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Claire & the End of the World: a true love story, a true tragedy, by Rewired.

rewiiired

Bluelighter
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Jan 20, 2002
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Chair.
Chapter 1.

A friend nice told me that every artist has his muse. It was Autumn of 1995 when mine more or less stumbled into my life. I like to call her Claire.

I was in a pretty bad state at the time, mentally and emotionally. I had, from about the beginning of the year, gone from what I consider to be a reasonably normal kid to a very tormented and lost young man. I wish I could blame all this on puberty, but it seems other forces were at work. I had about reached the pique of my horror in August, and that event had pretty much left me sinking in a swamp made up of overwhelming nihilism, unwavering pessimism, and the deepest, most thorough form of confusion one could imagine.

On the day in question, I was sitting in front of the computer, typing away as I munched on my usual Ritz crackers and drank coffee mixed with hot chocolate mix -- a cheap form of mocha my friend, Ned, had introduced to me. The computer I was working on was actually my parent’s computer and was situated at the far end of the family room. I had wanted one in my room for forever, but in some small ways it was pretty cool having it down there. When I wasn't writing I could shoot some pool on the table behind me or play the piano situated at the other end of the room.

My mind was far away from the piano or the pool table that day, however. As a matter of fact, I hardly noticed where I was physically located at all – I was very wrapped up in my writing. I was working on this short story involving a lost young man who is about to commit suicide on a bridge over water one night when he meets a girl, who turns out to be a vampire. It was going along pretty well, too, until my mind was pulled back to the mundane world by the sound of a familiar voice. And that's when I pulled out of that grand universe of chaos in my head and turned around to see my friend, Dante.

Dante. This guy was an excellent guitarist, and he played lead in a band called Wastelands that had formed the year earlier, my freshmen year of high school. They practiced habitually at the house of the rhythm guitarist, Aaron. As a matter of fact, as Dante quickly revealed, Aaron was the reason he’d stopped over: the guy was MIA and he wondered if I'd seen the guy. Why Dante would think for a second that I had a clue where the guy might be was beyond me, and I told him as much. Not to be harsh or anything, but I had never fancied Aaron that much. The guy was annoying, he never bathed, and his dandruff was atrocious. Other than that he had less than admirable qualities.

I thought perhaps Dante had just used Aaron's disappearence as an excuse to stop by, and I was fine with that, so we started getting wrapped up in some conversation. It didn't take too long at all, though, until I was struck by an unfamiliar presence. Struck like lightning. Struck by the purest manifestation of absolute beauty.

It was this girl that was with him who I had never seen before. She looked damned attractive. An odd being, yes, but a damn fine looking being with her cute face and her deep, blue ocean eyes. Her shoulder-length, hot-pink hair made her even more difficult not to notice. She wore one of those weird green shirts with the collar and those little dinosaurs in front. I was absolutely drawn to her. To everything about her. And instantly I was reminded of that girl Claire Danes off My So-Called Life, who I'd found attractive ever since I'd first seen the show. Actually, I had been wishing for a girl that looked just like her for some time, but I wasn't actually serious...

When Dante introduced us she kind of had her arms crossed and nodded a sarcastic "hi" with a tilt of her head. Ah, I thought, a cocky woman. Anyway, as any conversation with me ever starts on my behalf with a person I've never met -- espeically an attractive girl -- I started making fun of her. Yet to my surprise, this playful, pathetic and childish attempt at opening the lines of communcation was actually successful. The teasing that went back and fourth between us led to talking, and the talking led to pool-playing, and that led to more teasing and more talking. The feeling I got around her was tremendously strange. I rarely, if ever, felt that way around a girl.

I noticed a certain conflict in me then. I had lost all belief in the instincts that came with being human. I had lost trust in all drives that I did not entirely understand. I felt that by this point in human evolution we should have trancended such urges. It seemed to me that the concept of love was merely a romantic veil we placed over our animalistic instinct to procreate -- some genetic drive to achieve species immortality. I kept reminding myself that I could not be fooled by these lowly instincts and that I had to make sure it was something in her that I admired beyond the flesh before I even considered trusting this overwhelming, warm and intense feeling her presence gave rise to in me.

After we had played a few games of pool, I took Dante aside as subtely as I could. It wasn't really pre-planned, it was just something I found myself doing. And then I found myself very quietly asking him just where this beautiful girl had come from. He explained how she had used to live up in California, but that her father had lost his job and they had to come live with Dante’s parents.

Dante lived half a block from my house. This pink-haired, Californian beauty lived not a block from my house.

I was excited. He had liked my cousin, Trish, at the time so I asked him if half-jokingly if he wanted to exchange cousins. When he looked confused, I was more clear: I’d set him up with my cousin if he’d set me up with her, I told him. He said that this would be cool and all, that this would be beyond cool, as a matter of fact, save for the fact that Claire already had a boyfriend.

Some kid named Nick who was living with Aaron. I jokingly – well, half-jokingly – asked Dante how much it would be to kill him for me. He laughed and said he wasn’t sure he could do anything, but he’d see what he could do.

I felt a release. A tingly feeling. A lightness, a playfullness that I had a faint memory of feeling some time long ago. Any hope, especially around that time, was more than I could ever ask for.

After we had played more pool, and eventually got bored, Dante ended up standing by the computer and asked what I had been writing. I told him it was a short story, and Claire immediately jumped and said she had wanted to read. I was a bit nervous, because I wasn’t finished, so I tried to get my ass in the chair before she did. We struggled for a bit and she ended up sitting on my face. It was strangely comfortable. Dante stood over us, a bit amused, a bit disturbed, spell-checking my story as Claire read it.

When I told her it involved a vampire, she told me she was a Moonbeast. I lifted an eyebrow in confusion. When it had become clear that I didn’t know what she was talking about, she sort of pushed it out of the way and said she’d tell me sometime later.

The following day, Date gave me a call and asked if I wanted to come over to Aaron’s place and watch them play. I did this occasionally, as way back when the band first formed they’d played with the idea of me coming a member. It was brought up that perhaps I could be lead singer. Fortunately I had heard myself try and sing before, so I saved them from this. But it was still cool to be in the same environment as these creative individuals, so I occasionally came over to watch them play.

I was bored, so he came over to pick me up. I didn't have a car at this time, because I was phobic of driving.

When Dante walked in through the door and I followed, the evening opened as I had predicted, as it always did every time I walked through that door. You see, Aaron has a funny way of greeting me at the door. He always takes a look at me, takes a step back, widens his eyes as if he’s surprised that I’m still alive, and says my full name in a very astonished manner. And then I look at him without blinking and say his name in a spooky, threatening way. It’s nothing personal, it’s just some strange way of relating we developed some time ago. If you haven't noticed, I have a variety of social problems.

So their band room was the basement. That basement was classic. Dimly lit, full of cigarette smoke, littered with beer bottles. Microphones, amplifiers, a mixer, bass guitar, rhythm guitar, drum set, coffee tables, side tables, ashtrays, posters, calendars of half-naked women on the walls. Everything you think of when you think `band room'. It was beautiful. And a black leather couch pushed against the far wall, behind all the instruments, right below the banner on which was embroided `Wastelands', with a bull skull right in the center. Ah, that couch.

And that’s where I was sitting. I think their bassist was tuning and someone else was pissing around when I was sitting there, burned out from my insomnia and too much coffee. My head ringing and numb by the sounds of wailing gutairs and violent drum solos.

Then, out of nowhere, I felt the couch move and I almost fell over to the left. I instead braced myself, leaned my body to the right, and turned my head to the left. And my brown eyes met with a familiar, life-giving, vibrant blue pair of eyes. Like pools offered to me by some Virgo moon goddess, in which I could bathe my shit-coated Scorpio soul. Not to trail off into astrology and metaphor or anything.

It was, of course, Claire. I was especially impressed by her strange, black cloths, which I had to assume was typical for California girls. If it turned out it was not typical, I was certainly of the opinion it should be. She wore these very short shorts, her big boots, her funky socks. Her beautiful blue eyes gave me a sinister gaze through the pink hair that hung across her face as she sat there smoking her cigarette.

Me? I was still in an antagonistic mood.

"You know those things kill your lungs," I'd said, nodding my head towards her cigarette. She responded by blowing smoke in my face.

I gave her a scowl, she gave me a teasing glare back. I nudged her arm, and she nudged me back.

Crap. I liked her.

Off and on throughout the night we talked, joked, teased, flirted. And throughout all of it there I was, realizing more and more that I liked her and beginning to hate that fact all the less. I mean, why should I despise the fact that I actually liked someone? That I was so drawn to such a strange, beautiful creature? Truth be known, I felt alive with her, something I'd lost a long while back and left for dead. And yet here it was, the glowing feeling, as if it had never left.

I should go for it, I thought, I should go for her. Flow with it and see what becomes with it. I was good as dead, and I had nothing to loose. But yes, there was that tiny little annoying detail about her having a boyfriend. That kick of reality that was bound to shake my coffee-table mind and collapse the house of cards that was this dream. So far things had been unbelieveable, like the opening of a dream. It seemed inconcievable that anything would become of it. All dreams ended the same way: you woke up. Nightmares apparently worked in accordence with another logical system. I ahd to remember that I was in a nightmare, and the brief flashes of dreams were just a reminder of what I could never have -- something to further the nightmare. All this thought of hr being mine and mine alone, that was silly. Preposterous. An insane thought cooked up by an insane mind. It was a dream, and dreams weren't reality, reality was a nightmare that had no forseeable end and no true intermissions.

And yet, a voice reminded, stranger things have happened. Ever since December, as a matter of fact, strange things have seemed to be the rule.

By the time I got home that night, my mind was buzzing with thoughts I never had before. The life I felt around this girl was amazing. What was wrong with me? Suddenly the hell I had been engulfed in the previous ten months seemed light years away. I had become a corpse as the result of my own personal apocolypse, and it was like she had breathed life into me -- the unprecedented appearence of a new genisis at the end of the world as I had known it. Proof of some death-rebirth cycle of sorts. I had tread through my own shadows, fought my own demons, and just when I thought it was all going downhill without a flow or a pause, without any hope of reversal, a light had appeared on the other side. A beautiful girl with pink hair and ocean blue eyes and funky socks.

On a bridge, on the verge of a death of sorts, a blakc blacker than black, there she stood -- the light of my life.

I got a call from Dante the following evening. He asked if I’d still take him up on that offer about exchanging cousins. I asked him specifically what he meant. He then informed me that Claire had broken up with her boyfriend. I got excited and totally immobilized with fear simultaneously. He said that she was very interested in me, but that I had to do the work if I really wanted her, and that he was going to hand her the phone now. Before I could protest, a cool, sexy female voice said hi from the other end of the line.

Hope was on the line. Reel it in, I told myself, reel this in. She's quite a catch.

We seemed to talk for hours that night. She told me all about her misadventures in California. She asked if I had a girlfriend. I said no, not currently, that I decided it probably wasn't a good idea because I was a little on the insane side. I had a problem relating to people who were, well, normal and stuff.

She informed me that she was no stranger to insanity. As a matter of fact, she’d chased a bunch of pills with a bottle of Jack Daniels one night after a fight with her parents and woke up in a hospital having her stomach pumped, and after that, she got thrown in the loony bin. And then she came to Ohio. Which one might consider just a bigger rubber room.

I was fairly certain at that time that the loony bin was a place where I was going to end up, so I listened very closely to her strange tales. And the more she talked the more I realized that I was absolutely, totally, one hundred per cent, without a doubt, completely into this girl.

She asked me why I was so sure I was insane, and I told her that it was a long story. She told me she had plenty of time, so I flipped through the excuse files in my mind to try to find a better way to dodge the question. I came up empty. I didn’t want to tell her, but I didn't want to lie to her, and though silence wasn't a lie, it wasn't an option at this point, so I did all I thought I could do. I summed it up. I told her that it had something to do with UFOs. For some reason I thought I should dodge the whole out-of-body experiences, seeing aliens, remembering past lives, being attacked by evil entities from another plane of existence, being informed that the world was going to end thing. That’s never a turn-on. But she had surprised me so far.

And to my suprise she didn't seem suprised. So I figured California must be one hell of a place. She told me she had seen a UFO once, or thought she had, when her and some friends from the loony bin were trying to escape out window. It was just a light, glimmering and bouncing in the darkness. She did warn me that they were on a stew of prescrption drugs at the time, though. I smiled and asked her if she’d ever seen anything else like that; anything in the area of the paranormal. Then she said yet again that she was a Moonbeast, and I asked her to elaborate.

