Tag Archives: Frankenstein

When I Used to Run into People

“I hear it said of somebody that he is leading a double life. I think to myself: Just two?”  —Leon Wieseltier

We contain multitudes. Personalities are pieces of fabric sewn together with layers and layers of sometimes seemingly incongruous materials. But deep beneath that mismatch, the essence of our true nature thrives. Unwinding the knots of complexity reveals the building blocks of that Frankensteinian Voltron we call identity.

We’re able to manage striking dichotomies in our youth that become far more rare and much less tenable with age. But that’s what made each day feel like such an adventure.

I used to run into people.

As a wily teen, I spent many weekend nights cramped into poorly ventilated, overheated gyms, VFWs, and dilapidated all-ages music venues to watch punk and hardcore bands scraping together an existence by tapping into the abundant adolescent angst of mostly males looking for an outlet that didn’t live on football fields or wrestling mats.

We screamed along to PAs blasting distorted, indecipherable lyrics about clean living, distrusting the government, and animal rights. We slammed into one another, dodging haymaker fists and stomping boots. Spinning circles in some manic ballet, we were on an island of our own creation, and that independent spirit was the fuel that powered my rebellious little engine. Drenched in sweat and drained of frustration, we retreated from the battle in some state of earned euphoria, grateful to have survived another night in the trenches.

It was music specifically designed to elicit rage and defiance, and I soaked up every second.

Then, on Monday, I returned to my madrigal choir and a cappella chorus where my meticulously tuned tenor 1 voice endeavored to reach the highest of high notes. Hands clasped. Shoulders back. Wide eyes. Wider smiles. Bathing in the beauty of perfect harmonious balance. A wholly opposite community. A vastly different shared sense of accomplishment. But equal elation.

Was I a punk rocker? A chorus kid? An envelope-pusher? A strict, disciplined member of the collective? Yes. I was all of these things…and many more. They were some of the very best moments of my life, and I wouldn’t trade a second of that seemingly odd discordance to snap into some perfect mold of the typical, expected teen experience.

We do not all fit into boxes, so let’s stop building them.

Adolescence Interrupted

The Heart Beneath the Hat

People are more than the jobs they perform.

As a society, we have an unfortunate tendency to categorize by cramming into prejudicially assigned boxes the core essence of a stranger based on the task, project, or career stream he or she happens to be swimming in at the moment.

We look past the person, and only see the uniform, hat, or badge. But a face full of green makeup doesn’t make you Frankenstein, and much to the chagrin of a nation full of six-year-old Halloween candy hunters, strapping a red cape to your collar won’t help you take flight.

This is not to say that we can’t or shouldn’t take pride in the duties that drive the majority of our days. Embracing an impetus to help make this planet a safer, kinder, cleaner, and more compassionate space meteor is noble work, and that grand goal can be accomplished in myriad ways.

But our hearts do not beat in militant metronomic rhythm to the clicks of an analog time clock. Our spirits soar when we leave a little space for syncopation.

The next time you stroll past the invisible clerk, avoid eye contact at the counter, or disregard a service rendered, take a second to see the soul beneath the suit.

We’re all just candy hunters, sliding on temporary masks and searching for the right fit.

Adolescence Interrupted