. after the
storm at the llama farm . excerpt from with the force of an avalanche . a memoir-in-progress
.
life here is
just one big easy street. I remember the time at the llama farm and it was then,
then especially I felt no one cared about me. then that Russ called me "a little
trooper", then that I hugged flea-ridden kitty Sophia to me, clasped her to
my chest as I lay on my bed, under heaps of blankets, my toes wet and frozen,
my cheeks burning, my head on fire, my body chilled.
it was then that I called
up Kyle to pick me up so I could sleep in warmth and eat, it was then that I
asked him to come over to drive me over there, because I had no more strength
left, because I hadn't eaten, because I couldn't walk any more, couldn't wak
the hour it would take to campus, and from there, wait for the bus to take me
to Kyle's.
I lived in darkness, Kyle
in light.
when I come to Kyle's house,
we walk out to rent a video. everywhere, there are lights, everywhere, action,
everywhere people are moving, singing, dancing their lives. Burrito Heaven is
open, serving the best, the cheapest mexican food in town. the gas station is
open, the cars run through and run over its little bell. the pizza place is
open, so is the vietnamese restaurant. everywhere but everywhere is open, except
the mile or so down the road where I live, where I am alone and mute to my world,
where my needs have ceased to exist, because I am no longer a person, I am a
drone tethered to my responsibilities, tethered to my care of the farm. nobody
told me it would get as hard as this, nobody told me it would be harder - be
worse - than living outdoors because I could not build a fire, because I could
not care for myself!
these days, I never eat.
there is no time to eat, no food to eat, nowhere to eat. I work and work around
the farm, slowly, shaking, and around 3, right before sunset, I call a pizza
guy, who may or may not come, for they may or may not find the place that's
totally stashed away. many times, the neighbors, in all their twangs and toothless
grins (country bumpkin weirdos is what i'm getting at) have called the cops
on the pizza delivery boys, the poor things pulling in to our driveway, pulling
out, pulling into another, pulling out. as if a thief would be so obvious....
sometimes Raphael appears
at the farm. he too, is in and out. when he is in, he is angry and tells me
I should leave. he thinks I should let the animals starve and die - they are
not my animals and not my responsibility. I feel too sorry for them. I could
never abandon them. they are not the cause of this exhausting storm. they are
not to be faulted for their owners' carelessness, their owners' whims and impracticality.
they are innocent, needing, starving for care and attention. in their eyes,
I never do enough, because there are so many and their owners are too busy for
them.
I forgo a christmas with
my family to live at this farm.
18.09.97
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