I dislike making lists.  I pride myself on my memory, and ability to unfold the recent events that might make up the numbered items on the twice-folded piece of paper shoved into the right pocket of a pair of blue jeans and referred to as needed.   It goes against my grain, and if I was to peel back the layers, I’m sure I’d find that the act of scribing notes to myself is associated with mental weakness.  It’s not, of course, it’s a pride thing. I have amazing short-term recall, but it’s the older memories that blur between fact and fiction.

When Billy started having his minute memory losses, ultimately diagnosed as a malignant brain tumor, I started writing, a way of making lists I think.  I didn’t want to remember his march to death, but to remember how I got there, which eventually lead to the unthinkable, ‘where do I want to go’ question.  His journey, a fight to his right at life, wasn’t so different from mine, only I didn’t have doctors poisoning my body with chemicals, and cutting me with knives, rather I did that myself with introspection.  I clearly had the better end of the deal, and now that Billy is gone having lost his fight, and I am still here, fighting a different battle—acceptance for those things I cannot change.

I didn’t take if lying down because it felt too much like a shrug of the shoulders, and oh well that is life, what could I do about the cards I was dealt sort of feeling.  I don’t know if my life is predetermined, and regardless of what I do differently now if it will change the events ahead of me, or if I do alter my course now if I’ll end up at the same place regardless, who knows for sure.  Acceptance of loss didn’t mean that I had to surrender or find a rocking chair for the front porch, and wait around for my spirit to leave me.  It simply meant I had a choice.
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Instructions on the art of disappearing without notice

First, make the decsion and decide to disappear

  • The first task is that you must make the conscience decision to fade into air so that you can travel into the greater abyss unnoticed.  After this is decided, the following steps will aid you in your process.

Gradually become neutral

  • This is most important because if you are naturally vibrant red, you cannot suddenly become beige.  The greater world in which you inhabit would take note of this change immediately, and if questioned would say… “Yes, she changed radically.  Almost overnight really.”  If your objective is to fade away, your change must be so gradual so that even your closest stalker would fail to notice the changes.
  • Begin ever so subtly with your changes, but remember to be consistent.  Start with colors, then clothes.  At the same time, alter the tone of your voice, and the types of comments you make during a conversation.  Passion of any sort must remain buried and never released externally
  • The same applies to your physical attributes: hair color, make up, style of shoes.  Nothing must stand at attention or draw unwanted eye activity.
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