Tag: metaphor

  • Cathedral Nouveau

    “Cathedral Nouveau,” 2023, cropped. Watercolor and ink on paper.

    Just before dawn, an owl flew right up to the towering pane of stained glass and scraped the soldering with its talons. It crashed into the pane again and again, whilst the glow from behind the opaque window set fire to the bird’s eyes. As its shrill echoed off of great stone walls, the patron saints below watched the tired owl perch on the ledge and wondered,

    Why does a creature of the night

    slam up against the light?

    And as the saints crossed the threshold, past the doors of mahogany and iron, the owl descended. She tore the gold tassels from a banner, and tied them around her neck in a delicate knot. She cracked her beak into the wooden barriers, as if to knock them down.

    When the doors opened, she looked up at the man in the white robe and gold tassels with those burning eyes. The saint paused for a moment, then reached into his satchel. He leaned down, biscuit in hand, gently offered the bird reprieve for her strange arrival, and returned to the nave with the doors closed firmly behind him.

    The owl hurled herself into the air, those metallic strands loosening as she traced the perimeter of the cathedral. She scanned the structure from all sides, observing it like liturgy she could either bury herself in or burn. The tassels released themselves from her plumage and were tossed away in the cool air as first light broke, and her molten watch met the wrought iron cage of the aviary.

    A falcon, adorned with a leather harness and a capsule for a scroll, perched inside the dome with icy eyes fixed on the owl as she circled. The owl landed at the foot of the door to the aviary and knocked her beak into the gateway once again.

    A bird handler opened the door and watched silently as the owl walked herself past her feet, through the vestibule, beneath the falcon’s perch,

    and found herself an inkwell.

    _____

    Today, I was about to submit my application to the University of Missouri as a first-time, first-generation student. I wrote a free choice mini essay fully confident that option was my ticket, just to reach the ‘submit’ button with an error essentially telling me, “You still don’t fit into any of our boxes.

    You’ll have to try another way.

    Without rattling off the growing list of systemic barriers I have encountered trying to reach higher education, under survival conditions and finally not, I am unaccepting of being disallowed access to opportunity that the outside world insists on repeat I belong in.

    For the first time, I’ll agree with you openly.

    And for that reason, I have to play the game this time, but once I’m in through the side door, I’m going to highlight every crack I fell through that people with less of a vengeance might just submit to, and challenge them.

    Of course I don’t jive with boxes- I’ve been sharpened.

    And so, since my little admissions essay has been rendered obsolete, yet remains relevant to future posts I still have living in my drafts, here is a piece of The Microcosm.

    _____

    “Please see me as who I am, and not who you think I am.”  

    I mixed another three parts paint, one part mineral spirits in my cup and continued painting the bands of malachite over my old van. I ignored the drips of ultramarine on my running boards as I covered the grey that was singed with rising rust. My hands did not stop buzzing for minutes after grinding the rot away from behind my taillight lenses, and the 1985 small block Chevy looked ready for the scrap yard with the grill removed in preparation to be sprayed black.   

    Over the 68 hours inside of two weeks it took me to paint a classic, I remembered my nights parking on the streets of Louisville years before. Neighbors would call the police periodically, and I’d answer that dreaded knock on my side doors with a contained “Good evening, officer.” And I recall that each time, there was a micro pause before they spoke, and a softening in their posture as they looked at me and my warmly decorated interior. The dark air would move from enforcement to, “What’s the story here?”  

    I taped a handwritten sign to my windshield when I was out in public during the transformation process that read,  

    “Sorry for my mess. I’m going to be a mural.”  

    To an audience of one.  

    When I was finally finished, with likely one of the most unmistakable vehicles on this side of the New Madrid faultline, my own presence changed. Where I once kept my head down walking into the grocery store, I now turned back occasionally to admire my labor and sometimes noticed another taking a look from across the parking lot.   

    And sometimes still, they take two and they say,

    “Hold on. I have to meet this person.”

  • Take a Look at Yourself in the Sword

    Before I can finish writing the story of another, I have to look at something about my own.

    Photo © Tristan Sheldon

    One day, when I was in elementary school, Papa took me to the park. I was spinning the faces of the tick-tack-toe game on the playground by myself when another little girl came up to me and asked what I was doing.

    “Does it matter to you?” I snapped.

    She looked at me with complete paralysis for a long moment, and then ran away. Papa heard the whole thing. He marched across the mulch and lectured me about how incredibly unkind I was, and made me apologize to her on the spot.

