Showing posts with label people aren't as nice as i thought they were. Show all posts
Showing posts with label people aren't as nice as i thought they were. Show all posts

Friday, July 15, 2011

well, at least it's not ebola.


I have mono. I know what you're thinking: Gee, Laura! I'm so jealous of your life! Your car got broken into, people have been letting you down left and right, and now you have an illness that's going to make you debilitatingly exhausted and maybe even give you a wicked sore throat! You have the best! life! ever! 

While I will spare you the details of how I think I contracted mono {let's just say it involves the person who I was sort of thinking might be someone I could trust and build something new with, only said person recently betrayed me--"recently" meaning "while I was in San Francisco a couple of weeks ago," and "betrayed" meaning "slept with an engaged woman he barely knew in a hotel room in the city"}, I will tell you that it appears this is par for the course lately.

Let's review.

1. Ross. {Need I say more?}
2. Watched a dog jump off a three-story apartment building while in San Francisco.
3. Returned home from San Francisco to a car that wouldn't start. {Battery? Dead as a doorknob.}
4. Car got broken into and laptop stolen.
5. Got diagnosed with mono.
6. Learned that someone I thought was a man of dignity and integrity was actually a man who met women, went to hotels with them, slept with them, all while knowing that these women were engaged.

I'm having the Best! Life! Ever!

Oh, and I had to scrounge up quarters from various purse pockets and couch cushions in order to put gas in my car this week.

Yeah. I'm lovin' life.

Sympathy emails and words of pity may be sent to: withlovefrompittsburgh@gmail.com.
{image from here}

Friday, July 08, 2011

fuck you, universe.

What I wanted to write about today was my final day in San Francisco.

Except, when I woke up this morning and went to my car to go to work, I found that it had been broken into. So, you know, I'm not really feeling like writing about my trip.

A friend of mine stayed at my place last night, and like an idiot, I didn't have him bring his stuff in from my car. So, a fucking asshole decided to take advantage of that and break into my car and steal my friend's shit.

His "shit" being his laptop.

You know what, Universe? I've really had it.  Fuck. You. And fuck all the shitty people out there who are assholes.

Because I really don't like filing police reports at 8:30 a.m. And I especially don't like you. 

So just Stop. Fucking. With. Me. 

And just let me have a normal quite life that isn't filled with disappointments, betrayal, broken hearts, ex-boyfriends who still make me cry every single day, dogs who fling themselves off roofs, and other bullshit.  You know, like THEFT. And especially when it's all wrapped up in a week.

Just leave me the fuck alone.

Oh, and by the way: that guy who ran the red light by the Mellon Arena this morning and almost crashed into me? Yeah. FUCK THAT TOO.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

the assassin.


you awoke, distant despite being inches away
my right thigh radiating heat
while your left deflected it

there was no good morning
how did you sleep?  

the distance between us only magnified
when the sun was the only thing that greeted me that morning

by twilight, the sky dimmed and so did our story
our story that we thought had been inscribed on just a few pages
our story that had a twist and turn of events 
that continued to be the pen on page, writing more

but even the city lights shining and glowing and radiating out to us
while we stood atop that mountain
couldn't make the darkness go away
from the crater of black i knew we were carrying

that night, the table lamp next to the bed shone on the truth
whether i wanted to see it or not.
and so i turned it off, literal darkness now meeting the figurative. 

are you uncomfortable with me here? you asked
no i lied and held back the tears that were starting to heave from my chest
thank god you couldn't see me or you would have called my bluff


by morning, before alarms and stirrings and yawns and stretches,
you were ready to go
bags packed and waiting by the door
shoes on
teeth brushed

words hadn't been spoken since the lie i told in the dark
and still no words came
but i pulled you to me, and you responded, and i felt you squeeze
but i know better now what that actually meant 

do you really want to be an assassin? i'd asked the night before
yes, you said, without hesitation. it has the best working conditions.

and that's when the gulf grew so wide that i was certain i'd drown,
if i haven't already


i never really knew you
and even though there was no payment
no retribution
no formal request

you killed me anyway.

again.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

the two of us.




you.

I remember feeling uncomfortable when you told me you were going on that mission trip to Mexico. The Catholic in me couldn’t stop thinking about all the ways in my life that I’d been made to feel like my faith wasn’t real or valid by so-called Christians, many of whom went on mission trips, storming into deprived villages and telling the inhabitants that they’d give them clean water if those inhabitants promised to love Jesus.  A huge part of me wanted to beg you not to go, because something just didn’t feel right about it. The poor planning, the lack of proper pre-trip training, the stories I’d heard about what had happened on trips years before: marriages ending, personalities changing, etc. Four years you and I built together, despite our theological differences. Four years of the deepest love and trust I’d ever known here on Earth.

I was uncomfortable, but I supported you. I raised money for you. I prayed for you. I helped you pack. I gave you my pocket rosary to take with you and taught you the Hail Mary prayer in the car on the way to the airport. Because you asked me to. Because you were interested. Because you loved me.

