The damn timing’s just never right
Fingers clenching tense shaking mind racing
A thousand thoughts intruding on each other
Chest hollow
Fluttering heart erratic panicky feeling driving
Stakes of anxiety muscles taut
Cracking knuckles sinking flailing
Gasping for air inhaling failure like bitter remedies
Glazed eyes unseeing galaxies of unbidden futures
All imagined in escapist daydreams
Crushing hunched shoulders
Achy neck veins throbbing breathing shallow breaths
Overwhelming sense of finality
Conflicting duality of hope and despair
Rolled together like an expensive joint of reality
She smiles at me
Downcast eyes laugh lines hiding deceiving beliefs in the achievability of it all
The same reckless diving into disbelieving desires of possibilities
Of futures yet to pass but the hope is too strong to ignore
Incessant tapping of feet clicking heels betraying nervous ticks
A shared glance igniting fueling fire of my inevitable inability
To express what I mean
An inarticulate wordsmith dumbstruck by sheer desperation
Lacking faith or courage abandoned plans fall from weak hands
As opportunities knock but the door remained bolted
It’s the same old tale
Boring
A soul destroying passion too late or too early
Just not my time I suppose is the proposed moral of this story
Regret
Trembling fingers reach soft caress of flushed cheeks
Hands tumbling through ruffled hair snag on panting breaths and heaving chests
Lips sewn into pounding lines erratically beating across each other’s necks
Clenched
Goosebumps rise on roused arms
Shivers delectable vibrations arousing consuming sinful
Thump thump of hearts so loud they muffle the sounds
Of tearing clothes and noisy inhales
Worshipping at the altar of glistening pleasure
Mouths locked
Lips puffy
Tongues fighting a battle in which everyone is victorious
Heavy breaths and tangled limbs and heat radiating
Burning so good on wet skin
Eyes meeting electrifying currents of shared secrets
Floating in between
Time freezes momentarily fleeting
Sweet agony of completing this union of two souls
Temporary retreat from reality interrupted
Sweat sticky solidifying in cold pools of washed up desire
Eyes no longer meeting rather fleeing
Satiation granted with no permanency
Spent
A miasma of lingering questions and unspoken replies
All played out internally
Feet slip into shoes slide across the room and out the door
Never looking back
The whispered, “do you want to stay the night?”
Drowned out by the roar of the engine
Nonverbal response to an unheard request
Regret
First admittance
Bone-deep exhaustion floods through me, every shuffling step feeling like it might be my last. Years of fear and frustration boiling up and then subsiding because feeling anything at all is too much effort. I walk into the computer lab silently beside my classmates; turning right and heading towards the back of the class instead of my customary front-row seat. A few people glance at me quizzically, unsure of what I’m doing, but I ignore them and seat myself in the back corner, head leaning against the wall, the coolness a stark contrast to the raging inferno inside my of my head.
Professor Montoya doesn’t know what to make of me. She asks loudly over the conversations of the rest of the class, “Are you ok?” I glance up at her, debating whether or not to respond, and choose to simply allay her concerns with a thumbs-up. Lying about how I feel has gotten me this far in life. Hopefully it can get me through the rest of this class as well.
Everyone’s working on the lab assignment; extensive defining of terminology for their research projects. Usually I would be up at the front making a spectacle of myself as I debate with Professor Montoya about semantics and how certain definitions could be misconstrued. Today, I don’t even bother turning my computer on. Instead, I lower the chair all the way down, and place my head on arms. I inhale and exhale slowly, wondering if I can breathe in enough oxygen to wake myself up even a little bit. But even the action of deep breathing is too tiring to continue for long.
Listening to the conversations of research partners towards the front of the class, I quietly thank whatever deity exists that my perpetually flaky partner is absent today as well. Just as I think this however, I hear the professor scolding him for showing up late. I don’t even bother raising my head. Hiding behind a massive computer screen, I hope irrationally that he doesn’t notice my massive frame hunched over in the back. My hope is dashed.