    I remembered how badly I wanted to be one of the popular girls I admired in school. I connected that with how unwelcome they made me feel, and so I tried on that behavior for myself that day.

    That was the first and the final time I tried to become someone I was not.

    That memory stands out more vividly than most from that time period. And although I can’t be sure, I believe Papa’s quick motion to step toward my hurtful response, and forcing me to correct it on the spot, played a major role in me learning to both self-analyze and adapt reflexively.

    He taught me to watch for my impact on others before my parents had the opportunity to poison my self-awareness with permanent doubt.

    To the point that I started to turn that reflective surface back at them. I would narrate all of the ways they caused my siblings and I harm, and hoped they would be invested in correcting it the way I was taught to when I misstepped.

    But it was intolerable to them, and I was punished for then seeking the right thing.

    How disorienting.

    _____

    If someone was to say to you that they could see right through you,

    what is the first thought that comes up for you?

    That it’s some woo-woo shit?

    Does it make you want to back away?

    Are you curious about what they may perceive?

    Could you then explain why?

    Because the children of people who could not look at themselves, because they would not survive the clear image if they did, are forced to adapt in one of two ways:

    Look away, from both the behavior that hurts them, and themselves,

    or look closer.

    And oh, how has choosing the latter both saved me,

    and devastated me.

    _____

    I had to step back from someone important to me, again.

    I do this a lot, and it’s almost always once I see that someone isn’t moving in a way that parallels their words.

    And people do this a lot.

    “I want this,” -> I will choose not to act on that right now.

    “You’re so smart,” -> I will respond negatively to you not taking my advice.

    “I’m a good person,” -> I will communicate to others that you are not.

    And the space between,

    is where I draw my sword.

    I had to learn sensitivity to behavioral patterns when I was so young in order to not lose my grip on what the truth was, and to predict the reactions of people that should have been a safe harbor.

    Only recently have I learned that this sense can be used to recognize friends, too.

    And so in spaces where I used to swing that blade at anyone who moved,

    I just hold it up quietly and let them show me who they are.

    And because the sword has two faces,

    they see their reflection,

    and I see mine.

    And no matter how they choose to respond to their own clear image,

    I never lose me,

    even if I have to stand with only her for a while.

  • In Pursuit of Paradox

    I was driving home from work last week on an evening with one of the more saturated sunsets I’ve seen in my life- violet clouds singed with orange, crepuscular rays streaming upward as if God was about to make an otherworldly announcement.

    The clouds then took on a strange, hazy filter until I traced the smoke line to a structure fire just off of an exit ramp. The flames reached up above the trees, and the strobe of a battalion of fire engines evoked the feeling of emergency in me. I’ve seen my home burn before, had police and paramedics called to the house I lived in in high school more than once; the urgency and grief in the visual leaked back in like time travel. Yet as the scene came and went out of the passenger side of my van, I just looked back to the road ahead and said,

    “Ah, Paradox.”

    _____

    Labelling myself as a survivor doesn’t sit correctly. As I get further away from history, observer suits me more. It removes me from unwilling participant to autonomous documentarian. Where my focus was once on understanding how things happened, and why they did, I’ve begun to develop the ability to just look at what is happening with no need to understand simply because it no longer threatens me.

    And somehow, I understand it more only then.

    This year, I found a system of support that has provided me with safety for long enough that I have been able to spend less cognitive energy on acute problem-solving, and more on what my mind was built for. I’ve finally felt the ability to rest, and my body thanked me by nearly collapsing completely once we no longer had anything to run from. My most inconsistent and lackluster season has become the most affirming of purpose.

    _____

    I used to equate praise with safety, and silence with rejection. I have been surrounded by silence- like enemy forces closing in with no intent to ever strike, or ever allow me to flee. Praise was the breadcrumb, and Silence was overlord of acceptance that struck the gavel every time I spoke.

    I’ve since learned Praise is often a cheapskate, and Silence is seldom brave.

    _____

    Papa, my maternal grandfather whom I recognize as my true parent, passed away before I had the grounding to ask him the questions I really needed to. He often attributed weakness to my thoughtfulness. Accepted only tangible gain as growth. Did not understand why I enjoyed running in the nature of his farm most when I listened to music instead of birdsong, and yelled at me to take off my headphones. Did not support my athletic drive until I broke a record.

