Once upon a time…

Once upon a time there lived a boy who had way too high of hopes for his deranged girlfriend.  This boy, who most people refer to as Potato Foot, was a handsome fella, and played a lot of video games.  His girlfriend liked to sit behind him and watch as he played Players Unknown Battleground like a crazed maniac.  His girlfriend like to attempt to know what she was talking about, but usually he had to correct her because she is a bit of a ditz. 

The Boy was superhuman and could pick up a house and toss it feet, if not miles.  The Boy has never tossed a house, but the Girlfriend is pretty sure he could if he wanted to.  She has noticed that when the Boy puts his mind to something, he usually achieves it.

The Girlfriend, however, cannot seem to even write a sentence anymore.  In the past, she could write && write &&& write, but now, when she opens her laptop, all she finds that she does is stare at a blank Word document.  Sometimes she thinks that her ability to write, has gone down the toilet.  Just flushed, swirled down and now is in the sewer with all the rest of the crap.

The boy, being his loving boy self, tries to tell the Girlfriend that her writing isn’t crap.  But she cannot believe him since he has never read anything she has written.  But in his defense, The Girlfriend doesn’t usually share her writing – with him, or the neighbor, or the best friend, or even the cats… especially the cats – those mean little I’m going to judge you animals.

The Girlfriend had so many dreams && sometimes she feels like they were washed into a gutter and now the rats are chewing them.  This made her sad – not because her dreams are trash and unrealistic, but because – rats.

The Boy laughs sometimes at how silly the Girlfriend is and thinks and talks and walks and chews and…. Okay, maybe not – it’s not the point.  He just seems so perfect, being able to shoot fish in a barrel, but her – nothing.  She cannot even fail properly. 

The Girlfriend tries to accomplish new things but in the end trashes it to the floor in a small pile of crinkled paper.  It’s not that she doesn’t want to achieve greatness, she just doesn’t think she is worthy of it.  What makes her better than the next person who wants wonderful things to happen?  Her dream is to be a writer of books.  She wants to be that person that has a book that touches a soul – even if it is just one.

The Boy is always telling her she can do anything if she puts her mind to it.  But the Girlfriend knows you’re supposed to use personal experience and likes and loves and feelings and relationships to build stories off – but what happens when the writer hasn’t done anything to build from?  What if the things the writer has been through, they are tired of writing about?

Once in a world she could write and write and write and write about feelings, and experiences and death, but now with her Rainbow and Butterfly mind she wants to write love and happiness and finding a way to smile.  She wants to make someone feel as if they’re floating in thin air from just the words she chooses.

But words – what if her words aren’t perfect and her paragraphs are dirty, and her sentences are thirsty?  How can a writer have issues with wording and grammar and still write a book that pleases all the senses?

She will ask people, a lot, about ways to write more and their answer is always the same – to write more you need to read more.  What happens if you’re in a reading slump and every time you pick up a book you begin yawning and fall asleep?  Not because the book is boring but because you just don’t feel like it.  Kind of like when people tell you to drink more water, but the more water you drink the more boring the taste is.  Then you wonder how people can drink the water because it doesn’t actually have a taste and when they give you some line like it’s refreshing, and you think ‘so is Dr. Pepper if you drink enough of it’.

The Boy, however, doesn’t seem to have these kinds of problems – at least the Girlfriend doesn’t notice this.  He laughs things off and carries on his merry way.  He grabs controllers and plays video games forgetting troubles for a few.  The Girlfriend used to use writing for that – just jump in headfirst and live through characters a life worth living.  But does that mean her life isn’t worth living?

She is happy and enjoys life.  How many people can say they have fallen in love twice in a lifetime with the same person and finds themselves falling more and more every day?  She can.  How many people can say that by thirty she would realize that she has lived longer without parents than she did with them?  She can.  But how many people can say that by nineteen they had figured out exactly what they wanted to do with their life and just needed to put it into action?  She can.

