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Pretty used to being with Gwyneth

Regrets that her mother did not smoke

Frank in all directions

Jean Cocteau and Jean Marais

Simply cannot go back to them

Roll your eyes at Samuel Beckett

John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion

Metaphors with eyes

Life of Mary MacLane

Circle what it is you want

Not really talking about women, just Diane

Felicity's disguise

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Entries in samantha schuyler (3)

Thursday
Jan292015

In Which We Incorporate A Lulling Hush Intrinsically

Leaving Early

by SAMANTHA SCHUYLER

A car cries out from a place far away. Someone is leaning on the horn, squarely and securely, because the sound doesn’t let up for a full ten seconds. After the fourth second the air becomes strained, and faces lift in anticipation of something, or else in concern. Another car chimes in; it has become a chorus. The sound approaches, growing louder, until the two sing past the window: They have merged into one strained, long note. 

I am in a public place and so I look to my fellow man to be assured that I am not the only one whose body lit up at the sound. I am coiled and taut, but I do not want to be that way alone. As it turns out, people lost interest quickly. I am cooling my coffee with my hands. People are industrious and quiet; they pick at pastries and slowly stir drinks both hot and cold. Outside, I can still hear the sound, and my whole body is ready for a collision, a disaster. There is nothing. The sound fades away. I stir my coffee; I contemplate a scone. 
  
+

I had a panic attack the other day. I do not know where it came from. Out of nowhere, I guess. From what I gather, nowhere is an unpleasant place. Generally nothing wants to stick around for long. So I can sympathize with the attack, which had hurtled out of this place, nowhere, and into my synapses. 

When it came, and it hit me, the sensation was physical. I conceived of it as an oncoming train (inevitable, thundering) and myself as something caught in the tracks (trapped, flailing). We wrestled very briefly, but the attack won, settled somewhere behind my respiratory system, and squeezed. My lungs struggled to catch up and siphon its quota of oxygen into my blood; I began to make the sounds of a beached whale.

I stayed up to nurse the attack because we were in this together, the panic attack and I. Nowhere, I realized, must be a terribly lonely place. I laid on my side and curled around the feeling in a way that appeared fetal, embryonic. I wondered briefly if I was coaxing it away or nurturing it closer simply by paying attention to it, like a stray animal. Through the distraction a singular thought made itself very clear to me: The last thing in the world that I wanted was for the feeling to stay. A secondary thought followed: Will it be leaving?  

I closed my eyes and imagined myself floating in dark water, as if this would help. The water spread out infinitely and was difficult to separate from the sky. Being caught in a space that was endless on all sides was overwhelming, and I gave up immediately. But each time I closed my eyes the image appeared again, persistent in its complete neutrality. I wanted to be very far away from endless space, where nothing existed that was immediate or concrete, but if I tried to physically calm myself in what I assumed was a meditative and relaxed pose then there it was again. In fact, the immediacy of such a space thrilled the panic attack. In its excitement it enthusiastically sent a series of alarms up my spine, to which I responded by making fists that pressed five red half-moons into each of my palms.  

I wanted the attack and I to have an agreement that would be binding and secure: I would let it run its course on the condition that it would eventually go away.  I concentrated deeply on these terms. The panic attack responded by flicking a nearby cluster of neurons, and my whole sympathetic nervous system lit up like a pin ball machine.

+

Sometimes Florida weather is hard to bear in a way that the northerner would find insufferable. The warmth is unchanging; the sand is too powdery and fine; the sky is unnervingly blue. The sky, when it is clear and without clouds, is far too blue. Without any object — cloud, plane, tree — to create a point of reference it seems to be without end. It is Lynchian in its saturation, a caricature of real sky. In a way, it is reminiscent of another sky, dim and starless, indistinct from an expanse of dark water.  

Today I step outside into what appears to be a prototypical Florida afternoon, crowned by a layer of swampy heat. The pavement is white and glinting from the sun, oppressively present; immediately my skin acquires a lacquered sheen. I’m getting into the car with friends.  

David rubs his head. It’s been recently shaved, and he will absently touch his new downy skull as though to savor the feeling. He slides behind the wheel while Annie and I take up the rest of the car, where the inside is so hot it hurts to move. His hand plies through his prickly short hair while he recounts to us what a few mutual friends saw at a party last night.  

“So this girl — no one knows who she was — just falls on her face. It’s like 3 a.m., right on the pavement.” He pauses, sliding into midday traffic. “I mean, that’s what they think happened, at least.” 

