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Archives

Entries from June 7, 2009 - June 13, 2009

Friday
Jun122009

June 12, 2008: Z-Day

        Why “Z-Day”? Because “D-Day” was already taken. An alternative explanation could simply be, paraphrasing a burping, drunken brother Blutarsky from Delta Tau Chi: “Why not!?”
        Actually, I just like the ring of Z-Day. And although the moniker is silly and arbitrary, the day that it denotes is not. Not for me anyway.
        It was a year ago today that I literally felt something inside of me move. A little explosion happening just in the space of my being that rearranged my mind and altered how I felt, about almost everything, in the course of a single moment.
        I didn’t know it in that moment, but my heart had exploded. Shut down and hiding in isolation within the darkness of my pain since my dad had died twenty months before, my heart finally allowed some light to enter the prison that it had walled itself inside of. And that light caused a blast. A big blast.
        Just like in a real explosion, the second before it happens, things look and feel one way. And the moment after it happens, everything is different.
        Inside of me, I could feel that something big had occurred. But I could not fathom how big. Nor could I grasp how drastically it’s consequences would change my life. I just knew I was different. I just knew that my life had somehow changed from what it was just a second before.
        The heart explosion happened so fast and so powerfully that my mind and body immediately went into a kind of shock. I actually felt myself disappear for a minute, just after it happened. I felt a rush sweep over me, a massive wave of feeling crashing against my insides, and then I was gone. I came back a minute later.
        In a flash too bright for the rest of me to see, my heart was now once again alive. My heart could now once again allow itself to feel. My path had just changed. Drastically.
        The catalyst for this explosion that was to alter my life was my heart’s blinding realization that I was madly in love with the woman I was looking at. And I had been for a long time.
        Please join me on my next post for more gut wrenching honesty and all the gory details....


©2009 Clint Piatelli. All Rights (and five emotional beach fronts of wrongs) Reserved.

Thursday
Jun112009

SledgeHammerHeart

        I dug up this poem that I wrote a year ago next week. Back then, it was the first truly emotive piece of writing that I had shared with another person in years. I wrote it a few days after my heart exploded, and I sent it to the woman who blew it up.
        When I read it today, many things come up for me. I can recall exactly how I felt a year ago. The intense power of such heartache isn’t there now, but it’s memory shall always remain.
        That’s not a bad thing at all. It helps remind me of how far I’ve come in a year. How much I’ve grown. How much I’ve changed. It helps remind me that today, love is a vibrant, living, breathing, feeling, spirit that pervades all of my life. It reminds me that I really have made a quantum emotional shift. And that shift has allowed me to become so much more of myself.
        This poem represents the beginning of the finest year of writing of my life.


SledgeHammerHeart

why did my heart have to break to be opened up?

was my heart like a geode? a rock that housed a beautiful crystal on the inside. but the only way you could get to the crystal was to break the rock wide open?

i did everything i could to not have my heart broken. and it still happened. so what does that tell me?

maybe that to hide your heart is a waste of time. and energy. and love.

how could she break my heart if there was nothing there to break? she couldn’t have. so there was something there. or i wouldn’t feel this way. i just couldn’t get to it. and i couldn’t let her get to it either.

but she did. and i didn’t even know it. and i spent all that time hiding when i could have been seeking. for something. with her.

why does it take so much pain to be able to feel something that was there all the time?

why does it take a sledge hammer to smash a beautiful soft heart?

because it was a heart disguised as a rock.

you tap on what looks like a rock, what feels like a rock, and nothing appears to be happening. but something is happening. because the rock is really a soft heart. so finally you get tired of tapping and smash it open. and only then does the illusion of the rock disappear.

only then do you see that it’s not a rock at all. it’s not hard and cold. it’s soft and warm.

and it’s splattered all over my life.

and i played just as much a part in splattering my heart as she did. i can’t be mad at her, and i’m not. i can’t be mad at me. and i’m not.

but i am so sad.

sad that i couldn’t remove the illusion of the rock.

and the heart is really who i am.

it’s big and soft and warm and beautiful.

but i just couldn’t let her see that.

and now that’s all i want her to see.

we were both great illusionists. i created the illusion that i didn’t care that much. she created the illusion that things were okay.

i wonder how it would be with no illusions?

she reached my heart.

and she didn’t even know it.

because i didn’t even know it.

