Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Michael Arndt's avatar

I am a 66 year old child of battling alcoholics. Your “I-5 Part 1” really touched some old nerves. Its shocked and surprised me that those nerves were still there to be touched. Thought I was 100% over it. But no, guess we never truly are.

My trauma was deep and affected my path as I became a happy wanderer / achiever who could never really let anyone close, but never realized why. I would get invited to spend Thanksgiving with friends all the time but would find an excuse to cancel or would leave as soon as the meal was done because, I realized later in life, that in my childhood , thats when the horrible fights would start. They’d both be turning into their mean drunk selves and the whole extended family would scurry away before it got ugly leaving us kids there to watch the horror show that followed, or if we were at a relatives our folks would go outside and get in a fight and then the car ride home was like walking to the electric chair before execution because we kids knew what was coming.

Sorry if this is TMI. Anyway, what I want to add since I’m 13 years further along in the journey is my life from 50 to 66 has been incredibly happy and joyous. The pain FINALLY went away for good. And once I was free of it, I really have not sabotaged my own success the way I had all my life. The cycle was broken for good.

I have no idea if any of this relates to your life or not, but I do know the feelings you described in Part 1. I felt that profoundly while reading it, so much so that I couldnt comment. That surprised me, I thought that pain was all gone, but it bubbled up reading your piece. In my 40’s that might have triggered me, but that left 15 years ago and this time I was able to simply process it as my past and not let it affect my present.

Neko, thanks for the music and this blog. I hope your big change thats coming up is truly magical and long-lasting.

Expand full comment
Franny Sales's avatar

Neko. Your thoughts on clearcutting, the river, and the tribes and the sturgeon really touched me. I also think of things like this. Washington is so beautiful and where I live on the peninsula is a special place, but everything is often tinged with that type of sadness. These trees, those orca, that river, the Sound. It all feels so fragile. I am at once witnessing so much beauty, yet with it is the observable abuse of this beauty. What awful and wonderful and perplexing creatures, humans are. It does hurt though, both the beauty and the destruction of beauty. And caviar can fuck right off. Anyway, I always enjoy your writing and I look forward to your book. Preordered!

Expand full comment
25 more comments...

No posts