In Her Eyes

He stood, half seated on the antique writing table in the hallway. His stomach lurched. She turned off the hallway light. He surrendered to the darkness and slipped further down the front of the table until he was seated on the floor with his head on his knees. The weight of his error pinned him to this moment. He looked up again in her direction like knowing prey anticipating the first strike of its attacker. But there was nothing coming. Through the darkness there was only the blackness of her eye sockets, highlighted below by her cheekbones.

He looked through his tears and said, “I know what you’re thinking.”

Anger overtook him and he thrust his elbows into the weak old wood of the table until it began to crack. The lamp that sat atop the table fell and shattered on the floor. Glass scattered around him. He pumped forward and back again with so much force that his body was kicked away. Laying in glass, elbows bleeding, he screamed and pounded his fists until the pain absolved his lack of control.

There was a sincerity to her existence in his life that he desperately wanted to understand. But could not. She loved him and did not lie when she told him so. He could not stretch far enough through the darkness to reach her. Even if he was seated beside her, their arms entangled, looking into her cold blue eyes his empathy for her love would be insufficient. The fact that he could not try hard enough to make successful something that was not meant to succeed infuriated him.

Written from 2:15 am to 2:35 am in my bedroom in Traverse City, MI.

Two Of Everything Good, Please

“I’ll take two,” I told the young waitress behind the counter wearing a pale blue dress and filthy grease-stained apron. Her blond hair was pulled back tightly into a bun that looked like a small abandoned barrel of hay. In a hurried motion she swept her untrimmed bangs behind her right ear. As her fingernails, painted black, came back to her side I noticed she wore no earrings. There were two sets of holes but no earrings to dangle from or loop through them.

“Anything else,” she asked.

I stared at her and imagined that she was wearing strands of diamonds from each of the holes in her ears — that the diamonds radiated a bright white light that washed over the painful blue fluorescence. When I looked through my imagination, though, I saw that her eyes smoldered — perhaps with impatience — in the pits of her face and her ears were still unadorned.

“No. Thank you.”

Written from 12:05 am to 12:26 am on Monday, December 15, 2008 in my apartment in Concord, NH.

Proust Questionnaire

This is actually a highly modified version of the Proust Questionnaire, a questionnaire that was popularized by Marcel Proust in the late 1800s. The questionnaire was later picked up by Bernard Pivot and used on his French television show where James Lipton, the host of Inside the Actors Studio adapted it for his own use. My responses are to the questions posed by Lipton.

Q: What is your favorite word?
A: Ridiculous

Q: What is your least favorite word?
A: Whatever. Or fine.

Q: What turns you on creatively?
A: Comfort. Nostalgia. The dark. Music.

Q: What turns you off?
A: Pessimism. Apathy. Ambivalence.

Q: What is your favorite curse word?
A: Depends on how badly I’m golfing.

Q: What sound or noise do you love?
A: UM football crowd. Silence. Shower.

Q: What sound or noise do you hate?
A: The fish tank when it is not full.

Q: What profession other than your own would you like to attempt?
A: Travel journalist, novelist, pro golfer, entrepreneur.

Q: What profession would you not like to do?
A: Accountant, country western singer, IT manager.

Q: If Heaven exists, what would you like to hear God say when you arrive at the Pearly Gates?
A: Your family and friends are right this way.