go postle.

pardon my dust. i'm turning it into glitter.

Hi, I'm Chris. If you subscribe to the MBTI, I'm an INFJ. I put myself through school for a seemingly useless English/Creative Writing degree, but writing is my passion and that's what I want to do when I grow up. Still figuring out what comes next, and pretty much everything else, so I'm feeling kinda adventurous. And yes, that's exactly how my OkCupid profile starts out. Why mess with a good thing, eh?

The site's a work in progress. I'll be adding content over time, and hopefully eventually it'll evolve into something halfway interesting. I'm glad you're still reading, though. Usually by this point I have to show a little skin to keep 'em interested.

strawberry fields forever...


       just finished the last day of my three-day strawberry dunking marathon. i ended up on the white chocolate machine again this year just because i'm awesome like that (it's the fastest enrober and you have to keep up while keeping the berries pretty, which i do--mine are always the prettiest) and i ended up doing just shy of two tons of white chocolate covered strawberries. it was crazy. and i am tired. but it has so far had the unintended but quite welcome side-effect of making my body so tired and sore that the whole emo thing was kinda forgotten--for a little while at least. maybe until tomorrow, if i'm lucky. it was good to see all the old coworkers, though. and yesterday i was able to listen to an entire unabridged audiobook while i was there. it was my virgin audiobook experience. i enjoyed.

       apparently a lot happened while i was gone from my other job, though. my boss quit. she's being temporarily replaced by her boss--which won't be a lot of fun. but everyone's hours were cut and we're not expecting to see our raises that we were supposed to get last october. have i mentioned that i need a new job?

       wait. something just happened. the emo's back. shit. i'm going to go find a dark hole to crawl in.

i'll take two, please...



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 10, 2010
Contact: mercurialmusic

MIRACLE DRUG DISCOVERED

       Pharmaceutical giant Panazoth announced Wednesday that they have discovered a cure for the condition responsible for many cases of depression, anxiety, poor self-image, excessive obsession, mania, and stress, and which contributes directly to economic hardship and global overpopulation.

       "We're very excited about this discovery," says Panazoth spokeswoman Anita Goodman. "Hopeless romantics and computer nerds all over the world will be able to take back control of their emotions. We no longer have to face the debilitating pain that plagues so many. There is now a choice!"

       Panazoth has dubbed its new wonder-drug Amorex, which is available in different formulas for both men and women. According to its developers, the drug works on chemical receptors in the brain to simultaneously regulate levels of oxytocin, vasopressin, dopamine, norepinephrine, seratonin, and either testosterone or estrogen (depending on the formula), which are considered the main chemical offenders behind the symptoms associated with the condition commonly and often mistakenly referred to as "love." Panazoth claims that Amorex will restore normal behavior and increase productivity many times over.

       "Clinical trials have been quite impressive," says Goodman. "Testers have reported fewer thoughts of suicide, a decrease in emotional eating, and most importantly a significant reduction in sentimental babbling and other generally annoying behaviors."

       Panazoth expects Amorex to hit stores worldwide as early as this weekend and hopes that the drug will curb outbreaks of the "love" disease, which is usually most rampant this time of year.

dum dum dee dum...


       this one's gonna be kinda a rambly post because i don't really have a whole lot to talk about but things are still happening and i felt like updating. so yeah. ok now i'm not sure where to start.

        three weeks into the semester already, which is a little weird, but it always goes faster than i expect and you'd think i'd be used to that by now. but no. this is the time of year that for whatever reason i usually become even more of a loner. still true, for the most part. i've been busier than normal, i think, which is neither good nor bad, and i have been spending more time with one individual in particular, but the "loner" feeling still prevails, probably because i don't have any interesting stories to tell about said individual. well, at least no stories of the sort that would forever cure that "loner" status. and yes, i'd very much like to tell those sorts of stories about this person. way too much, probably. and no, i doubt it will happen. never does.

