Sunday, September 22, 2013

Leap or Don't Even Jump at All





                                      "Leap or don’t even jump at all "

          
         Commitment to one person you love for the rest of your life seems irrational, are we psychics? How can we look into the future and know for sure you’ll love that person 60 years from now?  We constantly are changing; we are always becoming a new person, so how do you change with someone else? I believe Marriage is a leap of faith, romance is still alive, but it just takes a certain type of person to pursue commitment. Marriage is still relevant today; it’s just no longer a must. Human Dynamics, economy, and individual circumstances all play a role in the idea of marriage.
 You fight for what you want in life, someone who knows what he or she wants will keep fighting till the end. That’s why I believe marriage is still appealing, it’s not for everyone, however for those with headstrong ways will love and love hard. Marriage is beautiful, it means you found someone who knows you in and out, and loves you for everything you are. Why would you not want that person by your side once you’re old and grey?
Us as humans are social creatures, we seek out companionship, love, and physical contact. A kiss, a soft breathe, these mean so much more when it’s your man or woman against you. Kissing someone isn’t so appealing when you know they might have kissed someone else but 1 hour before you. Marriage gives us comfort and stability; the principles are nothing but good, so why do some people fear marriage? Its true, a lifelong relationship is a bit scary, however that’s why you don’t commit until later in life. There’s no rush, its not like old times when you get married right after high school, women don’t need men as supporters anymore either.
Marriage is definitely not what it used to be, its no longer based on religion or gender, but it’s only a legal documentation now. However, the benefits are rather pleasing, and if you are planning on being together for the rest of your lives, you might as well. I guess its true, you don’t need marriage to commit to someone forever, and for some people it’s just not necessary. The thing about marriage now, is that its no longer expected, if you meet a 35-year-old man who is single, its not surprising.  No one is forced into commitment, and marriage is optional. Before, it was expected of women to marry, men needed wives to keep up to social standard as well, everyone started at such an early age. Now, those who want it, can get it when they want it, there’s no pressure.
As far as monogamy goes, I believe it isn’t healthy to only be with one person through life, that’s why I believe some people aren’t very happy in marriage. You have to get to know different people, and options, compatibility, how would you know what’s good or bad if you only stayed on one side of the street?  I say date, meet new people, but once you found Mr or Mrs right, commit and be faithful till the end.
 I think its wrong to compare us with animal relations when it comes to monogamy (in reference to Kayt Sukels Essay), I know we are animals too however we are so much more complex. We may not be built for monogamy, however we are certainly in no shape for open intimacy. We have feelings far more complex then animals, jealousy is by far the strongest one.  I don’t think its possible to be in a relationship and love someone knowing that they are free to get physical with someone else, and honestly if you love someone enough I don’t think there’s the urge to be with anyone else.  How would you confide in anyone anymore? Marriage and commitment plays far more in our culture then we think I believe. It makes structure, and boundaries with one another.  It makes us feel safe, and gives stability. Could you imagine living in a world like Prairie Voles? One day your husband comes home and tells you the neighbor is having his kid too.
Being committed to someone proves we aren’t alone in this world, having a partner in crime is important because it gives you support and foundation. However we don’t live in a perfect world, and marriage doesn’t work always, but I couldn’t imagine living in a world without the idea of monogamy. As a little girl the idea of a Prince in shinning armor would loose its meaning, looking into the eyes of the person you love wouldn’t be the same knowing their eyes will look back into someone else’s eyes. Just witnessing Hippie communes back in the 60’s, and the idea of free love, showed that humans aren’t really built for open relationships; the dynamic doesn’t necessarily work.
Even temporary marriage seems oddly uncomforting, why would you even bother to get married in the first place? It would be like putting an expiration date on love, but then again, I guess it’s only the legal side of commitment. Marriage is a part of our culture, it built a good foundation and morals to live by, and I think it’s really important to keep it. It also serves purpose for the youth, to see and learn from two parents in love definitely shows to improve a child’s development, and learn good morals along with it. Little girls fantasy’s of white dresses, and walking down the isle should always be a dream, it just is a matter of when, why, and who. Once you find that right person, don’t ever give them up.  True love exists, and marriage makes it known. I think a lot of people give it a bad wrap now days, but it changes with time, however I think it’s important to our culture. Who knows, marriage might turn to mean something else in a decade, maybe it will change with gay marriage. Nonetheless, I say leap or don’t even jump at all.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Just Another Brick in the Wall


