Tuesday, March 23, 2010

And the Heart Goes To...

I'm wearing a new suit today. I'm not only pleased by its appearance, but also the fact that it is new. You see, despite the relatively formal attire socioculturally demanded by my place of employment, I'm not well-off and a new suit is a rarity.

We can thank the girlfriend.

I had mentioned to her recently, much to her surprise and possible offense, that I still struggle to think of myself as part of a couple. I am reminded only when I speak to others who mention that they are alone or when another member of a couple mentions their partner. This is despite the fact that I see her literally every day, and have since we started dating. It is not out of any desire to be with someone else, nor any desire to be single. Certainly, no. Yet every time I am reminded, there is a pleasant, sedated surprise -- as if I never really knew it until that point.

I struggle to concieve of myself as a member of a couple because it has been so long since I was in love and, truthfully, I've never been with anyone long enough for the feeling of partnership to set in, the kind of conceptual understanding that develops only with time and trust. Psyche glimmered with those possibilities, but our relationship was apparently destined to be transient, as if perhaps a dream. A vivid dream, but a dream nonetheless.

With Bean things are different. Yes, what a silly statement. Everyone says "with this one it's different", but I suppose it's always true given that no two relationships are alike. I guess I should say that with Bean things are different, in a way that is proven to be good and established.

One of the questions I constantly ask myself now is whether or not this relationship, despite it's passion, health, partnership, and understanding, could fail? The thought of it seems ridiculous, but I am a man of possibilities. I strain to see these scenarios, how they could happen, and how to prevent them. Bean and I are always offering one another reassurances, and we both sincerely mean it, and have little doubt, if any. Promises of forever are, however, on the grand scheme of things, a best intention and literally could not be more, given chance and life's randomness.

And its frailty.

My heart presumes no outcome, but it loves, and so it hopes and hopes and hopes. From those hopes, the seemingly endless will to fight so that it never ends.

Monday, December 28, 2009

You've Got My Number

I'm a consummate self-analyst. Not only am I fond of reasoning out my every decision and feeling, but also of acknowledging the limitless possibilities inherent in a single action. This results in a lot of paranoia about the future and choices made in the present. It also results in a lot of situations (as often happen in sitcoms or HBO dramas) where I'm the subject of some diatribe or lecture whereby the person thinks they are revealing knowledge of myself, to myself, only for me to be generously irritated at the assumption that I hadn't thought of it. I'm crazy, no doubt, but delusion is not a spice in my recipe. Among other things, I think I suffer from some mild form of obsessive compulsive disorder, or "The O.C. disorder." At any given time, my mind is traveling down the tunnels through scary or wonderful non-terminal butterfly effects.

Wee.

I think that the self-defeating prophecy is my favorite, sort of like saying that blue skies are my favorite, since both are found in abundance. Still, I try not to let my paranoia or insecurities completely determine my personal life. Frankly, despite how beautiful I can swing a sadness, I rather enjoy being happy. It tickles my fancy, and I'd like for it to keep on tickling well into eternity if I can help it.


Relative to the lone wolf, gray attitude which I took to in the past couple years, it comes rather as a surprise how in love I am, and the happiness that that love has generated. Sure, I may not show it openly (in fact, I was recently asked if I was depressed, because I was acting differently), but it nests so close to my inner thoughts that it practically becomes me. I'm operating on a whole other level of internal dialogue, which I think is the most important dialogue -- except, perhaps in this case, those which I carry on with Persephone.

Every love is different, and while that which I share with this woman encompasses with varying degrees all other loves which I have ever felt, it is defined by a truth of comfort, an ease which I am not accustomed to. It permeates every experience I have with her, however minor or insignificant. Persephone is everything I imagine her to be. Yeah, we surprise each other sometimes. Yeah, we have random fun. But most of all, it's that smile I have in my heart, even if it's not on my face, every time I kiss her cheek or she walks into a room. It doesn't shatter down my defenses, it glides through them. It doesn't trip me up, it doesn't send me through the roof. It floats like feathers on the wind, landing and lofting up again, over and over, across the empty plane of thought and feeling.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Just Because

I can't believe it's been over a month since I posted in this thing. Do I really have no commentary to offer? No snark, no existential musings? No self-indulgent, presumptuous statements about the way of things?

You often hear that ignorance is bliss. Maybe the reverse is true as well. I have found that though I am quite happy right now, thanks in large part to that thing called Love, I lack the traditional depth and focus I used to have on life's finer mysteries, the nuances of behavior in those around me, and how to perform rudimentary simple tasks such as walking without running into things. Last night I walked into the edge of the stove. This morning, I sliced my toe on a stray DVD player. Today I find myself unable to perform the function of sorting data in Microsoft Excel, or to remember where I stored a particular drafted letter. I put a sheet on my bed the wrong way and didn't realize I had done it until I was under the covers.