        i've been teaching voice lessons. that's a new one for me. it was much easier with piano because i've been playing for 20 years, but i didn't start studying voice until my sophomore year in high school (ish). yeah, i guess that was still a while ago, but i haven't been singing either, for about seven years now. that makes me sad. it has been good to start again, to look through music and remember the theory and techniques that i was taught. we've had two lessons so far and we can both tell that he's improving, so that's good. he told me in the last that i was a good teacher. made me kinda happy. and it has been fun, but spending time with him in this capacity is a little strange. you see he's the individual i mentioned above, and i hope to god that he is ignorant of this blog because that would suck in the bad way.

       it's starting to hurt. what's worse is that i already know what he'd say. so i need to stop. again. really getting tired of this.

       next week's going to be crazy. true/false film fest volunteer orientation on sunday, work at the which then voice on monday, then i'm going to st. louis on tuesday with my dad and brother to see the red wings vs. blues, and apparently i'm finally being forced to wear a jersey, probably so i don't opt for the rainbow sweater. no, i don't really own a rainbow sweater. wednesday will be mine, but then i'm working at the candy factory for the rest of the week, doing strawberries again for singles awareness day. that will be roughly a 40-hour work week in a 60-hour period. should be fun. actually, i am kinda looking forward to it. if they have an open position (unlikely) and they'd have me (maybe) i'd take it in a heartbeat. i need a new job. desperately. i should get something that's more in my degree, but at this point i just need something that will pay bills and feed me. except i could definitely use some starvation.

       i have been good, i will say that. as i mentioned in the last, i was running about 20 miles a week over break, but i haven't been since classes started and the gym is temporarily swamped. i'll probably start going again this weekend, hoping to elbow my way through the people starting to get tired of their resolutions. i'm not sure why i so desperately want my abs back. probably has something to do with him. this will all end in tears.

       on a lighter note, and a slightly silly one, hermes got his nails done today. well, really they're just softpaws nail caps. you can get them in different colors, for cats or dogs, and they're seriously wonderful. he didn't quite like the application process and it turned into a sort of hide-and-seek game, but he didn't seem to mind them in the least once they were on. pic below. and with that i'll say goodbye for now. i hope you're all well.

rainbow hermes
=)


on a scale of one to ten, i'm a nine...


       i secret shopped a church this morning. i know, right? gay boy, more or less agnostic, hasn't been to church in about a year -- and they pay me $25/hour to visit and take a survey after. not the church itself, but there's a company here in missouri that offers this service to churches. funny thing is, i'm exactly what they want -- an outside perspective. apparently i'm a particularly good candidate, too, because i have an inside perspective as well and can express my opinions somewhat effectively. i was a little cynical about how i would like it, but it turns out i really enjoyed it. not the service itself. that was boring as hell, if you'll pardon the expression (not really -- i so did that on purpose). but it was rather amazing to be able to vent some of my frustrations to people who honestly wanted to hear them and who really want to make an effort to change. might be a tad idealistic to really expect that change, especially with all the gray hairs i saw in the congregation today, but at least it's something.

       i'm not really a nine, as the title of this update might suggest, nor will i probably ever see the graceful curves of that particular number on the far, far distant horizon or anywhere in between, but i'm working on two things here: actually improving myself and improving my attitude toward myself. selfish goals, i know, but i'm currently subscribing to the whole "be the change" idea, and after the last several years i definitely need it. to start, my self-confidence has been ground to dust. it was never that great anyway, but the whole shame of being gay and the (bad) weight gain during my years of uber-depression (that ended a little over a year ago) wore that ego down to the nubbins. so i'm working on the body, hoping to get my six pack back. man, that was a long time ago. i weighed about 145lbs out of high school. i'm short. about 18 months ago i weighed 190ish. keep in mind -- i'm short. now i did gain a lot of (good) weight during a gym-rat phase several years ago that took me to about 155, but that 190 is still a gain of 45lbs (that's just over 20 kilos for my non-u.s. friends). this past summer, and again in the last few weeks, i've been actively doing something about that. finally. i stole ryan's student i.d. while he's home for break, and i've been running like a crazy lady at the rec. which reminds me -- there's this crazy lady in columbia whom i've seen everywhere over the last few years -- i swear she's following me. she looks kinda homeless, but i don't think she is. just older and ... not that into grooming. she was at the gym the other day and it freaked me out. anyway. i'm down to about 164lbs now, if you get me all nekkid, which you really don't want to do. not yet. but that makes me happy. i wore a pair of pants to church today that i haven't been able to fit into in a very long time and my ass looked great. i smiled. but i suppose those would be my (cliche, i know) resolutions for the year twenty-ten: abs and absolution. it's a little bit of a stretch, but it's catchy and i wanted to use it. sure, it's not absolution in the traditional sense, but more of an absolution of myself -- being who i am without shame.