                              







                                        Just another brick in the wall

            
         It’s inevitable; boredom always had its sneaky ways with me, even with him. However, I wasn’t sure if I could pin this one on boredom, or the fact that he was starting to get out of hand. I liked his weird individual ways at first; he was so different and interesting. Even with his quirky trivia, witty sarcasm and computer skills, it just wasn’t enough to keep our friendship up. The whole thing was fun at first, meeting late at night, drinking orange juice and vodka in the forest. However, the feeling of excitement and spontaneity I got with him was running thin. His friendship somehow turned into silly kisses while parked in the shadows. Was that what I wanted? Or did I just need a friend, an escape from feeling stuck and alone. I guess we are all in search for something.  
            As a 16-year-old girl I felt as though I was trapped on a rock floating in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, and truth be told, that’s exactly what I was. I was living in Hawaii, and was going to a small charter high school at the time, with about 10-15 people per class. My parents were their fist steps into divorce, and my best friend had just got herself her first boyfriend, meaning she was out of the picture for me all of the sudden. This left me with no one in school that I could really relate to, and all my other friends went to other schools far from mine.  Don’t get me wrong, the school I went to was a good school, but I just hated being that awkward pretty girl that didn’t like talking to anyone. I also didn’t exactly appreciate front row seats to my best friend and her boy toy sucking face every second, of every moment.  So I sat inside my head day to day.
            However, one day I got the strangest blocked phone call. I ignored the first call and brushed it off, but the fact that I started getting the same call, day to day, was a bit unsettling.  When I picked up the phone, all I would hear is static sounds, voices, clicking sounds, and music of some sort; it would all go on until I hung up the phone. Everyday? That’s not an accidental pocket call if you ask me. Then, I learned if I stayed on the phone long enough, it would connect me to a young mans phone line. The first time I heard his voice, he sounded annoyed and confused, just like me. What the hell did any of this mean?
            “Who is this?” I asked, and he responded with the same question; we both wanted answers.  His voice was low, monotone, and a bit raspy, he also had a hidden sense of sarcasm under his breath. However, with all that, I had fallen to liking his voice. One night, our phone lines connected us again, and we started talking as if we had known each other for years; I didn’t even know what this boy looked like. In this conversation, I learned about this guy, his name was Roger and he was my age. What a coincidence. Who was this guy?
            One night we talked on the phone till the sun began to rise, we talked about math, space, darkness, fear, and so much more. I found that his voice caused excitement in me, and that it was so easy to talk to him. We started asking questions about how our phones were tied together, and who had our phone numbers? The mystery began building more when Roger said he got a random letter in the mail addressed to him, and as I started getting animated cryptic riddles in my voice box. I had no idea what these riddles were, but yet I was unafraid of the challenge.
            This raspy voice became my friend, my only friend it seemed. He was a boy who did not exist to anyone but me, in a way he was my little secret, the voice in my head. He was the brain between us two, so I passed the riddles onto him to depict. He told me that they seemed to be linked to Pink Floyd songs, which was no surprise to me cause I never really listened to Pink Floyd. The letter he had, had pieces of paper, strings of numbers, and a few other things inside. We weren’t very sure what any of it meant, so we had made a mutual agreement to finally meet face to face. Since I could not see the letter, we thought it would be best to look it over together. Besides, it was about time for this voice to have a face.
            Roger pulled up in his moms little white car, I could feel my stomach in my throat, and since there was no backing out now. When he got out, he was exactly how he described himself, however he was much smaller then I imagined. His voice was so low; it didn’t quite match up with his soft pale skin, and his long silky blonde hair. He was an awkward little man, but that voice was unmistakably that same sturdy, funny sound I loved.
