Monday, April 26, 2010

a long goodbye

If a grown man did something bad to you as a child, something that put you in therapy for years, that sent you into spirals of fear every time you poked your head outside, and you found that son of a bitch on Facebook, what would you do?

What if, for 8 long years, you spent hundreds of hours in lawyers' offices, deposition rooms, and courthouses; your loving parents emptied their savings accounts and lost sleep and happiness and trust: What if everything came down to nothing but a quiet, unheralded law change that you are restricted from speaking about and seeing that man's pasty, horrible face on a social networking sight "searching for love"? What would you do?

This is what I want to do. I want to learn how to fight. I want to learn how to split melons in half so their mushy insides Rorschach on the ground. I want to arm my body with the knowledge of vengeance, like a madcap heroine in some ridiculous Hollywood Kung Fu movie, so that I cannot lose my weapon on my journey to find this man-- my body will be the weapon. And then I want to hunt him down. I want to terrify him in his sleep, for months. I want him to know, without a shred of doubt, what it means to feel so completely helpless that the very ground you walk on has become your enemy. I want him to be afraid to turn corners and to be in his own locked bedroom and to think.

This world is so terrifyingly upside down, so backwards, for it to allow a man to molest children and then to log onto a virtual networking site 15 years later and search for a woman to fuck, with no mention of who he is as a human being. It's twisted in ways that it should never have become: Lawyers who represent the "good" side are willing to allow this man go unbranded, are willing to falter at the final stretch and cow tow to the whims of a judicial system that discourages change. For money.

Our lawyer failed us. In the eleventh hour, this self-proclaimed civil rights lawyer faltered like a spoiled prizefighter and bailed on me, bailed on my parents, bailed on her daughter, bailed on every woman in the world. We fought for eight years to keep this man from being allowed to be around children and now he is on Facebook looking for love.

Facebook has become the giant vanity mirror to Western culture, a masturbation tool that people I respect use everyday, that I myself use everyday, in the hopes that people will find me funny and worthy of talking to. And he is there, too. He could fuck your daughter. He could fuck your sister. He could fuck you-- and there is nothing I can do about it. In exchange for getting our lives back my family and I have unwittingly become the instigators of this man's undeserved freedom.

I dreamed I had the power to make what had happened to me un-happen, and everything was beautiful again the way it is for children. I had these dreams for months until I began to forget small things, like the smell of the air and the pavement and the room where the bad things occurred, where bits of me died in small, imperceptible ways. But the memories of these small deaths within me are still there and I know that, no matter how wonderful my life could become, I can never feel 100% safe again, and I have learned that this is true for many women. They carry it like the would anything they've become used to, something slightly crippling but still their own. A reminder to be aware, and a reminder to be brave.


Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Thoughts on Being a Lady Dick

I can no longer ignore the fact that I'm as shallow as the next asshole when it comes to, well, being a person. I know most people reached that conclusion before they hit puberty but my parents tried really hard to make me think I was special, because they are liberals and because they are sweet to a fault-- so it's hitting me late: That shiny exterior I like to embody is made out of all the wishes I have for myself, sure, but I'm a dick. I'm just like everyone I hate, and in some ways I'm worse because I'm a huge hypocrite. I don't recycle when it counts; I poke fun at idiots on personal profiles who leave stupid comments (and I call them "idiots"); on occasion I am mentally cruel to girls who are younger and prettier than me; I love the ocean but I don't even go to trash-pick-up-day at the beach-- and I sometimes wish I was rich enough not to care because it would be so much easier. I eat meat that comes from farms where animals are treated like car parts. I drive 6 blocks to work. I shop at Target. I lie about spare change to homeless people because I want to get the morning crossword and pay for parking for the car that I'm driving 6 blocks in. Etc., etc.

As a result of this lifestyle and perhaps of Al Gore, I often wake up in the middle of the night with a bad case of the Guilty Heebee Jeebees. I will stare at the oscillating fan and imagine my head in the spokes because I do not like who I am at 4 a.m., the hour when everything bad about oneself is magnified by one trillion. I bet Mother Theresa never got the GHJs. I bet she never woke up in the wee hours going, Why the fuck didn't I hand that old lady my umbrella in the pouring rain? I bet she woke up with the opposite, saying: "Thank you, Lord, for making me so pious and lovely that my poop smells like St. John's Wort."

Naturally all signs point to Finding Meaning.

In my search for meaning-- an abstract, mostly stupid idea I cannot grasp without plasticizing its form and function-- I come across very little anymore. Perhaps this is not necessarily a negative thing, I've surmised, for with meaning there comes responsibilities and risks. Risks aren't fun. They are a source of worry, a bothersome hound on your trail. All the What-Ifs that march your mental corridor when you take risks are enough to give you wrinkles, and what good are those? (According to Hollywood's highly regarded Scientific Experts, wrinkles are equal to Waterloo-- Your worth as a human being is Napoleon and your face is the Duke of Wellington. You might have a good go of it for a bit but then Wellington's all up in your shit and you must surrender.) In the end, however, it is the ever present, ubiquitous Meaning that gives us the drive to make change for the better-- right?

So I'll go adopt a hamster and name him Al Gore. That should absolve my stinky-shit self.