I have been reading so much lately that I have begun to see
words dripping off scenery in big wet drops, the most mundane events seem to
spiral into important plot points that unfold like a rapidly blossoming flower
in my mind (yes, gentleman in the blue Buick Le Sabre smoking cigarettes and
carefully balancing a well assembled floral arrangement on your knee, I am
talking about you), and my usual emotional snarls have started talking. I know, I know. The point of
emotional snarls is that they don’t talk, and therefore they go largely
ignored, or get brushed away like annoying but familiar insects. Or maybe
children.
But
perhaps not everyone is familiar with emotional snarls; well, we are all familiar
with them, but we may not know them by the same name. Therefore, in the
interest of ensuring that you understand me,
let us establish a common definition of the term emotional snarl. For this
purpose, I shamefully offer up a written record of one of my very own emotional
snarls:
I was
having a conversation with some acquaintances of mine and I referenced an
author that I have been reading a lot of lately. I went into great detail about
one of the chapters I had read recently, all to support some point I was
making, and knowing full well that the people I was conversing with were not
familiar with this author. Now, I broke one of the first rules of etiquette and
was talking in a way that was self-gratifying – as in, I wanted to
discuss this so I was going to regardless of rather or not anyone wanted to listen
– so I shouldn’t have been put out when someone responded to my self-indulgent
comments with the insincere response of: “Oh, I should start reading that
author.”
This was disconcerting for many reasons. First, my snarls were mean, which meant I was mean. My initial response had been really, really mean. I had been judgmental, arrogant, rude, and spiteful for no apparent reason. I didn’t have a single excuse. Second, snarls weren’t supposed to talk, because if they did you’d find out how mean you were. They were just supposed to be there occasionally and more often than not simply forgotten about, pushed aside as your brain pursued other thoughts and your face and body language remained composed, hiding any response to the beast-sounds your emotions were making.
In a
way, I liked having the words. I liked knowing right away why I was having that
uncomfortable feeling that could never quite be pinned down with a word like
anger, annoyance, or pain, but was likely a combination of many feelings,
though they were usually never fully identified or realized. It was nice to
know what I was feeling, what the snarl was responding to.
But it
was also awful, because it meant I had to admit that I was a terrible person. My emotional
snarls were better when they were vague because I could still live in blissful
ignorance of the meanness of my mind and pretend that my emotional surges and
responses were maybe good things, maybe only surged up heroically at the sight
of evil or at the infliction of some great wrong. But once the snarls evolved
into words, I could no longer pretend. I had to face the fact that while my
angry surge in response to the affront made by this person in the form of
insincere flattery and a teensy bit of ignorance FELT like righteous anger, it
was in fact, just the opposite. I was quite the scoundrel.
And so,
words that have taken residence in my brain and seeking outlet at any cost,
seizing on the sunrise as a chance to pour forth poetry, clutching at the
vehicle of conversation to delve into new depths of wit, and racing to write
stories as I pass people in traffic, you have set loose a monster in me. But I
don’t want to contain the monster because that will mean containing the words
and I will lose the moment when I find just the right way to say something,
miss the moment when I realize not that the light is fading, but that the color
is being sucked back into the earth, and I would never have known that
emotional responses really felt like snarls and should be called snarls because
they were animal-like, instinctual, and did not respond rationally.
So I will keep reading and will
tolerate the articulate snarls; because it is worth knowing that I am terrible
person if I realize that I live in a wonderful world. Maybe I will learn
something about myself from these talkative snarls. For example, now I know not
to indulge my own interests in a conversation and then get angry with people
when they respond insincerely after I have bored them to death with how much I
love the sound of my own voice.
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