She said that when she had just gotten out of the loony bin, just before her father had lost his job and moved out here to Ohio, she had been walking by an old clock tower and some guy had come by and asked her if she wanted to be a Moonbeast. She wasn’t sure, she told me, but she thought it was supposed to be some type of werewolf or vampire. I secretly rolled my eyes, but reminded myself of what had happened to me, and told myself that nothing should be shoved into the category of the impossible anymore.

Anyway, she said that the guy had bit her, and she had fainted, and that ever since she’d been obsessed with clocks. It sounded pretty out there, pretty cheesy, but so did inter-dimensional entities draining your vitality and getting probed by aliens, so who was I to talk?

We eventually got back around to the fact that she was single again, and I said that I was, too. I had been, since that little thing with Anne. I think I told her about Anne, how I’d met her at a water park with my cousins over the summer, how we’d met just before I’d gone completely insane and started seeing stuff. I told her it just hadn’t worked out. She suggested I go out with her now, because her and me, we could work out if I gave her a chance. And I said that I promised myself that I’d never ask out a girl over the phone again, that I should have guts and do it in person – and then I cracked down and asked her if she wanted to be my girlfriend.

And she said yes.

And for the moment, as they say, it was good.
 
Rewiiired, I love your short stories. I think your talent truly shines in this style.

I got totally caught up in the tale (so now it's past my bed time ;)), thanks to the fluidity of form and the clarity of imagery/emotions involved. It reads like a favourite memory plaing over in your mind.

:)Smiley
 
chapter 2.

Chapter 2.

So the next day I found myself at Aaron’s house, in his basement, on that black couch alone with Claire in her cute gothic-like Californian get-up. I lay with my back to the couch. She had her legs wrapped around my waist and she laid on my lap.

We made out for what seemed like hours. An endless, blissful, relaxing eternity. I rubbed my fingers through her soft pink hair, felt her soft lips press violently, then softly, against my own. Her smooth, cute little chin. And occasionally she’d pull back and I’d see those blue eyes of hers staring back into mine, eyes that seemed to be as entranced as I felt.

I found myself thinking: I don’t deserve this. There’s no way I deserve to be this happy. How had this beautiful girl happened to fall into my lap? And then again, why should I ask questions? So I enjoyed the sweet, intense electric building there between her and I. I let go into it all until I realized, suddenly, something that disturbed me a great deal: I didn’t know her last name.

Now only did this disturb me royally, but the fact that it disturbed me pissed me off. It seemed that every time my one, lower head wanted to do something my other, higher head broke in and had to ruin everything. I had ceased to believe that rythmic organ located somewhere between them had anything to do with this at all.

Just then I heard footsteps and the sound of Aaron’s ever-astonished voice going: “Holy shit… holy shit,” then saying my full name again, then: “-- is getting laid in my basement.”

Claire stopped a moment to explain to Aaron what a retard he was for considering making out the act of getting laid, but apparently the astonishing sight that I was still alive (since yesterday), mixed with the fact that I was engaged in some form of intimate interaction with a female was more than Aaron could take, because he was already running up the stairs in what was quite clearly sheer terror. After some short commentary to Claire on what a moron he was, I then re-engaged with bliss.

Some time later, we took a break and departed for upstairs. After Claire had disappeared for the moment, and I saw Dante, I shook my head and just let out a wow over his cousin. Aaron then came by and started going off on how I was getting laid on his sofa.

Nick was nearby, Claire’s just recent ex, and he made some crude remark regarding how I should handle Claire in bed, and I just gave him an evil look. This seemed to perplex him. I was about to defend myself and Claire when Dante stepped in to do so for me, explaining, quite simply, that I was `not like that'. Dante knew about my whole fear-of-sex thing, and he accepted it as part of my character. He turned to me and made sure to add, though, that I should know that his cousin was sexually active.

That, I must admit, got me a bit nervous. I had no experience in that area – none, zip, zero – and I didn’t want to sail those waters anytime soon. The thought of sex terrified me. At least: the part of me that was making a big deal out of something so small as not knowing her last name didn’t want to sail those waters.

Some people might call this denial of the sexual impulse as fear or anxiety. At that time, I called it the act of having morals. But let it eb known: it was in actuality what is known as fear or anxiety.

And then Dante pointed out something I hadn’t noticed – the hicky on my neck. He said it was quite a mark, and as I’d discover later in the mirror, she did indeed have quite a talent for marking her territory. It was going to be difficult covering this up.

I think I just happened to ask what school she was going to, and Dante turned to me and informed me that she had just moved down here just before I’d met her, and that in less than a week she would be going to my own. The paperwork and all that shit just had to go through. That basically knocked the wind out of me. My school? She was going to be going to my school? I’d never had a girlfriend at school before. What exactly were the responsibilities of having a girlfriend at school? I was new at this. Claire was already into sex, and would no doubt be expecting that from me soon, and I still didn’t know if I was supposed to walk her to class or expected to defend her honor or what. I was absolutely terrified. I was paranoid enough during that period for reasons that should be clear, and this whole being-a-boyfriend-at-school thing was not going to help matters.

Dante was about to take me home then, so Claire hurried up to follow. As she did so, she fell into a lamp, which toppled over and broke on the floor. She fell down. We all went down to help her, and through some sheepish laughing she said she was all right, but that she had gotten part of the lamp in her knee. Someone put a lampshade on top of her head, and she just kept laughing. I smiled then as I smiled now. You got to love the little things that stick out in memory.

The next day in school was strange. Covering up the hicky wasn't possible, as turtleneck drive me batty. So every five minutes when someone asked me if I'd gotten action the night prior I'd say, quit seimply, that it wasn't a hicky, it was a heat rash. I don't think anyone completely bought this, but it seemed to shut them up. Except for one lady, a teacher I knew, who stopped me in the hallway and asked who the lucky girl was. When I persisted that it was just a heat rash, she called me out immedeatly and, in so many words, let me know that she knew I was bullshitting her. I finally managed to cover up the hicky, though. My face got so red when the teacher didn't buy my bullshit story that the hicky just blended in.

When Claire had come in for her first day I was, as usual, at school early. I had no car, and our school’s bus systems had been voted out in the previous school levy, so I was always there early. I remember seeing her there in the hallway outside the art room, in her ripped jeans and in her blue, zip-down, hooded sweat shirt – what she called her `Ohioan cloths’. And I remember her cornering me just outside the art room door, just outside the door of my shrine, where my friends and I always hung out before school. And I was nervous. Incredibly nervous. I couldn’t resist it when she kissed me, but it was a quick one and I was sure to look around afterward.

See, I hadn’t told my friends about her. I was pretty much seen as a loner, an outcast at my school, and for some reason any girl I even had a casual interest in ended up being hated by the majority of the school. Whether it was because I liked them or because I just had the knack for liking girls every one else liked using as a verbal dartboard or emotional punching bag is uncertain, but I felt her being my girlfriend just might have cursed her from the beginning. And she had no doubt been through enough.

Not that my concern for her was entirely selfless. The fact that I had a girlfriend would no doubt attract much attention, and I was the kind of guy who went out of his way to not attract attention. Some had a thirst for the spotlight, I’d rather be hiding off in the shadows somewhere. Now I’d be in the shadows with this fine beauty who kept sticking her tongue down my throat, and her pink hair would be a beacon.

All day long I got asked if that girl was my girlfriend. I remember one girl in class, quite a snot, I might add, asked me if I `was going out with that one new girl who looked like the girl off that television show, My So-Called Life’ and I proudly said yes. Then she got all snooty and said she didn’t like her. I told her that was her prerogative. This was the same bitch who had gotten her whole class of freshmen girls to shun me because I had written a goofy letter announcing my admiration for one of her friends. I ignored her. I had found my smile, no matter how nervously I felt I had to conceal it, and that was all that presently mattered.

From the first day, though, my expectations had been fulfilled: she was hated all around the school. I had cursed her.

And as the days wore on, I couldn’t help but notice that the other side of me was winning over. I began to feel as if I was using her in some way. That whole fear of succumbing to lowly animalistic impulses began to claw at my mind.

She had told me that I reminded her of a boyfriend she’d had down in California – one that had strangely had my very same name – and she, of course, reminded me of Claire Danes, who I’d found incredibly attractive for a long time. It seemed to me we didn't even like each other for who we were. We hadn’t even had time to get to know each other. And love at first sight? I was sure all that stuff was bullshit.

So I called her up one night, about a week after that blissful night on the couch were I realized I didn’t know her last name, and I told her I thought we should break up.

Right after I said the words I regretted it, but it wasn’t like you can stop after breaking up with a girl and go, “oh wait, never mind. I didn’t mean that. I’ve had a sudden change of heart.”

But I wrestled with it all night. In the morning, I saw her by her locker, gathering books. Her face and eyes were red and wet from crying. She looked at me, frowning, and then glared at me. That look she gave me killed me. It was totally impossible to ignore the fact that I was a complete asshole now. She slammed her locker and gave me the stare of death as she walked passed me, not saying a word. My heart sank to my throat and choked me, then felt down into my stomache and twisted into a knot.

It wasn’t long until she was going out with a friend of mine, a really nice, interesting guy who wore a trench coat and shared my interest in the Occult. He had a Ouija board he tinkered around with and seemed to have a pretty good knowledge of the paranormal literature. He was an artist, too, just like me. He even drew the little alien guys, but I cannot say whether it was for the same reason. And I was happy for them. They seemed to be happy. And though it took awhile, Claire eventually began talking with me again. She’d let me bum fifty cents to buy some Pepsi from the bake sale in the school library or give me a bite of pizza she bought in the cafeteria. And we talked. And things were friendly, the wounds seemed to slowly heal. And let it be known that I still felt like a dumb shit for dumping her.

Her and my trench-coat friend? Their relationship lasted, at most, a few days. She called me up one night to tell me she had broken it off with him, and that she really wanted me back. I felt the conflict in me again. How can one person feel two ways at once, I thought? But I knew how. I wasn't exactly singular.

I told her I wasn’t so sure it would work. And she said in the very least I had to tell her why I didn’t think it would work; why I’d broken up with her out of the blue in the first place. And I beat around the bush about it, because, to be honest, I couldn't entirely provide an explanation for my actions. No one had contemplated my motives, it seemed, for the longest time: they merely accepted my short-circuiting self for what it was and left it at that. She really wanted to know my reasons, though. We spent about three hours or so talking. She was actually begging to have me back. It was scary. Life had to be some fucked up dream. What the hell did she see in me? I wasn’t able to give her a real reason, but it seemed evident that neither of us could get our minds off each other.

The other part of me, the paranoid part, he’d taken back the wheel. He’d pushed the love-struck part of me into the passenger seat. There were more important thins to worry about, this part of me said.

I was, for instance, quite convinced the sky was falling at that time. I’d been pretty straight with only a select few of my friends about what I'd seen adn experienced, but I’d told no one everything. To tell anyone a significant portion of what had been going on with me was as pointless as it was stupid, and I knew that. But I did tell my friend, Ned, that I thought the world was ending. Though it wasn't my envisioned version of earth's future, he seemed to agree a great change was coming and that it would tumble humanity back into the dark ages. Whatevr, I thought. So he decided to take me to the Ledges right across from the school one day after school hours and show me some plants I could use to make tea and eat and so on in the event of the apocalypse. No, really.

Little did we know Claire was trailing us. Or me, rather. She came right between Ned and I, came up to me, put her hand down my pants and pinned me up against a moss-covered rock. She then proceeded to stick her tongue down my throat as I did a bit of protesting that soon became quite muffled. All the while Ned was standing there, frozen, eyes open with shock and disgust. He was quick to point out that I was saying no as she was sticking her tongue down my throat while doing nothing to prevent her from doing it. He yelled at her for putting off her pheramones, and then added that her and I ought to get a room.

I was quick to notice that an increase of resistance on my part to her led to an increase in her persistence. So not only could I satisfy the one part of me that wanted to transcend this primitive urge by denying her, but I could satisfy the primitive urge as well. Strange how it worked that way. It also allowed me to totally deny that I was infatuated her. I loved how she had pinned me to that rock. How unwilling she was to take no for an answer. So I increased resistance. And, as predicted, she increased persistence.

By October, she had ended up going out with this kid, Gavin Janis. The way I met Janis is that Ned had come into the art room one day and told me that I had an evil twin walking around. Several people had apparently commented on how this guy looked just like me, listened to Green Day just like I did at the time, only he was into drugs and alcohol and sex and all that stuff I denied myself. So I was quite interested to meet this guy, who had apparently heard quite a lot about me as well, but had never seen me himself. So when Ned told me he was in the library, I slipped out of the art room and snuck down the hall, where I was met with a pair of brown eyes, not totally unlike my own, staring back at me fro the table. We both admitted to an uncanny resemblance.