    And given the dysfunction of the family system on a broad scale, I have been left to wonder how much of his love was limited by generational difference, or a need for power and control. If my love for him was a projection of what I so dearly wanted him to see in me, because it wasn’t being accepted by either of us. Or, if it was because I saw in him its source.

    And Paradox says,

    “Yes.”

    _____

    For some reason,

    Silence has entered the room with Invitation lately.

    Someone I have long admired, someone I perceived as above me, meeting me and saying,

    “I have so many questions,” with enthusiasm.

    People who have perceived me as intense, or at least met me with no reply to my casual, loaded comments, coming back to me with paragraphs of their own deeper experience, unprompted.

    People becoming warmer to me the more I dare speak, suddenly.

    And between the extremes of I don’t see you, and I’m listening,

    sits Paradox, as mediator- not judge, but arbiter.

    And when I say, “I don’t know how to feel. I don’t know what the truth is.”

    Paradox says,

    “Yes.”

    And so it is settled.

  • Reactor No. 4

    People like me aren’t supposed to make it in this sport.

    A single alarm rang out in that hallway as I put my kit on. It had been sounding for over a month, but I had to keep moving.

    This is what I do. This is who I am. This is where I want to be.

    Mile 3. The sun at high noon was punching down again. I was punching through the gears on a bike that didn’t really want to stay in any of them. The ghost in my shifter was pushing back worse that day, but I just shook my head. My legs were heavy, my mind was heavier, and the expectation of what more it was going to take to reach stability was becoming a team lift.

    Suddenly, I heard more alarms. The control room decided to turn right and head back home when we would normally proceed left. I exited the trail at a traffic light and sought to power down at only mile 9 at a coffee shop.

    I never have everything I need, but I can’t quit. I have to move forward.

    The lights in the control room turned red. I started to flip switches and seek outside support.

    I have help. This isn’t as out-of-control as it seems.

    Three miles to get home, and then I could just try to breathe. But as I slowed down, the output was still climbing. I dragged myself up a sustained but shallow paved climb and begged myself not to stop in the middle of it. I got home, had a quick chat with a veteran in this field (whom we call “Coach”), and pulled out all of the control rods to bring myself back to baseline.

    This too shall pass.

    And then I melted down. All of the variables that had been wobbling for months came to blows and the control room abandoned ship.

    The alarms all screamed in an ominous choir as the hallway filled with shouting I’ve heard before.

    Pathetic. You’re kidding yourself. This was always going to happen. You’re too flawed. You’re not safe.

    I made my way out and watched the walls of the powerful yet supremely fragile system I had built yell back,

    I warned you.

    I was unable to focus on anything else for the rest of the day. All I could hear were the echos of those alarms reminding me, again- you do not have enough.

    _____

    I am standing here staring at the graphite all over my roof.

    As much as the bike gives me power in this life, I keep trying to leave all of the external factors that don’t suit the mission at the door when I swing a leg over. The internals are meticulously maintained and observed with a critical eye, so I’m still the one in control, right?

    It doesn’t really work that way. It hasn’t yet mattered how finely tuned my interoception becomes; the world I inhabit does not reflect it.

    And that defies the very ethos of ‘I will the machine.‘ It takes the sacredness of my autonomy and hands it back broken, with a card that says “Get well soon,” with not even a signature.

    The shrapnel I’m feeling didn’t lodge itself in my flesh just from an acutely difficult summer, though. It’s sourced from when the reactor was built, left under-resourced, unsupported, its faults neglected- a life with parents that sought compliance even when they were wrong, a societal system that gaslights the unfortunate by preaching they can just work their way out, and a social structure that absolutely cannot sit comfortably with a truth-teller.

    People like me aren’t supposed to make it in this sport; we’re supposed to be realistic. Keep our heads down and sacrifice ourselves for the optics. Spit-shine shoes. Don’t cause a scene because you’ll do anything if you want something badly enough.

    Because if we don’t, we have to push ourselves beyond our physical and psychological limits, alone, in ways that are detrimental even to those without complex trauma.

    And perhaps the most impossible mechanic of it all is

    I just wasn’t built to be contained.

  • Projection, Your Honor (Pt. II)

    If you don’t like the image of yourself in the mirror, then you aren’t going to like me going to like you.

    “Blind Justice”. Photo © Ben Creasy

    The court will recall that this trial is ongoing.

    _____

    Statement of RecordDisrepair Service

    I was racing with an organized amateur cycling team in Kentucky when the head mechanic of our shop sponsor suggested getting me a job there. They said a female presence would be great for business.

