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what does it mean to be lonely.

what does it mean to be lonely,

what does it mean to be lonely?


except



they're so




           close

















you























can't  

































­feel    




      





































      ­          them?
 Aug 2014 rockywhoreor
megan
night
 Aug 2014 rockywhoreor
megan
The night makes me feel free and new and unmasked because it takes away the things I hide during the day, but it also makes me vulnerable and scared. I get this pit in my stomach, the kind that makes you want to rip out your intestines, and I have never been able to identify exactly what I feel. Maybe it doesn’t have a name; maybe it cannot be translated into words, but it rips and tears away at every piece of me until I am bursting and wasting away in the same instance, tears streaming down my face. It makes me so angry when I don’t know what to say.

I’m supposed to be the keeper of words -- I always have been, after all -- but now, more often than not, I find myself muttering “I don’t know” or getting frustrated because I can’t express something the way I want to. I didn’t even understand what an “existential crisis” was until a few days ago, but maybe this is part of the problem.

The aching in my head argues that I would do just fine staring at a wall for all of eternity, maybe contemplating some deep philosophical question, maybe just sitting there. I am one life out of seven billion human lives and the odds are against me here. It is more likely that I will amount to nothing than to anything at all, so why am I putting myself through Hell to keep getting nothing over and over again?

I can’t even ******* write about my problems, I can’t do anything except let them stew inside my head and poison my brain cells one by one because their complexity is beyond me, in numbers as large as the stars in the sky and the shards of glass in my heart.

Deadlines are catching up to me, and before I know it, I’ll be taking my summer school exams and getting my wisdom teeth out and starting school, and oh God, if I can’t survive in my own bedroom how am I supposed to make it in the pool of Great White Sharks? I’m not good enough for anything, especially not for my own standards, so it is easier to paint the works of Monet (the sunsets) on my forearms and across my thighs because there will never come a time when I will not be worthless. How am I supposed to write letters to my idols about how they helped me (they did, I promise you they did) when I’m still falling apart, when the rips in my seams and the holes in my skin keep getting bigger and bigger as days and weeks and months fly by. Why do I keep disappointing the people that love me -- I’m so sorry, I’ve always been a disappointment; I disappointed my workshop teacher when I told him my secrets, rushing out of me like the tide, but quickly withdrawing back into myself. When he told me he wanted me to get help, I was convinced that I would. And then I came home and realized that is so much simpler to take the pain and live with it instead of trying to explain it to others. I can’t even explain it to myself.

I want to know the cause, I want to know what made me this way. Was it genetics or my weight or some traumatic memory from my childhood or was it a small museum of relics donated by private families, collected over time until you could walk the halls of my suffering and drown yourself in me? What made me snap? When did I become so open-minded and when did I discover myself and why do I wish that this mental illness wasn’t just teenage hormones because I want to be special? I just want to be special. I want someone to hold me and comfort me and tell me they love me and I want a shoulder to cry on that can kiss me inside our blanket fort and I’m afraid I’ll get so tired of waiting for my soulmate that I’ll leave before they have a chance to find me. And I’m afraid of how far my dreams will take me before they are outpaced by money and power and glory in the race to the finish line and I am afraid of how I will take the loss. I discovered long ago that my dream was to live in San Francisco, by the bay, and own a bookstore/coffee shop, maybe with a record store, and live above it or in a townhouse near it with my husband and my four kids and maybe we wouldn’t be rich, but we would be happy and I could breathe in the sea salt air and finally feel like I am home instead of feeling like I am a misguided ghost trying to find my way back to my own graveyard.

Somethings never change, like the twisting feeling in my stomach as the clock moves closer to 3 am. I wish I knew how to stop it.
i took this from a diary entry so i'm not sure how coherent it is
 Aug 2014 rockywhoreor
megan
alone
 Aug 2014 rockywhoreor
megan
it’s 6 am again -
i think i’ve lost the ability to lose control
because i’m falling into the hole
below my bed but
everything is different and
my heart is beating slow
                                                      slow
                                                           ­           slow
  
it’s 6 am and music isn’t helping anymore
i’m //sick// and //tired// and
what little self worth i have left is
flushed down the toilet in a swirl of acrid water

it’s 6 am and i’m crying
saltwater tears for a saltwater girl -
the ceiling is blurry
my breaths turn shallow, searching;
there’s a demon at the end of my bed
can’t you see it?


