Showing posts with label Friendship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Friendship. Show all posts

Sunday, June 12, 2016

Pulp Fiction

You say let's chalk it up
and blame it on the drunkenness,
but a part of me wants to believe
that this was meant to happen.
We were supposed to find ourselves
drunk on whiskey on a rainy
Wednesday summer afternoon,
our foreheads touching as we 
drunkenly giggle at the idea of us,
with our faces lit up by the faint glow
of Pulp Fiction on the TV screen,
and me begging you with my eyes
to kiss me.
And we never even got to finish
that damn movie
or find out what happens next;
I guess we were too busy
writing our own story
that we'll chalk up tomorrow
and blame on the drunkenness.

Monday, August 10, 2015

FOR THREE WEEKS I BORROWED YOUR BOYFRIEND

1.
I took a quick glance at his phone screen
And there, in the tiny glowing square,
Were the words he was writing to you
But saying to me.

2.
We walked down Astor Place
And he mentioned you,
A quick slip of the tongue,
Slippery like the phrases I never let roll off mine.

3.
The subway swayed and he laid a hand on the small of my back
Steadying me, holding me in place.
But all I could see when I closed my eyes
Were him and you, swaying on the dance floor.

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

My Almost Romeo

There is something to be said about doing romantic things with unromantic people. About having picnics in Central Park with Italian wine and store-bought mozzarella cheese and assorted crackers, in the hopes of even slightly resembling Europe. About laying out on blankets in Bryant Park and watching  poorly delivered renditions of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, in desperate attempts to soak in every source of literature possible, regardless of quality. About getting on the last 6 train to Little Italy because of sudden hankerings for cannolis and gelato, despite having to spend the very last of dollar bills on subway fares. There is something to be said about existing in a medium so wonderfully crafted by things of love; but one where it cannot, and will not, exist.

Sunday, June 28, 2015

We Still Have Time

We as humans have a funny little habit of telling ourselves and one another that we still have time. We still have time until we don't.  We still have time until the day we've been silently dreading for weeks on end finally wedges its way into the present. We still have time until we are in the very moment of departure. And then we freeze. Our minds go blank and our bodies go numb, as if the universe is refusing to let us comprehend the concept of one last goodbye. What do we say? What do we do? Are words enough? Is one last embrace enough? So we get sloppy, and we start babbling about things we've already talked about; dead end statements that can't possibly be added onto. Perhaps we do it to fill the awkward air between us as we desperately try to search for something meaningful to say—something that'll stick. Perhaps we do it as to not let the other person know how much the present moment is ripping us apart inside. We fight the urge to look each other in the eye because we know if we do we'd never want to look away. We ditch the thought of trying to memorize each other's features because that in and of itself indicates that we'll only ever exist in each other's minds from here on out—and that's just not right. We shut down. We become emotionless robots. We give careless one armed hugs as to not let the gravity of the situation drag us down with it—at least then we still have some bits of our deluded fantasies to hold onto, even when reality is forcefully tugging us in the opposite direction. We turn our backs to each other and call out standard farewells, none of which even mean anything, really. We turn our backs to the sound of each other's voices, the ones that have been the symphonies of our daily lives for so long, as they echoed down halls, filled up rooms, and seeped into the tender cracks of our hearts. We turn our backs to the only goodbye that will ever really stay with us, rejecting its importance in a useless act of protest. We turn our backs even though we are fully aware of the risk we are taking. This could be the last, and we're wasting it. We lock up our hearts with such ferociousness because we're too afraid of everything that's left to say—everything we still need to say. We convince ourselves that it's not the last time, because we know it can't be. We won't let it be. We convince ourselves that we still have time. Because we still have time, until we don't. 

Saturday, April 18, 2015

One Last Goodbye

A fleeting wave
To end the day
We can't escape
The mess we've made.

I want to try
Ask myself why
It's all a lie
We cannot hide.

I miss you now
But don't know how
A broken vow
Take one last bow.

Better to leave
Torn at the seams
A movie scene
Not made for keeps.

There's no more sorrow
Tears will not follow
A friendship borrowed
Until tomorrow.

It's time that we
Accept defeat
One day we'll meet
Again repeat. 