            We didn’t end up solving that letter, but it was nice to see him in person. We ended up talking on the phone again that night again, and he seemed to have more clues from a message he had just received. Who ever was messing with us seemed to want Roger and I to work together, and figure something out, whatever it was. As this little game of detective went on, we began to learn more about each other, letting one another into our own individual lives. He told me about his friends, one named Toby, and another was a British guy that lived in the UK but kept in touch by phone. The British guy seemed really funny, and the stories he would tell me about him were hilarious.
            Even though I knew Roger face to face now, he still seemed like a surreal character in my own little world; bringing me out of my stale pages. We began to hang out almost daily; sometimes he would even pick me up from school. We would have endless nights spent parked in his car, talking, laughing, and drinking. You have to understand: Hilo Hawaii is a small, run down little town, with empty streets and moldy buildings, where youth has no room to stretch. So sitting in a car till 1am was our idea of fun. We would sometimes roam into the forests by my house, and drink there. We were so different from each other, he was a nerdy computer brain, and I was an artist that was bad at math, but somehow our friendship was perfect.  I enjoyed the stimulation, I was usually always to one to win a fight, but discussions with him were so challenging; so new.
            One time, I invited for him to hang out with my friend grace and her boyfriend, Colin, at his house. We shared a bottle of vodka, took several shots, which Roger apparently had a hard time handling, because he ended throwing up over the balcony.
            Through our time spent, we seemed to forget how we met, or what ever happened to the riddles, the messages, and random letters. We got as far to understand that everything was following the story of Pink Floyds ‘The Wall’. Once we figured that out, things seemed to slow down.
            As time went on, things led on more strongly. Our drunken nights spent alone got us a little closer, and kissing was now the next best thing to keep us entertained. My secret character was molding me and I was out of control, I felt rebellious and alive. My friends, obviously, all thought I was insane. I was staying out late with this random guy no one knew, or have even heard of, playing games with the unknown, they knew this was not normal; but that’s why I loved it. It was even a thrill to know Roger didn’t even have a driver license, only his permit.
            Roger, one day said he had a surprise for me; he made me close my eyes and get in his car. We drove for a while, and then I felt the car park. When I opened my eyes, in front of me was an abandoned house. There were abandoned items astray all over the front yard: clothes, suitcases, shoes, books, you name it. It was so eerie looking, like a scene from out of a horror film, as if something terrible happened to this family. Roger took me in and showed me around, I was a bit reluctant, but in the end I thought it was pretty cool and we called it our ‘house’. We bought spray paint and decorated our house, and had a plan to clean it up and make it our new pad. Colin and grace even came over to check it out and helped with the decorating. This was our little secret.
                        As time went on, my boredom caught up with me once again. School was almost over, and summer would be starting soon. That was very exciting and terrifying at the same time. I was stressed with schoolwork, and hadn’t been seeing Roger all that often. I remember Roger wrote a paper for me, for my science class, he must have done a great job, because I got an A+. Roger seemed really antsy that I wasn’t around as much. He told me he was out late all the time; he seemed up to something. He had made this plan with Colin to steal a well-known Jesus statue from the Pahoa church. I thought that was so unnecessary, and wanted no part in that form of entertainment. Sure enough, it was in the paper a few days later.
One day Roger got in a fight with his mom, he said she hit him, and kicked him out. So I took him to my house for the day, and we just laid in bed all day watching movies.
Time with Roger was fun in the beginning, but I was bored. Drinking in his mom’s car wasn’t so fun anymore, and kissing him wasn’t either. I guess I was realizing that I never liked him that way, and it was the excitement of finding a new me that kept it going. No matter how many times we kissed or drank, I was still the same girl, in the same town.  I think I just enjoyed his friendship better than anything else.
            My new hope was for the new school year, I was enrolled in a different school, a public school, where Grace and Colin went. In addition, my old friend Evan was coming out from California for the summer; this didn’t sit too well with Roger.  I knew I wouldn’t be able to see Roger that much with Evan here, and honestly no longer was feeling the same way towards Roger. The feelings I had towards him turned a corner, and now were uneasy.
