Monday, February 18, 2019

Harry Potter World

My friend and I went to Universal Studios this past weekend. It was a trip we'd wanted to take for a couple of years now. We'd daydreamed together of visiting Harry Potter world. Finally, this fall, he said triumphantly, "We're going!" He even was going to take days off school - a thing unheard of from him! So, we booked it all! I was beyond excited!

A bit about how the Harry, Hermione, and Ron's story has impacted me through the years. It started with taking a children's literature class where reading the first reading was "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone". I quickly saw why these books were being gobbled up by children of all ages. The lovable characters, the endearing relationships, the early teen angst of friendships, and the language- made up silly words made the whole thing, well, magical. The stories became dear friends of mine.

As the books came, so did the movies, and I loved them dearly. They were my friends when I was happy, and when I was going through my divorce and ran to Hawaii, I watched them over and over in the open air barn in the Hawaiian jungle. They comforted me as tears were running down my face and hugged me when I was high on silliness and new friendship. They were my go-to stories. 

Years continue to march on. New friendships, lost love. The constant was Hogwarts. I could always go there. Letting my imagination wander in the joy of believing in magic.

Fast forward to this past weekend. My dear friend and I arrive in Los Angeles, and we are so pumped. Laughter fills the air whenever we are together. I adore this man. He is kind, gentle, hilarious, sees my dark humor and plays along with it. He is unafraid to call out my bullshit and celebrates me when I am proud. He is strikingly handsome with a smile you can get lost in. He has been my colleague, confidant, and closest friend. We have shared the roles of Harry, Hermione, and Ron, Snape and Dumbledore, depending on the time and personal need to one another.  

Friday morning comes, and we wake with the excitement of children. Goofballs at their best. We wait for the shuttle to take us to Universal Studios. We hop on, and I squeal in delight at the sight of young children in their makeshift Hogwarts gear: capes, hats, glasses, fake scars, house colors. He laughs at me, out of joy, and I comment that this squealing will be happening throughout the day, so prepare oneself.

It is raining in LA. Something unheard of this time of year. I was told it is usually tank-tops and flip-slop weather, but not this Friday. This Friday in LA was a normal day in Portland. It was our normal. The rain helped bring the number of people down considerably, and those folks with umbrellas (I'm talking to you, LA) have clearly never used them before because I dodged being hit in the face over a dozen times. The rain did not stop our inner shine as we strolled on, to Hogwarts.

We turn a slight corner, and there it was, Hogsmead, with Hogwarts in the distance - the theme music playing, snow covered rooftops of Diagon Ally. The first thing I see is the Hogwarts Express Train, with the conductor gleefully greeting wizards and muggles alike, while smoke billowed from the smokebox chimney. I was overcome with childlike exhilaration and happy tears filled my grown-up eyes. It was all real! Glancing to the left was a barrel of Butterbeer, so naturally we got in line for the drink. It foamed like a fluffy fresh snowball. We cheered and took our first sip of the magical concoction. Tasted like light and creamy butterscotch, it was familiar, but distant enough to be a first time experience. The foam stuck to his mustache and we giggled like children at the sight.

Our next stop was Ollivanders, to discover how the wand chooses the wizard. A bustling experience with witches casting spells, and entertaining wizards helping all of us discover our wand match. My match being the wand of Sirius Black. I will let you read more about him if you wish on your own. My calling to Sirius was his devoted love for Harry. With magical wand in hand, I played with several spells along Diagon Ally - oh yes, wave your wand correctly, and magic happens before your eyes! My friend laughing along with my joy.

It was about time to make our way to Hogwarts, to experience the Forbidden Journey ride! I see that there are "test seats" outside the ride - I wonder to myself what that is about, and my anxiety gets tickled. I ask him if I should try it, and he says sure if I want to, and he tried to assure me that I will be fine. I sit and pull the handle bar over my head. It is certainly not for the claustrophobic among us. The light turns green, he tells me, so we are good to go. And this is where the mood shifts ever so slightly. 

