Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Players' Identities

In Removal Order:

Week Removed/Ranking (if applicable)/Alias/Real Name/Blog Address(es)

1/Arty Ant/Tim Kamermayer/Journey for Something More
1/Rowdy Racoon/Kristen/none
1/Mysterious Monkey/Ian Samuel/Burning Light of Reason
2/Daring Dragonfly/Alan Tauber/Xanga & Storm of Thoughts
2/Giddy Giraffee/Kiyomi Bolick/Xanga
2/Daunting Dolphin/Caity Ross/Livejournal & Square Pancake
2/Benign Butterfly/Anna Grey/none
2/Sassy Snake/Kyle Cheesewright/none
2/Original Owl/Mel Gibbard/From the Inside
2/Brainy Badger/Undisclosed
2/Earnest Elephant/Vivienne Creamer/Xanga & Musings
3/6/Wordy Woodpecker/Abram Rose/none
3/5/Ferocious Fox/Undisclosed
3/4/Precious Panda/Thomas McCloskey/Xanga
3/3/Creative Cardinal/Jenny McBride/Basil the Killer Sheep & Ivory Angel & Livejournal
3/2/Tenancious Tiger/Matt Harms/none
3/1/Flippant Flamingo/Andrea Parish/Live Journal & If Walls Could Cook

Monday, July 25, 2005

Final Results

The rankings of the top six players:

6) Wordy Woodpecker*
5) Ferocious Fox*
4) Precious Panda
3) Creative Cardinal*
2) Tenancious Tiger

And the winner after three weeks of stiff competition, Flippant Flamingo!

All players denoted with a * recieved signficant penalties for missing a prompt.

Note all ex-players: Contact me within three days (Wed at noon) via email with your blog address if you'd like it included (I know some of yours) when I reveal the identies of the players or if you'd like to remain annonymous.

Saturday, July 23, 2005

Flippant Flamingo # 9

The air is thick with sex
Heat, sweat, light and music pulsing
Filling every nook and cranny. The room
Dancing frantically, bodies adorned with wings
Feel the subtle, heightened effects of the drug

Known as Buddah's embrace, an illegal drug
That enhances emotions, sensations, and sex.
Ecstasy give each dancer's mind wings
That beat with each beat pulsing
Sound waves that molds the cherry smoke.
In this huge, dark, hot room

No one person is given enough room
To naturally move, claustrophobia unfelt by the drug
Affected mass. Almond smoke
Hovers on the ceiling like an angel of sex
That shoots arrows, spilling the pulsing
White blood out of the dancers wings.

Angels of black circle their dark wings
Around each painted raver in the room,
Their barely perceptable heartbeats adding to the pulsing
Rythem that the small, chalky, white drug
Has encouraged.
Out of their minds with heat and sex
Dancers forget their cravings for methonal smoke;

Although the ritual nicotine smoke
Will give them temperoary wings
To survive the day with no thought of sex
And of that undecorated, rented room
In which they created a new type of drug,
One that gives their hearts a new pulsing

And pounding.
They lie pulsing,
Surrounded by their clouds of salty smoke
Creating the only sensation free of the drug.
They will relearn to fly with out those wings
Created by the enviornment of the room
That was full of musk and sex.

The wearing of wings takes a delicate drug,
A mind insane with sex and rabid with pulsing
In a room full of smoke and ecstasy.

Tenacious Tiger #9

I grew up in a musical family. My Aunt was my music tutor from the time that I was in second grade, so I grew up using songs as a way to pack things away into the duffle bag of my memory. Some people take pictures to remember different phases of their life, but I've always used music. To this day, all it takes is a few notes of a certain song to make feelings and ideas flood to the forefront of my brain, making me remember the exact slice of time as if I was there living it again.

I Do It For You -- Bryan Adams:
Look into my heart, you will find
There's nothin' there to hide
Take my as I am, take my life
I would give it all, I would sacrifice


I was wearing a charcoal grey suit, unfitted, that was purchased in a hurry. The putrid scent of dozens of different flowers was overwhelming as you sat in the pews. Maybe it was the perfume of all the women there, as well. I kept my head down and listened to a pastor speak about the accomplishments of my father, and how he now will look after my sister and I from above. The clip-on tie I was wearing was pushing against the already gigantic lump in my throat. Before they played the song, some people spoke about how they remembered my father and what he meant to them. But I just sat there, wondering what I would do next in life, sizing up the legacy I had to live up to.

Sidewinder -- Lee Morgan

A simple piano lick opens with a nice kicked-back drum beat. It's calm and relaxing, just the two little sounds toying with one another. The rest of the band just sits back and waits while Kyle and D-Rock do their thing. Then WHAM, the crowd gets a nice wake-up call in an instant as 15 trombones, saxes, and trumpets drop the fattest, rowdiest, loudest note they can. (The goal of that note, as the band members would explain, was to create such a shocking and startling sound that it would make all the babies in the crowd cry.) Then, back to business as usual, a driving beat replaces the old one as David and I trade fours with one another. I'd make a statement, he'd try to top it, then I'd show him who's boss, all using my sax and his trumpet. We toyed with one another for a minute or two, then the rest of the band joined in until David and I reached our featured solos. But as the song winded its way to the end, I realized that I would when it was done, I would never pick up my sax again. Ten years of practicing, playing, and sweating came to a grand censura of a finale. I ended my playing career with the best performance I had ever managed to put together, and I was pleased to walk away on top of the world.

These are but a few examples of how songs open my memory banks. Maybe it was my musical upbringing, or maybe I'm just a freak, but for me, music makes anything possible. It lets me speak to my father, it lets me communicate with friends from the past. It just lets me be me.

Friday, July 22, 2005

Creative Cardinal #9

When I first saw him, tiny pale fist curled in on himself, his pink lips quivered. Tired, he would cry. I put my hand (not so big yet) on his head. It was like touching down feathers. My fingers felt so warm. I was only two and so I didn't really understand what this creature was, this rumpled ball of flesh and fat that sobbed constantly and drooled over everything, but I loved him anyway. I patted his head and whispered, "Bae. Bae."

My responsibility. I wanted to protect him. I wanted to keep him safe forever.

He had a yellow blanket when he was little. Yellow was his favorite color because it was "the happiest" or so he told me. "Celebration" was his favorite song. There was this Denny's commericial that always came on during Ninja Turtles and he'd always get up. His yellow, footed pajamas flew fluff everywhere and he jumped from couch to couch, singing at the top of his shrilly, silly lungs: "Celebrate good times! Come on!" I, who was too mature for some things, rolled my eyes. Then we pretended that the brown carpet was hot lava.

My responsibility. I will wrap him up in winnie-the-pooh sheet and put him in a laundry basket. He always wanted to play with my dolls. I didn't want him to because it wasn't right for boys to play with Barbies. Mommy just told me that it was because he wanted to play with his big sister, he wanted to be included in everything she did. He loved me so much.

He told me very solumnly one day after rocking it on the swingset that he was going to marry me someday. I took his hand and kissed it and told him that it was against the law, but he promised we'd find a way anyway. Silly boys. We played dress-up. I pushed him on the swingset, my slender arms trembling as I tried to rocket him to the sky. My brother. My one and only little brother.

Not always. Do you remember when our sibling came along? We didn't want him following us so we shoved him in a closet and told him not to come out. He didn't even cry, much. whenever we'd exclude him, he'd promptly roll over and take a nap. Sometimes we didn't even notice. Especially not the time we got Monopoly money all over my parent's bedroom, smeared across the carpet in jagged, paper rainbows.

Baseball bats with walnuts. The shells got everywhere. I remember his wailing in the other room. We both got spanked at once. Not always, though. Usually I was the first. When they hauled us in for shots, I always got it first and was told not to cry. I had to be brave and take it so that my younger brother would know that it was okay. For him, I bit my lip. For him, I refused to cry a tear. Not until I was alone, anyway. It was my responsibility.

Alone. Maybe...maybe...maybe... He wanted to be with me always. And we were together, most of the time. We made num-chucks out of soda-straws and marshmallow men out of toothpicks. But there were days when I wearied of him hanging on to me, when I slammed the door in his face and leaned my back up against it so that I could play alone. The cars drove over the play mats the way I wanted them to, the blocks could be built in towers that he never knocked down, and I wouldn't have to explain the awkward story lines pumping through the tiny figures that danced at my command. He didn't understand rape but I did, even then. And the toy women would be hurt and trembling only to be rescued by a knight in shining armor who turned out to be not a knight at all, merely another villain trying to make girls do thing they didn't want to do. Things they couldn't quite remember afterwards. Maybe if I hadn't shut him out, maybe if I hadn't hid that part of myself maybe he'd trust me more today. Maybe he would have trusted me more before. Maybe things wouldn't have gotten this out of hand.

He doesn't like the color yellow anymore. What do you do when the boy who was everything to you, the boy who was your responsibility, loses the joy inside his eyes? What are you supposed to do when he comes to you with the blood running down his arm, telling you that he cut himself with eyes cold and never moving. He held the razor that cut along his own skin, crying that he didn't deserve to live.

Bae. Bae. They tell you he's not your problem. They tell you he's beyond your control. They tell you that you have to live your own life and let him live his, but how can you possibly do that when you were the one who held him up in the swimming pool, who gave him rides on your back when you were both learning how to swim? We called it the water taxi. I'd spin him so fast he'd inhale water bubbles and mommy would scold me but we'd do it again.

How do you go on when the one thing that mattered to you more than anything else in the world suddenly changes into something that you never thought it could be. And your friends are still laughing and your teddy bear still smiles but you look up into a Godless sky screaming inside because the pain is so much. You were responsible for him and you FAILED.

