I Don't Want to Be Crazy

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I Don't Want to Be Crazy Page 8

by Samantha Schutz


  very simply

  and with my best accent,

  that I am lost,

  that I am looking for rue du Cherche-Midi.

  They put up their hands

  and tell me how sorry they are.

  I haven’t managed to memorize

  my family’s eight-digit telephone number

  so I can’t even call someone to come and get me.

  I will not cry on the streets of Paris.

  I will not cry.

  I will not cry.

  I have started to settle into my new routine.

  I don’t feel like a tourist.

  There is no time.

  I am taking classes in French language and culture

  and teaching English conversation at a high school.

  On Wednesdays I get to be an artist.

  I put on ratty jeans and take the metro

  to the western edge of the city

  for a photography class in the morning

  and then go to the eastern edge

  for painting in the afternoon.

  The metro that connects the two

  stays aboveground most of the way

  and it is the longest

  and most beautiful commute I have ever had.

  I have had very little anxiety and panic

  because the fear is real.

  I feel dumb

  because I cannot express myself in words.

  I’ve become mute.

  If I stop paying attention for even a second,

  I lose all understanding.

  I am so easily frustrated here—

  like when I was little

  and my dad tried to help me with math.

  All I wanted to do was scream,

  jump out of my skin

  and away from the kitchen table,

  but taking photos

  and exploring the city by myself

  makes me feel human—

  makes me feel calm.

  My photos let me show other people how I see.

  That’s all I ever wanted.

  Painting class is not going well.

  I look up at the model,

  hold up my paintbrush to get the proportions,

  and try to paint her on the page,

  but I can’t get my hand to create

  what I see in front of me.

  My portrait makes this beautiful woman

  look orange and lumpy.

  On the metro going home,

  all I can think about is

  how what I create and what I do

  is not good enough.

  I turn up my CD player loud

  for the first time in a long time.

  I could never do this before.

  The idea of blocking out

  all other sounds has always been scary.

  It makes my heart race,

  makes me feel like I can’t breathe,

  but today I crank it up

  and want to cry

  because this is not easy

  and this is the first work

  I have done in years.

  I have decided that it is time

  to do something drastic.

  I am going to get a real French haircut.

  Sitting in the chair,

  the stylist inspects my face.

  He checks me out from all angles

  and then gestures how short he is going to cut—

  at least five inches from the front

  and even more from the back.

  I’m scared, but I need this

  weight off of me.

  I miss home

  or at least being able to go home.

  Looking at photos makes me want to cry.

  I sit in my room,

  staring at the phone,

  not knowing who to call.

  I’ve already forgotten the numbers.

  I have become an introvert

  because I don’t have a large enough vocabulary

  to be anything else.

  Locked inside my head, my body,

  all I do is think

  and it is making me well.

  I am trying to find myself

  in all of the chaos,

  find something that I can call me

  inside the screams and inside

  the you shoulds and you have to bes.

  I am grown in so many ways,

  but in front of my parents

  I am still a child.

  I am having a hard time throwing off the skin

  that I pick and peel.

  I am the only one who can do it,

  but I can’t seem to let myself.

  I am getting so healthy here.

  I can close my eyes on the metro

  and let the speed move me—

  another thing I could never do before.

  I have found my body

  and come to terms with the space it takes up.

  I am confident enough to know

  that even when there is only blackness around me

  and voices with no mouths—

  that I still remain.

  Before, I disappeared.

  I have found a comfortable space—

  five feet six inches,

  one hundred and thirty pounds,

  with long fingers and toes,

  small breasts,

  and I like what I see.

  Progress, baby steps.

  I feel like I am checking things off a list,

  but instead of accomplishing feats

  like skydiving or swimming with sharks,

  I am listening to my CD player on high in public

  and keeping my eyes shut around other people.

  It seems crazy to be proud of these things,

  but I am.

  Living with Laurence and her family

  is a lot like living with my parents.

  I wake up to the sounds of screaming and fighting.

  When Rebecca sleeps over,

  she doesn’t understand how I deal with it.

  I feel like a member of their family.

  I watch cartoons with Augustin

  when he gets home from school.

  I drink wine and smoke

  with Laurence as she cooks dinner.

