Saturday, March 19, 2011

And you wonder why I'm so broken.

I would lock the door, trembling in the room as my right fist clenched a kitchen knife 'till my knuckles went white. You didn't care, shouting like a psychopath outside and kicking the door with all your masculine strength. The old lock gave way after you forced your way inside and as quickly as you balled your hands into fists to punch me, I had just as quickly thrust the knife into the air, giving you a silent warning. You scowled, shouting obscenities at me and slowly retreated, promising to get me another time.

You did.

The moment you broke the lock, the huge trust I gave to that rusty, inanimate object ceased to exist. If you went into one of your moods and I hadn't prepared myself with another weapon, it was due to be a bad day for me.

Days like these used to be copious and everyone thought it was because you were merely a spoilt brat. No one did anything about it because they thought you would grow out of it, that maturity would finally take a hold of you. But that never happened. The older you got and the more strength you garnered, the more it hurt when you would beat me up without a moment’s hesitation.

It got so bad that one day, I had a nervous breakdown. I couldn't stand the provoking, the fights, the insults, the bruises and the fact that it was becoming a daily occurrence. I hated coming home. I hated that dad was stationed across the ocean and mom was always held up at work. I hated the days when mom would have urgent matters to tend to and I would always interrupt her in the middle of it, constantly forcing her to get home as soon as possible. You were, again, in one of your moods. I would scream hysterically into the phone, afraid you would find my hiding place soon. I hated that she would frantically get home as soon as she could, worry and panic etched in her mind. I used to think that something bad would happen because she would be speeding all the way with her heart clenched by dread. I hated that the most.

I know she never left the house with a clear head, but there was no choice.

They said it was partly my fault, that it was because I refused to back down. I refused to be bullied so whenever you threw an insult at me, I would throw one right back. Whenever you punched me, I would serve you a kick with equal force. It was when they realised that you would also pick fights with our younger and (then) docile sister that it was wholly, and undoubtedly, you. You, who's the reason our eldest sought a psychiatrist (nothing serious, she just needed to talk about it), and our kind, loving youngest who is so much better than in me so many ways, started a conversation recently with "You know... I wonder if I would be sad if he would just... die. Sometimes I wonder if it's bad that I wish it were so."

The day when our parents placed you in a separate house was probably the one time I felt true relief. But you were quick to play on their sympathy, and you were very, very good at that. You made mom doubt herself, you made her feel like the worst parent on earth for having done that to her only son.

You had everything. A computer, complete entertainment system, a fully-stocked fridge, mom constantly visiting you and getting you anything you want... even a maid.

She paid for the services of a maid just for you.

In fact, it was your idea to stay in that house alone. The house was meant for me, after my nervous breakdown, after I worried mom with my talks of suicide (Though that was just in the heat of the moment). You thought mom was playing favourites, and insisted that you should get the house instead. And you got your wish. Then, a few weeks passed before you got bored of being alone and made mom think that she forced you out of our house, that she stopped loving you, stopped caring for you. You even told complete strangers about it. You manipulated and wrecked the poor woman with so much guilt she cried almost every night.

I would remember when she would be sobbing incessantly, asking us if she was a bad mother and we would coax her and persuaded her otherwise. A bad mother? She was always working and was rarely at home, sure. But that was because she was earning money. For us. To bring me to that expensive restaurant I loved every weekend, to buy the youngest the extravagant dollhouse she's been pining for, to satisfy the eldest with her rare collection of limited albums, to pay for our expensive tuition fees, piano lessons, to buy us the clothes we wanted while she continued wearing the tattered shirts that had micro-rips everywhere. She'd wear those two to three days a week.

I'm not exaggerating.

The one time she did get anything for herself, it was a cat's-eye necklace, not even amounting to RM100, one that I still keep in my drawers back home. She thought it was beautiful and mulled over the purchase one, two, ten times. She'd only bought it because we persuaded her, telling her that it was beautiful on her, and it was. She would then wear it everyday and proudly showed it off to her friends.

She would usually go home tired after work, with every muscle aching and frequent, paralysing migraines, but she made it a point to stay up a few more hours still to ask us about our day. Did we finish our homework? Are we getting behind - and if we were, would we like it if she stayed up so she would help us with Maths and Science?

She was a perfect mother.

Her husband, dad, was a perfect father.

When he failed to reject his promotion and the subsequent transfer, he paid an exorbitant amount on plane tickets so he could either visit us, or vice versa. When he visited, he was always laden with gifts. When we'd visit him, he would bring us out to eat everyday. When hunger pangs attacked past midnight, and all the shops were closed, our dad, the worse cook in the world, would try to cook something regardless. I still remember his feeble attempts and the burn marks from the cooking oil. Although he was a very busy man, he sometimes braved the insane KL traffic to come home during lunchtime. He’d call every hour if he couldn’t, and always had food delivered somehow. Once, I was excited about something so trivial but seemed so important then, and spent all his money on it. I found out somehow that he couldn't even buy lunch for himself the next day from my reckless spending.

He never said a word.

