Monday, January 30, 2012

One, two, three strikes, you're out

The first one I saw coming, an obvious swing and a miss.
The second one was unexpected, a curve ball.
I wanted to throw my bat to the ground in frustration.
The third is in the air, flying towards home plate, I can't decide whether or not to take my chance and swing or let it fly and hope it's rapidly spinning body goes ascrew and fouls.
I can't tell if I have the time to even be debating this, my bat held aloft over my shoulder, not in completely a passive or completely agressive position.
I decide to wait another moment, feel things out, watch it race towards me, one second longer...

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Acceptance

I'm sitting here in silence, I can't seem to find the words to say. Nothing sounds quite right as I combine words into sentences, and they are deleted quickly after their birth, wiped clean from the monitor screen. I'm left staring at the blinking vertical line, as if expecting inspiration from it's simple repetitive form. Nothing comes, my thoughts are dull, lifeless, emotionless. As colorless and repetitive and the plain black insertion point printing out the letters my fingers now tentatively press. There is no emotion behind them, stale, insipid thoughts now transfered into a physical light. 

This is the phase of the greif cycle I have a great distaste for. As backwards as that may seem, it pains me to reach this point, at least in the others I felt something, even the initial paralysis of shock was something. To me, this phase is synonymous to "what now?", or even the point right before, before you even have the sense to look for a "what now". You're numb, not with shock, just a bone chilling feeling of vacancy. The acceptance of passed events leaving you void of emotion. That is where I am now, just floating in the nonresistant space of nothingness with no real direction to focus my path for the future. 

Strangely, and frustratingly enough, this phase has laid hold on me at the same time for many of the griefs plaguing my life as of late. I'm left feeling exhausted and used, blindly insecure. I am emotionally sore, and without the distractions of the much more complex phases I am consigned with the abstraction of nullity, able to focus on the realistic pain left behind. This is the point where we are expected to pick ourselves up from the dark corner of despair, dust ourselves off, and move forward with renewed faith. No one ever talks about reaching acceptance and wanting to crawl back to the corner, just to be able to feel something. No, that would be detouring, diverting from the path, slipping from the norm and expected. Crazy, unwanted, unspeakable, not fit for the quality of life written about in self-help books.

 Like moths to a light, humans naturally seek the comfort. It is unexpected to turn our backs from the light, to wallow in the darkness. To be unwilling to take our chances in the light and turn back seeking any emotion we can find, just to feel something. Yet, that is exactly what I am doing now. Fighting the light, afraid that once I embrace it the things that brought me grief in the first place will no longer matter as they should, they will be forgotten. The light will take the sting away from the sharp thorn that pierces my emotional skin, dull it, cloud it. As crazy as it sounds I want it there, because it's something. 

Now I'm talking in circles. The black dash spurting out the nonsense, so here I close this rant, before I lose all sense of normality.  

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Useless emotion

Anticipation is an emotion I think I could live without.
That moment right before you jump, when all the balls are in the air, when you know something is coming, not necessarily what, only that something is. It makes my gut ache and my fingers tingle, when I am not sure whether to hold my breath or to empty my lungs and scream. It's probably why I am not one for suspense movies. I would rather things just be told to me, I don't want things to be beat around the bush. I want my questions to an answered with answers, not another question, or worse, complete silence. 

Anticipation leaves room for doubt, unreasonable or unexplainable feelings of guilt, it separates your sanity from within and plays tricks on it. It can shake even the strongest of confidence. Somewhere in the silence of that moment you realize you don't know what your doing, no matter the time or lack there of spent in preparation. A moment where you hope for the best and expect the worse. When you can't decide whether to lift your hands to your face and brace for impact or to square your shoulders and raise your chin in assurance. 

I like to consider myself an optimist. I look for the best in every situation, even in times riddled with anticipation my hope for the best out weighs any expectations of the worst. But optimism takes a lot from someone, it has to be worked my a muscle, and flexed tightly when needed. When it isn't used it becomes weak, and easily tires. When the feelings of anticipation carry on without resolution the optimism shakes, stuggles to bare the weight. With out resolve it will eventually break down, succumb to  the doubt. 