  I go to parties with Phyllis

  and her friends.

  And then there is Alexis.

  He has the maturity of a six-year-old

  and is obsessed with James Dean and Elvis Presley.

  He has to be told when to eat

  and when to shower.

  He is anxious around people,

  especially women,

  and does not realize that when he stares

  he makes people nervous.

  I have infinite patience with him

  as he shows me his collection

  of James Dean memorabilia

  and asks me to translate Elvis songs.

  I spend hours helping him

  with his math homework.

  Laurence is amazed at the progress we make

  and jokes that she is going to fire his tutor.

  The city has been wet and gray since I got here.

  Finally seeing the sun

  and sitting in the Luxembourg Gardens

  makes such a big difference.

  Being outside is a pleasure.

  In the sun I can see myself.

  I don’t know when I have felt this calm.

  It’s the sun

  and the fact that I stayed on the metro

  five extra stops

  just to hear a man playing the drums.

  I get so much smaller when I am in a city.

  I remember the first time

  I realized that I wasn’t the only person who cried.

  I was in the car, pulled up to a red light.

  Maybe I was crying, or one of my parents was yelling,

  or maybe I was just staring out the window,

  but in the backseat of the car next to us<
br />
  was a little girl crying.

  All of a sudden the world opened up

  and it’s doing it again now.

  In this garden there are so many stories,

  so many other problems besides mine.

  I am jealous of the little kid

  spinning around near the fountain.

  What would these people think

  if I were to start spinning with my arms spread

  wide?

  Regardez, elle est complètement folle!

  A lunatic on drugs, probably.

  My greatest accomplishment here is not caring,

  letting go of other people’s opinions.

  I am not wound as tight.

  I can let go,

  just no spinning yet.

  Everyone is all smiles

  and kisses today in the park.

  I am in the corner with my journal and CD player

  just loud enough to hear the water

  coming from the fountain and a few muffled voices

  speaking another language.

  I could stay in the Luxembourg Gardens forever

  if I had the right person next to me

  for conversation.

  Even the pigeons are dancing, kissing,

  going in circles, mounting each other.

  Paris is the city of love,

  even for the birds.

  iii.

  All of the students in our program

  go to Provence for the weekend.

  After a day of sightseeing

  we are at our hotel,

  sitting around rough wooden tables,

  drinking wine and laughing,

  when I feel panic surge through my body.

  My breathing gets off track

  and when I ask for water,

  I know I am in trouble.

  That’s the first sign

  that this is not going to get better.

  My eyes are darting around the room

  wondering who can tell that I am freaking out

  and just like that, I need to leave.

  It doesn’t matter

  that they haven’t served dinner yet.

  It doesn’t matter

  that I was sitting with my friends.

  All that matters is that I have to get out

  to make this stop.

  I tell everyone that I am tired

  and go back to my room.

  I try getting into bed and falling asleep,

  but that doesn’t work.

  I am too frantic.

  There is no TV, no radio,

  nothing to distract me.

  I am freezing cold

  even though the weather is pleasant.

  I take a hot shower

  to take away the chill

  and calm the creeping feeling

  that is going through my chest.

  I sit on the shower floor

  and let the water pour over me

  as I rock back and forth, crying,

  staring at the tiles on the wall

  and wondering what I did to deserve this.

  The steam makes me feel like I am choking

  and I am worried that the bathroom door is locked

  and if I die in the shower,

  no one will be able to get to me.

  I cannot do this alone.

  I cannot die alone.

  I must swallow any pride I have left,

  put on clothes and shoes,

  and get the one person

  I can cry in front of,

  the one person who will leave anywhere

  on a moment’s notice

  because she knows.

  I gather myself up

  and head out the door.

  It’s too dark

  and I hate this place.

  I hate being here

  and there she is,

  having fun,

  talking, drinking, eating,

  having a life—

  a normal life.

  Rebecca looks beautiful and normal

  and I am going to interrupt that.

  I lean down and whisper in her ear.

  I try not to look at anyone else

  in case they get a glimpse

  of how insane I am.

  She puts down her napkin.

  And that is it.

  No questions.

  She’s done this before

  and we both know

  she’ll do it again.

  I cannot stop crying and shaking.