    They insisted.

    They were exuberant, supportive, and witty at races and practices. They were the first point-of-contact when any of us needed parts, advice, or a fix. They remembered my name was spelled with a ‘G.’ They recognized my potential, and thought I’d be a good fit.

    Once I was hired, they rarely ever said my name correctly again.

    They nicknamed me “Gina” (hard ‘I’), and regularly addressed me as “Snatch.”

    No can do, mate.

    I quickly requested that they just call me Genna, or ‘G.’ They flinched a little.

    “I was just playing with you,” they said, but obliged anyway. Our rapport seemed to return to normal.

    One day, I went into work with a finely-striped, red, white, and blue shirt. They said “You’re patriotic today.” They would regularly comment on my clothing choices and accessories in a way that was… specific.

    They are paying a lot of attention to me.

    I still have that shirt, and never wear it without remembering this minor interaction.

    Inevitably, their jokes continued. I started to vocalize this pattern to everyone else in the shop. Most of them said “Yeah, they’re like that.”

    Another said “Yeah… they’re like that.” This person and I soon learned that we could communicate through eye-contact alone. I noticed the head mechanic’s behavior would escalate when this person was gone. After this mirror, I asked the owner to meet in confidence, and explained my discomfort with the head mechanic’s behavior. “I’ve already told them myself that I don’t like this kind of “humor,” I said.

    “I’ll talk to them,” they assured me.

    The behavior continued over the days to follow, so I went to the office again.

    “I don’t know what happened to you in your past, but you need to work on not being so sensitive,” the owner said.

    Irrelevant.

    One day, the head mechanic walked from the repair area to the retail store, where I was, with a box labelled with the ‘Spank’ brand-name. They wrote “dat ass” underneath it, and presented it in front of me… and a customer.

    Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, take a moment to chuckle, gag, or whatever else that incites.

    That’s funny on it’s surface, but not in its purpose.

    I immediately walked back into the owner’s office with no more reservation.

    “If there are not going to be consequences for their behavior, then I need to leave,” I announced.

    “Okay,” they said, staring blankly at me.

    That’s… it?

    And so, the evening after I walked out, I made a Facebook post outlining the experience I had behind the scenes while the world went on expressing appreciation for “friendly support and good deals” out the front. The owner called me and left a voicemail telling me to take the post down,

    and the head mechanic sent me a long, incoherent text threatening to kill themselves.

    I call a witness to the stand.

    For weeks, at least, another person in the local bike community sent me various posts through Instagram DM. They trended either thought-provoking, or funny. But, they were only posts, not actual messages, and there were no recurrent themes or patterns between them that I could determine. I ignored them.

    You’re going to have to tell me why you’re here.

    It continued. Sporadically, and quietly. It didn’t increase, nor taper.

    One evening, I finally replied out of sheer lonliness. And without much ado, they began to explain that they had heard about my falling out with that shop. They also told me that this head mechanic had called other shops in the area in the aftermath, warning them all not to hire me. I caused drama.

    And this person just… didn’t buy it.

    They sent me a document they had found. A record.

    A criminal record. One count of domestic assault, another of impersonating a peace officer. They were on parole.

    I got word that this mechanic incurred a divorce, lost custody of their young child, and moved to Alaska in the years to follow.

    The individual who believed me is now one of the most important people in my life.

    Final observation: Combustible material incorrectly labelled as irritant. Please avoid the area.

    _____

    Final Statement of Record: A Quandary

    Previously submitted documentation- If You Can’t Say Something Honest

    For those members of the jury who were not present for prior testimony:

    This individual reached out to me about this blog as a resonant reader. We developed a rapid connection, but through admission delayed until after I began to ask questions, I came to learn this person was perusing divorce but still living with their spouse. Throughout my life I had learned to anticipate “the catch” when finding a job opportunity, love interest, or means of assistance that seemed too good to be true. I noticed a subtle side-stepping of boundaries, omission where words should have provided clarity, and an enthusiasm that did not match the realism of the situation.

    I told them I was no longer willing to participate, and wished them well.

    The silence to follow didn’t sit the way it usually does.

    As I’ve demonstrated, I will walk away. I don’t fight, I don’t defend, and I don’t refute. I let people show me who they are, and collect my evidence over time. If something doesn’t sit right, I don’t respond right away- I just start watching.