All I can think of on days like this, are yellow footed pajamas and words to a Denny's commercial: So bring your good times, and your laughter too... We gonna celebrate your party with you....

Thursday, July 21, 2005

Precious Panda # 9

I walk these streets….

Reverend Carnat had presided over some interesting weddings before, but this certainly was a first. The bride was screaming—singing, actually—and knocking over the flower displays in the church. Oddly enough, right when she shoved the groom to the ground, all reverend Carnat could think about was stage diving.

Mathew Carmichael and Sandy Almaeda were the all-American couple. After meeting in a freshman seminar class at Kansas State, they dated for the next five years before they finally appeared ready to settle down. When Michael, who by then was the head softball coach at a local high school, proposed to Sandy, a software designer, everyone thought they were happy.

Sandy, however, was far from happy. She knew that Mathew had cheated on her repeatedly, including several affairs with his students. While his sense of humor was somewhat entertaining when they were 18, his fart jokes stopped being funny a long time ago. Sandy felt like she was dating a real-life Peter Griffin, an alcoholic moron who treated her like the fungus living between his rolls of skin. For some reason, though, she couldn’t bring herself to end it. Childhood asthma and years of psychological abuse from Michael left her physically and emotionally weak, so when he proposed, she didn’t have the strength or self-esteem to fight him off.

A newspaper headline days after the wedding read, “iPod bride goes wild.” If they only knew the half of it.

As Sandy came down the isle, reverend Carnat noticed that something wasn’t quite right. She was bobbing back and forth with a swagger and confidence that he hadn’t seen in her before. When Sandy’s father lifted her veil and stepped back, he saw that her eyes were bloodshot and she was wearing small headphones connected to an iPod, which she held in her hand. It blended right in with her dress. Sandy turned to the reverend and said “it’s all the same…only the names have chaaaaaanged…every day, it seems like we’re wasting awaaaaay.”

Reverend Carnat thought it would be best to ignore her and proceed with the ceremony. Mathew still hadn’t noticed that she was a little tipsy, which wasn’t uncommon in the weddings the reverend had presided over—most brides and grooms needed something to get them down the aisle. Still, Sandy kept bobbing back and forth while Mathew was saying his vows and it was a growing distraction for the audience.

Some were giggling, others whispered to each other, but everyone was startled when she suddenly shouted at him, “SOMETIMES I SLEEP, SOMETIMES IT’S NOT FOR DAYS…AND THE PEOPLE I MEET ALWAYS GO THEIR SEPARATE WAYS………….SOMETIMES YOU TELL THE DAY…BY THE BOTTLE THAT YOU DRINK, AND TIMES WHEN YOU’RE ALL ALONE ALL YOU DO IS THINK…but we both know that last part isn’t true, though, right Matt? Right? Am I right? Right? When you’re all alone, all you do is watch stupid fucking nascar…Well………I’VE SEEN A MILLION FACES AND I’VE ROCKED THEM ALL.”

There was silence in the church. No one really knew what to do when Sandy threw off her veil and shoved her fiancé to the ground shouting “I PLAY FOR KEEPS, ‘CAUSE I MIGHT NOT MAKE IT BACK!” Sandy was building momentum, and when she punctuated knocking the flowers over with “CAUSE I’M WAAAANTED…DEAD OR ALIVE!” even reverend Carnat was smiling a little.

Sandy took off her ring and threw it at Mathew, whom she left lying there at the altar as she walked back down the aisle alone, a big, happy smile on her face. She pushed the church doors open and marched down the steps in the sun. Getting into the waiting limousine, she said to herself, “I been everywhere…still I’m standing tall.”

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

TKO Question #9

TKO Question #9

Oh, give me the beat, boys, and free my soul
I want to get lost in your rock and roll
And drift away

Write about a scene that involves music. You choose the song.

[I am aware this is not political but I think you all are better on fiction/personal questions and this is the last TKO]

Post between noon tommorow and noon Saturday.

Wordy Woodpecker #8

The beach, no matter how much superficial change it endures over the years, always seems to retain its beauty. Its shape is constantly distorted by waves and humans, yet no matter how bad the initial distortion is, it always seems to return to normalcy. In fact, the beaches that have been around the longest always seem to be the most beautiful, despite enduring abuse for a so much longer time. This resistance to all nature and man throws at it should remind us how to deal with all of our own individual problems.

An individual raindrop does little to harm to the shape of the beach, but alas, the little raindrop rarely comes alone. After a shower of raindrops, the beach is a mere shadow of its former image. Each drop leaves a tiny individual mark that allows further drops to have more of an impact, and all that is left is a battered surface filled with tiny craters where the final drops fell. And yet, one day later and one can’t tell of any damage to the beach’s surface at all. Similarly, we all face our own “rainstorms” at times, where small problems all seem to come at once. We can easily face each problem if they happen one at a time, but it is so much harder when they come all at once. But like the beach, we must be able to move on. Instead of letting each individual problem compound into something larger, we must be able to clear our mind and deal with each problem separately from each other. Alas, if only it was as easy as the beach after a rain storm.

Waves routinely crash into the shore, but every so often, a wave that is large enough will pound the beach hard enough to change its shape for a while. But while the shape may have changed, it manages to still be a great sight to behold. And each individual wave that crashes onto the beach leaves just a little sentiment that adds to the beach’s long time value. Similar, we all have “waves” crash into us, incidents so poignant that they still influence our current actions. But, much like a huge wave does not destroy the beach, we must not let powerful events destroy us either. Instead, again like the beach, we must be able to take each problem and get something out of it. Trying something new often results in a feeling of failure when one doesn’t perform as expected, but is always beneficial. The pain is temporary, but what is learned stays with you for a lifetime.

Tenacious Tiger #8

"Now Jonathan, we need to talk about all of those girls at school." I loved how blunt my grandfather could be at times.

"When I was your age, guys couldn't wrap it up when they wanted to sex girls." Holy crap, my grandfather is telling me about when he was having sex like a hundred years ago. I'm not even sure that I knew what a condom was when I was 13 years old, but in retrospect, I'm sure that's what he was alluding to when he said 'wrap it up.'

"You need to find a good girl, Jonathan. Not one of those hoodlums. You need to girl to take ca--." Before he could finish, I was greeted with a finger snap to get my attention and a finger pressed over the lips to get me to shut up. The bobber on my grandfather's fishing line was dancing up and down, just barely breaking the surface of the murky water. Some little fish was toying with the fishing master. Then suddenly, the bobber--well--"bobbed" underwater, my grandfather yanked back on the rod with the force of one thousand horny 13 year olds waiting to ravage the condomless masses at the school sock-hop. Bass #1 was tossed into the bucket. A new minnow got hooked through the gut and with a high pitched whiz, the fishing line was cast another 50 yards away from the old mint-colored family boat, putting the tiny red and white bobber at the edge of visibility. Man, my grandfather could fish with the best of them.

"Now, what I was saying, you don't need one of those crazy girls that sleeps around. You need a good one, Jon. Like your mother." Ohhhhh yeah grandpa, great way to get me to bow down at the altar of penile responsibility. Tell me I need to date my mother.

"It's a new world out there, you have more to worry about than just the birds and the bees. Now you have to worry about people breaking your eggs and stealing your honey." I'm still not sure what that means.

"When I met your grandmother, we were married within 6 months, and had your father within the first year." At the time, I didn't know that meant that my grandparents boned before they were married.

"But you can't do that anymore, Jon. You need to test drive the snow tires, make sure they can handle it all: highways, icy ponds, snow drifts. You know." I didn't know, but I just kept nodding my head, partially frustrated at the fact that the fishing skill apparently didn't trickle down 2 generations into my tiny frame. I still just sat there, fiddling with my fishing rod, waiting for the next metaphorical tidbit from my grandfather.

"So the first time you bring a girl to family Christmas, I'm going to have to really sit down and talk with her, okay?" That was our big test: family Christmas. When you brought the girl or boy with you to family Christmas, you were serious. You can't just share the Sanst ham dinner with anyone, can you? There are nuclear facilities that aren't even guarded as closely as our family Christmas.

"Got it, grandpa. Thanks. What's the best spinner bait to use in 10 feet of semi-visible water?" Change of subject, naturally.

And this is how I learned about the world. Be it my grandfather, my grandmother, or my father, life's lessons were best learned over a trolling motor and the greasy smell of large mouth bass.

Oh, and when I did take Linds to our first family Christmas, my grandpa pulled me off to the side and said "Good catch, Jon. Good catch." I suppose the fishing metaphors will never end.

Tuesday, July 19, 2005

Flippant Flamingo #8

10pm and the café was empty. Usually at this point, it was just getting busy, full of revelers enjoying their last few hours before the cruise ship left port, or their evenings after a long day of work. On these beaches, it was very unusual to see the locals mixing with tourists- but the few that found themselves in my café at that hour had usually doffed the drunken teenagers and rude thrill-seekers, and wanted to truly understand the beauty that is my beach. For twenty-five years, I had served them all. Frozen drinks, good food, and desserts that were fit to be eaten only while watching the sun set behind fishermen just starting their evening run. That was truly heaven.

So now, here I sit. The last umbrella in the cupboard floating in the last of the mai-tai, and the last slice of chocolate cheesecake sticking to my fork. Alone, finally enjoying what my customers had been calling heaven. Funny how I never seemed to get the chance to enjoy this while they were around. It is really beautiful, but it just isn’t the same. I need loud voices shouting out to the cooks what’s next on their list. I need customers laughing at the latest antics of the birds (who, we think, had become slightly addicted to the remnants of cruiser’s watery daiquiris). I need a flour-streaked apron around my waist and waves and shouts from the fishermen. Those are the things that made this my heaven.