       writing more should also be added to that list, but "abs, absolution, and writing more" doesn't quite have the same ring to it. writing is part of who i am, though, so if i let myself be who i am then i'll write more, too. good theory? i'll take it.

       i'm in a good mood. and i just realized why. dammit. don't you hate it when your mood hinges on other people? this is going to hurt a lot more than i expected. but that won't be for a long time, so i don't have to worry about that yet. i'll enjoy the high for now.

       later, taters.

no more secrets: my coming out story, part two...


(click for part one)

       it was sunday afternoon. i had a little speech prepared, just a few sentences. my car was packed, coat on, and i had already said goodbye to my grandmother. i went back up to my room to conspicuously make sure i hadn't left anything behind, but really it was to get the little package wrapped in plain brown paper -- and to catch my breath while taking a last look out my window over the snow covered lawn, the poplars draped in white, and the frozen pond. that had always been one of my favorite views, but it wasn't very soothing this time. i knew that it could very possibly be the last time i saw it. i listened to my parents downstairs, dad was patiently explaining something football related to my mom, and hearing their voices made my heart race all the more. i don't remember walking down the stairs. i think it was one of those "i'm not ready but i'm doing it anyway" sort of moments. i stood a little awkwardly at the bottom of the staircase, holding the package and wondering what to do. finally i mustered a "can i talk to you guys?" followed by "i have something else for you."

       i handed the package to my mother and sat beside her on the couch, telling her not to open it yet. dad was on the other couch, reclining, watching the game. he got up, turned off the tv, and returned to his seat. both of them looked at me, wondering, and i forgot how to speak. suddenly my little speech was horribly wrong -- too formal, too long, too lost in the rush of adrenaline. "it's not a christmas present," i said. i didn't want them to be disappointed. heh. struggling for words, i finally just said, "open it."

       my mom opened it, upside down, saw that it was a book, and asked in all seriousness if i had been published and was giving them a copy. i wished that were the case. "no," i said rather awkwardly, "i'm gay."

       my dad went quiet. my mom looked like someone had just punched her. "what?!" she said. and the questions started; not rapid fire, but measured, with processing time between each: hot, sticky, and painful seconds that wouldn't tick by fast enough. "are you sure?" "how do you know?" "are you sure?" "do you have a boyfriend?" "have you had sex?" "you're attracted to men?" "but you dated girls--what about them?" "you were attracted to them, weren't you?" "what about rene? she was cute. or erin?" "who else knows?" "do you go to gay bars?" "are you promiscuous?" "do you believe in the bible?" "what about sodom and gomorrah?" "you know aids is a very real thing, don't you?" "just because you like to bake and act and play music doesn't mean you're gay."