I become a bit quiet (which is a telltale sign of emotional distress in me), and he comments that he can tell my anxiety is already starting. I even checked my fit-bit pulse, which incidentally was racing. I laugh it off, saying I am nervous that the ride will be too scary. He reassures me that he will be next to me the whole time. Side note - I had to hold his hand during the take off flight, because it was extremely turbulent - a detail worth noting in order for you, the reader, to more fully understand his nature. We continued our trek up to Hogwarts castle. Pausing in the various rooms to take in the magic - where they learned the dark arts, we listened to the Sorting Hat tell his stories, and we got a peak inside Dumbledore's office. The walls were decorated with the framed pictures of talking ghosts. 

My anxiety was peaking, and I finally told him, "my biggest fear is being too fat for this." He assured me I was not, and not to worry. We walked through the rooms and came upon a young woman working the ride and she asked me if I wanted to try the "test seat". I was extremely aware of why she asked me, and not the other passerby's. I told her that I had tried it outside, and it was OK. She smiled, and we continued down our path. We round another corner and the ceiling is beautifully full of floating candles. I reach for his arm and he tells me that it is all "ok". 

The way one begins the ride is to walk onto a moving platform. You then sit down on the 4-seated bench-like contraption. A man comes over to move the safety bar down. He jams it down on my chest, and it makes a click sound. It is tight, but OK. He then shouts at me "I NEED 3-CLICKS" and he pushes it HARD onto my breasts. OK, that was click number two, and I can feel that moving platform slow. He pushes again while shouting at me "I NEED THREE CLICKS, YOU DON'T HAVE THEM! YOU HAVE TO GET OFF!" time stops. STOPS. The entire ride stops. He lifts the safety bar and I am rushed away by strangers. I don't know where my friend is at this point, but as I am being quickly escorted into a black back-stage-type area with harnesses and yellow warning tape or arrows, or something of the like. Empty.

I just feel the wind knocked out of me, and he is next to me, and I cannot make eye-contact. We are left there standing alone for what feels like an eternity. Neither of us knowing what to do. The door opens again. A beautiful large black man, in tears, walks past us. I don't have words, but I know in my heart what is happening. My friend tells me "that large black man is in tears, he just walked by." I think I respond with something along the lines of "so will I be". But the tears aren't there, just shock and what I had just experienced. A cute young lady walks through a secret door to tell me something about "safety and comfort" and I try my best to be polite with a quiet "I get it" and I secretly wished for her to PLEASE stop talking at me. She continues walking us past people in line, taking us to, the test seat inside that I had been asked about! I look at my friend, and tell him "please don't watch this", again, I am in shock - my words are lost to me, numb and confused, she sits me down, and I say "you're doing this to me in front of all these people"? Yes, the line of people move right past the "are you too fat for this ride" chair. She pulls the lever over my head, and tells me same thing "looks like you aren't going to be comfortable or safe, I am sorry, you have to leave". I am unable to even feel my body at this point. 

What is starting to flood into me is the everlasting reminder my fat body is wrong. It has always been wrong. I see now that my friend is next to me, and it is like a knife to my heart. I tell him I need him to turn around and go on the ride. He looks at me, with his beautiful brown eyes, and says "we will talk about that later, keep walking." We walk to an outside corner, where swarms of people are walking into the castle. He tells me he isn't going on the ride without me. I turn, so that my face is away from him and the crowd. I ask him to please move so that I could talk to him without having to face the crown at the same time, he gently complies. 

The tears are now flowing out of me like a river, and words are choked up in my throat. He tells me again "I am not doing this without you." I am dreading that he is going to be too stubborn to hear me. I am finally able to squeak out the choked words "It is going to hurt me more, if you do not do this. I promise you, I will feel so much worse, if you do not turn around, and do this." He pauses, and looks at me, and I feel my heart falling into a million pieces, and I can barely maintain eye contact. He agrees to go, and I touch his shoulder as he turns away from me. I needed him to do this, and I am so grateful he heard me.