I can only see the side of Annie’s face from the back, where I stretch my legs across the two empty seats. She appears concerned; her glasses wiggle as she adjusts them.  

“They think? Did they see it happen?” she asks. 

“Well they just found her. Sitting in a chair on the porch. Her two front teeth — gone.” David removes a hand from the wheel to gesture to his own face, miming blood running from two holes in his mouth. Annie and I make a noise of disbelief in unison. 

“She was holding the teeth in her hand. People kept asking her if she was okay, if she needed to go somewhere. She just kept holding the teeth in her hand, totally calm. Knocked right out. She only would say that she fell.” 

Maybe it is the sun, but the image is visceral and nauseating. My hand is outstretched on my knee, and in it are two teeth, perfectly white, larger than I expected. I am parallel to the backs of the seats, leaning against the door, so all I can see is the image framed by the window: hot white pavement and unobstructed, infinite sky. Where I was once distantly sorry for the stranger I am now fully engrossed. The investment feels harsh and sour in my throat. It occurs to me that I feel the impulse to cry; the sun presses in on all sides; I feel inescapable contact with it and the car is lit up too bright to bear. If I shut my eyes the backs of my lids are red, lit by dizzying speckles of white.  

“I’m glad we weren’t there to see that. It’s good that we left early,” Annie points out. Her voice is tangible and firm; I sense the feeling loosen and slide off. In my relief I can’t quite slow my heartbeat, but press my hand to my chest anyway.  

“I need water,” I say. 

“We’re here,” says David, setting the car in park.

+

 

The only other time I have ever had a panic attack was in a plane. I knew going into the flight I’d be vaguely terrified the whole ride, but I outdid my expectations. I sat next to an old woman with gray hair — hard and shiny like a helmet — reading a religious text. I found this ominous, but that was normal. As usual, I looked down hard at the book in my hands as we lifted off and my stomach collapsed into itself. 

Once the plane was level, disorienting and incomprehensible dings sounded throughout the cabin, which were not acknowledged. This, too, was normal. As we cruised in a cloud of white noise, I ventured a peek out of the window. For the second time my stomach made itself as small as possible: I could see all the way down. Before we had climbed — or maybe this was after, I can’t remember — the pilot had mentioned the day was cloudless and clear. Great flying weather. Staring through the window, my whole body became fixed into place, my muscles frozen tense and coiled. I was gripping the arm rests with such force the lady beside me glanced up from her book and over her bifocals.  

Usually when flying I can eventually handle looking outside. The clouds give a false sense of perspective — I can trick my brain into believing that they are the ground, whipped topping earth. Or the floor of heaven, which is my more truthful and childish mental image. But this time I had nothing with which to trick my brain, and it short-circuited. I was frozen in terror. The sucking shriek of the plane fed my anxiety, which had become a feedback loop of death and a very specific freak accident. I felt more convinced of my own doom than ever before; the theoretical horror was real and tangible. I refused to move any part of my body, as though any slight disruption would rock the entire plane and send us spiraling back down to Earth.  

I sat in this way for the three hour flight, my eyes trained out the port hole, trying to think about absolutely nothing, physically and cognitively trapped. I woke up the next day and all of my muscles ached.

+

It took a little over an hour, but the attack went away. I knew because I was finally able to close my eyes and feel comforted by the nothing there. My breathing became inaudible; I was once again fixed and oriented in time and space.   

The relief came from knowing the feeling was not going to last forever. It had ended itself by falling away, back to where it came or onward to occupy itself with someone else. But I do not think that is true, that once it expires the feeling is gone. The anxiety which was so palpable and tormenting was a crystallized form of something that always exists. The world is always a scary and bewildering place, that is a constant. What is variable is our ability to deal with it. Or, more likely, ignore it.  

What I would like to know — and what I do not know the answer to — is what manipulates the variable.  

Outside of the coffee shop it begins to rain. The sound of police sirens is distant, and then searing in its closeness. Pulsing red and blue lights flash by the window; the sky is blurred and gray and swimming with clouds. One head glances up to catch it go. And outside the room where I lay, feeling the absence of the attack as emptiness, it begins to rain as well. The sound, a lulling hush, always puts me to sleep, and I find that I can. I do not know what pushes anxiety to the corner of a person’s consciousness. I don’t know what makes it bearable. It could be inherited, or learned; it might be a temperament, or a behavior. Parsing this matters less as I sink slowly out of consciousness. Tomorrow I will hear the sound of a person leaning hard on their horn. I will look up. A feeling will approach on the outskirts of my brain and pick up a scent. It will become intent. Grow disinterested. Look onward, lope away.