Is Suffering perhaps a close friend to Mental Acuity? And I, now hanging out with Peace & Contentment, have been ostracized from sitting at his lunch table? Seriously. Maybe bliss does beget ignorance. When you lack nothing which you desire, you lack the urge to discover, to analyze. You generate no answers, because you generate no questions.

Oh yeah, I was also in a car accident recently. I don't think that, at least, had anything to do with my not hasing smarts. Rather, that had to do with my not hasing tractions. Michigan winter can be pretty brutal, especially in an economy where plows and saltings are no longer affordable. My car turns from just having an offensive color to being a death trap on wheels. I skid, slide, and drift while going less than 20 miles an hour. Let me put this another way: if there is ice anywhere on a road, my awareness of my own mortality expands infinitely.

No one seems to really understand this either. There is some notion, somehow, that because I've only lived in this state my whole life I could somehow just be bad at driving in winter. I seem to remember driving in winter for 6 years prior to getting this car and not almost dying every time I got on an icy/snowy road.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

I have determined that tired and hungry could be mutually exclusive feelings. I'm used to feeling both at once. Whether this is pure coincidence or merely that I'm tired because I'm not eating, I will leave that up to logic to decide.

Right now, I just feel tired. Last night Persephone made me dinner (which was delicious by the way), so I feel full. I ate breakfast AND lunch today (Ho-ho!) as opposed to one or the other. I don't crave any organic sustenance. I am sated.

Now the exhaustion. My coworker is back today, so I imagined I'd feel, I don't know, less like I was running a marathon. No such luck. From the get-go I am the hamster in the wheel, spinning into infinity. This combined with my now resurrected romantic life has left me feeling burnt out even when I wake up in the morning.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

I fail at check-writing. I think Margarita is paying the price. Well, I am too, with a stab of 25 bones in an overdraft fee. Twice. Four times if you count the fact that I am recompensating her.

I happen to think that I am very responsible with my money, especially lately. Way early in my career as an Aide I stopped buying things I didn't need. I cut back on everything, consolidated trips home to multiple tasks just so I would not waste the gass money. For the past year especially, I will go a long time without eating because it costs me out the ass just to survive. Everything has a dollar sign.

Something happens when you get older, though, and it's something that I often take for granted: grown up needs are absurdly expensive. Whether they are tickets (guilty), loan payments (guilty), car payments (sort of guilty), or medical costs (guilty) They will drain the shit out of your meager bank account. Sometimes I feel like even when I am way overestimating how much something costs, it ends up costing even more. For example, my dental bill? If I do everything that they want me to do, it costs me literally 1/6 of what I am paid in a year. And they want to do it within three weeks. Not a chance in hell.

On top of that, and this is not a complaint towards my employer as much as it is a complaint towards public opinion dictating how much government employees should make: I don't make nearly enough money for the work that I do. When I tell people I work for a politician, they think two things about me: 1) power, and 2) money, of which I have neither. My power is limited to my resolve in granting myself enough self-respect and backbone to resist the blame for all of my constituency's ills. My money is limited to enough for me to survive on (most of the time) and little else. Let's be clear, my savings account is a joke. There is nothing in there at any given time, because it all goes towards something. I live paycheck to paycheck.

Do I want more? Well, no. I don't think I need more than it takes to maintain something that qualifies as a standard of living. What I would like is enough that I don't have to bounce checks to Margarita or be late on my car payments. My credit score is probably not so much bad as it is struggling to still be a number at all. It doesn't bother me to be poor, because I don't want much in terms of riches. It bothers me to be unable to make good at least with the obligations I have. I could care less about a nice car or a big house (or even a house). I want to just break even.

On top of this, budgeting is extremely hard for me because I am so forgetful. I have even forgotten plans to make a budget. Instead of planning, I just change the way I think about expenses. Urgent needs are all I am typically willing to pay for. Occassionally, I will buy a drink for myself and someone else, or fast food.

Someone said recently that our society has made it a crime to be poor. I think that's oversimplification. I think the nature of money ties virtue to a balance of wealth. If I have enough to pay my debts, I am a good man. If I don't, I am not. If I have so much that I pay off my obligations and have some left over that I am not donating, I am greedy.

In Star Trek, people have jobs which are pursuant to their ambitions, talents, and desires. Money does not exist, and poverty does not exist. Maybe once we reach a technological age where machinery and computers can accomplish rudimentary labor, all goods will be socialized and we will be free to pursue purpose instead of the dollar.

I am not a commie.