I take the excruciating walk back, passing the happy families, children, men and women. Keep in mind, they didn't provide me an alternate route, so I can only assume this was by design. Tears streaming down my face, I avoid eye contact with all of them. I hear one exclaim his annoyance with me walking against the crowd. I hear it like a punch to the back of the head. I stumble for my sunglasses to mask my tears. I walk what feels to be miles. Past the Sorting Hat, and magical rooms and offices, past the beautiful Fat Lady, guarding the entrance to Gryffendor's common room. Making my way finally back to the entrance. I wait with my sunglasses on watching all the people put their things in lockers in order to make sure nothing gets lost or broken. There was no locker for my heart. I waited for my dear friend to emerge, all the while trying the my damnedest to stop crying, I did NOT want him to see me like that. I tried my best, but he knew.

He smiled gently at me when we caught glances. He told me that the butterbeer was trying to come up - the ride was adventurous, and his way of attempting to convince me it wasn't all that great, a sweet gesture.  We wandered the little shop attached and went outside, and not another word was spoken about it. However, I am now carrying the agonizing pain in my heart, on my shoulders, in my bones. Mudblood.

I keep it together, for the remainder of our trip. We visit again, the following day. He makes comments about the rides being too "aggressive" and would rather not go on them. I cannot help but wonder if this is for my benefit, in order to help ease, what I am sure he is picking up on, my broken hardheartedness, and now extreme fear of not "fitting". And let me assure you, I was ready for all of the adventurous rides prior to what happened. We wander to other "worlds" and have a good time at various shows and sights. I hold my hurt deep inside as to not expose myself. We come home.

And now, dear reader, I am beyond grief. I am beyond heartbroken. I am so overcome with shame and embarrassment. My closest friend witnessing what I can only describe as one of the most humiliating experiences of my life. Not only did I have to live through it, but there is my dearest friend, a witness. My gorgeous friend. Not to mention the countless others who saw. I feel nothing but anguish and hatred at the body I am forced to live in. I hate it, with a hot knife-like rage. I am disgusted at the sight of myself. I am, of course used to being the ugly, fat, odd friend in the group, it is just something I have grown accustomed to. But after this, I just cannot. I don't think you understand. 

Saturday, January 19, 2019

Something has been weighing on my shoulders as of late. It doesn't really have a name, but it has feelings. For ease of understanding, lets call it bricks, each one with a label. Regret. Shame. Embarrassed. Unworthy. Disgusting. To name a few. Some of them are plenty - regret probably has the most bricks, along with disgusting. These bricks on my shoulders hurts, and they've made their homes inside my muscles and I feel the weight of their squeeze daily. Some days, I just know they are there. Other days, they are so heavy, that getting out of bed is excruciating.

I don't know what to do most of the time but ignore them, for fear of engaging is terrifying. I just feel so heavy with sadness that I wonder if I will drown in my own tears. What are humans supposed to do with such grief and regret? To say goodnight is always whispering in my ear, the alternative of continual carrying of this weight doesn't seem all that inviting. When my brain just replays all the "could-have-been's" and the "you are just too disgusting for anyone to want you", it takes a god damn toll.

So, here I am writing, hoping to alleviate some of the pressure in my shoulders. I try and remember the words my friends have given me about "hope" and other things that feel like utter nonsense. One day, one hour, one moment at at time.. one brick...

Wednesday, July 4, 2018

independence day 2018 - racism

The idea was to reflect on what is on our minds this independence day. With so much happening in our country, the USofA, it is difficult to be in a celebratory mood on this "holiday".

Looking back into childhood, I see my country as "the greatest". It is what I was taught in school. We would pledge our allegiance, our innocent hands over our pure hearts. "With liberty, and justice, for all," our voices proudly declared, having no real understanding of what those words meant.

As white kids, we knew nothing of the deep racism that impacted our classmates and their families.  We were taught "color-blindness", a fairytale idea that if you don't see color, color doesn't exist, therefore racism couldn't be real. We only knew of fireworks, bar-b-que, flags on porches, and police officers were the "nice guys". It wasn't until my teen years, when some of my best friends weren't white, that I began to see the ugly truth - america is racist.

