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Cataplexy
Mom told me about the time she ruined a boy.
 
 Sliding delicately over her tongue,
 The word was like a marble.
 Tossing back and forth
 Between each cheek,
 And the sensuous way that she
 Deciphered what the gut feeling was…
 Began the conversation.
 
 Filthy tools of lionized ideals:
 Bubbling around the surface carelessly.
 It was August and warm and sticky and dull,
 The precise time of year when a tear dared not escape,
 But flew from her in the form of an idea.
 An idea of infatuation,
 So why was it that the world seemed so empty in the sultry heat?
 Exceptions would bloom,
 But she wasn’t watering them.
 Like a victim of cataplexy,
 She wavered delicately over the concept of
 emotions,
 Despite that things were manageable when nothing was conceptualized.
 
 “Nobody is going to listen to a boring story.”
 He made the excuse quickly, raising an accusing eyebrow.
 “It’s always better to exaggerate.”
 
 The beams of sun exploded through the clouds with no shame,
 Making everything a little more exhausting.
 Lazy time plucking precariously,
 And the ball of sweat that was making its way through her cotton shirt,
 All of these things reminded her of last summer,
 And the one before that.
 
 “Fine.”
 She rolled her eyes,
 The green ones that captivated people
 Without meaning to,
 Oops.
 “I’ll start over, and I’ll lie.”
 He meant to protest,
 But couldn’t find the means to interrupt.
 Her eyes widened like
 A secret was about to escape,
 Maybe in a way it was.
 The anticipation was subtle
 But everyone’s throats were dry
 In that wretched guessing and wondering,
 Curiousity that maybe they’d uncover
 The rusty surface and reach the wound,
 The wet truth and the
 Delicious information which would then
 Catapult itself, making summer just that much
 Less dry.
 
 “When she walked into the party it was like the pop song was written for her.
 Really, she had blonde hair down to her back and these huge green eyes,
 Her lips were pink enough that
 All the way from the other side of the room
 He could see em’.”
 Everyone blushed inwardly,
 Secretly, and baited breath expected the rest:
 “Roses began to drip down the walls,
 Maybe it was the wallpaper,
 But to her it seemed as if the room had just gotten so hot
 That they were all melting
 Down to the hardwood floors.”
 And they could all feel that heat, that melting,
 Because now the sun had moved past a persistant but fleeting cloud,
 A puffy white kind,
 And was now triumphently and wretchedly shining directly over them.
 
 “Remember when you hear a song on the radio that you vaguely remember?
 He was like that song.
 Everything began smelling a little sweeter,
 Like when you’re a hungry child during December
 When dinner is almost ready, that smell like you cannot wait.
 So the two of them locked eyes, click,
 Right then the roses began sprouting more and more bulbs, petals,
 And their footsteps in sync:
 The walk together couldn’t have been more delightfully beautiful.”
 
 The stars were literally in everyone’s eyes now, t
 Twinkling and burning with envy, love, excitement, wonder, expectations,
 Words that tried to dress themselves up
 But really all meant the same thing:
 They were distracted.
 
 “They’ve loved each other since.”  She shrugged.
 
 The taste wasn’t quite as lovely when embellished.
 
 She said it was two years later,
 When he had the rose and it was shrugged over her front porch,
 And he told her that he waited
 And held his breath for an entire minute
 Until she opened the door in her pajamas.
 And mum looked at him and said, clearly, plainly, bluntly, bravely:
 
 “There’s no love here.”
Imagine being able to move your way up
 Brick towers
 Secured right on
 Like a snake.
 It was a windy September morning when The Vines
 Floated over the cobblestones
 Into the school doors.
 First was Nicolette, her hair
 Shiny
 Like polished counters in her loft.
 Then was Bridget,
 Tall and thin and walked like a fairy should walk,
 We weren’t sure if she stepped down the halls or simply
 Let the wind take her through.
 And Eve,
 So clever that this one wouldn’t
 Fall for cursed fruit.
 Then me,
 But my eyes retained the beauty
 I should have been seeing around me.
 The classrooms looked the same,
 The people slightly different.
 And we exchanged thoughts of who got
 prettier
 who got
 uglier.
 And then later we’d all stay up late talking about love;
 How stupid it was.
 How everyone would love to think they were immune to it,
 But how it is so easily captivating.
 And how everyone just wants someone.
 And how nobody can ever have someone.
 And things that are fleeting,
 And things that are confusing.
 How those two go hand-in-hand.
 But more importantly, we talked about how
 sometimes
 we walked on the other side of the street
 to see how different the view looked.
You didn’t know the rules of it;
 There was the beginning.
 The thing about love is you never really have it.
 You just have someone,
 But all the time when I had someone
 They’d have me
 but not want me.
 The Vines entangled me and then it was like
 I was wanted
 and there was this wonderful
 chase
 every boy was playing.
 But the thing about a chase
 Is that you can either run forever,
 lose,
 win,
 or stop the race altogether.
 “I wish I could stay.”
 My fingers running through his sandy hair.
 The beach was almost empty; the sky had lost its sun.
 “Then stay.”
 He held my side and brought me closer,
 Letting him kiss my cheek, leaning towards him and
 resting my cheek on his warm
 shoulder.
 I laughed.  “I wish.”
 And he pulled away,
 Looking right into my eyes and saying:
 “Then stay.”
 Once more.
 “My parents want me home.”
 He stared at me, face flattening.  “You hate your parents.”
 Smiling,
 “They don’t care.”
 His hand brushing my smile,
 “There it is.”  Smiling back.  “You haven’t done that in a long time.”
 “Done what?”
 Staring, tilting his head, thinking:
 “Smiled.”
 Brushing my lips against his hand, holding it for a moment more,
 “Maybe later.”
 He raised an eyebrow.  “On a school night?”
 Laughing, I say back:
 “I’m a bad girl when I want to be.”
 