 

©2009 Clint Piatelli. All Rights (and a Flintstone quarry of Wrongs) Reserved.

Tuesday
Jun092009

Nonny

        My grandmother lived with us for a little while when I was a kid. I wish I could say that, as a child, I loved my grandmother; I wish I could say that I have memories of how she bestowed upon me the archetypal love that a grandparent lavishes upon her grandchild; I wish I could say that she taught me valuable lessons in a way that only a parent of a parent can; I wish I could say that having her live with my mother, father, twin brother and I, was a good experience. But I can’t. Not without lying.
        My grandmother, or Nonny as she was often called, was senile and physically disabled for the majority of my childhood. Or at least, I don’t remember her any other way. She was more than two handfuls for my mother to take care of. Nonny demanded a tremendous amount of my mother’s attention and energy. She would scream a lot at my mother and my father in Italian (she didn’t know any english). She couldn’t dress herself, or move around very well, or go to the bathroom herself, or do much of anything herself, really. She was like a child that way.
        My grandmother was a hugely disruptive element in my household growing up. My mother didn’t have much left, emotionally or mentally, to give me after taking care of her mother. My dad, who worked his ass off, would come home from twelve hour days at the office to an old, senile woman who screamed at him and his wife. An old, senile woman who he was paying to feed and house and clothe and support. An old senile woman who was making his home life very difficult.
        It was a bad situation, for everybody. My grandmother needed professional care from a staff of people. She didn’t belong in a home with young twin boys and a couple in their mid fifties trying to make a life for their family.
        I grew up not liking my grandmother. She was nothing but a horribly disruptive force in an already tense home. She added nothing but mayhem. It wasn’t her fault. She was senile. She couldn’t help it. I understand that now.
        But as a ten year old, I was resentful and angry at her. For taking my mother out of my life so much. For being so mean to my parents. For not knowing who the hell I was. For causing nothing but turmoil in the only home I knew. Truth be told, I was angry at my parents, especially my mother, for allowing this maniac into our home. But you couldn’t get angry as a kid in my house. I was told countless times that I had no right to be angry at my grandmother, or even my parents, for anything. And that’s a real mind fuck for a kid, because some amount of anger towards elders is natural, especially considering the circumstances.
        What I’ve come to realize is that, as disruptive as that situation was, it wasn’t the situation itself that caused the most damage to my relationship with myself. It was how we, as a family, handled it. Or more precisely, how we didn’t handle it.
        We never talked about what was happening, or why. We never talked about how it felt to live under this roof with this very sick, disruptive, screaming, crazy woman. In fact, not only did we not talk about it, I was shamed for feeling the way I felt. Everybody was. It’s how we “dealt” with feelings.
        What this did for me was create the ultimate emotional dead end when it came to how I felt. I wasn’t allowed to express, or even to have, normal feelings, even in response to such extremely abnormal situations. So as a kid, to feel resentment towards your grandmother for screaming at your mother was normal. But then I’m shamed into oblivion just for having those feelings, so I learned not to trust how I felt. And I didn’t learn how to let go of the resentment. I didn’t learn anything about how to deal with how I feel. In fact, I learned to hate having feelings at all, because they created so much shame inside of me. And then, feelings usually created turmoil between me and others if I ever dared express them. Eventually, I developed an attitude of “Fuck that. Just don’t feel. And if you do, fuckin’ hide it.”
        In much the same way dealing with a mentally challenged sibling can either rip families apart or bring them together, my senile grandmother created the same dynamic. If we had been able to talk openly about this as a family; if we could have all been able to express how we felt; if we were allowed to have feelings without attaching truck loads of shame to them, we could have all grown so much from this experience; individually, and in our relationships with each other. The situation sucked, but lots of families deal with much worse. It’s not what happens so much as it is how you deal with it and what you learn in the process. There’s opportunity for personal growth, and for growth in your relationships, at any age, for anybody, especially in such adversity.
        I’ve learned to try and apply that axiom to the rest of my life. Not always with success, but I know that that’s the path of greater enlightenment. It’s an attitude I constantly shoot for.
        My parents did the best they could. They didn’t know any other way. The situation was very difficult, and unfortunately, how they chose to deal with it made it exponentially worse. As an adult, I have a responsibility to myself to unlearn all the bad lessons I learned through the whole ordeal. I’m responsible for it now. There’s no anger towards my parents. Or my grandmother. Just sadness that I never really knew her.
        But there is an incident that still haunts me today. In fact, it’s impossible for me to to even think about it without getting emotional.
        I had this latex gorilla mask. One night, I put it on and peeked around the corner so all my grandmother could see was the mask. It scared her.
        I can still hear my grandmother, the sound of her voice frozen inside of me, as she called out my mother’s name, “Angie”, in a heavy Italian accent, her voice thick with fear. When I think of that moment, if I stay there any more than a few seconds, I burst out crying. Every time. The thought that I could scare my helpless old grandmother like that fills me with a sadness and a guilt that almost no other memory of my life does. It happened almost forty years ago, I was just a kid, and yet it still hurts me to know that I could do such a thing.
        I’ve had dreams about my Nonny since then. In some of those dreams, I apologize to her for what I did. She always forgives me. I guess I need to learn to forgive myself.
        When I’m awake and think of that night and can get past the pain and the tears, I fantasize that’s she still alive, she’s lucid, she knows me, and that she can understand me. Then I imagine a scene with my grandmother that I never had. It goes like this:
        I tell my Nonny how sorry I am for scaring her. I see her smile. She doesn’t say anything. She just smiles and holds out her big, fat, beautiful arms, and wiggles her fingers, motioning me to come towards her. I run to her and jump into her heavenly soft embrace that I never knew as a child. I say to her, sobbing hysterically, “I’m sorry grandma. I love you so much Nonny”. She doesn’t say anything. She doesn’t have to, so perfect is her hug. I can literally feel the love coming off of her and wrapping itself around me like a blanket, just like her body does. She keeps smiling, closes her eyes, and hums a lullaby, rocking me back and forth, until I fall asleep. Then she opens her eyes and watches me sleep. My Nonny adores me with loving eyes, and wipes away my tears. I am at peace with all the universe.
        In those moments, I forgive the child who acted out of pain and anger. And all I feel is love. For the boy. For my parents. And for Nonny.