Does that mean I don't see the good things that america has? Well, of course, but I see it through my privilege of having white skin. I can't help think that when I have a positive interaction with a police officer, my black and brown friends may not be so lucky. When I walk through my neighborhood at night, I don't wonder if someone is going to call the cops on me. I know the store security isn't going to stop my white sister and ask her if she paid for the stroller her baby is in. I do know they have stopped my brown friends.

And all this is what I am thinking about. The racist president. The institutions of racism that allows such horrific things to happen to our black and brown brothers and sisters. The asylum seeking migrant children and families who are caged on this day of independence. Today, I am somber.

But I have to hope. I want to believe that we can rise to the occasion of "land of the free, home of the brave!" I hope we are up to the challenge. It is going to require those of us privileged to have white skin to interrupt injustice. Our hands are no longer innocent. Our hearts, no longer pure. We know the harsh reality, and if we choose to ignore it, then we deserve the doom that will certainly impact us all.

Saturday, June 9, 2018

Teacher Thoughts June 2018

A whole costco sized bottle of advil later, the 2017-2018 school year comes to a close. I believe every school year gives teachers an opportunity to reflect, think, and hopefully, grow. Grow not only as a teacher, but as a human.

I have never been good at goodbyes. I hate the idea of never seeing someone again. Many of my students will be returning to me in late August, but I cannot help wondering what will happen in our time apart. And what about my seniors? I will not being seeing them come into my classroom, all sleepy-eyed and grumpy at 8:20am. Those are the kids I am thinking about the most.

I have one senior who has changed me in particular. When I first started at this school, I was warned about him. I was told to "be careful" and that he has "hit people in the past". The feeling I got from my colleagues was this kid was going to be my most challenging. And, holy bananas, they were right!

The first couple of weeks, this kid spent the majority of his time right outside of the classroom next to a garbage can. The garbage receptacle was large and had a flat top that you could sorta lean onto. Believe me, the metaphor here is not lost on me. He swore a lot. He barely came to class, and when he did, he'd tell me to fuck off and he'd stand in the corner until he left to go back to the garbage can in the hallway. He wandered the classroom a lot. Kids mostly avoided him. He didn't smile. This kid clearly learned a long time ago that no one would bother him if he was an asshole to everyone.

About 2 weeks in, I had finally decided this kid was going to be mine! I had to claim him as mine! I decided that he was going to know that he was mine and I was his teacher and that his bullshit wasn't going to work on me. When he told me to fuck off and he walked away, I followed him. He walked to another corner of the classroom. I wasn't intimidating or mean, I just walked with him to the corner. He looked at me, and I gently and quietly said "it's all good, we got a lot of time left together". "Fuck you" he said. My calm reply, "it's OK, I get paid to be here, and we can do this all day." He went quite, and I kept teaching from that corner of the room. He wandered around a bit, and I just stayed right next to him - it was maddening, and I am sure the other students wondered what the hell was going on. He was clearly testing me. And each and every other student was watching. The stakes were high. He walked into the hallway, and I reminded him of the classroom policy of calling security if he left the room without permission, and I followed through. Security brought him back in the room, where we continued our dance of "fuck off and wandering".

This dance lasted a few days. It was grueling. I wondered what I had set myself up for. I feared he was going to hate me more. I was terrified of not being able to convince him that I was there for him, I was there for each student that was watching. Then, the breakthrough happened. He stayed in class for 30 minutes. Then for 40 minutes, an hour... 70 minutes.... 80 minutes.... Each class a few more minutes... The kid stayed. He finally felt safe. This was March of last year (2017).  We had a whole school year left together, and he was going to be a senior, and I was scared of this kid's incredible risk for drop out. His brother dropped out. His sister dropped out. He gave me a hug on the last day of school last year, and it made me cry, and his response, "stop fucking crying, Ms Angell!" of course, then I just laughed through my tears.

We began in the fall, as tradition holds. We started off as you'd imagine, testing the waters a bit. I held my ground, and he continued to blossom. I began to see and experience things with this kid that no one had before. He smiled. He fucking smiled! He said "Hello" and "good morning". He came into class right at the beginning of the day. He checked in with class during our morning check-in.