Paradise, however, is easily lost. When the cruise ships moved to the next island, we were left with little except pollution and poverty. I didn’t see the effects for a while- hard times are the times you want most to be around those that make you smile. After a few months, though, locals started moving away and those who did stay simply didn’t have the money to pay off the tabs they’d been running up with me on the promise they’d eventually pay me back. I didn’t really care about the money- but when they were all too embarrassed to join me in the evenings, I didn’t have much left. I sold what there was, and gave the money to the two employees who had stayed. My tickets were sitting back in the now-bare kitchen, waiting to take me off to another island, another café. I couldn’t leave this place, though. I had to see why they had called it heaven. Now, I suppose I understood.

Draining the glass and poking the umbrella behind my ear, I stood up quickly, resolving to leave and not look back. I knew I was kidding myself, though. I knew I would only be trying to recreate this wherever I next ended up. How can you really say goodbye to heaven?

Ferocious Fox #8

All of my colleagues have pictures of people in their cubicles. The average wedding photo, the kids, even the family dog, are all displayed with pride. I have this. Not because it is a particularity interesting photo, but because he took it.

There are people who are great at taking pictures of themselves. You know the ones, they always have a camera in tow and have learned how to pose so as to always look good. We are not these people. I have hundreds of wonderful memories of our years together but not a single photo of the two of us.

It used to bother me. I would go to the cubicle to my right and see the pictures of a woman holding a man and be jealous. Over the years the men in her photos would change. One day I realized people keep photos to remember moments. She needed the photos to remember the men and the brief moments they filled her life.

I didn't need photos to remember him. Without effort I could recall the first time he kissed me, the night we made love on that beach, the fights over toothpaste brands, and the moments in between. I could close my eyes and hear him whispering in my ear the first time we held our baby girl. I could feel his arms around me comforting me when my father died. I didn't need photos to remember my life.

After that I was never ashamed of my lack of people pictures. I have more memories than perhaps I deserve. More importantly I still have him. People walk by my cubicle and ask me what the picture is of and I tell them that it doesn't really matter.

Precious Panda # 8

Celeb Reality

Fred and Ben Savage never thought they’d be here. Child stars fading into obscurity are common, but being spit out the bottom of reality television is fairly rare. Unless you count VH1.

It all started six months before. After staring in “The Wizard” and “The Wonder Years,” Fred had not made the transition to more mature films very well and had been relegated to bit parts on Seinfeld and in an Austin Powers movie. He spent his time perusing local garage sales and narrating “Lumber Sports: Behind the Sawdust” on tape.

Ben was worse off. After “Boy Meets World” was cancelled and his career as a professional cyclist failed to develop, he was left sleeping in his car and eating discarded tins of holiday popcorn. His last project was playing “AJ” in the Backstreet Boys off-Broadway musical.

So, when their communal agent was contacted about them doing a reality show to fill the hole in VH1’s 1:35 a.m. spot left by the cancelled “Tucson Grammar Rodeo,” they jumped at the chance. The show was called “Savage Island” and the premise was simple: Fred and Ben were to survive as long as possible on a deserted tropical island resort without any food or water. It was being dubbed “The real Lost,” from the creators of “Alf.”

Despite the constantly erupting volcano and Fred speaking in the third person for hours on end, it really wasn’t so bad, although neither Savage had noticed a camera yet during their four months on the island.

Monday, July 18, 2005

Creative Cardinal #8

The pink bubble snapped again. Pop. Crinkle. Crunch. Right in my earlobe. She did it on purpose. I try not to get angry, but I can't help it. They walk over me and stomp on me and some days I just can't stay hidden anymore. I decided right then and there that I was going to skin her face and turn it into one of those neat leather purses hanging off silly college-women shoulders. Fuck off, Gucci, I have my own sense of style. It involves red plaid miniskirts and arms shaded with sapphire bracelets and not spending one-hundred dollars to buy a new blouse.

Anger is always something I've wrestled with. There was a beach once where I clobbered someone with a sea-shell. Conch, I think. I kind of regret that because it wasn't really her fault her boyfriend kicked sand in my face (it felt like eating road grit). She just happened to be within reach of my grotesquely skinny hands. You wouldn't think fists the size of sausages would hurt, but I leave everyone who angers me just a little raw. Red-faced bitches. Soft-dicked manwhores.

Like I said, I've had a temper since I learned to walk. Stomp, more like. I consider ti a sign of intelligence. I know the world isn't supposed to be this way and it pisses me off. I want to scream when I hear about suicide bombers killing children, but I can't do anything about it so I slam my shoe into whatever wall irks me at the time. They shoved me into therapy when I bit my orthodontist. She wanted to give me braces, I wanted to give her a headache. Neither of us came out satisfied. Mom always nicknamed me "Little Hulk" because of the fights I used to start, just because people said things to me. I know that words can't really hurt, sticks and stones and shit, but their taunts scraped at my soul until one day my self-restraint just ripped apart. I was a good girl, until then, and I didn't do much more than stomp.

That day... they threw me down under the teeter-totter and let it bash my ankle. I was stumbling for a week. I've never seen such purple oozing. Mom wouldn't even pick me up from school, told me to stop being such a crybaby. The teachers all ignored it. Right then and there, I knew I had to deal with things myself. I made sure I hurt those assholes them anyway I could. Sometimes I stabbed them with fingers or pencils or threw spitballs at them, but mostly I used a woman's weapons: gossip, lies, and feral stares. My favorite was when I left a girl handcuffed to the jungle-gym. It wasn't a very nice thing to do, but she had gone over my physique in explicit detail telling me how ugly I was. I hurt her, because she made me believe I was worthless. They suspended me for awhile, but school was glorified daycare. My ass can stand an occasional spanking for the pleasure of revenge.

I know I'm bad. I know I should know better. I'm all grown up now, but I never have been able to leash my temper since. No cool beaches, no pleasant sunsets, nothing beautiful ever runs through my eyes free of blood or the people who grab at me, call me names, trying to rip off my clothes and throw me front-first onto a dirty pool table. It doesn't even matter if I'm wearing three feet of flannel, I just draw people with my rage. They can see my defiance in my eyes and they want to punish me for it, for being different than them, for refusing to succumb to the montony of life. I will not be ruled by them just because they're stronger for me, and the hate in the tension of my limbs makes me an obvious target.

That's why I try to stay quiet, now. That's why I don't like to talk too much or even listen. I get so angry so easily, and when I feel my blood begin to boil they're on me again like cobras, bad memories stinging my flesh like bullets of paper. Just words, I tell myself. Dumb bitch. Cunt. Worthless. Just words. They don't define who you are, what you are.

Then what are you? A girl who can't learn to give in and walk away.

Don't be angry or they'll see you and hurt you. Don't stand out or they'll find you and rape you. Pretend you are just another mild-as-milk-mush, backwards-looking, California blonde who knows nothing of politics and less of using crochet needles. Certainly nothing of using them to stab the bastards in the back.

Sunday, July 17, 2005

TKO Question #8

TKO Question #8 [Fiction]

Be inspired by this photograph. Write.

Isolation

Post begining at noon on Monday, due on noon Wednesday.

Wordy Woodpecker #7

One of my more embarrassing moments in my life happened during my freshman year in college (yet again, who doesn’t have embarrassing moments their freshman year?). When I get up in the morning, I am completely incapable of pretty much anything without my daily dose of magical elixir. Ah the sweet taste of caffeine. When I am in my early morning stupefied state, I tend to take really long showers, as I just sort of space out in the stall. Normally, the friendly reminders of “What the heck are you doing there!! Get out now!” manage to stop me spacing out, but this morning, almost everybody on my freshman floor had classes earlier than I, and so I soaked for a really long time until I finally remembered what I was doing. I walk back to my dorm room to find that the door is locked. Apparently my roommate was able to get up and leave in the time I wasted in the shower.

At first, I didn’t think the situation would be too serious. After all, plenty of other students on our floor had been locked out before, and they’d just ask the RA to unlock their door. It wouldn’t be too bad; it’s not like they haven’t seen me in a towel before. But a quick check revealed they were off at classes. A slight panic resulted, but then I had the idea of finding someone on the floor and seeing if they’d be willing to help me out by going to the Reslife building and telling the faculty there that I needed my door unlocked. I assured myself that it would be slightly more embarrassing, but shouldn’t be too bad. I walked around my floor only to find that everybody had already gone off to class. A panicked look at my watch revealed that my Chemistry test was in thirty minutes, meaning waiting it out wouldn’t work. I had to get my key, and quickly. I sat in the corner when the door to my room resided, breathing heavily and beginning to realize more and more how screwed I was. A troubling thought passed my head. In order to get my key in time, I would have to go outside cross the street and go to the Reslife building myself, all in only a towel. I would have to choose: would I sacrifice my dignity or my grades?

I chose to sacrifice my dignity, of course. I’m an engineer; I’ve already given up my dignity.

In order to get away with the least amount of attention toward me as possible, I decided that I must walk confidently. For some reason, people seem to notice someone in an embarrassing situation more if they are seen to be embarrassed. I gave myself a little pep talk, and out I went.

The first thing I noticed was how terribly cold concrete and asphalt can get after a chilly night. The embarrassment instantly set in, but luckily, I had faced no comments so far, only some double takes. Just a little further, and I could make it. The ResLife building was right in front of me, with its confortable air conditioning and occlusion. All that remained was a street that had to be crossed. I didn’t want to remain outside for any longer than I had to, so I quickly began to cross the street. Between feeling the cold burning into my feat and the burn of people’s stares, I was so distracted that I didn’t notice the black sports car coming my way.

