Leaving comfort

I’ve been trying to start caring about my appearance again. Ever since I left serving for working from home, I began gaining weight. I wasn’t running 10,000 steps (according to my fit bit) in two hours anymore. Instead, I got up, put on my most comfy clothes, made the kids breakfast, maybe brushed my hair, and sat down for work for the rest of the day.

After a while, I hated seeing myself on camera. I started getting in trouble with my superiors when I started to claim my camera wasn’t working.

Before long, I gave in, keeping my camera on for every meeting. I hated how sickly I looked, I had long bags under my eyes the size of tangerines, my skin wasn’t just pale, it was a sickly grey, my pink lips were now devoid of color, and scabs covered my nose, chin and forehead where I had begun nervously picking. I covered up my chest as best I could where the picking had become even more sevier. My hair was greasy from the lack of showers and laid flat across my face.

I dreaded even going into work. The last ten years had weighed heavily on me, and working overtime from home was the final nail in my coffin.

I hated every aspect of my job. I felt as if I spent all day arguing with people. Each one told me they hated our product and I convinced them it was all worth the cost. And worst, we competed for the best numbers in persuading them to keep and upgrade their purchases. 

I felt disgusting inside and out. I started thinking of any excuse I could possibly think of to stay in bed. I was actually happy when I caught covid for the first time and took as much time off as I possibly could. I wanted to hide away and do absolutely nothing at all. So I did.

I stopped doing anything. All the effort I had put into keeping up on the apartment vanished overnight. I would sit there, internally screaming at myself to move, but I was frozen in place.

And then my cat Dominique got sick. One day, I found him in the kids’ room, and I immediately knew something was wrong. His skin was a dark yellow, his hair was listless, despite his large belly, I could see his spine, and he drooped lazily in my arms.

We quickly took him to the vet, who confirmed something was very long. He either had liver cancer, which would require months of chemo, or he had an inflamed liver, which would require weeks in the hospital with an I.V. Either treatment would cost thousands, and both had an incredibly low chance of success. It was also impossible to tell which treatment he needed without an MRI.  Which would also cost one thousand dollars that we didn’t have.

I immediately started bawling when I heard the word tumor. Erik had to take the phone from me to listen to the rest of the information. When he relayed everything, I cried even harder as I realized there was no way we could afford any option. And worse, I couldn’t put Dominique through chemo. Not when he wouldn’t even understand. Not when he would suffer so much.

“It’s okay,” Erik said. “Let’s get the MRI and go from there. If it’s the inflamed kidney, then let’s go for it.” 

I was shocked, “Are you sure we can afford it..?,” I hesitated.

“I’ll make it work,” he said. I think he sensed that this would finally do it. This is what would break me. And for some reason, that was comforting to me.

“Okay,” I said. We scheduled the MRI for the very next day.

That night, Dominique passed away in my arms. What surprises me the most was not how much I cried, but how much Erik cried. I wasn’t sure if he was crying more for Dominique or for me.

I applied for two weeks’ leave from work for depression the next day. I hoped I could feel better with some time off, but the closer I got to going to work again, the more I panicked.

I had spent so long doing everything I hated that I had missed out on everything I had ever loved. My kids were nearly out of elementary school. I had missed so much of their lives. The most precious years. If I hadn’t been working so many hours, would I have noticed something was wrong with Dominique sooner? What if this had been Erik? What if this had been the kids? I quit my job that day.

Today, I am looking at clothes online. I’ve bought dresses and bras. Though, it was a mistake starting with push-ups.  I want to be so different from who I was, that people realize how far I had truly fallen from who I really am. I want my kids to grow up thinking their Mom was the best and know without a doubt in their minds that I love them. It’s not easy, I’m still struggling in so many areas, but I’m not going to give up.

How far you’ve gone

You talk about how far I’ve gone, I dont clean like I used to, I dont cook like I used to. I don’t even play or love like I used to. But why is how far I’ve fallen all you can see?

Why do you always talk about these things like they just happened overnight? Why do you complain about me as if this weren’t the result of something larger? Is there truly something wrong with me? Do I not deserve the same love and patience?

I’m cleaning more now, see? Why haven’t you noticed? Im playing with the kids, cooking their favorite meals, and shopping. Will it never be enough?

I can feel your families eyes on me, its hard not to notice your sisters rolling their eyes. Was it something I said? Or something you told them?

I can feel the shackles trying to form, fastening themselves out of paranoia and low self-worth. I feel desperate, I want them to like me. I want them to see that I’m improving, so I talk about all the things I got done this week, proudly boasting that I cleaned the living room and about all the fancy dinners. As if it’s anything to brag about at all. The looks on their faces tell me its not.

I hesitate when silence breaks the conversation and smile when my niece giggles. I ask to hold her.

“She’s a little grumpy today,” your sister says and gives her to your Mom a few moments later. Do they think I don’t notice?

“You know, I’m home all the time these days. I could help watch her anytime,” I keep trying.

