Thursday, October 27, 2011

The NoBusiness in Show Business

My first paid gig, I worked on a show called Hannah.  It was a show about a jewish POW camp prisoner.  After 10 hours in the black box watching rehearsal, I was starving.  I tried to break off a piece of someones home baked pear loaf and the foil crinkled.  I was mortified.  As I chewed the morsel I managed to get away with, I laughed silently thinking to myself  I’m the prisoner not her.  This notion tickled me but not for long.  In two seconds, the playwright was in my face whispering “If you laugh again you are fuckin out of this theater, you got it?”
In all fairness I wasn’t the only person told that.  And to be even fairer, I’ve heard much worse.  The reason is this:  It’s theater.  When something as amorphous as theater in which extremely passionate people have to collaborate their work ethics with their emotions, things can go awry.  In fact almost always, they do in some form.  And the best week to witness these breakdowns is one of my favorite weeks: Tech week.  

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

"Eye" essay....

For my eye essay, I will be writing about the constant delicate balance of work and feelings in theater production.  Working in the theater is unlike any other profession to me because there is a constant ego orgy going on between production team, running crew, and "artists".  It's a constant battle not to offend someone and the most volatile time is usually tech week, a week or two before the performance actually premieres.  Knowing about enough falling outs based on small insignificant things, I have decided to write a piece of that high tension environment.


I will also think about quoting from a directors book I read this past summer which best defines the finicky nature of the jobs in the theater and their self proclaimed importance.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Essay #2

“I was born a poor black boy.”
-Steve Martin

When I was in 3rd grade, I was bullied by a kid named Jamal Alexander.  I later told my Nana and asked for advice.  She asked me if Jamal was black.  I said no.  He was dark brown.  She told me that next time I saw him and he was picking on me to say these four little words to him: “I am above you.”  Needless to say I got into a lot of trouble.

I remember going to school and not seeing anyone else that looked like me.  I later attended Wilson Middle School in Albuquerque New Mexico.  I was beat up once for claiming that m mother was Mexican because the woman who enrolled me in school (my stepmother) was white.  I remember going home and being told by my father that I was mocking an oppressed race by claiming to be a part of that race.  YOU ARE HALF MEXICAN Amanda, it’s not the same thing.  But I never remembered being around people that look like me in New Jersey.  Or North Dakota.  Or Mississippi.

I moved in with my mother.  She lived in Willingboro.  When I was 13, I was accused of being a slut because all white girls were deemed sluts.  “I’m not white,” I claimed.  “You’re not black, you’re white.”
I was raised by my stepsister and her grandmother who I later claimed as my own.  Of course we all got off to a rough start.  Grandma’s comments about my light skin and pretty hair didn’t make it easy to get to know me.  Of course after having my hair burnt off and a few other comments about my flat ass and skinny frame, we all learned how to love one another.  Eventually, it didn’t matter. I was part of the family.  And anyone who disagreed could kiss my black ass.

I wound up dating the only multi racial misunderstood guy in my high school.  His mother was black, white, and Columbian.  His father was  Cornish.  He grew up in Brooklyn and had no animosity of being a minority in our school.  We later moved to Crown Heights Brooklyn, a predominantly West Indian neighborhood.  We were not exactly welcome by the “banquet hall” below us on the first floor.  They used to play music so loud that our dishes would fall off our tables from the vibrating bass through our floor.  When telling our landlord, he addressed the problem with the banquet hall owner.  “They don’t like us here cuz we’re black my brother. They have a problem with us because we’re black.”  We shook our heads as we evesdropped.

I had a hard time finding a job in Oregon.  I clenched my jaw through jokes about Mexicans, or Latinos or Spanish people.  I always thought I would get the job.  Until I realized that I kept checking the box next to “Hispanic/ Latino” was a guaranteed way to not get a call back.  I eventually did get a job from a jewelry store who thought I was of Middle Eastern descent.  People always hushed when they made a joke about a rag head or a terrorist.  Eventually I took an ethnic studies class and realized that miscegenation laws were in full swing until 1951 in that state.  Moreover, I should have realized the Confederate flags and gotten out of there sooner.

     Three summers ago, I had the misfortune of dating a white supremacist and I was his exception.  He loved guns and hated anything with a tan besides me.  I tried reaching out to him by explaining statistics and economics to him.  He wasn’t game to listen.  This obviously ended messy.  I was later called a kike, a nigger lover and eventually a nigger altogether.  I couldn’t understand how I ever thought that I was going to live through that type of hate.

