Category: personal

  • Generations

    2019

    Look at me, lying on my bed, without words. My mother is standing above me, and I’m staring at her, through her. I’m outside of my body, with you, my other self. We are staring together. Mom is angry, so angry, always so angry. Her face is red, her tan skin is just starting to wrinkle around her eyes, which bulge almost unnaturally. Her body is lean from overwork, under-eating, smoking, drinking, stress. Body so small that nobody understands her power. Nobody understands why I’m terrified, even though I’m the same weight and even a little taller now that I’m fifteen. When she threatens to kill me, I believe that she can, that she will. She’s screaming at me, but I don’t hear the words right now. The words float around me. Words float, and I’m checking out. 

    My dad squats in the doorway of our bedroom, in his weekend uniform of khaki shorts and a gross, sweaty, white tee-shirt, worn thin by time. He hates his navy mechanic’s uniform, covered in grease, with holes, but honestly, I kind of prefer it. I look over to him with pleading eyes: “Say something! Do something!”  But he looks past me, gangly 165-pound shell-of-a-man that he is, a six-foot-three-inch skeleton, leering. I’m being ignored, on purpose. He often ignores us on purpose. I think he’s happy that she’s not angry with him right now, and that’s enough to keep him silent. It usually is. 

    My brother stands behind my father, leaning over his left shoulder, watching like he doesn’t understand or care what’s happening. Of course, he’s only six, and this is all he knows. Years from now, he’ll recall these times. He’ll be my best friend. He’ll visit me in the hospital after every suicide attempt, and he’ll understand why I tried. Right now, though, he’s so fidgety, shifting his weight from one foot to the other, restless. Restless and anxious as he waits to see how my mother will punish me for snapping a rubber band at him.

    My sister is right next to me on our bed, and she just pulled the sheet up over herself, up so high I can’t really see her eyes. She looks like a shock of red hair on a pillow, shrinking back while my mother screams at me: “You fucking bitch, why the fuck are you always aggravating your brother? You’re always causing trouble.” Fists now, landing with enough force that my body is bouncing on the bed, but I don’t really feel them, and I won’t for a long time. What I know is that I can’t give her the satisfaction of seeing me cry, even when I hurt. So I don’t. “Like a rock, like a rock” – I repeat it in my mind and it becomes true. I’ll be so strong that I won’t feel anything. Actually, I’m doing such a great job of not feeling this, that I won’t feel it for another fifteen years. But she must want me to feel something, because she just. Keeps. Punching. 

    I’ll learn later on that I am not the reason she’s angry. I might be her punching bag, but she’s just trying to figure out why her uncles hurt her when she was too young to know any better. She’s just trying to figure out why the people who love her keep hurting her. But she doesn’t know that yet. Neither do I. What she knows is what she’s making me feel right now: she feels like she’s no good. Like I’m no good. 

    I’m no good. I am no good, and no amount of beating me will change that fact, so finally she stops. She’s exhausted and sweating, because the windows are closed, on this ninety-degree day, while she punishes me for being alive.

  • In Sweden

    Chilling out in Sweden with my (almost-formally) step-kids, watching them each play video games – a roblox sandbox game, and Genshin Impact.

    A. and I both caught a mild cold on the plane. Combined with the jet-lag, neither of us slept very well (I didn’t sleep at all). So, we’ll parent in shifts today. I’m on the first shift.

    Later, I’ll make a Sprite-themed cake for D’s birthday – I’ve promised an attempt at a lemon-lime cake, complete with yellow and green layers, yellow and green sprinkles, bottle cap decorations, and edible spray paint to paint the sprite logo. I have no idea how this is going to turn out, but there’s plenty of excitement on both D and E’s part.

  • Ms. Jessica

    jess ingrassellino, October 2020

    I was the headmaster at my school for orphans. “No, no, NO! You have to

    stand right here. Princess wouldn’t go over there,” I’d command my younger sister, who played every supporting actor role with passion and vigor. We played this game where we pretended to be orphans every day after school. I was probably ten or eleven before we fully quit the game because we got too old for imaginary sanctuaries.

    It’s kind of funny to me now, to think back on what I thought teaching and helping were. Mostly, I thought it meant being in-control, and getting to have control. Both equally appealing to my child-mind. It was strange when I realized that teaching, the art, the act, had nothing to do with power or control.

    “Miss Jessica. Miss Jessica, will you help me with my card?” This little boy was a first-grader in the classroom where I volunteered after school a few days a week. In a rare moment of clarity, my mom had recommended that I volunteer in classrooms since I was interested in teaching, so I did. I met with the elementary school principal, and the next week, I was volunteering in a first-grade classroom – actually, my first-grade classroom, with my first-grade teacher, who was now in her forties.

    “Oh, that’s a beautiful card. Your mom will love it.”

    “This card isn’t for my mom,” he replied, “it’s for my Grandma. My mom’s dead.”

    As a sixteen year old, that was pretty much peak awkward. I tried my best to recover: “Well, I know your grandmother is just going to love that card.”  For weeks after,  I felt like a fool for assuming that he had a mother because he was making a card.

    Over and over again, my students have called me out — usually inadvertently — highlighting the gaps in my knowledge and limits in my experience. I’ve started to think that teachers are just people who like learning things the hard way. Within my first four months of teaching high school, I was certain I’d lose my job.

    “You know what lady, I don’t give a shit!” Eddie shouted.  Eddie, the 19-year-old senior. The genuinely nice kid who put on the tough-guy armor to make the world safer for himself.

    “Yeah, well, you know what?”

    I, all twenty-three years of me, yelled, “I don’t give a shit either. Now go to the principal’s office!”

    Yeah. I did it. I lost my entire temper in fifteen seconds. Couldn’t sleep for a week. Kept waiting for my whole career to get upended. You know what they don’t teach you when you study to become a teacher? They don’t teach you that all of the shit you’re struggling to leave behind is the shit that’s going to bite you every day until you deal with it. That illusion of control I had when I was five? It went out the door with Eddie.

  • Lingering

    jess ingrassellino, September 2020

    I don’t think of you,

    even when I smell coffee

    brewing before I’m awake,

    or when I see the chiffon red

    dress hanging in the closet – the one I wore

    when we lay, laughing, on the grass.

    Or when I order tacos from

    Taco King at 9:30 on a

    random Tuesday night.

    Every day, I see the doorway

    where you stood when I told you

    “I need to leave you”.

    But I don’t see your

    face, looking lost, crushed, hopeless;

    I don’t think about how you

    forced back the tears as you

    asked again to make sure that

    this is what I really wanted.

    For a moment, when I stumble on the

    wedding ring you left in the velvet box,

    with the note you wrote

    when you proposed, I stop. Turn the box

    over and over in my hands, then

    take it to my bedroom and lock it away.