Last night, I stayed in for the first time in weeks. After the first social engagement got canceled, I quickly put Plan B into action but by the time my friends got back to me, I was too lazy to get up and get dressed. Plus my parents have been complaining that I never stay in and spend quality evenings with them. By “quality evenings” I mean, me in my room, my sister in her room, my mom in her room, and my dad downstairs watching TV. The Dado family all under one roof.
At first I was panicky about my lack of Saturday night plans. It occurs to me that I’ve grown an aversion to spending time with myself, and that lately I’ve been desperately filling up my social calendar so as to avoid those long evenings with me and my lonesome. When I’m alone I get depressed and when I get depressed–well, getting depressed isn’t exactly the best way to party on a Saturday night, is it?
But I’m all for trying out new things. So last night, I decided to skip all social activities and take up my shrink’s advice and “sit with my Depression.” The problem with me (and most people I suppose) is that I do everything it takes to avoid being depressed or deny that I’m feeling that way. But there are times when sitting down and just feeling the depression is healthy. I forgot why exactly it’s supposed to be healthy but I ignored that little detail and decided to go along with this plan. I didn’t really have much to do.
So I sat with Depression in the bathroom while Elliott Smith sang to us about faking it through the day with some help from Johnny Walker Red. I sat there for a very long time, not really thinking or doing anything. At first I thought I’d try to figure out why I was feeling depressed but once I did that, I realized it didn’t make me feel any better. Eventually, I got bored sitting with Depression because he’s really not that much fun to be with. Plus, he keeps smoking my cigarettes, which I think is very rude.
So I picked up my guitar (I had gone into my room at this point) and played a random chord. Then I played another random chord. Pretty sound the random chords started sounding good together and I had a nice little riff going right there. I sang out gibberish to the melody I made and after a while, there were words to sing along to the music as the gibberish became coherent sentences. I was amazed. It’s been months since I last wrote a song all by myself–guitars and lyrics and all–so I was pretty fucking stoked. The song I made is called Escape and it’s about doing whatever it takes to be happy and to get way from the lousy state you’re in. Of course it’s chock-full of angst and I’m sure a lot of people would say that it sucks, but who cares? I wrote a song and although it needs some tweaking, I’m pretty fucking happy with it. It’s been a while since I created something I actually like. Depression might be a lousy conversationalist, but he’s good for inspiration.
Every time I get depressed, I stay that way for a while because I keep thinking that I’ll never be happy again. Which is both true and not true, when you come to think of it. If what I want is the happily-ever-after ending propaganda spread by fairy tales and Disney cartoons, of course I’m never going be happy. But life, the way I see it, is like a long dark hallway with little dim lamps placed at random intervals. It’s all a matter of trying to find the will and determination to keep walking that scary hallway to reach those sparks of light, those brief rare moments where happiness in its purest form can be tasted, before the world goes dark again.
Kristel once told me that depression and happiness is overrated. The only thing we should strive for, she said, is calm. I guess you can say that last night, I was the calmest I’ve been in a while. Calm is good. It’s just staying in the moment, accepting things as they come without angsting about how things should be better, blah blah blah. Because no matter how much you wish things were better, they’re not. So you might as well just go with the flow, acknowledge whatever it is you’re feeling, and keep walking that long dark hallway towards the light. The yellow glow of the lamps is very very pretty.
Sometime after my lunch break, I burst into a manic fit of shits and giggles. It happened out of nowhere and I had no idea what I was laughing at or why. I couldn’t calm down and I couldn’t focus and I got scared. Once my laughter subsided into snorts and snickers, I dragged Kristel out of her work station and we went to the poolside to smoke and gripe about our jobs and our lives.
After lighting our cigarettes with a borrowed lighter, I began to babble about how I suddenly found myself frozen and unable to write, as though I just ran out of words. Kristel told me she felt something similar to that when she started work. “On my second day at work, I suddenly got very depressed. All those articles just got to me and it felt like I could never write again. I was practically crying when I hailed the cab back home. I mean, I’m an artist, but what am I doing with my life? When Sylvia Plath was our age, she was writing Colossus–one of her greatest poems. And here I am, stuck with mechanical writing about wheelchairs.”
