I looked up at him looking down at me. For a second he was familiar, and I remembered when he used to smile up there. A slimmer, younger face. Happier eyes. All the feelings he kept inside all day rushing forward as he leaned down to kiss me full on the lips. Soft. Personal.
Not like that moment when our eyes met, briefly, before he buried his face in my collar bone. Hiding from the face he no longer longed for. Perched atop the body that would do.
Afterwards we slept as far apart as the king-size bed allowed, and he tossed and turned, snored and spoke like he knew he had a captive audience in the visitor's space. I closed my eyes and pretended he remembered I was there.
About Me
- T. Bruce
- I am not the person I was five years ago. I hope I will not be this person five years from now. For that I am continually thankful!
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
The Ordinary Hero
I didn't love you, though. Not even infatuation, really. You existed in my imagination; your presence was a coincidental manifestation of all the things I missed in them. A gorgeous manifestation...but a reflection of my hurt feelings nonetheless. And I elevated you to the level of "different" while I stayed at "ordinary" in awe of my own thoughts. You were just as I imagined you..."different."
I recently realized that it's people thinking they're different that makes them exactly the same as everyone else. Desperate for identity. Wanting to be separately connected. Looking for a place of social solace on Facebook or trying to enlighten the masses on Twitter. "Different"... isn't.
We all do the same things; the difference lies in our personalities. It's how we interpret our actions. How we redeem ourselves from our mistakes. Good and bad, right and wrong, and all the other bookends we like to claim really only exist in the murky waters between our ears and the cavity between our shoulders that connects our vertical halves. I guess I really liked the way you rationalized your life. How you made sense of your pitfalls...and forged ahead in life with your sense of duty. In my ordinariness, however, I forgot that pattern of thinking is employed by the masses.
It's my fault you began to think so highly of yourself. I saw you as something as bigger than me, and I didn't notice it until you showed me you thought you were bigger than me. Bigger than my run-of-the-mill complexion and body type. Greater than my sense of fashion. Deeper than my thoughts. More descriptive than my words. Well...you are...you are..."different." And you made me see I'm not.
But here's the kicker. My pride lies in my ordinary behavior. I think. I write. I live. I love deeply. I appreciate the beauty in the faults of the commoners. I'm flawed in the best way because I recognize it. I'm selfish. Opinionated. Quick-tempered, at times. I'm competitive. Talkative. Moody. I've seen the height of my anger and the depth of my sadness. My baggage isn't Dooney & Bourke. The path I travel isn't always tread in Nikes. I'm a mess in a manageable pile. But I'm enough to understand that I don't and never will have all the answers. Nothing special...except I'm me. And that's what I've been waiting for others to notice. I'm not different, as I once thought I wanted to be. I'm ordinary people. Just me.
Leave me lost; don't save me. Let me write my own epic. File me among the ranks of nobodies who came before me, for even they had epiphanies. That's a luxury the special...the different...will never be afforded. They are far too occupied with their "special-ness."
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