BEEP!!!!

The deafening horn of the car that just slammed on its brakes to avoid hitting me greatly startled me, so much that I could feel my towel beginning to fall. For some reason, it always seems that the split second before a crisis time seems to go in slow motions as you realized just how bad things are going to get. But luckily, my quick reflexes allowed me to quickly reach down and grab the top end of the towel. My crotch was safely obscured from view. Of course, I only caught the top end, exposing my rear for all to see. I quickly heard the voice of someone screeching. It was the voice of a middle aged woman. Almost instinctually, I snapped around and saw a horrified tour group. At this point, I was so rattled that I didn’t care about my façade of confidence, I sprinted toward the ResLife building and quickly made my way to the desk where spare keys are handing out to help students who get locked out. I told the young worker that looked to be a student there of my situation, but the first he asked for was my ID.

Oh no he didn’t. Oh no he fucking didn’t.

I erupted into a rage. After all the crap I had been through, bullshit like this was the last thing I needed. I can’t remember exactly what I said, but it probably wasn’t too pleasant, to put it mildly. After an older worker chewed me out, now all the staff members there were staring at me, furthering my shame. Eventually, the man agreed to give me the key to my room after I had almost broken down into tears.

Suffice it to say, I didn’t do too well on the Chemistry test that I worked so hard to make.

Saturday, July 16, 2005

Precious Panda # 7

Walk of Shame

The first time I got really drunk was during a debate conference in Krakow, Poland, during my sophomore year in college. Apparently what happens in Poland doesn’t stay in Poland, because over the years, the story of my Krakow debauchery has spread further and faster than that new Harry Potter book. Blimey!

It was our first night in town, so we decided to have a little fun. At the time, my experience with alcohol consisted mostly of that time my brother Paul fed my dog beer until she ran into the furniture. Consequently, when my friends kept buying me drinks, I figured I would be fine since they were in these really small glasses. As it turns out, my friends were just waiting to see if I would run into the furniture. I didn’t disappoint them.

I don’t remember a lot from that night in Krakow, but I’m told that over the course of the evening, I did each of the following:

--Decided that pants were improperly designed and took my jeans off and put them back on backwards, in the middle of the street.

--Shouted at a stranger, “those aren’t letters! You made up letters! Who the hell do you think you are?” while gesturing angrily at a billboard in Cyrillic.

--Did my part to reject obnoxious American stereotypes and overtly flirted with every woman within 17 kilometers.

--Stumbled into a McDonalds at 1:30 in the morning and loudly ordered a “royale with cheese,” then went into the bathroom and fell asleep on the toilet.

For my friends, it was a night to remember, and for me, it was the most embarrassing evening of my life. I will say this, though—for someone who was doing their first drunk walk on Polish cobblestones, I think I hung in there pretty well.

Flippant Flamingo #7

I am embarrassed when I stand naked in front of one person, ten people, a hundred, or more. I’m not embarrassed by my nakedness. What I am embarrassed by is the fact that everyone else is embarrassed, turning away, turning red, refusing to look at me or acknowledge that I am standing in front of them, exposing myself.

I usually end up doing this once or twice a week. What can I say, I’m a glutton for punishment, and refuse to lie.

I am in a very uniquely embarrassing position in today’s America. I am loathed by both sides of a very heated argument, and unless I am willing to acquiesce to one side or the other by omission or outright denial, I end up right where I started- standing naked in front of a room full of others embarrassed by me.

I am, in a world that seems to be very dichotomous between “straight” and “gay,” the middle ground. Kinsey would qualify me as a three. Many religions call me a sinner. Many heterosexuals and homosexuals admonish me for “not making a decision.” Researchers barely recognize the existence of me and those like me in their studies of “non-heterosexual lifestyles.” Even those who are supporters are often confused and embarrassed to admit that they do support me.

I am a bisexual.

I am not waiting to make a decision. I am not trying to figure things out. I am not halfway on my way to coming out as a lesbian. I am, pure and simple, attracted to both sexes, and everything in between. I find no embarrassment in this or in proclaiming this.

However, I see in the disgusted looks at Pride celebrations, the akward silences when an unsuspecting grandparent asks “so, any boyfriends?” when my current relationship is a girlfriend, in the frustrations of significant others that I won’t “commit fully,” bad jokes that end with horribly bigoted punchlines, (usually told by those I thought of as accepting), the moniker BUG (Bi Until Graduation), and even in the badly worded questions like “soooooo….. you’re……… like………… into both?!?”

Acceptance of homosexuals, gay marriage, transsexuals and cross-dressers are a wonderful movement and should get as much support and celebration as is possible. However, every time I end up saying the words ‘actually, I’m bisexual”, essentially stripping myself naked in front of them, I see the embarrassment that the reality of my sexuality reappears in the eyes of my friends, my family, and strangers.

And I am embarrassed that they are embarrassed.

Tenacious Tiger #7

May 28th, 1994 -- A 42-year-old Flanagan man died Thursday afternoon after the truck he was driving hit a bridge abutment two miles northeast of Flanagan.

It's a date I should never forget. I've already shared the horror I felt that day with you all. But to me, embarassment isn't always some humorous moment for the world to see. Embarassment is also shame. Disgust. Embarassment is one of those things that makes you feel like you're trapped in some room and all eyes are on you, making you feel like you're less of a person for having done something. In my case, my most embarassing moment is having not done something.

My father's death was one of those life altering moments when your predestination receives a massive electric jolt sending you skewed on a new path. Eventhough my parents had been divorced and I only got to see my father two weekends a month, he was still my dad, and like many growing boys, he was my idol. I wanted to be a farmer because my dad wanted to be a farmer. And I wanted to have curly hair, with a little bald spot on the top of my head (my dad called it his "solar panel"). I just wanted to be my dad.

So when he died, I didn't know what I was going to do. On May 28th, 1995, my sister and I went and visited his grave and cried together. We spent some time recalling some of the fun times we had with him. Like, when we were little--and I mean little--we would often take my dad's socks each morning that he was going to wear to work and chuck them from our living room out into our enclosed patio about 30 feet away. Why? I have no clue at all, frankly, but it was fun, and it was our little morning tradition. And my sister and I talked about the times when we would meet our dad at the local coffee shop (there was only one in town) before school each Thursday so we could get donut holes and see my dad (Thursdays were 25-cent donut hole days). Eventhough it was likely against court orders, it was something I loved doing and will always remember.

1996 rolled around and my sister and I went out to the grave again. Finally, the mound of dirt in front of his headstone was getting some nice thick grass on it. We cried some more because that dense, green grass reminded us exactly how long he'd been gone.

1997 came and went, and although we remembered to visit him, my sister and I were both busy doing things in school.

And then it happened. In the middle of June of '98 it dawned on me: we had forgotten altogether about Dad. I just sat in my room that day and bawled. I couldn't believe it. For 11 years, my father was all that mattered to me in life. And poof, just like that, I had forgotten about him. Some people have told me that it's just me "moving on" with my life. But that's not what I want. I don't want to "move on" if that means forgetting who my father is. For Pete's sake, all I needed to do was take a single day to remember my father. To say that I was embarassed is an understatement. I was furious with myself that I could just write off my father's legacy only 4 calendar years after his death.

And then in '99, I forgot what my dad sounded like. It sounds so silly, I'm sure. But your parents' voices are some of those things that should be hardwired into your brain by the time you're five years old. If you're sick at college, just hearing that ever-so-familiar voice over the phone is instantly soothing. But in '99, it becaume quite apparent that I didn't know what he used to sound like anymore, and I cried some more.

Embarassment is one of those things that has two motives, I think. It serves to shame you at first, but more importantly, it's a lesson to you. After the summers of '98 and '99, I started making a special note of that date so I can wake up and say a short prayer for my father. It's my own special way of remembering who he was, and who I hope to be.

Friday, July 15, 2005

Ferocious Fox 7

Do you remember what you considered embarrassing in Jr. High and High school? I do.

Truth or dare? . . . Truth . . . What's your most embarrassing moment? . . . This one time my top fell off at the pool.

Embarrassing moments become less funny and more personal, or so I have found, as you become an adult. Embarrassing moments become humiliating moments.

*** *** ***

We walked into the airport. I was stiff and afraid; meanwhile, he seemed comfortable with his hand resting on my lower back the way it had a million times before. We approached the ticket counter to check me in,

"your bags are over weight" the woman informed us.

"It's fine," I felt like I had screamed but it came come a hushed whisper.

"Excuse me?"

"Just check them," I felt my voice crack as I thrust my card at her and at the same time I felt his hand press harder into my back. She took my credit card and did just that. I could have left the bags.

We walked toward security and he pulled me close against him. Kissing me hard, a good bye. He whispered in my ear, "I can still forgive you. Stay." I turned away and walked so slowly it hurt toward the security check point. I never looked back.

"You are going to have to take off the sunglasses," the security guard said. Unfeeling I pulled them off, and he dropped my ID. "Please don't say anything... Please God just let me through . . . He's right there," I prayed that my eyes conveyed how important it was that I get through the gate. It must have worked because I next remember walking through the metal detector. It beeped but no one stopped me. I died the moment I was on the other side.

I was four hours early for my flight. I pulled myself up the stairs and turned left to the coffee shop. I was shaking. "Venti non fat iced latte," my voice more than cracked, it broke. The woman made my drink and then told me the price. This time I dropped the card. My hands quaked so badly they wouldn't pick it up. She walked out from behind the counter and picked up my card, "don't worry about it". I couldn't say thank you.