Samantha Schuyler is the senior contributor to This Recording. She is a writer living in Gainesville. You can find her website here and her twitter here.

Paintings by Per Adolfsen.

"Solo Dancing" - Indiana (mp3)

"Only the Lonely" - Indiana (mp3)

Thursday
Mar142013

In Which We Sing Past A Window

In Unison

by SAMANTHA SCHUYLER

A car cries out from a place far away. Someone is leaning on the horn, squarely and securely, because the sound doesn’t let up for a full ten seconds. After the fourth second the air becomes strained, and faces lift in anticipation of something, or else in concern. Another car chimes in; it has become a chorus. The sound approaches, growing louder, until the two sing past the window: They have merged into one strained, long note. 

I am in a public place and so I look to my fellow man to be assured that I am not the only one whose body lit up at the sound. I am coiled and taut, but I do not want to be that way alone. As it turns out, people lost interest quickly. I am cooling my coffee with my hands. People are industrious and quiet; they pick at pastries and slowly stir drinks both hot and cold. Outside, I can still hear the sound, and my whole body is ready for a collision, a disaster. There is nothing. The sound fades away. I stir my coffee; I contemplate a scone. 
  
+

I had a panic attack the other day. I do not know where it came from. Out of nowhere, I guess. From what I gather, nowhere is an unpleasant place. Generally nothing wants to stick around for long. So I can sympathize with the attack, which had hurtled out of this place, nowhere, and into my synapses. 

When it came, and it hit me, the sensation was physical. I conceived of it as an oncoming train (inevitable, thundering) and myself as something caught in the tracks (trapped, flailing). We wrestled very briefly, but the attack won, settled somewhere behind my respiratory system, and squeezed. My lungs struggled to catch up and siphon its quota of oxygen into my blood; I began to make the sounds of a beached whale.

I stayed up to nurse the attack because we were in this together, the panic attack and I. Nowhere, I realized, must be a terribly lonely place. I laid on my side and curled around the feeling in a way that appeared fetal, embryonic. I wondered briefly if I was coaxing it away or nurturing it closer simply by paying attention to it, like a stray animal. Through the distraction a singular thought made itself very clear to me: The last thing in the world that I wanted was for the feeling to stay. A secondary thought followed: Will it be leaving?  

I closed my eyes and imagined myself floating in dark water, as if this would help. The water spread out infinitely and was difficult to separate from the sky. Being caught in a space that was endless on all sides was overwhelming, and I gave up immediately. But each time I closed my eyes the image appeared again, persistent in its complete neutrality. I wanted to be very far away from endless space, where nothing existed that was immediate or concrete, but if I tried to physically calm myself in what I assumed was a meditative and relaxed pose then there it was again. In fact, the immediacy of such a space thrilled the panic attack. In its excitement it enthusiastically sent a series of alarms up my spine, to which I responded by making fists that pressed five red half-moons into each of my palms.  

I wanted the attack and I to have an agreement that would be binding and secure: I would let it run its course on the condition that it would eventually go away.  I concentrated deeply on these terms. The panic attack responded by flicking a nearby cluster of neurons, and my whole sympathetic nervous system lit up like a pin ball machine.

+

Sometimes Florida weather is hard to bear in a way that the northerner would find insufferable. The warmth is unchanging; the sand is too powdery and fine; the sky is unnervingly blue. The sky, when it is clear and without clouds, is far too blue. Without any object — cloud, plane, tree — to create a point of reference it seems to be without end. It is Lynchian in its saturation, a caricature of real sky. In a way, it is reminiscent of another sky, dim and starless, indistinct from an expanse of dark water.  

Today I step outside into what appears to be a prototypical Florida afternoon, crowned by a layer of swampy heat. The pavement is white and glinting from the sun, oppressively present; immediately my skin acquires a lacquered sheen. I’m getting into the car with friends.  

David rubs his head. It’s been recently shaved, and he will absently touch his new downy skull as though to savor the feeling. He slides behind the wheel while Annie and I take up the rest of the car, where the inside is so hot it hurts to move. His hand plies through his prickly short hair while he recounts to us what a few mutual friends saw at a party last night.  

