manager.  Rolex said he would vouch for me.

The manager eyed us, “Who are you, her sugar daddy?”

“No… I used to be,” Rolex laughed.  “I can put the shoes on my card, if you won’t take hers”

I blushed at this lie.  I knew he thought it was funny, but it was not true.

“You want him to be your sugar daddy again?”  The manager smirked.

“No, thank you,” I was bracing myself, tempted to leave the shoes, leave the store, leave Rolex right there and then. 

But the next moment, the clerk had completed my transaction, and we were leaving with our purchases.

I took Rolex to Garland of Letters, a new age bookstore.  I helped him select an edition of the I-ching that he would enjoy.  Later, upon asking it several questions, I found the courage to contact Victor.  He did not answer my call. 

He did not respond to my text message.  Nearly a day later, he responded by email, saying it caused him anxiety to hear from me.  He was restricting our contact to email.  It sounded hopeless, and I caught myself thinking of high buildings from which I could jump.

A little later I would realize that I had been reading the I-ching coins wrong for nearly a year.  One simple mistake had made a hundred readings wrong.

As Rolex watched me toss coins, he expressed concern, “I don’t want you to put too much stock into that book.”

“You wanted it… and you read the Bible.  It’s a book.”  I was distracting myself, “Besides, it mostly advises me to have patience. “

“Look, I think Victor should be here right now, but he isn’t.”

“You don’t know what I put him through… Or maybe you are the one person who might.  He isn’t like you.  He has never seen depression.  This is all new to him.  It’s traumatic.”

Even as I made excuses for him, my heart cried, fearing he would never hold me again.

BEG

When I was a child my parents took me to church.  They would give me a quarter for the collection plate.  In Korea, I saw Buddhists pay clerics to light incense and hang prayer papers.  When I saw a fountain, I would ask them for a penny.  I suppose I thought of God in much the same way that I imagined a wishing well... Give something to the world with a good intention and fondly hope for favorable results.


Somehow asking the universe for favors is acceptable... Asking other people, particularly strangers- It is daunting.

On a nearly weekly basis I hear the same conversation with other musicians- about how we hate promoting ourselves.  We want to perform.  We want to have more time free from our "day-jobs" to devote to our crafts.  But generating income from music is difficult even for big names (i.e. Cat Power  http://www.theatlanticwire.com/entertainment/2012/10/theres-no-money-indie-music-cat-power-broke/58552/).  How can we be confident that we are being wise in risking our time, energy, and money into recording and self-releasing a few hundred CDs... of which we give away half in the hopes of gaining a following?  Booking gigs?  Getting radio airtime? ...Are we confident in our skills?  Our innate talents?  Our developed products?  Ourselves?  

When I started writing music, it was so miraculous... It just happened to me, and I simply had to share it with whoever was around.  As life has continued, the music took over my life- At times I write a song that I do not understand until a situation progresses... Then it feels almost prophetic.

"They get on me, wanna know, Hank-
Why do you drink?
Why do you roll smoke?
Why must you live out the songs that you wrote?
Over and over, everybody made my prediction
So if I get stoned
I'm just carryin' on an old family tradition." -Hank Williams Jr. ("Family Tradition")

I heard these words and thought- Wow!  Someone else got it and boiled it down so succinctly!  ...Except in my case, there are no other musicians or artists in my family.  I have no legacy or inheritance.  I did not study music or songwriting... I have no- excuse to claim the right, the title of artist.

At that point, I was just addicted to the rush of breathing my emotions out through my music.  I was possessed by my creations, and they were not content long to be played without an audience.  My songs did not care that I did not know how to play a guitar.  They did not care that I had stage fright or social anxiety.

The first one came to me when I couldn't complete a love letter... The sensations that were vibrating through my mind and body could not be contained in words alone.  One day, as clearly as hearing a radio play in the next room, I heard a melody in my mind, complete with lyrics... With no intention to become a musician-- or even to win the affection of the man to whom it was addressed, I wrote it down.  Having never played a guitar, I borrowed one and found a chord chart online.  I sat down and tried each chord until it approximated what I heard in my head.  My first song was finished within few hours... But it would take me months to achieve the skills necessary to perform it.  After two years, I continue to struggle to play a guitar.  It is the part of the process that does not come naturally to me...  It requires practice.



Different artists are endowed with different innate talents.  Some hear better than others; Some can transcribe music notes as readily as I am writing these words, while others never learn to read sheet music at all; Some sing, others require instruments to create their voices, some are blessed with many abilities... However, I do believe that everything is relative.

From The Sims
There seems to be a reason that the most memorable historical figures and celebrities are all a little mad... Life keeps a balance.  Even if maybe a few lucky individuals in this world are given extra points to play... Let me take a moment to explain the picture above from the game "The Sims".  When a player creates a character, a finite number of character points are made available.  One can choose to allot configurations of these points to reflect different personality types- and this version even allows the player to choose his/her character's astrological sign.  Other online role-playing games (RPGs) use this point system model to allow players to specialize their characters in specific forms of magic or combat.  Now... If you imagine this on the huge scale of human existence, we would have encyclopedia volumes' worth of potential talents and attributes.


I have been toying with the concept of whether or not each individual has been born with an innate purpose.  If my entire life's journey is a process to lead me to the role I am supposed to play... Well, I think of it less like a road and more like a puzzle.  The pieces have been lining my life's path, in no particular order, like breadcrumbs.  Try as I might, I have yet to determine what the picture I have been building is supposed to resemble.  It is frustrating.  It is embarrassing... To go through life, trying and succeeding acceptably well, but always eventually walking away from every endeavor.

If I am a highly specialized machine. Then I am designed to absorb and digest emotional energy and turn it into art, music, self-expression... I want to be someone who cares and loves and turns the energy into help and charity... but I can not seem to do the work hands on. The more I fight against my nature, the more overwhelmed and exhausted I feel... I really can not handle getting too close to people. Everything feels dramatic. Everything is difficult to sift through... walking through other people's emotional energy is like wading through applesauce, breathing smoke.

...After my last published blog entry, I watched the number of my pageviews double over one month.  I realized that if I had just 50 cents for every pageview, it would pay for my health insurance.  I do not expect my friends and family to carry me.  I have had readers from 10 different countries, and I have faith that my stories are worth telling... If they are worth your time to read, please considering leaving a tip as well.

Thank you for your time and attention. I am grateful to have an audience.