That sounds very optimistic of me now doesn't it? I guess I am just getting to the point where my optimism is beginning to shake, tiring and unable to continue to flex under the pressure. Needless to say I am ready for a release, I'm ready to move on from this cross road. I tend not to do well when a future that directly affects me is not under my control. The decisions of others make me wary. My obsession with the control, or more specifically the outcome create concerns. The anxiety sets in and clouds my reason.

All in all anticipation is an emotion I would do away with if given the chance. I guess is the point I am trying to get across in the ramblings of this post. I find it to be an unnecessary and frustrating emotion. 

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

The high five scenario

Ever had that awkward moment when you think your still friends with someone and they act like you don't exist? It's like when you go in for a high five and the other person makes no notice of you standing there like an idiot with your hand in the air and that weird "High Five" smile on your face. There's no rebounding from that. Seriously. Best case scenario you pretend you were doing some sort of robot dance move that required your hand up at that odd angle. There's just no recovering from that much awkward. 

I'm not exactly familiar to people pretending I don't exist. With as in you face outgoing as I am I make it pretty difficult to just delete me from your life. I am also a person who doesn't go out of their way to make people upset or hurt, I usually go out of my way to bring around the opposite. So I don't come across feelings like this directed at me very often. 

Recently though, I have and I am not sure how to recover from it. Worst part is, I knew the person fairly well we chatted and hung out, so this wasn't like a regular old high five, this was like a up top-round the back-hand shake-slide-snap-knuckles-jellyfish high five. 

Try robot dancing out of that one. 

Unfortunately I wasn't smart enough to take it how it was and just walk away with what dignity I had left. Nope, I had to call him out for completely blowing me off and pretending like I didn't exist.
 Survival tip #1: Just walk away. 
That's when the most frustrating part happened. Instead of just fessing up to totally ignoring me, he tried to play it off by saying something completely ridiculous like, "Psh what do you mean, I totally high fived you."
It's like, "No. No Sir you did not." 
At this point refer to survival tip number one. Do not, at all costs continue this debate. So what did I do? Turned the whole situation into,  
Yeah huh!
Nuh uh!
Yeah huh!
Nuh uh!
Yeah huh!
Nuh uh!
You know. Very mature like and such. 
Sadly this story gets worse, he backed me into a corner using idiot logic, the only logic I am not equipped to battle. I was beaten, and had to shlunk away with only an "Alright then" as my closing remarks. I was beaten at a battle that wasn't even a battle meant to be fought. By a player who didn't even want to play in the first place.

 Annnd robot dancing suddenly seems smooth. So very smooth. 

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

So there's this guy

It is strange to me how much girls put on the shoulders of guys without them even knowing it. 

To a girl, one guy could be the key to her self esteem, confidence, happiness, everything and with one blow along the way shoot everything to bits in a matter of seconds. I don't understand why some of us do that, make that one guy your everything. What exactly happens when that one guy drops the ball? Steps out of the frame? 

Where is your everything now? 

When the guy changes his mind, wants something different, keeps moving, pursues other goals in his own life he takes your world with him unknowingly. That shouldn't be the end of the world for us. It shouldn't cause some sort of stereotypical psycho girl melt down. It blows my mind when I see this. I don't feel compassion for the stupid girl who put all her eggs (and self image, self respect, moral compus, excreta...) in one basket. I just want to throw my hands in the air and say,

 'Yeah, I could have found a much more logical way for disposing of all those eggs, like throwing them at a fan or something.'

It shouldn't be a guys job to carry all that for us, that isn't fair to them and never fair to ourselves. We should be self dependable, self reliant, self motivated. Making your happiness dependent on someone else unhealthy and wrong. It will only bring you pain in the long run. Girls have to realize that they have been happy before a guy and can be happy after them. 

Let them make your happier instead, let them add to your confidence and your love for yourself, but don't make them the factor of if you love yourself or not. I have many men in my life that make me happier, make me smile and blush at complements, but none of them hold all my eggs, they just help me paint them, they add to me, and who I am. They sometimes remind me who I am, remind me what I am worth, get me back on track in positive thinking about myself but they don't control everything.

I wish more girls would understand that. I wish I didn't cringe at the words "So there's this guy.." because I know that will eventually come back to bite them. 

