by HK Savage
Copyright 2010 by HK Savage
Cover by Airicka’s Mystical Creations
Edited by Sara Johnson
Staccato Publishing
Zimmerman, MN
First US Edition: December 2010
Second Edition: May 2012
Third Edition: June 2013
The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
ISBN: 978-0-940202-53-2
Printed in the USA
Empath
by HK Savage
Ch. 1
My head felt like it was going to burst. “It’s part of the whole college experience Mom,” I fell back on the same argument I’d given a thousand times as I wandered around my room. Packing my things, I tried to ignore the sense of failure accompanying the stabbing pains in my head and wrenching in my stomach, reminding myself none of them were mine.
“Claire, I just don’t know why you can’t stay here with us while you ease into college life. There’s no need to rush. So much is going to be changing for you and I want you to do well. You know how hard it is for you to make friends.” Jeanette, my mother, was overreacting as usual as she sat on my bed playing idly with a loose string on my comforter looking like she was going to cry. Again. Great. My eyes welled up.
She was right. It was hard for me to make friends but not for the reasons she thought. She was under the impression I was a loner by choice not out of necessity. But it was that necessity that was giving me a headache right now and making me feel like I wanted to cry. I didn’t want to cry, she did. That was my problem; empathy and too much of it.
I can feel what others are feeling so strongly that it’s not just a “feeling” it’s a real feeling. I can feel it like it’s mine, which makes being around other people really hard for me. I would describe it as being at an incredibly loud 3-D movie that is turned up so loud you can’t hear yourself think and everything seems like it’s all around, so there isn’t any sort of break or relief from all of it. What I have is not a choice but an affliction and I have been this way ever since I can remember. The only way I’ve ever found that I can limit the effect on me is to avoid being close to people. Proximity is difficult, but touching is terrible and that is yet another reason my mother was so upset with me at the moment. She thought I didn’t want to touch her or hug her. I wanted to; I just couldn’t.
And here she was about to cry. That’s always one of the worst things I have to deal with, it’s so raw and painful especially when it’s because of me. To stay was to keep the cycle going and leaving made me insensitive. Either way we both lose. It has been slowly driving me insane for the past nineteen years and most of my family thinks I’m socially retarded. Now, I had my chance to escape right here in front of me and I was taking it whether she was okay with it or not; it was the only hope either of us had for a somewhat normal relationship.
“Mom, you can’t cry about this,” I tried gently to disparage her fear while I wiped at my nose now running just like hers. “I will be fine and you know it. You’ve always said you wished you could have gone off to school and now, here you are, trying to keep me from doing it. If I stay here while I go, it’s no different than the last twelve years of school.” As expected I felt the stab of guilt and knew I’d hit home.
My mother grew up in Iowa with parents too busy with farm life and duties to see their daughter needed their attention and love. As soon as my father, a relatively handsome and gentle man with plans to enlist in the army after school had shown some interest, she had latched on and they had eloped at seventeen.
The life of an Army wife suited my mother quite well. My father was usually relocated every few years and she got to try on all sorts of lives for herself in different towns. She was always searching for something that would make her feel complete; whether it was new friends, running, reading circles, quilting groups, anything to take over her attentions and make up for the fact that her family was not what she had hoped. She had grown up dreaming of a big, happy family with lots of kids and their friends always at the house; filling it with their noise and energy. She was made for that kind of thing, with the chasing after and busyness of it all. Instead she got me, a socially limited kid who didn’t go out much except for the few outings to movies and dinner a few times a semester I could muster with the relatively small group of girls who were not completely weirded out by my odd behavior.
Because I have never found anyone else with a curse like mine; I have never been able to talk about it or figure out if there’s any way to shut it off. My only defense has been to keep my own emotions wrapped up tight and keep a safe distance from everyone else. Oh, and I hold my breath a lot. It seems to help when physical contact is unavoidable.
Not understanding the phenomenon myself, I can’t explain it. But the whole, “it’s not you, it’s me” argument didn’t carry a lot of weight when I tried to have it out with her a few years ago. I saw how her perceived failures were eating her from the inside and adding to her growing substance abuse problems. How could I not feel responsible? Since that discovery, I’ve actually had to withdraw almost entirely from her if I am to keep even a small part of my sanity and I have no idea how to heal the rift that now stands between us.