“Oh, yeah,” she says, but the look on her face says it won’t happen in a million years.

When will it stop being about how far I’ve fallen? How much have you complained about me? Why can’t they see this didn’t just happen, I didn’t just break. I was broken. And still, I’m trying. I AM getting better. Instead of talking about my struggles, why can’t you support me and talk about my triumphs?

I’m sorry, it takes me a while to process these things. I write about this small blip even as it happened months ago. I never knew what it meant to me.

Progression of the Negative

We were as poor as it gets. Our survival depended largely on government assistance and anything I could muster up in tips as a waitress. Erik had school during the week, so I had to be there to take care of the kids. So, instead, I worked longer shifts on the weekends.

Move faster, I need to take bigger sections. Make them laugh. If they laugh, they will give you a bigger tip. Not fast enough, you can’t make your customers wait. Volunteer to stay later, as late as you can. Even if it means working twenty hours straight, give it your all.

This is all you’re worth, all you can give, all you can do. So do better. The kids need clothes. They need school supplies. They deserve the world at their feet, so make it happen. Even if it breaks you.

I climbed three stories to our apartment late at night. I snuck in, peering into the twins’ bedroom. Evan laid on the top bunk, snoaring loudly. Kaylee slept quietly, her bottom lifted above her head. I sighed with relief and silently closed the door. I collapsed in bed next to Erik, not even bothering to take off my apron. “I made eight hundred dollars today,” I smiled meekly.

“Wow, that’s great. Maybe we can actually pay off some of these past due bills,” Erik said, rolling over to hold me.

“Maybe we can afford to do something fun next week? I feel like all I do is work lately.”

“I’m sorry, love, but even with everything you made, we are still completely broke.”

Harder, I need to work harder. This can’t be my kids’ lives.

“If anyone wants me to do their sidework, I’ll do it for twenty dollars!”

More, it still isn’t enough. Work the overnight shifts and carry more on every tray. You’re strong. Use that to your advantage. 

“Lovey, I made twelve hundred today! Maybe we could all go out and do something next week as a family?”

“I’m sorry, love, but we are three months behind on our power bill and two on the internet. We won’t have anything left once I pay those off with rent.”

Why can’t you just do this for them? Why can’t you provide for them in the way they deserve? You need to do better. You can’t let their lives be this mundane.

My feet begin to hurt, and my back begins to crumple. Ignore it. It’s only been a year of this. You can keep going. You can give them a better life.

I stumble into our apartment, trash has steadily begun to build up along the floors, and dishes surround the sink. This is pathetic. You’re failing them.

Two years pass, and I can no longer make it up the stairs on my own. When I walk, I walk on the very sides of my feet, wading through garbage.

You’re so pathetic, it would be better if the state just took the kids. Maybe then… they would have a good life.

No, I can’t give up. I have to keep going.

“Mama, can we go to the park?” Kaylee asks.

“I’m so sorry, sweetheart. Mommy can’t walk today, and Daddy has the car.”

“Hey,” Erik says when he comes home, “Im going out for sushi with a couple of my classmates on Friday, so I’ll be out late.”

“Oh, that sounds fun! Can we come with you?” I ask.

“Sorry, it’s not really the kind of thing I would want to bring the kids to.”

“Oh, right. Of course. Well, I hope you have lots of fun,” I try to make my smile look genuine.

Three years pass, I can no longer stand up straight without immense pain and begin to walk with a hunch below my neck. The apartment only gets messier and messier. The doctors tell me that if this continues, I’ll find myself in a wheelchair.

I can’t just stop working. My family would have nothing. If I died right now, Erik’s family would step in. They wouldn’t let him live like this. They would all be better off if I just disappeared. But…if I did…would the kids blame themselves?

I get frustrated and clean the entire apartment in one night. After all, sleepless nights were something I was more than used to. Besides, it wasn’t the first time I’d spent all night cleaning. I couldn’t just let the kids grow up in that dump.

When I’m finally done, I’m kneeling at the sink finishing the last couple of dishes. Unable to walk any further, my legs and knees became bruised and battered as I crawled my way through the apartment. My legs couldn’t take it anymore, so I decided to leave the last few dishes for later.

I ran into Erik on my way to bed, “Erik, can you just help with the dishes? It’s the only thing I couldn’t finish. I just…can’t.”

“Yeah, okay, I’ll do it later,” he says.

“Right… okay,” it wasn’t the first time I’d heard that.

When I wake up for work three hours later, I notice the dishes are still piled up. Panic rises into my throat. I had no time to do them. I had to get to work. And when I got home there would be even more. And Erik would have trash all around his chair. And the kids will have made a mess that went completely ignored. And I’ll barely be able to move, but everyone will blame me if it’s not done. They’ll treat me like a child, like I’m the reason Erik is failing his classes. Like I’m…useless.

I can’t breath. Tears stream down my face. I rush out the door, hiding myself from Erik. Calm down, he said he would help this time.