“So this girl — no one knows who she was — just falls on her face. It’s like 3 a.m., right on the pavement.” He pauses, sliding into midday traffic. “I mean, that’s what they think happened, at least.” 

I can only see the side of Annie’s face from the back, where I stretch my legs across the two empty seats. She appears concerned; her glasses wiggle as she adjusts them.  

“They think? Did they see it happen?” she asks. 

“Well they just found her. Sitting in a chair on the porch. Her two front teeth — gone.” David removes a hand from the wheel to gesture to his own face, miming blood running from two holes in his mouth. Annie and I make a noise of disbelief in unison. 

“She was holding the teeth in her hand. People kept asking her if she was okay, if she needed to go somewhere. She just kept holding the teeth in her hand, totally calm. Knocked right out. She only would say that she fell.” 

Maybe it is the sun, but the image is visceral and nauseating. My hand is outstretched on my knee, and in it are two teeth, perfectly white, larger than I expected. I am parallel to the backs of the seats, leaning against the door, so all I can see is the image framed by the window: hot white pavement and unobstructed, infinite sky. Where I was once distantly sorry for the stranger I am now fully engrossed. The investment feels harsh and sour in my throat. It occurs to me that I feel the impulse to cry; the sun presses in on all sides; I feel inescapable contact with it and the car is lit up too bright to bear. If I shut my eyes the backs of my lids are red, lit by dizzying speckles of white.  

“I’m glad we weren’t there to see that. It’s good that we left early,” Annie points out. Her voice is tangible and firm; I sense the feeling loosen and slide off. In my relief I can’t quite slow my heartbeat, but press my hand to my chest anyway.  

“I need water.” I say. 

“We’re here,” says David, setting the car in park.

+

The only other time I have ever had a panic attack was in a plane. I knew going into the flight I’d be vaguely terrified the whole ride, but I outdid my expectations. I sat next to an old woman with gray hair — hard and shiny like a helmet — reading a religious text. I found this ominous, but that was normal. As usual, I looked down hard at the book in my hands as we lifted off and my stomach collapsed into itself. 

Once the plane was level, disorienting and incomprehensible dings sounded throughout the cabin, which were not acknowledged. This, too, was normal. As we cruised in a cloud of white noise, I ventured a peek out of the window. For the second time my stomach made itself as small as possible: I could see all the way down. Before we had climbed — or maybe this was after, I can’t remember — the pilot had mentioned the day was cloudless and clear. Great flying weather. Staring through the window, my whole body became fixed into place, my muscles frozen tense and coiled. I was gripping the arm rests with such force the lady beside me glanced up from her book and over her bifocals.  

Usually when flying I can eventually handle looking outside. The clouds give a false sense of perspective — I can trick my brain into believing that they are the ground, whipped topping earth. Or the floor of heaven, which is my more truthful and childish mental image. But this time I had nothing with which to trick my brain, and it short-circuited. I was frozen in terror. The sucking shriek of the plane fed my anxiety, which had become a feedback loop of death and a very specific freak accident. I felt more convinced of my own doom than ever before; the theoretical horror was real and tangible. I refused to move any part of my body, as though any slight disruption would rock the entire plane and send us spiraling back down to Earth.  

I sat in this way for the three hour flight, my eyes trained out the port hole, trying to think about absolutely nothing, physically and cognitively trapped. I woke up the next day and all of my muscles ached.

+

It took a little over an hour, but the attack went away. I knew because I was finally able to close my eyes and feel comforted by the nothing there. My breathing became inaudible; I was once again fixed and oriented in time and space.   

The relief came from knowing the feeling was not going to last forever. It had ended itself by falling away, back to where it came or onward to occupy itself with someone else. But I do not think that is true, that once it expires the feeling is gone. The anxiety which was so palpable and tormenting was a crystallized form of something that always exists. The world is always a scary and bewildering place, that is a constant. What is variable is our ability to deal with it. Or, more likely, ignore it.  

What I would like to know — and what I do not know the answer to — is what manipulates the variable.  

Outside of the coffee shop it begins to rain. The sound of police sirens is distant, and then searing in its closeness. Pulsing red and blue lights flash by the window; the sky is blurred and gray and swimming with clouds. One head glances up to catch it go. And outside the room where I lay, feeling the absence of the attack as emptiness, it begins to rain as well. The sound, a lulling hush, always puts me to sleep, and I find that I can. I do not know what pushes anxiety to the corner of a person’s consciousness. I don’t know what makes it bearable. It could be inherited, or learned; it might be a temperament, or a behavior. Parsing this matters less as I sink slowly out of consciousness. Tomorrow I will hear the sound of a person leaning hard on their horn. I will look up. A feeling will approach on the outskirts of my brain and pick up a scent. It will become intent. Grow disinterested. Look onward, lope away.