    The body knows it first. I trust it, so when I felt it start to shut this person out, I didn’t interrogate it any further.

    But oh, how I interrogated me.

    In these circumstances, the stages of detaching are grief, but also…

    satisfaction. I’ve stood up for myself even at a cost.

    I didn’t get either this time. Actually, I received this soft- featherlike tap on my shoulder that suggested that the cost here might not be just temporary discomfort.

    They didn’t intend to hurt me.

    Stay with me. This isn’t enough.

    But I asked if they would be open to a phone call. They said yes. I asked when. They said as soon as possible.

    During that call, any emphasis on “intent” I made certain to steer back to “impact.” And while we were examining that together, they told me they felt “burned at the stake,” by what I wrote about them, but also,

    “You’re right.”

    Not submissively. Not to please me. It was a realization of effect.

    They proceeded to open up to me, sincerely rather than performatively (the difference here can be heard), about everything they were trying to manage all at once while feeling trapped. Decisions cause ripples. Honesty is not a sterile procedure no matter how hard I have tried to make it one.

    They said “You’re intense, so intense,” but also

    I still want to be close to this.

    Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, most people run from me. They fight, tell me I’m the problem, or disappear, all for using my words to narrate their behavior back to them. They rarely stay long enough to understand that on the other side of the scale is a quieter humanity that just wants to not be lied to anymore.

    But here on the phone was not another person who was trying to hide themselves, but was weighing the cost of exposure in a period of major overwhelm and overlooking the impact of omission entirely.

    I want to allow people to be different from those I have known.

    And so, I walked back. Not with erasure of the problem, but with agency over what I was willing to accept circumstantially. I rendered verdict because I was uncomfortable with things that were absolute red flags, but then I asked mewhy?”

    And I asked them, “why?”

    And the fog lifted.

    Protection, Your Honor.

    Final observation: Ongoing.

    But, there’s one more thing.

    There’s someone in the jury who knows something.

    Is it you?

    Will you take the stand?

    Will you look yourself in the eyes?

    And will you lower your shield?

    Or will you raise your sword?

    _____

    I rest my case.

  • Projection, Your Honor

    Learning to Trust the Part of You that Knows

    This passage is dedicated to those who have experienced relational dynamics where you felt lost. While you read, I hope you will listen first to that feeling in your core, and then watch for the moment where reason overlaps.

    Or doesn’t.

    And then let that have the floor.

    To follow is a series of cases in my life where I have understood the language of the subconscious. The defense may argue some of these as trivial, but let me insist- the undercurrent of plausible deniability is where the deceptive get to hide from their charges.

    _____

    My mother, on her way to blindness, unwittingly taught me how to see. I am so insistent on accuracy with my language now because I made a thousand pit maneuvers to try to get her to understand me. Now I know a thousand different sentences to say the same thing at any given time.

    I searched for the words to say “will you please be here with me, even if only for a minute?” She would be silent. Sometimes, she would narrow her eyes and just glare at me. Others, she would sigh loudly or directly assault my bids for presence and reflection with “you, you, you.” Like I was the assailant. Like I was asking the impossible of her. Like I was demanding for her to call a version of herself from another dimension to observe us in the third person.

    Actually… I was. On every plane, she would have to have a seat with herself in order to have one with me.

    Not only could she not, but there was no alternative because I could. And the deliberation went on like a spiral; because I was asking too much of her wanting her to acknowledge the ways she avoided responsibility at ALL costs, but would feign compassion with “I didn’t know you felt that way,” when a family counselor was in the living room. The more I asked “Can we acknowledge this?” the louder her behavior shrieked “How dare you ask!”

    In my sentencing, I have by some alchemy integrated the testimony of that pain, and know one thing- if what someone says is disorienting, you can find the truth in what they aren’t saying, or in the part of you that flinches at what they are. It is so quiet, but it’s there. Once you see it, it transcends. Are you still here? Have I lost you? Please don’t worry, I’ll explain:

    _____

    Statement of RecordBuilder of the Fourth Wall

    When I moved here a little over a year ago, I had followed someone high-profile in the local cycling community on Instagram. I had intended on reaching out directly to ride together later because we had a lot in common. When I got around to doing that, I saw I had been blocked. I had never had a single conversation or encounter with this person, so I was puzzled. I explained this result to a mutual friend who had encouraged reaching out, but was met with little comment.

    Weird, but oh well.