            Towards the end of everything, Roger said he had another surprise for me. He took me to our home, and walked me to the entrance. Inside there were more random things covering the whole place, stacked almost to the point that you couldn’t even walk through anymore. There were crosses, glass items, flowers, shoes, and even the churches statue of Jesus. It was all things he had stolen with his friend Toby. How could I have approved of this? This was definitely a surprise, but not a good one. I had no Idea what to say, I couldn’t believe it. He even stole things from off of graveyards. At that point I told him to take me home, and I wanted him to return at least the graveyard items. I think that was a wakeup call for me, even in my own boredom and unhappiness, I wasn’t about to reflect it onto others.
            I started realizing how unbelievably irresponsible I had been, meeting up with this random guy I didn’t even know and trusting him. I made myself so venerable, and had put myself in positions that were potentially dangerous. I was raised in such a small world; bad things didn’t seem to exist. School existed, my parents existed, and my loneliness and unhappiness was all too real. However, I never took the time to analyze what I had put myself in. Luckily Roger wasn’t harmful to me, but he could have been. I was so sheltered, I got a taste of outside, and I thought it was an escape.
            One of my last memories with Roger was when he picked me up, and we parked at the end of a dirt road. I hadn’t noticed he was extremely intoxicated till we got there. He said he had drunk about one and a half bottles of Robitussin, and at that point I was over it and wanted to go home. He said he would take me home if I kissed him. I did not want to kiss him. He grabbed me and tried to force me, however I was much stronger than him and pulled away. Then he started to ramble about ‘what if nothing was real’ and ‘how do you know what is real and what is not’. Then he took me home.
            After that, there was no more phone calls, no more messages, and my secret voice was lost. It was all so surreal. Not long after I got an email from Roger, he was talking about how he assumed I would go to this new school and find another distraction, hang out with attractive guys and start another story. He ended by saying he had something to tell me, but I needed to promise not to call the police on him. Sure enough when he told me, I felt like such a stupid gullible teen girl.
            He admitted to everything, that he was the one behind it all. He was the one leaving riddles on my phone, the random phone calls that ‘just happened’ to connect our phone lines. He lied about everything, even about his British friend that apparently never existed. His mom never hit him, she actually was a sweet woman, he just wanted an excuse to come to my house I guess and spend the day with me.
            How did I not see any of this? Was I so blind? I was in denial, and wanted to believe him, I wanted that voice. I was so tired of living in my own head day to day; I finally had someone else’s words in my ear every night.  In the end, he was exactly the same. He was fighting loneliness, and tucked away in his room all day, he only knew one world, the computer. So he used the only way he knew to get human contact. It was his final act of desperation and boredom, a cry for help. He found my face book, somehow got my number and begun the games. He didn’t know how to talk to people, or how to make friends, so he used his own methods.
            I on the other hand fell into it; my desperation was following the games, and believing the lies. We were so different, but in the end we were in the same situation. We were both searching for something in the wrong way. I realized I couldn’t just throw myself into a stupid situation to find happiness. Honestly, I don’t think I even realized how lonely and unhappy I was until this all happened, it was certainly a wakeup call. I hope he realizes too what he did, he got an upper hand of power and I guess he liked it. What he didn’t realize that I would have been his friend even without the riddles, even if he didn’t tell me funny stories about his British friend, and all the other stories he had made up. I liked awkward Roger nonetheless.
I guess he figured if he just messaged me on face book, I wouldn’t have given him the time of day. Which you know, I probably wouldn’t have. So that in it’s self showed me something, the beauty of people. It’s the quirks, and little things that are striking, and make a friendship. You don’t get to see them in a person until you give them a chance. You just have to be careful how you let people in, and don’t lower your standards out of desperation.
My email in response to roger’s was, that in the end, it wasn’t all his stories that made me like him. Even when the riddles stopped, I was still his friend. I just enjoyed him as a person, someone to call my friend, someone who actually wanted to spend hours in a parked car with me. That’s the Roger I liked, the pale blonde boy who drove his moms car, and made jokes about himself.  That voice I thought I got to know so well; my friend. That’s all I needed.
           
