Thursday, November 1, 2012

No Internet So I Wrote...


This was written back when I was living in a basement in Queens:


Staring at the blinking lights on the modem wouldn’t make the internet come back on any more than staring at a pot of water would encourage it boil or staring at a quiet phone to urge it to ring.

Sigh.  Now what?  The evening suddenly seemed long and open and ….boring.   The chasm of time needed to be filled.   After all, it is Saturday, I am young and single, and I am in the greatest city in the world: New York.

Well, that’s really a lie. A geographically convenient fallacy that helps keep small talk small and questions at bay.  I am in Queens, past Jamaica, and work a few blocks away from Nassau in Long Island.  But, if asked, I tell friends and family that I am living and working in New York, leave out the city, and hope that a few quick and short quips about Times Square and Lady Liberty will satiate any superficial need to know how I and my new job are doing.

How am I doing?  Honestly, I always said I would visit New York and never live here.  My main fears were trash and rats in the streets, ruffians and rude people, and high prices.  None of those were the cause of my public breakdowns in front of co-workers, strangers, and would be lovers.  As a child I was considered “tender-hearted”, as my mom would put it.  The euphemism did not help me feel any better about being so sympathetic that I cried during House Party 2, or worse not being able to hold my tears as a boss spoke to me one on one about a co-worker who saw me on the phone while she was gone.  I’ll never forget her looking awkwardly at anything but me until she finally said, “Shamika, I can’t talk to you when you are like this.”  We remained good friends and she was even a customer for me during my brief time as a Mary Kay Beauty Consultant.  Brief, three years, everything is relative.

Before I go backwards in time, I want to finish talking about now.  New York.  I am 26 years old and living in New York.  I have graduated from college and have my life ahead of me.  Some days I have to remind myself of that.  The entire time I was a student at Stanford, I managed to not get involved in a relationship.  Not that I didn’t try.  God, how I tried, nearly to my embarrassment, but driven intelligent young men who shared my alma mater didn’t seem to want to share a life or even an academic quarter with me.  Perhaps when I visit for a reunion, I hear that is when people reveal crushes and unrequited like.  I guess I can wait five years.

November 2012: NaNoWriMo ALL 50,000 words done!


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NOVEMBER

Resolution: NaNoWriMo
Track: http://www.nanowrimo.org/
Reward: Buy new acoustic guitar



All the words were written, 90% by hand in a journal, so when they are typed up and somewhat cleaned up, I will post the writing here.  Funny enough, I didn't even finish the story!  The idea is the story of my life through the eyes of other men.  The process was very therapeutic and cathartic.  Though the whole thing won't be ready for a while, here is an excerpt:

The first thing you need to realize is that the movies that helped develop my understanding of love all lied to me.  According to the overwhelming majority of them, there was always a lonely  nerdy guy willing to take any girl that gave him the time of day.  In high school, I wanted to be that girl.  I crafted and honed my personality and personae around who I thought geeky guys would like.  I was already smart, into video and board games, and a fellow tortured soul.   So many plots presented the friend of the main character who was either seeking a general girl or had his eyes on a particular girl and got matched up at the end with her or someone who was also eyeing him.  For the many crushes I had, I was never the girl that a guy got.  I was the girl that a guy found himself with.  I thought I was being crafty when, looking back, the best way to describe it is probably stalking.

I would look for the guys with the least amount of friends, especially female friends, and befriend them.  I would do everything I could to impress him on his level, play it cool, and give him all the green lights I thought he’d want.  The only variable I didn't factor in was that the guys I was pursuing were not ready to be pursued.  I was very much a woman offering myself to boys.  Then, I came across a bona fide man.

He was 20 years old, exactly four years older than me and he was everything I could have ever imagined wanting in a guy: mature, tall, handsome, had his own place, a car, smart, funny, could carry a great phone conversation for hours, and he had a job.  I realize now that my mother had it right not to agree with her sixteen year old daughter dating a 20 year old, but at that point in my life, I had just gotten over my first puppy love and was ready for the real thing.

I wanted to race into life.  Hurry up and find a husband, get through college, get a job, house, car, kids, then retire before going to heaven.  And not necessarily in that order.  



Next month....
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DECEMBER

Resolution: Learn to play the guitar again
Track: Be able to play 2 whole songs
Reward: Professional mani/pedi with friend




And remember...!
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2013


If I, Shamika La Shawn Walker Goddard, complete all 12 resolutions during the course of 2012, I will reward myself with a ...
Bahamavention!!!