What is it about our depression that really affects us? We live like Eeyore from The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh walking around with a dark rain cloud looming over us. Suddenly, everything is seen in a shade of gray. This feeling robs us of seeing color and emotion. Happy yellow, bold red, somber blue, elegant purple, perky pink, unpredictable orange, wise green—they all turn into gray. Simple gray with gray mid tones and no high lights or low lights. Every situation for us is clouded and masked, like the looming clouds before and after a storm. Where you can walk outside and feel the bitter cool wind whip against your skin. But it’s a relief from the blazing heat, isn’t it? Or in this mask of gray, is it simply another uncomfortable weather change? Our dejection leads us there, standing on the front porch, clutching our crocheted sweaters against us and wondering when the rainbow will shine its merciful colors through the thick clouds. We don’t need a dazzling show of bright colors, but simply a tiny peek of light. Something other than gray to let us know hope is coming.
Monday, December 19, 2011
Monday, December 12, 2011
The Photograph
Click
I am a hunter
I am a poacher
I am a captor
I am a kidnapper
Click
I am a thief
I have stolen
This landscape
This beauty
This creation
Click
These mountains
This river
Those trees
That person
Click
The emotions
I’ve stolen them too
Anger, sadness
Joy, frustration
Laugher, love
Click
It is mine
I am a thief
My camera is my weapon
I steal
But I leave everything behind
Just the way I found it
Click
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Abracadabra
I don’t believe magic is casting spells or drinking potions. It’s much more simplistic than that. I believe “magic” is how people explain the unexplainable. It is the first snow of the year, when the world seems to fall silent. Or it is a new born baby’s first smile, or that ray of sun that shines through the living room window on Sunday afternoons, warming from the inside out. This magic takes many forms. It’s the subtle glow of fireflies that dot the summer night, the tingle and fright of first falling in love, or the sound of rain pattering on the tin roof, creating a stillness in the chaos. Magic isn’t the leprechaun holding a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, but rather, the burst of color in the hazy, storm-torn sky. Simplicity. It cannot be explained by human terms. Isn’t that what makes these things magical?
Allow Me to Rant
Kudos to the brave therapists who listen to problems all day, but my therapy today comes in a good, old-fashioned rant about my pet peeves, all of which I have experienced this week.
1. When people are late.
This one just really pushes my buttons. We said 7:00. Do not show up at 7:15. 7:00 and 7:15 are not the same time, strangely enough. It’s not a hard concept, essentially. Just leave earlier. I just love waiting in dark parking lots for late people. Actually, I don’t. I very much hate it. So be on time.
2. When people text me to start a conversation, then reply about every ten minutes.
Really? Yes, this happens to me quite often. It isn’t brain surgery. If you’re busy, don’t text me. Are these tax dollars really going to education?
3. When people believe they are smarter than they actually are.
Welcome to my school. I may be indirectly referring to a few choice people, and I am in fact aware that I do sound like a 13 year old girl’s twitter account but isn’t that the purpose of ranting? People really need to get over themselves. Ever heard of the sun? The world revolves around it, not you.
4. Excessive cussing.
I am not preaching, just irked. Wow, you look so tough dropping 27 F-bombs because you just stubbed your toe on the side of the desk. I only wish I was as cool as you. Marry me now?
5. Cocky guys.
You will never be as hot as Ryan Gosling. Don’t even try.
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