Life as an Extreme Sport

missing home

I left quietly. It’s not as though anyone could hear me, but I still slid the door slowly and silently, using my fingers to cushion the gap. The door that swung shut, I placed my palm on, flat, and moved with the motion of the closing door, waiting for alignment between door and jam and then locking with care. I used equal care in walking, in calling the elevator, in stepping down the stairs.

I missed the rain, today, three times making it outside in the breaks between storms. The scent was there, though, moist and rich and wet and a damp dirty smell rich with herbs and flowers, an almost heady perfume. I took my time walking home, lingering in the park, watching the sun paint the sky goodnight.

I thought about choices, and feeling stuck between feeling selfish and feeling desperately ungrounded. And how I can’t talk about most of what is on my mind, with anyone, because there is either no one who can hear, or no one who wants to hear. And just how much being competent can be a curse.

Mostly, though, I thought about wanting to go home. The overwhelming, aching desire to go home, and how horrible it is to feel like I don’t know where that is anymore.

I used to be loud, pale as milk and bold as a promise. But somewhere, I seem to have lost being as bold as a promise. Now, I’m just a silent ghost, seeing everything, rarely saying anything.

My statements these days come in movement, in noise. And I always leave quietly.

one inside joke later, the DoomClock

controlling yourself in chaos

I suspect that Liam just passed some sort of test there; some lab monkeys are more suited to a controlled environment, but Liam wasn’t bothered by the chaotic element of the crime scene so much as he was disturbed by his own inability to respond to it.
TWoP recapper Sobell on CSI

I like this differentiation, separating out a situation and your reaction to the situation. I think that this is quite often what I fall into; I have a nasty perfectionist streak in me, and can get very frustrated when I don’t know how to respond properly to a situation – not because the situation itself bothers me, but because damnit, I should just know everything and how to handle it all intuitively, skipping the whole learning and process part.

I know this is patently absurd, but that doesn’t stop me from being guilty of the expectation.

I can’t remember who said it to me, and I suspect that far more than one person has actually said it, but to say that I’m my own worst critic is an understatement of vast proportions.

small things

Sometimes, it really is the small things, eh? And those small things can turn an entire day on its ear – a simple conversation, laughing, being able to be generous without a thought, coming home and finding a small package with two DVDs full of happiness.

These small reminders of how blessed life is? They’re nice, and I’m grateful both that I have these reminders, and that I’m in a place where I can see them for what they are.