 It was the time of summer when it’s already over
 But it keeps going on.
 When you’re holding on to this little
 Thread
 Strand
 And screaming, “I can’t wait another year”
 Like a lost love
 Or a boat moving towards sea.
 You want it back;
 But patience is the only option.
 S***.
 
 The room illuminated all of a sudden
 And this terrible noise
 Exploded through everything.
 In half a daze I briefly imagined
 Abductions – 
 Like the stories Auntie used to tell the cousins.
 “Watch out,”
 She’d warn,
 big eyes,
 “There are a lot of them here.”
 And so I sucked in my breath,
 expecting something shattering,
 but then once more
 my phone beeped.
 I’ll wait outside the door.
 Then the next:
 Anytime you wanna come outside, babe.
 And believe me,
 For a second I thought about it.
 But that didn’t stop me from slipping on my shoes.
 Tiptoeing,
 Although I wasn’t sure
 If I really didn’t want
 To be caught.
 Sometimes I wished that
 I loved him.
 Even if he didn’t love me back,
 Sometimes I think it would be nice to
 have your heart broken.
 
 He’s holding a sweater in his right hand
 When I come out he
 Smiles.
 “Hey beautiful.”  Wrapping me up in it.
 Whispering in my ear,
 “Think you’d be able to sneak out more often?”
 I took a hand in mine,
 His hand,
 And ever so carefully he moved
 So his arm touched mine.
 The thing was 
 Touching him was normal,
 natural;
 Because it seemed like
 Every time we touched,
 He was expecting it.
 “Guess what.”  We sat on the beach now, feet bare and buried in
 sand;
 “What?”
 And his eyes shimmered,
 “I want you.”
 There’s this moment where I saw him,
 The way he looked at me,
 And this wave overthrew me:
 Because at that moment I wondered why,
 When we’re all so dear to one another
 We never care enough.
 Letting the wariness ooze off of me like a blanket
 Unwrapping
 I stared at him,
 He was beautiful under moonlight,
 And I told a lie:
 “I want you too.”
 
