“Shared Furniture”

This is an unfinished and on-going piece about specific pieces of furniture and how they tie into the tasteful, vivid moments Kyle and I have shared.

+                      +                       +

1. A table. First, is a table. Stretched mahogany, waxed. Borrowed. Nearly the length of my tiny kitchen at 40 Hartwell Street. It’s the big white house on the corner. Kyle sits across from me, at that table. It is late September. I hear the tea kettle heating up slowly. Tiny bubbles scream under high pressure. He sips his tea slowly. I take large gulps. The thought of leaning over and kissing him crosses my mind. It confuses me– i’ve never had these kinds of impulses, not for him. I use a small spoon to mix honey into my tea. Our fingers are too afraid to touch, just as our words hide truths behind unnamed pronouns. We tell our deepest secrets without using names. There are boxes and bags of loose-leaf tea tucked within the cabinet above the stove. It’s past midnight. The two of us—we are the epilogue to a birthday party with the candles and the frozen cheesecake and the tearing of wrapping paper. Mugs become empty and bladders become full. It makes for a good excuse to leave the table and stare at my reflection in the mirror. I mouth words, attempting to read my own eyes, searching for a hint of dishonesty. No, not one. Just truth and myself. I take my place where my cup sits. One of my housemates descend the staircase and stumbles into the kitchen for a glass of tap water. She stops. Looks at us, all sleepy and suspicious. I wonder, does she know already? That when she sets her glass down and falls asleep, while the teacups are emptied of everything but the wet leaves that lay shriveled and cold at the very bottom, that I will return from the bathroom to him standing in the middle of my kitchen in that dim light and embrace him with my face pressed into his chest as I inhale deeply?

2. Second is a couch. First, it belonged to my oldest cousin Alissa. She was older and free and promised to take me to Mexico when I turned eighteen. She never did. At the time, she was living next to the asbestos-coated ruins of the Twin Towers sometime in the 2000’s. You could see the collapsed remains from the one, big window. I remember sleeping on the couch, brown like a leather cafe armchair, but lumpy and cotton-filled. I was much younger then. When she moved, she gave the couch to my second oldest half-brother. He sets it against the only window of the living room of his house on Ray Street. I sink into it, holding a giant juice box filled with white wine that he bought me. There’s a board game coated in dust on a shelf behind the TV. He is a drug dealer and that’s that. I’m the delivery boy. He moves out without a word, someone else moves in. I move out of the dormitories and move into the big white one on the corner. Our landlord, a small Chinese woman, offers us some furniture from a previous house. The house on Ray Street. It all smells like marijuana. My brother is long gone. Part of the door frame breaks in the attempt to get it into our living room, and we do it and it is there and now it belongs to me. That couch. Kyle and I. We move to the couch after countless cups of tea in the dimly lit kitchen, late September. He suggests we sit someplace where he could be closer to me. I am still trembling from our first kiss, some sort of electricity only generated by human lips upon lips. I think of bridges. Building bridges with our lips.

“This feels right,” I say. “This…it’s so foreign to me.”

We pull back and look into each others’ eyes. His are a shade of subdued blue like a rainy afternoon. I notice my reflection in his irises. A new phenomenon, I tell him. I can’t recall what I wore, maybe it was dark green like the pine forest in the dead of winter and a pair of panties I never wanted anyone to see. It’s all shed, his skin and mine. The light from the street float between our interlocking shadows. In his ear, I whisper, consume me and he enters my most sacred place where, with his hands and hips and knees makes love and all sorts of neat things. He says above me, I don’t want you to sacrifice anything because you don’t want to sacrifice anything, either. In the morning, the light filters through the bed sheets someone hung as curtains and I awake to him, naked, too.

3. The mattress he’s had for fourteen years. It is twin sized, so his feet hang off the end. So do mine.  Underneath the off-white bed-sheets, it’s all baby blue and floral, cut in diamonds by small threads. The middle of it is slightly sunken in. It gives Kyle his bad back. The sides are frayed. To him, it is just another piece of furniture. At seventeen, he loses his virginity on this mattress while his brother sleeps in the next room. It is sometime after 2 a.m. on a Wednesday and I just got off from work at the Alexander Library. October sheds its leaves and the world becomes frigid. I remember walking directionless to his house. I remember the stretch of Easton Avenue, quiet. The stoplights change when nobody is around to see. He leaves the door unlocked for me. I make my way to the basement, untie my shoes, move silently into his room. He mumbles something, turns and makes room. I slide under the covers and encase his body with mine like a wasp’s wing. As the world becomes colder and colder, the temptation of sleeping next to a breathing, human body grows greater and greater. I find myself pressed against his sleeping body almost every night. His mattress grows warmer as my house grows bitter and cold towards my absence. Will Winter be bearable this year? I think as I drift to sleep with him for the first time.

