While we are putting all the details together, I thought I'd give you a sneak peak at the first chapter.
Session
One
I’m standing, facing a wall with
my back toward Jen. Jen’s my
therapist. It’s my first time here. I’m nervous because she’s watching me and
waiting. I’m staring at four long
shelves that stretch the length of the room.
Two shelves are filled with little toy people; action figures,
playschool people, Disney characters, etc. The other shelves have props like
trees, rocks, fences and animals. There
are hundreds of things on the wall and more in the containers on the floor and
I’m supposed to pick out some things that represent how I feel. I don’t know how I feel. I don’t want to know how I feel. The room feels like it is a hundred
degrees. I want to run out the door or
hide under the table. I slip one of my
shaky hands into my pocket. I look at
the shelves. There are so many
toys. I have to do something, but I
can’t move. I can’t breathe. I can’t think. I turn to look at Jen. I cringe a little waiting for her impatience
to flair, but she is calm. Her hand is
resting on her chin. Her eyes are big
and brown. She looks at me and smiles. I swallow and exhale. I didn’t realize I was holding my
breath. It seems she could wait all day
for me to make a decision. Maybe I can
do this.
I step toward the wall hoping it
forces something to jump out at me. My
eyes move along the shelf past each of the characters until I spot a little
Pocahontas figure. I pick her up. I feel a little better having made a decision. I look over the other figures. I pick out two boy figures and a girl for my
kids. I skim the shelves and grab a
miniature champagne bottle, some trees, a fence, and a miniature gun. I walk back to the table and place the items
into the sand box which lies on the table between us. After placing everything in the sandbox I
slide onto a hard plastic chair. Jen
looks in the sand box and starts asking me questions.
“Who is Pocahontas?”
“That’s me.”
“Why did you choose Pocahontas?”
“Because she belongs outside, in
the woods… not locked up.”
“Do you feel locked up?”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“I’m married, and I have kids.”
I stare at my shoes which are
tapping on the floor beneath me.
“So, you have responsibilities.”
“I don’t want any more responsibilities.”
I stare at the tray because I
don’t know what else to do. I don’t want
to be here, but I don’t have anywhere else to go. I want a different life, but I’m scared to
death of what it will take to get one.
“Why don’t you tell me more about
Pocahontas?”
I run my hands down my jeans. I can hear my heartbeat in my ears. I feel like a wild animal trapped in a
corner. I’m trying to resist the urge to
fight my way out. Jen’s not the
enemy. I look above her at the wall and
force myself to say something.
“When I was growing up we lived by
the woods. I went there a lot to get
away.”
“What were you getting away from?”
There is a long pause.
“My house.”
Dozens of pictures and emotions
flash through my head. They are
scattered and disjointed and I can’t seem to filter through any of it. I desperately want Jen to see what’s in my
head, but I don’t know how to let her inside.
I have to think of something else.
There is a long pause, and I keep thinking Jen is going to fill the
space, but she doesn’t seem troubled by silence. I’m dying to tell her that I want to be held.
I’d give up eating for a week if I could curl up in a ball and rest my head on
her lap. I want to be five years old
again, so it’s ok to cry.
“I was the oldest of seven
kids. Our house was pretty
chaotic.”
I’m staring at the sand in the
tray. She remains silent. I take a deep breath.
“My dad worked a lot. If he came home late it meant he had gone to
the bar.”
I want to tell her how scary it
was when he came home drunk, but my mind goes blank. I try to shake some mental cobwebs loose.
“My mom was gone a lot too. She didn’t have a job, but she volunteered at church.”
I take my eyes off the sand tray
and look at Jen. She has been looking at
me the whole time. I’m not used to
someone focusing on me for that long.
She moves on to the next thing in the tray.
“What is the bottle?”
“Is that what you drank?”
“That was my first choice, but anything would do.”
“When did you start drinking?”
"My dad gave me my first beer when I was ten.”
“Ten?”
“Yeah, but I didn’t start drinking
regularly until I was fourteen.”
Jen looks at the tray again and points to the
little people.
“Are these your children?”
“Yes.”
“Tell me about them.”
My chest tightens. I close my eyes. My feet start tapping. I push away the pain and focus on the facts.
