i'm just trying not to lose
POSTED ON Nov 12, 2024 11:09:36 GMT -5
Post by Tawny Vokes on Nov 12, 2024 11:09:36 GMT -5
[nospaces]
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As much as she disliked the fact, Tawny was... on the whole... a predictable and habitual woman. She knew her own tells. Her patterns and proclivities. She could recognize the trajectory in her thinking and behavior... acknowledge the signs in how she juggled her friends and responded (or didn't respond) to them... and she knew — with a resigned sort of weariness — when she was getting "bad". And she could approximate the where and when she would slip from "bad" to "worse". [break][break]
She could always see it coming. Mostly because it tended to look roughly the same each time. It started with smiles that weren't as generous or sincere as before. Days passed on autopilot and muscle memory. Silence where there might have been a wicked laugh. Waning enthusiasm for conversations she'd kept so excitedly stoked. Then eventual avoidance of them entirely. Until she couldn't stand to look at her phone; felt herself drain just a little more every time that it chimed and someone wanted her attention. Or else... wanted to simply check in on her.[break][break]
Because, as predictable as she was to herself, there were a choice couple of others who knew her fairly well, themselves. Could see the patterns, too. [break][break]
Weeks like that, they had a way of ending one of two ways. The first was her holed up and decomposing in her bedroom. Energy non-existent. Head foggy and blank. Body unfeeling, heavy with too little sleep or too much sleep. Unable to move under the weight of her bedroom blankets. Unable to do much of anything but watch the shadows of the day grow and then shrink across her room's ceiling and walls. [break][break]
The second was much louder and desperate. Spiraling in a club. At a house party. In a friend's apartment. An animated feign of energy. Or perhaps the last flare of energy before she fizzled out. Body somehow moving despite the fuzzy, world-graying veil in her head and the hollow disconnect in her chest. Dancing and laughing loud — perhaps a little too loud — as she leaped on jokes and cracked grins wide enough to seem drugged. Those nights almost always ended in someone else's bed — a stranger or a dependable friend who simply didn't mind the use. Knew the cold, impersonal way she had before, during, and after, on those particular nights. Didn't care enough to be concerned about it or about her. [break][break]
Somehow... the second always still led to the first. [break][break]
And Tawny knew, even as she did everything she did, and told herself she needed the distraction and the comfort, that there was no actual comfort in those things. They were crutches. Or familiar, well-worn stepping stones she'd grown so accustomed to leaping from on her journey to the bottom. Predictable and habitual. [break][break]
It was one of those weeks. And she'd clocked it. So she'd prepared. [break][break]
Not by saying 'yes' to plans but, instead, with her art studio. She'd spent the first half of the week tidying up. Making space. She'd covered tables, all her half-finished projects, the floor, and the walls with sheets of plastic. Drug out the largest blank canvases she could find, as well as some work-in-progress paintings that she imagined she'd only feel relieved to "ruin" — the ones that only depressed her when she sat down in front of them, intending to work on them but never quite able to find where to put the colors. [break][break]
Each time she made some progress, she flipped the light off and locked up, then started the short trek home; feeling the moment where she just needed to let loose and make a mess draw a little closer. A little darker and threatening.[break][break]
And when that sleepless night came where she tossed and turned for hours, had turned off her phone, and could feel the "nothing" want to creep into her chest, she'd leaped from bed, shrugged on a cardigan over her pajamas, grabbed her keys and bag, and stepped from her apartment and into the building's hall. Then she'd gone right back in to slip a bottle of wine into her bag. (It wasn't her preferred alcohol but... it'd been gifted for her birthday, so she thought... she might as well get rid of it on a night when she was feeling anything but choosy.) [break][break]
She made the short, chilly walk to her studio, eyes absently tracing long cracks in the sidewalk before her socked-and-slippered feet. [break][break]
As she fit her key in the studio's lock, her hands stilled and her head lifted; gaze sifting slowly sidelong to note the figure sitting at the curb a few paces away. She hadn't noticed them there before, as still as they were and as distracted as she'd been. Instinctively, her fingers tightened around the (still turned off) phone in her palm. She unlocked the bolt, turned the knob, and cracked the door inward. But something about the person's hunched shoulders and posture — she stilled again. [break][break]
Her mouth tucked and she fisted her keys in her hand before turning and ambling the few, short paces that existed between them. "Hey... you alright...?" she asked, folding her arms across her middle and marching a little in place to try and keep warm (wishing for a moment that she'd put on some actual pants). She paused just behind and a little to the side of the seated person, debating briefly if she should step into the street and try and get a peek at their face. That, or pop a similar squat on the curb a respectful distance away from them. [break][break]
After a considering moment, she simply swayed and squinted at their back.
The question that's been on my mind all day[break]
Are we moving toward something? Or just running away?[break]
And if we're just running... are we gonna be okay?
