Awkward, Acrylics
“Awkward,” Acrylics on Canvas

Her sandaled feet tapped nervously on the linoleum floor, casually pausing to toy with the stains that decorated the haphazardly assembled tiles. She smirked at the persistent circles and blotches that refused to surrender to her soles.

A tug-of-war erupts between the acute sadness in her eyes and the subdued smile from her lips as she stares at horribly mismatched walls of the lobby: urine yellow behind the receptionist, vomit green to her right, and an angry sky blue to her left. Leaning back, she rests her freshly shaved head on the blister beige wall behind her.

They won’t understand, she thinks. I can’t even imagine how their reality can’t seem more imagined to them my so-called imaginary reality. She chuckles at her own verbal recursive loops between reality and the imagined.

The door opened, and a middle-aged man stepped out, smiling, escorting an elderly couple out. They were sobbing. And that made her tap her feet more. And the vomit green and blister beige suddenly became more saturated.

Crisp sports blazer. Slacks. White shirt. No tie. His chest hair creeping up from under his shirt, peeking out between the buttons, as if seeking other follicular acquaintances out there.

She sat still.

He smiled and beckoned her in.

She did not budge.

“It’s ok. Come on in,” he bellowed, with a criminally fraudulent smile. “Your father can come in, too – if you’d like.”

She quietly followed him into his office. It looked stale and smelled like formaldehyde. Well, that’s not entirely true since she has never really recognized the scent of formaldehyde. But if she had known, then that is what it would be – formaldehyde, sitting comfortably in the counselor’s office, its formaldehyde-smelling feet tossed casually onto the formaldehyde-smelling table … kicking back and relaxing … formaldehyde-style.

I feel dead , she thinks.

“So what is the problem?” he asks, after she sits down on a folding metal chair.

“There is no problem,” she retorts.

She does not tap her feet on the floor anymore. Instead, she sits upright, stiff, her eyes casually wandering over every formaldehyde-smelling inch of the room.

“Hello? Are you still with me?”

She barely heard his voice from within the insulated walls of her reveries.

“Hm?”

“Your father here tells me that you do not eat or talk to people. Do you think that’d be cause for concern?”

“I eat enough.”

“And talking to people around you?”

“If there is a need to say something, I will.”

“So you don’t think family is important?”

She looks at his dusty books tucked away into the sprawling shelves: God and FamilyThe Disciplined Child

“That is not what I said,” she objects softly.