The Scarecrow in The Stuff That's Not Interesting But Is The Most Interesting Stuff I'll Write

  • March 6, 2015, 6:21 p.m.
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I was enduring the long ride home the other day… I say “enduring” but really it isn’t that bad. It’s a choice that I made for this time in my life, but I must say that Southern California is NOT commuter-friendly.

As I was on the bus, amongst all the strange people that were on it, I ended up sitting next to this young guy. He had to be in high school and the words flew right out of his mouth, “I’m gay.” He was cute, gregarious and instantly well-liked by several people sitting around him as he chatted.

I also happened to witness a marriage proposal. Never in my life did I actually feel like saying “why must you flaunt your private life in front of decent God-fearing American citizens” until that moment. This white-bread All-American Boy in an Angels baseball cap got on one knee and proposed to his yoga-pants wearing girlfriend in the little shopping plaza where I was at. There was all this bragging about how they’d “known each other for seven months” and this was the happiest day of her life…she’s 22.

I try real hard nowadays to be positive. Seeing how far I sank into my depression over the last 3 years made me really hate the person I’d become. I enjoy the humor and wit that cynicism elicits out of me, but the truth is those little jokes reveal much darker hidden truths that I excuse away as just being another layer of my humor.

The words “I’m gay” don’t fly out of my mouth. In fact, I don’t really ever say those things ever, I usually just confirm it with a nod of my head when someone asks if I’m gay. And even when I do say it, I feel an intense pressure in my chest that threatens to escalate into full-scale panic. Plus, marriage is still this foreign concept to me.

I just wonder, as I’m trying to make strides against the things that weigh me down and prevent me from living my life fully, what if I can’t ever get rid of these things? What if I end up living my whole life in fear? I certainly don’t want to live that way, and someone rather insensitively told me I should just stop being afraid. As if fear is like a light-switch.

I was thinking about how I’ve faced other things in my life that have made me afraid, I usually face those things head on. How do you face down a fear that essentially traces back to who you are and the way you were made? Maybe it’s not a fear of what I am but a fear of what I could be. It’s like the spectre of possibilities. It’s like there’s this gay scarecrow out in the horizon, it’s dressed a certain way, like some hideous deformation of what I’m supposed to look like. I feel like it’s chasing me and won’t let me go....

But that’s not reality. A scarecrow is just some discarded fabrics hanging on a lifeless piece of wood. The truly break the fear, I have to deconstruct it. I think that’ll be my next task. All I’ve ever done is face down my demons and I’ve realized over the years that they become bigger and bigger the deeper I go. Pretty soon, I won’t be chasing down the demons, I’ll be fighting dragons with a toothpick.


Fawkes Gal March 09, 2015

Fear is difficult to get rid of, especially fears that we learned during our formative years. Just recognizing the fear is a really important step.

I still don't understand marriage, and I'm married. Of course in my instance, the marriage was clearly a mistake. I think a lot of people just do what they think society expects of them, and marriage is jammed down our throats as "the thing to do" from the time we're children. You grow up, you get married, you have kids, you live happily ever after. Of course it's just bullshit. My parents didn't live happily ever after, I didn't live happily ever after either.

KissOfLife! March 10, 2015

I think that's why I made my 'Vulnerabilty' book here on Prosebox, not that I've written much in it yet. I'm fearful of a lot of the otherwise-quite-lame things in my life, but it's who I am. I don't necessarily think that's a bad thing, but maybe it is preventing me from being a more true me. That time I got punched at Mardi Gras and attacked at the train station, I was terrified both of those times, but they were physical events. My mental mind scares me much worse sometimes and I don't know if I'll ever figure out why. Writing helps I guess.
You elude confidence to me, so it'd be nice if you could deflect your fear, but as you say, it isn't a light switch. Deconstructing would do wonders, as you already know yourself so well.

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