I don't want to give you the impression it was all butterflies and rainbows, because it wasn't! This kid had been practicing his fuckery for a long time, and he was damn good at it. He was hard to like, and teachers often complained to me about him. I didn't have a magic bullet, but I did learn that loving kids who are the hardest is the only thing that works, and it is the god damned hardest thing to do. I had to dig deep on some days, when he would just push, and push, and push his terrible at me. With his swearing and meanness and cruel comments spewed at me. Many days I just felt weary and depleted.

And just like when he began staying in class, he then began actively participating. This kid read out-loud for the first time. He completed independent work! He joked with the other adults. He got silly with his peers. We helped him peel away his layers of practiced avoidance and watched him begin trusting. He relaxed into being a teenager who was accepted. And while my classroom is only a pebble of space in his world, he was safe there. He was accepted. He was loved and cared for.

And last week, I got to watch him walk across that graduation stage. I saw him hold up his diploma, beaming with pride as he looked up at his parents in the audience.

And with that, this school year comes to a close. Love is the only thing that works every time.














Sunday, January 21, 2018

Single Reflections

Fellow Human, I know what you are going to say. This time, please don't.

Being single sucks! And while I know all you partnered humans are going to tell me that partnership also has its points of sucking - I assure you, it is different.

Most days I can carry on with my life just fine. It is in the finer details of life that I get filled with sadness and frustration with a lack of a partner. And I mean, a partner in the non-intimate sense - I'll get to that later.

I have been really, really sick this last week, and when that happens, I become acutely aware of how single I am. Shall I paint you a picture, fellow human?

Picture a fever of 102, you can only think 1 thought at a time, you can barely make it into the bathroom, and on the way, you stumble into the wall, holding on and praying you don't fall and pass out. You wonder if you will make it back into bed. Of course, there's no one around to check on you. That thought alone fills you with anxiety. But, thankfully, you make it back into bed, and pass out from the exhaustion of just going to the bathroom.  Well meaning, and very dear friends, text you, wishing you wellness and healing. One or two ask if I need anything, but pride always wins the day with "no, I'm fine, thank you." Besides, I would only barely make it to the door, and I certainly can't entertain guests, and I truly do not wish this illness on anyone.

I wake up a day or so later with excruciating pain in my ear. I have to go a doctor, and I am wondering how?! I argue with the receptionist, they are insisting I stay home, which I understand is protocol for the flu, but this is now a flu complication- ear infection, that I will need antibiotics for. I resign myself to going to urgent care. Keep in mind, dear reader, that I still am in fever land, and am still alone. But I have to take myself to the doctor, and likely to a pharmacy.

Long story short, I deliriously drive myself to the doctor and then to the pharmacy. The pharmacist asked "did you drive yourself? Do you live close by?" Clearly, I should not be out driving. I looked in the mirror - I was grey.

So, besides the obvious - when you are single and sick, you're on your own. Those finer details I mentioned? You've had a long day, week, month, year, and it would be really great if someone else got dinner started and made. Or, could someone else please take the trash to the curb tonight? No? OK, well, I'll get it next week, I'm just too tired. Can't someone else go to the grocery store? Sure would be nice if someone else were here to help pay all these bills and the rent.

And those intimate parts? Having someone to talk to at the end of the day? Having another human touch you, you getting to touch another human being? Yeah, I don't have that. You partnered people need to not take these things for granted. I am touch starved. Aching to connect mentally and physically to another human being. You have no idea how this feels. The loneliness of singlehood is painful. It aches deep inside my bones. The longing is unending.

But I can't stay too long in that place of longing, so I push it aside, and go on with the day to day. Though, it seeps itself into my waking thoughts more often than I'd like. But alas, what choice do I have? Carry on.













Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Men Taught Me to Fear Them

So many stories. So many accusations. My head gets foggy. I shake it, trying to keep myself in the "here and now".

I recently read a post by a woman explaining how she developed a fear of men. If I can find it, I will link it. I have been thinking about it for days now, and I need to write in order to get out my spinning thoughts.