       i was patient, but some of the questions were pretty ridiculous. in some ways i can't really blame them. i'm twenty-six and just now telling them, but i didn't really accept it that long ago either. they were visibly shaken, disbelieving, almost like i was telling them as some plea for attention. to their credit, they were careful. they didn't use the word "sin," though they had to sidestep it a few times, and i didn't see any disgust on their faces. but they did make it clear that they believed it was a choice and not a good one. the talk lasted almost an hour. they promised to try to be open-minded about the materials i had given them, as long as i would be open-minded about any materials they gave me in response. i'm worried about that one. my brother texted me last night, told me mom had told him to watch my facebook, to let her know what my relationship status was, if i had changed my "interested in:" section, and to watch my status updates. i texted her and asked her very politely not to have my brother spy on me but that if she wanted to know something all she had to do was ask, that if i wanted to be dishonest i wouldn't have told them. they're having a family meeting tonight, my parents and my brother and sister-in-law. caleb said he'd tell me how it went.

       so i guess that's not the entire story just yet. it took me over fifteen years to come to terms with it: i'd always known, but didn't want to. it's the least i can do to give them time as well. it wasn't quite the cathartic experience i was hoping for, but it is done. no more secrets. ball's in their court.


my coming out story, part one...


December 12, 2009

       it's been a long time since i've had a protected post, or any post for that matter. just wanted to get some thoughts down. i made up my mind about a month ago to come out to my parents when i'm home for christmas. i don't remember exactly what prompted the decision -- i had not intended to tell them for, well, ever. i couldn't even imagine telling my more or less mormon parents that their quiet son was always quiet because he liked boys and was living in a world of self-loathing and shame. in my fantasies i was always telling them in an email while safe in the arms of someone i love at a very safe distance. i like feeling safe. but this is probably the most difficult thing i've ever done. if you've ever seen the movie "latter days" you'll have an idea of what i'm looking at. my parents aren't utah mormon, though, which is the church that many estimate to have funded about 50% of california's prop. 8 victory. that's the church (lds) that followed brigham young in the first major split when the church's original founder was assassinated. my parents belong to the church (rlds) that followed joseph smith jr.'s son, joseph number three, which stayed in the kansas city area. it also had its splits between more liberal and conservative views, but my parents remained with the group that became one of the most conservative of the "mormon" family tree. yeah, more conservative. they're a small group and don't have nearly the power or resources that the lds church has. no walmart or dole or coca-cola to fund legislation. but i'm getting off topic.

       the first thing i did was research because i'm a nerd like that. i googled "how to come out to your parents" and bought books and movies on amazon and spent hours in the library. in one book i read ("just a mom" by betty degeneres -- one of the books i will be giving to my parents when i tell them) the author mentioned that in her experience, in every case but one the parents had eventually come to terms with their son's or daughter's sexuality. that one case was a mormon family. that's about when the anxiety attacks started. ever since it's been a roller coaster of doubts and resolutions that i've tried to keep as far back in my mind as possible. it hit hardest the night i returned to columbia after being home for thanksgiving, a combination of nerves and anxiety and the possibility that that might be the last thanksgiving i spend with my family. not a very encouraging thought, and almost enough to stop me. it's not a matter of giving up my family for this "alternative lifestyle," but a matter of not wanting to lie anymore, not wanting to hide. when i think about not telling them the first thing i think about is that if by some miracle i have a big happy gay family ten years down the road, my new family still wouldn't be able to know my parents. i still wouldn't be able to spend holidays with them or tell them how their grandchildren are. either way i could lose my family in one way or another. and i hate lying, or at least real lying. i'm tired of secrets, of tiptoeing around things, of not being able to be myself. i even have to be careful here in columbia because it would too easily make its way back to my parents if the wrong people found out. i'm tired of having to take off my pride bracelet when i go back to my apartment. i have to tell them.