Friday, October 30, 2009

In An Instant

I'm an extremely strong advocate for the Butterfly Effect. Which is a silly thing to advocate for, because in reality it is not only present but unavoidable. Causality is the ultimate trip: action begets result, but those results are not always predictable. For someone who spends the greater part of his life searching for patterns in the fabric of reality, you have to imagine that I am surprised to... be surprised.

Persephone came out of the woodwork like a butterfly floating through a field of gray. I sat among the rotting memories and sober conclusions of solitude for what seemed like an eternity (two years). I wouldn't say I was totally without hope. I hoped for the future. I hoped for peace. But I never expected this.

I would tell you the story of how we met and connected in its entirety, but that's less intriguing than the process, at least for the purposes of this blog entry. I'll just elaborate on where it starts. I barely knew her to start, but Persephone was going through some rough shit. I mean, of course, heartache, confusion, etc. Things I'm well acquainted with. So Persephone makes a facebook (is there a TM sign I can insert here?) post with awesome lyrics from a Paramore song I was unfamiliar with at the time. Naturally, I asked her to identify the band/song. She does. Then I ask her how she's doing. She asks me if I'm free for coffee.

Hold the phone. A pretty lady asks me if I'm free for coffee? This guy? Well, naturally I'm attracted to fair Persephone, but I understand she's been through a lot. I'm also tired as hell. I had promised myself that I would take care of myself first. But you know what? One last hoorah for the common good. More than likely, I was just going to be messing with my emotions by trying to help someone I'm attracted to. But it seems like she could use it, and she definitely trusted me enough to meet me early in the morning, by herself. I am a safe harbor. Maybe I can make her feel better somehow. So I decided to go. I didn't know it at the time, but romance was calling.

On this simple choice hinged what true believers refer to as Destiny. The Plan.

While it may be such, I know with certainty that it is at least the Butterfly Effect. I could've said no. I could've changed the date of said meeting. But hell, why not now? My choice beget a whole series of results, further choices, further actions. It was like being in a dungeon maze, opening a door you passed by at one time and never opened before, and finding that it led outside, a version of outside you never believed existed. An outside you felt but never saw.

I set foot in that coffee shop and I haven't looked back since. I'm not just in love, I'm loved back. I'm cared for. I'm understood. I'm trusted. I'm listened to. I have a partner in crime (or justice). I have someone to laugh with and someone that gets me.

Is there something spiritual about the Butterfly Effect? Does it lead us where we are supposed to go? Or is causality simply impartial?

I'm not sure. But here I am reaping the rewards of a universe where minor actions make major life changes.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

In Which There Are Code

Air is quite an evocative term bearing a lot of imagery, and I think that is well-deserved. Because we are a self-aware and sentient species, we are jealous of those breeds which can manipulate it. We long, sometimes, for the relative freedom of the birds. This, however, is tangent to my point. The point being, we need air. To breathe.

We breathe. Sometimes we cough, sometimes we sneeze, sometimes we find ourselves being choked by strange men in alleys or large snakes native to the Amazon River basin. But the expression "a breath of fresh air" is tellingly expressed to describe when someone is encountered by a person, place, or thing which pleasantly contrasts with the hum-drum of their daily lives.

For the past couple of years my life has felt fairly stagnant. Occasionally, I've had my encounters with something fleetingly interesting and, also, the periodic hangover. There has lately, however, been a whipping of the winds somewhere in the valleys of my mind and in the events of my life. The stagnancy is bubbling from underneath with fermented product. I am feeling a breath of fresh air. Perhaps more than one such breath -- or one such air -- I think when we are dealing with pluralities the expression starts to self implode. Bottom line: I'm feeling pretty vital.

I have determined that at some point this blog will be connected to Martini's, so I'm going to start giving people codenames, Martini being one of them. I am not an explicitly private person, but codenames can be fun and I sometimes need to handle things... delicately... for the sake of others.

Since Psyche, I have interacted with many different women on a purely platonic level. Gunrack was sweet, even kind, and will do some man rather well, just not me. After all, I do not own a gun, let alone many guns to necessitate their racking.

Now, somehow, there is a strange whisper in my heart. A glimmer at the corner of my eye. Things are happening. The world is turning again. Psyche is a painless memory. Gunrack, a friend kept carefully at a distance, for whom I wish all good things. And everyone who proceeded them I bear no ill will, just a future of success and happiness with someone who will help them achieve it. I will wait for that person now. And I will know her when I see her, not her face, but the depths of her. I will stare at her and through her. And I will commit to nothing as I commit to recognizing the difference between wanting to see her, and seeing her.

It is a strange thing to be human. Quite a bit more bizarre to be the person I am. I reflect on my own psychological geography and wonder at how life is colored by our perceptions. It is strange, too, how a chance encounter or a road not traveled (yet) can reveal so much more than we anticipated.