Improvising | Teen Ink

Improvising MAG

January 25, 2009
By Anonymous

Hi, I’m bored. What are you doing? I read a pretty book today. No, not just today. I’ve been reading it for three weeks because I read slowly. I’m not stupid, though. I just don’t like missing things. If I think I haven’t completely gotten something, I have to re-read, re-read. Shall I re-read you?

The book was pretty. I said that already, sorry. You said, “Hey, I love that book. Cool.” I’m sure it was a flippant comment, because you’re made of those – you radiate them – but it made me want to cry big fat attention-seeking tears.

You read fast. Whenever I give you anything, you whizz through it. You think whizz is a funny word, it makes you laugh when I use words like whizz.

I want to go to sleep and wake up and find that you’ve called me, but instead I just pick up another pretty book and read it all night and prove to myself more and more that you’re wrong. You call me and say, “You read too much,” and I smile and say, “Yes, I do.”

I listen to bad music sometimes and you tsk and say, “No, listen to this.” Music is your passion. I think you worry you’ve offended me when you’re nasty about my bad music, which is nice. When I turn off the bad music and play one of your “more than just noise, this means something” songs, you say, “You’re kind of cool,” and my heart turns into a hot air balloon. Float, float, whizz.

I thought about you saying that over and over. Can we run away together? You have a lovely way with words.

Your music is so much prettier than mine, and it makes me smile big, so I worry you’ll think I have ugly teeth. I don’t have ugly teeth. I want you to tell me that. Will you tell me that?

I’m sorry, but I wish your teeth were ugly. Your teeth are so, so perfect. I’m so, so sorry.

Do you remember our meeting? That sounds like it was a pre-planned corporate event, like it was a thing. It wasn’t a thing. You said, wasn’t I a friend of a friend? And I said, “Maybe of a friend.” You laughed. The truth is, I doubt I was even a friend of a friend of a friend. We were vague and unconnected and hopeful. You said I was funny. I made you laugh.

I re-re-re-re-recorded my answer phone message – that means I did it five times – after you left me a ­message, the premiere, the number one (“Hello. What’s up?”). You left the first message on my answer phone and I thought my voice was wrong.

I want to record the sound of your voice when you laugh and print it on a T-shirt, paint it on a wall, etch it in my brain.

Your second voice message ever said, “I liked your old answer phone ….”

I’m so, so sorry. I tried to re-re-re-re-record it like how it used to be, but it wouldn’t play right, it wasn’t the same. It was just wrong.

You told me your dog died and it made you sad. I want to buy you a dog that won’t ever, ever die. An ­immortal dog. I hate dogs; they’re smelly and ugly and they bite and they’re similar to people, but I would give you an indestructible dog. Completely in-vin-ci-ble. If I couldn’t find one, I’d build you one. I’d put my hair into a ponytail to get it out the way and then I’d build you one out of coloring pencils and the grass we sat on this afternoon and the screen of my phone when it says ONE VOICE MESSAGE.

And I said to you the other day, “I have a secret” – because I wanted to be interesting and you looked tired of me. Were you tired of me and the stupid things I was saying? I wanted to say, “Are you listening? Can I keep talking? Do you just let me bore you?”

“… And then someone said we couldn’t take the A train because it didn’t stop close enough and we’d be too cold to walk, and did you know I have a secret?”

I said it like that.

You said, “Do you?”

Do I? I nodded and bit my lip and you bit your lip and smiled, but I didn’t take any teeth away from my lips. I thought, Ugly teeth! but I still didn’t stop biting my lip until you said, “What happened with the train?”

You wanted to know what happened with the train.

And then I blinked like I’d been hit, but I’ve never been hit – you know that, I think. I might have told you that. You can’t tell – you don’t understand that flinch. It cannot be pinpointed. Still. I told you my boring, ­boring story and you asked more questions and I blinked more and more and more.

My lip hurts this morning because I woke up and there were NO MESSAGES and I chewed and chewed and blamed it on the trains and my inane rambling and secrets and other girls you prefer.

