Read What Does Blue Feel Like? Online
Authors: Jessica Davidson
dance floor and the cool kids laugh at them and
the speeches go for a really long time and
one of the girls turns up in an ultra-revealing dress
and her boobs pop out halfway through the night and
she gets suspended and
it passes by
so fast.
In the girls' toilets,
Char is in a cubicle
when some of the girls from the self-proclaimed
âcool group' come in.
She listens for a few minutes as they gossip, meanly
about this girl's dress
or that girl's hair.
She comes out,
irate,
and says,
âYou know who the real losers are?
It's you lot.
You don't do anything except laugh at other people
so you can feel better about yourselves.
You're not brave enough to do anything
in case someone laughs at you.
Just get a life.'
They bitch about her from their table all night,
but she doesn't care.
You can't be hurt by people you don't care about.
what I want to be when I grow up
and it scares me a little.
I'm thinking about this in class,
not really listening to Ol' Yapper
until he says,
âNelson Mandela said that it isn't our darkness we're afraid of.
It's our light.
We think,
Who am I to achieve my dreams?
Who am I to be successful?
Why do I deserve that kind of happiness?
But the truth is,
ladies and gents,
the truth is
that you do.
You don't make dark corners darker
by letting your own light fully shine.'
Â
The blackness in my head |
Is turning grey |
And I can't help but wonder |
If it will ever be fully gone. |
that I had some sleeping pills left
to get me through the agonising hours
until dawn.
I feel
so tired
but I can't sleep.
I gnaw at my fingernails
until they're bitten-down, bleeding stubs.
I pace the room
like a caged rat.
I draw tatts on my arm
until my pens have run out of ink.
I visit the fridge for midnight snacking
even though it's finally about three am.
The shrink warned me
that the insomnia
might stick around
and that I will still have âdown days'.
But she didn't remind me
that it's always worse
at night.
Char sits,
snacking on a cheese and potato chip sandwich,
interspersed with a glass of milk.
Her hair is matted,
and curls have formed at the nape of her neck from the
friction on the pillow as she tossed and turned.
She's staring,
hypnotically,
at the knife block in the kitchen.
Sandwich finished,
she rises,
puts her plate and glass into the sink
and pads back up the stairs.
I have a shadow
that follows me
everywhere I go.
It shadows my thoughts
and makes them dark
on the sunniest of days.
Â
I have a shadow
that mostly hides
coming out at the strangest of times.
It cannot be shushed
and it won't be ignored
and it makes me want to cry.
Â
I have a shadow
that makes me feel blue
even on happy days.
I ask, and I beg, and I plead with my shadow
but sometimes it won't go away.
Mum says, with concern in her eyes,
that I can go back to the shrink if I want.
But I don't.
I just want to be
left the fuck alone.
Â
I have a bath that night
sinking into the steamy water
down
down
down
until I'm lying flat on the bathtub
holding my breath.
Eventually
I resurface
gasping air.
Â
Another night
and I can't sleep.
I count imaginary sheep.
They mock me,
laughing,
taunting.
I find my headphones,
jam them in my ears,
and turn them up loud.
I'm backsliding |
down |
down |
down |
maybe it's futile |
maybe I'm just a big pain to everyone |
and maybe I'm going to spend the rest of my life like this |
and that thought |
makes me want to cry. |
I go to Bronwyn's house on a Friday night.
We drink tequila
and walk the streets.
I bum a smoke off someone
and suck it down
out of control
and unable to stop.
I'm about to go to Jim's, and Bronwyn to her boyfriend's,
when
she looks at me drunkenly, sadly, tiredly.
âWhen are you going to stop relying on other people
to save you, Char?
When are you going to save yourself?'
that everyone needs help, sometimes
but
ultimately
you can't rely on other people all the time,
maybe because life's a bitch
and people will let you down,
or maybe because
just maybe because
they can't control how you feel and what you do.
I tell him
that sometimes I feel like
I can't control how I feel and what I do.
Jack wants to go out for burgers and chips,
washed down with milkshakes.
I tell him no way,
there's like 40 grams of fat right there.
He tells me that guys don't like girls who are
scrawny and bony,
they like girls who look healthy,
with boobs and bums,
women who look like women,
not like their little brothers.
Girls who don't obsess over every little thing
they put in their mouths.
âWhat'd you like me for then?' I grouch.
He laughs, kisses me, and gives me a bite of his burger.
Lee is out of hospital.
Her hair is growing back
slowly.
The bruises have faded to a yellowy-green
and the guy who was driving has been charged,
although her father spits,
âSlap on the wrist it was, Char, slap on the wrist.'
