At one point, I think she is paranoid. She weaves through
the start and end points of incidents, mixing random events. She makes up motivations
for why someone said something, why certain things happened. I don’t know Susan
very well. She is, at best, an acquaintance. I listen because I know that she
needs someone to listen to her.
But I feel slightly jaded. My attention flits away. I think,
here I go again, playing my default role. What use will my listening be? Then, I
think, not everything has to have a use. This is something I can give. I will
myself to listen.
After she has talked for a while, Susan looks cheerful. I
walk back home, realizing that it’s been almost two hours. For the last many
weeks, I have been extremely resistant to doing any creative work, whether it’s
writing or photography, and I have completely stopped writing my daily morning
pages.
It’s only when I start writing them again that I acknowledge what’s been happening. Writing wipes down the smudges, gives a clarity that’s threatening. It’s easier to just float along and think that everything is pleasant. As soon as something uncomfortable comes up, I shut down.
Given a choice between telling my own truth and displeasing
other people, I have usually chosen other people and abandoned myself. Not this
time, I think. I start my writing practice again, without scolding myself for
stopping.
At the end of our conversation, after having got some of the gunk out, Susan told me she knew she got anxious. Maybe it was just the anxiety talking. I think of Susan - how she is both fanciful and lonely. Can not being heard make you go crazy. Can turning your imagination against yourself make you less than sane?
I decide that Susan is not crazy. She has just built up so much loneliness that she has entangled all the different things in her life.
I decide that Susan is not crazy. She has just built up so much loneliness that she has entangled all the different things in her life.