    Encounter #1– Weeks later, this person approached me at a race. They asked if I was Genna, and if I was racing that day. I told them I wasn’t- that I was opting to stay fresh for an ultra race the following weekend. They said “Oh, you’re doing that on those tires?”

    Wait, what?

    “Yeah,” I stated. “My frame doesn’t accommodate wider, unfortunately.” They responded by insisting that I should run wider, and that I could borrow their bike.

    This is a wild course-correction from blocking me.

    I thanked them, but declined. We parted ways and I said, “It’s nice to finally meet you.” They said, “It’s nice to meet you… finally.”

    Nothing about that interaction was natural. That was uncomfortable.

    Encounter #2– After the start of the race, I drove to the aid station I was working. My best friend was in town from out-of-state and hung out with me and one other volunteer for hours that afternoon. Eventually, this individual, our mutual friend, and another mutual friend all rolled into the aid station as a trio. The mutual friends stood at the table and talked to us, but this individual kept wide physical distance from me and didn’t make eye contact with me once.

    Okay. Maybe they’re struggling today? But that would generally just look like weariness, not evasion.

    My best friend, with very minimal context, saw exactly what I did.

    Encounter #3– I didn’t see them again until the next race. We were both on the line this time, but racing different distances. My new boyfriend was standing next to me when this individual left their group to come over to us, and asked me if I was nervous. “Actually, yeah,” I said.

    “Oh, there is no reason to be nervous,” they said.

    The words were kind, if we are being completely objective. But the delivery was subtly condescending. My boyfriend saw it too. It was here that my thoughts and the feeling in my body eclipsed.

    This person isn’t saying what they mean.

    Encounter #4– Not long after the start of the race, I had found myself settling in solo for a really long day. This person came up from behind me, again alone, and asked “Are you watching your heart rate?”

    By this point, I was no longer open to further interaction with this person. They kept approaching me in this interrogative way. No real warmth, just like they were keeping tabs on me and attempting to ascertain dominance in the most underhanded way possible. But all I said was, and I’m not paraphrasing- “I don’t need your advice. I know what I’m doing.” No inflection, no emotion, just dry. It was automatic. I wanted to turn this off without theatrics, because I didn’t like any of it.

    Their jaw dropped. They fell back for a few minutes and I thought the interaction was done, but they came flying back past me, yelling “I wasn’t trying to give you advice, I was trying to be nice!”

    Nothing about that felt nice.

    There was also that delay. Not responding on-scene, instead dropping back to then come by me again, felt like when the GPS says “recalculating,” and has to pause to find a new route.

    Our mutual friend was the race organizer. I later heard that this person went back to them crying, and expressing how mean I was.

    Encounter #5– The next day, I was still feeling this behavior in my gut. Had it stopped after I told them “I don’t want your advice,” I would have left it alone. But the “I was trying to be nice,” spit like venom, was the incongruence between words and behavior that I had been feeling. As you can clearly tell, I am not a passive communicator. If there is a problem, and I feel it’s worth addressing, I go to its heart. I bring what’s uncomfortable into light. So, I sent them a stern but deathly accurate Facebook message (where I had not been blocked, yet) about how their approaches and use of language had made me incredibly uncomfortable. I twice referenced the blocking in those messages because it was too big of a paradox to write off.

    I was promptly high-roaded. Their responses were brimming with “The world isn’t out to get you. I’m a great person. I even offered you my bike. We need to support each other and embrace our differences. You’re the problem, not me.”

    But what did they not say? “I hate that this was misunderstood. Let’s talk about it.” There was no open door to real conversation here. There was no intent to understand. I did go in pointed, and I did so because I trusted my perception that this was not actually misunderstanding- it was design. Even with my edge, though, I asked the question “Can you at least understand why I took it that way?” A person who is interested in repairing after conflict is going to at least try to appeal to that question. Instead, I was met with blame. And the blocking? Completely ignored, both times I mentioned it.

    The next day, our mutual friend (who had been a huge support to me while I navigated a lot of struggle, and had even shown me the skeletons in their closet) called me and asked “What’s up?”

    “Not much, what about you?” I said.

    “I’m done doing you favors. I saw your messages to them. I understand now why everyone thinks you’re a bitch,” they said, coldly. They didn’t even ask me to explain myself.

    “Okay…” I said. I did not argue.

    My boyfriend was beside me on the couch when I got that call. He heard it too, and while I was sitting in shock, he was furious that I wasn’t given an opportunity to tell them my side of the story. But I already knew it didn’t matter.

