Embracing the Dog-Eat-Dog World

Full disclosure: Not everything I wrote is strictly factual. For one thing, I write from the perspective of a senior who is close to finishing HS. In reality I am just finishing my junior year.


Logo of the National Beta ClubMeet John: Number one in the senior class. National Honor Society president. Perfect scorer on the ACT. If I tie for third in the Poetry Slam, he places second. If I set a personal record in cross-country, he’s team MVP. It’s always the same story: In the world of transcripts and awards ceremonies, I am one step behind.

I can’t help but think that if it weren’t for him, the glory would be mine. Not that I ever worked for glory; I am simply passionate about learning and growing, and the trophies and certificates mean little.

But at the end of the day, I am human. This powerful little adjective encompasses both the dark and the light, and the darkness, the id, cries out for recognition.

Conversely, the light of my humanity remembers—wonders how I ever forgot—that I once called this incredibly driven spirit my boyfriend. The only boyfriend of my high school years, the one whose hand I held while walking in verdant May woods, while watching friends act and dance on stage, while praying at youth group, while pre-race nerves pulsed in our guts. That’s John. The texts, the red envelopes, the notes between class changes, the barrage of pathos as our cortical reason and our primal desires entangled to form a brilliant alliance: that’s John and me.

And brilliant we were. Nothing stood in our way—between his capacity for math and music, and mine for writing and art, “if we wanted to do anything together it would work out.” (His words.) And ‘things working out’ does not mean parental acquiescence to Saturday movies or Friday afternoon get-togethers.

Indeed, we never went to the movies together. Never saw a single one. We did things like jumping on a trampoline with his 5-year-old niece, running laps around the track to raise money for the band, quizzing each other on Constitutional Amendments, and co-leading the National Beta Club.

I know, we were the ultimate nerdy duo. But to two sophomores in love, “nerd” may as well have meant “muse.” What a beautiful three months it was.

Three months, the span of spring—but by summer it was over. Neither of us can remember why it ended, except that perhaps we spent too much time quizzing and racing and poetry-slamming to understand that love transcends performance and ability, even ability to love. It was I who scripted the end, so perhaps that misunderstanding was solely on my end. But it is at least clear that we, the two sophomores, were nothing if not the definition of sophomoric.

But I quickly became my own entity—my own nerd—and my muse became the rain and the road beneath my feet. It took nearly a year to restore our friendship after the break-up.

But even then, I could not offer him sincere congratulations. In answer to humanity’s innate competitive drive, I wasn’t satisfied unless I was the best. And clearly, John was the best. So I decided I was sick of the high-school-scale “rat race,” of the comparing game, of pride and external validation.

But, you want to know something? John and I dream different dreams. I am not walking in his shadow; I’m going in an entirely different direction. On Saturdays when he’s coaching soccer, I’m helping middle-schoolers design yearbooks. On Thursday nights when he’s studying for a calculus test, I’m serving at my youth group. When he’s practicing the sax, I’m writing for my blog. His joy and success is no greater than mine, regardless of whether or not it’s accompanied by another blue ribbon.

The world, I realized, is full of Johns. John is the colleague who gets the raise, the researcher who gets the grant, the entrepreneur who gets… past bankruptcy. He (or she) is the lead role in the play and the writer with an actual book deal. But that’s how it’s supposed to work, isn’t it? Retreating to Walden Pond isn’t likely to change the world. Competition, at the risk of wasting time, capital, or dignity, on the other hand, is another word for passion.

seventeen, take two

It’s that time of year: the school Poetry Slam.

Last month I posted a poem, seventeen, almost without revision. So for the Slam, I took the original poem and re-worked it to tighten the focus and make it slightly more understandable.

Even so, when I read it before my AP English class on Monday, I felt so vulnerable. I desperately wanted it to be understood and appreciated, but when I read it aloud (“perform” it), the audience has little chance. It’s the type of poem you have to read, not just watch. So I had mixed feelings about moving on through to the third round on Friday.

