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Mikaila Jun 2014
What am I holding onto?
A ghost, a shade; a person who,
If she ever existed as I loved her in the first place,
Is certainly gone now.
You are slipping through my fingers like funeral soil,
And I am not ready to believe that there is simply nothing more I can do but cry and heal.
I am not ready to believe it,
But somewhere underneath I do know it.
I have known it for much longer than I will ever truly admit to myself.
For a long time, I think,
I have been crooning love poems to the vacant air,
And heaven only knows when I will have the strength
To stop.
Mikaila Jun 2014
God help me if I ever do anything just because it "makes sense".
**** me then, because I'll be over.
I want the things I choose to be chosen with passion,
With need,
With vitality and determination and...
A total disregard for whether or not they
"make sense".
Growing up is not being sensible or practical
Or working constantly
Or doing what seems to be what you are supposed to do.
That's not what living is.
Growing up is GROWING. Changing.
And every choice you make changes you.
And every choice you make out of passion makes you more brilliant, more alive, more present.
And every choice you make out of practicality dulls you, fades you like a newspaper clipping left in the sun.

God HELP me if I ever "make sense".
Mikaila Jun 2014
I never want to be second best to a man because I am not one ever again. It BOTHERS me. It keeps me up nights. It's... humiliating. It stokes a rage in me that I don't like- it's ugly, and hot, and pressurized, and it never seems to lessen, only grow. I am so good at being silent, at being nice, at being a good sport. But I've been getting worse at it for years. As I've begun to realize just how much I've lost to men because they think they're better than me, because everyone thinks they're better than me, because sometimes I even think they must be better than me. I've started to lose my grip on that quiet, humble girl who doesn't fight for what she loses. I sit up at 1:30 in the morning and sometimes I can't stop stewing over the fact that some men think they can unclothe me with their eyes and I'll secretly like it, that everyone on the ****** earth assumes that I will want a man, marry a man, that I'm LOOKING constantly for a ******* MAN. Is that what straight girls do? I didn't think so... But as I look around, really look, the world makes it seem as though every ******* thing is centered upon finding and keeping a man. And I don't want one. And I resent having to explain that day in and day out to everybody I ever meet, and even to people who have known me for years and KNOW how I feel about the subject. And no, nothing set this off- this is how it is all the time. I am just disgusted sometimes, that if I don't shout constantly (obnoxiously) people will slide me into my designated spot in the world- a white picket fence with a hubby and 2.5 kids and a small adhd medication habit- and I will be LOST to that. Obliterated by what is expected of me. I'm not doing it. I will never do it. I don't want a man. I don't want to BE a man. I don't want to marry a man. Honestly, on days when I truly allow myself to think about this subject in depth, I don't even want to LOOK at a ******* man. I don't want to know that because my hair is long and my waist happens to be 20 inches, men find me attractive. That my long eyelashes and high heels make it oh-so-hard-to-believe I'm not straight, and that much more disappointing if, in fact, they ever do believe me on the subject. I don't want to look up by accident and see a guy leering at my ***. I don't want my sarcastic remarks taken as flirting. I don't want to ever hear the phrase "You're too pretty to be a lesbian." again. I'm not gay because I'm angry at men. I'm angry at men because I'm a woman. Being gay happens to slide the binary into focus even more. Masculinity is valued. Femininity is insulting. There are classes on it. And I understand that not all men are *******, but honestly... all men take from me. They do. I'm sorry if that offends you, or if that makes it hard to view the world the way you do, but hey, it offends me. Offense is not an order of change. It's how you feel. And I am deeply offended that men win over me. I'm offended that it's a contest, and I'm offended that I am ill equipped to compete. I'm offended that women seem to see having a boyfriend as an achievement, as something you earn and flaunt and show off to other girls and boast of, when I was hardly able to hold hands with the girl I loved in high school, in fear that her family would find out. I'm offended that she couldn't be proud to be with me the way she'd be proud to bring a boy home and plunk him down at the dinner table on Thanksgiving- "Look, Ma, I got one!" I will always be offended. I don't expect anything to be done about it. But I do sit up nights and think about it. I do. It bothers me that men are worth more than I am- and for what? What are they really that I am not? The answer is very simple and utterly infuriating in its pointlessness: They are men.
This would be the rant that ended up on facebook this morning... And this would be the comment I left below it:
(I swear to god, do NOT comment on here and try to begin a debate about individuals and how men are all different people and blanket statements are unfair and- no. I happen to have a brain. I do know this. I'm talking big picture, large scale, the gender that rules the earth and has since the dawn of time, and the things I've lost because of the culture that has grown out of that. And so help me, if you try to start an argument about how I'm actually the one victimizing people, I will lose my mind. It is my right to be offended, and if you are offended by my offense, that is your right. And we both have our lovely emotional rights, and we needn't talk about it. Okay? Okay.)
Mikaila Jun 2014
You know, you can say I don't know how
To be happy
That I don't love right
That I'm too complicated and too raw
That I'm
Crazy.
Hell, you've said that a billion times.
{You
Are the reason I began to say it along with my name
To new people I meet-
A handshake and a disclaimer.}
You can think
Whatever you want about me.
Maybe I am insane. Mad. Delirious.
******
Up.