The best thing I can do now, for both of us, is to get away. I’ve been waiting for this day my whole life although my enthusiasm is, of course, tempered by a few of the hurdles I can see standing readily before me. School has never been very hard for me. Little social time leads to lots of study time. However, living in a dorm with a pack of overly emotional girls who are finally getting a chance to be relatively unsupervised with a pack of overly hormonal boys. Oh, the joy that is going to be. The difference is that I am better able to insulate myself from strangers’ emotions. I can feel anyone, but I’ve noticed that it takes some exposure and personal connection for me to feel them intensely. Once I have their feel, I can’t even lose it in a crowded room. It’s just there, on my periphery until I put some actual distance between us. Thus, the need for my own room on campus. A roommate would be a nightmare.
Now, here I am about to head off to Augsburg College, a small, private school in Minneapolis. As much as I would like to move far away, I just couldn’t do that to Mom. She needed me to come home on weekends and holidays and I am terrified (probably because she is) of going away to some strange state; it would be too risky if I completely fall apart. I chose a private school not because of the prestige but because of the small classes. As one could imagine, crowds are pretty hard for me to handle.
“Any more boxes? I don’t know how much more will fit in the van,” my father, Doug’s, voice drifted up the stairs and with it, a welcome sense of calm I eagerly tapped into it, feeling my nose and eyes clear at once. A life of barking orders had never transferred to his volume in the house, thank goodness. Dad came through the doorway to the bed where Mom was still sitting. He rested a hand lightly on her shoulder with a nervous glance at her face. Poor Dad. Mom was going to be difficult for a while if her current state was any indication. Her despair was increasing by the minute. I could taste it and feel the air being squeezed from my lungs as I suffocated on her need to keep me close.
“Just one more bag, Dad, and I think we can go.”
“Okay, I’ll meet you down at the car. “ He pulled away gently from my mother with a last lingering pat on her shoulder, which she did not acknowledge, grabbed the bag from the bed and gave me a slight, tight lipped smile that didn’t reach his eyes. His anxiety was growing in direct response to Mom
’s grief and I was relieved when he went downstairs before both of them were a wreck.
I needed to leave this sick cycle before I officially went nuts!
On the surface, they looked like such a normal couple. Dad was balding a little on top through his crew cut brown hair but always had a strength in his hazel eyes that I relied on for stability in my darkest times. Mom was a brunette like me with her hair just past her shoulders in a typical mom bob. Her eyes, light brown, were always a little pinched at the edges, too tight for genuine warmth.
Dad was great at locking down his emotions. It made us work pretty well together. The bummer was that I didn’t really know what he was thinking unless I tried. It must be what normal people have to put up with when interacting with others. It wasn’t a bad thing, just different. Dad had been shutting down emotionally for years, and with a bit of an emotionally crippled wife and distant daughter, who could blame him. Then there was a lifetime of military training. Not really a breeding ground for warm and fuzzy behavior. I did feel bad for him, though; now that he was retired, he had nothing to do with himself except for woodworking. It was no wonder he spent so much time in his workshop.
We live in Richfield, Minnesota. Minnesota is a state with a surprisingly lively boutique furniture trade. Dad had always found woodworking comforting and constant in his perpetual job transfers over the years. He’d developed quite a knack for furniture design as well. A crib for a friend, new chair for a co-worker; he was always working on something. It surprised us when it turned out the local boutiques were able to sell his designs for a pretty penny; this let him supplement their retirement income and help send his only daughter to a nice school with minimum need for student loans. I would also be working on campus in the library but that was okay with me. My first love was books and I felt perfectly at home in a library.
I made an inspection of the now relatively bare room I had spent the last few years in and looked at Mom. I couldn’t think of anything new or comforting to say to her. Whether she knew it or not this was the best thing for all of us. Hurriedly I held my breath and touched her shoulder. She closed her eyes as the tears started and I walked quickly out the door.
Things just have to be better away from here; at least they’ll change.