 “Stop.”  I breathed, bringing a hand to his chest and holding it there,
 I could hear him breathing.
 And he leaned towards me, kissing my neck.
 “What is it?”
 And my mouth all of a sudden felt dry, and I stared at him
 And I said,
 “You need to promise me something.”
 He nodded, “Okay.”
 “You-“  I ran my hand down his bare chest, listening to his heart
 It was beating loud enough that
 I could hear it from my head on the sand,
 “You need to go steady with me.”  I bumbled over my words.
 And he grinned, white teeth and pink lips,
 Kissing me gently.
 “I’ll fucking marry you, Portia.”
 His grin disappeared, and he became so much more serious now:
 Kissing me lightly, then harder, kissing me all over, and breathing heavily:
 “You’re beautiful, Portia.”
 Blushing, my face was flushed.  
 My bare chest covered by his and my hair wrapping through seaweed and rocks,
 “And I’ve been in love with you for so long.”  He whispered,
 So close that I could feel his eyelashes
 Against mine.
 “Really?”  I bought it, but I let myself buy it.
 He laughed, running a hand through his blonde hair, nodding.
 “I just want you.”  He shook his head, “I want you so badly.”
 And I smiled at him.
 “Tomorrow you’re driving me to school.”  I told him,
 “And holding my hand.”  I continued,
 “And when you wake up?  You’ll kiss my forehead.”
 His face remained flat, and he nodded,
 “Anything.”  He promised.
 So I held out my pinky finger,
 He broke a smile, linking his with mine.
 “I promise.”
 I nodded, “All right.”
 And he moved closer, resting his body on mine,
 “I love you.”
 I kissed his cheek.
 “Do you love me back?”  He checked.
 And I ran fingers through his hair,
 “Ryan,” I began, raising my eyebrows,
 “Every girl who has ever met you has fallen in love.”
 He bit his lip.
 “I only care about you.”
Imagine the moment
 Right before a thunderclap
 When all is silent,
 completely silent,
 and calm.
 Imagine that rumbling,
 how it begins low,
 And slowly begins crawling through the
 clouds
 and you know it’ll pass,
 But at that moment time freezes
 And you hear everything so, so slowly
 Like an ant it sneaks in and 
 Like a butterfly captivates you and
 Like a hornet scares you
 Then like a minute
 It passes without action.
 And that was sort of what it was like
 When they walked into the school,
 And silence erupted
 So, so loudly.
 There was something sweet in being stared at,
 but then something sinister right behind.
 Nicolette led them, her face stony.
 Something caught in my throat,
 And now she stood before me.
 Eve’s face solemn,
 Bridget’s startled.
 And she positioned herself, 
 Staring down at me
 And began:
 “Portia, what the hell did you do?”
 And my throat was dry,
 And I begun thinking of answers,
 but she answered for me:
 “You b****.”  And the sharp pain of her hand
 Slapping my cheek, 
 shook the locker next to me,
 rattled my bones
 bumbled along my nerves
 and I fell,
 capsized
 A sinking boat,
 to the floor.
 She hovered over me, and her eyes wet with tears she said:
 In this sing-song voice which she always had:
 “You slept with him.”
 And I brought a hand to my mouth,
 My lip was bleeding.
 “You slept with Ryan last night.”  Her words clipped,
 As if by scissors,
 And her eyes sliced into mine like
 knives
 and she stepped backwards,
 Like I reeked of something.
 And in disgust she turned,
 Walked away,
 And Bridget and Eve stared down at me.
 Eve extended an arm.
 And stared
 As I let her help me up.
 And then the entire hall stared at me
 Shocked,
 Excited,
 Glad they weren’t
 me.
 And Bridget stepped towards the onlookers,
 raising an eyebrow,
 hip cocked with a hand placed
 So delicately on it.
 They turned away.
 And Eve kept staring at me,
 finally:
 “What were you thinking?”
 And I tried to answer,
 And then he tapped my shoulder.
 Eve’s face fell.
 Bridget bit her lip.
 Ryan took both my shoulders, “I’m sorry.”
 And I took a step back.
 He tried moving closer, “Portia come on.”
 And I shook my head. 
 “I never liked you.”  I blurted, rubbing at the blood and the tears.
 He put his warm hand on my face,
 shivering down my spine,
 staring at me and what surprised me was
 he looked so hurt.
 “I’m sorry.  We’ll fix this.”
 I shook my head.
 “I never liked you.”
 The words tasted salty on my tongue,
 but also like they didn’t belong.
 Yet they fit perfectly within the creases of my 
 Lips
 That he had kissed.
 And I kept myself from falling into the dreamland,
 But his lips were so close.
 And what compelled me to lean in and kiss him,
 And feel so at ease with his arms on my waist,
 And let my body fall into his, 
 And let his hands grasp mine,
 And begin to smell him,
 Taste him,
 Opening my eyes and staring into his,
 Then feeling the sob in my throat.
 And again, moving backwards
 Breaking the embrace.
 None of it seemed right.
 “It won’t work.”  I told him, voice wavering.
 And I’ll tell you this:
 I’ve never felt so weak.
 So Eve took one arm, brushing my bangs
 Away from my eyes,
 And told me she’d take me home.
 And Ryan kept looking at me but now spoke to her:
 “Is she all right?”  Concerned, so, so worried.
 And Eve looking icily at him.  Opening her mouth like she
 Wanted to say something,
 Closing it like she
 Decided against it.
 “Just leave her alone.”
 At this point
 It was like
 I could fall into anyone’s arms,
 As long as they were around me.
There’s this lovely drama
 that dawdles right behind
 rainfalls.
 All the youth in my town were so disturbed,
 You could tell by the way whenever thunder came
 they’d all be outside.
 What I think is that it is in our nature
 To always imagine in
 happy endings,
 Believe in them like they were
 Ghosts after scary movies,
 Santa Clause on Christmas Eve,
 but now during every sad story about death and 
 lost loves
 I find myself speculating
 all the ways it can end well,
 But there’s something telling me
 Yeah,
 everything seems sweet when left to just your mind.
 Sometimes I wonder what shaped me.
 And every time I begin this,
 It reminds me of the seventh grade.
 Miles Webber was the kind of boy
 who made you feel
 completely
 and entirely
 insignificant.
 There were stories about how
 He scooped girls up like water in palms,
 Then slowly would let them drip away
 Like the gaps between his fingers,
 And he’d watch.
 And it was frightening,
 But mystifying.
 And we were all in complete, utter, entire
 love
 Or love that seventh grade girls could muster.
 I think the splendid thing was that when you heard his name,
 Just heard it,
 All of a sudden these shivers ran down your spine
 tickled you in places
 you couldn’t help notice in the seventh grade,
 and you thought
 and you imagined
 how nice it would be to have a boy like Miles Webber – 
 at your beck and call.
 Or even to give you a smile,
 But this whole time the thing that changed me,
 because there’s always something that changes someone,
 was the fact that I had the idea.
 It was:
 What if I was like Miles Webber.
 what if there were fables and fantasies attached
 to my name
 and what if I was remembered
 like I’m remembering him now?
 And I remember when we went to the high school graduation
 Because Carly’s brother was there,
 And I remember her whispering:
 “How can someone never get attached to another person?”
 and I remember whispering back:
 “I think it’s all because you love someone, you just don’t know it yet.”
 And she shook her head,
 “Miles Webber will never love anyone.”
 But looking into his eyes maybe I should have dreamed,
 or hoped,
 or imagined,
 but right then it was like Miles Webber was a firework,
 right before it erupted.
 Silent, pregnant with baited breath and
 I wanted to cause his sparks.
Eve said to me:
 “You know, you come across as such a sad person.”
 She said it after class one night when we were in the girls’ restrooms
 changing because
 we both had tennis
 and she had these sneakers,
 white ones,
 that always looked new.
 And I looked up at her,
 Bridget and Nicolette weren’t there because
 They went to field hockey,
 and sometimes being alone with Eve
 or anyone clever, for that matter,
 frightened me.
 It was like I thought
 that they were dissecting me.
 In a beautiful way I yearned for someone to figure me out,
 But in an ugly way I shyed from 
 Resolutions
 and Confrontations.
 “Why is that?”  I questioned, looking into the dusty mirror at the frowning girl
 thinking:
 It’s right in front of you.
 Eve pulled back her pretty red hair,
 shrugging carelessly.
 “Just… you give off those vibes.”
 And anger whipped through me like venom.
 “I’m not a sad person.”   Arguing like a toddler,
 I felt stupid.
 But as quickly as the venom was released I collected it all
 back inside my head
 and said – 
 “Do you remember Miles Webber?”
 Silence.
 A girl in the stall coughed.
 Eve stared at me, narrowing her eyes:
 “From five years ago?”
 I nodded.
 “I think so.  Why?”
 And I shrugged, ending it there.
 Like, how does that feel?
 