Well, it turned out that hew as sort of head over heels over Claire. He wanted to ask her out, but he was nervous about it. And so I began to see a bit of my personality in my so-called evil twin alongside the physical appearance. I urged him to ask her, and basically set them up. I think a good amount of my reason for setting them up was to try to prove to myself that I wasn’t attracted to her anymore. They went out, too, until around the Halloween party at Rowan’s house, when Claire’s persistence knew no bounds. At the party she had followed me outside and guided me in the woods, where she pinned me up against a tree. It was basically the same thing that had happened at the Ledges, only Ned wasn’t right there, a foot away. But in the mist of all this occurring in the woods, I noticed that people from the party had followed my lead and were slowly maneuvering outside. I freaked out out and ran away from her, and ended up lying down, hiding, in a field of weeds.

Not long thereafter, Ned came up, with his arms over Rowan. Those two were hitting it off at the time. Him having a girlfriend was even more shocking than me having a girlfriend. When he spotted me in the weeds, he laughed and asked just what the bloody hell I was doing. I said I was hiding from Claire. He went on to say that it was more than obvious we were both nuts for each other, and that I should stop being a fuckwit and just go back out with her. I told him she had a boyfriend. And he brought up the fact that it was a me look-alike, and that this should tell me something. And he again suggested I stop being a fuckwit.

After he left, I just sort of lay there in the weeds for awhile, staring up into the star-filled Ohio sky, wondering what I was to make of everything that had happened in my life over the passed year. Wondering what was wrong with me. Wondering why I could not just let go and let this beautiful girl in. Wondering just what that was that was crawling up my pant leg.
 
I want more
i need to know the ending of this...
terrific..

amazing writing....
 
Thanks all... more on it's way...

(Question to any mods who might be reading this: does it count as being over the three-item limit on the first page if I slowly put the chapters all in one thread? Last thing I want to do is get kicked out of here for exessive writing... :) )
 
I really enjoyed reading this.. please be quick with the next chapter 'cause I need to know what happens next! You really have a way with words.
 
chapter 3.

Chapter 3.

Some have warned not to bite the hand that feeds you, but it's been suggested that perhaps you should if it prevents you from feeding yourself. And if we bite the hand that feeds us because we want to feed ourselves but we haven't figured out a way to feed ourselves -- what then? We bite, run away, starve. We crawl back, we beg, we feast. We bite, run away, starve.

We push away when it pulls us close. We pull it close when it pushes away.

This was my relationship with Claire.

After the incident at Rowan's party on Halloween, I went on a hunger strike of sorts. Biting the hand that force-fed me. I kept her close enough not to be out of reach, but far away enough that I could breath and feel my freedom. So Claire and I hovered in that undefined space between friends and significant others. And slowly but surely she became an integral part of my little group of friends.

Ah, the group: our group was rather odd. It was this little circle of friends that I had accumulated when I went insane. Like moths to a light bulb. Like flies to a pile of shit, I seemed to draw these people. I couldn't figure out why they stuck around, or how they ended up around me in the first place. I put fourth no real effort to be with them, I wasn't really a good friend, I never really invested in my relationships, and yet there they were.

More than once I’d heard someone comment on how incredibly weird it was that we all hung together. It's true, we were all very different from each other. Outsiders were not able to see the things that linked us together; what they saw as an enigma. Truth was we were diverse, and we respected diversity. For the most part, the way I’d seen it, we didn't have to be like one another. At least for a time, we were able to accept and build on our differences. And we had enough in common that we could do things together, like hang out in the library after school, at Ned and Nathan’s house on the weekends (where their father came to refer to us as the `Barbarian Horde’) and go to the coffee shop not thirty minutes away from the school. But no one was trying. Everyone was just being who they were. That's the way I saw it, anyway. Others, they couldn't understand how we had found each other or why all of us lasted. One's enigma is another's common sense.

When Claire began to tag along, they accepted her pretty well. Well, except for Ned, who constantly accused her of emitting pheromones and often referred to her as `the leech’. As for me and the others though, I think we all agreed that Claire fit in to our little clique rather well. And deep down, I think Ned felt the connection, too.

Claire wrote letters to me often. She always had this amazing ability to write down or say things that would stick in my head from then on. Like that one time she asked if I’d ever heard of the song, Cumbersome, by Seven Mary Three. I said that I thought that I had. She said I should listen to the lyrics, because it explains our situation entirely.

Overall, those times are very fond in memory. The truth was, though, that there was a lot of conflict. Claire was very hurt and most of the blame lay on me. I was really cruel to her back then. Half of me needed her, the other half wanted to be alone. She was my goddess and my temptress. She brought out my soul and she brought out my monster. She was the light that brought out the shadow.

I'd just loose it sometimes, unable to deal with these conflicting sides of myself, and I’d just start yelling at her. Before she had come along, nothing in the external world really interested me. I think my friends kept me at bay, and she brought me to solid ground. If not for my friends, if not for Claire, I would've gone mad. I may have ended up in that loony bin.

Half of me wanted to fade away and never return. A part of me that didn't want this feeling of need. I had other concerns. But something about her kept me in that limbo between the world of the mundane and the otherworld of wonder and horror.

And so Winter, the appropriate season, came all too soon. I’ve come to hate the cold season. Somewhere around then, I cannot remember when exactly, her parents had got in a fight with Dante's parents and they got kicked out of the house. She had to leave, she told me. She was moving out to Maple Heights with her grandmother there.

I figured it was the end. Story over. I was sure I’d never hear from her again. So I gave up. Cut contact and tried to forget. I played like I didn't care.

But she haunted me. Taunted me. No matter what I did, no matter how hard I tried, she was there as some eternal reminder, it seemed.

As soon as she had moved away, there was suddenly the thing with Marcus. Marcus was a grade above me. I had met him some time back through a girl we mutually admired and I had gotten the hint he wasn't too fond of me at the time. But he turned out to be quite an interesting fellow, as I discovered once we got to talking. In my eyes at the time, he was quite the computer wiz -- now he makes a living out of being a computer wiz. He would show me a few cool things on the computer, we'd get to talking, and he'd give me some crackers from this roll of Ritz he always had in the breast pocket of his shirt.

Well, Claire ended up dating Marcus. That was weird. That got me thinking. Her pink hair was gone; now it was purple. It was the summer before my Senior year of high school by that time. The summer of 1996. Marcus would drive some of us in the group up there to see here once in awhile, just to see her and putz around. We went to see two concerts. And I noticed how different Claire was. I began to think Ned had been wrong, and she wasn't some leach, but something more like a chameleon. She seemed to change with every person she went out with, as if she was looking for herself through another. And that's when it hit me. That's when I realized what the problem was, with me, with her, between me and her. It all became crystal clear, the reasons she'd been asking me for and which I didn't have that night she called me after breaking up with my trench-coat friend. She had wanted to know why I broke it off with her. And it wasn't because I didn't like her or didn't care for her. I most certainly did, and she could sense that, and I think that's exactly what got her so confused.

But then, as I was saying -- blam! -- it all became crystal clear. And I know this is a pause in the story, but I think it's very important to illustrate this. Especially since for the longest time I could not successfully express it in written form. The idea was there, the concept lingered behind and between words, trapped in pictures and feelings. And then it came to me one day while drifting through an isle of books in the store. I picked up a copy of `The Missing Piece Meets Mister O', by Silverstein.

I had read the original book, `The Missing Piece', way back when I was in elementary school. I'd forgotten all about it. But this book explained my problem with Claire perfectly.

You know the story: there's just this little missing piece, like a slice of pie, lying on the ground. These little Pac-Man like people go rolling by, missing pieces. Things is, try as the piece might, she doesn't seem to fit into any of them. Some are too big, others too small -- you get the drift. Well, finally the missing piece find this Pac-Man person who fits. Together, they make a whole person.

In Jungian terms, he meets his Anima. She meets her Animus.

And then it happens: the piece who needed a Pac-Man? She starts growing. She doesn't fit anymore. So the piece is left alone again.

And then someone different came by. It wasn't a Pac-Man like person, this was a full ball, a whole person. The missing piece thought this is what it had been looking for. But the ball said it didn't need the piece. He was complete. It told the missing piece it should roll by itself. Maybe they could roll beside one another one day.

The missing piece argued, saying it was impossible, because it had edges. The ball said that shapes can change. The ball left the missing piece alone. Then it tries to roll, and it's a little rough at first. Eventually it smoothes out into a ball itself. At the end, you see it as a whole ball, rolling beside the other whole ball.

The story of Claire and I, well, it's a bit different. I was no O, and neither was she. Neither of us was complete. We're both Missing Pieces, and we both saw Pac-Persons in each other. In me, she saw her Animus; in her, I saw my Anima. When I was close to her, I felt complete. It seemed she felt the same way around me.

The thing was, she cradles the perceptions of the Missing Piece in the story. She needs to be a part of someone to be complete. She overlooks the fact that she will grow and will never fit another person forever. She also overlooked the fact that she can be a complete person all by herself.

Me? As I said, I was a Missing Piece, and I saw a Pac-Person in her, but I wanted to be complete on my own. I wanted to change shape. I didn't want to find myself in another just to outgrow her or have her outgrow me -- that wasn't real. My idea of a relationship was the end of that book: two complete balls of shining radiance rolling beside one another on the path of life. Two complete people who love each other. I didn't know how to get there, but I couldn't take it -- this impulse to compensate for my lack of completeness by falling into another. I wanted truth. And at least the truth in this matter seemed clear:

Until we are complete, we see our missing pieces everywhere.

She fit so comfortably. So comfortably. Too comfortably. But how could I fall in love with someone when I didn't know who she was? How could I trust what I felt when I didn't know who I was?

That's why she seemed so different with every boyfriend. She was looking for a place to fit. And it seemed evident that either way you sliced it, she had already outgrown me.

By the end of summer, Marcus was off to college and for some reason, perhaps mainly the distance, they decided to call it off. They broke up. Claire also had to leave her grandmother's house. I was told that she was going to live with Katie, another cousin of hers, who lived in Pennsylvania. I thought I'd never see her again.

I did. It was around the beginning of my Senior year. It was still warm outside. She came up to visit the art teacher. Her and I and the rest of the group hung out after school, outside the library doors. We sat in the grass and bullshitted. I couldn't ignore it. How great it was to have her there, to see that sparkle in her blue eyes. Had she really outgrown me? I didn't care. I was still incomplete.

She left to get up and go to the bathroom. Left us and the grassy outdoors behind and walked back in through the library doors. Already the distance killed me. Her presence, it was addictive. No, not addictive. Not even habitual. It was something else, something that drew you.

A wise man once had something to say about drugs and the foolish way that many approached him. They get a hit of acid, DMT, MDMA, or something of the like and they drop into other world, they experience transcendental bliss, they merge with the cosmos. And then after the drug has worn off, you're back to the mundane world again, and it looks even more dry and meaningless and boring now that you know there's something so much better out there. It kills you. And ignorance is kind of bliss in that sense.

He says that the wrong way to approach the drug is to think, `wow, this drug took me to that other place, now I have to take this drug again in order to get to that place.' The way he seemed to explain it, he saw drugs as important in the sense that they can shoot you through a cannon into a spiritual experience of levels far higher than you can imagine. Mystics and monks spend years trying to achieve these states permanently without even really knowing the destination other than through word of mouth; the words of their `masters' or `seers'. He seemed to indicate a path between drugs and spirituality: take the drug, shoot yourself to the goal so you know what to spend years shooting for without the drug.

A glimpse at completeness. A glimpse of what you could be.

But drugs, they can be addictive. I had a drunk friend once who, outside of a party in a college town, met me outside as I was having a smoke. He said that it had occurred to him how much likeness exists between drugs and significant others. This girl he was in love with, she was addicting. When she was away, he got withdrawal symptoms. When she was away, it was as if he was missing a part of himself. He was like an amputee. It made me wonder why they have twelve-steps programs for alcohol but not one for broken hearts.

She outgrew him. She wanted to become a radiant ball of her own. He still saw her as his Missing Piece. Addicted to that glimpse of completeness he felt he could only make permanent through owning her. Not at all interested in two radiant balls rolling beside each other on the road of life.

The glimpse is addicting.

I got up from the grass and told the group I'd be back. I walked in the library doors and turned down the hallway, where I saw her on the way back from the restroom. I stopped her right outside the art room door, where I'd first seen her in her Ohioan cloths for the first time so long ago. I choked down my fear and looked at her. She seemed confused.

"I missed you." I told her.

She smiled, still confused, and gave me a hug. "I missed you, too," she told me.