“Hey buddy, what’s going on?” he asks, plopping down in the seat next to me. I’m simultaneously overwhelmed by gratitude for his kind voice, and completely infuriated that he couldn’t take the hint that separating myself from the rest of the class meant I didn’t want to be disturbed. I offer a non-committal grunt.
“Can I do anything to help?” His sincerity and open demeanor aren’t doing anything to help at the moment, because indifference is easier to deal with than sympathy. My head still buried in my arms, I shake it back and forth slowly, mentally begging him to go away. Thankfully, this time my telepathy has apparently worked because he pats my shoulder awkwardly several times before returning to the front of the room.
The conversations in the room become louder and louder, as people try to be heard over their neighbors, until what seems like a deafening cacophony of voices are all debating definitions. Professor Montoya’s voice rings above it all calling for quiet.
“Alright! Enough! That’s plenty of time to work on your operationalizations. Now we’re going to cover the types of tests you’ll be using for your data. Who can tell me what a chi-square test measures?” I finally raise my head from my arms to glance around the room, noting that the only person looking in my direction is the professor. I lean my head against the wall again, closing my eyes and wondering how upset she would be if I left early. As I debate the pros and cons of blatantly walking out of class in the middle of the lecture, I notice that my name is being repeated.
“Joseph? Can you enlighten us?” Professor Montoya is staring directly at me now, and the rest of the class has turned around as well to hear my response. I stare back nonplussed, mind blank, wondering what on earth they were talking about. I shake my head, unable to form words, a sudden lump of anxious build-up making its home in my throat. A few people look at me askance, unable to determine why I’m not on my A-game today, but blessedly turn back around when the professor returns to lecturing on homogeneity and independence. The world blurs for a moment, colors blending together, a vacuum-like silence descending on the room as the sound rushes out. My eyes droop, not quite closed, but not absorbing any information regardless.
“Joseph, talk to me, what’s going on?” The sudden voice from my left startles me, jumping slightly in my seat as reality snaps back into place. I turn to see Professor Montoya staring at me with worried eyes, eyebrows scrunched together, slowly reaching a hand out. I flinch.
“You’re really worrying me, please talk to me,” she implores, lowering her hand but still looking at me too closely, too much scrutiny in those eyes. I look away, desire to confide in someone conflicting violently with my lifelong refusal to ever admit any emotional pain.
“I’m just really tired today,” I whisper, trying not to let the sound of exhaustion and tears enter my voice. Judging by the look on her face, I doubt I succeeded.
“It’s more than being tired, I know what tired looks like, this ain’t it. Come on Joseph, you know I’m a mandatory reporter. If you don’t tell me what’s going on I’m going to have to assume someone’s hurting you or you’re hurting yourself. Please, talk to me.” I glance up at her face, and can tell she’s deadly serious about the reporting if I don’t give her something. I take a deep breath, trying to steady my inner turmoil and find the courage to admit a tiny portion of what’s happening in my head.
“I’m on new meds,” I respond, refusing to look at her, speaking more to the keyboard in front of me than anything else. “They’re just making me really tired. I’m sorry I’m not participating.”
Her silence in response forces me to look up at her again, wondering what her reaction would be to hearing this. If she would stop probing. Wondering if she would leave me alone again so I could pretend to be present. She stares at me intently, seemingly searching for something that she doesn’t find. The pressure of maintaining eye contact becomes too much, and I look away again.
“Meds for what?” she asks in a no-nonsense tone. I can tell from her voice that she thinks I’m lying, that I’m on drugs, downers, maybe took too much syrup this morning.
My breath is coming in shallow gasps now, heart pounding so hard in my chest it feels like the motion is rocking me back and forth. I shake my head again, hunching over, shame flooding through my at the thought of admitting what’s wrong with me.