These are the two people whom raised you nobly, who would put us before anything, even them, in the world. These are the people you tormented every day.

You're a fucking monster.

Remember when you grew gradually worse? When the punches weren't just to channel your anger towards me, but to beat me to a bloody pulp? When dad had to fly home damn near weekly to settle things? Or the night you punched his face so hard that his tooth flew out? After you called mom a pathetic mother and a prostitute? When you went so out of the control we had to call the police? Twice?

This is just a mere speck of dust within my dirt of knowledge on all the bad memories you wrought. My head is swirling with all your evil deeds, your iniquities, everything you did as a monster in human form, but I refrain myself from exposing more of it. Otherwise, I would literally be typing the whole night. Or, several nights.

I guess the realisation that I'm coming home and having to meet you soon has been eating at me. It's all I could think of right now and it's diminishing the happiness of meeting friends and family.

All the memories are simmering, resurfacing like bubbles in the sea. Finally, there's that one memory that overpowers all the rest. The one that resolved me to hate you for the rest of my life. To never ever accept you as my bond through blood.

It was the night our parents got into an accident. The last night we'd see them alive.

You were happy that night.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Something I Read Today

I woke up with a jolt, startled by the sound of my mom calling my name from the kitchen.

I was annoyed but it sounded so loud and urgent I stumbled out of bed and slowly made my way.

On my way over, a pair of hands grabbed me from inside a closet, and pretty soon my mouth was cupped.

It was my mom, holding me tightly and whispering;

"Shh, be quiet. I heard it too."

Have a good night everyone.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Can I Has a Job?

I regret not being a student anymore.

Right now my friends are busy attending classes, gossiping about their lecturers and the cute guy sitting two rows over and whining about assignments.

I hate all of the above. But still, between work and playing truant, getting admonished for not completing coursework and lambasting friends for their desperate need for a guy's attention, work definitely takes a backseat.

Work will be about attending seminars, gossiping about colleagues and the cute boss two floors above and whining about workload. Oh dear the vast chasm between both worlds. So unnerving.

I'm in the process of applying for jobs, and honestly I've learnt so much about résumé polishing that it seems like I am an accomplished musician / aspiring astronaut, with particular talents in English, Malay and dolphin speak. Extra-curricular activities? I co-composed Canon in D before that arse Pachelbel stole all the credits. My recreational activities include reading, writing and swallowing fire.

Seriously, how could you not employ me?

No more bonding with you guys.

In my attempt at bonding with the minions (they prefer the term younger housemates), I orchestrated a movie night with one of the awesomest mindfuck movies of all time, The Signal.

These narcoleptic idiots slept about 3/4th into it. This is after skilfully deceiving me into thinking they're paying attention when I pause every 10 minutes during the first half to make sure they're still awake and giving their undivided attention.

Cunning bastards.

My biggest mistake was organising the venue in my room, seeing as I have a complete TV and speakers set. Now it's almost 3am, all three of them are peacefully asleep on my bed leaving no room for yours truly, I really don't want to sleep on the floor or their beds (not sure why), and I'm actually writing up this post in the hopes of having the cacophony of keyboard noises from literally banging the keys jolting them awake.

...

...

...

No such luck.

I'm screwed for tonight.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Love Chronicles

I've finally decided to expose the inner workings of my much mundane mind when it comes to love, relationships and all that sort. Uncharacteristic, sure. Makes me feel vulnerable, of course. Maybe I should just skip this terrible idea altogether and hide behind my comfortable gadget-frenzied cushion post, why not.

Better get this over with before I change my mind.

I've never been in love, never remotely liked anyone in a "special" sense, and never felt the need to allude to a relationship. I have, however, nurtured the idea of a pseudo-relationship in the hopes of opening my horizons and hopefully, making epiphanies along the way that would make the notion of being in a relationship that much more feasible.

Never acted upon it, however.

There were times though, when I forged friendships with the opposite sex and had gotten on very friendly terms with them, and considered a relationship because I know there'd be up for it. But then, reality kicked in when Peter, my imaginary Flying Unicorn Friend would advise me against it because deep down, I know enough about myself to acknowledge even in that phase that I would never fall in love with them. Peter said it, so it must be true. Also, Peter said to stop smoking weed.

In the course of growing up, or what I thought was my journey towards adulthood, I've made and severed several friendships. Mostly because I got bored. I have to admit when a guy shows interest, I would assume a personality that's not mine, where I would hide all judgments and criticisms and pretend that everything they do makes them cool and unique.

Men says women are easy, just shower them with expensive things. Well, you know what? Guys are easy too - Just feed their ego.

There would then be constant texts, occasional calls and one or two outings as "friends" which, to the casual observer, would seem like a relationship that's headed somewhere "special". This is the last time that I quote "special", I promise. In the end, after few weeks, or two months being my longest run, I would disappear once I've seen him in every angle I can imagine and make a deduction as to the sort of person he is. He has lost the allure of being a "stranger", I can guess his behaviour and jokes, and since I had always emphasised the "as friends" part, there would always be an almost clean break. "Almost clean" because sometimes I get angry texts or voice mails about my abrupt change of heart, but I know that it would last a few days before he moves on to his next female target.