I guess this doesn't only apply to girls and guys, it really applies to anyone. No single person should hold your key to being happy. Okay rant over.

Plus self confidence is much prettier on a girl then desperate dependency.    

Okay, now I'm really done.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Monster

Everything is so loud.
Like every person on earth is shouting. The noise rings in my ears, and destroys any previous concentration. I feel like I am sitting at the bottom of a ocean, the weight of everything around me crushing me. I struggle to hold my breath, clear my mind, I'm looking for a way out, but my lungs are burning, my mind is foggy. I'm desperate for anything. I curse myself for not knowing something as simple as knowing how to swim, again it's my fault I'm here. It always is. It's my fault I'm slipping away.

This place is worse then the cliff, the cliff is out in the open, it's quiet, almost peaceful compared to this. Here it's dark, thousands of voices shouting and I still feel alone. The weight pushing down on me, taking the last of my air. I can feel myself slipping and I'm half hoping it would just take me faster, submerge me into unconsciousness where I could no longer hear the noise. Thats when he comes, the monster who whispers lies into my ears. The one I thought was so far gone he had no hopes of returning. I should not have kid myself, I know him too well. I can feel him grinning into my neck as I accept this. Then I realize he's been there this whole time, whispering to me amongst the noise. I cringe as he speaks, already knowing the worlds he will use before he says them. My voice in my head intermingling with his. I try to shake him off, another desperate attempt at escape, push him back into that hole I thought I had so carefully imprisoned him. To my surprise he goes willingly, slinking back into that pit.

I begin to relax, it became quiet when he left. Quiet is good. My thoughts begin to clear, my lungs no longer burning. Cleaver answers to my problems coming together. I can see the light from the surface, hope rises from my chest. Then as quickly as he left he is back. I shudder expecting his hot breath in my ear, but I feel nothing. He speaks again. I know he is here, I can hear him plain as anything, again he speaks, his voice no longer a whisper. I shut my eyes tight and clutch my sides as to protect myself. And again he growls I can tell he is inches from my face. My eyes snapping open I recognize the face I see before me. 

Her lips turning up in a familiar sickening smile. 

This was not the monster I was expecting, but the monster I always knew was there. I stand face to face with my reflection, clear as a mirror before me. She opens her mouth to speak and I feel myself feeding her the words, watching her lips move in identical patterns to mine. I stop and reach up to touch my own lips, and she waits, hands at her sides. I begin to shake, wishing I had slipped away earlier. She smiles again at me, not in kindness but in greed. I lift my arm to swing, throwing my all my strength into it, my fist connects where I planned. The split second I expected to meet flesh, soft and moveable, is washed away as my knuckles meet glass. She shatters into a million pieces that decorate the floor. Blood from my hand drips down, falling onto the shards of glass. I will myself not to look, not to let my eyes stray to the ground, to peer into the reflections scattered about, but I can't help myself. I step forward to a clean piece and lower my chin. There she is, staring back at me. Her large eyes a flame, hair falling beautifully passed her shoulders, small upturned nose, she was me, minus all of my flaws. She was perfect. All except that manic smile still slapped across her face and even then she was beautiful with perfectly formed lips, smooth and red. She notices my fixation and laughs, its shrill and cuts into my ears. I kick the glass, sending it flying across the floor but I can still hear her echoing inside my head.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

I am awakened by my own struggling, the blankets tangled about me, wrapping me tighter, the darkness of my room adding to the claustrophobia, they remind me of the water and I shove them off me. I am sweating and my heart feels as though its about to burst through my chest. My hair disheveled and matted to my face. I'm still shaking as I pull my knees up and burry my face. My chest tightens as I try to hold in the tears, but they still build up and spill over without my permission. 'I'm alone now,' I tell myself, 'no one needs me to be strong here.' As if on cue I loose all sense of control, the tears coming in floods now and I let them. I let them until there is nothing left, then I lay back down shaking still, this time from a mixture of what was before, pure exhaustion, and now as my body has cooled, the cold air. I am tempted to reach for a blanket but decide against it remembering the mess they encased me in before. Closing my eyes I know I wont fall back asleep, so I listen to the silence.  