“Joseph?!” She asks in alarm, a hint of panic seeping into her voice, clearly dismayed by the sight of me. “Joseph, I need you to verbalize to me. What’s happening? You’re scaring me!”
I realize that if I don’t say anything, she’s going to call campus safety. That idea more than anything else spurs me into calming myself long enough to respond.
“Depression,” I mumble, the word escaping from my lips like a pulled tooth. “The meds are for depression.” My whole body is tense, drawn taut like a bowstring, ready to snap at the slightest hint of scorn or doubt. I wring my hands together so hard that I can feel my bones creaking in protest, knuckles so white they look dead. My previous exhaustion is replaced with a post-adrenaline rush of shakiness, breath still coming out in nasally exhales. I can’t bring myself to look at her.
“Ok,” she replies. “Thank you for telling me. I understand. Don’t worry about the classwork today. Feel free to take off whenever, I know you don’t need the practice.” With that, she gets up, walking to the front of the class towards a raised hand, never looking back. An overwhelming sense of relief fills me, a prickly feeling building in my eyes. Curious, I reach up, feeling wetness, confused as to what it could be.
Medical Hypocrisy
If you had asthma you’d use an inhaler
If you were nearsighted you’d wear prescription glasses to see better
If you had high blood pressure
You’d take Lipitor in the morning
Cause if you didn’t, you’d know that your body couldn’t afford it
If you had a headache you’d take aspirin to make the pain go away
If your pancreas doesn’t work you inject insulin every day
What’s funny though if someone had cancer you wouldn’t say
That they can cure themselves with self-help books and meditation
Obviously what they need is chemotherapy and radiation
But what you’re telling me is if I’m struggling with mental health
That it’s different from everything else
That I don’t need professional help
Just learn to be comfortable with myself
Well I call bullshit!
How you gonna tell someone who sincerely wishes they were dead
That they don’t know how they feel
Cause it’s all in their head?
Of course it’s all in their head, just like Alzheimer’s and MS
You gonna tell me you think fresh air
Is gonna cure ALS?
The stigma about discussing mental illness has slowly eroded
But that’s only half the problem cause it’s not just the talking that’s important
The diagnosis is a start but it’s only the first part
Anxiety and depression won’t be cured by yoga in the park
Cause please explain to me why morphine’s ok for a broken back
But when I’m having a panic attack a xanax is too much to ask
But I gotta ask
Have you ever felt like you were crawling out of your skin?
Like the whole world’s about to end and you’ve got tunnel vision
Your lungs are feeling so heavy and you can’t catch your breath
And you’re sure everyone’s staring at your heart banging in your chest
But maybe not
Maybe anxiety’s not your story
Maybe you cried from disappointment that you even woke up this morning
Maybe you get so tired that you can’t even stand
And the only thing keeping you going is a bottle in your hand
Every sharp object you see you imagine slitting your wrists
Cause anything’s gotta be better than this
We can talk about depression but it’s so hard explaining
When you hate yourself and every interaction feels so draining
So why is it socially acceptable to get knee and hip replacements
But not when I’m suicidal and need anti-depressants?
I’ll tell you this
When I was 20 I tried to kill myself by jumping off a roof
Cause I felt worthless and ashamed of who I was and that’s the truth
When I was 21 and 22 I drank myself to sleep at night
Figured if I didn’t wake up the next morning well that’s alright
Been depressed and suicidal since I was a little kid
And for a while I wasn’t sure I was ever gonna want to live
For the past ten months I’ve been taking some medication
And for the first time in my life I feel something other than agitation
For the first time in my life I can see with clear eyes
And it’s all thanks to these pills that everyone wants to demonize
I’m so sick and tired of these people who complain
About anti-depressants as if the pills are to blame
We need more dialogue about mental illness that’s how I see it
Cause when I’m dealing with my sickness you don’t get to tell me how to treat it.
