Dirty hands.
"It's always the ones with the dirty hands that are pointing the fingers."
There are things in this world that are overrated. Everyone strives for them, but once they are achieved there is still an emptiness somewhere within. That thing we thought would fill us lets us down. All too many times, we get to the top of the mountain only to find out the hole within is still empty. At this point, we determine that what we are desiring so incessantly must be at the top of the next summit and off we go to scale another mountain, to chase another dream, knowing the top would contain that thing we were after. Again, the top of the next is empty, but we were so sure. Perhaps that’s the thing about chasing dreams. It’s not about that thing we think is at the top, but the experience of the climb. The hours, days, weeks on the path. Finding ourselves halfway up. Learning that we can keep going even when we think we can’t manage another step. The higher we go, the harder each step gets, but in those steps we find our inner strength. We become one with ourselves.
But what about the things in life that are underrated? Things that hold so much weight and yet they do not draw our attention, for what we think we need is atop that next mountain. The things we think are givens. Things we don’t need to work for, for they are already there. But what happens when they aren’t anymore? If you are in need of a knife, will the spoon at the top of the next mountain suffice? The last time you held that knife, you stared at it in such disgust as the blood ran down your arm. It was your fault the knife got so close. It was your fault you let its edge slice your flesh. It was your doing when you took the knife and tossed it in the trash can, took out the bag, and turned your back on the it. As the garbage truck came, you didn’t think about the knife in the bottom of your can. You didn’t think about it in any other way other than to say that knife got what it deserved for cutting you. But as you stand before your plate, staring down at a t-bone, holding your shiny new spoon, you sure wish you had that knife.
It is possible to get by without the knife. The steak can be lifted and bitten from. The steak can be stabbed and lifted by a fork. That spoon in your hand might be slipped beneath to balance the steak as you take a bite of the tender meat. There is a saw in the garage, right? You can find a way to improvise, and yet nothing would get the job done quite as nicely as that knife would have. But the knife is gone now and was highly underrated in your rage. The knife was expendable as you sat before your bowl of mac n’ cheese. You didn’t need that knife. But now, that knife’s worth is plainly on display before you and you are seemingly fucked.
There are a million other things you may not think much about, but when you need that thing and it’s gone, can you really blame anyone but yourself for not appreciating its worth when it was in your possession? And what happens when this thing that jumped out and bit you was a person? What happens when you put them in a garbage bag, toss them in the can, and turn your back? What happens when it’s your best friend? What happens when that thing they did when they bit you was so deep that you said goodbye, or worse, you said nothing? Friends are underrated. They are unappreciated until they are gone and by then, it’s too late. You let them go for one reason or another. Maybe it was justified. Maybe they fucked you so good that it could only be met with this farewell, silent or spoken. In a world where so many are enemies in friend’s clothing, a guard is put up at the slightest scent of bullshit. A zero tolerance policy is put in place, even stated out loud. A warning of sorts issued. Perhaps they even show pride in you for standing up for yourself, but they never meant for you to stand against them. They never wanted to be called on their own sh*t. They never thought you’d be so bold.
Even with just cause, does that undo time? Does it undo time spent with the person you once referred to as your best friend? Does it change the love you held for the person? And are you a fool for looking back, knowing they did a number on you, and yet feeling as though you might’ve been able to change things? Even the blameless will take fault here, feeling as though they were the one to put the nails in the coffin because in the end, they still don’t want to find fault in that friend, that best friend, that person who was there for them when they felt abandoned by the rest of the world. And here in lies the problem. The person who remains is the one who carries the load while the other can run about, claiming how they were thrown in the garbage. It’s true. They were. But they forget to own up to what it was that landed them in the trash bag in the first place. They can spin it, speaking to that which was done to them, rallying their followers to believe a different version of the truth, their own distorted version of the truth. A band is formed and opinions there with it by people who held no direct knowledge of that which landed them in the trash bag to begin with.
This world is fucked up. It’s always been fucked and it’s just getting more fucked. Your best friend at the time might’ve looked as though they were trying to help, but when you’re looking for your knife, you might wanna check your own back.
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Moving to the new house meant there was space. Vast amounts of space that their apartment didn’t afford them. There was something permanent feeling to this place, as it should be considering the thirty-year mortgage on the place. John had done a great job of making sure everything was move in ready, as well as relocating their things from their apartment to the house, though it would take some time to get it all put where it belonged and such was her mission this day. Little by little, things took form, each item finding its home in the space.
When she believed it to all be done, it was then that she would come across a stack of boxes in a downstairs storage closet. They were familiar and the sight of them brought a smile to her face. The items within were her own. Not from their marriage. Not from their apartment, but from her own before she was Mrs. James. A collection of things that had remained in boxes for the last year of their marriage, having been back and forth on unpacking them at various times. There were times she felt they were solid and she’d stay, at which she’d consider unpacking them, but would stop herself when she wasn’t quite sure which room to unpack them into. Then there were times she felt they were rocky and it was all better left boxed up. But now, as she carried the boxes one by one up to the master bedroom, it was with every intention to find homes for these things and to put away the idea of ever not staying right where she was.