I never start a friendship with the intention of doing the above, but that's how it always ends up. There's never been that one person that made me go "You know what, I can see myself with this guy in the long run" before running up the mountain made of marshmallow with Peter that's traipsing along with virgin pixies by his side. I did rationalise once that, maybe it's because the friendship lasted for such a short duration and there was never enough time to truly assess my feelings about the relationship. I tell you what, if you're bored with a person, spending another week would be torture. Another month would be a trip to the store for some razorblades, noose, guidebooks on tying a noose and Gummi Bears for Peter who explained that Unicorns are almost extinct because they can't exactly just waltz in a store to buy Gummi Bears which are like, their only source of sustenance.

I've never, ever felt affection towards a boy. At most it's a sense of strong connection from shared interests or ideas. And that worries me. I've entertained the idea of being a Lesbian, and was almost convinced I was indeed one, but that's the problem with our generation. We only think we're something else because we need a label and we've got infinite access to the most tired source of information - the internet. Suddenly everyone's self-diagnosed with OCD, ADD, BPD, and the list goes on. I don't know what I am. Straight, bisexual, gay, asexual, I'm not sure but it would admittedly be awesome to put a label on it.

I'm twenty-two now, and if you asked me a year earlier, I would have a fuck-all attitude about relationships but as they say, things change and people change. In my case, I need to change because what I am is not normal. When I say "not normal", I don't mean in a cool, stand out in a crowd and having my own identity sort of thing, but in a literal, psychological and physiological "not normal". The bad sort of "not normal".

And no, not all my friendship with guys were based on the premise of testing the waters, I do have several male friends whom I knew from the beginning that I would never have a romantic relationship with, but a long and reciprocal friendship with. You tend to know when guys want to be just friends or more than that since they don't waffle about as much as girls.

I'm waiting for a guy to, as they say, blow my mind but I'm not holding my breath. Under that unrealistic and fantasy-like expectation, I'm going to end my post with an appropriate;

Signed,
Forever Alone.

Marvel what? DC Comics who?

Possibly the best comic strip I've encountered in my life.


Sourced from Reddit.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

I Hate Them.

My sister and roommate are just remarkable. Case in point;

My beauty sleep has been bothered even before the sun barely filtered through the sparse clouds of spring, thanks to the hammering of tools from some construction work just outside my window. I've been tossing and turning in bed, trying to ignore it, but how do you ignore a sound that drowns out even your television at the highest volume? Now here I am with bloodshot eyes and a steaming cup of coffee to soothe the twitching on my right eyelid.

MY SISTER however, blissfully slept right through it, only waking up when the minimal tone of her phone started ringing. Not the ear-deafening jack-hammering. Not the constant shouts of labourers. Her phone. I'm now trying to stifle an angry drivel on teenagers and their unnatural connections to their phones.

While MY ROOMMATE...

...is still sleeping like a baby.

I need to kill these two.

Friday, March 4, 2011

"So when are you coming back?"

I'm due to come back to Malaysia now that I've completed my ACCA. So many people have asked me this question repeatedly, despite telling them that I'm not sure and will not be sure for quite some time.

Thus, here's a promise. When I've decided on a date after careful contemplation, and after I've bought my plane ticket for Malaysia, I will:

  • Photostate it.
  • Authenticate and stamp it.
  • Mail it to your homes.

If it's an e-ticket, I will:

  • Photoshop it with happy faces and purple rainbows.
  • Watermark it with my name.
  • E-mail it to your inbox.
Then everyone's happy.

Guys, when I know the date, you'll be the first to know. For now, being badgered with the question by 10 different people 20 times a day gets a bit tiring.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Introverted.

Introversion isn't the same as shyness or the social outcast. Introverts can socialise just as well as the archetypal extrovert, but choose not to. Rather than thrive on social interaction, introverts see social situations as a burden which requires the expansion of energy. It takes energy to socialise, rather than creates it. Introverts prefer thinking. And reflections.

You can now see more introverts online, as social networking sites are banding us together. The perfect combination of interacting with others in a minimal social situation while being able to share our thoughts or bemused reveries caters to our needs. Facebook has status updates, blogs are online journals for public consumption, Twitter is a succinct regurgitation of our thoughts we think are worth sharing.

And quite honestly, you extroverts and your exhibitionist ways are tramping on our turf. If you need a place to show off how social and popular you are, find one where others learn to care. Of course, that's a selfish thing to say and a little bit elitist. I do admit I enjoy stalking your pictures and doing a bit of digging about more of your personal secrets you tried to hide from public - all made possible by the internet.

But that's what introverts do - We don't live in the moment, we live it vicariously and disseminate it for extensive analysis.

If you're reading this and not out chugging a keg of beer, then like me, you're possibly an introvert. I'd probably never see you at a party or feel compelled to have coffee with you, but thanks for reading a little bit about my life - and yours.