“Jay is nine. He’s in third grade. Annie is seven. She’s in second grade and Joey is five. He’s in kindergarten. I was homeschooling them until I went to
treatment, so school is still pretty new to them.”
“Why did you place them in the
corner of the sand tray?”
“Because I feel far away from
them.”
“Why do you feel so far away?”
“It’s like there’s always this
barrier between us. I can physically
touch them and hold them but I never feel close to them.”
Jen pauses. She seems so content in the silence. My heart is beating out of my chest. I need her to say something. She looks at the tray again.
“What’s your husband’s name?”
“JB.”
“Is there a reason you didn’t put
JB in the tray?”
My eyes immediately look over all
the pieces in the tray. I didn’t even
notice I left him out. I wonder what
that means. I wonder what she thinks it
means. I go with the easy answer.
“He’s not home very much. He works a lot.”
“Why don’t you go choose a figure
off the wall for him?”
I stand up and turn around to face
the wall again. I look over all the
figures, but nothing stands out. I hate
the feeling that she’s watching me and waiting.
I take a step closer. My eyes
scan each shelf. I want to just pick
one, but nothing fits.
“There’s nothing here that works
for him.”
“Just choose the closest thing.”
I look over the figures
again. The super heroes are out. The little playschool people are definitely
out. None of the other male figures are
even close. Then I see a row of villains. There’s an action figure that is three times
the size of all the others. He is dark
blue and black and has a web of ice all around him. I grab him off the shelf and put him in the
tray. The villain towers over
Pocahontas.
“This is JB?”
“Sort of.”
“Is he a lot bigger than you?”
“His personality is.”
“What do you mean?”
“He’s intimidating. I can’t really say what I’m thinking to him.”
“Why not?”
“When I try, I always end up being
shut down, like my brain won’t work anymore.
I don’t know how to explain it.”
“So, nothing gets resolved?”
"Right.”
“Do you feel safe at home?”
It takes me a second to understand
what she’s asking.
“Yes. It’s not like that. He’s a good guy. I’m not physically intimidated by him. I just freeze up when we argue.”
Jen nods her head, looks down at
the tray and back up at me again.
“What is the fence?”
“It’s supposed to be a brick wall,
but I couldn’t find a wall.”
“Ok, what is the brick wall?”
“It’s the wall between me and
other people.”
“Any people in particular?”
“No. Everyone is on the other side of the wall.”
“So, you feel lonely.”
My chest tightens again. It feels like someone is squeezing my heart
like a balloon popping contest. I take a
deep breath. My foot starts tapping in
place.
“Yeah, I do.”
I notice my whole leg is now
tapping and I force myself to stop.
“How about the gun?”
My foot starts tapping again.
“That’s a way to escape if I need
it.”
“Have you ever tried to escape
that way?”
My foot taps faster.
“No, but there were times I wanted
to.”
“Kill yourself?”
There’s silence. It feels like the air has been sucked out of
the room. Sometimes the thought of
killing myself is the only thing that relieves the torture in my mind. I picture myself driving into oncoming
traffic or through the cross bars onto the railroad tracks. I can see myself hanging in the garage, but I
don’t want a slow, painful death. I
already have that. I want a quick,
painless ending. I settle on a large
pile of lethal pills. It seems like the
easiest way. I swallow the pile, then
lie down on a bed of leaves and look up at the sky and wait. The image temporarily relieves the torture in
my mind.
“Yeah.”
“Do you want to kill yourself
now?”
This question is different than
all the others. I don’t feel she wants
to know more about me at this point. I
feel she needs to know whether or not I am suicidal. If I answer this wrong I could wind up in
the psych ward. I would lie about it if
I was, because I’m not willing to get locked up again like in the treatment
center, but I don’t need to.
“No. The antidepressants are working now that I
stopped drinking.”
3 comments:
Jen, How open and vulnerable. I want to hug you, be your mom and dad so you wouldn't have grown up in chaos. Loving you!
I'll take that hug when I come get my painting! Work is slowing down as of next week, so I'll call you. Thanks for the encouragement. You of all people know how much writers need it. :D
I love this, you are so real. I think that is inspiring to people. I would love to talk to you about featuring your book on my blog and maybe you could do a small interview for my readers. aboutproximity@gmail.com
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