       i told my brother early last week, in the first couple days of december. it had been suggested by a few friends and a few of the things i read that having someone in the family who knew before might prove helpful. he lives in the kc area and we text often, so i told him i had something to run past him, swore him to secrecy, and after a couple minutes pounding my fist on the floor and screaming expletives into the nearest pillow, i sent the text that shoved the boulder from its perch on the mountain that is my closet, which was quickly followed by a second and much prolonged string of the same. he was shocked. still processing it, actually. but we talked for a long time in what turned out to be one of the deepest conversations i've ever had with my brother. i'm still not sure what he thinks, exactly, but i have a feeling we'll be fine eventually. he asked if he could tell his wife, which i reluctantly consented. you know how women are, and i don't mean that in a derogatory way. it's just true. she was much less surprised, which didn't surprise me. i knew there had been rumors. and that gave me some hope for my parents. but then my mother is also one who threw dr. dobson at my lesbian cousin until she "changed" (she dated and got engaged to a man, but has since broken off the engagement) and my father is the man who stopped giving money to his alma mater in iowa (a university run by the church) because they accidentally allowed a gay marriage in their chapel after iowa passed its law making it legal. nearly every time i talk to him he has something homophobic to say. i have no idea how they will react. they might surprise me. but i'm taking a "prepare for the worst, hope for the best" approach. and i'm trying to gather enough materials to make it easier on them, including this website, and this dvd, this dvd, the betty degeneres book i mentioned before, and also this book. i hope they help.

       it seems surreal right now. i'm sure it will feel much more real as the day approaches, but i'm enjoying this slight mental reprieve for now. it almost feels inevitable, which is comforting in an odd way. it's coming, like a train, and it's going to hit. all i can do is hope for the best. i've assembled some books and dvds and websites for my parents that will hopefully help them in coming to terms with having a gay son. i plan to tell them the day i return to columbia: sunday, december 27th. i plan to pack up my car while they're at church in case i need to make a hasty and emotional exit. i'll give them the resources wrapped in plain brown paper, tell them to wait to open it, then tell them that i want to talk to them. i have a short preface ready, a couple sentences (i can't imagine i'll be able to handle more than that) telling them very concisely what i've told you here. then i'll say those two words that i'll never be able to take back, the words i've been so obsessively hiding from my parents for the last twenty years.

       i very much hope that i'll be able to give you a happy part two. until then.

December 22, 2009

       it's different now that i'm here. it was a long day: work earlier, which was slow since the students are all gone, then an emergency trip to the (gorgeous) vet for poor hermes, who's been sick and hasn't been eating. this followed by hurried loads of laundry and dishes and packing, going over everything multiple times to make sure i hadn't forgotten something, and before i know it i'm giving my mother a hug. suddenly the two worlds that i've fought so violently to keep separate for ages are crashing together with just as much violence, but they haven't hit yet, and the wait is torture. my resolve hasn't lessened. but i am afraid. i find myself choking on the words days before they've had a chance to pass my lips. it's easy to make up your mind when you're not staring them in the face, hearing about their plans, when you don't have to see the damage you're about to do. i really hope i'm doing the right thing.

(click for part two)

 

empathy...


       Harry Potter: This connection between me and Voldemort -- what if the reason for it is that I’m becoming more like him? I just feel so angry, all the time. And what if after everything I’ve been through, something’s gone wrong inside me -- what if I’m becoming bad?

procrastination...


       so i'm writing this . . . novel. yeah, it will probably never see the light of day, but it's nanowrimo and it's what a writer's supposed to do. oh, that's right, i was going to be one of those. day three. i met day one's goal yesterday afternoon (yes, day two) just before i went to work. just sitting down to do more today and i'm realizing that i'm over 3,000 words behind and that every day adds another 1,700 or so. not looking good. it gets worse: i have no plan. well, i had this idea for this story, and have had it for quite some time, but it wasn't very solid yet -- still quite vaporous, actually. it was to be a fantasy based on historical events, namely the salem witch trials. i've been doing half-assed research for about a year but have made quite an impressive effort over the last three days, amassing quite a few bookmarks in various books and browsers. but i'm starting to get stuck in all the non-fiction. i have some pretty amazing characters, some my own and some provided by history, but i'm starting to find the true events far too limiting. as the story develops it becomes more difficult to fit it within the confines of salem village, massachusetts in the late 17th century and now i'm considering moving the whole dang thing over to some fictitious town in germany where the witch hunts were arguably the worst -- entire towns of women were convicted and one town had something like 19 priests and 49 children executed for witchcraft, but that's entirely beside the point because i'm pulling what little hair i have left out by the roots! the dang story keeps changing too much and i have 27 days left to write 48,000 words! i don't think it will happen. =( i so wanted to do it, too.

