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me with fan
Saturday, I rushed around a very busy All Fired Up. I felt crappy, and tired, and despite the beautiful weather, I wanted to just go home. After taking my manager back to her house (she'd bought two rugs and needed a lift so she wouldn't have to carry them on the bus), I drove back to Schuylkill House.

I unlocked the door and stepped inside. The house was quiet and dark. The walls were bare, there were patches on the walls where we'd filled in the holes with spackle. Boxes were strewn against the wall like a decaying palace. Things were missing.

Jon and Kelli moved out on Saturday. Jon's family drove down to help them move, and when I'd left that morning, they'd shown up and started moving things.

Andy had already moved out. Drew was gone, presumably at work. Amanda was gone. Jon and Kelli and the family nowhere to be found. I texted/called a few people to figure out where they were, and there were no answers or responses. I put my things down in my room and continued to wander.

There were spaces in the kitchen. The basement was stark and naked. I kicked off my shoes and stood in the hallway. It was so quiet.

The cats were gone. They'd been moved into the new apartment.

It was so quiet.

I went into my room and sat down on my bed.

I began to cry.

At first it was just that rush of tingling and pressure behind my nose; then the tears. But this was... I was bawling. I cried harder and stood up, walking through the dark, cool hallways, running my hands on the naked walls. And then I'd slide down the wall and onto the floor and cry, and I walked it like a ghost. They were tears of grief, and fear, and sudden absence, and sorrow, and I stood in the living room and thought of my roommates and I sitting around, Colbert Report on TV and laptops on our knees and laughing and talking and stories and capers and epic adventures and I thought of being in California, far away, and the distance multiplied exponentially in my mind, and suddenly I was moving to Saturn and I was doing it tomorrow, and by the time I had enough common sense to pick up the phone and call someone, I had moved into full fledged messy, hiccupy sobbing, and I was so upset that Anne thought that someone had died.

"S-Sarah," I sobbed, "The house is so qu-quiet. I'm... s-so afraid. I'm afraid th-that I'm going to f-fail in California and I wasn't ready for this change, and Jon and Kelli are g-gone and the cats are g-gone and I don't know where anyone else i-is and the house is so qu-quiet and I'm so stupid, I make the st-stupidest decisions," and here I broke into fresh tears and make gross wibbling noises. "I'm such a c-coward, I pretend that I can just up and leave when I c-can't, I can't leave these people, I wasn't r-ready for them to g-go, it's happening so fast..."

"Carmen..."

"I'm s-scared, Sarah. Ch-christ, I'm scared."

"Have you eaten, sweetheart? You should eat something."

"I c-can't eat, there are empty spaces in the k-kitchen, I c-can't even stand in the kitchen!"

Sarah talked to me for an hour. She murmured things that I wanted to believe, how I was brave and I wouldn't fail and everything was going to be okay and that no, I wasn't a big baby.

"You just care deeply about the people in your life. That's why you're so upset. It says a lot about you."

After we hung up, new tears came. I waited by the window like Simon used to do. Every time a car slowed down for the speed bump in front of the house, my heart raced. Surely they weren't done moving. Surely they were coming back.

Amanda strolled in from her walk two and a half hours after I'd come home. The house was dark, and I hadn't eaten, and while the tears had mostly stopped, my face was one big, puffy "I've just spent hours weeping by myself" billboard.

They came back. They came back for more things, and I practically launched myself at them, hugging and trying to seem calmer than I had in the past several hours.

Sunday morning, while glazing pottery in the solitude of AFU's back room, I thought about a lot of things. I thought about how the night before, I'd both felt deep and painful loss from just the temporary absence of two people who mean the world to me. I thought about how I'd told someone else "goodbye forever!" and wished that I meant it. I cried again, but quieter. I had to make sure my tears avoided the glaze bucket, or else it would have ruined the chemical integrity of the glaze.

Sometimes, I wish I were braver.

Comments

[info]tamnonlinear wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 04:12 am (UTC)
*HUG*

It's not the worst thing to have part of your life matter so much that it hurts to leave it.

For a lot of life, desire has to run ahead of ability, in order to guide ability in a direction to grow. Just sometimes that means it goes around the bend ahead of you, and you lose sight of it a little. It doesn't mean it's a bad choice, and it will still be waiting for you, lighting a path, when you get past the next little bit.

But I'm deeply overtired, because I'm talking in weird analogies, so I must go to bed now.

Be good to yourself.
[info]crazykawaii wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 04:35 am (UTC)
I said it before and I'll say it again... you are already very, very brave. You take risks and chances and usually you profit off of them and when you don't, you learn from it. You have amazing adventures that DO require you to posses great bravery. Including moving to Cali.

I love you and I have great faith in you.

*hugs*
[info]marnanel wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 04:41 am (UTC)
I hate that "Jesus Christ, I'm the last human left on earth and I'm going to die alone here" feeling. I'm so sorry you had to go through that. :/

(You know if you ever need it you have my cellphone number. There are not many people who have it.)

Edited at 2008-04-22 04:42 am (UTC)
[info]nedlum wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 04:43 am (UTC)
"Sometimes, I wish I were braver."