But I did my best. Because I believe in my poem, I made it the focus of my week, memorized it, and stood confidently on the stage. I also did so partly in the spirit of this:

“If I could go back, I’d write another, more dramatic, more emotional story. And I’d sweat the details, tweak it 60+ times, get nervous in front of everyone, forget something, vow to do it better next time. But the satisfaction of my fullest effort outweighs all of that.”

My friend John, a 2-time Slam finalist, didn’t make the Poetry Slam a priority this semester, but he says that he wished he had. Let me tell you, his poems are definitely dramatic, and I know he would have given his fullest effort to the Slam if he hadn’t been busy trying to break 5 minutes in the mile.

Fun fact: it takes exactly 3:00 minutes to recite, which is the limit according to Parkwood Poetry Slam rules. That doesn’t even include the part where I say, “My name is Alisha Newton, and my poem is titled ‘seventeen’.”

seventeen
by alisha newton

i move in circles.
i merely chase the sun.
day in, day out
i trace a sphere around my wants and needs.

to embrace my passion
i balance ink against smooth paper,
like rubber against asphalt,
a controlled release of energy

it works like this: words beget words
as easily as love begets love
the giver and the receiver
become one in the cycle

this circle begins
with ascent into the unknown,
over burning hills
of piled hurts and desires

so i ascend,
gasping for new life to fill my lungs
exhaling my humanness,
my impurity

yes, impurity—you must know i am not clean
but neither am i forever stained.
when it’s over, stains will wash out,
sweat and so many words cleansed from my being.

but until then, i focus for a breath
on superfluous film,
and on matte pink,
and inspiration: a book.

i had touched the pages with reverence
and had seen my future written
in the lines of the print—
between their words, mine

then more words begin to collect like rainclouds,
a gathering storm
in my human brain
until lightning jumped between the neurons.

love risk learn, i hear
words flowing in my veins
living words, alimentary,
since the beginning

i can pour out but i can’t take back
like blood
i’ll give as much as i can till i’m faint
until i’m empty

consider:

love,
because i am a spark
and you are a match:
our fire will leave a coffee-brown singe

risk,
even wary of the uncertainty
of the wavering flame
and the potential for destruction

learn,
gather and create
until möbius ceases to meet
in the middle

and so i keep moving
i rush headlong at high gear,
like my spinning thoughts,
faster every day.

downhill, here, is no easier than uphill,
breaking the rules of physics,
of romance novels,
but i hope beyond the hills.

finally i stop for the rain.
realizing the futility
of trying to go further,
i rest. i let raindrops

soak me to the skin,
gently surround me,
dance over my upturned eyelids and
drip off my nose.

if you could see me now, you
wouldn’t know
who i am.
the rain washed me away

she melted the bars and bricks
of labels they had given me
to build my own prison—
washed it all away

you wouldn’t have known me—
and neither would i.

i only know that i am seventeen,
and i know the taste of eternity,
of thunderclouds.
i know that it rains in heaven.

when i awoke the next morning,
i was warm, and dry,
but paralyzed with the fear that
it all had been only a dream

Continue reading

poetry beyond everything

seventeen

i move in circles
i am just chasing the sun
day in, day out
tracing a sphere around my wants and needs

love begets love
writing begets writing
the giver and the receiver
become one in the cycle

i’ll admit to this conscious addiction
i embrace it, even ache for it

writing can never earn me my daily bread
it is my daily bread
Lord, give us this day our daily bread
tonight i will devour the world

tonight i’ll strip to my soul
and give you what’s left

Cargoes, pink
useless 35 mm film
promises that
my passion can thrive

in the vacuum of college
art is its own reward

you say this is 2012
so pull out the plug and let it be known:
i am a woman
and it’s all i want to be

at age seventeen

i opened the pages of your book
and saw my future written in the lines
of your printed words—
between yours, mine
conceived only insofar as i have
years left in my life