(Excerpt from my new poetry book "Ramblings of an Addled Heart")
She
She smells like drunken three AM philosophical conversations
Sitting on the grass
Pants wet from the not-quite-dawn-yet dew
Like the aroma of iced-tea on a hot day
Sweat rolling down tense necks
Sweet ice cold salvation quenching parched lips
She smells unassuming
Like a quiet confidence reflected in the fire of her eyes
The reek of determination and nurturing
Rolling off of her like comic-drawn heat waves
Tangible
She sounds like the voice you knew all along
Like a forgotten memory
A wisp of echoing melody you can’t quite place
Like the name of a song you know intimately
But can’t quite say
She sounds like distant ocean waves
Crashing along the shore
Calm
Yet hiding a raging riptide underneath
She sounds like sizzling blueberry pancakes in the morning
Buttery crinkling of home-cooked comfort
She feels like
Sweaty palms and pounding hearts
Like blazing rays of possibility
The first splash of heat across your face
Staring into a sunrise
Shielding squinted eyes with hands to block out the overwhelming radiance
She feels like redemption
Like the culmination of a lifetime’s work
Like a patchwork quilt
Built by holy hands designed to wrap around
And smother hesitation
She feels like home
SHUT UP
Anxiety coursing through my veins like snake poison
Uncontainable
The harder I try to repress it the more forceful it comes
It’s ebbing rage creeping up on me
Subtle as a brick in the face
Consuming
The nervous tap of my foot
Hand clenching into fist
Fingernails biting into palm
Pent-up energy begging to be released
The urge to scream nearly overwhelming
And every word you say feeds it more
Cracking knuckles, and hands and fists
Clenching
Unclenching
Clenching
Unclenching
Foot tapping and knuckles still cracking
Head bobbing and the sound of your voice
Raking on my nerves like the sound of nails on a chalkboard
But worse
Because you won’t shut up
Want to punch you, kick you
Pick you up and throw you down a flight of stairs
Do anything to shut you up
The primal need to yell, to scream
To expel some kind of angry noise from my throat
Approaching the breaking point now
And for some fucking reason you still won’t shut up!
The only thing left to do is let it all out
Scream at the top of my lungs
Call you names
Bring into question the legitimacy of your birth
And say things about your mother that would horrify me if she heard
And as I stand there, energy spent and all my pent-up frustrations
Heaped onto you
Tears falling down your face
Anguish written in your eyes
The slight trembling of your chin
I want to feel bad, remorseful
Guilty that I’ve hurt you
But all I can feel is relief
Contentment
Because you’ve finally
Finally
Shut up
I am not a noun. I am a verb.
What do you do?
What do you mean? I do a lot of things.
Yeah but when you introduce yourself to someone you say, “Hi, I…”
“Hi, I like to write.”
Oh cool you’re a writer?
Sometimes.
Well what about the rest of the time?
I dunno, I like to read a lot too.
Ok but what’s your job?
Like, what do I do for money? Is that what you mean?
Yeah.
Oh well I tutor.
So you’re a tutor?
Sometimes.
What do you mean sometimes? You’re either a tutor or you’re not.
Well sometimes I tutor. Most of the time I don’t.
Yeah but if that’s your job then you’re a tutor.
No.
What do you mean, no?
I mean I’m not a tutor. I’m not a noun. I’m a verb. I tutor.
I don’t get it.
Ok let me ask you this; what do you do for money?
I’m a bank teller.
You’re a bank teller.
Yes.
You’re a noun?
Huh?
You tell banks?
You’re confusing me.
Are you trying to tell me that the sum of everything you are can be explained as “I’m a bank teller?”
No, obviously not.
Obviously.
I do other things than work at a bank.
Then why are you trying to define yourself by your job?
That’s not what I was doing at all.
Of course it was. You said “Hi, I’m a bank teller.”
…
Do you see what I mean? You’re more than the sum of the roles you occupy. Why would you want to limit yourself?
I’m not limiting myself by telling people what I do for a living.
For a living?
Yeah?
You live for work?
What? No!
Then why did you say you’re doing it for a living?