"No," I said, pausing, swallowing, breathing, gathering strength. "I really missed you."

And I laid it all on her. I kissed her as best as I could. I put everything I'd been storing up into me into that kiss. And she kissed back. Lost in the blissful eternity again. Those soft lips. Transported back to the black leather couch in the basement in the band room at Aaron's.

Addicted to the glimpse.
 
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Wow, cool story. You shouldnt let all that mental crap get in the way, you could have spend many happy years together. Instead you denied yourself, why? What fear was behind it, and it was prolly a fear, rather then a need to be a perfect ball rollin around. You'll most likely grow out of those conflicting mental urges, once you work out which one to listen to. I'm sure something was said about starving one and feeding the other.

Though that quote sucks. You dont get into a spiritual high unless you seek it, have a deep need for it. Its got little to do with drugs. Nothing infact. Drugs pale in comparison to such an extent, its not funny. They show you a glimpse of an opening, a hint of a possiblity, but once it becomes your reality... man with drugs its like trying to study the whole universe through a keyhole. Damn its been said so many times, but the truth can only be found within.

Ok, enough crapping along. You've found something intense, go with it. Good luck, hope it works out. It might not, who knows, but sometimes two people with missing pieces can help each other get whole. Or have some fun trying. Though I recon pink hair is much cuter then purple.

Anyway, you've been seeing stuff, going insane? What happened? I recon everything is possible, and every possiblity is real from certain points of view. You got some raelly good writing skills though. Will there be more chapters in this or is this it?
 
Three or four more chapters.... hopefully not as long as these have been. Maybe fewer chapters, I don't know. I know how the story goes, how the story ends, but I don't know how long it'll take me to walk there in my writing.

It's actually part of a much larger story -- abook I've been working on for years -- but I always had this gap in the chapters. It was the period where I met Claire. So I thought I'd take all my notes and, once and for all, write this story of Claire and I start to finish. I was hoping the feedback I get on here would help push me along to finishing the story, and that plan seems to be working out damn well. :)

The book it's a part of details `what happened', so-to-speak. Many would probably explain what I experienced at the end of 94/beginning of 95 as a psychotic break. But though this little story within my larger book does deal with that weirdness a bit, it mostly has to do with Claire and what we've been through and how it all turned out.

Thank you for the feedback, though, and I hope you keep reading. There's only, as I said, about two or three more chapters to go, and i'm not writing them all at once, so I won't be dumping them here all at once... so I thought that would save people from reading such a long damn thing all in one sitting (and that they'd probably be more likely to read it if I put it out small bits at a time).

If anyone else is still reading this, however, I'd appreciate any constructive criticism -- especially on the third chapter, as it does seem the story slowed almost to a standstill. it does pick back up, but is chapter 3 the way I wrote it kind of distracting? Needless?

Again, thanks...
 
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Chapter 4.

So Claire and I: we were kind of going out again, for what we might call the second time. She expressed desire to go to my Homecoming dance, and I reluctantly asked her. I hated dances. Every highschool dance I'd gone to, some poor girl ends up crying in the corner over some asshole boyfriend. I didn't even go to my Junior Prom. But I compromised; I went, and I took my California queen.

Already, I had been having second thoughts about Claire and I again. I wasn't so sure now that I wanted a girlfriend. I was also really nervous about taking a girl to a school dance (as I had not done so since seventh grade). That, and I had to wear a suit and tie and I'm more of a baggy-jeans, black T-shirt, ball cap and flannel kind of guy.

I was wondering, if I did decide to call it off with Claire, if I should officially tell her I didn't want to go out with her or if I should just let it fade. Maybe, when I talked to her next, I should call it off. Before the dance.

When I talked to Claire just before the dance, I was suprised. She suddenly wasn't so sure that she wanted to go. I found this pretty ususual, as she had been really excited before. Then it suddenyl dawned on me that something was up. Something was awry. There was something she wasn't telling me.

I remember her telling me on the phone with a strange tone on her voice that there was something she didn't want to tell me. And it took her awhile to tell me what it was. It turned out that she had somehow gotten poison ivy all over her face.

Now I couldn't tell her I didn't want to go, because she'd think it was because of the poison ivy. I cursed and cursed myself in my head. I was completely nervous about this whole dance thing.

The night of the dance, everything seemed wrong. I felt very uncomfortable wearing the cloths, I forgot about the corsage (my mother saved the day and got one for me), and I wasn't sure if I wanted to continue this thing with Claire. To boot, there was the poison ivy thing, and Claire was convinced she was ugly. She had said it several times, as a matter of fact. Claire was a beautiful girl, there was no doubt about that, and poison ivy didn't really make a difference to me. But I was already feeling ill at ease due to things previously discussed, and I knew that any sign I showed of not paying attention to her, of being uneasy, of looking nervous -- anything like that would be interpreted by her to be because of her poison ivy. And that fact that I knew that made me more nervous. In case your wondering, this is what they call a self-fulfilling prophecy.

I don't remember a damned thing about the dance. In memory, I have one image, and one image alone. Claire's sitting done in the hallway by the art room, knees drawn up to her face, and she's crying. I'm talking to her, trying to calm her, and doing a piss-poor job of it. Was it something I did? Damned if I can remember.

After that night, things, yet again, went quickly downhill between Claire and I. I maybe saw her a few more times. Then things just sort of faded. I fell into my usual habit of not putting fourth any effort, and she seemed to finally see the futility. She didn't call me, she didn't write me. I didn't bother trying to contact her.

Living a state away, I figured she was out of sight, out of mind. With school, my circle of friends, my artwork, my writing, and my interest in the occult, I had plenty to keep me busy. I told myself I didn't have the time or energy for a girlfriend anyway, and it was wrong to string her along like that.

What happened around then was a sort of mental overload. I was covered in heaps of my shitty short stories, articles, poems, ideas and artwork, and I had nothing to do with it. I these things out of my mind in a way by writing and drawing, but the writing went nowhere. I had nowhere to put it. I had chewed on, swallowed, digested all these things, and that was great and all, but I felt constipated, and the pressure was building. And I have Ludwig to thank for the cure.

Ludwig had come into art class one day and threw this stapled stack of papers onto the table in front of a bunch of us. He said he had found it on the internet and printed it out: it was an e-zine; an electronic magazine. These people who had put it together, they made no money off of it, but they put together a whole bunch of poetry, articles, and short stories every month or so and put out an issue on the web. I was amazed at the zine, and it got me excited. Ludwig suggested that some of us get together, write some things, and just bombard them with submissions, or -- and this idea appealed to me more -- we put out our own zine.

It was a great idea and all, but it was fated to go nowhere. Ludwig and I, we have a certain likeness: we're both extremely big procrastinators.

But I couldn't get the idea of my own zine out of my mind. It was perfect. It was just what I needed. Not wanted, needed. I needed some dumping ground for thoughts, somewhere were me and like minds could gather and express ourselves. So I put together a couple versions of an issue one, asking people for submissions.

At first, it seemed that I'd be forced to publish only my own things, but I slowly began accumulating a mass of submissions. In no time, I had an issue ready, and pronounced myself so-called editor.

I called the zine, Gopher: Writings of the Rodents of the Underground. And okay, maybe it was a lame title, but damned if I could figure out anything better to call it at the time.

I was going to publish it by using the photocopy machine in the school office, but Marcus caught word of what I was doing and suggested that I let him put it on the internet. And so it was. Every month, we would publish a new issue on the worldwide web.

Finally, I was no longer constipated.

Things didn't get better in life, though. I had a release, but the shit flow got bigger. Things got worse. And at the time I didn't have any clue that Claire had anything to do with my shitty feelings, but a dream I had around the time seemed to spell it out pretty clearly.

The dream began with a vision of a figure, which I somehow knew represented me, being encompassed by a dark form that wrapped around me. When I woke up and drew it, I called it a `vile spirit'.

Then I fell back asleep, and I had the dream. I was some superhero talking to a girl. We were interrupted by some jock from my high school who wanted to know if we’d play a game of pool. I said okay, but I needed to close up a file on a nearby computer. When i was done with that, I todl the jock I just wanted to make a trip to the restroom before we began playing the game. The girl, she seemed upset that I was leaving. I asked why, and she said, “well, maybe I was hitting on you.”

I can't help but be reminded of the day I met Claire.

So me, the superhero, I walk to the bathroom. The girl walks with me. I eventually got the feeling that we were being followed, and when I looked behind me, sure enough, I found we were being followed closely by an evil villian. For some reason I called this being The Fluke -- without knowing at the time that a Fluke was a type of parasite.

The Fluke was a big, plump and rippled bipedal being. Depending on what angle you looked at him, he was either pink, red, or orange. It was a very strange, Otherworldly color.

Upon seeing him, the girl and I decide it was in our best interest to escape from the creature, so we tried to outrun it and hide. (Some superhero I am, huh?) He followed us everywhere we went, however. There was no escape from him. Her and I, we even hid in the ladies room, but he followed us right through the plumbing. He came out through a drainage pipe in the floor near a cement block.

I knew what the Fluke was. He was Ee, the Evil Entity, that thing that began attacking me back in May, 1995, when I started having my out-of-body experiences and falling into those `waking dreams' that seemed like some other world.

I thought he had left. I hadn't seen him in so long, I thought he was through with me -- but evidently, he wasn't. It started happening all over again.

Night after night, on the verge of sleep, I would feel him above me in bed, just waiting for me to slip into the vulnerable state on the twilight of sleep, hungry for my energy. Once I even saw him. He was this tiny shadow that jumped over my head and through the wall my bed was pushed against. As he went through it, I heard a loud noise, like a hard pound.



Once I got on the edge of sleep, my senses would turn off, my awareness would become incredibly acute, and I'd feel disconnected from my physical body again. Then he would drag me down. The places he dragged me down to were no longer full of vivid, colorful, and self-luminescent objects, but were very dark environments, oftentimes just some big, black, endless void. It felt as if I was in zero-gravity, or underwater. There was no top to this space, no bottom, no sides. It seemed infinite and black in all directions, this void I called the Limbo.

As soon as I was down there, he would quickly throw himself at me, trying to attach to me. I would struggle with him, to no avail. It felt as though he was ripping my insides out. It felt as if he was literally digging into my body, stabbing me, scrambling around organs and ripping them out. It was absolute fucking torture. A lot of these sensations felt almost electric, and I’d often even hear and see these weird, erratic, high-volume electric shocks between us when we came into contact. The shocks brought disoriented images into my mind.

Other times, instead of a void, the Limbo would be this series of black or white tunnels. He would chase me down and eventually catch me, it never failed. He'd grab my legs, arms, and chest and pin me to the ground.

When I awoke from his vicious attacks, I could sometimes still feel the pressure on the parellel area of my body where he’d pinned me down. And I felt drained afterwards, as if he was slowly stealing the force of life right out of me. I had no energy. I felt like I was dying on a level that eyes could not see. This thing was sucking the energy from me like some mosquito of the soul.

I kept trying to fight him, but he was far more swift and had much better reflexes and more strength than I did when I was down there. So instead of fighting, I simply tried to relax, but all that got me was more of the same: I was helpless, paralyzed, and having my body zapped with electricity and my insides were scrambled around and ripped out.

And so I did all I could do. I did what I used to do when I had first lost my mind: I didn't sleep. I would stay up nights, strung out on coffee, listen to music and write stream-of-consciousness style, or draw, or read. He could onyl get me in my sleep, I thought. So long as I didn't submit to sleep, he couldn't get me.

That was apparently a faulty assumption, for it was also around that point in time that I began noticing something very, very disturbing. I’d be in my room, writing by my computer, lip synching to music in the mirror or drawing, and I’d feel his presence again. Eventually, I realized a noise preceded my awareness of his presence - little clicks or crackles or swift pounds in the walls. It usually seemed to come from the same places. Usually it was on the wall farthest from my window, where my door was, behind two specific pictures. They were both pictures my uncle had gotten for me, one of the Apollo 11 moon landing by the door, the other one of the surface of Mars that was closer to my far wall, were my mural of Saturn was.

He was there, it seemed, but it didn't seem he could really attack me. So I kept up the insomnia.

Unfortunately, the body requires at least a bit of downtime, and if one ignores this he inevitably begins dosing off. That’s where I ran into problems again. For instance, one evening as I was writing at my computer, the urge to sleep began to come over me and my eyes grew heavy and began to close. I heard a loud `click’ inside my skull and felt myself detach from my physical body and start floating backwards in a vivid, but dark area. It looked like the inside of a bee hive, with shelves encircling the curved walls. Ee was there waiting, and rushed towards me and began to attack me. I quickly pulled myself together, quite literally, and opened my eyes. I felt very dizzy and nauseous, as if I’d reconnected a little too quickly.

