return to home
blogportfoliosketchesaboutemail
eleanor no. 25

October 5, 1989. It is one day more than three months since the fall. My eyes are already tired and I have only had them open for a few seconds. This room is a different one from the room I first opened my eyes in — yesterday? My brain has fogged over, and the defroster isn’t working yet. There is a large window beside my bed. It is open, and screened over, and I can feel the wind. It is a Disney kind of day, with birds singing in the distance. There is a sprawling azalea beneath the window, and hummingbirds flit patiently back and forth, waiting for the traffic jam of honeybees to dissipate. It is an awful lot to take in, and my head throbs.

Mama sits in a chair beneath the window, her head tilted back against the glass. She stares up at the acoustical ceiling tiles, probably trying to connect the puncture patterns into some sort of coherent scene; she taught me how to do this to distract myself whenever I needed a shot from Dr. Bonavault. Mama was always better at this than I was, or maybe just better at pretending. “Look, there is a giant creeping snail,” she would say, “and the villagers are running away from it.”

Mama is not yet aware that I am here now.

I remember waking up just like this after the car crash, but in a much less interesting room, and with Mama and Daddy both sitting on my bed, stroking my hair. They scared me at first, Mama in the neck brace that she wore for the rest of the summer, Daddy’s face red and scratched. He broke two ribs, too, and later he showed me the heavy bandages wrapped around his torso. They cried and smiled and they explained what Mama’s brace was for, and why Daddy was bandaged up. Then they cried some more as they explained to me what ‘minor skull fracture’ meant. I ran around for weeks after, telling anybody who would listen that I broke my head all open.

The disorientation settles a bit, and I gather my thoughts. The hospital bed, I must get used to the hospital bed. Why am I in a hospital bed? There are needles in my arms, taped over and tubed-up. My arms are yellowish, skin stretched tightly around my thin bones, which are far too visible for my liking. There is a line of demarcation, much like a tan line, wrapping around my fingertips, which are rosy and pink. I puzzle this together with a memory of a broken wrist when I was seven; my arms look now exactly how my arm did then when the cast was buzzed off.

Things begin to return to me: the pebbly cliff, Jack, peanut butter-and-honey sandwiches, diving… Falling. Everything comes back in a rush: falling, falling, falling. The colors. The voice. Is this heaven? I am crying now because a hospital bed is the stupidest place in the world and that voice was like being perfect, and from what I can tell I am very far from perfect now. Mama sees that I am stirring and she is over me in a flash and I do not want her here, not yet, there is too much inside my head. I throw up on myself and drop my head back onto the pillow and I am gone again, and in my dream I run around telling anybody who will listen that I have broken my heart wide open, and nobody is listening, so I sit down on nothing and cry and cry and cry. I tell myself I will cry until the voice returns and asks what is wrong, and I will say Where have you been, everything is wrong, but now it is fine. I never get to say this.

Comment on this entry




deeplyshallow is subscribeSubscribe to RSS feed

flickrMy Flickr photostream

my twitter feedMy Twitter feed


recent entries

exit music
waiting, seeing
that faint sensation of loss
kninja
the boondock skeins
how to be better
the chime-maker’s nemesis
some things change, some don’t, etc.
ohh hahh ohh hahh
damn you, molly
View complete archive

movie & tv reviews

Lust, Caution
Double Indemnity
Iron Man
Forgetting Sarah Marshall
There Will Be Blood
Gone, Baby, Gone
Live Free or Die Hard
The Indian Runner
The Iron Giant
Contact
An Inconvenient Truth
X-Men: The Last Stand
Superman Returns
Enigma
Nobody's Fool
Look, Up in the Sky
Numb3rs
Mission: Impossible III
Heaven
The Abyss
The Constant Gardener
The Mosquito Coast
The Hustler
Limbo
Grizzly Man
The Verdict
Superman Returns
Elizabethtown
Battlestar Galactica
You Can Count on Me
Rolling Roadshow 2005
The American President
My DVD collection