That summer was the same summer my father’s side had a family reunion.  We stayed in Seaside Park, just like my Nana, my brother and I used to do.  And for the first time in years I would be reunited with my aunts, cousin, my brother, and my father’s new family: Sonja and her two children Courtney and Allison.  When I arrived I wasn’t greeted with hugs but rather very professional and distant handshake.  My father reintroduced me as his daughter and I was given a few hugs.  My aunt was probably the most petrified.  She wouldn’t even touch me until my Nana calmed her.  “This is Mandi, my granddaughter.”  She replied, “Well why didn’t you say so?”  The love was later received but the final line had been drawn to isolate me.

Everyone seems to have something rooted to hold onto.  It’s something that defines them.  Just in case they lose their way, it is their anchor to bring them back.  It reminds them who they are.  Like tattoos, these roots are embedded in their skin.  Even the ones who just want to shake it, can’t escape it.  It’s a luxury most people don’t even know they have.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

what I would like to know from comments...

I want to know if the subject matter is interesting. I have dismissed it several times and said no.  however, with the recent passing of my grandmother ( i consider her my grandmother) who is a black woman and the speculation i got from the court for attending her funeral I thought back on this loss of identity and how untraditional my relationships to people culture and the world is.  So i would like to know if its interesting enough.

Essay #2...ideas and structure....

Last time, I mostly just wrote. A lot of it flowed.  this time i am going to play with structure.  I have decided to write a series of little peisodes that relate to my lost identity. 

I have a very white father and relatives that do not shake my hand because i am brown. but when they find out out that we are related they swallow the differences in complexion and hug me. 

My mother is mexican and her side of the family is deeply rooted in East LA culture, Chicano ways of life, and gang life.

My brother has always looked like a white boy and I have always looked mexican(ish).  the fight for custody during the divorce was only over my brother.  in the same token when my brother developed blonde hair and my features got darker my racist great grandmother used to say every time i visited her "you look like shit".

My mother married a black man. i became estranged from my father and was newly adopted into a black family through the love of my stepsister. 

I can't speak spanish even thought it was my first language.  I don't know yiddish even though I was taught yiddish when I was three. I don't have a religion either for obvious conflicts in beliefs between judaism, christianity, catholocism, and assimilation into american culture (holiday wise).


The other part of the essay is going to express how my identity has evolved and also how this is not a taboo subject since there is no sympathy factor for being half oppresssed and half privileged.  However i think the struggle of that should be expressed.  finding identity with no home base is a hard thing to find.

What worked what didn't?

I am a little behind so I will post two blogs today.

What worked.  The sunject matter of my essay was still tender.  i liked the idea of people responding toward a trauma thatpeople sympathized and empathized with.

what didn't work?

I think I could have been clearer on exactly what the trauma was. but now that I think about it i like the idea of keeping it open for interpretation as far as the loss of a child. 
I have also decided to tie in some other ideas of choice and the idea of something being ripped away in the same moment as the realization of opportunity. 

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Another draft (fixed grammar and typos.)

“I don’t take life or anything in it lightly.”  It has been my motto for years, ever since emotions engulfed me at the age of 13.  It was the phase in which feeling led us to do everything, it woke us from our bed, made us sneak out of our parents windows, made us listen to the music of bitter relationships and obsession.  I have always kept at least a part of me invested in that phase, deeply rooted in the notion that our emotions, our obsessions, our most innate feelings are inescapable because they are a part of your soul.  A part of your purpose in life on this earth.

For as long as I can remember I have always wanted a family.  Not the best family, not the most loving family, just anything but what I had.  What I had was two divorced parents, each of them trying to reconstruct their lives from the ground up.  I went to half a dozen schools due to custody battles, and eventually, the result of custodies were pendant on the mature decisions of a 5 and 8 year old.  Oddly enough most of our choices on who would be a better parent laid heavily on the most recent toys or priveleges we received from parents.  Thus the never ending custody battles ensued over my brother.  I unfortunately was baggage for my brother attached to the moral rule of never separating the children. 
My idea of family became an amorphous concept at an early age and I became immediately aware.  The biggest blow to my loss in normalcy was the clear idea that I was the only kid with divorced parents in my class.  When kids were drawing pictures of their families and their houses, I had two sheets of paper and I drew two families.  Mom and Dad were never on the same page.  Dad was always with a stick figure with a skirt with different color hair every time I would draw.  Mom was always by herself with  us.  She didn’t have a house, so I drew her car, which also always changed.  My second major clue that I was always moving.  As a military child, it’s normal to be stationed in several states. Combine that with a mother who likes to move and two people who like nothing better than to win their children, we were on relocation overload.  I never had a best friend until 3rd grade and that last 2 years.  I don’t have any friends that date back more than 3 years due to this constant moving. 