I took a deep drag of my cigarette and exhaled. “Oh God, I hear you. I’m supposed to be a writer but my novel remains unwritten while I’m churning out articles on the mundane.”
“And great songs.”
“Well, I should hope so!” Although I really think Kristel is better at writing songs than me. She writes poetry, I do prose and guitar riffs.
Suddenly, I got reminded by this Nick Hornby book my dad just bought me called It’s A Long Way Down. I asked Kristel if she’s ever read it and she shook her head. “It’s about these four suicidal people who happened to be at the same suicide spot at the same time. By far one of the most amazing books I’ve ever read,” I explained. “It’s witty and quite easy to read, but there are so many moments where I want to jump up and down and scream, ‘That’s me! That’s me!’ I’m the dude who thought he was going to be somebody but ended up being nobody. I’m the mother who spent the last nineteen years of her life doing nothing but take care of a son who can’t walk, talk, or recognize her. I’m the TV personality whose career went up in smoke because he got involved in a sex scandal. I’m the violent teenage girl from a rich background whose sister is missing and presumed dead.”
Kristel nodded. “Nick Hornby’s really good at that. You’ve read How to Be Good, right? It starts out really funny but a few pages down, it becomes depressing because he touches on relevant issues. You know how after the girl has an affair and she leaves her lover in the hotel room? On the drive home she said that if her life were a film, something would happen or she would meet someone that would make her a completely different person. But instead she stops for tea and donuts and nothing happens. Life’s never like the movies. I feel just like her, I keep making pop culture references to my life. Right now it’s like we’re both in Reality Bites.”
“Except in the movie, Winona Ryder ends up with Ethan Hawke and suddenly everything’s okay even though she never finished her documentary. In real life we won’t meet a cute guy whose kiss will magically solve all our problems. In real life, the guys who kiss us are the problems.” I must have sounded bitter when I said that last sentence, because I am.
“True.” We both smoked our cigarettes in silence before Kristel spoke again. “We’re in that stage between Reality Bites and reality. But this is just a temporary thing. We’re still following the same path we set for ourselves. We’ll be real writers someday. Right now, we just got a little derailed because we need the money.”
“Yeah.”
“When our band gets famous, we’ll write books about our first jobs. Then we can throw ourselves off the top of a building and people will remember us forever.”
I laughed. “Like Kurt Cobain.”
“Or we could do the Kool Aide thing, all of us. Lace it with cyanide.”
“What we’re talking about. This is so…”
“..bourgeois,” we both said.
“We’re so vain. We make pop culture references to ourselves!” I exclaimed. And we burst into laughter and sang the last verse of Bourgeois Suicide.
“Bourgeoise suicide
Drank some cyanide
I finished the bottle
Drowned in my tub of lies.”
And I felt a little bit better after we sang. Among all the songs we’ve written, Bourgeois Suicide is the most meaningful and important because it shows exactly how hopeless and lost we both feel. There are people in the world who are unemployed with families to feed. But instead of being grateful there we were, smoking by the swimming pool, unhappy with our jobs and unhappy with our lives, even though we have everything a human being needs to survive and more.
Bourgeois or not, our problems are real. The depression weighing both of us down is real. There’s nothing glamorous about being depressed. Everyday I keep asking myself why the fuck I can’t be consistently happy. And everyday the answer eludes me. The worst feeling in the world is to be unable to stand each waking moment of your life. But it’s something we need to conquer every day of our lives, even though there are times when it seems like there’s no point in doing so.
I think about suicide more than I care to admit. Last night, I figured out why people kill themselves on days when they seemed the happiest. Happiness is my vacation and depression is my home. The happier I am, the more depressed I eventually get. It’s a vicious cycle. Every time I go on a trip, I don’t ever want to go back home. Not because I hate it there (I have a very lovely room), but to go back to Manila would mean facing the harsh reality of living through one day after the other. When people know they have limited time on earth, they usually do everything they can to make each day the best day of their lives. I think that’s why people kill themselves on days when it seems like nothing could go wrong. Because tomorrow, or the day after that, the happiness just might shatter and it’ll feel like nothing can ever make them smile again. And who wants to die on a day like that?