My secret is that sometimes I wonder about your lips, because I don’t really know anything about them. No, I know a little about them. For instance, the border between the lips and the surrounding skin is referred to – by whom, I don’t know – as the vermilion border. The vertical groove on the upper lip is the philtrum. The skin between the upper lip and the nose is the ergotrid.

Ergotrid – you’d like that word.

But that I could read in a book. What I just cannot pick up from a passage of writing is what your lips feel like. I can only wonder. I think they’re like the paper birds I used to make with my friends when I was small enough to believe in fairies and dreams and nightmares. And your lips are like the red flowers spilled on the floor of my apartment. And they’re like a thunderstorm that reverberates, making more-than-just-noise music, and the lightning spells out our names across the sky.

That’s what I think. People make me crazy sometimes, and I want to kiss you.

There’s a party this evening that I might not go to.

You don’t call me sometimes. I know I have to come to terms with that. That makes me laugh, coming to terms. Terms aren’t really a thing you can come to, ­arrive at. If you dissect it, it doesn’t make sense.

At this party they had fries, so I ate some because parties make me tired, and I licked all the salt off my fingers in case someone saw and thought I never washed my hands, that I was disgusting. I am disgusting. I couldn’t wash my hands right then, because you said, “Have you drunk anything?” And I said no and drove you home, and you said I was too skinny in the same way you said I read too much.

I drove you home and my car felt warmer when we talked about bees and stars and Traumatic Childhood Events. Your breath came out white and misty, exhaling phantoms to prove you weren’t a ghost.

We are both connoisseurs of road safety, or at least we like to think we are. So you only grabbed my hand and squeezed it when my car was parked nice and safe outside your building. You had such a strong grip, ­super-human strength. You’re my hero – can I kiss you? You grabbed my hand and squeezed, and I said, “What,” because I couldn’t analyze the situation and I was hoping you could shed some light. Like a butterfly shedding its cocoon.

After seven lifetimes you replied, “Nothing,” and oh, you have a lovely way with words and you’re so polite but you need to stop lying when people ask you questions, because then they try to dissect you and it doesn’t make sense, and after a while you let go and leave.

The next morning I was awake when you called ­because there are some nights when I just don’t sleep. You said you read something you liked. You wanted me to read it. We chatted on the phone and didn’t talk about it and didn’t talk about it and didn’t talk about it.

My car felt cold this morning. It just doesn’t make sense.

You said my music isn’t good enough for me, and you gave me these CDs. Lots of the songs are love songs, but then, lots of the songs in the world are love songs, so it doesn’t mean anything.

The songs you sent me catch in my throat a little, and one of them says “Don’t let go,” and it hurts that you think you have to tell me that, hurts like my lip when you don’t call.

I said to you, I liked the song, the “Don’t let go” one. And you said you liked that one because of the instrumental between the lyrics. And you never held my hand again, and I never even thought about it. But that’s okay, because I still listen to it lots and lots and lots and I don’t. I don’t let go.

I was ill today and tomorrow and the day after that. I floated around in fragments, thump-head, achy teeth, and chapped lips. My eyes felt warm and open and blurred. Resting in a bed felt like resting inside my own mouth outside my own skin and ah, my head. My skin felt like flannel and I remembered the cough syrup I should have taken.

You sent me a note to say get well soon but didn’t visit. This – this whole you-not-visiting isolation television imagination situation – this was expected. I was ready for your casual negligence; I always am. Back in my fever, my throat burns and it’s setting fire to my mind. I’ve been staying up too late. Three whole days in bed with too much sleep, and you don’t even visit. In my head, to pass time, I relive things. We dance. You grab my hand.

And then I’m better, I’ve gotten well soon like you said. I don’t smell like vomit and I’m good as new.

You say, “Oh, you’re so pale.”

I say, “I was ill,” and you nod sympathetically and you mean it, I think.

The next time my hands touched yours, you came to hang out with me for an hour or so and I wasn’t nervous but I managed to drop a plant because I’m so clumsy. On the floor was this plant, snapped and earthy and its pot was broken. We danced around it and the soil between my toes felt golden and bright, like a ­sunset.