I wonder if he knows
the damage he's done,
wonder if he cares.
Â
When we're alone in her room,
Lee says,
âWe get mad in this family now.
We yell
scream
feel like punching things
cry with rage.
It's great â
too bad it took this to make it happen.'
Her mouth twitches,
and she says,
âI'm still mad at you for telling my mum about me cutting
but I understand why you did.
Thanks.'
Â
Her eyes are soft
mirroring mine.
Today is a Good Day.
I've been
pissed off at Tim for reading my diary
shitty at my broken shoelace
had a fight with Mum about getting a tongue ring
cried because I damn well felt like it
(although it could be PMT)
and yet
today is a Good Day.
Perhaps tomorrow will be too.
I get offered a job after school
working as a secretary
in an office as big as a shopping centre.
It's not so bad,
it means I have money,
and I now know I don't want to be a secretary
for the rest of my life.
I blow my first pay cheque
on new jeans,
jewellery,
a new stud for my piercing.
Mum looks
disapprovingly
over my purchases
and says dryly,
âEnjoy it while you can, Char.'
It's Saturday
and it's raining.
I curl up in my trackies
and sit with a Milo at my bedroom window
watching the rain
fall.
It's pouring â
loud
throbbing
raindrops
that splatter onto the path
and run down the drain.
Compelled,
I let my feet lead me out the door,
peeling off my trackie jacket as I go.
I stand
in the middle of the driveway
face upturned
arms splayed out
eyes squinshed shut against the rain.
Within seconds
my hair is drenched
and my singlet is see-through.
Dad yells from the doorway, âAre you mad, Char?'
I grin
and yell back,
âIt's very cleansing actually.'
And begin to laugh.
that afternoon
walking through the shops
hands shoved in the pockets of his baggy jeans
cap jammed down on his head.
I smile,
tentatively,
and say, âHey.'
He smiles back,
albeit guardedly,
and says, âHey you.'
I guess time doesn't always
heal
but it can
ease the pain.
I will have finished Year Twelve
and be a student
no more.
This time when we sing,
âNo more homework
no more books
no more teachers' dirty looks'
it will be
for real.
Â
Ol' Yapper says
not to get too excited
because you are always a student
at life,
always learning.
It's our last lesson with him
and I'm not too sure
that I'm ready to leave the familiarity of this class.
But whether I'm ready or not,
the bell rings,
and with a lump in my throat
I pick up my books
and head towards the door.
As I'm stepping over the threshold
he gives me a nod,
and just as resolutely
I nod back,
understanding everything he was conveying.
We lock eyes for a minute,
until I'm hustled out the door
to my next class.
It seems eons ago
when we booked for Schoolies.
The place is a little fibro shack
right on the beach,
but,
says Jim optimistically,
âIt's got great potential.'
I crack up laughing,
throw my pen at his head.
Trust him to say something like that.
Â
I lie in bed that night
thinking about
that word â
potential.
How do you know
when you reach your potential?
Â
The next day
I do an internet search
and come across a site
that talks about setting goals,
not comparing yourself to other people.
It's pretty clever,
really.
I add it to my favourites list.
Mum cries
when I walk on the stage to get my certificate,
and my teachers look proud.
I shake hands with the principal,
and walk over to the other side of the stage
feeling
pretty damn proud myself.
Â
Afterwards,
everyone is hugging.
Teachers,
students,
parents,
I guess they all feel like they've accomplished something.
I know that's how I feel.
Inside.
how this might've turned out.
I could be six months pregnant.
Dunno if I would've finished school.
Dunno what would've happened . . .
That night,
after the celebrating has ended
and I'm tucked up in bed,
I begin to cry.
Â
Some feelings you can't run away from
no matter how hard you try.
Some memories hunt you down
when you least expect it,
stinging
burning
opening the wound
and making you cry.
Â
I ask Jim
if he ever thinks about it
if he ever wonders.
He ruffles my hair
and is quiet for a long time
before he says gruffly,
âSometimes â
but I can never think about it
without being appalled
at the way I acted.
Tell me this, Char â
if I hadn't been so supportive of you having an abortion,
would you still have done it?'
Â
Then it's my turn for silence.
we get drunk
eat cold pizza for breakfast,
well,
breakfast at two pm anyway, when we've woken up.
Â
Jim has an ecstasy tablet
and decides he loves everyone and everything.
When he's coming down
his teeth chatter for ages
and eventually he goes to sleep.
Â
Mum rings me constantly
to check that I wasn't
the kid on the news jumping off the balcony
or in the group of girls abusing the police.
Â
Lee comes for a couple of days