Since I couldn’t fight sleep, I decided to try something else: I kept on all the lights in my room and turned on my radio. Then I'd fall asleep. I guess my logic in this would be that I’d have something for my mind to focus on so I wouldn’t slip too deep in. Or: if I did slip in I’d have some sound in the physical world to focus on to be able to “pull myself back.”

That didn’t prove effective, either. Sometimes I didn’t hear the radio at all. Other times, I heard it at a distance, and it was muffled, as if I was hearing it from underwater.

I realized that I needed something to help me get through this. I needed something to protect me. Whether it had any psychic significance or not, it seemed to calm me down psychologically, so I began using what I’d learned in meditation, and what my hypnotist in April of 1995 had strongly suggested - whenever he was near or I felt vulnerable to his attacks, I’d envision a cocoon of white light surrounding me.

The way I used it, I envisioned that it started at my chest area - for you more esoteric individuals, the `heart chakra’ - as a ball of white light, and then quickly and powerfully grew to cover my whole body in a big white ball of light that pulsated and often had charges of electricity flowing around it (this was an effect I created to ensure that my concentration was on the ball surrounding me). The presence of the white light could be called on at any time when I recited a certain word three times to myself in succession.

To ensure the personal power of the word, I never wrote it down or told it to anyone. I knew that even if it was nothing more than a psychological safety blanket, the fact of the matter was that it worked. If Ee was a figment of my own imagination, at least I had a means of imaginary protection from my imaginary enemy.

And though the white light worked, in order for it to keep working I had to constantly pay attention to it -- and that can’t happen when one’s sleeping. I still suffered vicious attacks.

I cracked the Occult literatrue again. Were their rituals to get rid of psychic parasites? Disembodied psychic vampries? Spiritual leaches? What was Ee, exactly? How could I get rid of him? I came up with nothing.

So one day, I asked Ludwig, who had always been an open ear for my weird experiences, what he thought I should do. What hadn't I tried? And he pointed out that I should eat it. I looked at him strangely. That sounded pretty insane to me. I was afraid this thing was trying to possess me, and taking it into me, eating it or whatever, was not something I was too keen on trying.

But it kept happening. The stupid fucker would not go away. If he was just a figment of my diseased mind, why couldn't I control it? How unnatural was this, for one part of one's mind to attack the other without reason?

Then one evening I reached the breaking point. Yet again I had been attacked by him and managed to awaken. I decided to go downstairs so I could get some sleep. Previously, he had never bothered me unless I was at home, and I never slept anywhere in my room, so this would be a new experience. Maybe it would work. So I lay down on our new sofa in the front room, face first.

And as soon as I was on the bridge of sleep, he dragged me down again. The place I ended up was different. It seemed as if I was in the center of a hurricane, a swiftly turning funnel or a vortex. The walls of it were blurry, streaming, multicolored horizontal lines that seemed to rush in a leftward motion.

His face was suddenly right before me. It seemed to me that his face was morphing, changing, like he was finally getting more of a form. Like he was closer to having stole enough of me to take me over completely.

I freaked out and woke up.

Even back then, I considered the possibility that I could be insane. And if you're summing it up as that, I'm sorry, that's just stupid. Problems don't change with a label. if reality is that which does not go away, then this problem was very real. Imaginary enemy or not, I could not rid myself of this thing.

I tried a lot of things in the attempts to get rid of him, but nothing seemed to work. Fighting him didn't work. He just fought back harder. It's like being angry just fed the thing.

So that night on the sofa I decided that rock bottom had finally come. I could not deal with this anymore, at least not alone - I needed someone to help me, or at least someone to talk to. My art teacher had always been a great help to me, especially when things had really began getting weird the year before, so she was the one I went to.

So I came into school, having gotten no sleep, and crept into my sanctuary, the art room. I waited until class was over, and Miss Leila was the only one left inside. I just sat in a chair at the end of the room, at the table by the heater, and she looked at me.

“What’s wrong?” She asked. And I coukldn't answer. Were was I to begin? I just laid my head down on a table nearby and broke down. I just fucking lost it. I cried, I rambled, I pleaded for her to help me because I was so afraid I was loosing my grip on reality, that I wasn’t even sure what reality meant anymore. I just wanted to be fucking normal, to be a normal person, with normal desires and a normal life.

She asked me what was wrong. She asked me if I was seeing the aliens again, but I told her it wasn't that, that this was different. The thing had come back, and it was like it was trying to possess me, to take me over, to drain my vitality. I couldn't get rid of it. I didn't know what it wanted.

She suggested that since I was now of age, I should go see Dr. Navier, a psychologist I had contacted through my school psychologist shortly before I'd met Claire. He wouldn't see me back then because I was not yet eighteen. He would have, of course, if I had parental consent, but I wasn't ready to talk to my parents about this. I was terrified they'd put me in a rubber room. And once I'd met Claire, all the weird shit had mysteriously stopped, so there was no reason to see him. Not urgently, anyway.

Now that this weird stuff was coming back around again, I told the art teacher I thought maybe she was right and seeing him was a good idea. I called him shortly thereafter and set up an appointment. My parents? They were all for it, of course.

Doctor Navier was a plump man, maybe in his late thirties. A very, very interesting guy. He knew mythology left and right. He taught at a college. He had a good sense of humor and an intellect that had no bounds. He loved sitting in his chair smoking cigars - always polite enough to ask if I minded. He even offered to make me coffee a few times, but I declined. Why, I don’t know.

Perhaps I feared he was too nice of a guy -- frighteningly nice. He seemed the perfect guy to spill all this too. All this time of seeing people in the feild of so-called mental health and I’d finally settled on the fact that you had to be an extreme-case patient as a prerequisite to becoming a doctor. He destroyed that theory. Here was a guy who actually seemed to have a good grip on more than one reality.

So I told him everything. I went over all the abduction events and memories, but told him nothing had happened in that area for a long time. I briefly went over the past life memories, but not the oldest. Then I told him about going through hypnosis and seeing those strange things on the way home. I told him all about the `astral projections' and my fights with Ee in these `other worlds'. I told him how these other worlds used to be like alternate versions of places I knew in the physical reality but had, as of late, degenerated into the form of this endless black void.

In short, I laid my crooked story out as straight as was possible.

I told him that I'd spent a lot of time reading up on Occult literature in the attempts to find out what was going on with me and what all this meant. And I told him I fully accepted that I might be psychotic, that I may very well be insane, but I'd gone through the psychological literature and I couldn't find a condition that seemed to catch the full scope of everything that was wrong with me. No category seemed to encompass enough. I told him that I thought maybe I just had some spiritual disease or something.

He told me that there was a condition that covered everything, and right away I knew he had slipped. He had said something he didn't want to say. And he said that he didn't want to throw me in a category, and that the label was irrelevant. And I pressed him to tell me. I told him that I had to know.

And then he uttered the word, and very empathically, very hesitantly, very carefully.

The word was schizophrenia.

He quickly added that it was a very vague term, and I should try not to put myself in that category. Ultimately, no one knows what's behind this, and he seemed perfectly open to the fact that it may be something very real, but was quick to add that he was a skeptic. On both sides. He was a true skeptic, and he recommended I push aside my bias and take the same kind of attitude.

And when he asked me why I'd come to see him, what was bothering me now, what we had to take care of immediately, I told him that it was this creature that attacked me at night. It was a ghost or something of the like. At least that's what it appeared to be to me.

I told him I had tried everything. That I'd try fighting it. And then he smiled, like he knew what was going on. And I asked him what he suggested, what he thought I should do.

And it was odd, but he responded almost exactly as Ludwig had. He said that if fighting with it wasn't solving anything, I should hug it. I should stop hating it and just love it. I should possess it. Like the new agers and Christians I absolutely hated with every inch of my being at the time, he said I should do the hippy thing and cover it in white light and love the hell out of the bastard. That I should take it into me.

Me? I still thought this idea was entirely stupid, and I didn’t care about the synchronistic suggestions between Ludwig and my psychologist. If the thing was trying to posses me, taking it into me would essentially be letting it achieve it’s goal all the more easily. It would be an act of spiritual suicide.

He sensed my uneasiness, and sort of laughed. I lightened up a bit with that laugh, but I asked him what he was thinking.

He said that he knew I was on a self-quest. He said that in some cultures, people were set out into the mountains or sweat lodges or the desert at a certain age to receive a vision. They'd spend years meditating or other things to achieve that altered state. And when they finally got a vision, they'd come back to their master and ask what they were to do now. The student, he was expecting to be put on some mission, gain supernatural powers, have this great responsibility, go fourth on some grand adventure. And what did the master say? He'd hand him a bucket and an axe and say, "chop wood, carry water. Chop wood, carry water."

When he said this to me, I just looked at him dumbfounded.

He simplified it for me. He said that I needed to be grounded. Me, I was like jet fuel without a container. I needed to get my roots in the ground beneath my feet. I needed to `master the mundane', as he put it. He told me that was my homework assignment. I was to put aside my visions for now. I needed some down-to-earth, short-term goals. Get a job, he told me, get a license and get a car. Hang out with friends. Get a girlfriend.

It took me some time and a few more sessions, but I began taking his advice. Doing my homework.

I hung out with my friends at the coffee shop every weekend. At age eighteen, I finally got my license. I got a car; an 88 Oldsmobile my friends unanimously referred to as `the Boat'. And I got a job at a convenience store not fifteen minutes from my house. My boss was this vile old lady that looked like Yoda from Star Wars, turned over to the Dark Side. She talked in this voice that led me to believe she was inhaling helium and always had nasal congestion. I called her Evil Yoda.

This, apparently, was normality.

And over the next few weeks, my insomnia continued. Ee hung over me at night, just waiting. I could feel his hunger. And I kept up the white-light cocoon until I fell dead asleep.

The next time I confronted Ee, it was January 19, 1997. I found myself in the Limbo. As always, Ee came at me. And for some reason this time I decided, on a whim, to change my attitude. Nothing else had worked, so what the hell?

Instead of fighting, I made the conscious choice to hug it. To possess it. I toom Ee into me and ate him. I gave up on resisting and just merged with the thing. And the strangest fucking thing happened.

It almost seemed as if I was before this dark, black screen. All of a sudden part of my attention was pulled back to my physical body -- namely to my ear, where I heard this weird ringing or buzzing sound.

Then the black screen began to change.

These vivid, absolutely beautiful kaleidoscopic images, patterns and designs blossomed before me in bright and intense colors. I was entranced by them, in awe of their immense beauty. I had no sense but sight, and it was what I can only call subjective, but it didn’t seem to stem from me. I wondered: was this what Ee was trying to show me the entire time? Was it sent to communicate this?

This kaledoscopic picture show went on for maybe fifteen to twenty minutes, and then the picture show was suddenly over. I again heard that weird buzzing or ringing noise, which I think may have been going on the entire time without me noticing it. Then it just stopped. The experience was over.

I felt different. Energized. Overflowing with emotion. Released.

I remember going into Dr. Navier's office the next day, telling him I’d gotten the job and the car and had become more social. I had no girlfriend, though. And then I told him about eating Ee, about the colors. He seemed interested, but didn’t comment on it. Years later, when I read up more on Jung and discovered Alchemy, I’d understand the possible meaning behind those colors a bit more.

Something was happening. A new phase.

I was in the school library one day shortly afterward. I was reading when I got up to go to the bathroom. As I was washing my hands, I saw, in a crack in the wall, a cigarette. It must have been someone’s stash. Suddenly, this wave of energy swept over me. Nobody was watching. Life was shit anyway. All those smokers out there, maybe they knew something non-smokers like me didn’t. And I was so curious and tired of hiding it.

I grabbed it and stuffed it in my pocket. I contemplated smoking it on and off as I was reading, and eventually decided against it, wrapped it up in a napkin and threw it away. A few days later, I changed my mind again. I asked a friend of mine, who had taken about every chemical known to man in his body, if he could get me a cigarette and not tell anyone about it.

He was quick to remind me that I was eighteen and asked why I didn’t just buy a pack. I told him I didn’t want a pack, I just wanted to try one. So like a good little monkey he went and got me one. I kept it in my pocket and contemplated smoking it for maybe a week.

It was about that time that I felt inspired to put together this story for Gopher. It was dedicated to Claire and the times we had. As I was working on it, I found her number from Pennsylvania and gave her a call. I tried a few times, too afraid to leave me name, but she was never around. She was always out or taking a bath. I knew she couldn’t be ignoring me, because she had no way of knowing it was me.

But on the day I finished the piece, and gave the story it’s title – Cumbersome – I finally got a hold of her and talked with her. It was nice hearing her voice again.