A few years when the dust settled from the War Over The Children, my brother and I were separated.  I lived with my mother and went to school in Willingboro NJ, where I planned to make lifelong friends and adjust to my mother’s new boyfriend and his daughter.  I would have a family and although absent of my brother I had a female substitution in his place.  This was also invaluable to me because I would be living with a mother, a father figure and a sibling.  In a house.  With a real yard.  A real address.  I began rooting immediately.

I was not exactly welcome.  A regrettably ugly and smart child, I did not make friends easily.  In fact, I couldn’t’ make real friends at all until high school.  Coincidentally, that’s when I fell in love.  His name was Andrew and he would make a huge impact on my life for the next six years.  Shy at first, he let me feel stable.  My home life had proven to be not a family, but another war zone.  My step father became abusive and addicted to drugs, he estranged himself from all things of and resembling a family.  My sister sought adventure and I weighed her down by being younger and less attractive.  My mother threw herself into work, and spent her free time saving face in front of other moms in the neighborhood.  My family was in pieces again.  But there was Andrew.  He came from an equally, for lack of a better term, fucked up household as well.  We were in love.  We stayed together throughout high school, with no breaks, no huge fights in the halls, no teenage lapses of judgement.  We were just together, no matter what.  He graduated a year early and moved to Brooklyn.  I woke up at 5:30 every Saturday morning for a year to catch the trains to New York.  When I graduated we lived together.  When we got sick of New York, we moved.  Together. 

In Oregon, things became rocky and the lapses of judgement that we had not explored in high school made themselves ever present by the time Andrew decided to go to college.  It was the phase I like to call College Douchebag phase, defined on exploiting the concept of being free, young, and attractive.  I too, had explored it.  My phase was over in 2 months.  His?  It may not ever be over yet.  He occasionally returned to the same longing for stability that we had originally shared.  He proposed to me.  Followed by that were, 3 other girlfriends besides me who knew nothing about each other.  Needless to say the engagement ended.  My stability had ended and I was forced to rebuild.
I went back to New Jersey where I enrolled at Kean University.  As always, I would be a theater major with a concentration in lighting design and I had decided that I was going to plant myself here for at least 3 years.  I was going to make myself stable.  In the meantime, men would be equated with the occasional meal, cup of coffee or movie.  Until I met Shmustin.
Shmustin would be the most complex and fickle human being I had ever laid eyes on and had the mishap of dating.  He proved to be extremely interested in me, unlike most people in this new school and I obliged him with small stories from my life.  He also disclosed many feelings and anecdotes from his past relationships, each one, had I been listening carefully, disclosing why this was not the guy for me.  Looking back now on the myriad relationships he had including both men and women, I should have not fell pray to the one thing that allured me about him the most: his family.  His parents were married forever and he had two sisters.  They lived in Jacksonville Florida and he visited them for the holidays. He loved them and talked to them on a pretty regular basis and I thought this guy is stable.  This is what I need.
In hindsight, it took him 5 months of waiting to obtain the position of his girlfriend, he was frequently flirting with others in our department as well as friends of friends outside of the university, lost multiple jobs, and relied heavily on me for financial security.  I became stability for him.  This was obviously stressful and I felt like I had become his mother.  However, every time I thought he was too much of a child, I would be rewarded greatly.  Our relationship was punctuated with joint visits to his parents in Florida.  We would sleep in the spare room they had.  His mother would cook, his father would watch television.  His sisters lived not too far away in the same city, one of which had two children and a husband of her own.  Every visit to that particular sister resulted in a conversation of Shmustin not wanting to be married or have children.  This idea changed frequently as well. 
A year later, we were still together, but this was stability.  There were semi annual breakups and arguments and difference in opinions but we always returned to one another.  I, for the love that I lacked and the stability I didn’t want to admit I lacked, and him for the life that I provided him with: cooked meals, help with his homework, someone who admired him constantly, and would be there no matter what. 
In the winter of 2010, our department began to work on the production Sweeney Todd.  Shmustin was Assistant Stage Manager and was there from the beginning of rehearsals.  As a lighting designer, I am not brought on board until the final few weeks before opening night.  Preceding the project, I had been broken up with but we had agreed to steadily work on our relationship.  As far as our behavior nothing had really changed.  He was always at my house or vice versa.  We spent time with mutual friends, we spent days together, we got along and for the most part we were perfectly comfortable being intimate.  That is, until his birthday. 
I had been brought on the show a few days prior and we started to work non stop.  Shmustin and I barely had time together that week and he asked me if I would have lunch with him.  I rejected him coldly but what I had planned had to be done on our lunch break.  I had ordered a cake for him and needed to pick it up along with a card for the entire cast to sign.  I did my best to conceal this plan from him and I started running errand.  Luckily everything was done in time and I had a bleeding red velvet cake stabbed with a razor prepared for him by the time he would get back from lunch.  However, I was missing a lot of cast members signatures.  I called Shmustin thinking maybe he was eating with them.  To my surprise, he was eating with a particular cast member.  Alone.  One whom he had hinted to me about before.  He had texted me messages on accident that were meant to go to her late at night.  I thought it mostly harmless until he guiltily admitted he was having lunch with her.  I explained my hurt feelings and what followed were several falling outs that day.  However, I happily greeted him later that night with a gory cake full of candles and a whole cast singing happy birthday.
He later apologized for everything and swore we would work on things exclusively.  So we stayed near each other.  We hung out, went to dinner, talked, slept together.  I occasionally caught him lying about who he was speaking with, still received intermittent text messages intended for the leading female role of Sweeney Todd.  I cried but hoped it was a phase. 