When I get home, I crawl my way up the stairs. With every step, I was positive my feet would finally break. I slowly opened the door, carefully peering around the corner. Everything is as I predicted. The trash had gotten full, so no one took it out. Instead, there was trash all around it, on the floor and boxes of opened packages and mail surrounded Erik’s desk. Someone had spilled cereal, and it remained, dripping from the counter onto the floor. Clothes had been taken out of the laundry basket and thrown down the entire stretch of the hallway. In addition to the dishes from last night, there were now more. Some were still full of food and thrown in the sink.

My body trembled, the aches and pains from the long night of cleaning and the following ten hours running at work raged throughout me. It would take hours to clean this all up. Perhaps another all-nighter.

I noticed the knife block to the side of the sink. Inside, I imagine the glimmering sharp blades. It would be so easy to take one. No one had even noticed I was home.

I imagined the blade running down the length of my wrist, the pleasurable sting of pain distracting me from the aches that far exceeded it. I imagined my body growing cold as I became more and more sleepy. For years, all I wanted was sleep. Now, I would never have to wake up again. It would feel like a sweet release. I pictured it so vividly I could almost feel it.

“Mommy, why are you crying?” Kaylee was looking at me from the living room, and I quickly realized tears were streaming down my cheeks.

“Oh, Mommy just had a long day,” I tell her. I pick her up and hold her close, and all together, I begin to sob. I could never feel that release. I could never hurt my kids that way. Not like my Dad had hurt me. I would remain trapped, so they would never have to wonder why I didn’t love them enough to stay.

“What’s wrong?” Erik asks, a small frown curling his lips.

Does he really not know? “Nothing, just hurting a lot today,” I sob, shaking. I was far too tired to start an argument.

Erik sat down next to me to hold me close, “How about we go out and do something fun next week? Don’t worry about the money. What kinds of things would you like to do?”

“I… don’t remember anymore.”

Super Smash Bros

When I was seventeen, my friends and I would gather on the weekends. Usually, Squee, Korin, and me. We would order pizza and soda and sit around my flat screen t.v. Most importantly was the weed.

“Tapey, you ever try purple cush before?” Korin asked.

“No, I don’t think so. Why? Is it good?”

Squee laughed, “Oh, you’re in for a treat.”

We sat on my red leather couches, passing the bong around. When the bong came to me, I lit it and inhaled deeply but coughed it up immediately when my hair started to sizzle.

Korin burst out in laughter, “Tapey, how do you do that? Your hair isn’t even long enough to reach the flames!”

I sputtered between coughs, “Shut up, I’m just that kind of lucky, okay?”

“Hey,” korin said, looking serious.

“Hey,” I smiled.

Korin made dramatic eyebrows, “Super Smash Bros?”

“Oh,” I giggled, “yes!”

We started up the game and shuffled through the characters, picking who to play.

“What? Tapey, you can’t pick Kirby. He’s like, the most bullshit out of all of them,” Squee scoffed.

Korin nodded, “He’s right, you can’t Tapey.”

“Shut your faces, don’t you talk shit about my cute little mush face. You’re just mad cause that sappy little face is gonna kick your ass.”

“As if, bring it Tapey,” Squee retorted.

“Oh, look at that. Look who just took Squee’s first life. This adorable little mush face, that’s who.”

“Only cause you’re playing the world’s biggest dick sucker.”

Korin nodded, “He’s right, Tapey. He is the biggest dick sucker.”

“What, no he isn’t.”

“Look at that big pink mouth Tapey, and what’s he do all day? He sucks, Tapey. He fucking sucks,” Squee retorted.

I laughed, “Nuh-uh, he eats your souls and wears them as his skin, obviously. Boom, got you again.”

Korins tone turned serious, “That would essentially make him gluttony in a cute pink package. Tapey, we need to kill that thing.”

“You just made me like him more. I’m coming for your soul, Squee.”

“Good luck with that.”

I burst out laughing, “No fair! Korin made me laugh. What are you even doing over there?”

“I’m attacking this wall,” Korin said plainly.

“But why? Squee, stop killing me. I need to know what’s going on with this wall.”

“It’s just standing there, always looking down on me.”

“…okay,” I giggled.

“I mean, just look at it. It’s so tall and so thick. Like he’s better than me.”

Squee and I were dying in our chairs, watching Korin try to defeat this digital wall.

“This wall doesn’t know me. He doesn’t know my life.”

I tried to sound serious, “I’m offended. Do you think it’s a guy? It’s all flat from what I can see.”

“Fine, I don’t care if it’s a woman. No woman or man gets to look down on me, so I’m gonna beat the shit outa this wall.”

“I’m with you!” Squee yelled.

“Alright, fine!” I laughed menacingly, floating Kirby up and slamming down on them both. “Woops, looks like I killed you both.”

“You’re the worst, Tapey.”

Korin nodded, “You are the worst, Tapey.”