       deep breaths.

       i need an outline. and a pomegranate martini.

       i hate non-fiction. is it wrong to shape history in ways that suit your needs?

       ok, get this. not only is history limiting, it's too big. ha. that's another problem i'm facing -- how to angle it. and how to join the angle of my fantasy story with the angle on the historical. i swear, after this i'm never working with history again.

       can i get an extension on my nanowrimo? i know it's only day three... but my grandma died and my cat ate my homework and aliens ate my babysitter and eric northman . . . sorry, got sidetracked there.

       why couldn't i have wanted to be a computer programmer?

you're going to get sick of my kitten, i can tell...


       so i suck at updating. and being online. and all that. i know. i'm sorry. really. no, i am, i promise, but there has been a lot going on and i've been kinda emo and not wanting to do the whole human interaction thing. so i have my cat. here are a couple youtube videos for your viewing pleasure. hermes at ten weeks, in my apartment.







i probably should be sleeping...


       feeling a little bit like an asshole at the moment. i can't really talk to anyone about it (or don't feel like it), so, sure, i'll tell a bunch of strangers. i got a kitten last night. yeah, that should be a really happy thing. and it is. i love him to pieces. he's super cute, and i've never really met a cat like him. all my cats in the past have been either extremely playful or extremely cuddly, and this one is the best of both worlds, hilariously playful, and heart-breakingly cuddly. i've been wanting a cat for a very long time, and i was amazed when my house director said that i could have one. and he can't get enough of me. so why am i depressed? it's pathetic. i went into it in part hoping that little hermes would fill a rather painful void. he did fill a void, but not the void--the one that's raw at the edges and gaping in all the wrong places. somehow, having him here has only served to magnify the other. heh. he just jumped into my lap. he's so tiny he can fit in one hand. and it strikes me that i can love and be loved so easily and so quickly by this tiny little furball when all i do is give him food and shelter and attention, but it's seemingly impossible to get another person to love me when i work infinitely harder for it.

       and don't be so vain to think this song's about you.

       a lot has happened. i've been changing the ol' life around. it has its moments. more later. i never disappear entirely from this place.

God and AK-47s...


       I was recently sent a link to this video of the CNN American Morning interview with the owner of a truck dealership in Missouri who has decided to give out vouchers for free AK-47s with the purchase of a truck. Go back and read that sentence again. Free AK-47s. Yup. All in the name of -- you guessed it -- The Almighty. A fairly effective marketing strategy, apparently, at least for rural Bates County, Missouri (about an hour south of my hometown, Kansas City). The comment that accompanied the link was essentially, "He sure gave her what for!" which I found rather interesting since in my opinion he still came out looking, well, like a hick.

       Please don't get me wrong. I believe that the second amendment of the U.S. Constitution is quite important. It was not only necessary at the time it was ratified, but it also shows wisdom in recognizing (among other things) that a government could become too powerful and that the final checks and balances would have to be in the hands of *shudders* the people. However, I also believe it is one of the most abused privileges that United Statesians* have. Being the opportunistic capitalists that we are, we've created a disgustingly large industry surrounding firearms, complete with its own disgustingly large not-for-profit. Black sheep that I am, I'm probably the only person in my family who doesn't own a gun of some sort. Hmm... no, not even a water gun, which is a little sad. My brother, however, owns at least a half dozen of the real sort. At least he'll tell you that it's just a hobby, and not a cheap one.