It wasn’t.

The show ended and so did our relationship.  We ended things harshly when I dropped by his house and “Johanna” was there.  I cut off communication when I found out that he didn’t have just one infatuation but a few.  I felt the pattern of infidelity forming.  I decided to end things as quickly as they had began.  I blocked his number and text messages.  Just like that.  Six weeks later it was April.  I had been single and completely content with the idea that maybe I was not suited for relationships.  Maybe I was supposed to be alone.  For now.  Or so I thought.

I called him that month composing myself and trying to hold back my tears.  I failed to keep calm.  He had been trying to contact me desperately for the past few weeks and I wanted nothing to do with him.  In fact I could have let him go scott free.  But this.  This was too important to me to let it go.  He needed to know.  If he felt even a small portion of what I felt, he needed to know. 

He reacted sympathetically but as I suspected, he thought it should bring us closer.  That it would allow us to communicate again so we could relate to each other through our pain.  I could not allow that.  I hated him more for reaching out to me. I wanted him to suffer.  Just the way I had to suffer through the cheating.  The way I would suffer through this.  The way I would fill out forms at the clinic.  The way I would swallow this every time I listed the number of pregnancies as 1.  The way I would list my number of children as 0.  Alone. 

I always remember him saying, “ I see myself as a father before a husband.”  I hear it in my head and it turns my stomach.  He would be neither in my eyes.  It’s what haunts me to this day.  This possibility of family.  This feeling of being accompanied unknowingly with something that was us.  The thought that we may have not even had the choice but to be a family.  We would have been forever bound and obligated to one another for a lifetime.  I was feeling deserted and alone, coping with this solitude and I wasn’t.  For six weeks I wasn’t. 

I see him now and remember the week it was conceived.  He had slept with that girl in the same week.  Moreover, he bragged about it with friends.  I crumble when I think about how my future was pendant on this fickle excuse for a man.  I wince at the possibility of what we may have had to do if our ‘family” had lasted longer.  I shake my head reflecting on how I was almost a mother and he was infatuated with girls who held the same unpredictable and childish whims.  Every time I hear Sweeney Todd play on my Ipod, I cry with the meaning the lyrics hold for me. I feel you, Johanna.

Monday, October 3, 2011

Essay #1 Draft


“I don’t take life or anything in it lightly.”  It has been my motto for years, ever since emotions engulfed me at the age of 13.  It was the phase in which feeling led us to do everything, it woke us from our bed, made us sneak out of our parents windows, made us listen to the music of bitter relationships and obsession.  I have always kept at least a part of me invested in that phase, deeply rooted in the notion that our emotions, our obsessions, our most innate feelings are inescapable because they are a part of your soul.  A part of your purpose in life on this earth.