it’s 6 am and i want to die,
for real this time
it would be so easy to take the pills
but i’m weak
as well as worthless,
and as i drift off to sleep at 6:30,
the sun is rising to hide
my failures

it’s 6:30 and the stars aren’t helping anymore
it’s 6:30 and i’m alone
 Aug 2014 rockywhoreor
megan
wrong
 Aug 2014 rockywhoreor
megan
I knew then that
something was wrong
with me.
I knew when I scribbled
sweet nothings on lined paper,
words of longing and regret
so dark I couldn't believe
they flowed from my pen.
"It's just fiction,"
I claimed but a faint
tugging at my weak
heartstrings proved otherwise.
Summer of 2013 hit
me like an angry tsunami,
ripping everything I loved
away from me
in a split second,
agonizingly alone and
left with far too much time
to contemplate things
beyond my control.
The littlest of things could
send me into a crying fit,
a single broken memory
knocking me on to my back
in one fell swoop,
unaware that I
had begun digging
the hole I was trapped in
long before I fell into its depths.
Not six feet under,
not yet, hopefully never,
but three feet at least,
shocked realizations
facing clouded mirrors that
I HATE MYSELF, and
everything I seem to represent.
It’s incredibly frustrating to
push and pull at a way
of life that won’t collapse;
to WANT so badly but never
RECIEVE.
The worst part is seeing the
others, somehow enjoying
being 15 and powerless and
stressed and consistently
worried. Then I remember:
that’s only me, I’m the only
one that’s drowning, and I
ignored the neon sign that
read “No Lifeguards: Swim at
Your Own Risk.”
I knew something was
wrong with me and with
barricades raised I could never
pinpoint exactly what it was.
 Aug 2014 rockywhoreor
ab
they're back, in the hallway. i thought they only stayed in the dark and turned up at night. they're escalating, following me with vicious ideals of demonic intent. my demons are real, how they got out i'll never know. is my mind a hell mouth, a gate where human souls of the ****** pour from? am i apart of the ******, or am I merely just an anchor to them? i'm terrified, wondering where i'll see them next. it's never full on, just glimpses and images in the corners of my eyes. they crawl like slithering beasts and serpents of sin, the very idea of sin. are we all eve's garden, the serpents living in our minds which pose as the tree we should not take from and eat? are we ****** vessels for sin to tempt and thrive? after all that's all we heavenly humans do isn't it? sin, sin until we can't anymore, then remember our repentance? then we are saved. i wish i felt saved. i'm tired of my demons, i'm tired of fear. today i told the people i loved the most about my demons, that they terrify me. i can never tell if it's me or something truly demented. i shall repent and then be saved but is the fact that i am saved going to be enough for my diseased mind? all i have is question after question and my demons only snicker and laugh in hate as they crawl on their bellies like cowards.
 Aug 2014 rockywhoreor
ab
Let's talk about our lives, our wonderful wonderful lives. The lives we think about day to day because we live them so carelessly in the sense of our own well-being. We care about us and only us. Us in the sense that we are only ourselves, no one else we pretend to be. Only this happens so often, where ignorant people unaware of themselves pretend to be someone else. Someone else they think they truly are but in fact are not. The thoughts in my head are real, but am I in fact real? A true persona of myself? A young woman in black, white, teal, gray? Who are we really? Question, question, question, question? I have brunette hair of rolling waves and eyes that are blue and pale like a cloudy sky and skin as pale as marble and snow and lips cracked and pale as well, like dried up carnation petals. I am a young woman, or girl, or young lady. I know what I am. I am a mentally unstable entity, a ******* edge of a chasm of the mind. The tiny demons, crawling black and quiet and fast. "Did you see that?" I'd ask and all replies say, "No." Am I losing my mind? A truly mind barreling, thought projecting spiral of my own demons appearing on my suburbia street. Act happy, say hello, smile. Routine, routine, routine, routine. Don't you see? We're all in hell. Am I the only one who knows it? I've turned, a young innocent girl, to a black on black wearing delinquent of a routine, cliche, conservative era. I am different, whether I am real is still my ever mind numbing question. I am not Good. I am not Bad. I am not Cute. I am not Preppy. I am not Rich. I am not Poor. I am not Goth. I am not Emo. I am not Grunge. I am Not. I am Not. I am Not. Am I Not? Who am I? Who are you? I have friends, friends of great birth and creation. They are my soul mates, though not of romantic kind. They are my soul mates in the sense that our minds meld in a precious manner, like gold. No, like molasses and syrup. If heated up we are painfully fast and overwhelming, covering everything in sight. When at room temperature, we are sickly sweet and slow, waiting for a thought to pick and pull apart upon ourselves. Their beautiful minds are like Evergreens and Aspens: partly permanent and luscious, partly colorful and changeable. Folie à Duex: Madness Has Two. A well used term, but my term is Madness à Trois: Madness Has Three. A maniacally made trio of doom, composed of minds far greater than any Diseased Adult Mind.
 Aug 2014 rockywhoreor
Mak
selfless
 Aug 2014 rockywhoreor
Mak
last night i woke up from a nightmare.
my boyfriend of 2 years knocked on my door,
held a colt 45 to my chest,
smiled,
told me "i love you baby"
and pulled the trigger.
i didn't die,
no, that would be too easy.
i stood there, bleeding and hopeless
and watched him pull the trigger
with the gun to his temple.
the twisted thing is,
watching hurt more.
 Aug 2014 rockywhoreor
Mak
my story
 Aug 2014 rockywhoreor
Mak
The room was silent. The only sound to be heard was the slow, steady dripping from my mother’s IV.      