I walked toward the gate. I knew I had started bleeding again. I could feel it under my tights. Half way down the hall I froze unable to take another step. The coffee cup slipped from my hand and I gave in. Panic slammed full force and I wept sucking in air as thought I had been trapped underwater for days. I didn't want to keep breathing.

There was no slow coming to terms, there was just the cliff that you fall off of when your adrenaline stops. Then there was pain. Not heart break pain, real pain. The kind of pain you feel when your jaw is out of its socket. The kind of pain you feel when you lift your skirt and see your thighs in a spectra of colors you've only seen in the blue section of crayon boxes. That kind of pain levels you. I remember that pain.

There was a beautiful black woman watching this happen. She ran over to me, "do you need help?" "Don't touch me," I screamed crawling away, "God please don't touch me." She sat down on the floor and pulled me into her lap. My whole body wracked with sobs I could no longer hold back. She held me and cooed, in a way that only a mother would know, until I calmed, "do you want me to call an ambulance, the police?" I started to panic again, "please no, I just want to go home." She nodded. I needed to go home.

She took me into the bathroom and helped me clean up. I remember her eyes brimming with tears, and then little else until I got off of the plane. The last thing she said to me as we parted company was "God loves you, he'll take care of you." I attempted a smile. I think you should know that God died 12 hours ago.

*** *** ***

What's the most embarrassing moment? None of what happened that day or even the night before. The most embarrassing moments I've ever experienced were the looks of pity. The 'oh you poor thing' moments. The reassurances that everything would be fine. Being pitied is the only thing I still believe to be truly embarrassing.

TKO Question #7

TKO Question #7 [Personal]

What was the most embarassing moment of your life?

Post due by noon central time Sunday.

Updated Schedule

TKO #7 post due by Sunday at noon CNT
Vote #7 due by noon Monday
TKO #8 post due by Wednesday at noon CNT
Vote #8 due by noon Thursday
TKO #9 post due by Saturday at noon CNT
Vote #9 due by noon Sunday

Wordy Woodpecker #6

Let us not kid ourselves that Bush will appoint a moderate to aviod a firestorm. A pro-choice nominee would face the extreme wrath of the relegious base, and they are hungry. After Congress failed to intervene in the Terry case, many on the religous staked the Supreme Court as the final line; if the President blaks them here, they severly cut their number. What will actually happen to the court decisions will likely be rather small. Instead of O'Conner, the reigning swing vote will be Kennedy.

They call him Flipper, Flipper...

But the most important impact will be the partisan birth fest that will result, and the effects on 2006 and 2008. Assuming the nominee is Janice Brown, for the sake of arguement...

Instapundit will appectionatly link to a number of blog entries that accuse Democrats of racism with "Heh. Indeed.", but will instantly called liberals who call him out as shrill.

Ann Coulter will accuse liberals of trying to keep blacks "on the plantation" and when faced with angry comments in response, she will act like a victim and claim their anger makes them crazy and unable to debate.

Hugh Hewitt will claim that liberals are anti-Christain for opposing a justice that wants to incorporate the Bible into law.

David Limbaugh will take it a step further, comparing liberals to Nero for savage anti-Christain bigotry.

Move America Foward will act outraged that liberals are opposing the President... DURING WARTIME

Sean Hannity will argue that liberals shouldn't play politics with judical nominees by confirming her immediatly. Alan Colmes will meekly argee.

And all the while, the news media will claim that the Democrats are planning to "Bork" the nominee and will ask in online polls "Is it appropiate to Bork nominees, especially during wartime?"

I'm not bitter. No way.

Ferocious Fox 6

For me nothing will change. I figure that Bush will appoint some closed-minded conservative and those of us who support liberal social issues (abortion, right to die, etc.) will feel ostracized. Welcome to Utah everyone.

Sassy Snake #6

I like my Supreme Court Justices to be super heros.

Defenders of the weak and innocent, destroyers of bad precedent.

Sandra Day O’Conner was not a super hero. She made some good decisions (School District 47J v. Acton [even though she dissented}), and she made some horrible ones (Bush v. Gore to start). At least she wasn’t a master of the Dark side (think Rehnquist and Scalia here).

It’s just to bad that the overwhelming tendency of the Bush administration is to hire ideological conservatives who mask their activism behind the lie of strict construction. Its a good way to construct a force of super villians who are appointed for life, but it kinda sucks if you aren’t one the people that the founders deemed valuable.

When I fall asleep, Sandra issued decisions like Thurgood Marshall or William Brennan. But in the morning, she is still just Sandra . . . not the worst, but far from the best.

I’m just sad that her replacement will likely be far worse. One day, I hope the Supreme Court returns to its roots as the Justice League. Until then, lets just call them the empire.

Flippant Flamingo #6

Sandra Day O’Connor has already been forgotten.

WHAT? You’re saying. But, but, but….

But here’s the deal ladies and gentlemen. Sandra Day O’Connor’s appointment was special mostly because she is a woman. She was a great justice, a swing vote, and is overall a wonderful person. When she was appointed, it was hailed as a keystone in the women’s rights movement.
Yet our government is still run, overwhelmingly, by White Anglo-Saxon Prodestants. 99% of the current discussion about a replacement goes along the lines of “if he appoints an ultra-conservative woman, there is no way the Democrats can say anything” or other such comments.
The fact is, Sandra Day O’Connor was one that wanted gender to be a non-issue, on the court or anywhere else. And yet we remember her for being the first woman. We ask if her replacement will be a woman. We (as in a large majority of Americans, and a large majority of the lawmakers) don’t remember her stint as a justice for what she would have wanted.

Therefore, Sandra Day O’Conner has already been forgotten.

How about the next Justice is chosen not on what’s between their legs, but what’s between their eyes?

Thursday, July 14, 2005

Tenacious Tiger #6

I could honestly care less about the resignation, appointments, deaths, assassinations, or "good hair days" of Supreme Court Justices. The law is nothing but politics. It is not an objective lens to cast fairness and truth among the masses. If justice is blind, we should have no questions about how Judge X's resignation would/could/should harm the rights of women, or bolster the agendas of environmental activists. Justice is not blind. In order to gain a seat, you must be friends of the Reds or the Blues. True legal fairness does not--nor will it likely ever--exist.

If the new Justice sways the court in a conservative favor, then not much will happen. Decisions may be handed down that reverse Roe, for instance. But along those lines, it will galvanize support and spur action against said decision. In five years time, Roe would likely be reinstated. Wash, rinse, repeat. The law is a pendulum. Pulling back the weight further and further merely guarantees a larger upswing on the other side.

It's just all a matter of when your life coincides with the upswing of your choice.

Daring Dragonfly #6

Sandra Day O’Connor’s retirement is important for several reasons. First, she was the first woman appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court. A rather impressive achievement for a woman who, after graduating third in her class at Stanford, could only get a job as a legal secretary.

And yeah, she’s been a key swing vote in a lot of important 5-4 cases. But I’m sick of all the hysteria typified by such comments as “Ladies, get your abortions now.” The fact is, Roe isn’t going anywhere. Even Thomas, arguably the most conservative member of the Court, has said that they aren’t going to challenge the core holding of Roe. So let’s lay off the hysteria. The fact is, any of the key opinions of the last five or so years aren’t going anywhere. It’s just too soon. And Justice Kennedy is still around, and he’s been trending fairly liberal the last couple years.

The much more interesting question is, what’s going to happen with the Court. Since Chief Justice Rehnquist announced today that he isn’t going anywhere, there’s going to be huge pressure on President Bush to appoint a conservative. After all, he campaigned on appointing people like Thomas and Scalia. And with the Chief sticking around, there’s no compromise to be made. But at the same time, there’s a huge pressure to replace O’Connor with another woman. And that makes the pool much, much smaller. Priscilla Owens is out, because she just went through a messy confirmation, only getting through as part of the compromise.

The current front runner to replace O’Connor is Alberto Gonzales, although Bush is getting flack from his base because he’s pro-choice, and from the left over the Guantanamo Bay memos. Until the President makes his appointment, it’s going to be very hard to see which direction the Court will go in. But Roe is safe.

Creative Cardinal #6

5-4 cases O'Connor was key in dealing with civil-rights law: http://www.aclu.org/court/court.cfm?ID=18623&c=286

My money is on the Ediths, but my friend is certain it'll be Lutwig or Gonzales. I nominate my Star Wars Stormtrooper pez-dispenser. It'd probably use logic that's easier to follow than the twists our Court sometimes applies now.

Reasonable Doubt
Don't rage against the jackal-bellied white man-god spewing hate.
There's only one thing to do for our nation and that is slither on twined, fiery bellies,
Begging that the law not be strangled in five, clawed hands.
Ash-mud fills their white corridors and my mouth is full of dust while I'm crying.
It's all crumbling wrong. It seems like there should have been another way.

Where were you when the sky fell down? Where were you when fine print filled our rivers with cyanide?
The blood of the martyrs flows down the black robes of the gavel-crowned
The blood of the babies who coughed and flickered and died.
They never meant to leave our sky yellow and flat like old newspaper,
They never meant to close our polling machines to only the rich and the white.
They never meant to deny anyone the ability to open yawning lips
But somehow, our constitution flew out the window
A frail paper crane.

In liberty, we refuse to be packmules for your babies.
In liberty, we refuse to let HMOs dictate our death.
In liberty, we made democracy into government by the people
Their skin the color of splintered rainbows, hands stretched into the sun.