After about an hour or so, you went to see another person, and all I know about her is she doesn’t have a silly secret about you. And she’s not pale. That’s all I know. She’s your friend. I’m the person who accidentally dropped a plant with red flowers, red flowers like my stupid secret, and it made you laugh and you said, “Let’s dance,” and I thought, Oh, so this is hanging out?

You are a catalyst, I decided. Catalysts are chemical; they are unchanged by reactions and they make things happen. They can work together with heat, or oxygen, or continuous stirring, but sometimes they will kickstart the buzzing fizzing all on their own. They don’t kill people, catalysts. Catalysts speed things up. Come on, let’s go. Let’s start. You have a lovely way with words, and you probably held your friend’s hand much tighter than mine.

You’re a catalyst.

You’re a scientist.

You’re a newly discovered vitamin pill.

You’re a start-whistle but less shrill.

You’re a solemn warrior in the dark, saying, “It begins.”

You like that movie, maybe just because I don’t, and I’m grateful for that. For disagreements, and for movies, and for vitamin C and omega-3, self-improvement programs. I’m grateful for my vitamin and mineral friends, their laughing and therapeutic conversation and, “Hey, listen to this,” like dangling by a thick, sturdy thread.

You give me a slice of cake one day, and we watch a movie and wittily disagree and don’t talk about the girl with no secrets about you. I see her again with someone else. It makes me feel refreshed and revitalized like someone in an ad with low-cholesterol and decreased heart problems. Omega-3 and vitamin C. Health food.

Even before you held my hand and then didn’t talk about it, I used a notepad and a pen to call you. I have to write down what I’ll say, how I’ll start, word for word.

Hello, you. Want to know something funny?

When I get the guts to call you, I read off a script that I’ve written, and I know you think I’m a bad actor, but that’s only because I told you I was. I said, “I’m a bad ­actor,” and you said, “So?” But it’s easier when I’ve ­written my own script. And you think how I write is pretty, so do you think what I say is pretty?

It’s quiet so I tell you I’m not cut out for this. You might not be a catalyst, sometimes my metaphors don’t translate to anything. I don’t say that last bit, so you ask, “Not cut out for what?” And I say, “Oh, sorry. Ignore me. It’s not important. Forget it.” I meant, Oh, please. Notice me. It’s important. Remember it.

Next morning, there’s ONE NEW MESSAGE and you’re saying, “Hi, how are you? Let’s meet up later.” You say that, not me. You’re a bad actor too, and you’ve never mentioned writing. Complete improvisation.

How am I? I’m fine. I’m fantastic. I’m wonder-kid with a bright red cape, with an air balloon heart and chapped lips and super-duper love, and I think a lot about words you like, whizz and November and syrup, and your grin carries me all along the phone line.

One of my orange-juice kind-face friends says I seem happier. Bubbly. I laugh because I can, and ask her if she means like froth, and she says yeah. I buy a hot coffee with lots and lots of froth and it’s warm and sweet and I called you two days ago without writing down a single thing, not a word.

I’m following your lead and improvising more and more, and we’re spending less time blinking and more time smiling, and my ugly teeth stay away from my lips; and I dare myself to give you nicknames. You say, “Hey, remember that time we danced around your red plant?”

It’s great to be your friend.

Your message this morning didn’t scare me. Nothing scares me. I’m Sonic, I’m Jonny Bravo, I’m Superman, I’m not scared of anything. You said you wanted to talk, when you know I’ll only start rambling something stupid. Do you want to hear that? You’ve heard it before. You say you just want to talk.

The sunrise this morning was so elaborate it made the sky strange and green, but it only reminded me of envy. And if the sunrise can morph itself today, then what?

I think maybe you want to tell me you’re moving away. Or you just don’t want to talk to me anymore. Or you’ve found someone; you’ve fallen in love. You just remembered that we held hands once and you’re asking me to please not tell anyone. I never ever know.

If you want to talk, I’ll buy you coffee with vanilla in it. If you like. You say you don’t want coffee, you want to talk. You want to go and buy me a scarf because I always look cold. And I blink at you and say, “I always look cold on my neck?” But what I mean is, I thought you wanted to talk?

You hold up a dark blue scarf. I like it in your hands – it looks soft, and you tell me I need to eat more. I say, “I know, I know.” You remember the time when you held my hand, and ask if I minded that. Did I mind?