4. Fourth is the king-sized bed in the downstairs room of my house. It wasn’t always there. The room used to be full of cabinets with toolboxes and car parts. Laid out of place was a single bed where only my father slept that year. It was supposed to be a bed for my little sister. She wasn’t so little, however, all the poison she’d pushed down from her childhood began to resurface. The violation of her most intimate place as a child. So, she became afraid of sleeping alone, for fear of being violated where she lay to dream, the place following sleep where she goes to escape. My father wasn’t afraid of sleeping alone so he took her place in that single bed. I like to think that maybe, he was actually conquering the fear of doing so. One day, that bed became empty and the tools were moved and used and the parts of the car were put in motion again. Now, there is a king-sized bed in the red-painted room. The day after Thanksgiving, Kyle and I rise from his blue, floral mattress and with our bad backs, make our way to my house in northern Jersey. I live on Aspen Road in West Orange where there are no aspen trees, only a dead end and a cul-de-sac. It’s the white house at the very top of the hill. We sit in my living room with our hands folded in our laps. My mother asks nice questions but is more enthralled with the Filipino soap opera on the television. My father talks only about what he knows most about: cars, building things, his garden, how it used to be. We keep our hands folded in our laps until they go to sleep, until we are expected to leave for the post-Thanksgiving dinner. It is quiet. We are pining. The sound of the TV becomes washed out under our heavy breathing. I untangle our hands and pull him to the red-painted room with the king-sized bed and shut the door. Quiet. We remove only our pants until our legs are bare and the space underneath us spread wide and open as we move, silent, in the sea of sheets.

5. Fifth is a bathroom mirror on the first floor of the house on Duke Street. There is one window and it overlooks the neighbor’s backyard. Their son is sixty-five and calls the cops on Kyle’s band when they play. Wistful. The mirror remains clean while the rest of the bathroom grows filthy, like bread that’s been molded over. Does it remain clean so the human beings can see their own filth? Nobody cares about the bathroom because nobody cares about each other in this house. It is a place for cold strangers. He rents the basement only because it is someplace quiet where he can be alone, like a grave one could exit. The two of us stand before this mirror and brush our teeth. The first time we brush our teeth together, our eyes are blood-shot and our tongues reek of whiskey and coffee. It is Halloween. It is also his twenty-first birthday. I am wearing his fitted cap and his brown hair is a mess. My toothbrush is purple, his is blue. When I brush my teeth in that mirror, I watch his eyes watch mine.

6. The front seat of my 1999 Nissan Altima. We are horny on Parkway South. Our hands, too, travel in that direction. I moan as we pass Exit 139. We radiate heat. My eye-sight begins to shift and the lights of the cars pulsate luminously, bursting in my vision. My knees tremble. I follow the lines on the road. I think: stay within the lines! like a kindergartener with a coloring book. But the crayon in his hands colors passionately, moves too wildly, surely it will pass the lines! I moan some more. Surely it does. Suurely. Kyle shifts his legs apart. He’s grown and I see this with the corner of my eyes. It pushes against his jeans. Let me out! It pleads. So I do and it’s dark and my soft fingers wrap around him. Pulsating and delicate. I pray the other drivers cannot see that his left arm and my right are crossed and that he and I are writhing in pleasure. Exit 130 to Route 1. Let’s stop somewhere, I nod with flushed cheeks. I make a right at the Hotel Classique where only half the sign is illuminated. The parking lot is unnecessarily wide; it snakes far enough around. I park beside a lone pick-up truck. The front seat of my car is pushed down as far as it goes: I lay on my stomach as he moves above me and behind me. The glass begins to fog. Surely, a bedroom on wheels.