Do you remember when we freed the detainees from their chains?
Lifting the locksmith and demanding a dawn?
Do you remember the cracking knuckles of the executioner who was stopped
In the precise moment the black, handicapped boy was going to die?
Long ago, we sang when our gay sisters and brothers finally raised babies
But now we spit at a moon's sniggering pus.
And you tell me that this doesn't matter. That all of these topics pale in comparison to who Paris Hilton fucked last.
Forgive me if I am less than intrigued.

There is some hope, at least, because the faithful will linger
Raising frail and free candles to hold back the night.
The shelter of voices trembling with emotion
We will not be brought down by the likes of you.

Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Precious Panda # 6

Thinking out of the box

I think Dubya will nominate some Butterbean look alike and that not a whole lot will change as a result. Sandra D. was one of six votes to preserve Roe in Casey, so abortions will still be safe. Most other big decisions lately except for Lawrence went conservative on 5-4’s anyway, so I really don’t think her resignation will have as big of an effect as many fear. That said, I have some suggestions for nominees who would make up for in hilarity what they lack in legal knowledge:

1) One of those really smart Apes that Jane Goodall taught to use sign language

Advantages: Every time Scalia references another justice in an opinion, she could be trained to hurl her own shit at him. The opinions of Justice Coco would be shorter than the average Thomas concurring, consisting mostly of “thank you” and “cookie.”

Disadvantages: Holding a gavel would be awkward.

Things to consider: How she’ll fit into a robe, whether or not constantly stroking her doll would get in the way of hearing cases, where her tire swing would fit in the court room.

2) Roberto Mendoza

Advantages: Easy and quick confirmation. Everybody loves The West Wing! Get ready for a privacy rights bonanza with Mendoza on the bench!

Disadvantages: Mendoza has a bit of a temper and could fly off the handle and beat the bejesus out of poor old Rehnquist should a discussion become heated.

Things to consider: How he will wind down after a controversial ruling given his physical inability to drink alcohol. If he could balance his duel role as Selena’s father and Supreme Court Justice.

3) Gizmo from the “Gremlins” series

Advantages: He could hum his opinions in that really soft, melodic tune. Justice Gizmo could also fire matchstick arrows at Stevens with his paperclip bow.

Disadvantages: What if he got wet? What is he was exposed to sunlight? What if somebody fed him after midnight? If you think about it, isn’t it always after midnight someplace? Does that mean that little Gizmo has NEVER EATEN ANYTHING? I’m not so sure an anorexic Gremlin is the sort of role model our children need on the bench these days.

Things to consider: Gizmo is small enough to be fired out of a potato gun.

Tuesday, July 12, 2005

TKO Question #6

TKO Question #6 [Political]

How important is Sandra Day O'Connor's resignation? What's going to happen now with the Supreme Court?

Remember, while this post is indended to be political/social commentary, any format of answer is acceptable.

Post by Friday at noon. Do not begin posting until Wednesday at 2:00 PM.

Ferocious Fox #5

Her eyes were swollen and his voice was amused.

"You know it is supposed to be fun?" he said.

"I know that, but I am so frustrated," she replied, "everyone is better than me and I can't think of anything. I am going to look stupid."

"L, you will not look stupid and even if you did . . . No one will care."

Sniffling she answered, "but I care. I was so excited for this and Marie works so hard to run it. I feel like I'm letting people down. I just can't think of anything to write this week."

She lit a cigarette and curled up on the park bench leaning in to the phone. "So how's the hurricane?"

Giddy Giraffee #5

Her eyes were swollen and his knees were starting to shake struggling to hold his weight. The water they had been forced to drink all day was retained in the body, giving both contestants a puffy slightly marshmallow look. It was obvious that fatigue was finally setting in. It would only be a short matter of time, before one of them cracked. The only question was who would go down first.

The rules of the game had been simple. The last contestant to let go of the car, got to drive it home. The game had started early that morning with 25 contestants. Throughout the day they had been submitted to the torture of cups of water, no bathroom breaks and polka music. Gradually people started to let go. Some from boredom, some from hunger and as the hours passed, some from no longer having the physical strength to stay standing.

After nine long hours the game had finally been narrowed down to the final two. The torture techniques had been halted, nature was taking it course. Eventually one of them would cave to the pressure of the bladder, or the ache of the stomach or the burn of the muscles. It had become a battle of the sexes, male against female, who could handle the pain.

The last two hours had been marked with a resolved silence. The loud tick of the moderator’s clock, counting the minutes by echoed in the air. The pair had just stared at each other, she would give him the evil eye and he would reply with a cocky little wink. When the silence was finally broken it was done in a sing song, childish fighting kind of tone.

“You should just give up, ya know. I could go on like this forever.” He gave her another stare down and continued, “No point in sticking around if your just going to loose.”

She just shook her head and sweetly smiled at her reflection in the passenger mirror.

Another hour passed by.

“Ah ha” he shouted. “I can see it in your face, your about it give up. Might as well no way your going to win.”

Again no reply from the lady, only a smirk that would put Mona Lisa to shame.

Another hour slowly dragged by.
And then another.

Both contestants could no longer keep their eyes open. Their legs were screaming to sit down. He was determined to out last a female and she was determined to win. When the moderator announced they had just passed the 13th hour mark, He broke down.

“Fine” he huffed, his voice laced with exhaustion. “You win. I can’t take it anymore. Let’s just go home.” His hand dropped from the hood of the car and he took a step back.

With her remaining strength she raised her arms into a victory pose. She proudly strutted to the other side of the car and wrapped her arms around her defeated husband. “Oh sweetie,” she cooed, “look at the beautiful car I just won.”

He just looked at her, too tired to talk back. Too tired to care and almost too tired to ask, “Darling, I don’t understand it, how can you possibly have the strength to survive this?” Rolling her eyes she gently kissed her competitor on the cheek.

“Honey you forget, I’ve given birth to three children. I can do anything.”

Creative Cardinal #5

Death on the Drina

Gorazde, Bosnia. May 22, 1992

Her eyes were swollen and his hands tried to cover them but the whites just seemed to bulge out around his fingers. My mind told me that it wasn’t possible, that it was just a trick of the light because his hands were shaking so hard. That didn’t change the fact that it looked like the eyeballs could explode. So white. I didn’t even know eyes could look that way. Empty. Whitewhitewhite.

This is my mother, I tried to tell myself, but it was like trying to tell myself that rain is made of cheese. I couldn’t reconcile her manicured nails resting gently against our kitchen tiles, her black hair sliding out like a shimmering oil slick against a blue-eyed ocean… I couldn’t reconcile that image with this pale apparition, this pitiful corpse. All the grace was gone from her now. She was never dance to The Beatles again. This is my mother, I thought, not believing it. She’s dead. My father is trying to shut her eyes and failing.

He shook himself slightly, as if trying to remember where he was. Blood still flowed from her skull even if her heart had forgotten how to beat. I tried not to think too much about the pink and gray pieces smeared across my father’s blue jeans. He bowed over her body, lowering her to the ground as if she was made of glass. As always, he answered my thoughts. “I know she can’t feel anything,” his throat was making a strange rasping sound. “I know it doesn’t make any sense. But…”

“Shh,” I told him. I closed my eyes. “This isn’t a day for sense.”

I hadn’t believed the refugees. Everyone knew that they were driven mad by gunpowder. They told me that the chetniks made a grandfather eat his own grandson’s liver at gunpoint. The other girls told me about bloated bodies floating down the Drina from Foca, their castrated, limbless bodies tangling with the weeds. My father never let me go down to the river and so I had never quite believed it. “You’re too young,” he whispered. I didn’t know if he was talking to my mother or me.

Not too young for some.” I knew what happened to girls caught by the chetniks. There was a cold feeling in the pit my stomach. “I don’t want to die, daddy.”

My father shook himself. “We must get to the river.” He hesitated for a moment. The tears followed the crevasses of his face, dripping down to mix with his wife’s red blood. “You won’t die, Sudija.” He was trying to sound certain for my sake. The sniper bullets struck the stone corner with showers of plaster, booming like fireworks, and we cowered behind the buildings. I thought about the refugee woman who had taken shelter in our basement. She wouldn’t come out, and whenever she spoke her wrists clenched and she rocked back and forth. “They cut out his eyes,” she whispered, trying to grab my collar but never really looking at me. “Why didn’t they kill me, too?” She was probably still there, curled deep in her own filth.

“I won’t let them catch me alive, father,” I told him. He nodded slowly and pointed to a kitchen knife which mother had taken. It wasn’t much of a weapon, more like a talisman that she had grabbed off the kitchen counter when the shelling started. He held it like a sacred relic before sliding it in his belt.

“We just have to get to the river,” he repeated. “We’ll be safe there, I’m sure. If we stay here, we die. If we die, better to die on our feet and running.”

I didn’t remind him that the Drina was where they dumped the bodies in Foca. It didn’t remind him about the stories of the Chetnik armies, waiting to slit truckloads of refugee’s throats on the bridges.

My father took my hand. “Come on.” His mitten was warm and sticky. And we ran.

The street was empty. Tall, shattered buildings rose beside us like scabbed tombstones, bare and burned. I remember later that the foreign reporters and their t.v. cameras wanted natives to show them damaged buildings. The villagers just laughed coldly, pointing all directions at once. Laughter like ice.

Yes, I remember…

The moment froze, a stain on cold air. For an instant, I was falling forward. The muscles in my right hand snapped, making a sick, melon-cracking sound. I cried out, my bare fists slamming the pavement, my body jerking as I fell face-down in the dirt.

