Wednesday, April 13, 2011

hurt

Found myself spending snips and chunks of today considering moments where I've felt extreme emotional pain. Don't worry (that's to you wife, who is the first and probably only person to read this), I'm not currently hurt. Only, I woke up this morning with a vague precursor of what it might feel like in the future, and it made me think of the past. If I had to narrow it down to the most excruciating, there would be six moments I'd put on my list of god-awful emotion, and mixed in with those are moments I'd pile in the same section of a fabric store, the kinds with similar threads even if they aren't the intense shades you immediately return to when perusing shelves of memory [a well meaning, pretentious person taught me that "peruse" is commonly mistaken to mean skim when it actually means to deeply delve. Since then, I debate how to use it, because if language is to communicate and that's how people interpret it, why not use it in the way people will take it? In this case, you can take it whichever way].

As a friend and a med student and other-relations-to-others, I've been privy to other people experiencing pain, just as most of us have. I could describe the expressions of those things, but when it comes down to the inside, we can only draw from ourselves. So from myself I draw the periods of time, short and long, where I was in sharp conscious unwavering pain. There was that time I ate nothing but cereal for weeks, and watched a lot of movies with sensory overload in the hopes of crushing inner workings to no avail. This was the most drawn-out, recurring pain. There was that other time I didn't eat anything for several days, didn't sleep either. I thought it'd be drawn-out and recurring too, but it wasn't, but it was damn intense in its compactness. There was that time I sobbed in a stranger's kitchen, for someone I knew and didn't really know, and then spent days in beautiful new places and felt tangibly less touched by the beauty, the pain coloring all else. This one comes suddenly into focus at moments that make sense and ones that don't, and fades. Then when I sobbed against my car in a cold snowless winter, for someone I kind of knew but didn't really know. This doesn't come back too often. Then when I felt shelter crumbling while wearing kid pajamas, when I sat holding the hand for someone older and in more pain than me. Then when I was the wielder of such pain, different than other cases because the person who bore it didn't choose it; this happened in a place away from home, and I came home and put the wrong on bare display for two people who love me and it hurt like all hell. All of these come back in the form of sadness more than pain, and in some ways you can't say that you'll never forget; there's always forgotten. Strangely it's not so bad to remember what parts of it I do.

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