And then – oh. Oh, I see.

As it happens, kissing feels like kissing, you feel like you, this feels like home.

We’re still in the scarf shop, surrounded by patchwork fabrics, and everything is suddenly easy and sweet. You’re stroking my knuckles like there’s a treasure buried just ­beneath them. There isn’t, but I don’t mind if you want to keep looking. Just in case.

You buy me the dark blue soft warm scarf and I wear it all day.



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This article has 278 comments.


on Sep. 3 2011 at 6:55 pm
ohsopoisonous GOLD, Salisbury, North Carolina
11 articles 0 photos 16 comments

Favorite Quote:
"I don't care if it hurts, I want to have control. I want a perfect body, I want a perfect soul. I want you to notice when I'm not around." -Radiohead.

I love the way you write! I always try to write like that but I can't..

Amazing, it made my heart jump a few times.(:


on Aug. 29 2011 at 7:49 am
ThePeaceDaisy BRONZE, Albany, New York
4 articles 5 photos 223 comments

Favorite Quote:
&ldquo;Laundry is the only thing that should be separated by color.&rdquo; - Unknown<br /> I will change this every week!

that was cute!!

on Jul. 30 2011 at 2:26 pm
MaggieElaine GOLD, Los Alamos, California
11 articles 0 photos 55 comments

Favorite Quote:
&quot;As I hide behind these books I read, while scribbling my poetry,<br /> like art could save a wretch like me, with some ideal ideology that no one can hope to achieve.<br /> And I am never real; it is just a sketch of me.<br /> And everything I made is trite and cheap and a waste of paint, of tape, of time.&quot; - Bright Eyes

Amazing... All I can say. <3 <3 <3 :)

on Jul. 30 2011 at 1:03 pm
Tongue_Blep PLATINUM, ????, Ohio
40 articles 1 photo 769 comments
I LOVED THE STORY!!! Great job and keep on writing!!! one of my stories was just posted. if anyone could read it that would be great. Its called: Alien Invasion Series: Book One: The Caller. just click my user name and then that story and start reading, I enjoy the comments and feedback! :)(:

wasps said...
on Jul. 30 2011 at 12:35 pm
wasps, Other
0 articles 0 photos 153 comments
Sames .... it is beautiful :) 

Emmazing GOLD said...
on Jul. 22 2011 at 3:25 pm
Emmazing GOLD, Alexandria, Virginia
18 articles 0 photos 11 comments

Favorite Quote:
I&#039;m simply complicated.

This is absolutely amazing. I love your writing style, keep it up! :)

on Jul. 21 2011 at 7:39 pm
youaretheinkandlifeisthepaper BRONZE, Houston, Texas
3 articles 0 photos 26 comments

Favorite Quote:
&quot;I want to unfold. I do not want to be folded anywhere, because there, where I am folded, I am a lie.&quot; Maggie Stiefvater

It made me cry too. Sometimes that happens when a character pulls at your heart strings in a beatiful way. Love it!

on Jul. 21 2011 at 7:12 pm
youaretheinkandlifeisthepaper BRONZE, Houston, Texas
3 articles 0 photos 26 comments

Favorite Quote:
&quot;I want to unfold. I do not want to be folded anywhere, because there, where I am folded, I am a lie.&quot; Maggie Stiefvater

Sometimes when you read something beautiful, it make you eyes sting and your arms shiver and your spine tingle. A writing style should be named after minds like yours. Can't explain how much i LOVE IT.

on Jul. 17 2011 at 11:51 am
Tongue_Blep PLATINUM, ????, Ohio
40 articles 1 photo 769 comments
I loved the story! and was impressed! Great job! (Sorry for the advertizing!) If any of u coulld read my two stories called the beast and nightstalker, that would be great! Also please post comments saying if u liked it or not. Thanks! And keep writing! :D

on Jul. 8 2011 at 5:52 pm
TheSecretWriter SILVER, Charlotte, North Carolina
5 articles 0 photos 15 comments
I love this!  I especcially love the part about the boy being a catalyst.  That is so true.

writelife GOLD said...
on Jul. 7 2011 at 10:43 pm
writelife GOLD, Whitby, Other
16 articles 0 photos 12 comments

Favorite Quote:
You can&#039;t plow a field by turning it over in your mind.