the words began to collect like rainclouds,
a gathering storm
in my human brain
until lightning jumped between the neurons

i am a spark you are a match
the fire will leave a coffee-brown singe

i’m racing in circles
i rush headlong at high gear,
like my spinning thoughts
faster every day

into the unknown
over this mountain
of piled hurts and desires
you and i can hope beyond the hills

i exhale my humanness
my impurity
and pant for the daemon to fill
my lungs with new life

you must know i am not clean
but neither am I unclean
stains will wash out
before it’s over

some say love
i say let’s live,
create until Möbius ceases
to meet in the middle

love risk learn
words flowing in my veins
since the beginning
living words

i can pour out but i can’t take back
like blood
i’ll give as much as i can until i faint
with no one to revive me

if i had gone farther i
wouldn’t have been careening in the grass
when the rain came
wouldn’t have felt
soaked to the skin

if you had seen me then you
wouldn’t have known
who i am
but neither would i

i am thunderstorms, matte pink
holy spirit
neverending spheres

lock me up in a label but
everything you feed me
turns into more words

when it was all over
the sky was dark
and i was afraid that
in the morning it would have been a dream

Merry Christmas

This personal essay was written written over Christmas break 2011. I waited to share it because I feel like I keep replaying the plot of my life up until this point. (I wrote on the subject during the Christmas season of 2010 as well.) Every half a year or so, I look at my past and my decisions (ie. China missions trip and food/running addiction) and re-evaluate the impact on my life and the changes since then. I rewrite my experiences, each time taking a different angle. But I guess that’s what writers do.


The aptly named "Green Monster" smoothie.

Christmas afternoon: I didn’t snuggle in a blanket or crack the fresh spine of a book. I didn’t play the new Wii (nor would I ever) or a board game with my brother. I didn’t browse for new music, and I didn’t chat with friends, even online.

I helped make a gingerbread house from scratch. My aunt’s idea, it ended with a messy kitchen, a pile of dishes, sticky hands, and several happy children. I licked stiff powdered-sugar icing from my fingers compulsively as I worked on the house, adding gummy candies and chocolate pieces to the miniature version of the witch’s house that lured Hansel and Gretel.

I used to dream about such a house: Hungry? Just pick a candy cane from a window pane or a piece of sweet bread from the roof. I imagined the smell of lemon drops wafting in the breeze and apple cider running from the faucets. Now I shudder at it: Not only would such a house be unlivable, it would most likely collapse on top of you as you swallowed its sweets one by one.

And I shudder because for a time I did live in such a place. I was lured by its sweetness, and likewise imprisoned within. As a freshman in high school, like Hansel and Gretel I was hungry and lost. I was a depressed spirit. Many of my best friends from middle school began attending high schools other than mine, and I was wary of attraction and boys after having been repeatedly betrayed by my own heart.

I was also running. I started running in August that year, covering more than 2, 3, and even 4 consecutive miles for the first time in my life. I wanted to be fast, but I had to be content with just being able to finish the 5K races. I wanted my body to be strong and beautiful, and I never thought it was, even after many months of running. I couldn’t stop running, even if I needed to rest, because I was afraid I would gain 5 pounds the first week I didn’t run.

I ate food like I wanted to gain weight—whenever I was at home or at parties, I ate sweets compulsively—but I forced my lungs and legs to burn off the excess. I also became health-crazed, drinking a smoothie made with bananas, spinach, and ground flaxseed nearly every morning. For Christmas my gifts included a water bottle, a blender, a food processor, and a “Buy Local” t-shirt.

In reality, I was hungry for love. I found solace in food, but it further betrayed me when I became addicted. My world was a struggle between my mind, body, and soul, each part of me unable to control the others, and as a result I was falling apart inside. I felt like the dark winter skies, and with no circle of friends around a fire to warm me.

