In
late August, hoards of young Ivy Leaguers descend.
I sell them 3 subject notebooks. I sell them dry erase boards. I sell them
flash drives in the shape of cars, sharks and Stewie Griffin. When I ask for
photo identification, I’m presented with college IDs on crimson lanyards. I
smile at the genuineness, the sometimes less than covert human desire to
proclaim, “Look! I’ve made it! Affirm my effort!”
At
11 pm, after I’ve punched out of work, I ride the bus. At my stop, I thank the
bus driver because I wasn’t raised here and I walk the two blocks to my
apartment. It’s dark and quiet and sometimes – if I let it – the cemetery I
must pass, unnerves me. I’m not afraid of tombstones, just stillness. The way
tricolor, foil pinwheels on children’s graves glint and catch moonlight. I’m
uneasy of time. So, I imagine what I’d do if I were jumped. I count the
streetlights. I try to drown out the calm with too much thinking.
When
I arrive home, I let my dog outside. I take off my pants. I make a peanut
butter sandwich. I talk on the phone to A. I send a text to B, another to L, a
final to A. Something inane like, Meow,
or I want brunch in and around my mouth.
I read. I write. I listen to music. I refuse to sit quietly.
At
the roughly appointed time, I wash my face. I brush my teeth and put on wrinkle
cream because once, while still in university, I overheard girls my age saying
they wore wrinkle cream. That it was never too young to start. That they’d
preserve their skin, their beauty, their youth long into the future. I smear on
wrinkle cream like I might live forever. I put on socks.
After
this, I lay down beneath a scratchy wool blanket pilfered from my dad’s house.
I turn out the lights. I lay still in the darkness, I create lists in my head,
I edit them, I write stories and dialogues and poetry until wakefulness eludes
me. I sleep.
This
was not the life I imagined for myself as a college freshman. 40 hours a week
in retail, eating peanut butter at midnight, just outside the city. This was
not my expectation.
I
always imagined adulthood would feel more solid. Even as I stood on the
threshold of my twenties, I assumed by the time I moved out of my parents’
house, I’d have it more thoroughly figured out. Perhaps I wouldn’t live in a
fabulous 1-bedroom apartment (I don’t) and likely I wouldn’t spend every day
modishly dressed (style is confined to Fridays, dinner dates, and hosting
visitors), but I would at least know what I want.
I haven't got any idea of what to want.
Any
person who claims to “know thyself” is a liar. This is what I’ve
learned about being an adult. Nobody has any idea about what they want or need
in the long run. It is a daily assessment. The realization feels sort of good
and sometimes slightly awful.