a woman's painted
journey
When I was a young girl I danced in a
field of wild flowers, Dreaming of a man Who would
breathe life into my hollow soul. He would bring laughter
and joy. I was certain he would come Because I had
dreamt this dream When I was not sleeping.
One day a man came up to me. He gave
me his keys and his name. I invited him to come in. He
sat at my dinner table and I told him all my
secrets.
Some angels came. They giggled and
gossiped about my beautiful white dress and the tiny
flowers hidden in my hair. They held up the train of my
veil and led us down a path of faith and
tradition.
The wedding party was all that they told
me it would be. Familiar faces danced about me as I
watched the movie of my life go in and out of
focus.
I felt so small next to the man. He
was so large and his world was so vast. So I hid inside his
pocket.
I gave him everything to hold, Some
red apples and my heart.
I watched him so carefully. I noticed
every hair on his body. I counted his eyelashes and drew
imaginary lines connecting his moles while he lay
sleeping.
I made him into an angel. I gave him
his wings and a little smile. I served him obediently like
a devoted disciple.
I offered myself to him like a
fruit, hoping that he would peel me thoughtfully and cut
me into delicate geometric pieces, and eat me so completely
that I could be an angel, too.
Life was so sweet with my perfect
stranger, a stranger who never left me. I gave him a
toboggan, a cherry red sweater and a jar filled with
honey. He gave me a miniature doll house, a make-believe
pony and some colors to play with. I painted us over and
over again.
Our happiness was simple, Open
windows with daylight peering in, the sound of the tea
kettle whistling on an old stove, the scent of jasmine
under moonlight.
To please the angel I gave all that I
had, But my hands and feet grew smaller.
I brought our intimacy into my
paintings and the days melted together into private
patterns.
One day the child appeared. Not
noticed at first, he entered through a window into our
world. We named him and I rocked him to sleep In my
painted dreams.
The boy was an angel. The cat was
made of porcelain and the flowers were soap foam. We were
all together in a bubble of happiness.
The child became a small boy Who made
the make-believe pony come to life. My heart overflowed
with real joy.
There were picnics on long summer
days. We ate cold watermelon and wrapped ourselves in
thick daisy grass. He crossed his legs, I crossed my
arms and the angels that watched over us crossed their
fingers.
In our little garden with the blue tile
fountain and the little orange fish and the chirping
birds and the colorful tulips, we built a wall To keep
out all things not beautiful.
I painted my miniature doll
house In the brightest, gayest colors. I played house
with tiny tea sets and little toy furniture. But all the
while I dreamed of a life beyond the canvas
borders.
As I painted the story of the man and the
woman, of the cats, of the birds and the boy, I felt
like a traveler passing through.
The stranger became a familiar man. I
served him a plate of sweets, pears and a spring melon full
of new seeds. He put me in a teapot to simmer and
boil While he dreamt his dream alone.
But he was my whole world. How could I
dream without him?
When did the apples turn green? When
did the sweet tea go sour? We were quite pleased with
life But our cat had the blues.
The man left every morning with his
umbrella after reading his paper and drinking his
tea.
I thought, "Maybe I should bake
another pie, or have another baby."
I was left alone. I surrounded myself
with birds. I studied them closely, In case I needed to
learn how to fly.
One time he left the door open and
a cold, hard wind blew through the doll house. My pictures
began to shake. It froze me deeply and frightened the
cat.
I felt I was a wind-up
doll, Sleeping for years in a felt-lined box on lace and
tinsel. While looking at my own world With two glass
eyes, I met the little girl in me. Who had never
grown.
When I saw myself in the mirror I
asked, "Who are you? Are you my mother? Are you my
child? Are you my nurse or my friend? Are you my
enemy?" I looked her in the eyes and told her To tell
me everything that I had forgotten To ask her
before.
For a while I kept this part of
me, the small girl, a secret. I painted her face to
match mine. I made her pretty too, With painted lips and
penciled brows. I let her use my name and my
husband, And I allowed her to dream my dreams.
But for no reason she began to
grow, And I had a harder time keeping her
quiet. Sometimes she would cry at night inside me and
wake up the man, the boy and the cats. She became bigger
than me And she took over my house.
When I outgrew the doll house I was
not the woman I used to be. It made the man, the boy and
myself afraid. Women in the neighborhood came to
visit. They wore gold jewelry and flower-patterned
dresses They smelled of the same perfume. They were made
up to look happy and content. What will they say when they
hear that I have dirty dishes in my kitchen and that my
milk has gone sour?
I raised the candle higher to see All
aspects of my self Were there in the dark.
In my desperate search the bird
came out of the cage. I could not make her go
back.
As my soul traveled inward, I saw
myself as the enemy. I left the man staring at the
moon.
When I escaped from the painted
world I knocked over the house, the apples, the man and
the cat even though my body remained there to serve them
What happens when you have lived in a
doll house, a bubble, a dream and one day you wake up
outside them?
Looking back from the impossible
horizon, I saw the man sitting in his chair, Asking,
"Where has she gone, and will she ever return?"
He stood amongst my paintings and
sighed, "That was my wife."
My whole family mourned their
losses. Where was their happy daughter, The obedient
wife and the loving mother? They all cried.
I could not find silence in my own
bed When the mad woman jumped on me and demanded that I
give her a real life.
Not in here and not in now. I needed
to bleed To know that I was real.
My duality. We both bled under yellow
sheets.
I realized that life cannot be beautiful
all the time. I could not be beautiful all the
time.
The season changed, and I emerged with
capable arms and strong legs. I am standing now on
solid ground. I have made myself a cherry red sweater to
keep myself warm.
I now replant myself every day and
I will continue to grow. This I know this I
know.
by Mahvash Mossaed & Pamela grau
Twena |