It’s a turn of phrase, it doesn’t mean anything.
Of course it does. Everything means something. You said it, you expected me to understand what you meant when you said it, of course it has meaning.
Yeah but it doesn’t mean that.
What does it mean then?
It means I do it to make money so I can afford to live! There! Does that make sense to you?
I mean, I understand it, but that doesn’t mean it makes sense to me.
Ugh. You’re so frustrating. Why are you like this?
Like what?
THIS! Why are you questioning everything I say? Why can’t you just make conversation like a normal person? You obviously know what I mean when I’m asking these things. Why are you pretending to be so obtuse?
You think I’m being obtuse?
Uh, yeah. Yeah I do. I think you’re deliberately trying to be annoying.
I’m sorry you feel that way. That’s not my intention.
Then what is your intention?
To make you think?
You’re saying I don’t think?
No, I’m saying you don’t think about the things you find so common to ask about because you’ve never had a reason to question it.
Questions like these are common for a reason when you’re meeting someone new.
Why?
What do you mean why? I’m trying to get to know you!
No, you’re trying to learn the labels I’ve been given. I am not a noun. I am a verb. I am not stagnation or complacency or anything you can easily define. I am motion. I reject the idea that you can take something I do occasionally and make that my identity. I am more than the sum of the things that I happen to be doing. I am more than the sum of the roles I am told to play. I am more than the sum of the labels people use to define the world around them because they’re afraid of ambiguity. I am indescribable. I am uncomfortable. I am everything and nothing and all of the things in between. But I am not a noun.
You’re weird is what you are.
I know.
You’re definitely right about you being uncomfortable. Thanks for the drink, but I’m gonna take off now.
No worries. And you’re welcome.
Bye!
Bye bank teller!
…
…
*sigh*
Don’t know where to go from here
THE BREAKDOWN
Third night in a row with little to no sleep
Frustrated thoughts raging beneath a happy exterior breaking free
Like a shroud thrown over thoughts a blanket falls over my mood
The temporary refuge of suicidal thoughts
No longer a retreat but now a permanent residence
Willing myself to keep going through the motions
Because this dreadful agony of constricting despair
Ebbs and flows
And judging by the well known pattern it’s been months
So
By now it should be easing up
But it’s not
So I drink
Maybe it’s unhealthy but it’s the only thing that makes me want to wake up in the morning sometimes
But only sometimes
The motivation to seek help pushed along by the long held fear
Of feeling like this ten years from now
So I do
I reach out for help.
THE TESTS
A series of frank questions that follow one another
Fired like bullets from a machine gun
Rapid-fire
Being asked to divulge information
Previously only written down in hidden journals
Staccato hum of the blood rushing in my ears
Accompany the soul-crushing weight of my responses
To the question
“What do you hope to get from treatment?”
I answer, “relief”
The series of questions is followed by a battery of tests
Questionnaires and coordination trials and answering the same questions in different ways
A half-pint of blood taken to run tests designed to make sure the problem exists
In my head
And not my body
THE WAIT
All the old doubts about seeking treatment resurface
Maybe I should cancel the follow-up appointments
It’s not really that bad I tell myself
I’ll get over it eventually
Except I never have
Other people have real problems, I think to myself
I’m just a negative nancy
I don’t even feel that bad today
Everything’s fine
I was freaking out over nothing
THE DIAGNOSIS
Reluctantly I return to discover what has been discovered about me
I am handed a printout of a summary of the diagnosis
I read over the list of symptoms possibly associated with my condition and nod my head along like a bobble with each one:
Inability to concentrate
Feelings of worthlessness
Desire to stay away from others
Self-hatred
Rarely experiences positive emotions
Loss of interest or motivation
Overeating
Unexplained irritability
Insomnia
Hopelessness
It’s called Dysthymia. Persistent Depressive Disorder. PDD.