Putting it to action is her problem.  She has a memory card with thousands of writings – beginnings – no middle and no end.  She finds herself sometimes going back and opening her old writings and trying to finish them, but she can’t.  There is no ending.  Her writing seems to go on forever, but the forever isn’t a good thing, because it turns into crap.  Then when she finally does write a full story, whether it is short, middle or long, she shreds it to pieces before she can stop herself and ends up with the dog ate my homework writing that makes no sense at all.

The Boy tries to help her the best way he can by supporting and telling her to start writing and saying how their future could be great – if she would only write more.  Finish what she has started and do something great!  Greatness, she wonders, was it ever in her future to begin with?  People her age seem to have already gotten what they want out of life, family, career, but she sits on her throne staring off into the distance of an unwritten world of greys and whites covering a rainbow that was once thousands of colors.

Where did her colors go?  Where can she find the colors to pull them back into her life so the rainbows, and unicorns, and cotton candy comes back into her eyes?

But even in the bleakness of rainbow-less worlds of soggy sandwiches and stale potato chips, she can still find a small hole in the fence and write something.  Maybe nothing touching or excellent but something – small and ordinary.  She finds her wording sometimes to be dramatic and wholesome and perky.  But parts, in the same writing, would be swollen and contemporarily empty. 

She blinks back the thoughts of quitting and moves on down the wet pavement to the stop sign and stares emotionless for a while before she turns back around and goes home. Home, a place of solitude and happiness. Home, a place where she can put her feet up and know that no one is judging her, except for maybe her cats. Home, a place she can close doors off to people and things and other worldly beings and pretend she isn’t home. They can knock and ring the doorbell and peak into the windows but all they’ll see is empty space. Home, a place where dreams and aspirations live in the air where they’ll be plucked and hidden in a box deep into the abyss of what is known to her as a closet. The closet holds secrets that sometimes need to be spread around, so people know what they are up to. Cleaning out the closet is a real thing and maybe she needs to open hers wide open so the world can swallow her whole.

She doesn’t know where life will take her if she is barefooted all the time, but she does know wherever it leads, the Boy will follow on the back of a fedora wearing horse with a cape yelling “GO GIRLFRIEND!”  She knows out of the whole world that he will be her cheerleader, the one person that she can count on, and know that when it rains, it’ll pour – but he’ll be holding the umbrella getting soaked because his ball cap that he wears backwards doesn’t block the rain.

15 Minutes.

Daily Prompt : You have 15 minutes to address the whole world live (on television or radio — choose your format). What would you say?

(I find myself standing on a stage in front of millions of people.  A hush has fallen over the crowd.  It’s quiet.  Except for a couple coughs and readjusting their seat.  They wait.  Cameras flash as people take pictures.  Film crews, many, surrounding the stage that I shakily stand on.  It’s Christmas Eve.  The world has gone crazy on the debate whether or not Santa Clause is real.  The world is watching.  I fumble with my index cards as I look at the crowd, one more swoop through, and wonder if anything I was about to say would mean anything to any of them.  I clear my throat.)

Dear People of the word, (My voice sound weak.  Almost hoarse.  I know if I’m going to get this to work, I must sound more proud.  I straighten my back and take a deep breath.  Starting over.)

Dear People Of The World, (A couple people smile in the front.  I wonder if they know how nervous I am.  How everything I was about to say I meant and I believe.)

Lately.  (I adjust my skirt.)  We have had a big debate on the existence of Santa Clause.  Whether or not he is real, or an old fairy tale our parents told us to keep us in line – since no one has ever saw him.  Thinking on this topic makes me think of a cartoon I watched the other night, “Yes, Virginia”.

(I stop for a moment and take a breather.  I glance down at my hands, which are knotted and intertwined in themselves.  A pretzel.  I didn’t realize I could get my hands to look like this.  The crowd, the world waits for me to continue.)