Monday, January 9, 2012

The reason I fight for my dream

I wrote before about how much my riding means to me. 
My horses are my everything. They are the reason I get up and push through every day, day after day. My dream is to wear roses. I'll never stop fighting for it. I am willing to push myself to my breaking point and beyond for it. 

I came into this sport as an underdog, a nobody with no name or titles to speak of, from a family completely new to this. A little girl with a spotted pony that I loved more then anything else in the world. I used to call him my Romeo, I never thought I could love anything more. The first year with him I became very acquainted with the hard reality that was the ground. He was young, a greeny three year old. He knew about as much about riding as I did at seven, coming eight years old. We were new to this, and I fell undeniably in love with him. So he became mine. 

Ride after ride, tumble after tumble, we grew together. There was hardly anything that could keep me off his back. Even after he threw me in the pasture, breaking some bones in my back I was counting the days until I could ride him again. Then again when I came off and broke my leg, I was so concerned that he had been frightened by the accident. He came back around and stopped next to me, lowering his head down to my level as I sat of the ground and waited for my dad to reach me immobilized by the shock setting in and the pain in my leg. It was only 24 hours before I was out to the barn to be with him again, he was never spooked by my uncoordinated moves with my crutches or the loud plastic bag my dad had tied around my foot and leg to keep it dry. 

He was patient and stood still, halter-less while I tried to brush him. 

   My first real show was a big one, but I didn't know the difference. We had only been together less then a year when we decided to attend this show with the rest of our barn. We packed up and drove nine hours to Loveland, Colorado for the POA World show. I was excited beyond belief. Our placings were to be expected, even better in some cases but that didn't change the fact that I was immensely proud of our 10th, 11th, and 12th place trophies. While others in my barn won giant wooden trophies with shiny champion plaques on them and long beautiful ribbons, I placed my small much less elaborate trophies in front of Kips stall with great joy. I couldn't be happier or more proud of my pony for no more reason then the fact that he was mine and we had done that. As the show went on we came to one of the last nights. It was time for my favorite class, one I had waited all show for. The Open Costume class. I anxiously waited all day for it, and late into the night, it became so late with classes running long that was forced to lay down in a make shift bed in the tack room. Then finally at 12:00 am I was stirred awake by my mother who helped me adjust my braided pigtails and clamber on to my waiting pony. 

Dressed to the nines in real overalls my mother had altered to fit his front legs and attach around his neck and a green plaid shirt with arms stuffed with news paper and gloves attached to the ends that swayed when he walked, and topping it off with a straw hat with holes cut out for his ears tied to his head, he put up with more then you could ever ask of a three year old broke primarily by a little girl with nothing but dreams. I fidgeted in my dress as I walked to the large indoor arena, waiting in the warm up area for my class to be called. I struggled to keep my eyes open as the time ticked by, trying to remember my story I was supposed to tell the judge about my costume. When the class was called Kip moved around the arena, being cautious of the wobbly body swaying on top of him as he moved himself to keep me balanced. Every time the Judge would catch a glimpse of us he would laugh. Once in line up the Judge moved down the row of horses listening to each story and judging each costume. Then coming and stopping next to me. He looked up and grinned at me and asked me to tell him a little about our costume. I nodded and started. 
"Hi sir, my name is Beckie Thatcher, and this is my boyfriend Tom Sawyer..."

I panicked, I was too tired and couldn't remember the rest of my story, something about a glass door knob and barefoot summers by the river... I stared back at him I felt my ears get red and could feel the tears welling up. I mumbled the first words to come to my mind.

"I'm sorry mr judge sir, I had a very good story I promise, but it is so late and I am so tired, I just can't remember what it was."
He patted my leg and said it was okay before moving on down the line. My fingers curled up in Kips mane and I combed it with them in disappointment. It took a good fifteen minutes for the results to be calculated. I waited not even daring to hope for my number to be called. We were called forward in backwards order by placings, numbers were called and horses and riders stepped forward until I was left on the far side of the arena alone with three other pairs far down the line in the other direction. 