{You rolled the blue crystal beads between your fingers, the only physical connection to me you would have for the next ten days.}


Ten days later, when you returned, my worst fear came true. You called to say you’d landed state-side, but you didn’t say you’d missed me.  You didn’t say you couldn’t wait to see me.  You didn’t say “I love you” before we hung up. When you finally made it back to Pittsburgh, you didn’t even call me.

You text messaged me.  You text messaged me.

I was so confused. Four years together, you and I.  A commitment.  Love.  Suddenly, vanished. You said you couldn’t see me because you said you had to “pray and process with your brothers and sisters.”  I cried.  You were stoic.  Distant.  Not the loving, tender man I taken to the airport ten days prior.  I finally begged you to let me come over and see you.  And when I arrived at your apartment, you gave me a patronizing hug. Your first words to me were, “Better now?” And I continued to cry.

We sat on the edge of your bed and you said that you didn’t want to have to say this to me, but you had to: You were going to be a missionary. God had spoken to you in those few days in Mexico. And you couldn’t have me back here clinging to you when I should be clinging to God.

You said we never should have been together.

I ran into the living room, sobbing, searching for my keys, desperate to get out of the nightmare I’d just walked into.

And then you insulted my Catholic faith, going on and on about idol worship and Mary worship.
And you said you’d compromised the past four years of your life with me.
And you said you’d been so patient with me to come to Jesus in the way you had, but that you didn’t know how much more patient you could be.
And you said you’d lost the rosary I’d given to you.

You, on one end of the living room, those horrible words dripping off your tongue as thick as liquid daggers.  Me, on the other end, sobbing, confused, betrayed.  In that moment, you claimed God had spoken to you. But to me, He was nowhere to be found.  Least of all in your words.

I ran from your apartment, destroyed.  I don’t even remember how I got home. I only remember my neighbor carrying me into my apartment and me collapsing on the floor.

I died that day.


You.

Every day for six weeks, except on Saturdays when there were weddings, I came to You after work and after Mass. I knelt before You, my knees on the cold, white marble, the Communion rail only a formality of separation between us.  {Because You and I both know there really is no separation.} A mere ten feet away, surrounded by the warm glow of candles carrying prayers to Heaven, was The Blessed Sacrament, Your eternal gift of Yourself to me. My knees ached on that marble, but their pain was nothing compared to the earthquake that had taken place in my heart.

I came to You because I needed You, and I knew that You wanted me so desperately to come to You. To fall on my knees, to weep at Your feet, to cry out to You so that You could wrap Your arms around me and around my heart and mend it all to complete healing.  I needed to believe that You would not cause this kind of pain. That his actions, in Your name, were not at all in Your name. “This isn’t You,” I said. Those were the words I prayed to You over and over every single day for six weeks. Only they weren’t quiet words.  Instead, they came as heaving sobs, crumbling me from my knees down to a curled up ball in front of the Blessed Sacrament. Day after day, this was my time with You.

{I’ll never forget the woman kneeling in the first pew that Wednesday afternoon who so kindly knelt down next to me, put her arms around me while I shook from my sobbing, and said, “You’re in the right place, honey. You’re in the right place.” You had placed an angel there for me.}

 
You let my weeping echo off the walls of our Cathedral--my second home--to remind me of the greatness, the enormity of Your love.  You never left me.  You comforted me as I knelt before You on the cold, white marble, reminding me that all things that come from You come as love. You were there. I felt You. And I knew that Your loving kindness was not responsible for the unkindness he had shown to me when he returned. 

You brought me back to life.

You.
Never.
Left.
Me. 

And I will never want to leave You.

{NOTE: It took a tremendous amount of courage to write this post, but they always say that if you're sweaty and sick to your stomach before you hit publish, that's all the more reason to hit publish. This part of my life occurred over a year and a half ago, but the pain of that memory still sits in my heart. And I still miss him.}

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

vapor.


When I was staring at the ceiling this morning at 5:03 a.m., I wanted to scream. But I was too tired. And the sleepies in my eyes were heavy, just like my eyelids. So, instead, I screamed last night, as I leaned against my desk. I cried and sobbed and cursed and clenched my fists.  Do you know that I questioned my worth last night? Because of your words? Because of your impersonal words typed up on a piece of letterhead paper, heavy with ink that was more dagger than liquid?

I questioned. my. worth.

Your initial silence was hard enough to bear. Waiting for some acknowledgment that I existed.  And yet, it never came.  I have given myself to you for 14 years. In more ways than one. I have been dedicated and steadfast and honorable. And yet, you treated me like nothing. Like the emptiness of emptiness.

Well I am not empty. I am full of so many good things. Things you will never get to see or feel or hear or learn from. That's right. Learn from. I could have taught you so much. In fact, that day we met, I did teach you something--something you didn't expect to learn. I solved a problem for you. Before we even had a commitment to each other. I solved a problem for you, because I care. Because I am honorable and good and am thinking of someone other than myself.

But you are not.

Your words. On that letterhead. The ink. Heavy like daggers.

Do you know that I burned your words? I skimmed them, they punctured me, and then I burned them. I took the match, struck it against the box, put the fire to your words and watched them burn into nothingness. Because that's what they're worth. Nothing.

But I am worth something.

{If I could escape through that window above, I would.}