. 0 10B - The Michigan Daily - Literary Magazine - Thursday, March 11, 1999 Solace in a Closed Closet By Renee S. Zukin The Michigan Daily Literary Mag Aloe Vera's Mysterious Malady or An Indigo Dream I don't remember the first time I spent time in my closet. It must have been dur- ing a game of hide and seek or while seek- ing refuge from noogies, spit balls, and unfair wrestling matches between my older brothers and me. Shutting myself into the closet of the house on East Larkmoor provided comfort in the chaos. Though the closet in my bedroom with the shaggy red carpet was a haven during day- light hours, the doors had to be kept shut at night. It was a ritual. When my mother would tuck me in bed, she would check the closet for monsters and make sure those doors were closed tight - ensuring there was no chance of the goblins escaping and torturing me in my sleep. The comfort of the closet would later become precious moments of self-reflec- tion and much needed solitude through life's trials. There is something uniquely serene about entering that tiny space, sit- ting down, and shutting out the world. In every bedroom I lived in, I could find that solace in the space of the closet though never really understanding what drew me into it. The house on Arbury proved to be more conducive to closet sitting. During my teen years, I kept a dresser in my bed- room closet. I would climb on top of it and shut the sliding doors in front of me. There was just enough light peeking through the bottom of the doors to see the silhouette of my hands as they twisted and turned with each passing thought. Sometimes, I wondered if it were the monsters in the closet that I was coming to sit with - cavorting with the demons -~ I 615 E. Liberty off State M-F 8:30-5:20 Sat til 4:20 that never seemed to disappear complete- ly from my early childhood. In the dark- ness, the world stopped just long enough to ease my mind of the changes going on around me. Sexual awakening, cognitive enlightenment, and emotional awareness were so much for a young girl to handle. But the feel of my soft shirts hanging above me and gliding against my back reminded me of cuddles I received as a baby girl from my daddy and gave me hope for a future of warm touches and sincere embraces. And then the creaking of the hangers would remind me that silence is never long lasting, and I must move on with the task of growing up. In my early years of college, I only had one closet with a door that would actually close. I made that closet my own, painting the outside with my signature daisy and boxes of red and blue and black across the bottom of a green door. I even added my initials so that all who lived in that room after me would know I had been there and know that this space had been something special, maybe even magical. There were only two occasions in which I remember spending time in there with the door closed. The first time was the night my boyfriend and I broke up, and I couldn't escape my roommate in that tiny apartment. The need to be alone was so powerful that I didn't care what BUUAN DAMIAN GAP/Daly I e e O You Make the Calli Win the raffle and choose your favorite drink special! Friday Nights The Place to Party 1220 S University. 665-7777 *Fall + Winter *Spring +Summer + ISIS is a study abroad program specializing in the social sciences within an international and cross- cultural context. " Electives taught in English " Students required to take Spanish at appropriate level " Homestays with Spanish families " Applications accepted on a rolling admission basis Prospective students are encouraged to speak with current University of Michigan students who have participated on the ISIS program. Contact information: ISIS at Portland State University Tel: (800) 547-8887 ext. 4029 E-mail: isis@pdx.edu she was thinking as she sat on my bed staring at the closed door in front of her. The second time was the day before I told my mother I was pregnant. I left the lights on this time, for there were parts of me I didn't want to turn off when I closed the door. I sat down slow- ly, with just enough floor space for me to sit Indian style and touch the walls with my elbows and knees. In the calm, I looked up in search of something, some guidance perhaps, and found cracks in the paint on the ceiling. I noticed one major crack in the wall which all others sprout- ed from. Reaching in all directions, the lines reminded me of veins - a blood- line, the line from which my blood ended and my soon-to-be daughter's blood began. And then I became momentarily blinded by the uncovered light bulb and, in that instant, felt that things were going to be okay. When I moved into my parents new house in the middle of my pregnancy, I found new meaning in my closet sitting. All these years, I had wondered what being inside a small space was all about. Why was it that being inside of a closet made everything inside me calm and serene enough to focus and breathe effort- lessly? I figured it out one night as I spent GRADUATING STUDENTS Consider a lucrative career in commercial real estate sales. We're a local company, looking to hire a self-starting, business- oriented graduate with a good sense of humor. I have 32 years in real estate, yet keep an open mind and respect for the abili- ties and opinions of younger agents. Sound interesting? Call Gary or visit our web site. Gary Lillie & Associates Realtors 663-6694 www. garyl ill ie .com time organizing newly acquired baby items and sAt in the closet that would soon be my daughter's. Sitting inside the cubelike walk-in clos- et setting tiny clothes on tiny hangers, I decided to shut the door on the world once more. All was quiet. I could hear my breath and the echo of my quickened heartbeat that was now beating for two. Sounds from the other rooms of the house were muffled - voices murmuring as if floating through fluid to reach my ears. I lay down and curled my legs up to my bulging belly, my hands resting gently on my daughter's body. I closed my eyes and, for a few moments, was lost in the world of the Womb. "This is it," I thought to myself. "We are home." And so I realized that the closed-in feeling of the closet doors was not only refuge from sibling rivalry, puberty, or the lack of solitude in the college setting, but also a return home to the place of my ini- tial existence. Sitting in a closed closet embodied a feeling of floating in fluid