Monologue of the Woman Dreamer
by Kara Knickerbocker
I don’t know how to peel back the months
of my life. When those moments I was in became days that drifted into years,
how I stopped recognizing myself in old photographs or where the people beside
me in them went, or how to get them back. (As if I could convince myself it
would be the same.) When six year old innocence became sixteen angst, became
the shell of this twenty six year old woman. I blazed through adolescence with
bleached hair, a hungry heart, a kind of wild ambition I can’t even dream up
now.
Graduation was almost five years ago. The
night before, I stood on that dock ready to jump, ready for cool dark water,
something to shock my body, something to wake me up, just something underneath that
May moonlight to either bathe me or drown me, I wasn’t sure which. It’s a
strange feeling to want to be consumed. To be ready for it. That desire, that
ambition, meant long city nights were ahead, and I fought my way to see them
through. To pay the electric, to keep the light on, to keep burning. I set
myself on fire. I raked through a 9-5 like I was taught. I stopped looking
for answers to the questions I forgot I’m allowed to ask, steadied myself
against the current of the world and from reaching the bottom of the bottles on
my shelf. I buried myself. Had milestones and mistakes on repeat. I bled trying
to figure out just what it meant to be successful. A degree. A job. An
apartment. Check, check, check. I did all of it. And yet…what for? And what
now?
What happens when the supposed keys to
happiness don’t twist and give way at the door in front of you? What if your
wants and your needs and your reality don’t meet at this intersection and you
look over to find nobody but doubt is sitting shotgun? I’m knee deep in my life
and all of a sudden, I’m not sure where I am going or if I like it and who I
am. I’ve stood in shadows and I’ve stood in the light, and I still don’t know
how to love myself in either.
But I’ve loved. I’ve loved men who have
seen all of me and yet never even knew my scars. What does that say about
them? Better still, what does it say about me? I’ve loved the chase, the
thunder of the unknown barreling through me. I loved the hum of a heartbeat,
the strength of fingers interlocked, the safeness of a naked soul. I clung to
the notion I should romanticize busyness. I loved making calendars and planners
fill up until I realized I was emptying myself. Running on coffee and the
belief that I was making you, or at least someone, proud. That I was becoming
something. Starving despite a full stomach, the appetite for my life
lost. Maybe I’m repeating myself. Maybe we’ve all been there.
Women – how fragile and fierce are we?
Too much this, too much that, but not enough. Crooked noses, big feet.
Hair that frizzes in summer heat to swallow anything it touches. Clavicle bones
that are never kissed, shoulders sunken with a weight we shouldn’t have to
carry. The dripping curve of a lower back that forgot how it felt to be
touched. Eyes an ocean of maybes. Stomach too soft, hips hidden from
unwanted gazes (even our own), cellulite sliced into upper thighs as if it was
a hot pepperoni pizza. Lips that beckon to tell secrets and inhale whatever a
sunset is made of. Made of a million particles of “what ifs” and a swelling
storm that rages even when we’re calm, even when we smile. Everything we
are could bring you to your knees. We are composed of sheet metal our fathers
molded from childhood, translucent glass that can never break, diamonds and
teeth from past lovers, wood from the tree in your front yard, dirt
roads and plastic bags, and stitched together with ribbon our mothers
gave us- fragments of raw love, fraying at the ends. With bad posture and
clumsiness and a beautiful brain and a lot of guts. I promise I am 75% fire and
within me there is a real hurricane. I feel too much and I feel nothing at all.
I’m trying to explain to you how that’s possible.
How do you learn to know who you are when
the world is still telling you who to be? Where can you find what you love and
let it kill you? Maybe we’re just the blind leading the blind toward this
whacked-out definition of happiness. Will there ever be a moment you look in
the mirror and you don’t feel even just a little uncomfortable? How do
you make sure friends won’t be just a profile on a Facebook page and family
won’t be strangers you feel obligated to see on holidays? Stop hiding behind
filters and phones. Strip it all down, scream, do something. We’re so far
removed from feeling anything and acknowledging it, revealing it. Too immersed
in media and this illusion that everyone else has it together, and therefore so
should we.
I’m here to tell you I don’t. I’m not
exactly unhappy with my life. I’ve stood in crowds at concerts, feeling
invincible. But when it ends, I wonder when’s the next time I’ll feel a part of
something again. I’ve been told how envious people are of my accomplishments
and experiences, like my life was this incredible dream they wish they could
attain or trade something for. To some, that validation would hold meaning. But
what do you say back, when they don’t realize the half of it? I’ve made
friends in corners of the world, but those connections don’t reach across phone
lines, probably for reasons that all lead back to me. I’ve stood on Machu
Picchu, dined atop the Eiffel Tower, rode a camel in Morocco. I have traveled
to cities where my tongue couldn’t speak the language, felt my skin burn from
the fire of a different sun, and I’ve tried to soak my tired bones in all of it
to find out what it means. Seeking fulfillment. I’ve crossed state lines and
boundaries and crossed off bucket lists. I’m living but when do I start to feel
alive?
And here we are already, another calendar
year, another birthday looming ahead, emotions moving at the speed of light.
How did we get to this place? I wish I could slow it down. These seasons are
melting together so fast, memories always slipping through the tiny cracks in
the palm of my hands as I try so desperately to hold on to them. And yet, I’m
here still secretly hoping the leaves would just hurry up and change
again, still wondering if there’s something more and measuring up just short of
it, still waiting to find the word “yes” just so I can say it out loud,
over and over again, to my reflection without flinching.
* *
* * *
"Monologue of the Woman Dreamer" was first
published on the author's blog, www.fromthissideofthesun.com.
Kara Knickerbocker is a poet and writer from
Pennsylvania and the author of The Shedding Before the Swell (Dancing
Girl Press, 2018) and Next to Everything that is Breakable (Finishing
Line Press, 2017). Her most recent poetry and essays have been
published or are forthcoming in print and online publications including: Cabildo
Quarterly, The Laurel Review, and the anthology Voices
from the Attic Vol XXII. She lives in Pittsburgh where she
works at Carnegie Mellon University, writes with the Madwomen in the Attic at
Carlow University, and co-curates the MadFridays Reading Series.
Go ahead and say it, and pretend you believe it, and pretty soon... Anyway, you've made ME believe it, so there's that. And this: "I stopped looking for answers to the questions I forgot I’m allowed to ask." Brava!
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