    They didn’t care.

    They chose allegiance and bias over “drama.” Because on a surface-level account, I had looked like the aggressor- that is the foundation that was already laid. This person had only ever spoken to me in isolation or in sight of my friends. And they validated that I was seeing it clearly because it was off for them too. The one encounter we had where both of our circles were present, this individual acted like I didn’t exist. Because they knew, too, that they would have had to change their tone.

    I have not had interaction with this person since. I had to create all-new social media accounts recently because I got locked out of my old ones, and I noticed that they promptly blocked me on all three of those, too. They couldn’t just ignore me- they had to erase me. It still is all a game of optics- of yelling “kindness!” but whispering “I don’t want you here,” and expecting me not to respond. Because in the silence, they conceal.

    They were trying to fly under the radar by employing calculated moves that would make me look like the “problem” if I called it out. I chose to anyway. They were playing social checkers, and I wasn’t playing at all.

    Final observation: The mask slipped under questioning. Observe.

    _____

    Statement of RecordThe Masked Horseman

    For two and a half years, I worked as a farm hand for a private equestrian facility- hired by the owners, but answering to the trainer. I had been living in another state when I found the opening online and thought “eureka!” I worked a trial weekend for them at a show an hour from home, and by the next weekend I was moving.

    I must have really made an impression for them to hire me from this far away.

    I was in paradise. I had my hands full of personal dramas but my job was a rugged, sweaty dream. I could never strike a social rhythm with my trainer through the stall bars as we forked s*** into a manure spreader, at least not the way most others were, but I wrote it off.

    I’ve been told I’m unreadable, so they might just not understand me.

    Over that year, there was a repeated discourse about how none of the grooms she personally hired to travel to shows with her ever lasted. Those individuals would share with me how the trainer “was more intense,” in those environments, but also that “they are just under a lot of pressure.” I was the one who held down the fort when everyone was gone, so I was only ever the observer. The revolving door of grooms was well-maintained, and so was the looped recording of “you just can’t find good help anymore.”

    My own experience was less than noteworthy (usually). I had noticed that this trainer would ask for the same task to be done one way, then another, and then a third. I would ask for confirmation on everything to suit their very particular style, but rolled with all of it with neutrality.

    Then, moving into my second autumn there, a newer coworker who was also very point-and-shoot, but more placid, began to vent her frustrations about the trainer’s unstable directions. We both acknowledged the same feeling- that they were never happy with any job. Not long after, the trainer then asked me “does something seem off with them?” I told them that this coworker had recently shared some medical concerns that were weighing more than usual, and left it there. The trainer hung on that for a minute.

    I don’t trust your intent with that question.

    Soon, the trainer asked to speak to me privately and began to critique me on how I had been slacking off, yet also how they “saw so much potential in me.” I followed my usual code- you’ve got it, boss. I’ll fix it.

    Come January, the trainer shipped the show horses, themselves, and a groom to southern Florida, 1200 miles away. That same week, I got a call from them.

    “Can you come down? My other groom walked off.”

    “I’m game, but I need two days to get down there,” I said. They agreed, and gave me the rundown of expectations:

    “I’ll still find a third person so you can have two days off. Afternoons are wrapped up around 3:00-3:30.”

    These terms sounded fair. Early mornings, long days, but I could still get my coach-led bike workouts done in the evenings, and I’d have a place to park my van and shower. I accepted.

    “Okay. I expect perfection,” they said.

    I don’t think they mean that.

    By request, I made sure my coworker was comfortable handling the rest of the barn solo for the two months that I would be gone. They confirmed, and by the evening I was prepping the van for the haul from bitter Missouri to sunny Florida.

    When I got there, it was business immediately. Hustle, think fast. Learn fast. “You better have this done when I get back.” Learn faster.I already showed you that.” Constant manic phone calls asking where I was. “You have to watch the live show grounds schedule and anticipate where I need you, and when.” Walk faster. No, RUN. “We should be done by 6:00p.m., but also you’re on night-check tonight.” Do this faster, but also be perfect.

    I had one day off, and worked 60 hours that one week for $700. I still got on the bike, pre-steamed. The third groom? An attempt was made to hire one, but then the trainer said “I think we’ll be fine.”

    Week two. I texted the trainer and asked if they had a minute to talk. I walked out to the arena where they were riding, and they came over to me.