For as long as I can remember I have always wanted a family.  Not the best family, not the most loving family, just anything but what I had.  What I had was two divorced parents, each of them trying to reconstruct their lives from the ground up.  I went to half a dozen schools due to custody battles, and eventually, the result of custodies were pendant on the mature decisions of a 5 and 8 year old.  Oddly enough most of our choices on who would be a better parent laid heavily on the most recent toys or priveleges we received from parents.  Thus the never ending custody battles ensued over my brother.  I unfortunately was baggage for my brother attached to the moral rule of never separating the children. 
My idea of family became an amorphous concept at an early age and I became immediately aware.  The biggest blow to my loss in normalcy was the clear idea that I was the only kid with divorced parents in my class.  When kids were drawing pictures of their families and their houses, I had two sheets of paper and I drew two families.  Mom and Dad were never on the same page.  Dad was always with a stick figure with a skirt with different color hair every time I would draw.  Mom was always by herself with  us.  She didn’t have a house, so I drew her car, which also always changed.  My second major clue that I was always moving.  As a military child, it’s normal to be stationed in several states. Combine that with a mother who likes to move and two people who like nothing better than to win their children, we were on relocation overload.  I never had a best friend until 3rd grade and that last 2 years.  I don’t have any friends that date back more than 3 years due to this constant moving. 

A few years when the dust settled from the War Over The Children, my brother and I were separated.  I lived with my mother and went to school in Willingboro NJ, where I planned to make lifelong friends and adjust to my mother’s new boyfriend and his daughter.  I would have a family and although absent of my brother I had a female substitution in his place.  This was also invaluable to me because I would be living with a mother, a father figure and a sibling.  In a house.  With a real yard.  A real address.  I began rooting immediately.

I was not exactly welcome.  A regrettably ugly and smart child, I did not make friends easily.  In fact, I couldn’t’ make real friends at all until high school.  Coincidentally, that’s when I fell in love.  His name was Andrew and he would make a huge impact on my life for the next six years.  Shy at first, he let me feel stable.  My home life had proven to be not a family, but another war zone.  My step father became abusive and addicted to drugs, he estranged himself from all things of and resembling a family.  My sister sought adventure and I weighed her down by being younger and less attractive.  My mother threw herself into work, and spent her free time saving face in front of other moms in the neighborhood.  My family was in pieces again.  But there was Andrew.  He came from an equally, for lack of a better term, fucked up household as well.  We were in love.  We stayed together throughout high school, with no breaks, no huge fights in the halls, no teenage lapses of judgement.  We were just together, no matter what.  He graduated a year early and moved to Brooklyn.  I woke up at 5:30 every Saturday morning for a year to catch the trains to New York.  When I graduated we lived together.  When we got sick of New York, we moved.  Together. 