I have tried, many times in my lifetime, to explain why people should always believe in Santa Clause, whether you are 6 or 106, and until I watched that cartoon, alone in my cold living room, did I hear the best way to explain the reason.  (I wipe my forehead free of sweat.)  Out of curiosity I Googled the clipping from the newspaper in the cartoon and realized it was a real clipping from a newspaper from September 21, 1897 and written by a news reporter by the name of Francis Pharcellus Church.

I want to read this news paper clipping from the New York Sun if you’ll have me.

(Out of a small pocket on my jacket I pull out a folded piece of paper.  I unfold it, shaking just a little, and run my eyes over the words that were printed on the sheet.  I couldn’t believe I was standing in front of these millions of people.  The world.  Explaining to them why anyone, no matter how old they are, should believe in Santa Clause.  I begin:)

Virginia O’Hanlon wrote to the sun, this is what she wrote, “Dear Editor, I am eight years old.  Some of my little friends say there is no Santa Clause.  Papa says, ‘If you see it in The Sun it’s so.’  Please tell me the truth; is there a Santa Clause?”  After a quick response, Mr. Church replied, and he wrote:

Virginia, your little friends are wrong. They have been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except for what they see. They think that nothing can be which is not comprehensible by their little minds. All minds, Virginia, whether they be men’s or children’s, are little. In this great universe of ours man is a mere insect, an ant, in his intellect, as compared with the boundless world about him, as measured by the intelligence capable of grasping the whole of truth and knowledge.

Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to your life its highest beauty and joy. Alas! how dreary would be the world if there were no Santa Claus. It would be as dreary as if there were no Virginia’s. There would be no childlike faith then, no poetry, no romance to make tolerable this existence. We should have no enjoyment, except in sense and sight. The eternal light with which childhood fills the world would be extinguished.

Not believe in Santa Claus! You might as well not believe in fairies! You might get your papa to hire men to watch in all the chimneys on Christmas Eve to catch Santa Claus, but even if they did not see Santa Claus coming down, what would that prove? Nobody sees Santa Claus, but that is no sign that there is no Santa Claus. The most real things in the world are those that neither children nor men can see. Did you ever see fairies dancing on the lawn? Of course not, but that’s no proof that they are not there. Nobody can conceive or imagine all the wonders there are unseen and unseeable in the world.

You may tear apart the baby’s rattle and see what makes the noise inside, but there is a veil covering the unseen world which not the strongest man, nor even the united strength of all the strongest men that ever lived, could tear apart. Only faith, fancy, poetry, love, romance, can push aside that curtain and view and picture the supernal beauty and glory beyond. Is it all real? Ah, Virginia, in all this world there is nothing else real and abiding. 

No Santa Claus! Thank God! he lives, and he lives forever. A thousand years from now, Virginia, nay, ten times ten thousand years from now, he will continue to make glad the heart of childhood.’

(I folded the piece of paper and placed it back in my pocket, never looking up at the crowd.  If I were to drop a pin, I’d hear it.  I closed my eyes and took a moment for myself before lifting my head and revealing a jaw dropped audience.  A couple, sitting in the middle of the front row, smiled, tears speckled their cheeks.  I felt my heart expand.  The crowd stood on it’s feet, applauding.  I smiled.)

Thank you.  (I took my bow.  I took that moment to enjoy everything.  Even if I didn’t win over everyone, even if I didn’t win the debate, I believe that I got my point across.  The love and beauty, never being written so well since, still rings in my head from that clipping.  I enjoyed it.  If one person, or two, enjoyed it as much as me.  Then I did my job.)

(I turned on my heels and began walking away.  I didn’t stop until I got back to my hotel room where I dropped, roughly, on my bed and pulled a sheet over my face.  I was still fully dressed as the last bit of sun peeked it’s “Hello!” through my window.  I didn’t know what would happen the next day but I was proud.  I was happy, and for me, that was enough.)