7. Jiyun hides a key under the front mat for us. We’re in hasidic Williamsburg. Take the J to Marcy Ave. Walk past all the jailed up shops with Jewish names, turn right. Heave open the welded iron and ivy-shaped door, let the long-skirted woman out first. Walk down the hallway past the other apartments; hear the mothers shrieking and the dogs whining and the children barking. Number four. There are Christmas lights above the doorway. Walk past the bikes hanging from wires above the shoe racks and around the kitchen to the spiral staircase that leads to the basement. There, to the left, is a couch with mismatched pillows. It pulls out into a sofa bed. That’s seventh. It is January of the new year, two-thousand and twelve, the year we’re all supposed to die as the planets realign. 189 South 9th Street, Apartment 4. Kyle and I are at the forefront of our journey North, to Montreal. This place is a community for wanderers to stay and meet and feel at home in a city where if you are nothing, you go unnoticed and remain unnoticed. Here, I meet a young girl from Estonia in film school. Love Connection, a band from Australia, a journalist from London. I’ve forgotten their names. There’s a door by the coat rack that leads to the backyard. It’s all cement. I walk past a naked mannequin wearing sunglasses, leaning against the brick. A single wooden table and mug full of cigarettes. Broken glass lines the edge of the building. Jiyun comes out with us to Think Coffee, a cafe where you can have a glass of wine or a cold beer with your text book. That night, we make grilled cheese sandwiches for the house and dip them in tomato soup. In the dead of night on the pull-out sofa bed, we make love silently so not to wake the sleeping travelers.

8. to be continued…

“Claire, mommy and me will drive to Rootgers ebery Sunday to stock your refrigerator.”
“Oh! We can just buy an apartment in New Brunswick and stay there on Saturday and let Joanie sleep in your dorm, then take her home Sunday.”
“Claire, I’ll install a verizon phone in your dorm so we can call you every night.”
What? Why??
“How will we know if you’re home?”

\\

Papa, when did you all of a sudden decide to become a parent to me?

Have you ever thought of one day not being just one day, but your entire life? If humans did not require sleep, life would be a continuous reel of happenings. I’ve been feeling moody and hopelessly craving some sort of emotional connection with a man. I really do have to stop thinking constantly about the future, but holding my acceptance letter in my hand gives me real hope. I just can believe that four years ago I was saying to myself, “Wow, only four years until college…” and here I am. It’s too surreal. It’s so hard to believe.

So i’ve been thinking. My guidance counselor was right. At the beginning of the school year I was totally for going to Maryland, then it turned to Syracuse. She said to me that by the end of the year, I would change my mind because of the financial situation.

And here I am contemplating the advantages of going to Rutgers.
ADVANTAGES:

  • Save a lot of money because it is an in state public school.
  • Would be closer to NYC
  • Good enough distance away from  home. Actually,
  • I’m away from home.
  • I can still study abroad whenever
  • I could bargain with my parents and go to Rutgers in change for them paying for a few summer and winter study abroad trips. :)
  • I have a good bunch of friends there, so I won’t feel completely desolate.
  • It’s actually a really good school
  • Apparently the parties are good too.
  • The campus is really nice. And so are the apartments.
  • It’s incredibly diverse.
  • I could always transfer to an international university or at least study abroad for a year.
  • Less debt when I graduate. This means it won’t be so hard for me to actually live abroad in Europe or something.

So those are some advantages. I’m awaiting replies from Maryland and Syracuse now. Next Thursday i’m actually going to have a phone interview with a lady who is part of the Discovery Florence program. I have to prepare myself for that!

I just got really angry today because when my dad looked at the letter, he said, “You have to pay a $250 fee now.”
“That’s only if I decide to go.”
(Looks at me crazily) “Of course you are going.”

Then I stormed upstairs.
He has no right to tell me what to do with my life. Because my life, our lives, are short. SHORT. Time is running faster than light and there is no way I am letting go of the steering wheel. They did their part, and now it’s my time to leave, to flourish and fly. It’s just how it was and how it always will be.

I really don’t know now. I fell in love with Maryland when I saw the campus. I made friends so quickly, too! And Syracuse’s Discovery Florence program is something that is truly meant for me. For my sole existence.

Bottom line is, if I go to Rutgers, i’m pretty much going to just save up money and do as many study abroads as possible.

Good bye.

alone

:) Pre-M syndroming. I can feel it. I can’t sit still, I can’t stop thinking about certain people, my emotions are intensified x 10000, I get irratible and pissy sometimes. And all this shit is happening with my dad, how he’s accusing me of ‘sneaking’ around with boys without telling anyone, how he’s so bitter and angry and not understanding.

