TIMED WRITING EXERCISES INSPIRED BY NATALIE GOLDBERG'S WRITING DOWN THE BONES

September 9, part two: journal entry (10 minutes)

It's harder to be comfortable when you're an adult. It had to be hotter and more humid than this in Florida, but I'm dying (no pun intended). There were so many distractions when I was little, so much to help me forget the weather, forget the miserable state of my life. Running, jumping, screaming, even fear was a good antidote. Now I just lie around wanting to do something but with no energy to do it.

Anita sent me a long letter full of news, good and bad -- or what she considered good (she and Simon are gonna have a baby) and bad (Hazard died from a urinary infection and blockage that had been plaguing him unnoticed for weeks); I would likely label the news the other way around -- and I sat at the desk planning to respond and must have spent three hours looking at a blank piece of paper, no energy to write even "Dear Anita."

The sun set and my eyes were too strained to focus on the paper any longer so I looked out the front window and much to my horror (and curious delight) witnessed the across-the-street neighbors having sex. Such an ugly thing, hetero-sex, so uni-directional and uninteresting. I may have had different feelings about it if the young woman weren't the most visible participant. She isn't ugly in her street clothes -- and her boyfriend is certainly "attractive enough" -- but naked she looked like a Frankenstein creation, particularly because of the huge purple scar running from her belly button to her breastbone. The only opportunity I had to see the man's genitals I completely missed because he removed himself from her throat and traced the scar with his cock then quickly poked it into her pussy. I was way too distracted by the gash to get a good look. My mistake. I have half a mind to send them a postcard and let them know a thing or two from the peeping tom's point of view.

But then again, like I said, I don't even have the energy to write my "best friend" a reply to her letter, and now I've completely wasted what little I had today writing this journal entry.

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