2 July 2020
The last Counseling
memo of Spring promises to cut you off from treatment. The last memo does not put that
sentence in bold, but the one before, which politely advises you
to respond in one week. The last memo is too complicated to
be read by a student in distress. Written words dissolve into reeds,
sharp as writing implements. Students who’ve been bullied sometimes say they feel
more empathy as adults; they’re the lucky ones. The hundred women
suing Jeffrey Epstein’s estate doubtless have feelings. Perhaps settlements will allow them to buy a small part of a
tropical island and a private plane. Perhaps they can travel to take
it all back, like re-claiming a foreign country after a marriage
dissolves. Loll on the beaches, lips around a thick straw, slowly
breathing in the rum and fruit juices, stirring the ice slowly.
Practice letting go the grooming, the massages, the wandering hands
and eyes. Surely, any image can be broken. Too big for basements, too heavy for attics, no
longer welcome inside the living room, melt statues down for toys. Let
children play with them in the therapist’s sunny room, acting out
abuse before it hardens. Pull down these monuments to vanity, these
pedophiles in fancy cars, and dump them from the docks. You’ll get
10 years in prison if the president gets his way. The memory police are out on call.
--Volcano
1 comment:
Good one. And you had me completely in that early line, "the last memo is too complicated to be read by a student in distress"--I feel that's true of a lot of the official responses to human need.
Post a Comment