Samantha Schuyler is the senior contributor to This Recording. She is a writer living in Gainesville. You can find her website here and her twitter here.

"Jour de Chance" - Maissiat (mp3)

"Les Fins de Nuit" - Maissiat (mp3)

 

Friday
Nov232012

In Which We Regain A Particular Sensation

The Accumulation of Objects

by SAMANTHA SCHUYLER

The bird was small, but seemed much less frail on the ground. In the air you can’t see the dome of muscles around its neck, or the heaviness of its body. It lay half-covered in the grass, dappled with midday light, and made no signs of movement. Then again, it also gave no signs of being dead, either. No part of it had decomposed yet, there weren’t even any bugs.

So we buried it, I think. That was the only conclusion I could come up with, the only reason I was standing over this spot specifically, my chin on my chest and my shoulders on my ears hunched tight against the wind. Because somewhere in my memory Maggie and I, at a sub-decimal age, had touched an old dead thing and put it under the ground. We got in trouble, despite having the best intentions. But the memory was so strong I could hardly keep it back: cradling the limp sturdy body, using our fingernails to scratch out a hole. My mouth bitter with fear, of Trouble.

But I couldn’t be sure that it happened. Remembering and remembering myself remembering sometimes feels like the same thing. It could only be true right now: because then there would be no reason to be here, under this palm tree, in front of a house that is not mine anymore.

+

I mean, I do remember wondering if this was going to be home. I was untangling metal coat hangers, a whole box of them, liberating each with a series of chimes and slipping them onto the bar that ran through the closet. One by one, front to back, coat hanger sardines.

The room was dark and huge and lit only by one lamp that had a dim shade. Golden, syrupy light vaguely touched everything. The light was palpable, suffocating. Or maybe the part that made it hard to breathe was the singed smell of new carpets. In any case, it was there, unpacking coat hangers, that I felt finally unfortunate.

I thought, maybe this is home. And then I thought, what if it’s not home? And then I thought, then I don’t have a home.

+

Home spaces are ones that are filled haphazardly. There exists a quiet accumulation of objects that is natural and reassuring, but is only apparent once you have lost the home space. Once lost, you understand that not every space has the same comfort of senseless, constant addition. But the fact that the feeling of home is so undefined, based totally in feeling, is what makes it unique, and therefore valuable. So then the home is only peculiarly itself, perfect and relieving, when one is not aware of why.

I wonder why there is something so tender in a single shoe between the coffee table and the couch. Or, a scarf draped over the counter, despite being August. Or textbooks rooms away from where the student sleeps. A baseball bat leaning against the stairs; goggles forgotten on the kitchen table. Objects out of context, absent-minded and natural.

Invited to a friend’s house, I sit by their piles of clutter and forgotten objects and marinate, measuring the unacknowledged and complete sense of ease. The friend, bored, looks restless. Suddenly I am pulled from where I am, towards the door, seeking somewhere else. “Let’s get out of here,” they’ll murmur, wanting to leave, sidestepping their mom’s knitting project, their brother’s set of cards, their sister’s iPod. I am obliged to follow, but if I wasn’t, I’d stay, flicking through the various complimentary pens acquired over time, the ones stashed away in the pencil drawer.

+

The place with the bird and the place with the new carpets are different places, but I do not know if they really are. I have lived in three places: the house I grew up in, the second one, and a dormitory. On one hand, they are very distinct; none remind me of the other. On the other hand, they are all essentially the same. They have all been the place to which I return for sleeping, for stowing myself away, where all my material possessions are stored. Is that home? And if it is, then yes, all have been home in the sense that they are my home-base, my headquarters: essentially a utility, otherwise irrelevant.

Yet the haphazard objects, meaningful in their accident, meaningful in their meaninglessness, existed in the first space, did not in the second, and in the third were only my own possessions. A roommate existed in the peripheries. But the absent-minded messes only make a space like a home when they are markers of other people’s presences, that other thoughts and actions and possessions exist simultaneously with your own, and with the same naturalness that yours do. This is coexistence; cohabitation.