Saturday, March 14, 2015

The Night of the Fluffy Rug

High school has always been, and always will be, to some degree, about finding the perfect niche. Tiring and most likely to leave you in shambles, the pressure of not having a group to call your own can be distressful, and lead you to believe that you simply do not belong. There truly is nothing like having a group you can fall back on, composed of people you trust, love, and feel comfortable with: a home base. No one's trying to be anything other than themselves, because no one's asking you to be. You are accepted for who you are, no matter how weird, outrageous, and flawed you may be. You simply are: vulnerable and unplugged, stripped down to the very core.
 
I'll be the first to admit that my priorities were in the wrong place over the past four years. I was always the girl with the broken heart. "By whom" was a question whose answer was ever changing. I was fooled into believing that that's where I would find my absolute happiness: in the arms of someone else...the boy of my dreams. But as the great Peyton Sawyer once said, "People always leave." Now, to some degree, there is validity to that statement. But what Ms. Sawyer failed to realize is that though person after person made their cameo appearance in her storybook of life, there were always a few constants who refused to walk away no matter how rough the times got, namely, Brooke Davis, and the ever so wonderful Lucas Scott.
 
As I delve deeper and deeper into the heart wrenching, emotionally traumatizing drama that is One Tree Hill, I can't help but envy the friendships that continue to deepen and thrive between the characters, all of which started in high school. Why don't I have that? I ask myself, as I wait for the next episode to play on Netflix on a Saturday night, alone in my dark room with only my laptop to keep my company, while the rest of the world is out with their friends, having fun. It's a question that has been gnawing at me throughout my senior year, and I can't seem to find the right answer. The best that I've come up with is this: I just didn't try hard enough.
 
Every time I had my heart broken by yet another boy who wasn't even worth my time in the first place, I retracted into a dark place where I bathed in my despair and solitude. Rather than trying to make the most out of life and reaching out to potential new friends, I wallowed in my self pity and fed off of the little sympathy others had to offer. I proudly wore my despondency like a badge to the point where there was probably a cloud of gloom hovering over my head, following me wherever I went. I analyzed every last detail of what went wrong with the guy of the hour, creating deluded theories in my head and living in the imaginary constructs of my mind, when I could've been enjoying myself with people who made me happy.
 
This, in all of its tortured truth, is why last night was a night I will remember for the rest of my life, despite its innocence and uneventfulness. In fact, it is because the night was so innocent and uneventful that it stands out, and will always be one of those dog-eared pages in my mental high school memory book. In the basement of a friend, I sat with some of the nicest people in my grade. Most of them are friends of mine with varying degrees of closeness, while they, in their entirety, form a close-knit group. Naturally, I felt a little out of place. They all had their inside jokes, adventures, and unique bonds that I could not adopt simply by being there. I had no idea if I was overstepping my boundaries, but I was grateful enough to be so unquestionably invited and welcomed into a home.

As the night went on, I grew more comfortable and realized that I was far from being an intruder. I guess the habit of automatically assuming that you are disliked just comes with going generally unknown at school, and being used to melting into the background. But last night, I sang, I danced, I laughed, and enjoyed the company that was able to provide me with such pure bliss. There were times where I wished to remove myself from the moment, just so I could capture the pure essence of its perfection without being a part of it.

The moment so particularly engraved into my mind came towards the end of the night. The lights were turned off for a collective nap and with the flick of a switch, bodies were entangled, breathing was synchronized, and a wave of peacefulness washed over the room. I chose to lay on the floor on the fluffy rug and watched as a sweet and innocent intimacy unfolded before me. With every shallow breath radiated a stroke of trust, a stroke of love, and a stroke of comfort. I smiled as the acoustic guitar continued to play in the background and thought to myself, So this is what it must feel like. To have a home base. To have a niche. To feel grounded. Accepted. Appreciated. Loved.

So it turns out that I've been looking for all of these things in the wrong places. Maybe it's too late; maybe I really did screw it up for myself. Rather than counting down the days until I can leave this one horse town and the people I have made loose camaraderie with, I will cherish the days I have left in the hopes of forming bonds that stand the test of time and distance. I can only wish to find what my peers have found as I embark on a journey and start a new chapter in my life, in the midst of all the parties (and overall impurity) that college has to offer, and feel the sense of belonging and contentment I have been craving for for as long as I can remember.