  Rebecca wants to know what to do for me.

  I tell her I feel like I can’t breathe,

  so we walk outside, down a path

  with perfectly manicured hedges.

  I feel like I can’t control my limbs

  and the sound inside my head is like a tornado.

  I want to cover my ears,

  but I know the sound is deep inside.

  I have a moment of clarity

  as we are walking.

  For the first time I understand

  the concept of suicide.

  I can understand the feeling

  of wanting it to stop

  and being willing to do

  whatever it takes

  to make sure that happens.

  We go back to our room

  and Rebecca gets into bed with me.

  I ask her to distract me,

  so she tells me stories

  about people she grew up with.

  She even gets me to laugh a little.

  Hearing her voice—

  hearing something besides the thoughts

  ripping through my mind—

  is calming.

  I just need to put a little space

  between me and the panic.

  I need a little bit of calm

  so I can get a grip

  and hold on to something,

  to pull myself up

  and out.

  The next morning,

  I am as tired as if I hadn’t slept.

  I feel hungover and stiff.

  The entire day I am walking a fine line

  between normal and crazy.

  I drink water constantly

  to make sure I won’t pass out.

  The day goes reasonably well

  until dinner.

  Our group is on the bus, pulling up to a restaurant

  when the electricity races up my chest

  and stops with a fizzle at my lips.

  I cannot go in there.

  I cannot sit down

  and act normal

  over a leisurely dinner.

  It is not possible.

  Everyone gets off the bus

  and I tell Rebecca

  I cannot go in there.

  I need to walk.

  I need to move.

  I cannot sit.

  I cannot be confined.

  We walk down the road a little

  and there is nothing

  but fields on all sides.

  Just the restaurant and our bus and some fields

  and I am babbling like a lunatic,

  wishing I could take off running

  and never come back.

  This is it, I think.

  I have finally gone completely insane.

  After a few minutes of walking

  I tell Rebecca she has to go get our coordinator.

  I need to go to a hospital

  because

  I

  can

  not

  do

  this.

  The only thing that makes me feel better

  is the thought of slightly stiff hospital sheets,

  the scent of disinfectant,

  and a tag on my wrist

  with my name and information.

  Our coordinator comes out

  and wants to know what is going on.

  I wonder if he has been trained for this,

  if he got a pamphlet

  title
d, What to do if one of your students

  goes insane on a back road in the middle of nowhere.

  He tries to coax me inside,

  but I am not ready for that.

  He tells me that he used to have panic attacks,

  but they went away,

  just like that.

  One day, he grew out of them.

  His anecdote converts some of my panic

  into anger.

  His story insults me,

  makes me feel as if what I am going through

  is not significant—

  that it’s just a phase.

  His wife comes out

  and suggests that I have some wine,

  that it will help relax me.

  She says she has some pills

  at the hotel she can give me.

  This is what I want to hear.

  I want solutions.

  The restaurant sets up a table for me and Rebecca

  away from the others

  because there is no way

  I can be around that many people

  staring at me and thinking I am insane.

  The next day we are supposed to tour Avignon,

  but I cannot go with the group.

  It is too dangerous.

  I need to keep myself safe.

  Another girl is sitting out the day too.

  From what she says,

  it sounds like she has irritable bowel syndrome

  and it’s nice to know

  that I am in good company.

  We stay at a café

  while the others walk around.

  There is a table with a man and his son.

  Over and over the son asks, “C’est quoi ça?”

  To be that young

  and not know what things are

  is enviable.

  She and I sit outside in the sun in the town square.

  I reassure myself that I have eaten enough,

  that I won’t pass out,

  but I wonder if I have had enough water.

  Always the fear of the uncontrollable

  dark times when I am somewhere

  in between here and there.

  I feel safer being with her,

  but my body is still buzzing

  and at any moment

  I could have another panic attack.

  I know I am sick,

  I just thought I was better.

  It is over

  and I am back in Paris and I am tired

  as if I have been in a war.

  My stomach is still clenched

  and I don’t know when it will let go.

  I feel like I am back at square one,

  at the edge of something,

  and I don’t know what will be there when I fall.

  Two days ago I was willing to commit myself

  and now all is calm,

  but the old fears have come back

 

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