Reserve was called and the arena hushed for Champion, a number was called, I glanced down at the other riders but neither moved forward. I also stood still not knowing what to do. The announcer called the number again and laughed making a comment about how "she must be shy". I looked up to the crowd for either of my parents I found my dad holding the video camera smiling from ear to ear, he shouted, "Thats you sweetheart!" the audience broke out in laughter and the announcer called me forward by name this time. 

I held my beautiful trophy tightly as I rode Kip back to the stalls, my dad leading him because my hands were full. Once dismounted I looked at my small group of trophies from the days before, they were still shiny from all the care I had taken cleaning them only hours before, yet my new wooden trophy still looked out of place set down in front of them all. My mom saw my face and came over. I watched her remove my Champion trophy from where I had sat it down and moved all of my others forward, arranging them in an appealing manner. She then placed it behind them and told me it looked much better that way. I asked her why and she said something I'll never forget. 

"It took every one of these to get to here, every bit of every class. You should never let where you are now over shadow the places you've been, because without the effort you put into the past you would have nothing to show for in the present and nothing to strive for in the future."

 I've never had the money some riders do, the non existent budget that pays for top trainers, beautiful talented horses, or expensive tack. I make the best of what I am given, what I have been blessed with. Sometimes I find myself thinking what I would give to ride that 50,000 dollar horse, trot into the arena with no doubt you'll to trotting out with roses. Then I remember the 1200 pounds of animal underneath me, the one I bought with pocket change compared to the others, a meer one tenth of that. The one, like Kip and Kori before him, has put effort into every step, knows what its like to be beaten and knows what its like to win. I am not someone who has had everything handed to them like my critics believe, I've been to the bottom, I'm actually quite familiar with it, but I've also pushed and pushed and worked to get to the point I am now.

To the rider and equestrian I am now. 

I have been a lot of places, been through a lot of pain, found both joy in victory and joy in defeat, the kind that burns in your chest, pushing you to move forward and progress. I've lived though tear stained cheeks that scar my soul, and moments that made my heart swell with happiness. I've fought for my dreams. Put every ounce of effort into my present because I know some day it will be my past. I am still the underdog, the long shot, the nobody, but I will never stop fighting. 

Not until they know my name, not until I accomplish what I set out to do.


Saturday, January 7, 2012

You did it again

You did it again.
Waited until the last moment to call out and stop me from slipping off the edge. Pushed my strength as far as it would go and then some before rewarding me with your hand. Thousands of miles away and your still testing me, pushing me. 

I haven't seen you in months but you still know me better then I know myself.

641 more days.

Monday, January 2, 2012

Let the good times roll

I am losing it.

Today I had the reckless erge to drive up Suncrest, turn off my car, roll down my windows and let it roll down from the top. Building speed and taking those crazy turns like we did last summer. I actually caught myself smiling as I remembered how utterly terrified I was, clutching my seat with one hand and the dash with the other. You leaned over and asked what I was thinking, my voice was strained as I spat out things like, 'Have you done this before?, you are completely insane, this is so reckless and stupid, please turn the car back on,' and 'I want to scream!' You just kept the car rolling and laughed. I was getting frustrated now and asked in annoyance what you were laughing at, you looked back over, and said, 'Do it. Scream' I had to have looked confused because at this point you thought I needed an example. I about jumped out of my seat as you belted out a yell. Once you stopped you looked over at me, I must have looked absolutely ridiculous because you laughed. And laughed, and laughed. I glared over at you until you looked back at me, serious now. 

"You should start doing things you want, because you are only here once, make memories worth remembering."

Once we got to the bottom you pulled over, leaned back in you chair and closed your eyes. I sat there in silence for a while until I asked what you were doing.

"Remembering." you said. 


646 more days. 

Sunday, January 1, 2012

Another life cut short

Life is sort. Sometimes its cut short by your own hand.
Suicide is a terrible thing. It burns everything it touches. 
The one lost by its hands is now not the one suffering. The ones left behind are now alone, beaten by the selfishness of suicide. To lose one is too many.

B.J and Brandon, your lives mattered. They mattered here, on earth. I wish you could have been here for the floods of love and tears after you left. I wish the floods could have came sooner.. There is not much else to say. 

You were loved. And you are loved. I hope you realize that now.