No, this isn’t some stupid cry for help. I realized long ago that no matter how bad things get, I’d never commit suicide because I’m too afraid. Not because I might succeed–but because I might fail. Fortune tellers tell me I would have a long life and with my luck I’d probably tie the noose wrong, or survive an overdose. Do you realize how humiliating that is? If I survive a suicide attempt, nobody will ever take me seriously. They’ll think I’m just doing that for attention, to get back at the people who hurt me or whatever. I’ll never get another job because employers will think I’m too mentally fucked up to do my work properly. There won’t be any grief to water down everyone’s anger, sadness, and confusion. I don’t even want to think about how expensive the obligatory psychiatric treatments will get. My family, friends, even people I don’t know very well–they’ve been nothing but nice to me, even though I probably don’t deserve any of that kindness. I think the least I could do is to spare everyone the trauma (or the embarrassment) of knowing someone who tried to kill herself and lived.
Those were the thoughts that were running through my head, but I didn’t want to dwell on them any longer because I had articles to write. Shitty and pointless as it might seem, life must go on. One fucking day at a time.
I tossed my cigarette butt over my shoulder. “Shall we go back in?”
“Yeah.”
And with that, Kristel and I walked inside the building, arms linked, bracing ourselves for the work that lay ahead, for the silent tears we shed at night, and for the strength we need to gather to keep ourselves and each other afloat.
My mom interrupted my packing to show me a very interesting find: proof that I was already an emo kid at seven years old! Either that or I must have been taking drugs disguised as candy and I didn’t realize it then.
I don’t remember writing this and I have absolutely no clue what the hell that last sentence meant. O_O According to my mom, I used to write her short notes at that age and in every note I would say that I had a “terreble day”. Good God. Aside from the fact that I was bullied by a couple of girls in the school bus, I vaguely remember that my childhood was a happy and normal one. Maybe that explains why I’m the way I am now. People can’t always be happy throughout their lives. Every single god-awful, weird thing that’s been happening to me lately must be payback for having an abuse-free childhood.
Ever since I met up with some grade three classmates a few days ago (whom I haven’t seen nor spoken to since I was eight!), I’ve been going on this weird nostalgic trip, rummaging through photo albums and hunting for old letters. I seriously regret burning my high school diaries and the circumstances in which it happened. When I was a kid I had this romantic notion that I’d give all my diaries to the man I wanted to marry so that he could have all of me and my neuroticisms. It was a very big deal to me, a gift more sacred than my virginity. Virginity is just a tiny piece of skin; any drunk frat boy can just snatch it away from you. But those diaries were records of my thoughts. My feelings. Forever preserved in paper because I had no friends to talk to back then.
When I thought I found the right guy, I did just that. I placed my diaries in a box and gave them to him. Instead of treasuring my gift, he suggested tossing them into the bonfire because he couldn’t stand to read about my past. Okay, I would understand why he might want to rip apart the diary where I wrote about my first boyfriend. I’m insanely jealous myself and I’d probably want to do the same thing had he kept a written record of his first relationship. But he didn’t even want to read about my childhood! I did what he said because I “loved him so much” and felt like shit afterwards. I think that’s when my romantic notions started dying.
Lesson of the story: you don’t know shit about love when you’re 18. Your boyfriend/girlfriend is probably a douchebag.
Words can’t describe how glad I am that my mom still kept my letters to her, even though I find them stupid and grammatically embarrassing. At least something I wrote from the last decade or so of my life still exists.
Back to packing! I love how I was too lazy to remove my clothes from last weekend’s Ilocos trip from my duffel back. That takes care of half the stuff I’ll be bringing. See? Sometimes being lazy is a good trait to have. 
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