She said that things had been okay. That she was happy down there. She said I should come up to Dante’s and see the band play. I was confused. I asked her if she was going to be down there or something. And then she told me that Katie, the cousin she was living with, played as the drummer in their band. Katie and her apparently went down there every Saturday. Every Saturday, she was a block from my house and never told me. I suddenly found myself very depressed, but reminded myself to not forget that I was the asshole in this situation and I was lucky she still even gave me the time of day.

She said I needed to loosen up and relax, and that I should go over to the place, she'd show me how to have a good time. This seemed to echo the advice Dr. Napier had given me, but I still hemmed and hawed. I wasn't sure whether I should really go or not.

So that night, after getting off the phone with her, I sat down at my computer and finished my story, Cumbersome. Then I got up, went downstairs, grabbed a pack of matches from the drawer and walked out into the night.

I walked down to the end of the driveway, and I pulled out the cigarette. I remembered the night Claire had turned to me on that black leather couch and blew that puff of smoke in my face. And I took a few puffs and threw it to the ground. This stuff, it was suicide. It gave you a buzz, sure, but you ended up killing your lungs. That what short-sightedness got you. That's what living for the moment got you.

During the week, I had slipped and told Marcus about how I was going on and off about going over to Aaron’s house to watch Dante and his band play. The reason that I kind of wanted to go, I told him, was that Claire was there. I was a bit wary when he offered to drive me and see her as well, and I think part of it was because he had gone out with her last and part of me wanted to see if there was any potential for me in her. Perhaps she had grown, become independent. I wasn’t complete yet, that I knew, but I somehow felt I was a step closer. I had battled a demon and now I wanted to reunite with my goddess.

As we drove over there that Saturday, eh asked me how she had sounded on the phone. I tried to look for the right words.

“Happy,” I told him.

“You still like her, don’t you?”

I told him that of course I did. Then he repeated the same question, with emphasis on the `like’. I repeated that she was happy, and then added that I didn’t intend to ruin that.

Aaron answered the door. Can you guess what happened? He paused, took a look at me, took a step back, and widened his eyes. Then he announced my full name in an astonished manner.
Me?I stopped, looked at him without blinking or saying anything for a second, and then said his name in a spooky, threatening way. Then I walked into the door frame.

As he was announcing Marcus’s full name, I saw Claire on the couch in the living room in front of the television. She had been sleeping. She sat up on the couch, rubbed her eyes, stretched, and said hi in an unenthusiastic manner. She had thought I was coming over earlier, she told me. I asked for a hug, and she gave me a weak one.

At about a foot the scent of alcohol on her make it clearly evident she was pretty plastered. I watched her hug Marcus, and those infantile feelings of jealousy returned in an incredible way. But I patted myself on the back. I was no longer trying to hide from my fear or fight it. I felt it and all the feelings I had sacrificed by burying it.

Again I wondered what Ee really was.

I turned to Dante, who was nearby, shook his hand and began talking. I tried acting casual, as if I wasn’t really here only to see Claire, as if her lack of response to me didn’t really hurt me or something. And though I talked to Dante, I wasn’t really there. I was dying inside, and I just wanted the Californian beauty I once had as my own to breath life back into me. To make me feel complete again.

Claire finally got up and said I needed to hear the band play. We all followed. They had moved all the band stuff upstairs now, into a room down the hall. It didn’t have the same appeal as the basement. And that’s were I spied Katie for the first time, Claire’s cousin. She looked a lot like Claire, only her hair was black. And I watched them play their usual Metallica songs, I watched Katie beat the hell out of those drums so beautifully, Dante wail on his guitar, Aaron wail on his and head bang. And I watched Claire, looking so drunk, so inescapably lost, bouncing up and down with her eyes closed, as if trying to loose reality in the rhythm.

Marcus wanted to leave, and I was suddenly piss-raging angry. He wanted to come with me and now he wanted to drag me off before I was ready. We hadn’t been there twenty minutes. But we said our goodbyes and left, and on the way home he apologized. He said he just felt uncomfortable. I shrugged: me being in her presence didn’t seem to affect her in any way, and maybe she was better off without me in her life at all.

Maybe it was better if it ended this way. The wimper, as opposed to the bang.
 
I am really enjoying reading this story.. I think the last chapter was good because it kinda added something different to the story, another aspect besides Claire... which I found interesting.


Even back then, I considered the possibility that I could be insane. And if you're summing it up as that, I'm sorry, that's just stupid. Problems don't change with a label. if reality is that which does not go away, then this problem was very real.

^^ I am a little confused about this section... I am not really understanding.. you're saying that the possibility of you being insane was stupid? I can understand that the problems don't change with a label, but if the reality of this Ee was in fact that he did not exist and was caused by Schizophrenia (I am not sure if it was, just assuming), then wouldn't this mean that you were in fact not experiencing "reality" as such, rather you were experiencing a figment of the imagination? And in turn, wouldn't that lead to the conclusion that you were actually insane?
 
Yeah, reading it myself now, it does seem rather confusioning. No, what I was trying to say is not so much that the idea that I was insane was stupid, but that it was irrelevant. Regardless as to whether Ee was real or merely a figment of my imagination, no matter what I did, he would not go away. I had to deal with him the same way, regardless as to whether he was real (and I was sane) or he was imaginary (and I was insane), so the question of his reality and to my sanity didn't make a difference either way, really. Hopefully that's coming across more clearly... I will go back and try and re-word that.

Snowfrog: more to come soon...
 
You should but in some graphic sex scenes 'snicker, snicker' as I have always had a crush on Clair Danes also.

Good stuff, the meta-physical madness is something I can relate to very well. I'd like to hear more about the aliens and your experiences with that side. (just babbling comments)

<-- Twiddling my thumbs and waiting for more... G-g-g-g-g-g-eat story.

Is this a true tale or is it truth mixed in with fiction or is it purely autobiographical, just curious...?

Keep it coming
 
chapter 5.

Chapter 5.

My life was driving my sisters and I and a neighbor girl to school, driving us home, and then leaving for work. And when I wasn't at work, splitting my time between hanging out with the group and locking myself in my room, reading and writing on the occult. When I hung out with the group, we'd go up to that coffee shop of Mardon square, not too far from Evil Yoda's Inconvienence store.

Mardon is a tiny little town about fifteen, maybe twenty minutes from my parents house. On the square is the coffee shop were me and the group enjoyed hanging out, getting wired and engaging in deep and long conversations. We debated over such plaguing topics as multiple universes, the existence of extraterrestrial life, life after death, and how the existence of male nipples provides evidence that conflicts with the Biblical tale of Genisis.

In the center of the square, almost directly across from the coffee shop, there is this little gazebo. Nearby, there is a clock tower that doesn't work, and hasn't, not as long as I've lived around here. And every year, about April, they have the Mardon Maple Festival. The carnival comes through, they have rides and sell fatty food, and everyone who's anyone is there. Even the nobodies, as a matter of fact. You see people you haven't seen all year at the Maple Festival.

The real reason for going up there, though, and the reason I went with Ludwig up to it that April of my senior year, was to get those infamous sausage sandwiches -- the ones loaded with melted cheese, sauted onions, bleeding grease. A heart attack worth the pleasure of it's cause.

He drove. We parked down at the local Burger King and planned to walk up the hill to the square, as it was never easy to find a parking spot down there during this event. If you did happen to find one, it was always next to impossible to get out. Ludwig suggested getting some drinks at Burger King for the walk, as they would be much cheaper down there, and I couldn't argue with saving money.

We had just stepped in to Burger King when I heard someone say my name. I turned around to see three stoners from high school. One of them was from my grade, Mike. The other two were underclassmen. I walked over to say hey.

And that's when I saw her. Beside them, leaning in the booth and smoking a cigarette, sat Claire.

Nothing dies, but some things can consistently kill, you know? That may sound like a contradiction, but I assure you, it isn't.

I said hi to everyone. I gave everyone eye contact. I tried to keep it all equal. I tried not to act like I wasn't trying to pay attention to Claire but at the same time not act like I'm not trying to pay attention to her. And it wasn't easy, trying to just even out attention across the table.

I met with futility. Trying to conceal were the spotlight in your mind shines never works. Especially when it comes to girls. You always find yourself staring too long or avoiding eye contact with her entirely, seeming too exaggerated in your cheery, relaxed, fabricated state or coming across as too locked up and nervous, like you're on the verge of having a massive anxiety attack. When trying desperately to conceal something, from others or yourself, you always go to extremes. Generally intense people should get you wondering.

I asked Mike what he'd been doing.

"Partying and work," he said, and then invited me to go out partying with him sometime. I just shrugged.

One of the kids I knew that Mike was with laughed. "Tim doesn't party," he said, "Tim drinks coffee and chases after little aliens."

In actuality, he had it backwards, but I wasn't going to waste my time trying to explain.

As I talked, I watched myself in some detached observer mode. I had quick, twitchy movements. I talked fast. I was fucking freaking out and I knew I had to get out of there fast, so I tried to distance myself from them as quickly as possible.

When Ludwig came over after getting his pop and started talking to them, I felt Claire's eyes on me, and sensed something from her. It's hard to describe. So many things about that girl are so hard to describe. She seemed stressed out and on the edge. And she was curious about me and the way I was acting. It was just the look she carried, and I worried about her and all I didn't know.

As quickly and subtly as I could, I left for the counter and ordered a coffee. I wish it would have taken longer. Something to let me stall more so I didn't have to wait around for Ludwig to get done talking. I should've ordered a goddamned value meal. All I wanted to do was escape this situation. But I was painfully aware of a part of me that wanted to go up to her and say a billion things I've wanted to say from the day I met her. But I never had the balls to say any of those things. Not then, not now.

I grabbed my coffee, stirred in my four packets of sugar slowly, and casually made my back over. Ludwig was still talking. I just kind of stood there and nervously sipped my coffee as he continued conversing. I put my coffee down on top of a table nearby.

Then something came at me from my side. I winced. When I looked, I saw it was Katie, with her black hair and that face of hers that reminded me so much of Claire's. She put her hand on the side of my hand, I put my hand on the side of hers. We then both touched foreheads and stared into each other's eyes. I don't know where that came from, but it was entirely natural, entirely weird, and way too erotic.

I looked to the side of her, and there I saw Ron. From the way it looked, he was involved with Katie. From the way they all looked, they were all hung over and stoned.

I'd known Ron back in elementary school. He'd gotten kicked out, but before he did, he used to be a great friend. We shared a desk in the back of the room, and we'd draw and write and just bullshit with each other. He was cool back then. I shook hands with him, and found that he was involved with Dante's band. Exactly how he was involved wasn't clear in that conversation. I asked him how he was.

"Pretty drunk," was his reply.

I questioned Katie about a scar above her eye, which somehow didn't at all lessen her attractiveness, and she told me she'd gotten in a car wreck with Ron here. I tried to keep it going, I tried to keep bullshitting and forget how terribly abd I wanted to run out of here with my tail between my legs, but there really wasn't much to bullshit about, and I was growing all the more nervous with Claire around.

Claire turned to me and said hey, I nodded sheepishly and said hey. I felt a choke in my throat, that was really bad. I was cracking.

I tugged Ludwig's coat and told him that maybe we should get going. We had to go meet some people and do some stuff at the thing at the Maple Festival and we're going to be late. And we better hurry. Like, we'd better leave now. Didn't he think so?

He took the hint. Speaking vague bullshit in an urgent way is always a hint. So we waved quick goodbyes and walked out the doors. I suddenly felt very empathic with Marcus's uncomfortable position at Aaron's house.

I needed to walk. I needed to go outside, get some fresh air, and give myself some time to think. By the time we were outside it was amazing, as I was already feeling better. No, not really. But having Ludwig around helped -- he was an easy guy to talk to, and an honest and loyal friend. After we were a ways away from Burger King, and I hadn't said a damned thing, Ludwig felt it was time to ask just what the hell that had been all about.

I told him I just felt awkward.

"You still like Claire, huh?"

"No," I snapped, "why the fuck does everyone keep asking me that?"

His hand went up in surrender to my attack and he laughed and said he was sorry. I shrugged, apologized for screaming at him, and looked to the ground. Somewere there in the dirt and gravel I found the courage to be honest with him.

I told him that every time I was with her, something felt wrong somehow. Something felt great, but at the same time there was this resistance I couldn't override. I was just so fucking conflicted about everything, and her times two. And he laughed again and said that I seemed to be pretty conflicted about everything times two. I couldn't deny that.