On the outside, I looked fine. I participated in clubs, made high A’s in all my classes, and lost weight. My life was plenty busy and full of meaningless stuff, but I was subsisting on the bread crumbs of rich human relationships, not to mention my relationship with God.

But I couldn’t humble myself to share that I had any sort of problem, so I continued to live in my head for several more months after the day I built the gingerbread house. I ran track in the spring, eliminated meat and even milk from my diet, and continued to read endless books and blogs about health. I felt wrong, and every day the feeling intensified, but I didn’t know why I felt wrong and I couldn’t see the way out.

And then one day it was all over. I told my youth group one late-April evening. Gretel and I had God on our side, and at the climax of our stories we both got the best of the witch. In the end, I lived in that house for about a year, and when I finally stepped out into the light, the world was a different place. I didn’t know who I was, but I knew I was also different.

Since then God has opened my eyes to a brighter world and a led me to a more balanced life. I gave up physical perfection for sanity, and I love my life more than ever. Some days that statement rings slightly hollow, but now that it’s Christmas break 2011, and I’m turning the calendar to the year I will take the SAT, become a licensed driver, and apply for college, life becomes brighter every day.

Freshman Fiction: A Bad Day

Proof of our awesome English class: we decorated this door for a school-wide contest. 2nd place.

I’m posting a story I wrote for my freshman English class. I had forgotten about it until my brother asked for biology help, but in the same folder as my bio notes I found my entire freshman year repertoire.

I’m not posting this solely because I’m totally self-centered and want to show off my writing skills. (I may be a little proud, but I’m going to ignore that for the sake of recording my life on this blog.) No, what struck me about this is how it reflected my life at the time of writing (13 September 2009). I don’t enjoy ‘creative writing’ or fiction—this is probably my most recent piece—but I like how I distilled my current situation and emotions into the writing. I did cry over geometry homework, stress about sports, drink out a blue water bottle, and fail an art assignment. What can I say, transitioning to high school was rough for me.

If it seems to use strange words (like parapet, turret, and breastworks), it’s because the point of the assignment was to use a list of vocabulary words and their definitions.

This one’s to you, Mr. Eddy.

“A Bad Day”

Laura O’Dell sat in Geometry class, laboriously working on the newest pile of homework from the incompetent teacher. Everything was going wrong with this class today. She hadn’t been able to finish the previous day’s homework, a result of bad teaching and a basketball game that left her practically asleep over her homework. Of the problems Laura had managed to finish, most were wrong, discouraging her even further. Why did she have her worst subject right before lunch, she thought bitterly, at a time when her growling stomach blocked her attempts to concentrate.

The teacher was talking so fast, droning on and on. Laura was trying to comprehend it with all the will she could summon, but wanted nothing but to lay down her head down and cry. She wanted her tears to streak the blue ink covering the paper, but her cursedly self-disciplined nature kept her eyes dry—barely.

The students around her began a great shuffling noise, with papers fluttering and calculator lids sliding shut. What? Laura sat up spasmodically; everyone must be leaving for lunch, she thought. She hadn’t heard the bell, and suddenly she was alone with the teacher and the loud busy hum of the air conditioning unit. Ms. Mathis approached her desk, looking with concern upon Laura’s drawn, ascetic face.

“Having a hard day?”

Laura was struck by remorse for being so distraught over schoolwork. Her mind’s eye retracted from the cold classroom to see a tiny Earth hanging in an infinite universe. She remembered what her dad had said just a couple days back—“You have to make sacrifices sometimes, so that you can live your life.” But the feeling of deep guilt about her self-pity was as brief as it was sudden. Why shouldn’t she feel horrible?

At least this teacher wasn’t inhuman, no matter how inefficient Laura considered her. A tremor of relief ran through her, relief that she could stand up from behind the breastworks barely hiding her distress.

“Um…” Laura took a breath. “Yeah, there’s so much homework, and it seems I have so little time.” She smiled weakly, and the teacher returned it. Even though she felt like a child for complaining, she was a little better. Also, Laura remembered happily, it was lunchtime. No worries there, right?