Don't.

You're about to make a *huge* change in your life. And of course you'll be able to get through it, because you are strong enough. But the kind of bravery you're asking for? The kind that keeps you from worrying about what's to come, the kind that tells you not to look back, not to think about the cost? That isn't Carmen. That isn't human.

And you're so very human. Don't lose that.

*hug*
[info]marnanel wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 04:45 am (UTC)
"For I do not know the meaning of the word 'fear'!"

"Yeah, they warned me you were stupid."
[info]mathnerd wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 05:09 am (UTC)
Funny to see this post. I've been bawling my eyes out with fear over change and moving to LA for grad school end August. All I can say to you is what my godfather Dave told me when I was frustrated with my knack for crying to deal with things.

"Tears are a gift of the Spirit. Cultivate them like any gift and do not reject them just because others do not have that same gift."

*hugs*
[info]mlfoley wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 05:21 am (UTC)
Hon, I suspect the only way TO be braver is to be "I don't care about any of it, fuck my life right now." It's not a fun way to live. You are simply acting naturally in response to having a home and people you love.
[info]kisekileia wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 08:16 am (UTC)
Oh, hon. I wondered if something like this would hit you--it honestly seemed a little strange to me that you WEREN'T freaking out about leaving a place where you've experienced as much fun and joy and companionship as Schuylkill House. And I have to admit, much of the reason I am reluctant to ever make a move like you made is that I'm afraid I'll lose all the wonderful people currently in my life and end up alone, so I can certainly understand your fear.

But look at how you made friends at All Fired Up and at Pleasure Place. You were only in each of those places for a few months, but in that little time you made friends you can confide in. And look how many LJ friends you've attracted. People like you! You won't end up alone. You won't fail.

*hugs*

Edited at 2008-04-22 08:17 am (UTC)
[info]nikki_z wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 08:28 am (UTC)
change IS scary. still going for it makes us grow..
and admitting fear is VERY brave, you know that.
[info]flutterbychild wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 10:49 am (UTC)
You are very brave for moving across the country... That is a big change, and change is scary! Those changes are what make us grow.

India.Arie sings, "The only thing constant in the world is change. That's why today I take life as it comes..."
[info]goosechecka wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 11:24 am (UTC)
"Being brave isn't about not being afraid... it's about being afraid and still moving forward." - The Animorphs

(Anonymous) wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 02:46 pm (UTC)
To my honey baby with love, your Mommy
I can remember leaving home when I was 18. At fist it was a big adventure but all of a sudden it hit me that I was going far away from my family and all that I knew and was comfortable with. I felt like I was in shock and all I could do was cry, it was a good thing that I wasn't driving because I cried almost all the way to Florida. This was the same reaction that I had when I realized that my life depended on me and me alone. It is scary! Everyone has these same moments and reactions in their lives.

This is life, emotions, feeling, seeing, loving, experimenting, teaching, and learning. Stepping outside of our comfort zone is the only way to experience life to it's fullest. I know that you are a brave girl even though you wear your heart on your sleeve. I will truely miss your smile, perky sass and enthusiasm but this is how I tried to raise you to go out and tackle life. You are an intelligent, strong indiviual and the world will have a hard time containing you. Remember that life is an adventure and anything can happen but because it is part of the adventure it is still OK. I am sure that your grandparents have had many of these same moments traveling to foreign countries for a better life. Think about your tapastry and what is inside of you and then let that shine to the world. You are only going to California, not accross the world and they have airplanes now. You have and can accomplish much in your life, your dad and I have no doubt.

Love, Mommy
PS. Your Daddy will be also going through a Carmen withdrawl so you better be in communication often so he will stay calm.
[info]schmarty_hosen wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 07:22 pm (UTC)
Brave is not the absence of fear, it's recognizing your fear and then doing what you need to anyway.
[info]madwriter wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 11:00 pm (UTC)
For what it's worth, that's how I felt when I was leaving Northern Virginia, seeing as how most of my friends live up that way. (And I was only moving 250 miles!)
[info]ethernight wrote:
Apr. 23rd, 2008 12:03 am (UTC)
I have known a few people who have such fluid lives that they can pick up and move across country without batting an eye. I have known far more for whom it is HARD. I have even known a number of people who I consider quite brave, who found picking up their lives quite an emotional challenge.

Unless you are one of those terribly rare few who, for whatever reason, have little attachment to their environment, it's difficult. Being brave ahead of time doesn't really make it any less hard -- just shifts it from being hard-ahead-of-time to being suddenly-surprisingly-hard-at-the-time. I'm not sure which is a better deal, honestly.


Your relationship with your roommates sounds lovely. You are lucky to have had something so beautiful in your life.
[info]kattas wrote:
May. 13th, 2008 01:34 am (UTC)
Lots have said it before me, but bravery is not about being able to shrug off and ignore your fear, it's just being afraid and doing whatever it is you're afraid of anyways.

I'm never afraid, but I'm not brave either. Just lacking in foresight and awareness, the two qualities necessary to know that one ought to be afraid.

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