I can't tell you how many times I've read this piece. Its absolutely beautiful. You are an amazing writer

on Jun. 16 2011 at 10:57 pm
TheLemonadeCrusade SILVER, Huntersville, North Carolina
9 articles 0 photos 25 comments

Favorite Quote:
&quot;Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the whole world, and all there ever will be to know and understand&quot;

I have to say I completely admire the originality in this peice, its so individual. I absolutely loved how it wasn't a formal narrative but instrad just like reading ur exact scattered thoughts..so creative! very good work here

 


on Jun. 16 2011 at 7:13 pm
CrazyUnbreakable BRONZE, Bradenton, Florida
3 articles 0 photos 1 comment

Favorite Quote:
Alpha&#039;s are always born alpha&#039;s.

Very different. It seems as though this is your mind on a page (or 2). I've never read anything like this... ever. This should be a style of writing. Is it? It should be. Never stop... writing, I mean.

on Jun. 16 2011 at 6:56 pm
Untouchable-Summer SILVER, Cranford, New Jersey
6 articles 0 photos 86 comments

Favorite Quote:
Even the best fall down sometimes

EXACTLY what I was thinking!! I want to see so much more writing from you :) I added this to my favorites by the way:)

on May. 25 2011 at 8:59 pm
PaRaNoRmAl627 GOLD, Mountainside, New Jersey
15 articles 0 photos 296 comments

Favorite Quote:
&quot;Do what you want. If it&#039;s something you&#039;ll regret in the morning, sleep late.&quot;

^^what you said :)

depulso said...
on May. 10 2011 at 4:22 pm
depulso, Brussels, Belgium ;), Other
0 articles 0 photos 3 comments

Favorite Quote:
&quot;The moment had passed, the door between the lives we could have led and the lives we led had shut in our faces.&quot;<br /> &mdash; Nicole Krauss, The History of Love<br /> <br /> &quot;Yes, I was infatuated with you; I am still. No one has ever heightened such a keen capacity of physical sensation in me. I cut you out because I couldn&rsquo;t stand being a passing fancy. Before I give my body, I must give my thoughts, my mind, my dreams. And you weren&rsquo;t having any of those.&quot;<br /> &mdash; Sylvia Plath

I finished reading this five minutes ago and between then and now, I've been trying to think of something to say about it. I can't think of any words that could describe how amazing this is, honest. I'm so happy that there are people out there with such beautiful talent like you. In my mind I can picture everything you wrote, like a little movie, and it looks lovely. This story is so... sugary and delicate, and I love it so much. I do hope you write more.

vampier BRONZE said...
on Apr. 21 2011 at 8:49 am
vampier BRONZE, Glasgow, Kentucky
1 article 0 photos 57 comments

Favorite Quote:
&quot;my favorite thang about eating gumybares is knowing that thay wont fight you back when you bite there heads off.......!!!!!&quot;

i know were your coming from but you cat let it control you like that.....!

Luna1 SILVER said...
on Apr. 11 2011 at 7:46 pm
Luna1 SILVER, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
9 articles 0 photos 109 comments

Favorite Quote:
Bite Me

Loved it! keep writing!

on Apr. 8 2011 at 9:58 pm
SmellsLikeTeenWriter SILVER, Adel, Georgia
5 articles 20 photos 19 comments

Favorite Quote:
&quot;Hey, you know, life&rsquo;s like a bucket of wood shavings. Except for when the shavings are in a pail- then it&rsquo;s like a pail of wood shavings.&quot; -Spongebob Squarepants

I think this story is sort of great.

No, really great!

Reminds me a little of The Catcher in the Rye.

Keep up the good work :)


on Mar. 27 2011 at 11:27 am
NotJeneric BRONZE, Plymouth, Michigan
4 articles 0 photos 9 comments

Favorite Quote:
&quot;Don&#039;t cry because it&#039;s over, smile because it happened.&quot;<br /> ~Dr Seuss

me too!!!!!