RUNNING AS SLOWLY AS I CAN
I don't know where I'm headed, not a very good escape plan
As much as she disliked the fact, Tawny was... on the whole... a predictable and habitual woman. She knew her own tells. Her patterns and proclivities. She could recognize the trajectory in her thinking and behavior... acknowledge the signs in how she juggled her friends and responded (or didn't respond) to them... and she knew — with a resigned sort of weariness — when she was getting "bad". And she could approximate the where and when she would slip from "bad" to "worse". [break][break]
She could always see it coming. Mostly because it tended to look roughly the same each time. It started with smiles that weren't as generous or sincere as before. Days passed on autopilot and muscle memory. Silence where there might have been a wicked laugh. Waning enthusiasm for conversations she'd kept so excitedly stoked. Then eventual avoidance of them entirely. Until she couldn't stand to look at her phone; felt herself drain just a little more every time that it chimed and someone wanted her attention. Or else... wanted to simply check in on her.[break][break]
Because, as predictable as she was to herself, there were a choice couple of others who knew her fairly well, themselves. Could see the patterns, too. [break][break]
Weeks like that, they had a way of ending one of two ways. The first was her holed up and decomposing in her bedroom. Energy non-existent. Head foggy and blank. Body unfeeling, heavy with too little sleep or too much sleep. Unable to move under the weight of her bedroom blankets. Unable to do much of anything but watch the shadows of the day grow and then shrink across her room's ceiling and walls. [break][break]
The second was much louder and desperate. Spiraling in a club. At a house party. In a friend's apartment. An animated feign of energy. Or perhaps the last flare of energy before she fizzled out. Body somehow moving despite the fuzzy, world-graying veil in her head and the hollow disconnect in her chest. Dancing and laughing loud — perhaps a little too loud — as she leaped on jokes and cracked grins wide enough to seem drugged. Those nights almost always ended in someone else's bed — a stranger or a dependable friend who simply didn't mind the use. Knew the cold, impersonal way she had before, during, and after, on those particular nights. Didn't care enough to be concerned about it or about her. [break][break]
Somehow... the second always still led to the first. [break][break]
And Tawny knew, even as she did everything she did, and told herself she needed the distraction and the comfort, that there was no actual comfort in those things. They were crutches. Or familiar, well-worn stepping stones she'd grown so accustomed to leaping from on her journey to the bottom. Predictable and habitual. [break][break]
It was one of those weeks. And she'd clocked it. So she'd prepared. [break][break]
Not by saying 'yes' to plans but, instead, with her art studio. She'd spent the first half of the week tidying up. Making space. She'd covered tables, all her half-finished projects, the floor, and the walls with sheets of plastic. Drug out the largest blank canvases she could find, as well as some work-in-progress paintings that she imagined she'd only feel relieved to "ruin" — the ones that only depressed her when she sat down in front of them, intending to work on them but never quite able to find where to put the colors. [break][break]
Each time she made some progress, she flipped the light off and locked up, then started the short trek home; feeling the moment where she just needed to let loose and make a mess draw a little closer. A little darker and threatening.[break][break]
And when that sleepless night came where she tossed and turned for hours, had turned off her phone, and could feel the "nothing" want to creep into her chest, she'd leaped from bed, shrugged on a cardigan over her pajamas, grabbed her keys and bag, and stepped from her apartment and into the building's hall. Then she'd gone right back in to slip a bottle of wine into her bag. (It wasn't her preferred alcohol but... it'd been gifted for her birthday, so she thought... she might as well get rid of it on a night when she was feeling anything but choosy.) [break][break]
She made the short, chilly walk to her studio, eyes absently tracing long cracks in the sidewalk before her socked-and-slippered feet. [break][break]
As she fit her key in the studio's lock, her hands stilled and her head lifted; gaze sifting slowly sidelong to note the figure sitting at the curb a few paces away. She hadn't noticed them there before, as still as they were and as distracted as she'd been. Instinctively, her fingers tightened around the (still turned off) phone in her palm. She unlocked the bolt, turned the knob, and cracked the door inward. But something about the person's hunched shoulders and posture — she stilled again. [break][break]
Her mouth tucked and she fisted her keys in her hand before turning and ambling the few, short paces that existed between them. "Hey... you alright...?" she asked, folding her arms across her middle and marching a little in place to try and keep warm (wishing for a moment that she'd put on some actual pants). She paused just behind and a little to the side of the seated person, debating briefly if she should step into the street and try and get a peek at their face. That, or pop a similar squat on the curb a respectful distance away from them. [break][break]
After a considering moment, she simply swayed and squinted at their back.
The question that's been on my mind all day[break]
Are we moving toward something? Or just running away?[break]
And if we're just running... are we gonna be okay?
Tag: Nathaniel Collins [break]
Quick and very, very messy!
Quick and very, very messy!
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