eleanor

01. dreaming of falling
02. marvelous descent
03. a conversation
04. the colors
05. huffnagle island
06. a hundred million
07. sixty-six stories
08. anyone earthbound
09. a girl named eleanor
10. a route obscure and lonely
11. a certain stillness
12. this is jack
13. wide flat lands
14. going home
15. girl unscrewed
16. slow rehabilitation
17. twenty-three stories
18. a far-off point
19. fifteen years quiet
20. a one-beer fella
21. luminescence
22. one-sided conversation
23. hearts big and stupid
24. nineteen seventy-eight
25. first light
26. a hundred years
27. too long to stop now
28. plainswept
29. a widower in training
30. spies and assets
31. thirty years and then some
32. leaping over couches
33. cricket song
34. eleanor's first kiss
35. like so much ballast
36. too much
37. the longest wait
38. the second ice storm
39. rocket summer
40. waiting
41. wax wings
42. breakup
43. tough beans
43. the heavy gray sea

best of ds

welcome to sxsw
the last omelette
summer of '69
firewalker with me
lady beware
how to drink wine
fish waffle beanbags
smells like granny fanny
simple request
student of okinawan history
operation dinner out
straight on til morning
billions and ... eh, whatever
sight
on the subject of overtime
permafrosted
this morning on the way
three days later
rally, monkey
growing shames
small moves, captain
bored beyond belief
so well, so strong, so slow
that was a good day
amazing stories
cracked your code
varieties of experience
hate it when she does that
most likely to wear tights
should've been a cowboy
mean old men
and scene
time-traveling head-puncher
what're the odds?
big k days
this base will explod
no place like
50/100/buh-bye
further baseball conversations
longest last rites ever
watch the skies
who needs sleep
rogue agent
red shag carpet and iced tea
fuck you, murphy
slow drift
pyro, singular possessive
decomposition
wide-eyed wonder
october morning
national pasttime
wordplay
movie buff extraordinaire
an approximate transcript
i wonder if neil simon had a cat
teach my feet to fly
unexplored
old girlfriend

recent entries

Achewood
Alligators in a Helicopter
Art of the Title Sequence
The Big Picture
A.V. Club
Binary Bonsai
Bluishorange
Brand New
Collision Detection
Consumerist
Cynical-C Blog
The Daily Figure
Facetiously Me
Fast Company
Fireland
Fool's Paradise
Ftrain
Hacking Netflix
In the Kitchen with Kristie
In One Ear...
Looks Good Works Well
Kathleen Edwards
Mark Simonson
Oblivio
One Good Move
Our Secret Handshake
Photoshop Disasters
Physical Interface
Posterwire
Roger Ebert Journal
Ryan Keberly
Sarah's Sketches
The Snowsuit Effort
Three-Letter Word for Art
Tomorrow Museum
Traditionally Modern Designs
Unreasonable Faith
Warpspire
Wired - Epicenter
Wired - Geekdad


of peripheral interest

The Eleanor Sketches
My Flickr
Sketch Gallery
The Dialogue Archives
Manual
Best Fiction, Vol. 1
DS on Archive.org
Hosted by Kionic
9rules member


what i do

I've been a web designer since 1998. In the ensuing ten years I have worked in that capacity for an arctic ISP, a dusty Reno advertising agency, a boutique design firm with trendy brick interior, a nefarious taskmaster, an obsolete-but-oblivious (and cigar-permeated) development shop, and myself. At present I'm an associate creative director for Level Studios, a digital agency in San Luis Obispo, California. I used to keep a list of recent projects here, but lately my work has taken me into the application space, which isn't as easy to share. Instead, check out Level's portfolio.

recent projects

LVL work samples
Freelance (old)
the shallow end

Ebert, of all people, posts a creationism Q&A, the subtle genius of which is his absence of commentary. // Turns out we're not done exploring after all. We're going to the Sun. // Cassini discovers organic material on Enceladus. // Word on the street is that Dubai is nuts. // You'd think that a video like this would be awe-inspiring all on its own. Tell that to whoever added the stock wonderment musical score. // American passenger jets now being outfitted with anti-missile devices. "Officials emphasize that no missiles will be test-fired at the planes." // Does atheism equal irresponsible parenting? State of New Jersey challenges adoptive parents' right to their adopted child due to their (lack of) religious belief. // Unbelievable single-car accident. // Insomnia, begone. // Fairly predictable and run-of-the-mill promo for Kathleen's upcoming album, but hey, you take what you can get.
Copyright Jason Gurley. Simplicity is sexy.