with protection from the outside world by walls representing the amniotic sac that I elbowed and kneed and was first embraced by. And now it is my daughter who crawls and explores the world out- side of the womb, who will take a time- out from the struggles of learning before bedtime. As we play quietly in her room after her bath, she crawls up the one step into her closet, turns to sit, and looks up toward me with a smile, as if to say, "Mama, I'm home." n ~i'c225 E. Washingtoni corner of Washin"ton and"5th NORTH AND SOUTH INDIAN MEALS DINNER FOR TWO VEGETARIAN PINNER $12.95 NON-VEGETARIAN DINNER $16.95 TUES-THURS ONLY expires 331199 Tu-Th 11:30-2:30,5:00-9:00 Fri-Sat 11:30-2:30, 5:00-9:30 Sunday 11:30-2:30k&5:00-8:00, She was the weird one. Even though, she always said that I was the weird one. She had loved to point out the way people's interest turned to poorly-contained nervous- ness when they saw me push some invisible strand of hair behind my ear a billion times in a conversation. Or she would laugh in reliving all the times that bums picked me out of a crowd to harass and rant to. It made me pick my lip and reach around for some way in which she was strange; any quirk with an easy grip handle. But there wasn't any, not one. Her strangeness was broad and smooth without chink or hand- hold. It was the way she spoke, without comment on herself. She couldn't hear how the words might sound, if they might limp out in a motley formation. It was only the idea. She spoke with complete can- dor, without consideration to appro- priateness, or the potential awk- wardness of the listener. So she felt hurt a lot, too. Often enough her verbal troops were a deformed bunch, and leading them into dis- cussion was like charging into the valley of death with the six-hun- dred. By some cruel twist of fate her full name was Aloe Vera Cummings. If the great God in heaven had only allowed the grace of Vera Aloe Cummings, maybe she wouldn't be filled with such self-loathing. We lay on a rooftop, high above the city. We lay on our backs, exactly -oppo- site each other, ear to ear, with the crowns of our heads touching each other's shoulders. The fireworks were mostly star bursts stretching languorously across the night sky in blue, green, red and white. The whites were the best, looking like meteor showers or something bizarre and catastrophic. The muf- fled booms of the explosions were soothing, rather than surprising. Every once in a while, I would turn my head to watch as her face was brushed with light from the explo- sions overhead. Her lips were slightly parted in sightless feeling. Inevitably, it would fade into dark- ness again. "How can these things be birthed by a machine?" she asked, her breath whistling into the folds of my ear. I pictured a grotesque machine, all perpetual motion and gears, cranking out divinity. Alternately, I thought ofa kind old man lighting them one by one, tenderly, and I scratched this out also. "They're just lights, is all. I'll tell you, I feel kind of stupid finding bright lights and loud noises as beautiful as I do. It's like thinking that an amusement park is the height of culture," and I felt dumb as soon as the words faded. Aloe turned her head and kissed my ear By Edward Kehog lobe. "I feel like the fourth is the orgasm of the summer or some- thing. It's in the dead center and filled with heat, noise and light. I think it's my favorite holiday," she remarked. I smiled. She knew as well as I did that that wasn't the truth, but, for Aloe, it was her favorite, one now and that was the important part. With patience mingled with a near super- stition, we watched the display. We felt the heat radiate up around our ears from the black rooftop. We could hear the monotonous murmur of the crowd in the street. "If I squeeze my eyes closed wicked, wicked tight, I can see the fireworks in blue on my eyelids. It's like a souvenir," she said. I smiled again in the dark. Her body stirred the gravel beside me. I felt the scene change there but given the chance, I couldn't name what it was, what thing had meant change of scene . But there was. "You know, I think that perhaps the nature of the perfect lover is uneasiness," she said. I could feel her nod her head. I looked over and saw little specks of light reflected in her eyes. She began again. "I don't want somebody smooth. I want someone who is desperate and shaky. I think that there is beauty in the uncertain movement. like a falling body reluctant to give up its grace." She spoke to me but her words inevitably floated up to the sky. The irregular thump of fireworks sound- ed vaguely, a mile away, a heartbeat after the lights filled our eyes. I felt the gravel pressing into the backs of my arms and legs. I could almost see the tattoos they would leave minutes after I stood up. "How can I find comfort in a liq- uid hand, something rolling on me like oil?" I exhaled. I heard the crunch of gravel as she nodded again, agree- ing with herself. It was nearly a soliloquy. No, I guess she wanted feedback. But the sky took the words from us. I just watched them as they passed by, on their way upwards. The rooftop was so airy that it felt like a vacuum. And instead of the fireworks providing definition and boundary to the sky, they merely enhanced my feelings of groundlessness. I forget that word; the word for 'fear of wide open spaces.' The gravel and the gravity sandwiched our bodies. She spoke again but I didn't hear her. I was thinking of the sky. With each new revelation, I wondered more and more what she thought when we were together. The absence of the fireworks made the rest of the night seem See ALOE, Page 16B J Sa roI U.wS. IMMY The law firm of Dobkin obtaining both temporary have over 20 years of exp Michigan foreign student Sherman, Esq. at: Lav DOBKIN & 32901 Middk Farmington H: Tel. (248)855-8600 E-mail: xgr Live with British students in the very center of Oxford as an Associate Student of a medieval Oxford college. Summer and graduate study available. Since 1985, students from 240 leading U.S. Colleges have studied in Oxford through WI.S.C. Washington International Studies Council 214 Massachusetts Avenue, N.E. (Suite 370) Washington, D.C. 20002 Phone Number: (202) 547-3275 Free Telephone: (800) 323-WISC Facsimile: (202) 547-1470 E-mail: wisc@erols.com NELSON STAFFING: GREAT JOBS FOR GREAT PEOPLE AT GREAT COMPANIES. 1: Human Resource Solutions ii