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Six of us here in the bland and zinc-white waiting room, small machine on the floor burning the air with brown noise. We're nominally here for group therapy, but in truth we prefer to ritually founder in great excesses of civility. The therapists all but plead for us to say right upfront exactly what we don't like about each other. That's uncomfortable, and each of us toys with the idea before securing the old masks. My own mask isn't the Venetian kind, or the grotesque Twilight Zone voodoo variety, but the clear hospital type, used to inhale great lungs of ether. Sometimes sincerity creeps from the gaps, sometimes I do my best to collapse into this checkered chair, close my eyes and hide in the sound of my blood. It sounds surprisingly like the brown noise machine. I'm up against it. I'm not getting younger, and these feel like last chances to learn to be, in a way where I don't end up shut away, eating myself alive, riddled with depression and loneliness and long black strings of guilt that resonate like a tritoning cello. The thought carries: The six of us are an atonal sextet of numbness and refusal, dread, attraction, the works. Around us, the whole room is phthalocyanine green, blue shade. Therapist's preference, probably calming, soft music in the eye, and it almost works. But instead I am lost in new haircuts, in leggings ripped behind the knee, in the way a lamp hunches over like an ibis. Anything to avoid it, anything not to admit it, admit that despite years of this, years of looking out the high window into the red riot of Farragut Square, years of forcing myself to say terrible and incriminating things while rain and snow attacked the window, I am still sick with feelings where I must belong to someone, must be deeply known, or else I've never been anything at all.
0
Dec 19, 2017
Dec 19, 2017 at 7:48 PM UTC
Against It
Six of us here in the bland and zinc-white waiting room, small machine on the floor burning the air with brown noise. We're nominally here for group therapy, but in truth we prefer to ritually founder in great excesses of civility. The therapists all but plead for us to say right upfront exactly what we don't like about each other. That's uncomfortable, and each of us toys with the idea before securing the old masks. My own mask isn't the Venetian kind, or the grotesque Twilight Zone voodoo variety, but the clear hospital type, used to inhale great lungs of ether. Sometimes sincerity creeps from the gaps, sometimes I do my best to collapse into this checkered chair, close my eyes and hide in the sound of my blood. It sounds surprisingly like the brown noise machine. I'm up against it. I'm not getting younger, and these feel like last chances to learn to be, in a way where I don't end up shut away, eating myself alive, riddled with depression and loneliness and long black strings of guilt that resonate like a tritoning cello. The thought carries: The six of us are an atonal sextet of numbness and refusal, dread, attraction, the works. Around us, the whole room is phthalocyanine green, blue shade. Therapist's preference, probably calming, soft music in the eye, and it almost works. But instead I am lost in new haircuts, in leggings ripped behind the knee, in the way a lamp hunches over like an ibis. Anything to avoid it, anything not to admit it, admit that despite years of this, years of looking out the high window into the red riot of Farragut Square, years of forcing myself to say terrible and incriminating things while rain and snow attacked the window, I am still sick with feelings where I must belong to someone, must be deeply known, or else I've never been anything at all.
EvanS
Written by
46/M/DC
Dec 19, 2017
Dec 19, 2017 at 7:48 PM UTC
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