In Oregon, things became rocky and the lapses of judgement that we had not explored in high school made themselves ever present by the time Andrew decided to go to college.  It was the phase I like to call College Douchebag phase, defined on exploiting the concept of being free, young, and attractive.  I too had explored it.  My phase was over in 2 months.  His?  It may not ever be over yet.  He occasionally returned to the same longing for stability that we had originally shared.  He proposed to me.  Followed by that were 3 other girlfriends besides me who knew nothing about each other.  Needless to say the engagement ended.  My stability had ended and I was forced to rebuild.
I went back to New Jersey where I enrolled at Kean University.  As always, I would be a theater major with a concentration in lighting design and I had decided that I was going to plant myself here for at least 3 years.  I was going to make myself stable.  In the meantime, men would be equated with the occasional meal, cup of coffee or movie.  Until I met Justin.
Shmustin would be the most complex and fickle human being I had ever laid eyes on and had the mishap of dating.  He proved to be extremely interested in me, unlike most people in this new school and I obliged him with small stories from my life.  He also disclosed many feelings and anecdotes from his past relationships, each one, had I been listening carefully, disclosing why this was not the guy for me.  Looking back now on the myriad relationships he had including both men and women, I should have not fell pray to the one thing that allured me about him the most: his family.  His parents were married forever and he had two sisters.  They lived in Jacksonville Florida and he visited them for the holidays. He loved them and talked to them on a pretty regular basis and I thought this guy is stable.  This is what I need.
In hindsight, it took him 5 months of waiting to obtain the position of his girlfriend, he was frequently flirting with others in our department as well as friends of friends outside of the university, lost multiple jobs, and relied heavily on me for financial security.  I became stability for him.  This was obviously stressful and I felt like I had become his mother.  However, every time I thought he was too much of a child, I would be rewarded greatly.  Our relationship was punctuated with joint visits to his parents in Florida.  We would sleep in the spare room they had.  His mother would cook, his father would watch television.  His sisters lived not too far away in the same city, one of which had two children and a husband of her own.  Every visit to that particular sister resulted in a conversation of Shmustin not wanting to be married or have children.  This idea changed frequently as well. 
A year later, we were still together, but this was stability.  There were semi annual breakups and arguments and difference in opinions but we always returned to one another.  I, for the love that I lacked and the stability I didn’t want to admit I lacked, and him for the life that I provided him with: cooked meals, help with his homework, someone who admired him constantly, and would be there no matter what. 
In the winter of 2010, our department began to work on the production Sweeney Todd.  Shmustin was Assistant Stage Manager and was there from the beginning of rehearsals.  As a lighting designer, I am not brought on board until the final few weeks before opening night.  Preceding the project, I had been broken up with but we had agreed to steadily work on our relationship.  As far as our behavior nothing had really changed.  He was always at my house or vice versa.  We spent time with mutual friends, we spent days together, we got along and for the most part we were perfectly comfortable being intimate.  That is, until his birthday. 
I had been brought on the show a few days prior and we started to work non stop.  Shmustin and I barely had time together that week and he asked me if I would have lunch with him.  I rejected him coldly but what I had planned had to be done on our lunch break.  I had ordered a cake for him and needed to pick it up along with a card for the entire cast to sign.  I did my best to conceal this plan from him and I started running errand.  Luckily everything was done in time and I had a bleeding red velvet cake stabbed with a razor prepared for him by the time he would get back from lunch.  However, I was missing a lot of cast members signatures.  I called Shmustin thinking maybe he was eating with them.  To my surprise, he was eating with a particular cast member.  Alone.  One whom he had hinted to me about before.  He had texted me messages on accident that were meant to go to her late at night.  I thought it mostly harmless until he guiltily admitted he was having lunch with her.  I explained my hurt feelings and what followed were several falling outs that day.  However, I happily greeted him later that night with a gory cake full of candles and a whole cast singing happy birthday.
He later apologized for everything and swore we would work on things exclusively.  So we stayed near each other.  We hung out, went to dinner, talked, slept together.  I occasionally caught him lying about who he was speaking with, still received intermittent text messages intended for the leading female role of Sweeney Todd.  I cried but hoped it was a phase. 

It wasn’t.

The show ended and so did our relationship.  We ended things harshly when I dropped by his house and “Johanna” was there.  I cut off communication when I found out that he didn’t have just one infatuation but a few.  I felt the pattern of infidelity forming.  I decided to end things as quickly as they had began.  I blocked his number and text messages.  Just like that.  Six weeks later it was April.  I had been single and completely content with the idea that maybe I was not suited for relationships.  Maybe I was supposed to be alone.  For now.  Or so I thought.

I called him that month composing myself and trying to hold back my tears.  I failed to keep calm.  He had been trying to contact me desperately for the past few weeks and I wanted nothing to do with him.  In fact I could have let him go scott free.  But this.  This was too important to me to let it go.  He needed to know.  If he felt even a small portion of what I felt, he needed to know. 

He reacted sympathetically but as I suspected, he thought it should bring us closer.  That it would allow us to communicate again so we could relate to each other through our pain.  I could not allow that.  I hated him more for reaching out to me. I wanted him to suffer.  Just the way I had to suffer through the cheating.  The way I would suffer through this.  The way I would fill out forms at the clinic.  The way I would swallow this every time I listed the number of pregnancies as 1.  The way I would list my number of children as 0.  Alone. 

I always remember him saying, “ I see myself as a father before a husband.”  I hear it in my head and it turns my stomach.  He would be neither in my eyes.  It’s what haunts me to this day.  This possibility of family.  This feeling of being accompanied unknowingly with something that was us.  The thought that we may have not even had the choice but to be a family.  We would have been forever bound and obligated to one another for a lifetime.  I was feeling deserted and alone, coping with this solitude and I wasn’t.  For six weeks I wasn’t. 

I see him now and remember the week it was conceived.  He had slept with that girl in the same week.  Moreover, he bragged about it with friends.  I crumble when I think about how my future was pendant on this fickle excuse for a man.  I wince at the possibility of what we may have had to do if our ‘family” had lasted longer.  I shake my head reflecting on how I was almost a mother and he was infatuated with girls who held the same unpredictable and childish whims.  Every time I hear Sweeney Todd play on my Ipod, I cry with the meaning the lyrics hold for me. I feel you, Johanna.