Snipers. The rain had finally broken and the dust became the mud. Maybe they’ll go away if it’s raining.

My hand… I let myself look down the fingers that had gripped my father’s just a moment before. I couldn’t even feel any pain, but I looked away quickly. Damp spots. Bones splayed in jagged directions. You wouldn’t think that hands could look like that, you wouldn’t think the laws of nature would let them.

The cold numbness was half from that, half from seeing my father lying bent on the ground. Wouldn’t the Chetniks be happy? Two Muslims with one bullet? My father was still breathing, his eyes twitching, agitated. Blood oozed out around the tail of his shirt. I didn’t think the wound was fatal but he was pale as a sheet and his teeth clenched twice.

“Go,” he hissed at me. “Go on. Don’t worry about me.” One bloody hand held out that kitchen knife, the one my mother had grabbed right before we ran into the night. In the lightning, it suddenly looked like one of the chetnik’s crosses.

“Father, you’ve got to get up,” I whispered to him. I crawled on my belly over the tracks of artillery, the scars the shape of bear-paws crushing stone. “Father, I can’t make it alone.”

There was another crack and plaster chips flew by my left ear. I couldn’t help screaming. Men laughed on the hilltops, their jackal cries blending with thunder. “Father…”

The knife flew the few feet between us, landing in the dirt. The handle was smeared with the blood of both my parents and I wanted to vomit until my stomach was clean again. I wanted to vomit for the grandfather who had to eat his grandson’s liver, vomit for the little girl who had a bullet pulled out of her forehead without any anesthetic, vomit for the greasy stains on my father’s blue jeans. Vomit for the blue in my mother’s eyes.

“Run, Sudija,” my father whispered, his hand still outstretched. “Fly away, little bird. Don’t let them have you.” Another bullet cracked by my elbow, slamming pavement. I was whimpering worse than the refugees ever had.

God help me, I ran.

Flippant Flamingo #5

In memory

Her eyes were swollen and his fist was red. You looked from one to the other, but didn’t want to say anything. After all, you were just the bank teller behind the glass.

Her cheek was bruised and his face was scratched. You noticed both, but didn’t ask about it. You’re just the police officer called to deal with the fender-bender.

Her nose was broken and his arm was bruised. You couldn’t ask, because company policy states that you “never get involved.”

Her eyes were shouting for help and his burned with hatred. You looked down to count their change into his hand.

Her frame got thinner and thinner, while his continued to grow. You told her she needs to take better care of him, make him happy, because your religion says the marriage always comes first.

Her belly got larger, and his shouting calmed. You were the product of his hate, but she loved you all the more for your innocence.

Her screams of pain drowned out his insistent questions. You give her the painkillers, and coax her through delivery, because he won’t come near her.

Her breasts are sore from breastfeeding; while he approaches the crib with a look of tenderness you imagine he gives her every morning, you're just the nurse watching over their baby.

Her scars aren’t healing correctly and his smile gets bigger every day. You ask her about them, because it’s your job, but accept the excuse she gives you.

Her stomach contracts in pain and his eyes are only for the baby. You don’t see her run outside to throw up because you’ve learned to ignore “that couple next door.”

Her face is serene with perfect makeup and his eyes have a tinge of red. You hear him whisper in the baby’s ear “I love you, and your mother never did.”

You finally speak up.

Wordy Woodpecker #5

Her eyes were swollen and his hands were trembling, as Felix’s heart was filled with revulsion toward both himself and Alexia, the school’s social queen, as all the kids on the recess playground turned to stare at him and the scene he had created.

The ensuing brief moment of silence was all the time Felix needed to fully recognize the scorn directed by all toward him. He was being judged for this moment is isolation of all others. He still felt the sting on his fist and the sting from Alexia’s revelations. But this was of no matter to him at this moment. He was a disgusting monster who physically attacked a girl’s on the provocation of words. Just words. To himself, he was now a disgusting thug.

Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can never hurt me.

Felix soon found himself sitting in front of the middle aged principal. A slender man who always took pains to dress as well as possible, the principal, Mr. Dawson, could nonetheless make students tremble with his scowl. Mr. Dawson was normally a kind hearted fellow, which made is scowls every so much more guilt inducing. And Felix faced that scowl as he tried to explain his actions. But it was for naught, for as soon as Felix uttered the words “she said”, he was cut off. That was enough information for Mr. Dawson to condemn him.

“What she said is irrelevant. How…dare…. you assault someone. Can’t you remember that…

Felix didn’t have to listen to what Mr. Dawson said after that. He already knew what was coming.

Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can never hurt me.

As Felix lied in his bed, he could not help remembering the irrelevant words of Alexia. She had gone to those Felix considered friends, and threatened complete social isolation if they did not stop associating with me. And given her status in the school, these threats were credible. Felix could not forget that wicked smile as Alexia revealed what she had done, promising that he would soon have no friends. He could not get that smug grin out of his mind. But he was the worse person. He was the brute that threw the punch.

Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can never hurt me.

The next morning, Felix really didn’t want to go to school, but he had to. He soon learned what was the story that every other student had heard. Supposedly, he had asked Alexia to be his girlfriend and punched her when she refused. He didn’t bother trying to expose the lie; he knew he had no credibility left. True to Alexia’s promise, he had lost his friends, and his chances at making more.

Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can more than hurt me.
They destroy.

Monday, July 11, 2005

Sassy Snake #5

Her eyes were swollen and his back was covered in bloody scratches. The sex had been fantastic.

Daring Dragonfly 5

Her eyes were swollen and his heart went out to her. Her she was, at her best friend’s wedding, and yet she couldn’t help but cry. She tried to hide in the corner, but he found her anyway. He had seen her earlier, when the bridal party was having their pictures taken. Even then, amid all the smiles, she seemed sad. The smile hadn’t quite reached her eyes. And so, he slowly approached her.

“Excuse me, Megan?”

She looked up. “Yes?”

“Hi, my name’s Ted. I noticed you earlier.” God, that sounded so lame. “Why are you crying?”

She sniffed a bit and used a napkin to wipe her eyes and nose. “It’s just….I mean, I’m happy for Julia, and all, but…..” She trailed off.

“But you wish it was you.” It was half a question, half a statement. She just nodded in response. “That’s okay, Megan. It’s natural. I’ve been to tons of weddings and all the single girls feel that way to some extent. Ever heard the expression ‘Always the bridesmaid….’?”

She smiled a bit. “Yeah. It’s just so tough. Julia, me and the other girls are all best friends. Have been for ages. And now, I’m the only one left without a husband. Do you know what it’s like to see everyone get married, but never be up there yourself?”

He chuckled a bit, holding up his left hand. “You see a ring on this finger? And if you think you’ve been to a lot of weddings….” He let his voice trail off.

Megan blushed. “Oh that’s right….you’re a wedding photographer. I forgot.” She giggled a bit.

He grinned. “Yeah. So don’t you tell me about watching other people get married. I do it for a living.” He offered her his hand. “Now come out of that corner. You’re needed on the dance floor.”

Megan hurried out with the other girls to gather at one end of the dance floor. Julia, the bride, was making her way to the opposite end, the bouquet held tightly. She turned around as the DJ counted. “One…..two….three!” The bouquet went flying through the air, and so did Megan. They came down together, and Megan’s eyes shone with a light that had been missing earlier. Ted smiled and dazzled her with the flash from his camera. As he walked by her, on his way to shoot pictures of the groom removing Julia’s garter he whispered “Well, I guess you’re not always the bridesmaid….”

Tenacious Tiger #5

An Alternate Reality

Her eyes were swollen and his voice was sharp, focused, and vengeful. Years of infidelity came spewing from the mouth of the man she thought she loved.

"I fucked a flight attendant when I went on that business trip to Vail back in '96, and she was better than you could ever hope to be."

The room started spinning and she just kept thinking to herself, "who is this monster?" Back at NYU, her friends always warned her that she couldn't change him. She just took it in stride. "The only reason they would say things like that are because they're jealous of us," she would say to herself so often that it practically became her personal motto.

"And oh yeah, at that costume party back on campus in '92, your old roommate and I fucked in the bathroom while you were dealing with Cindy vomiting on the floor in the next room."

Cindy had been in their wedding and was one of her closest friends at school. She cried even more now as it became aware that her life had been some cheap reality television experiment and she wasn't aware she was being filmed. "How many people knew about this behind my back," she kept asking herself.

"That one time you went back to your uncle's funeral, I spent the whole weekend in our apartment together with the bartender from down the street."

"You've got to be kidding me," she said as it became aware that she could trust no one in this city. Suddenly she felt alone. She moved to this city for him. She gave up on friendships and relationships elsewhere all because she loved him; all because she thought he loved her. Even their neighborhood bar was in on the secret. "They must think I'm an idiot, aloof to what was going on behind my back," she thought. She didn't know who to trust; she didn't know anyone's phone numbers to call ; she didn't know who to turn to. Her life revolved around him and he demanded her full commitment.

She was so alone. No friends. No family. Her heart was aching with the pain of the lies and the depths of the newly found emptiness.

In one swift movement, she whispered "Lord protect me" and stepped off the ledge.

Saturday, July 09, 2005

Precious Panda # 5

The Road Not Taken

Her eyes were swollen and his arm was in a sling, but all Rob Layne could think about as he stared at the two teenagers in his office was how long the Momba would be out of commission.

“That’s what you get for screwing around on the tallest and fastest rollercoaster in the Midwest,” he said in his somber and authoritative voice. Even when lecturing his employees, Rob still managed to sound like a commercial. “That sort of behavior isn’t something we endorse here at Worlds of Fun. We’re going to have to let you both go. Don’t worry though, assholes like you will fit right in at Six Flags, so something tells me you won’t be out of jobs for long. Now GET OUT.”

