Tuesday 29 July 2014

People are innately and reliably selfish... and

Thinking otherwise is absolutely foolish. But, alas, I am a fool. 

I've discovered lately, that after bottling up emotions like bottling up water during this drought, nothing good is to follow. The more I bottle, the greater the probability of explosion. And explode I tend to do. 

My explosions, I'm learning too, are not always the same kind. There are the explosions that detonate—high pressure explosions that cause rapid decomposition, like sticks of dynamite stuck into the angel veins of my heart that explode between beats; and there are the low pressure explosions, with more pillars of black smoke than anything else—the ones that creep through my lungs and spill out my mouth at four in the morning, the ones I feel coming but cannot stop. 

This, I'm afraid, is a high pressure explosion. An external explosion. I have let far too many clumsy people wander into my space, my peace, armed with sticks of explosives and with hands covered in traces of gunpowder. They have stuffed their TNT into the spaces where I have cleared room for them and they have stumbled away, left me to sift through the rubble. 

People, I've come to realise over and over and over again, are incredibly selfish creatures. Perhaps the only truly reliable thing about people is that, eventually, all of them disappoint you. Not always intentionally, but certainly always always. At the end of the day, people tuck themselves into themselves. They will always prove to do what is ultimately best for themselves. 

Now... my generalisation is offensive, I'm aware. But here is my act of selfishness, for I too am human: I do not care. I do not care whose feelings I hurt tonight. My feelings have been trampled, disregarded, just plain blown up. And tonight I look around and I see the fingerprints of selfish, selfish humans. Humans who I have allowed to selfishly destroy me. 

I don't consider myself a particularly 'good' person; I am not particularly moral, or just, or decent. I am not particularly kind, or brave, or generous. Interestingly though, more times than I care to consider today, this week, this month and this year, people whose opinions on myself I trust have called me selfless. 

This whole selfless thing is something I would typically deny vehemently (and will continue to do so, upon completion of this blog post), but for just a second I'm going to think about this. The word itself is the primary issue I have with being called selfless; how can I (or anyone) possibly have little or no regard for myself? In a dog-eat-dog world where groups of people mass murder other groups of people, even their women and children? That's ridiculous. I have high regard for myself. But then I think; what regard do you really have for yourself if you continue to allow people to take advantage of you? To abuse you? To disregard your feelings? To stuff you full with explosives and then leave you to clean up the mess they have made of you?

I realise that selfless is not a compliment. There is a reason why, in Veronica Roth's Divergent universe, the Abnegation (those who forget self to claim the virtue of 'selflessness') are considered foolish, stupid, laughable and called Stiffs. Reading the books I find myself questioning the Abnegation myself—selflessly catering to the four other factions, who ultimately serve their own agendas. These foolish Stiffs... But then, there are other people—people I know well, trust—who have looked at me and thought 'selfless'. One of these people has gone as far as to tell me how badly she has wanted to choke me, how ridiculous she finds me... And this startles me. Oh, Lord, tell me I am not the Abnegation. 

But I am. I am the foolish. For I have put the happiness of others above the happiness of myself. Even if the happiness of others has cost me my own happiness. I continue to do so, and I don't know why. That, it would appear, is pretty darn 'selfless'. 

Perhaps there is strength in being selfless, like Veronica Roth's fictional masterpiece might suggest—but here, in the real world that I live in, I am weak. I am drained. Sapped of energy. Empty like the NWC reserves. 

Like the watering can; I have made rounds of this beautiful, flourishing garden and watered its beautiful blooms. And like flowers do, they have continued to bloom—photosynthesising to make food, for themselves, sustaining their own lives with the vital ingredient which I have given them. These blooms give me nothing. Eventually the can is emptied. 

And then what? 

Maybe selflessness is self-destruction. This makes more sense than strength... For yes, I have been stuffed full of explosives, but who has lit the match? Instead of opening my windows and doors, a metaphoric release of the poison spilling from infected wound, which may then be cauterised shut to heal; I have cauterised my wounds from the inside, poison pulsing behind skin, until I breathe the destruction. 

I am tired of breaking. I am tired of hurting. I am tired of blowing up. 

People, I have a learned, are innately and reliably selfish. 

