Posts in Emma Suzanne
Resentment: Emma Suzanne

01. Writer

Emma Suzanne


02. Theme

Resentment


03. MUSIC INSPIRATION

RJD2:
Seven Light Years (Instrumental)


04. WRITING

The world

We are all equal. 

“Don’t be a victim”, he told her. “You are not different. It’s not part of your identity.  Your identity is a personality, not some hardship.  Your identity is your choice.”

She heard these words.  In English. It was more difficult for her to understand compared to her native tongue, but she understood the meaning.  She felt shame. 

A choice, she pondered, and her mind drifted back to a summer in her childhood, before choices began.  The sound of cicadas roared from the forests surrounding the rice farms.  The smell of mosquito coils registered the season in her mind, and that was her only world then.  This was before she would enter “the world”.  Back then, she could search for pill bugs in the back garden, wander through bamboo groves, play on the steps of the small shrine.  Then, she simply felt what she felt.  In her mind, that was who she was.  Her identity was what she had felt - what came to her naturally.  She had let it all happen that way.  She simply saw the world, and she had let other souls see her back.  Judgement had no necessity, but then “the world” came to meet her and tell her otherwise. 

“Your identity is your choice.” His words rang in her ears again.  When did choices become so rigid? Moisture pooled in her tear ducts. His explanation seemed to make sense enough logically. If she chooses to hang onto that feeling, to embrace any part of it, it is her choice. That much is true.  Yet, it will hurt her.  Voluntarily, she thought, confused.  The logic did not falter. She does have a choice; she has a way out.  Therefore, all responsibility falls completely on her. 

That moment - the one where she felt shame – the brief second when she allowed someone to tell her who she is or isn’t – that moment never actually stuck. For good or for bad, though, she had listened. Damn it, she had listened. And, in some way, she even wanted to believe it, to be empowered by it (empowered?).  

It changed her. Well, no, her heart couldn’t quite detach from herself, but facing shame was not an option either.  She decided to pretend. She was clever enough to pass the tests, and then careful enough to pass as one of them.  She styled her hair just so; wore fitted suits to work. five-centimeter heels, no less, no more.  She always spoke their language.  She wouldn’t let them believe she had ever known another language. 

So she was equal.  She was one of them. Well, she could fool anyone into thinking so. 

After she got home though, she closed the door and opened the closet; she changed her clothes. She could breathe this way.  For a while, this made her just okay.  She was okay but lonely.  Then, however, she learned there were others, other pretenders. 

She went to them. They gathered in dark spaces after most people went to bed. They opened up their souls and spoke their condemned language. They wore familiar costumes.  They let themselves be the minority, even the minority within the minority. They kissed each other. A place where being different was ok.  

In these shadows, she found some joy. She found someone to love, and one who could love her real self. Somehow, this captured that girl on the shrine steps playing with pill bugs.  She knew the remnants of her identity could be boarded up in this relationship and remain somewhat alive.

“You are not different.” She still heard, as the day broke. She heard it from her friends, even. From their spouses and parents. From her colleagues.  Go with the flow of everyone.  Assimilate. She worried that the cracks were exposing her.  Have they noticed?  Why do they assume?  She worked harder to hide it.  She separated her worlds.  

She guarded her private spaces. Her only joys. She would never let them know. Even though she saw others talk openly about their attachments and joys - the sanctioned ones.  Even though she sometimes forgot that she was any different.  Her life seemed to have become just as steady and familiar as the model life.  But no, she thought.  To do the same as them would expose her.  She would become an identity.  It was better to keep the label hidden.  She would keep it to herself.  She would keep all of it from “the world”. 

And every day, for leverage, she crossed over into it, “the world”.  She pondered again the idea of having a membership to it. Yes. She thought.  I’m not different.  I’m just as equal as every other.  This is a community, and membership comes at a price.  Being different is not an identity.  It’s just a side hobby I can manage in the shadows. That is all it is, which is keeping me living, just a personal hobby that no one needs to know about.  Differences don’t exist.  We just merely have personal lives.  That’s it.

So then life pushed on, heavy with irony, as she went through every next step, every natural phase of the world.  “I’m not different”, she thought, when she marked ‘single’ on her tax returns.  “Not different,” every time she used an initial for her name on a resume.  “Not different,” when she slipped her passport into her pocket for a jog in the neighborhood. 

“Not different” as she read the reviews and comments of her work, 

as she didn’t bother correcting the way they referred to her.  

“It’s not my identity,” she told herself, every time she let others assume - incorrectly - what she went home to. “It’s not about my personal life,” she would divert. That doesn’t set her apart.   We humans are all the same.  We are equal and no one treats us differently.  

“It’s nobody’s business,” she decided. 

But would we really be so surprised
if she ever felt

Resentment? 



Flow: Emma Suzanne

01. Writer

Emma Suzanne


02. Theme

Flow


03. MUSIC INSPIRATION

Pinback:
How We Breathe


04. WRITING

Assume there is a natural pull
gravity,
a goal,
a determined order of events

Collected momentum, 
advance
Obstacles, don’t mind.

Just keep on with it, 
travel
path of least resistance

You’re a movement
of liquid 
or air 
A stream of sound

An excuse for the general 
way
that things will unfold

All things go with you
at times
when it feels right

You keep things alive
working and thinking 
breaking, gliding

Emotions, 
the faster you go

Move to a beat
A gush
A breeze

You’re unstoppable 
Do it.

Distant: Emma Suzanne

01. Writer

Emma Suzanne


02. Theme

Distant


03. MUSIC INSPIRATION

Parov Stelar
feat. Lilja Bloom:
Coco


04. WRITING

An important relationship

Away
That’s you
Far, as in a place
but now also distant
in heart.

Distant,
but distinct.

I don’t resent you
We finally
learned to keep our distance
Still
there's meaning

I remember a time I longed for you
A painful yearning
On the banks of the Arakawa
looking out beyond
where the highway separates
the Naka river from the main
A small island of concrete
in the lapping ripples
The sea river

And I felt the pain
Pain from confusion
At times, intense
Other times distant

It lapped
up and down like the waves
But indeed
a constant tugging on the heart
that admittedly,
took a long time to settle

And before that
The time I met you
when curiosities unfolded

The time I knew you
The bond we formed
Something lost, connected.
A surging, dangerous river
The time I had you.
My soul, unashamed
A slippery animal

We never admitted
The depth of what we forged
Guilt
made it deeper
Maybe

The responsibility we never took

Distance.
The inevitable
that would separate our mess
Our only reprieve
The way out.  

Yet oceans between us
was little relief
from all
that we failed to sort out 

For you too?
I wondered
It pulled on you too
Hesitation
Persistence

But the purpose of us
wasn’t for each other

You unraveled me.
A catalyst, you were 

The waves they rocked
So close to the edge
Only the distance would tell

Make it more distant
the bank
from the waterline

A river calmed. 

Distance is time
Distance is learning
Distance achieved,
Wisdom.

I’m grateful.
I won’t forget. 

Now
even if made possible
our interactions
are all spent

We only exist in thoughts
Recollections. 

An untraditional, but
important relationship.