    Ladies and gentlemen of the jury. I ask you to imagine yourself, with all of the outlined expectations for your job completely blown apart, approaching a person that already has power over your accommodations and your income while 16 hours from home, while they literally sit on their high horse. Additionally, I want you to try to imagine this person observably, however infinitesimally, somehow cowering to you.

    They don’t like this.

    However, all I said was that I needed my schedule there to more closely resemble the one they had described on the phone. My own training was still a priority even with the high physical and logistical demand of this job.

    They have known my habits and lifestyle for a year and a half already, so why do I suddenly need to assert that?

    They levelled with me enough, however coldly, to say we could figure it out. But they needed me to also prioritize this job.

    Why does that sound like there is no real compromise?

    The other groom, much younger than I, started to confide in me that week. During our shared night-check that evening (where we topped off hay, water, and picked stalls for the third time, no earlier than 7:00 p.m.), they found a release in the trainer’s absence. They told me how they had borrowed the trainer’s second vehicle to drive down from Missouri because theirs had been totaled- they had lost control on black ice the week before it was time to head south. The trainer used this “courtesy” to deny covering their fuel costs for the trip. They also shared how they had told the trainer about their weight-consciousness, and later received comments like “oh, you’re eating that? I thought you were worried about gaining weight?”

    We compared more experiences, frustrations, and understandings. They called their parents while in the barn, crying. They were being lorded over, shamed, and bullied. They drove home the depth of their misery with this line: “I feel so awful for thinking this, but I have moments where I hope something bad happens at home so I have an excuse to get out of here.”

    And also, “But they said they saw so much potential in me.”

    Oh my god I can taste the blood in my own organs. We work for a tyranny excused by how “lucky” we are to do this as a job.

    Among so many other micro-grievances that week, the trainer set me up to fail by telling me to wait until their text to get a client’s horse tacked up and start walking the 1.5 miles to the ring. They finally messaged me and then called frantically like I was crazy for not teleporting when I had barely learned to trot.

    When I didn’t have to lead a horse, I (a former criterium racer) was making runs between the rental house and the showgrounds on the bike with a 30-pound backpack (at least), blowing past golf carts on the street, and I still wasn’t fast enough.

    The other groom was getting more anxious and upset, but also inexplicably more distant from me.

    I was struggling with my ears clogging up and told the trainer if I didn’t hear something they said, that was why. I was so cautious to not make any noise in the house when I went in for breakfast in the mornings, and they still told me I was being too loud.

    Wait, are they criticizing me for exactly the things I give them disclaimers for?

    At the end of that second week, I was done. I sent a text to a member of the family that owned the home barn (who was also a client of the trainer, and there at the show that week) asking if I could talk to them. I told them in private that I needed to go home, because this was not what I signed up for, but I wanted to make sure my job at home was secure.

    They immediately assured me it was.

    But then they went straight to the trainer and told them that I was unhappy. Minutes before (and I am not exaggerating here) I was about to go into the house to tell the trainer that I was leaving, they came outside first.

    They’re isolating me again.

    They told me I had poor work ethic. That I was too dramatic. That they needed me and I was letting them down. That people in this industry have to earn their right to be there, but they do what it takes because they love the sport. They said they respected what I did and the sacrifices I made to make things happen for myself, but they desecrated it with their misrepresentation of the job and thinking I’d tolerate being steamrolled.

    I told the other groom I was sorry, and I left.

    The van broke down on the way home, and the trainer denied me the full amount of the agreed-upon fuel money because I left early.

    When they all got back in March, the trainer barely acknowledged me; if they could, they would text someone else to give me information.

    I noticed that the to-do list that was usually written on a whiteboard was now being jot down on a sticky note placed in the tack room, undisclosed to me.

    I see what you’re doing.

    Over a text, I asked for a joint conversation between the trainer, myself, and the owners. The owner had Covid, and couldn’t attend right away. The trainer replied that I didn’t need them for a meeting- that I could just talk to them one-on-one.

    “I’m not comfortable talking to you without a third party,” I said.

    They told me I could just wait to come in to work again until after everyone was ready.

    They’re punishing me for not letting them control this.

    I instead found a different role on the property where I was no longer answering to that trainer. They buzzed me with a side-by-side twice.

    Another winter set in, and I ran out of work.

    And I left.

    Final observation: The right candidate will exhibit an excellent work ethic self-abandonment.

    _____

    The court is adjourned.

    Proceedings resume in Part II.