“What do you mean, you’re dying?”

Multiple Sclerosis was, in short, a ***** of a disease. Somewhere along the span of my mother's 35 short years on this planet, her immune system made a giant mistake. For uncertain reasons, her body began to attack nerve cells, severely affecting her brain's processing ability and mobility. The only medication that had ever subdued the symptoms was beginning to **** her.

“It isn’t an immediate thing, Makayla. I still have plenty of time.”

Turning away from my mother, I wiped tears from my eyes. There was no way in hell I was going to let my family see me cry. Absolutely no way. This was a joke. My mom was not going to die.

“Kayla, baby, talk to us. It’s okay.”

With a deep breath, I forced a smile, as I often did, and blinked away all traces of tears from my gray eyes. Turning around to meet my parents’ worried expressions, I simply nodded.

“How long?”

The question came out as more of a statement than a question. The morbid implication of those two short words spoke worlds louder than any words I could muster.

“5 years, at the absolute worst.”

At that, I stood, and left. I ran, and ran, and ran. I ran until my lungs hurt, and then kept running. But no matter where or how fast I went, I knew I could not escape the horrible reality of the matter.

The woman who gave me life was losing hers.

I was always the type of person who knew how to talk my way out of any situation.

And this time, there was absolutely nothing I could do about it.

There’s no sweet-talking death.

And with that, I began to accept her demise, and my defeat.

///

The first sip burned my esophagus, and I felt the blaze continue to my stomach, where it left a lasting warmth. I coughed a little, as the hazy feeling of drunkenness set in, setting my head spinning and my insides ablaze.

The past two months (52 days, 4 hours, and 30-something seconds) were a continuous downward spiral into a constant intoxicated state. Instead of addressing my feelings in the endless sea of counseling sessions and semi-sympathetic family therapy hours, I isolated myself. When my mother asked how I was, my reply remained the usual, “Doing great, mom.”

I was not, in fact, doing great. The alcohol wrapped itself into me, braided itself within my better sense, and I began to let myself fall apart. The wall I so often hid behind, the wall of perfection, of cool, was crumbling. Short, yet deep cuts lined my thighs, just high enough to be hidden by the hem of my shorts.

My mother had the opportunity to save her own life. Russian research had found a possible cure for the disease that had been plaguing her very existence. 3 weeks of chemotherapy, followed by a few months of intensive care, and she would be normal once again.

My mother denied the treatment.

“Too much money,” she said.

“Too inconvenient,” she said.

Compared to the life of my mother, no amount of money nor convenience mattered.

I was furious.

I was drunk.

///

My mind swam, speech slurred, fingers trembled.

My phone sat in front of me, propped up on a gray tissue box, which had been halfway expended due to that night’s waterworks. The Coca-Cola can which held my ***/coke concoction was long past empty. I was drunk, and screaming words like ‘sorry’ and ‘doesn’t deserve this’ into a pillow. I knew my mother deserved to live. Compared to me, she was a saint. I felt empty and pathetic. I deserved to die.

I convinced myself that maybe if I did something extreme, she would value her own life more than she did.

I held tightly onto the railing of my house’s only set of stairs, as I attempted to keep my balance. I walked drunkenly to the medicine cabinet, careful not to make noise and wake my parents. I grabbed as many pill bottles as I could carry.

Exactly 41 pills of assorted shapes, sizes, and colors sat in lines on my bed. Small to large, rainbow order. The comfort of organization wasn’t helping this time. I wanted to die.

Before starting my buffet of medication, my phone lit up. One new text.

“I know you were feeling upset earlier, and I just wanted to remind you that you are special. You matter.” I instantly felt even ******* for what I was about to do.

I laid down in bed, beginning to drown in my own tears, and let myself fall asleep.

Neither I nor my mother would be dying tonight.
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