I promise to post whatever it is I
write here now at this moment. Damn it. I feel some serious weirdness coming on. This is an exercise, a fragment, work in progress or something that will be discarded. It's just this, and so, I offer my apologies. You've been warned. This is just silliness with grammatical errors, prattling, so much blahblahblah and etc.....
We sleep.
We do not sleep quietly.
We do sleep soundly.
Except when we don't, and then well,
you know, we don't sleep quietly or soundly.
The sputter and snore of it, mumbled
muttering, nonsense, “Monkeys on the roof, waffle umbrella-shark.
Ahhhh...”
The inevitable passing of gas; sleep
farting. God forbid.
My son laughs in his sleep.
This is a delightful thing. My son
laughing in his sleep is a beautiful thing and it makes me feel
hopeful.
My son is a dear darling boy so I imagine that he dreams happy wholesome
dreams, dreams about the things that delight children; puppies and
butterflies, balloons, baby hippos, and farting.
When I was a child I didn't want people
to see me with my eyes closed. I don't know what I thought would
happen to me if I closed my eyes in public for longer than the time
it takes to blink-- to blink, to prevent our eyes from drying out and
dropping from our eye sockets, dessicated and shriveled, eye-raisins.
When I was a first year student at
college, I was18, shy, depressed and far too serious for my own good.
One warm October afternoon, I fell asleep in the university library.
I awoke in a panic minutes or hours later, I had no idea which, and
peeled my face off the sticky vinyl couch cushion with an audible
'rrrppppp'.
My cheek was hot and wet with sweat and
drool and the shit brown Naugahyde upholstery wore a glossy sheen, a glinty spitty sheen which
I'm sure I wiped away with the floppy cuff of my green and purple
paisley blouse.
I straightened my Louise Brooks bob,
readjusted my wire framed glasses, smoothed my vintage Girl Scout
green pleated skirt, picked up my Sony Walkman and slung my black book bag over my shoulder with as much dignity as I
could muster, which was probably a lot.
I avoided making eye contact
with the assortment of grad students, undergrads, and pretty Tri
Delts in their tight magenta sweatshirts and stiff big hair and I was gone.
Having drooled on myself and on the
university's hideous plastic furniture was embarrassing, but the thing that
made me sick to my stomach was the horrifying thought that I may have
farted in my sleep.
I still don't like closing my eyes
in public, it makes me feel vulnerable and from time to time I find myself worrying about
falling to asleep in a room full of quiet strangers.
Comments
Funny blog post! Thnx