I didn't choose to fear men, men taught me.

In 5th grade, a boy from another class grabbed my ass. I got shy and didn't respond. He did this every time he saw me. He was older than me, and I was scared. Men do what they want.

As a 15 year old, walking to the grocery store, the catcalls from groups of men in cars. Some would pull over a block or so ahead. I would continue walking as they shouted from the car "hey, babe! Where are you going? Let us give you a ride!" I ignored them. "Hey! We're talking to you!" They revved the engine as I walked by, which startled me. "Come on, slut, get in the car!" I kept walking, and eventually they left. As an adult woman, that situation should have scared me far more than it did, but it was the first of many. Men are persistent.

In math class as a freshman in high-school, I heard a boy say "Hey! Watch this!" I paid no attention until he was next to me, and shoved his hand up my skirt and under my panties. He laughed. I heard the others laughing. I sat mortified and shocked. Men want what's under your skirt.

A year or so later, my high-school sweetheart, some friends, and I were off at a church retreat. We were "good kids", so they let us bunk in the same room - my friend (girl), my boyfriend, and I. In the middle of the night, my boyfriend got into bed with me. It was totally innocent at first. We just snuggled and kissed, as teens do. Then he got on top of me. This was my first experience with this. Fear made me frozen - I couldn't make a sound. I managed a whimpered "stop! She'll hear you!" He put his hands under my clothes and grabbed at me. I remember feeling his arms slip through my hands, and for the first time I realized that men are stronger than me. I tried to get out from under him. He was trying to kiss me, and I was squirming away. When I managed to get out from under him, I ran down the hallway to an empty room, he chased after me. Thankfully, the room had a locking door. This was my first panic attack. I remember sitting in a corner of the room, feeling extremely small with the walls huge around me. He kept knocking on the door. Hours went by. When I finally had the courage to open the door that had fallen silent, he was laying outside of the room. Waiting. But, he had fallen asleep. I was able to get to a phone to call my mom to pick me up. Men are stronger than me and they don't listen.

Through the high-school hallways, a boy would come up to talk to me at my locker. When we finished talking, he pressed his finger into my breast, hard, and walked away. I was speechless and confused. Did that really just happen? It happened several other times. My breasts are not mine, they are for men.

I had a date with a very handsome man. We went to his place to sip wine and do what adults do. The classic, one thing led to another... He wanted to try the "other way". I agreed. Though had never done it. I screamed! He shouted at me to "SHH! My roommates will hear you!". I couldn't stand the pain, so I wiggled out from under him. He turned on the light. "What the fuck?!" he said, "you got blood all over my sheets!" Men hurt me and are mean.

I was dating a man for a couple months and he stayed over sometimes. This particular night, while doing what adults do, he suddenly flipped me over so I was on my belly. He jammed his penis into my anus. And I remember seeing white with pain. I screamed a blood curdling sound that I didn't know I was capable of, and he forced my head into the pillow "shut the fuck up!" he yelled over and over again. I was screaming and trying to reach behind me to get him off. I began to feel I couldn't breathe from the intense pain. A strange sensation took over. I remember feeling my body go limp and I floated up to the top of the room. I could feel the pulsing of him thrusting into me, but I was no longer connected to the massive pain of my experience. He finished and rolled off of my body. I got up, put my nighty back on, and went downstairs and sat on the couch in a haunted daze. He yelled at me "get back here!" I silently walked back. He said "you are being rude, just leaving me like that. Get back into bed." I was so afraid that he would do it again, so I obliged, but not before he said "Take the nighty off, I told you, you need to sleep naked when you're next to me." Men are terrifying.

Men taught me to fear them.

Sunday, August 27, 2017

A quick trip to the Gorge

Earth's breath tickles the rivers surface
Columbia giggles
Swiftly flowing to freedom

The vast carvings look down upon me
I gaze, in awe and wonder at the sight
Wonder what stories the rocks could tell

Mother lets out a sigh
my cheeks enjoy her cool kiss

I fall in love every time.