I had to tell him I was at the mall. I couldn’t even say “Joe’s house” because Joe is a guy’s name. I was playing video games for four hours, Jesus. I could’ve been out there doing worse things, but instead, I was eating oreos and playing video games. I can’t stand it.

My mother talked to him, said, “They (my sister and I) ask you anyway and you say No.”
He says, “YES I’LL SAY NO.”  I sneak because he says no. It’s his own fault.

And my cousins are out of the country. I can’t call them. Who can I call then?
Paul is away on aim, Jiyun is home…

I hate this.

Cloudy skies and loud voices

It’s scary when my dad gets angry. Most of the time, when he yells, I just try and block his voice and nod. Keep my mouth shut, throat dry, and nod. Sometimes, if I have enough courage, I might look into the fiery dim holes of his eyes. The same dark eyes I have. “No Mercy.” His eyes say.
Oh, my poor brother. My poor, poor brother.

I went to Boston last weekend. The trip was the highlight of my year, thus far.
I have to write a travel article anyway for AP Comp, so i’ll post them later.

On the Boston trip, the second night was Party Hard night. Yes, Allie brought 99 Black Cherries in an Contact lens cleaner bottle. She shared some with atleast ten people, including me. Oh boy, did that hit hard. It was fun, after the stomach ache. Towards the end of the night, at 1am, me, ashley, and allie were talking while Halli showered. Ashley started to cry first. She said how frustrated she was, especially with her parents. Her parents let her do nothing after they found out of her interracial relationship. Their racism disgusts me. She cried because nothing on the trip went right for her; she was losing a friend and confused. She told us how she cries herself to sleep often, how she wears a mask and pretends to be happy. Then Allie started to cry. She said, “What’s wrong with me? Why does nobody want to stay with me?” She said how all her relationships are the exact same way, that they were hollow, ended too fast.

And I sat there. Thinking. What are my insecurities? What do I cry about? What makes me human?

So I came out too. I said that I was sick of being an equal to my guy friends, that I wanted to be seen as a girl too. And I cried because I couldn’t have what they have. But the truth is, I’m happy being the way I am, appear half girly, half not, a conserved type of spontaneous, funny, kind, generous, video game lover-esque type of girl. Intellectual and a thinker. It’s wonderful, the relationships I have with my guy friends. Allie and Ashley told me how they envied that about me, that I can have genuine relationships with guys. And I envied them for being able to get them. But then, then they told me the truth about their side.

They both took turns explaining this. I was utterly amazed the entire time. They said how being the ‘other type of girl’ (You know, attention grabber, tends to be loud and/or obnoxious, pretty, make-up, all over with hugs, flirtatious, cutesy, make other guys jealous kind of girl) is hard and painful work. They said how they have to change themselves into this thing, they have to pretend and act and desperately try to get attention, even by jealousy. They told me that nothing goes they way they want, that they never get the guy they want, that they’re sick of it. And I sat there, my mouth wide open, thinking, “I had N O idea it was like that.” I thought it was easy for them. Ashley, the gorgeous Filipino ‘model’. I thought it was easy for Allie, unique, beautiful, cute.

And there was me. I’m not a cute and small asian. I’m tall. And I appear as an equal to my guy friends. And being around them, I hated it. I wanted attention for the first time in my life. But when they told me their side, I reconsidered. I would rather be myself and be extremely happy hanging out with my guy friends without the sexual tension than chasing guys and counting hook-ups forever. Come college, we’ll see what happens. I might tweek my personality and try to get used to it. We’ll see.

End ramblings of a teenage girl.

city traffic puzzle

Hello everyone!
Claire reporting once again.

I realized that i haven’t blessed any of you with a travel story yet. I have been INCREDIBLY busy. Being a junior isn’t the greatest of things, especially being Claire the procrastinator. SATS and ACTS saturday and the next saturday. The Strawberry Festival. Relay for life. Cobblestone magazine, boys, photography. my non-existent chemistry project.

oh, dear.

i am jovial because one, Im traveling all weekend, in Boston, two, im meeting up with Izzy to catch up, three, i am going to bring my camera and capture some amazing shots of things and people, four, i will be away from my family.

I wonder why teenagers loathe being home so much? My friend is under house arrest for nothing really. “Tell them that you will never invite them to your Thanksgiving dinners!”

I’ll try and blog this weekend, depending on internet access. three weeks left of school, then i become a senior, wonderful.

Fight Club is an AMAZING book.