-
Written under a heavy dose of cough syrup, and a heavier dose of my own misery—a far more potent drug, I've discovered. The mere act of writing this post has drained me, sapped the reserve strength. I did not find anything left to proofread and check for errors. Corrections to follow, I hope. I selfishly make no promises. 

Wednesday 23 July 2014

I am entirely stitched out of mistakes and good intentions,

The things I meant to say (but didn't because I didn't want to hurt your feelings) and the things I wish I could take back and the things I wish I had said but the moment passed. How if I had done it again, I would have told you how you broke me with your tongue like a whip and your words like fire. How I would have told you that this lukewarm love is not okay, never was okay and will never be okay. How I would have told that regardless of how you feel, I am enough. How I would not have replied to your apologies with "It's okay" when we both knew that when you put her above me, again and again and again and again, it was not okay. 

These things are called regrets. These things make a man bitter and angry, and I don't want to be bitter and angry... but these things also make a man shy. Once (or several times) bitten, twice (or several more times) shy. 

Now my heart is not on my sleeve, or on my cheek, or in your hand. Now my heart is behind my ribcage, my words a battalion behind my lips, ready and waiting to tear a man down at my command. 

They say that hell hath no fire like that of a woman scorned, then perhaps the devil may think of me as his competition. I have gotten so used to the fire in my veins, I have fooled myself into thinking it is blood. And I taste blood. I taste the blood of every bitten lip and of every stifled cry and of every word I swallowed that ripped its way through my cheek to land on your ear. I am scorned. 

Understand then, that when men come knocking at the door of my ribs, mocking smiles pinned hastily to their masks, I have turned them all away. I have rolled up my welcome mats, and turned out the lights in the front window, locked my doors and am inside sleeping. Resting. Waiting for the day when the man I haven't met, comes to my door, weary and apologetic—sorry for showing up so late, but his tire was flat and he's walked miles to get here because a lady waits and he has kept her waiting long. 

When he comes, may I have scrubbed the blood from under my nails and washed my hands clean until the water runs clear and sandpapered the notches from my heart and I am ready to be loved. 

...but until then, may I live in such a way—with walls up, treasure guarded and eyes and hands cold—so as to scare off the jackals and the vultures, to turn away the scavengers, to invest solely in the garden of potential growing in my chest and between my legs. May I live in such a way that regrets are few, but nuggets of wisdom many that I may be the woman, the queen, the king, the empress that both He, and I... and he, when he comes (eventually, hopefully), can love. 

Thursday 17 July 2014

If I was a blue whale, my heart would be the size of a small car and weigh over 1500 pounds...

And I would probably still love you, with every square inch and every individual kilogram of that giant heart.

That's why they fascinate me. Not because of the size of the creature called balaenoptera musculus itself... but rather the size of its amazing heart. With an aorta large enough for an adult human to crawl through, pumping approx. 15,000 pints of blood—compared to the 8 or so pints in a human being (bare with me here, my knowledge is as extensive as the majority of the syllabus of CSEC Human and Social Biology, on a good day). 

A blue whale's heart beats about six or seven times a minute, while our human hearts beat about seventy times when resting—our healthy slowest, I believe. So for every sixty seconds, balaenoptera musculus's heart beats seven times. A beat every eight and a half seconds. 

Then I wonder things like: if blue whales feel things extraordinarily. I know certain emotions probably only affect humans a certain way, but I know animals have emotions not much unlike our own. They seem to display attachments, attractions, desires, weaknesses and even distinct personality traits amongst themselves... One of the most interesting things I've noticed about animals is the sense of belonging, and the need to feel such a sense of belonging. Aaaand if you've never heard, I have a fascination with loneliness. I've written about loneliness before, but I wonder... Do blue whales feel an extraordinary amount of loneliness? With a heart that big, I sure would. 

Then I think that maybe the blue whale probably feels a bigger heartful of love too; of feelings like contentment, satisfaction, appreciation, admiration and belonging even. Maybe it is a great burden but a greater blessing. 

Oh, to have a big heart. 

I wish I had more of a direction for this post, but it's been difficult to write anything at all... much less something with direction. 

I'd recommend Joshua Bennett's spoken word poem Balaenoptera by the way. It's on YouTube on the "Striver's Row" page, I will attempt to add a link on a non-mobile device later. It's not exactly related to this poem aside from the fact that the blue whale is the central metaphor. (Edit: LINK ADDED!)