 Usually I look for ways to
 sum things up.
 How I’m feeling,
 And I’d be able to pin it down
 Like a squirming bug.
 Then maybe I could squash it.
 The thing that will let you down is this:
 I will never
 meet Miles Webber.
 And everyone would say:
 that’s how you ruin a story.
 But I think
 it’s all for the better:
 Because it was people like Miles Webber
 who ruined a life.
 The dark was a place I visited a lot,
 Because it always came with an excuse
 for bumping into something.
 It was hard to explain what happened to me 
 that Saturday
 in December.
 It is hard to describe
 How it felt
 But it starts like:
 I’m completely bare, and my feet have no shoes on them.
 I’m standing on the beach
 and I’m wondering if I’m dreaming,
 Or if I’m actually awake.
 And then when I step into a wave
 and feel the coolness
 I know that it is all real.
 That scared me.
 And it was like all of a sudden my legs began to control me.
 When I was younger Mum used to tell me:
 Don’t ever let yourself go,
 Don’t ever lose yourself.
 And I’d wonder why, but never voice it:
 because she’d follow with:
 “Sometimes, if a lovely young girl loses herself,
 Then she’ll be forced to sit back and watch herself maneuver.
 And not be able to do
 a thing.”
 It will be hard to explain what became on me that Saturday night;
 But imagine a river that is completely and utterly calm,
 And imagine a single bubble rising to the surface.
 Then imagine tens of them,
 hundreds,
 thousands,
 millions so that you can’t even count them anymore.
 It’s bubbling like it’ll erupt
 And the ground is shaking
 And the leaves are shrieking
 Birds whipping their feathers
 The sky turns red
 Fire red
 Screams
 Shouts
 Bubbles
 Rising to the trees like a curtain at the end of a show
 And then:
 Imagine the silence.
 Imagine a calm pool with no bubbles.
 It’s like that,
 But try as I might,
 I couldn’t stop the few more bubbles from protruding the surface.
 That’s what it feels like to have semi-control.
 That’s what happens
 When young lovely girls
 Lose track of themselves.
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Favorite Quote:
Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.~Ferris Beuller<br /> The past is the future with the lights on.~Plus 44