As the teary-eyed teens were leaving, Rob was reminded of his own tearful exit from something he loved seven years earlier. It was then that he left the world of forensics that had been his home for over a decade to pursue a career as a Worlds of Fun Theme Park executive full time. Swiveling around in his Italian leather chair, Rob looked at all of the pictures hanging on the wall and took stock of his life.

He knew he was what the world considered to be a phenomenally successful person. When he returned to Missouri seven years before, Rob quickly demonstrated the initiative and creativity that ensured his fast rise in the Worlds of Fun Corporation. His “Spinning Dragons in Spin-City” project—building three rollercoasters in Central Park and one on top of Madison Square Garden—made the company billions. Now President of all North American and Southeast Asian parks, Rob made roughly five million dollars annually and he was only 33 years old. Add to that his partner of over six years Kenny Chesney, whom Rob has “turned” shortly after moving back to Missouri, and he was a pretty happy camper.

Still, Rob couldn’t help but feel that he was missing something from his former life. Sure, he had money and cars and a 55th level Paladin on World of Warcraft, but part of him secretly longed to be back in the debate community. Sometimes, when he would look into the eyes of his country music singing beau who was hot enough to make his teeth sweat, Rob wished he could get up at 4:30 in the morning and drive a 15-passenger van to some Godforsaken hole in the wall town and listen to poorly structured inherency arguments all day. As Rob walked over to the bar in his office and poured himself a drink, he realized that he really missed all of the goofy bastards that he coached and wondered aloud what might have been had he not chosen his current profession.

For a moment, he regretted the choice he made. But only for a moment. Whistling the tune to “Save a Horse, Ride a Cowboy,” Rob picked up his drink and headed back towards his desk.

Earnest Elephant #5

Her eyes were swollen and his watched her heart break. Sitting in a parking lot next to the house that was home to so much of their love, she spilled out her heart. Reasons she loved, reasons she hurt, reasons her heart was shattering. There's no pain more real than a broken heart. She felt stupid for loving his snoring at night, so loud sometimes she couldn't sleep. Felt stupid for loving his inability to carry a tune, and how he loved to sing anyway. The girl with swollen eyes and a broken heart hates to cry in cars. It's too much of a reminder of pain; it bears thoughts of cancer, a first love lost, a second love lost.

For a moment she flashes back to a different parking lot, lit by a neon blue cross. The night was like some twisted confessional where the priest was a past love, and her sins were caring too much. There, in that car, she realized what it meant, what it felt like, to be alone. Scared of the future, of the lump in her mother's breast, she clung desperately to his arm and cried, but truly sat there alone.

Now, here, in this car, her eyes were swollen and his eyes were searching for a cure to the pain. Too young to love, they sat separated by the one thing that kept them clinging to one another. He thought of nights when he held her in his arms and the rest of the world faded away. Long bus trips by her side, they'd write secrets to one another on a pad of paper or her new laptop. He still loved the way she looked in that glow. The only thing he hated was how she looked when she cried and how it broke his heart.

He never thought he'd feel this way again. Sitting in this car, he identified her feelings. Searching her eyes as she purged her love, he remembered. He didn't like cars either. It made him think of a backseat, and a face he'd never forget. Of how he'd sold his soul to her that night, a sale with no return.

Back in the car, her eyes were swollen and his guilt was painted all over his face. As she sat in the driver's seat, her hands upon the wheel, she thought back to the loving things he'd said. She could picture in her mind a note from the bus where he confessed

"I don't think that I would make it for very long right now without you. Even more than the fact that I couldn't, I wouldn't want to. I refuse to attempt to imagine what I would be like not to be able to walk up behind you and wrap my arms around you and kiss your neck. It would make life virtually unlivable. I want to be with you, and only you, and from now on, and for as long as I can be with you I want to be with you. I love you."

thinking of that moment started the tears all over again.

And there they sat. Her eyes were swollen and his love was lost, to a list of things he needed to accomplish before love was really an option. He got out of the car and watched her drive away. Knowing she'd be losing sleep tonight, he climbed the stairs to his bedroom and went to bed alone. Waiting for his roommates to fall asleep, he pulled his comforter over his head and layed alone with his thoughts.

And now his eyes were swollen and her image was imprinted on his mind.

Friday, July 08, 2005

TKO Question #5

TKO Question #5 [Fiction]

"Her eyes were swollen and his ..."

Use that as the start of your post. Go from there as you please.

Do not begin posting until tommorow at noon. The post is due by noon on Tuesday. This is a schedule change because I will be in route to Hawaii on Monday. I REPEAT. Do not start until noon tommorow (which is when the vote is over) and post before NOON CENTRAL on Tuesday.
Happy writing! PS: I know this is harder, but you all made the first cut and are quite talented. You also have four full days to think and write.

Wordy Woodpecker #4

It has often been said you can’t fully understand what is truly valuable until you have experienced a time without what is valuable. Having been somewhat of a loner in years past, I can understand how each of the little things involved with being in someone’s company is truly valuable. Being with a friend does not make a meal any tastier, a movie’s actors perform any better, and coffee doesn’t get any tastier or more caffeinated with a friend. Yet we feel compelled to perform these actions with a friend or acquaintance. Why is this the case?

One of the major “little things” I enjoy with others is the verification of thoughts. Consider a comedy club. When you are among the crowd, even the tamest of jokes tends to get you laughing. But if you are alone watching the performance on TV, you find yourself laughing only at the funniest of jokes. The performance of the comedian is the exact same, but I would find myself clearly having a better time at the comedy club itself. When in the company of other people, every small laugh verifies the thought in my head that the joke was funny and makes me less likely to be embarrassed at laughing at a “cheesy” joke. Sure, one can say this is irrational, but this is an irrationality built into our subconscious. And instead of shunning the unavoidable irrationality, one should embrace it and greater enjoy the little things. Moreover, the verification of thoughts can act as a great salve to frustration over events past. To know that others have gone through what you have puts your predicament into perspective, and allows you to realize that you aren’t alone, in more than one sense.

Another “little thing” I enjoy with others is a sort of mutual happiness. For some reason, observing people happy tends to make oneself happy. Especially when I know that I have caused the happiness, I just feel good. As they say, smiles are contagious. As a nonbeliever, I do not believe that I will be rewarded by my good acts by being sent to heaven; in fact, if there was a heaven and hell, I would be most likely sent to hell for being a dirty atheist. Or maybe purgatory, aka God’s version of the bureaucratic DMV which makes hell seem like a nice place. So it certainly is irrational that I would feel happiness for bringing happiness to others, but I do. And much like for the verification of thoughts, this unavoidable irrationality is not to be shunned, but embraced.

For many years, I demanded of myself that I would be purely rational. Since the movie remains unchanged regardless of who I bring, what should I go along with anybody? But then I realized by cold calculations forgot the irrational, but important, positive feelings associated with being in someone’s company. And to try to ignore these feelings is, in a word, irrational.

Giddy Giraffee #4

I have 488 little “things” that make my life happy. Mind you 488 is an approximate number, but the official count has to be pretty close. If the doctor’s calculations were correct I have a +/- 4% buffer zone.

I lost skin pigmentation on the front part of my lower abdomen when I was 13. The area affected stretches from hip to hip and at the largest point is about three inches tall and at the shortest maybe a half inch. This area was completely albino white, until about 3 years ago when I started taking medication and skin pigmentation began to slowly return. My pigmentation returned in a spotted, dotted, speckled – insert adjective of personal preference – pattern. Simply put these tiny little things, these spots make me smile, but it hasn’t always been the case.

I used to be mortified of my markings. Any situation that makes a 13 year old pull her pants down repeatedly in the doctor’s office can be a hard thing to handle. Combine that with the fact that my mother gave permission to have my condition photographed for research and you might be able to grasp the intensity of my spot complex. I refused to wear a two piece swimsuit, low cut jeans were out of the question, and on several attempts I bought fleshed colored markers to see if I could fix the problem myself.

Surprise, Surprise, makers didn’t work, and gradually I came to accept the fact that my spots were permanent. (unlike the promise on the marker package.) For the most part, I did a good job at hiding my disfigurement. These few inches became completely taboo, no one got to see them and absolutely no one got to touch them.

The first time I realized I couldn’t hide forever was about a year ago. I was with a guy who was very special to me, as our relationship grew, I knew that eventually my shirt would come off. My spots would be exposed and I was certain that this meant the end of our make out sessions, dooming me to a life of being a virgin forever, in which no one would find me physically attractive, eventually leading to death- alone, bitter and spotted.

When the moment finally came I laid back on the bed and asked if I could show him what I was so afraid of. Dramatically I revealed my forbidden 3 inches. After what felt like and eternity of silence, I slowly opened my eyes. What I didn’t see was a look of disgust, I didn’t hear was a shriek of terror, he was smiling and from what I could tell laughing slightly on the inside. Slowly he leaded over and tenderly kissed my spots.

His acceptance of my greatest insecurity was life altering. Following his example I gradually came to accept me. After I worked on loving my spots, I moved to my thighs and then my elbows. My body never changed my attitude did. Physically I’m not perfect by any means, but when I was finally able to loose the chains of insecurity and release the weight of anxiety, I became happy.

I am a unique, exciting, beautiful person. My tiny little spots are a manifestation of this. For the first time ever I am a proud owner of a two piece swimsuit. If you see me at the pool this summer notice my smile, then look a little closer, if your lucky you’ll be able to see my spots.