Being forgotten is a skill I was born with. |
Being forgotten is a skill I was born with. I. From the time I was fourteen I realized I have this power to become invisible. I just become silent and still in a group of people, and I disappear from their conscious, like a pin dropping from a cloud. II. It has been blatantly apparent lately with the way lovers can forget me— I was in a relationship for nine months, and to be honest, I’m amazed the other even knew my name. In the off chance he did see me, I fear that he could not hear me as though I were in Pandora’s vase. III. I can tally a list of people who have forgotten me, who will not remember me, even if my name were repeated back, and these tallies I keep on my thigh—but I don’t care all that much. I guess I have forgotten them as well, forgotten their scents and their eye color and the sound of their voice. I have forgotten whether or not they are worth it to take to bed. IV. Except for one, but with time I will forget him, too. V. It’s easy to forget, I’ve found, and sometimes I look at old characters or poems or paintings, and a nerve bundle in the ashes of my skull reignites for a phoenix to emerge once more, but disappear in a plume of smoke. I know some characters strive from past memories, but of whom I wrote these I am not sure. VI. I wonder if ever someone who has forgotten me wrote a character on me. I can’t recall if ever I loved a writer. Maybe there are no characters that are me, or maybe every character I read is me. I often think maybe that I am those characters in books that are estranged and absent from the story, the “Other,” they’re called. But I think those characters everyone sees as a mirror. VII. I saw him— the one I remember— the other day. He looked right through me. Some day I will be able to do the same, and I will only catch glimpses of him in past writings and paintings. VIII. Being the forgotten is a skill I was born with, and since then I’ve turned it into an art. |