Showtime

Step into my office! Welcome to the show! Watch me demonstrate in startling detail all of these things I don’t care enough about to be good at!

Look at me! Watch as I accurately portray whatever it is you think I should be.

All of this while you OOH and AAH!

I can bend over backwards and say pretty words! I can dance and sing and throw glitter in your eyes blocking you from all of my well timed lies.

I mean JOKES! It’s funny. I can be that too!

Please sir! Please!? Ignore the person behind the curtain and this face behind its paint.

No! DO NOT touch the art… it’s already falling apart.

EXCUSE ME backstage is off limits! You need a ticket to enter long term memory.

No, that’s it this is over now.

You need to leave! You need to go! GO! GET AWAY! Quick before anyone else can see the layers, plaster, duct tape, and glued lies I show to all of you.

See what you’ve done? You’ve taken away all of the fun.

There’s not much here past the sparkles and eyes. There not much here past all of the lies.

Not much.

That’s all that there is.

A flawed, chipped, and imperfect being.

There’s nothing more here to see!

Just another human. Just another bag of organs and emotions made of matter I don’t understand.

You know this. You all do. So why? Why do you expect to see a show encompassing much much more than just me?

Simplicity my friends. Simplicity is key.

©C. O’Connor, 2018

I was a kick ass kid.

I don’t like serious things. I’m a sarcastic person at heart. Sarcasm covers up real emotions that I avoid like the plague. The avoidance stems from that same fear of getting close to people. So I add in sarcasm and then it seems like I’m a real person and not a complete sociopathic asshole. It’s either that or the person is one of my best friends, in which case they already know all of this shit from figuring it out on their own.

I wasn’t always afraid of standing out though. Hell when I was a kid I was in the dolphin show at Sea World. The grown up version of me hates this, because I feel so bad for those animals. I’ve seen Blackfish. But a part of me is still so proud of myself, because I wasn’t just in the show.

I asked to be in the show.

My family was vacationing in California, visiting my uncle on the L.A.P.D. We saw the whale show where they had people up on the stage (I hate myself for having enjoyed that show so much). So when we moved on to the dolphin show I told my mom I wanted to be on the stage. She told me to ask.

Well little me accepted that challenge and walked my little chubby legs towards the first person I saw with a uniform on. I placed the best and cutest little girl smile on my face and asked to be in the show. She asked her manager, and BAM! I was in the show.

I stood up on the stage and fed Dolly the dolphin, but just being ballsy wasn’t the only difference from the young version of me to the current one. I trusted people too. People I didn’t even know. The trainer that had that giant microphone strapped onto her face looking like a nineties Madonna meets Steve Irwin (may he rest in peace) told me at one point to jump into the water. According to her Dolly the dolphin would catch me.

I guess the other children they brought up there were too scared to jump, but Madonna/Steve hadn’t met me yet! She counted down from three into that microphone, her voice echoing over the giant pool to the people in the stands, and when she got to one I launched myself in the galoshes that were made for an adult, off of the stage. There is a picture somewhere of the trainer catching my small body midair. My mother almost had a heart attack from where she was standing on the stage. I didn’t care, Dolly was going to catch me and after that I was famous for a day!

I was fearless.

So where did that change? Where did that freedom that I once had change into panic attacks, too much booze, and a fear of getting too close to people? When the hell did the little girl who jumped into the dolphin tank become average?

I think she would be upset with me. If I could talk to the four year old version of me I’m not sure whether or not she’d like me.

That’s an even sadder realization. When you don’t even like you.

@C. O’Connor, 2018

Success

Help me down

I’ve been up here for so long

I can’t see my feet way down under me

Where did the world go?

Where did the ground go?

Help my down.

I don’t want to be up here anymore.

I want out

I want my feet back

I want the street back

I wanted to be up here

I wanted to see the view

Didn’t know it meant losing myself

losing you

I didn’t know

Help me down from this heavenly looking hell

Help me down.

©O’Connor, 2016