Maybe I'm damaged.
Who am I to contest your diagnosis?
But I do have this to say-
Although I love you,

I'd rather be like this than like you.
Mikaila Jun 2014
Every time my heart beats, it loves you more, and that is part of why I crave to live.
It doesn't matter who you turn into,
If you become a stranger- harsh and cold and ordinary.
I love you as I knew you.
I love you as you are meant to be- alive and passionate and thoughtful,
Kind beyond measure,
Hot headed but so joyful.
My heart beats for that girl.
And no stranger with your face can ever take that from me.
Mikaila Jun 2014
Horror is so so important. Stories are how we explain our world, how we make sense of it, how we prepare ourselves for it. If ever there is a place for horror, it's in stories. It is the most important part of many stories, because you WILL be afraid in life. And your fears will not be so cut and dry as a zombie hoard you can hack at. Nobody wears a white or black hat- you don't know. Life is messy as hell. So I think it's really important that we learn to feel fear and confusion and to face horror in a controlled environment like a movie or a book, where everything is make believe and reversible, where things are a bit easier to make sense of. It's training, really, for a world that is so much more horrifying than any monster under your bed. The monsters in horror films do exist, they just exist in different ways. They hide behind faces. They hide in the mirror. And you need the practice of recognizing and facing them in their purest form before you graduate to living surrounded and inhabited by them. Children need horror. People need horror. I really believe in that. That's why I LOVE horror films. Because I always wish my life was so simple. I wish I knew what was chasing me, and that it would only break my body and not my soul, and who was "good" and who was "evil". I watch horror and I think it'd be a relief to have something to hit, something to hold and swing against my demons, something to struggle against that had a face and a clear malice, and no complicated soul beneath. Something that could never convince me that maybe I was the one in the black hat, and just didn't know it yet. Life is brutal. Show your children how to face it, instead of protecting them from it until the opportunity is past and letting them face alone the disconcerting, bewildering, frightening betrayal that no, nothing makes sense, and no, the good guys don't always win, and no, you aren't always on the good side, and no, the cruelest people almost never get what's coming to them. Prepare your kids to be horrified, because monsters under the bed and zombies and ghosts and vampires- they're nothing compared to lovers, to bosses and best friends and sudden deaths and trying to live through the pale, ugly moments of mediocrity that pile up around you as you age. Get them ready to be hurt, because you have to know that you can't keep that from them. You can't stop the world from doing what it does. The world creates and then destroys. It wounds. You can't stop that. You can only be honest about it. Just like we teach our children rhymes and myths to explain confusing things like seasons and divorces, we need to show our kids the symbols that represent the horrors they will ALL have to face in their lives. I will always see horror as an escape from the fear I have in my life, because it's simple. It's one side versus the other and nobody switches and if you lose, you die- you don't have to keep going. That's the secret. For all of you who wonder- why would anyone like a horror film? We like them because we can feel our fear and our revulsion and leave it behind once it's done, tidy and finished, a release of the screams that build up in our throats from things we refuse to let inside enough to react to. It's a deferral. A stand-in. A safety net. It's a way to handle everything we can't handle in a symbolic form and move past it. Horror is incredibly important in this world.
"I think there's a lot of people out there who say we must not have horror in any form, we must not say scary things to children because it will make them evil and disturbed ... That offends me deeply, because the world is a scary and horrifying place, and everyone's going to get old and die, if they're that lucky. To set children up to think that everything is sunshine and roses is doing them a great disservice. Children need horror because there are things they don't understand. It helps them to codify it if it is mythologized, if it's put into the context of a story, whether the story has a happy ending or not. If it scares them and shows them a little bit of the dark side of the world that is there and always will be, it's helping them out when they have to face it as adults."
-Joss Whedon
Mikaila Jun 2014
Tomorrow I will ask for your forgiveness until you hate me for being sorry.
(Tonight I will struggle to turn my anger at you into the repentance you will resent in the morning.)
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