When someone asked me
how I felt about turning twenty two, my response was fuelled by a stream of
cheap champagne. I answered with my mouth full of dip from the platter that I’d
been dreaming about making for weeks, so excited I was to have a justification
to buy expensive cheese. ‘I’ve never known so much,’ I declared, ‘but I have
never known so little about what to do with that knowledge.’ I was quite
pleased with how that sounded, believing it to be clever and prophetic, and
repeated it several times over the coming weeks when people asked me about my
birthday, even inscribing it in the notebook that was reserved for writing down
things I wanted to remember when I was 97 years old and riddled with dementia.
Trying being grown up on for size is a recurrent daily activity. Caught
somewhere between adolescence and adulthood, forcing myself to try and grasp
the concept of delayed gratification, of foresight without being suffocated by
hindsight, shaking off the warmth of nostalgia and embracing the chilly unknown
comes about as easily as constructing flowery metaphors after a semester of
banging my head against a brick wall of statistics.
Am I real grown up now? I’ve asked, too many times to count,
as we chit chat in pretty dresses, amongst the beginnings of lives so carefully
but accidentally created. In the beginning there were milk crates with
cushions, an old laminex desk and a basket for dairy. ‘Isn’t there something
that should be in that hole?’ visitors asked quizzically. Long-life milk will
never taste okay again. Even the purchase of a fridge after six weeks of sweaty
cheddar and broccoli-in-the-pantry did not segway to functionality. Illusionary
grand future plans, lengthy lists, strict budgets, forbidden chocolate,
academic and social successes for every week of the year, melt and congeal into
a barely recognisable puddle that looks a lot like 40 hours of work and two
hours of idle study, eleven dollars for as many days, where I serve flat whites
and scrambled eggs every Sunday while
willing myself not to vomit, phone conversations are had with a face buried in
featherdown, Rihanna rattles windowpanes and the washing basket overflows.
Then something happens to remind us of our mortality. I
cried when I was watching the news, learning of a brother, a son, who would
never go home again. Had he not died, his name would have never passed my lips:
it was only in the wave of public mourning that I knew of the life wasted. I
walked home in the shroud of darkness, the ebb of fear making me sneak glances
behind my shoulder, my stare fuzzy with wine and the warmth of friends but
still suddenly attuned to the things that are okay when you do it all those
other times except for that once.
I do not always understand, when people envy me my youth. I
make the same mistakes often, I want to say, I never have any money, I want to
say, I lack certainty, clarity, stability, I miss deadlines, flights and
birthdays and I am always graced with realisations long after the moment has
passed. One Sunday morning I hobbled home with hollow eyes and a wrung out soul,
stinking of cigarettes and of all the fleeting decisions I had made. I lay
outside in the dappled light of the fading sun that afternoon and for the
second time in a year wished for all things ordinary, for love, a vegetable
garden, summer heat to wrap around me like an old friend. This tumultuous wave
of life heaves me up and spits me out shuddering onto wet sand, nearly drowned
every time.
Case and point, the realisation always comes after the
storm, and the temptation to now recite cheesy song lyrics or to summarise in a
neat and packaged cliché is overwhelming. While I ignore all the things I
should be doing and faff about finding lost socks to put into pairs and writing
ambitious To Do lists for tomorrow so I can justify going to bed at 9.30pm and
watching Season 2 of Skins for the
ninth time, I can see real adulthood hovering in some sort of illusive glass box
just out of my reach. There’s a great danger if I grab at it suddenly it will
fall and smash into a million smithereens. Best let it suspend there for a
while, and I can say I couldn’t be happier about that.
No comments:
Post a Comment