It started out with shoes, some clothes she hadn’t worn in years. Picture albums containing family images found home on the top shelf of her closet. These were things she wasn’t willing to get rid of, yet couldn’t quite bear the sight of with all that was going on. The next held her cap and gown, prom dress, prom shoes. These items would remain in the box they were in, slipped to the shelf beside the albums. Within the next box she would find Judas Khrist music, her ticket stubs, a napkin from the bar she met Gia in after that first show she attended in Dallas. As she dug deeper in the box, she found a few items that didn’t need to be kept any longer. Her first blade. A suicide note. These items would be tossed as that time in her life was gone as the rest of the box was added to the shelf. Continuing further on, she unpacked some things and stored others.
A standard box with a capital letter on the outside of it brought pause to the woman. There was a time the contents of this box were spread around her bedroom. A high school girl and one of her two best friends were inseparable, infiltrating every aspect of one another’s lives. Kelly, Shelby, and Spencer should have been born sisters, or so they always said. Shelby had fallen off after getting married and starting down the path to happily ever after, distance separating the girls over time, but it was natural and expected. Kelly, on the other hand, that was a different story altogether. There was no box of Shelby, as items given to Spencer from Shelby still littered her space. There were still reminders of Shelby in many aspects of Spencer’s life, even if the women weren’t as they once were. Spencer had tried to call her a few times in years past, but life didn’t much pan out for the two, turning Shelby and Spencer into fond memories of worry free lives back when things were simple.
Kelly on the other hand, that was a different story entirely. There was a reason this box donned her name and the items did not infiltrate Spencer’s daily life. As she held the box in her hands, she drew an uneasy breath. Her first reaction was rage. She could remember just how angry she was when she boxed this box up years ago. A teenage girl with Judas Khrist lyrics blaring in her ears, tossing items in haphazardly with no regard to anything within. ‘Don’t throw that stuff away, Spence. You may want it some day.’ Addison Reese’s words were soft and encouraging, so much so that Spencer couldn’t fight them, but she didn’t agree to do it gingerly either. As she carried the box to the bed, she was already scolding herself for going here. The box should be tossed away. Lit on fire. Thrown into the Schuylkill River.
As she sat down on the bed, she unfolded the top of the box, anger coursing through her just as it had the day she threw it all in the box. Until she glanced within. The pink jewelry box within donned an S atop it in Swarovski crystals. Spencer bit her lip as she carefully picked up the jewelry box, placing it onto her lap as her fingertips trailed the letter against the top. ‘I know you loved mine, so I had to get ya one too.’ The girl’s southern draw was there ringing in Spencer’s ear as she recalled just how excited Kelly had been to give Spencer her birthday present. Closing her eyes, she could see that excited redheads face as she urged her to open the box. Slipping her fingers against the silver closure, she unfastened the box just as she had there at her birthday party, opening the box slowly, finding within an assortment of best friend’s necklaces. Some were two part for just she and Kells. Others were three part for the two of them and Shelby as well. Each one holding some inside joke. A set of cupcakes. Cell phones. Ice cream cones. Each one marked an event for the girls. Some were bought by Kelly, some by Spencer, and some by Shelby. Each one of them seeming to contribute to this collection over the years.
Setting the jewelry box to the side, there was a senior scrapbook that would draw a sigh from her lips. It wasn’t Shelby’s thing, ever, but Kelly and Spencer had loved to scrapbook the things going on in their lives. Pictures, movie stubs, concert tickets, wrist bands, prom tickets, newspaper clippings, and more were rubber cemented to the pages of the scrapbook. Page by page, Spencer glanced over the images, rage being the last thing on her mind. There was a soft smile on her face by the time she made it to the back of the book, setting it aside with the jewelry box. Further on in the box, she’d find a t-shirt Kelly had left at her house, as well as a pair of pajama shorts the girls fought over who they actually belonged to, but truth be told, she knew they were Kelly’s all along. Toys from McDonald’s happy meals, folded up locker notes, loose pictures, books, and c.d.’s all littered the box at random, indicative of the manner in which they were thrown into the box years before.
By the time she got to the bottom of the box, tears were streaming down her face. With all of the good this box contained, there was too much bad that had landed it all in that box to begin with. Manipulations. Backstabbing. Slander. All of the things that made this box take form nearly a decade before still held true with Spencer to that day. Some sins even time couldn’t erase, regardless of how much the two had surely changed. Sometimes things are just how they are and there’s no changing it. Even with tears in her eyes, able to remember the good times, she could still remember the bad as well. She’d never forget the last thing the girl said to her as she told her everything she thought about her. She’d never forget sitting in silence, shocked at all of the nasty things her supposed best friend thought of her. Things that shouldn’t be said to an enemy were hurled at Spencer unexpectedly. There were things Spencer knew she should have said in that moment instead of biting her tongue. She should have stood up for herself in that moment. Spencer would never quite understand where this division occurred between she and Kelly, but always assumed it had something to do with the joint friendship with Shelby. For so long, the three made it work, but in the end, three became a crowd. Sins were revealed as it became clear that Kelly was making a play for just that, attempting to mark her territory on both Shelby and Spencer separately, but her force just wasn’t strong enough to do so. In the end, Spencer went quietly, fading into the distance, but in the aftermath she knew there were four words she should have said to the girl.
“Go f u c k yourself, Kells.”
-June 23, 2016