I went on and told him that there just seemed to be this weird, push-and-pull force between Claire and I. When she pushed away, I pulled her closer; when I pushed away, she pulled me closer. We just couldn’t do anything in unison. One of us was always running, the other always chasing. One saying no as the other was sticking the other's tongue down the other's mouth breathing yes, yes, yes passionately. There was no apparent way to stop this conflict.

I looked to him, hoping to find some answer. I hadn't listened to him at first about his suggestion as to how to deal with the whole Ee thing, and it worked when I eventually tried it. Maybe his logic here would be as helpful. I half expected him to turn to me and say to me the same thing he'd said about the Ee situation: eat her, possess her, hug her like a cheesy new-ager.

And I knew if there ended up being some surreal, kaleidoscopic array of colorful patterns as a result I'd know beyond a doubt that there was something very weird going on with the world and maybe my apparent insanity was in some way justified.

He threw his hand at my arm, a little tap as if to let me in on something. He then said, "we've got company," and motioned behind us. By the time he'd said it I heard the sound of feet-against-pavement behind us. Getting louder. Closer. My first instinct was to run.

I took a peak behind me just as the group from Burger King surrounded us like flies to a pile of freshly lain excrement. Mike came up to me, holding a cup of coffee, smoking a cigarette.

Poor Mike, I thought. This guy was such a tragedy. Truly. I had been best friends with this kid when I'd first met him in sixth grade. He was one of the strongest individuals I'd known, or so I'd thought, mentally and physically. Mike always held a lot of weight. I always thought the guy was really strong, the way he handled it. His parents were separated. His mother, she went through men like a hot knife through butter, his father was rarely spoken of, his brother was always getting in a mess and now had a child, and the grandmother he lived with was over-religious and very controlling. Mike always was an optimist though, and always subverted authority in a way where he expressed his individuality without really getting anyone mad at him. I don't know how he did it, but he did it beautifully. Then something went wrong, and it was a mystery as to what.

So I turned to him, missing the guy I'd one known, and asked him how he was. He said he was doing good, he was just working a lot at the factory. He held up a cup of coffee and said he was drinking a lot of this, and I laughed, saying that it was the only thing that kept me going, too. He said that it went great with cigarettes. I shook my head. It just wasn't my thing.

He asked me again to go partying with him sometime, and I told him drugs and alcohol would just further my already pathetic state of mind. He laughed. He said that I should really take a look at myself: I'm sober and as miserable as hell and he's high as a kite and can breeze through life. He said that he used to deny it, too, that he used to resist. But everyone does it, even his managers, and look how higher than him they are in life.

And I laughed and shook my head. What a pathetic excuse. I felt better being the black sheep, running from the herd, flicking off the Shepard. It was lonely, but at least I wasn't sacrificing my identity to a parade of hopelessness. That real world the adults are always talking about. The world of nihilism that existed beyond the border of high school. The context where apparently smoking cigarettes and drinking booze and popping pills and hitting this and shooting up that made sense in some way that was presently inconcievable to me.

Hell, I wouldn't even take over-the-counter medication. I resisted prescribed medication, like that bullshit I'd been put on my Sophmore year when I first started flipping my lid and seeing shit. The antidepressants.

It wasn't as if I wasn't listening to what he was saying and considering what he suggested to me. It was just that I look at this kid as an example of where his present philosophy got him. I mean, it's the same way I would look at some of the greats years later: Nietzsche, Crowley, people like that. People who's ideas, when you heard them, whether you wanted to believe in them or not, made sense to you, inspired you, made you feel alive and laugh in cynical pleasure. But then you get done reading their books and envying their thoughts and identifying with their feelings and you see where they ended up. Broke, pessimistic, insane.

Mike, as I said, was just such a tragedy. The guy had everything going for him, and I mean everything. He was the kind of kid who could pick up anything in a flash. If he tried to learn something, like guitar, or karate, or anything, he could pick up a pattern in no time. And he made it look as simple as breathing. Learning was no challenge for him. He was intelligent, and he was physically fit -- he tried to get me to work out on weights with him all the time.

And years ago, he had it all planned out. From his present circumstances to his preferred future, he seemed to have every step of the way planned out and have the know-how and will necessary to make it all happen. He wanted to keep his job in fast food until high school was over, get into the police academy, become a cop and get a `pretty girl' and settle down. That was his goal. And he damned his brother for what he'd become -- a druggy, he had called him, a drunk. A waste who did nothing with his life.

And then one day in high school, on the flip of a dime, Mike seemed to have changed. Something seemed to be dying in him. He said that he wasn't going to go into the police force, he wanted to join the Marines. And in a short time even that plan that fell away. One day shortly thereafter, after a bout of depression that I'd never seen in him before, he ended up going to a party out of the blue, which was very unlike him, and got shit-faced. He's hardly been sober since.

He became a trouble-maker in school. He tried every drug known to man. He drank regularly. Gave up his dream to become a cop. Stopped working out. Stopped caring. Drawn in and consumed by the nihilistic sense of futility in life. He worked at his factory job and got drunk and got stoned and whatever else and he played like he was perfectly happy in life, but I could see it in his eyes. An anger at life. He'd tried so hard and something had gone horribly wrong. What was it? I think it was Mary's breaking up with him, moving to Florida, and all his failed attempts to find a `pretty girl' since. Because he always seemed to find the kind of women who, like his mother, moved from guy to guy without pause or remorse. It killed him inside. So he decided to let his life caress a lifestyle that was more in tune with his internal conditions: decay.

That was the way I saw it.

Then Claire popped up beside me. I looked at her. Beautiful, radiant, fragile. Hair undyed. In ripped jeans, a T-shirt, and a flannel shirt. Reeking of cigarettes. Hung-over and stoned.

She was such a sight for sore eyes.

She asked me how I was. Mike broke in and said that I was going to go party with them last night. I just laughed and shook my head in the negative.

I confessed to Claire that I hadn't changed at all. She quickly apologized for the night Marcus and I had dropped by, telling me that she had been drunk and tired and, well, that life hadn't been the best lately. Life was, as she put it, a "rotting bowl of cherries." I told her I thought she was happy, like she'd said on the phone -- that night I called her before finishing my story about her, Cumbersome. She told me that things are never as they seem.

I asked her about Ron, because it was weird seeing him with this group. I asked if maybe he was in Dante’s band. She shook her head, and said he had just been around a lot lately, hanging out with them. He’d gone out with this girl for about four years and she’d just broken up with him after telling him she’d been cheating on him. Then apparently he’d somehow gotten the idea that Claire and him were an item, and she’d been trying to tell him again and again that she just wanted to be friends. She said she knew he was having a lot of problems and he was in a very sensitive state right now, but the truth was she simply wasn’t attracted to him and the whole situation was getting kind of annoying.

And she made me promise to give her a call sometime, and she looked at me. And I said okay.

About a week later I was over at Ned and Nathan's when she called on the phone, drunk as a skunk. She wanted me to come over and drink with her, but I told her I wasn't much for drinking and I didn't have my car with me. She said then she'd come over there. I told her that would be cool, but she should get somebody else to drive since she was drunk. She suggested that Ron drive her over, since he was here right beside her and he offered to drive. I asked her if he was drunk. She said not too drunk, and I argued that drunk was drunk. I remembered that scar on Katie's face and how she'd gotten it from her accident with Ron. She said she'd be over, though, and there was no winning over her persistence. Her life. Her freedom. I just hoped she got here in one piece.

Not long thereafter there was a knock at the door. Behind it were two of the most drunk individuals I'd ever seen in my life.

Ron stumbled in, saw Nathan and said hey, shook his hand, and addressed him as Ned -- his brother. Nathan hated that. But it made me smile. Then he shook my hand, ask me how I was doing. I smiled more broadly.

"Pretty sober," I told him.

And then Claire stumbled in, and, quite literally, into my arms. I cradled her like a delicate, foreign object. I had never seen her like this. She was pretty funny.

Nathan guided them both into the kitchen, were he was a little less wary of them toppling into something and breaking it. (It seems funny to think how weird he was with those two when we were drunk over at his house so many times ourselves in the years that followed).

Ron propped himself up against the counter in the kitchen, where he tried to engage in coherent conversation with Nathan. Once the topic got moved onto the contents of Nathan's father's liquor cabinet, they got pretty involved. Meanwhile, I was trying to talk with Claire as another friend of mine tried to help her maintain balance.

When I saw her moving towards the door, I asked her where she was going. She said she was going outside for another drink, and I followed her. She took out a little bottle of Jack Daniels from the dashboard and took a swig. That made me feel better. I mean, at least they were trying to conceal the alcohol, you know?

I brought her back in the door after that. It was weird, having that feeling of being responsible for her, of watching over her, of caring for her. We walked into the dark living room, and she told me she just wanted to sit on the floor. So I sat down next to her.

Ron came in to the living room. He asked if Claire wanted him to leave her here and pick her up later or take her back now. She mumbled something incoherent. I said I'd find a way to get her home if needed. He said it was okay, he'd swing by in the morning. He good us bid evening and departed.

In the dark of the front room, Nathan suggested we light a candle or something and I think Ned or somebody put on music -- probably the first album of Garbage. That CD always reminded me of her, for some reason.

Claire offered her lighter for the candle, and with it Nathan lit the candle on top of his television set. As he did so, she changed from sitting to laying down on the floor, and I lay down beside her. I put my arm around her and she moved her body very close to mine. Nathan had put the candle inside this jar with different-colored sheets of glass on the sides. As the light from the candle flickered it sent out beautiful patterns of colors out into the dark room.

I just closed my eyes. My mind tuned to my senses, my senses tuned to her. I felt complete again. Her and I, we moved closer. I felt the warmth of her body, the smell of strawberry alcohol and cigarettes on her breath. Lost in the rythm of our breathing. Breathing with her breathing. I was at total peace there. Years later, I'd often say if I could freeze one moment in my life and re-experience it forever it'd be that moment. I was at total peace, without a worry in the world. For a moment, everything was perfect.

We fell asleep in each other's arms that night, two beings wrapped around each other in a room -- in a world -- full of darkness, with colorful patterns dancing around us.

Ron came over to pick us up the next morning. It was a kind gesture and all, and if not for the fact that he hadn’t slept and never stopped drinking I may have been more comfortable with the fact that he was to drive Claire home. Or that he was driving, period.

What would a normal person in this situation do? Probably find some alternate route to getting Claire home. Me? I decided to go driving around with Ron and Claire. I didn't have a ride home, and Claire didn't, so it made sense in an I-haven't-had-my-first-cup-of-coffee-of-the-day kind of way.

So off we went. And Ron drove his convertible in an interesting fashion that day. He had some good points about his driving. For instance, he knew were the steering wheel was, and the pedal to stop and the pedal to go. Very vital to driving. He just occasionally fell into the delusion that he was driving on the roads in England, that's all. Several times he came close to hitting the car in the other lane. I can't count how many times Claire grabbed the steering wheel away from him to keep the car on the right side of the road or to steady the wheel as he grabbed a bottle of booze. I suggested to Ron that he not take me home right away, as I wasn't particularly comfortable with having my parents see him coming down the driveway. Or having the knowledge that someone drunk and suffering from sleep deprivation was driving their son home.

Ron was all cool with that and decided to take us instead to a park not half a block from my house. A park appropriately named Hell Hollow.

There seems to be a gap in my memory, but either prior to drinking the night before or sometime between the time we woke up and decided to go to Hell Hollow, Claire had received some disturbing news from Pennsylvania. Katie's parents were getting a divorce. Apparently Katie's mother was cyber-sexing with somebody, met the guy, and began having an affair with him. They weren't divorced as-of-yet, but they were separated now and living in different houses. The difficult part came with the fact that they jointly owned a business. I knew this wasn't the best news for Claire; it seemed as if every time she even got remotely comfortable again another crisis came around and sent her flying off to some other house in a new town, usually in some other state. I'd known her for not even two full years by that time and she'd moved twice.

It was hitting her pretty hard that morning. I remember looking from the back seat as Ron drove, peering into the rearview mirror on the passenger side, and seeing Claire's face from the passenger seat. I remember seeing her reddened eyes, wet face and blushed features as she took another swig from her bottle of Jack Daniels. It was the look of total turbulence, total torture. My heart went out to her, if only it could kick the rest of me out of my rut -- but I just couldn't seem to properly package and deliver my feelings.

Once at Hell Hollow, Claire stumbled out of the car and walked across a nearby ditch and tripped. She was pissed off about that. She took her empty bottle of Jack Daniels and threw it at a rock in the ditch -- and she missed. She was really pissed about that. So she picked it back up and threw the bottle at the rock again. She hit it. And it didn't break.

And she was really, really pissed this time.