Walking to the cafeteria in the bright sunlight, hearing the water tricking out of the fountain and the wind rustling the trees was balm. The barest outline of a smile appeared on her face. “Look at this beautiful weather! It’s almost fall!” Laura thought, and her smile grew.

Her light steps grew heavy again when she reached the doors of the cafeteria. Where were her friends? She looked around and hurried to the parapet, peering below to see if they might be on the second level. There! There they were, sitting right by the bottom of the short staircase—an interesting mix of those whose real friends ate at a different time, students new to the school, and whoever had got kicked out of their usual tables. What a telling thing it was, where people sit at a meal, Laura thought.

A few at the table were thinking the same thing miserably, a few who cared for popularity. When Laura needed a seat, they could stand it no longer and decided the excuse to get up might as well take them to another table.

It left Laura, her best friend Brianna, and a few boys from their Geometry class. Just as Laura was taking a deep draught from her water bottle, her friend Angie approached their table.

“Hey, Angie, what took you so long? Here, sit down.”

“You know, yesterday we got kicked out of this table by upperclassmen—some obnoxious boys,” Angie said. She didn’t sit down, but edged towards a nearby table.

“What, those boys over in the line?” Laura looked over her shoulder furtively, like a sniper peeking over a defensive low wall. There was a group of dark-looking boys waiting in the lunch line.

“Yeah, those are the ones.”

She was gripped in a sudden fit of irritation. “For Heaven’s sake, Angie, sit down! We’ll just tell them no—it’s our table today!” I can’t handle her weakness right now, thought Laura selfishly.

“I wouldn’t be that brave,” said Brianna.

“I’m sorry. Angie, you can sit wherever you like. But I’m too cross to move,” Laura said icily, and then sighed, wishing she wasn’t feeling so mean.

“What’s wrong, Laura?” asked Brianna.

“Just a bad day.” Laura sighed again. “I have another game today, but I’m so tired and still kind of sick, and I have way too much homework. And this morning I was looking for my new sandals I just bought, and I think I’m going crazy, for I put them right by my bed and now I can’t find them anywhere. Then this morning in art, I got a 76 on my project! I worked so hard on it all last week and I didn’t finish like 10% of it… so my teacher gives me a D!”

“I’m sorry. At least you’re learning—that’s all that the grades should reflect… how much you’re learning.”

“Amen,” said Laura, and put her head down in her arms.

“Guys, don’t mess with Laura today,” Brianna said to Wilson and Frank, their friends from Geometry.

“Why?” Laura’s lamentations had gone over their sports talk and banter, and Brianna sighed at their cluelessness.

“A bad day, is all. OK?”

Laura sat up and took another drink of water, and held the thick plastic bottle up to her face. Suddenly, through the blue she saw the silhouette of some tall and stocky figures standing by their table.

“This ain’t your table,” one said slowly, looming like a small tower.

“It is today. We have as much right to it as you do, except we got here first,” Laura replied quickly, her light green eyes dangerous-looking.

“Hey, OK, little lady.” He laughed mockingly, his friends following suit. They turned and went to the first level of the cafeteria.

As soon as they left the small round table erupted in a paroxysm of noise.

“You looked like you just might shoot someone, and they sure didn’t want to be your enemies.”

“I just hope they don’t shoot me!” She looked back up to the low railing above them, as if expecting to be picked off at any moment.

“Oh, Laura, I can’t believe that you told ‘em off like that,” said Angie.

“Well, you can’t let people ruin your lunch.”

“You can’t let a bad attitude ruin your day,” said Brianna wisely.

“You’re right. I think this cheered me up a bit, actually. I overcame a challenge.” The girls laughed at Laura’s word choice.

“You’re so weird,” said Wilson briefly, and then turned back to discussing how to defend the turret in his and Frank’s favorite video game.

They all laughed again.