+

Dad said we’d have a month in the house, and then we’d be gone. This, after sudden loss, is not welcome. It occurred to me that it would be called “the house I grew up in,” if I had to explain it. I looked at my brother, who only reached my ear. Jeez, I thought, we aren’t grown up. My hand rested on the top of his head, pressing the springy dark hair. I thought, will we ever be? I mean, does anyone really finish?

We spent the month packing, and another month in the second place, unpacking. Two new sets of hangers to unravel, two new closets to fill, two sets of walls to repaint. New carpets. Convenient! The house needed new carpets anyway. My brother and I, being updates, were good excuses for more.

In my new room, I painted two walls a color called Terra Cotta, and one called Sierra Red. Maybe it was a gesture toward a home-space, but a room is not a home-space. A room is for an individual. I built a tree on one wall, painting branches, attaching plastic tree-limbs so they would hang off of the wall and over me when I slept. I attached shelves all down one wall, and filled them with books. Each book was bought for me, or I bought for myself, or chose for my own consumption. I flattened posters of my favorite faces to another wall, each hanger had a piece of clothing which I felt looked good on me. All of these things were particularly my own, a matter of my individual identity — it was not a home space.

Outside of my room, things were sparse. Charlene is very neat, Dad explained. Charlene smiled, and revealed a row of very white, very straight teeth. Bent together as they were, their hair was like a black and white cookie. My father’s, wiry and dark; Charlene’s, wispy and light. Too sweet, I thought. Those cookies.

In the living room, everything was vaguely wood-colored, even the walls. The theme appeared to be African Congo Adventure. One lamp had an elephant as a base, the other a monkey. The coffee table looked like a trunk, the kind you put on a ship, and could have been filled with waistcoats or petticoats or corsets. It was purposefully aged, sprayed with a darker color in some places, like the sea had warped it; it was an object of canned experience. The blades of the ceiling fan were made to look like palm fronds. If you thought about it long enough, the aggressive colonial theme was unsettling.

Here, nothing was out of place. Items belonged places; they did not exist collectively. They belonged in rooms. Any personal belongings found out of place were gathered up and placed on a counter, a temporary lost and found.

+

A few months ago I stood outside of the dorm with my dad with all the material possessions I could need pressing up against the windows of the car. How is one to feel, going from one space to another? This process of moving had once, before, felt so heavy. I tried to reach for a feeling. I didn’t come up with anything. I felt, decidedly, nothing much.

What I mean is, I sense a distinction between house and home. One is utility, the other is sentiment. One is the thing you miss when you miss food that is not microwavable or needs more than half an hour to prepare. The other is the thing you miss when you feel something tense and solid in your chest that hasn’t unwound in a very long time. One is missing a hot shower, the other is missing the same feeling, but which occurs when you find yourself lying splayed and unmoving on the carpet because who is going to judge you, Mom? Both, I guess, are forms of comfort.

As I emptied the car of my possessions, I felt a moment of liberation. This nothing that I feel, it isn’t so bad. I could pick up and travel through another country—many countries, a dozen countries!—without feeling regret or longing. I am untethered, unbound, I am free! I am a single human, unattached. For a moment I felt giddy. But as I filled up my new space with things, and my father hugged me and said goodbye, see you, the heaviness returned. I felt a loss incalculable, which I hadn’t felt in a very long time. The last time was a hospital: like a dorm, housing for utility’s sake. Residents circulate, no one stays for long. People passed me by carrying luggage, while images one by one made me very still: a book laying face down on its pages on the kitchen table, a broken video game controller that needs to be fixed, a picked-through gift basket from some party.

Under the palm tree, there is a tiny grave somewhere. Here, I grow certain of something. Maggie and I had knelt by the bird a long time. We said a prayer. Our hands were dirty and lay in our laps, but we felt calm. A gust of winter wind cuts through me, like a reminder that I should keep walking: this is not my property anymore. A few days ago I had, as they say, come home. I had felt the impulse to look at the house that I grew up in, and so I walked here, to stand in front of a home that is no longer mine. It is here that I remember a very specific feeling more vividly than anywhere else. For a moment, I am tethered; for a moment, something unwinds. The feeling is relief, and it is familiar.

Samantha Schuyler is a contributor to This Recording. She is a writer living in Gainesville. This is her first appearance in these pages. You can find her website here and her twitter here.

"Revelation Blues" - The Tallest Man On Earth (mp3)

"Bright Lanterns" - The Tallest Man On Earth (mp3)