       "I believe [Jesus] would carry a sword if he needed it, but he was so powerful he didn't need any weapon." Yeah, I won't get started on that. But what do you think (all two of you that will respond)? Would you call shenanigans on this guy? Is it irresponsibility? I wonder if he actually believes that God wants people to own guns or if he's just trying to justify and defend his shoddy business practices. Should Jesus have given up his evangelical ways to pursue a career as a samurai? Discuss.

*I very much dislike the use of the word "American" to refer solely to residents of the United States to the exclusion of all other residents of North, Central, and South America. I'm only half serious about this, but it is somewhat grating. It's not my word, so feel free to use it. Maybe it will catch on, just like goiterific.

sometimes i wake up in the middle of the night...

 

"Sometimes in the morning I wake up with hope and I think maybe today something will change.
But now the night, as inevitable as death, engulfs me, and I wonder: Is there anyone out there,
anyone at all, who is awake and feeling what I am?"
-from "Sometimes I Wake Up"
by Kathleen Leisure

      i've become addicted to the podcast "this american life," thanks to this guy. the host is the cousin of one of my favorite modern composers, which only furthered the addiction in a weird sort of way. hmm. kinda funny, actually. i used to listen to his music to fall asleep. his score to "the hours" remains my favorite soundtrack of all time. anyway, one episode grabbed my attention: titled "fear of sleep," which you can find here (i hope). got me thinking. not about anything intelligent, because we all know i never have anything to do with that sort of nonsense, but it made me think of all of us that have issues in the slumber department. made me think of the friends i've made over midnight chats. reminded me how much i miss the ones i don't/can't talk to. it made me realize that there are a lot of us, even a high concentration here on xanga. and it made me think of some of the things that keep me up and some of the things that made me want to stay asleep.

       it's funny how being stripped of something as simple as an illusion can still leave you feeling like you've lost a part of yourself. i suppose when you've held it for so long, willing the vapors to become substantial, you begin to trick yourself into thinking they are. but eventually you have to wake up. sometimes i try not to. sometimes i try to go back to sleep and linger in the dream a little longer. sometimes that works. other times i don't wake up properly, and i'm stuck halfway between the two, paralyzed, with the "devil on my chest," as they described it in that podcast. most of the time it just slips away, gossamer threads in the breeze--the insubstantial fibers that, for a moment, i thought i could build a happy life with.

       sometimes i wake up in the middle of the night, or rather i just don't go to sleep in the first place, because i feel like i've wasted another day. it's like i'm suddenly acutely aware of the passage of time, and by refusing to sleep i'll somehow stem the flow--a finger in a leaky dam. i'll have more time to accomplish something, more time to make something of myself, more time to wait for someone to come over and fall asleep with me. so i sit there and wait for things to happen. it doesn't work that way, i know. god knows how many of you have told me that i have to try at life for anything to happen, that i have to work for it. but i'm a coward. i'm afraid of failure. i'm intensely horrified by it. paralyzed. so i don't try. right now, as i type this, i'm thinking about how i have to go to work tonight--a rather meaningless job--and all i want to do is to go back to sleep. i shouldn't be tired. i had my eight hours last night. but part of me doesn't even want to try, not even at that.

       i'm rediscovering that life is trial and error. it's not a story that you can organize and outline and turn the numbered pages and read it like a novel with an inevitably happy ending. it's more like a choose your own adventure book. you jump around. you make wrong decisions, you say the wrong things. those have consequences. sometimes you can go back, most of the time you can't. you live with it. you keep going. somehow. and somewhere in all the screw ups you're supposed to learn how to do it right. but what i do, this doing nothing, is still a choice. saying "fuck it" and turning to my books or movies or cooking or cross-stitching or whatever other satin bed sheets i escape in is still a choice to avoid the adventure, or whatever the heck it is. it's about time for me to get into a normal sleep schedule. wake up in the morning. be awake through the day. do things. write. fucking write. go to bed at night. sleep.

       it's about time i take some responsibility for my life. i'm going to be twenty-six in a month. little less. time to grow up.

