-FAKE IT TILL
YOU MAKE IT
Fear Can Have A Voice
At least that’s what you tell
yourself, going blind to the hatchet in your heart, blood trickling down your
ribs aphid-slow.
“I hate you,” is Fear’s twin or Fear
not being done for the night. Often Fear’s
remarkable endurance supersedes Fear itself in the catalog of what terrifies
you most.
Other people have frightened you
before, other words have been jagged spires launched from a slingshot at your
eyes and mouth, but you are not so young anymore. You have grown your own set of tree rings.
This Fear has a different energy,
though. An urgency. It’s greedy but also inconsistent and
confusing, like a Rorschach inkblot where no clear image emerges, and so you’re
left waiting for more code to appear, to decipher.
But it’s when Fear’s words fold up
their tent and go mute black that you start thinking-- it might be true this
time. He might really mean it. You revisit the tenor of Fuck you and Leave me and
Hate you. The words swell in size, becoming gigantic
and menacing. And sure his voice could
walk it back in the morning, his marionette could even apologize, but you’ll
still remember how his words were fists, barbed knuckle words, and so what’s
left in the night’s ensuing silence is a macabre game of Scattergories being
played out over the piping red coils in your brain.
You try telling yourself you still
have choices but you know that notion is no more than a hemorrhagic stroke
waiting to happen. You are a nurse. You know these things. You’re not stupid like Fear says.
Still, choice only retains power
when its employed, which is why after a civil breakfast where the prior night’s
verbal assaults is given no mention, and after his hot coffee-lips brush your
forehead before he mumbles, “Goodbye,” you become a busy fish, breaking through
the undertow and currents, tossing off tangles of seaweed, avoiding the sharks
that might eat you. You even start to
hum as you swim and bundle. You find a
new smile and loan it to your child. When
you ask him if he thinks you look like a fish, the boy giggles and says, “No,
Mommy, I think you’re pretty.”
You decide to believe him. You decide to be pretty for once.
When the bags are all loaded in the car,
you give your son a long hug, then take his hand, noticing how warm it is, how
small.
You flash another smile and this time it’s
not concocted. You tousle your boy’s hair
and say, “It’s time to go.”
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