It is cold. Not
the light jacket cold or the raise the thermometer a notch cold. The cold that can’t be inhaled. It shocks your lungs, it gets stuck
inside your nose, and it creates ice on the tips of your eyelashes. Shallow breath. Folded arms. Adjust your hat to fit your ears more snuggly. Inhaling scarf fibers. Clunky boots.
It is quiet.
The snow swallows the sound of the city. All you can hear is the traction of your boots making weak
attempts to grab the snow as you walk as briskly as you are able.
You are starting to sweat from the back and forth movement
of the coat. Step. Step. Step.
Left Right Left Right. The quiet,
the aloneness of your boots is unnerving.
You glance around nervously expecting to see someone. Footprints, tire tracks, small patches
of snow undisturbed, a cloudy night sky bright enough to bring feelings of hope
and peace. Step step step, left
right left right. Hat
adjustment. Check nose for
numbness. Almost there.
Why did I think this was a good idea?? Nervous
glance, quick step. Finally!
Force the gate open against the resistance of the pile of
accumulated snow. Up the steps,
knock on the door not too eager,
not too slow--its cold. Shift,
shift again. Rub gloves
together. Adjust hat. Nose is numb, that’s going to
hurt.
Door opens. He
smiles. “Come in!” I
remind myself not to rush even though my body would like to dive into the warm
oasis. “How was the
walk?”
I hear myself say “Good, pretty.”
“I love the snow…it’s so beautiful.”
I fail to
muster more than a nod. Small talk
portion of the evening...check. He
invites me to sit. I chose the
chair furthest from the one I know he prefers. I like chairs that surround you. I was going to be needing that tonight.
“So, have you thought about it,” he says casually and yet we both know more of my
effort has been spent in trying not to think about it.
“Yeah…yeah I did.”
He waits. I
hate it when he waits. Sometimes I just want to scream “What
do you want from me?!”
“I don’t know, it’s just hard….I don’t know what to
do.” He nods. I hate it when he nods.
“I just don’t know what the point is anymore. What’s the point?”
“What do you think the point is?”
I could just leave.
I could leave his stupid reflective listening and go. My
slightly defrosted nose begins to protest my plan to return to the cold. “The point is that I need to do
better.”
No response..really?
Fine. “I
mean, I do want to do better I just don’t think I can.”
“What makes
you think that you aren’t doing adequately?”
Duh. “How can what I’m doing possibly be
adequate?”
“That wasn’t my question.” What does he want from
me??
“Fine, I know that I can do better, I just need to stop
acting like a dumbass.”
He shifts in his chair, “I am just struggling with how
simple you make it sound.”
Okay, okay I’m intrigued. “What do you mean?”
“Your belief is that you need to do better AND that you
are not doing better because you are making stupid decisions, correct?”
“Yeeaaah….”
He shrugs, leans back into his chair, “I’m just not
convinced.”
“Isn’t the point to be better?!”
“It depends on what better means.”
“Better
means…better! If I was better,
things woudn’t be so hard!”
“Ahhhhh.” What
is ahh?? Ahh???
“Well,
that’s different. You are assuming
that things aren’t hard in and of themselves, that it’s you that is the
problem.”
Skeptical eyes.
“I mean, things can be hard, I just feel like…I don’t know.”
He knows what I know. “You should be better.”
I can’t look.
I can feel my heart beating fast.
I feel ashamed.
I consider bolting right now when he stands up and walks out
of the room.
Sigh. Arms
fold. Shift in seat. Where did he go? Why would he just leave? I hear
footsteps again. Sit up, unfold
arms, refold arms.
He reenters the room, smiling again, food in hand.
“Here,” he hands me
a big bowl of chips and a coke. I
manage a “thanks.” He sits next to
me and takes some chips. I follow
his lead.
After a few chips and a dramatic conversation with myself, I
engage…”so what do you think?”
I wish I could stuff it back into my mouth and break in
into little chip size pieces.
He looks at me, confidently and says “Its just not that
simple. Someday, not today, but
someday I promise that you won’t feel like you have to protect yourself against
me. But, until then…how about
tomorrow?”
Sometimes I think he tries to distract me while I’m trying
to process, “Sure.”
Sure?
A few more chips.
A sip of coke. Scarf,
check. Protesting nose,
check. Adjust hat.
He opens the door, I walk out and through the gate that has
appeared to accumulate more snow, further impeding passage. “Don’t forget, it’s just not that
simple!” He yells to remind me, as I begin
the trek back home. Step step step
left right left right.
1 comment:
There's good tension, a good sense of conflict in this. That's key. Plus, you keep up a bit of mystery by not describing this guy a bunch, just using dialogue and keeping it introspective.
I would suggest changing the opening description of the trek over to first person instead of second person point of view, for consistency and clarity.
Enjoyed reading. :-)
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