©2009 Clint Piatelli. All Rights Reserved.

Monday
Jun082009

Poems From A Friend

        A friend of mine, who wishes to remain anonymous, has been following this blog for months. When she told me that she wrote poetry, I asked her to submit a few of her favorites so that I could publish them here. At first resistant to the idea, she found the courage to share them with me. I am honored to earn her trust. And I am a better man for knowing her and reading her work. Now, because she found it in her to share so much of herself, we can all share in this gift. Thank you.


SKY

Sharing feelings, thoughts and desires
Secrets said out loud, I hear a quiet noise
It is the sound of serenity
A feeling of peace within
Upon arrival back to reality, I look up
The sky is sparkling “just for me” I think
Millions of diamonds against the black eternity
I am finding my strength within
Being led by a power greater than me



THE MEDITATION

I walk along the angry shore
I hear the thunder of the waves
The sky is white as snow. The ocean a deep dark blue
I feel alone, empty, sad. The feeling of despair devours me
I voice is faint. I am here. I am her within you.
Don’t be afraid my child. Walk towards me.
Slowly my pace begins to change
A peace surrounds my body. My spirit has been lifted.
There is a quiet calmness that begins to soothe me soul
He is there. He is real. He holds my hands. He fills me.
I close my eyes. I pray for strength. Quiet and still.
Be still my child. I will do for you what you cannot do.
I let Him
As I open my eyes, there are tears on my face
I cannot see Him any longer.
My heart beats stronger. I put my hand on my heart.
He is in my heart
I am loved and I will not feel alone ever again