posted on Mar, 2 2004 @ 09:13 PM
So there I was, 3 years after graduating, happier than ever that Texas was out of my life, and it just had to come rushing back in. But I wasn't
going back, no no no. I was not going to let one little thing I accidentaly left back in Texas take me back. No way. No chance. There's no way that a
stupid picture of me at 16 with the paintball gun that saved my life was going to bring me back to Texas. I was not going to let the stupid memory of
me, thinking that a 9-5 job was the end of the universe, cursing anyone out who owned a cellular phone, and constantly screwing up anything
coorporate, no, those memories weren't bringing me back. Because I was on top. I was not a failure.
I ran to throw the photo in the trash, stumbling through the dark in my 2 bedroom, 1 full size bath and fully functional kitchen apartment. Then, with
my foot stuck on the step leading out of the living area into the hallway (split level), I plumeted to the wooden floor.
Getting to my feet, I flipped the light switch and looked around the room. The photo fell from my hand in slow motion, like in a movie when the
protagonist realizes that they've got along jounrey ahead of them, they have to save the world, or they have cancer.
I was on top. I was not a failure.
I was on top. I was not a failure.
I was on top. I was not a failure.
But looking around at my Ikea furniture, my suit, jacket, tie wardrobe, my cellular phone, laptp, and Palm Pilot trio, I realized I had become
everything I once was against.
I was on top. And I was a failure.
Tossing aside the Comfortable Living and Technology Today magazines I lifted up the lid on my old trunk from high school. Inside I found photo upon
photo of me, ready to take over the world and crush American society. I was going to change the world. I found countless photos of me and my old
friends at the football games, always protesting by not watching and standing under the bleachers. There was that photo of me and Diane that Tommy and
Marcus had taken just as we were getting somehwere. Those little pricks.
Every memory brought back by the photo of me with that stupid paintball gun were all documented. I had newspaper clippings of all of our vandalism. I
still had the bandages I wore after that fight.
This was it. That one picture was not going to bring me back to Texas. Realizing how "content" I was, understanding that I was not a high-ranking
employee, I was middle management, frequent-flyer, watch wearing crap.
I was on top. And I was a failure.
When I came to this epiphany, I was already on my way back to Texas.