yes, i'll take the mulligan...


       a big one, please. no, the really big one. somewhere in the eight to ten years range. yes, that one, thanks. now how does this thing work? oh, it doesn't? shit. now what?


       i've just decided that i want the last decade of my life back. this last one? yeah, totally screwed it up on so many different levels. you see, the cruel thing about time is that it keeps going. and i keep spiraling. i want to be done. this ride needs to stop. i'm going to be sick.

       i should definitely be on meds right now.

       you see, i'm a failure in school. i've always been pretty dang bored with it so i never tried. didn't see a point. i never really cared about having a plan in life. didn't really want one in the first place. starting to realize as i'm thinking about grad school that i really should have. oh yeah, and with finances? i suck. i'm horrible with money. i have problems and i ignore them until people threaten to sue. i was close to being sued by four companies. now it's just one. awesome. hmm. love life? haha. yeah. i think people are happiest with me when they're walking away. or when they can sign off. and my friends have been showing me lately that i'm pretty much a self-centered prick. i don't return messages/e-mails. i don't answer my phone. i don't come out of my room. even my online friends uninstall their instant messengers to keep from having to talk to me. i work for minimum wage at a sandwich shop, serving people i used to work with who are on their way to success, handing over a side of ranch with a smile to the professors who thought i'd go places, then i come home and i disappear into books and movies to keep myself from living my own life, because, honestly, it keeps me alive. hi, i'm chris, and i suck at life. don't get me wrong, my life doesn't suck. there are billions of people out there who have it harder than i do. no--it's just me.

       please, sir, may i have another?

       screw optimism. i'm thankful for alcohol. and for comfort food binges. and for being able to smile when i don't mean it.

       <== like that.

day six...


        i think i'm going to stop counting these and just try to maintain the every day thing as much as possible. i missed yesterday, but i have lots of excuses. i was studying all day and getting homework done and doing some major grocery shopping. i spent $250 at wally world on groceries. i know. i don't get many chances to go shopping over the summer, being devoid of a street-legal vehicle and very nearly friendless while everyone's home enjoying themselves, so i stocked up on the non-perishables. i have about 30lbs. of flour in my cabinets right now. haha. should last me a little while, i hope. had my first exam in over two years this morning. went really well, but i nearly had a panic attack before. i've been going crazy over this class. i've been putting it off for too long, but i finally enrolled last june (it's an online independent study). it expires the end of the month, so of course i waited until a month before it expired to start work on it. yes, it's my own fault. so over the last week and a half and for the next two weeks i'm writing about three papers a week and immersing myself in british lit. the last section, romanticism, was fun, but now i'm into the victorian period and it's not so much. bleh. i have a paper due in a few hours that i'm procrastinating (yes, i'm the king).

       everyone's leaving me this week. all my online friends have left me already. he's avoiding me like the plague, he's limiting his internet and trying to sleep, she's doing the whole family thing (which is awesome), she's never online anymore, and he's moving and getting settled and is otherwise... preoccupied. i didn't mean to leave anyone out, but those are the ones i talk to most. now my real friends are leaving, too. not that i ever emerged from my apartment anyway. i just don't want this summer to be like the last two. things are a bit different now, granted, and i've resolved to spend as much time on my trail as possible. the piano time will be nice, and i'm sure i'll get a lot of reading done, but... it's going to be quiet.


  1. doing well on exams, signifying no serious mental atrophy.

  2. character foils that make me realize that i know what i want even if it seems impossibly out of reach.

  3. booby-trapped cupboards.

now to work! later! (i mean later to you, not the work. bah.)

a quickie: day four...


about to leave, but i wanted to post real quick. =)

  1. not seeing a movie last night, but driving with friends around town and watching the storms. and seeing a movie tonight.

  2. amazing light shows, loud noises, and showers for everyone thanks to mother nature.

  3. the impossible blue of the sky after the storms clear.

<edit> i'm such a silly little fan boy. i love movies. </edit>

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