When it didn't break the next time she threw it at the rock and hit it, she was furious. It was so fucking absurd, the futility. But she started laughing, and I started laughing, and Ron started laughing. She just gave up and we started walking down a trail, leaving the evidence that the universe was orchestrating a conspiracy to piss her off far behind her. Both Ron and I acted as her bodyguard and guide along the path, and far away from the likes of that uber-bottle.

We walked, I thought, Ron drank, and Claire smoked. I remember how we made it down the pathway that led to the stairs, but never started walking down them. These stairs went way deep down into the depths of the park; the depths that had earned hell hollow it’s name. Right there, before the steps, there was a wooden railing and a bench. Years later, remembering this memory, I’d return here and watch the sun rise. It really is beautiful there. Why so many horrendously confusing things have happened there over the years is beyond me.

Claire was looking over the wooden railing, looking down into the drop. She looked across the sky, looked down again for a long time. She finally said, half-jokingly, "Anybody else got the urge to jump?"

It may have been total talk, but she was pretty drunk and pretty pissed and neither Ron or I were willing to take any chances. We were, of course, her guides and bodyguards. We exchanged worried glances, our mutual sympathy for her conveyed more appropriately by these looks than we could ever convey in words. We both took Claire and guided her away from the overlook and toward the bench.

Just then it began to drizzle.

She refused to sit on the bench, and fought us, literally, to the ground. There she lay, refusing to get up, and we stood to either side of her, looking down at her. She just wanted to stay there, on the comfort of the gravel and the dirt. I'll never forget that image of her, laying there as the drizzle that had just began turned to a steady downpour. She cried, and then cried harder. Drunk and sad and beautiful as the rain tapped down on her face, washing them of tears. It was like the earth herself wept for the poor girl.

Soakign wet, we eventually got her up and ran back to the car. I had Ron drop her off at my house, where I could take her back to Dante's in my car whenever she wanted to go. My parents were happy to see her, as always -- they adored that girl. And she refused to eat, as always. I got her to drink some coffee, though.

We sat in the chair that was just outside my doorway at the time. We wrote a story together for the Gopher, and I even got her to write a few short articles. Then I pulled up issue 3 off the net and let her read Cumbersome, by Rewired. She looked so excited to see that I’d written a story about her.

It was nice to have her so close to me again. It was like I’d gotten a part of me back that I thought I had lost forever. It was as if just when I thought all hope was lost, her blue ocean eyes, like fate herself, fell right back into my lap again.

She feel asleep on my bed that day, after putting in her choice of a CD, Tool's Aenema album. I just watched her there as she slept, smiling.

And it ended up that she got to stay living in PA with Katie. Her parents were still separating, but they were mature about it, and wanted to keep the business and weren't about to dump Claire out on the streets or ship her off to another relative. And Claire still came down to Dante's on the weekend and I'd pick her up after my job at the convenience store in the Boat.

Her and I, we spent a lot of time over at Nathan’s. Sometimes we'd get together with the rest of the gang would go out to the coffee shop, get wired, walk around Mardon square burning off out coffee nerves and inevitably end up at Nathan's house watching television, listening to music or just bullshitting.

Claire and I slept over there almost every weekend. It became a weekly ritual. She'd fall asleep with me on the couch. It was so warm with ehr atop me, beside me. Sometimes we'd wait until everyone in the house was asleep and we made out. When that got boring, I experienced something wonderful and new.

After having my blow-job virginity broken in Nathan's bathroom, I'll never look at the place the same again. Bet that was high on your list of shit you don't want to know.

Sometimes Claire would wake me up at 3 am and have me wake Nathan up. She’d make him or I drive down to this all-night restaurant about forty-five minutes away. It was basically a truck stop, and it was how the whole 24-7 restaurant thing started for me. I’d order a coffee, Claire would usually get one too. I’d get fries sometimes for her and I. We’d sit in smoking, with her constanbtly apologizing, and me constantly telling me it was her own free will. Shed tell me she wanted to quit for me, but I todl her I didn't want her to quit for me -- that if she quit for anyone she should quit for herself. Like I didn't know she got stoned all the time with Katie. That she got stoend sometimes before I picked her up. My eyes were red because I was an insomniac. Her eyes were red. She was no insomniac.

Nathan, he'd sit there and look like some psychotic Irishmen in a trench coat and beret. Whenever the waitress asked what he wanted, he’d say in a silly voice, without moving his eyes,`toast.’

Some nights I’d wake up beside her and I swore we’d just been through some discussion in our dreams. For some reason when I slept by her it felt as if our energies melded in some way and there was more going on between us than even we were aware of. Strangely, though, that was the limits of the weirdness when she was around. It was as if she warded off all my demons.

Though I felt great with her, I was very confused. I was really a horrible boyfriend, and I knew that. I was still piss-poor at calling her or writing to her. I never bought her flowers or gifts, never really took her out to dinner, save for the 24-7 resteraunt thing when she persisted. I really wasn’t much of a boyfriend at all. Why she held onto me for so long is beyond me.

Sometimes I'd watch her as she slept. The picture of innocence. I tried to crack her open with my mind, figure out what it was about her. I was happy with her but depressed about myself. I was happy with her but felt this sense of impending doom. I knew I wouldn't change for her. But if she really cared about me, why would she want me to change? I wasn't asking her to change. I respected her freedom. This kind of partnership, it wasn't supposed to be about slavery to another or fashioning a mask to hide your true self simply for another person. It was respecting someone and sticking with someone through the thick and thin and back again. Two complete people rolling beside one another on the road of life, not two people trying to complete themselves through one another. I wondered if she wondered about me as much as I wondered about her.

Sometimes I'd wake up. I'd see her sitting beside me, watching me with a curious look in her eye.

After all the chaos with Katie’s parents, it turned out that Claire did have to leave that house after all. I don't remember the reasoning exactly, but her parents appeared out of nowhere and took her off once again. I didn't see her sometimes for weeks. I couldn't call her, even if I’d have the decency to do so, because she was in a new town, sometimes a new state every few weeks. She call me on a pay phone using her phone card.

It took me awhile, but eventually I realized something of vital importance that I had selectively ignored for quite some time: it was my Senior year of high school. How on earth had that crept up on me so fast? In less than a month, I realized, I would be graduating -- that's what I assumed, anyway. After checking with my teachers, however, I found that I was in danger of failing several classes. I asked them for any extra credit work and tried to do what I could to ensure I passed.

Work was still irritating. I'd take the chance in the Gopher editorials to take shots at Evil Yoda and her plot to dominate the world through the medium of her chain of convienent food marts. I was perfectly content hating her. Then my parents said if I did fail high school and I didn’t go to college, that I had to get a full-time job. They suggested that maybe I ask Yoda if I could go full-time at convenient. I think that’s when my terror struck home.

I was stacking beer in the beer cooler one day like every day when it suddenly hit me that I could be doing stupid shit like this for the rest of my life. Working for this decrepit old lady, being her little slave, taking her shit. There was no way I could do this. I couldn’t handle the adult world, I wasn’t ready to be thrust into it. But I couldn’t bear the feeling of having to stay back a year in high school. Everyone I know, gone. Me, seen by them and everyone else as some pathetic looser. I couldn’t take the thought.

What the hell was I going to do? I couldn’t see my life passed the age of twenty three earlier in the year, now I couldn’t see a life for me after high school. I was scared shitless.

So I wanted to go home one night, but like always, I knew she’d see that I did everything she asked and still find me more pointless shit to do just to display her power over me and keep me after hours. So I got my check and went up the register where I got it cashed every pay day. I thought that maybe she wouldn’t say anything. I was thinking maybe when she asked me if I had everything done and I said yes, she’d be pleased and let me go. Instead the predictable thing happened: she snapped at me when she saw the paycheck, asked me where I thought I was going, and told me to get back there and do my work. She was screaming at me in front of a line of three to four customers. I stood there, dumbfoudned. I told her I had it all done. And then, right in front of customers, she was yelling at me to do a billion things she’s never even mentioned before.

I told her no, and told her goodbye, and walked out of the store.

I drove home, where my dad was working on fixing a closet door. The phone rang not ten seconds after I opened the door and my dad, seeing I was pissed, asked me what was wrong. I picked up the phone, and it was her: Yoda. She asked for me, I said I was me, and she told me that the work at her shitty little convenience store was important, and it has to get done, and that I shouldn’t bother coming in tomorrow. And then she hung up. The bitch had to get the last word. I’d walked out, basically quit, and now she has to call to get the last word in and fire me when I’d pretty much resigned.

I hung up the phone and told dad I’d just lost my job. And he looked like the air was taken out of him.

I told Claire. She said I'd find another job, no problem. I shouldn't sweat it. There wwere many other, better-paying jobs out there, and I was bound to find one. Anyway, I would probably pass high school after all and I'd have to go away to college anyway.

Not quite.

To make matters worse, it turned out that I did fail high school. And now I wasn’t going to graduate and I didn’t have a job. Mix in all the weird shit that had been happening sporadically since my senior year, and my life begins to sound like a really bad country song on acid.

I didn’t bother going to graduation, though my mom asked me if I intended to go. And that seemed like a stupid question to me. Why the hell would I want to go? I couldn’t face that. Everyone dressed up in their gowns and stuff getting diplomas and having their names called. Fuck that. I couldn’t face them. All this time I thought this kind of thing wasn’t important to me, that it was just some meaningless kind of ritual, but it wasn’t. It turns out I was fucking devastated. And it was irreversable.

Where had I been for the last four years or so? I couldn’t concentrate on a damned thing. I hardly slept at all, unless Claire was around. And it was becoming horribly obvious that I was insane.

Around that time Claire called me again. She told me her parents had dumped her on another cousin, and that she now lived not half an hour from my house. Her cousin -- Dante's brother's wife -- she had two kids, Claire told me, and she was really cool. She wanted to meet me and invited me over for dinner. They were having beef stroganaff.

I didn't make it.

My parents asked me then what I was intending on doing. Did I want to go back next year? Would I get my GED? Would I take summer school? Was I even planning on going to college? I snapped when they asked that last question: of course I wanted to go to college. And it wasn'ty just that I wanted to. I’d had high school and fucked it up. I’d had a job and fucked it up. My future? I’d done a damned good job of fucking it up. Summer school wasn’t an option , the way I saw it, it was a fucking necessity.

The only way I could take summer school, however, was to take my English, Government and Economics classes in the two-week summer school run by Mentor High school, roughly thirty to forty minutes away. I’d never driven to Mentor before, and I never paid attention when other people drove me. I loved riding in cars, because it let my mind wander; I even liked driving routes I knew well, so long as I was in the car alone, because my mind could wander during that as well. But Mentor? The thought of driving there inspired a deep fear in me. The thought of driving that far, and into unknown territory, absolutely scared the shit out of me. I knew the roads from Nathan’s house to convenient food mart, where I had worked – that was it. Beyond that I was oblivious. A small detour outside my usual, well-worn paths would have sent me frantic. Mentor seemed light-years away; I regarded it as sailors must have regarded venturing too far out into the ocean: there be monsters out there, and if ye venture too far, ye might fall off the edge of the earth.

Dad had drawn me a map, and within that month I was supposed to graduate, June of 1997, I ventured out into the unknown frontier, scared out of my fucking mind.

Fear ensures that every one of your senses, especially your sixth – that’d be your mind – is painfully acute. That I knew well from well-worn paths of experience. Someone once said that fear is a great motivating force – this is also true, as I know from personal experience. It’s especially true, I might add, in the case of people who traditionally survive on three or less hours of sleep. For fear, when you’re an insomniac, helps the mind battle it’s impulse to drag itself inside itself like a black hole when you do, stupid, silly things like blinking or becoming entranced by the slashed lines on paved roads while driving. You dance on the tight rope of consciousness, trying to keep your balance – or, in that case specifically, try to stay awake enough to note that all the stop lights and faded road-markings that indicate tuning lanes.

And to note the differences between green lights that indicate you can go straight but have to yeild to oncoming traffic if you want to turn left and green lit arrow lights that indicate oncoming traffic has to yield to you as you turn. It helps the mind stay acute enough o realize that when traffic in the lane opposing you is going forward and you don’t have that lit green arrow, it’s best to keep note of those lines on the road and it’s in your best interest not to turn left, cross that line, and drive head-first into oncoming traffic.

Unfortunately, I can also say that I learned this from experience one morning on the way to summer school.
 
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It got depressing, reliving all this through thought/writing, so I called it off for a few days... but I was thinking about trying to finish it all day today. Then this evening I came home with a six pack of Smirnoff Ice and found an answer on my machine from none other than Claire... so I'm taking that as a sign. So off I go...
 
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