I finally have a name for it
I’ve heard stories of people receiving a diagnosis and feeling happy because they finally have a name for it
Except I always understood what I felt
I just didn’t know why I felt it
The last thing I feel is relief
Because Dysthymia is a lifelong illness
So instead of relief
I get a diagnosis that tells me hopefully with medication and therapy
I’ll one day have this under control
Hopefully
But it’ll never go away
My greatest fear stemming from early childhood
Is that I would feel this way for the rest of my life
Now I have a definitive answer
The answer is yes
THE REACTION
While I agonize over these thoughts
Another pops into my head
That my mental suffering compares not at all
With people who have real problems
I’m not homeless. I have food. I have a safe place to sleep. I don’t live in a war zone. I’m better off than most of the world’s population.
The self-hatred I know so intimately wells up and chastises me for having the audacity to be depressed when I have absolutely no reason to be
I feel overwhelmed
Tired, anxious
My neck has been aching for weeks from tension
I can’t pretend to be cheery anymore
I can’t pretend at all anymore
I’ve lost my motivation
I’ve lost my hope
I’ve lost the energy to even care
Most Needed Vacation Ever
Early in the morning, (12:45am), sitting on the ridiculously comfortable recliner in the den of some of my closest friends’ house in Kansas. Said my temporary goodbyes to California last week, but I’ll be back to bring in the new year. Every day that I’ve been here, I feel the stress and anxiety dripping off of me. Every day that I’m away from the things that call upon my time and energy I feel rejuvenated. I haven’t been this relaxed in years.
Looking back at my emotional state two weeks ago is startling. It was scary how close to the edge I was, how totally defeated I felt. The lingering pain is still there, but it’s not the knock-down, devastating wreck that it was. Maybe it’s true that time heals all wounds. But I feel more open than I have in years as well. More vulnerable, but in a good way. More willing to make connections. Maybe it’s true that there’s a silver lining to everything as well.
I’ve been a very closed off person for a long time. Years of perceived failure, coupled with a crippling fear of rejection left me a hopeful guy with impenetrable walls. But in mere weeks she tore down those walls like they were cheap plaster. Took the scabs I willingly placed over every inch of my heart and ripped them off. She burrowed her way into my very psyche, and destroyed nearly every barrier I had ever put up to stop that precise thing from happening.
In the wake of coming to terms with the fact that another relationship didn’t work out, I didn’t see at first the gift she had left me. That even as she stole away a piece of me that I didn’t know I had left to give, instead of feeling hopeless, I actually feel hopeful. Hopeful for the future. She showed me that life without these walls is hard. It’s harsh, and it hurts, and a lot of things that didn’t seem painful before, are painful now. But at the same time a lot of things I didn’t let myself feel, I’m letting myself feel now.
It’s scary to contemplate the idea of being so open. But once down, I can’t find it in me to try rebuilding those walls. Maybe it’s true that those who wear their heart on their sleeves get burned more easily than those who don’t. I don’t know. What I do know is that life looks brighter and more appealing with these walls down. Things don’t seem as dark as they did before. It feels like even though things will hurt more readily, I’m stronger than I was before her.
It feels like 2016 is going to be a good year.
Emotional disaster
Torturing myself looking at the new pictures of you
Seeing you look at him the way I looked at you
Wondering if everything was a lie
Of course the promises were
Of course the promises were
But wondering if the looks you gave me were a lie
If the sensual touches
The nights curled into each other
The opening of our hearts
The sharing of our baggage
You crying on me,
Me crying in front of another person
For the first time in years
Was it all a lie?
Was every moment spent holding each other a lie?
Was the laughter?
My lips on your neck, my hands on your back and thigh, was it all a lie?
Why
It's what I keep asking myself
Why
Baring my soul to you
More honesty flowing through me
More genuine responses than I had ever given anyone
Our relationship was based on deception
I guess I always knew that nothing good could come of it
A part of me still wants to know, even though I never will
Won't ever get that sense of closure
Was your love a lie?