           
           
             



Sunday, September 15, 2013

The Name Game


                                                            



                                                 The Name Game
             

Cassandra Mahea Kanaar, that is the name my parents decided to title me with. Their curly haired, wild-eyed child dancing around and playing in the dirt was also known as their ‘GirlCat’ or ‘MouseMuffin’, nicknames they had for me in my early years. However, as time passed my name went through its twists and turns, dealing with my indecisiveness.
            I was born in Los Angeles, and in the 6 years I lived there my family and friends would all call me Cassie for short. My parents named me after my godmother, Auntie Cassie, because she was a big part of my parent’s life at the time. Which is funny, because now we no longer are in touch with Auntie Cassie, but I have her name; she apparently lives somewhere on Oahu, but we aren’t that close. My parents also had this evil plan to make my brothers name match mine, because for some reason they thought it’d be cute if we had the same initials, CMK. So there we were as children, fighting over lunch pales, and school supplies, because they all had CMK written on it; brilliant, applause for mom and dad.  
            So I took the liberty and changed my name from Cassie, to Kassy. I think that looks a lot better anyway if you ask me, and how cool is that for initials KMK, or KK. Cassandra to Kassy, it works. Before that, my parents both decided to move to Hawaii. So in my head, I thought I can’t go to Hawaii with a name like Cassie. So I switched to my middle name Mahea, which has Polynesian background. My parents were Polynesian dancers their whole lives, and were part of a traveling dance troupe; thus explaining my middle name.  Mahea means ‘endless blue sky”, it’s a Tahitian name that my parent both thought fit. My brothers middle name is also Tahitian, and of course starts with a M too, Makoa.
            Once I got comfortable in Hawaii, made some friends and enjoyed the new lifestyle, I got bored with my name again. I treated my name like a game of musical chairs in my childhood, or a game of hot potato, I couldn’t keep it long enough to get through a grade level it seemed.  So back to Cassie it was, then to Kassy eventually.
            Being a little girl, names are a huge deal; I don’t think it’s quite the same for boys. I remember every game of princess played, a good Barbie doll session, or even my favorite game as a child ‘teenager’, all these games started out with one thing “What’s your name going to be?”. That was a huge deal, my friends and I would even fight over names sometimes, “no that’s my name, I called it first!”.  For some reason I always used the name Courtney, I really liked that name, but thankfully only used that one for make believe.
            When I hit the 7th grade, I went to a new school,  it was my first public school experience and it was terrifying. In that year I went by my full name, Cassandra, because it was my legal name and I thought I’d confuse everyone if I went by anything else. So through that whole year, I was Cassandra to everyone.  It was very annoying to all my friends; they could never keep up with my name changing and me. Some friends knew me as Mahea, some Kassy, and some Cassandra, and were often very confused when they all got together.
            However when I grew u a bit more, I generally began to stick with Kassy. I like writing it, and when I use my full name I spell it with a K, Kassandra. It feels weird when I have to use my legal full name, like when I turn in papers, or sign a contract. Or when I have a job, like when I worked at Coffee Bean we had to have our full, legal, first name written on it.  At least one thing is for sure, my last name, Kanaar; that will stay the same for now. However even that will eventually change if I get married. I believe Kanaar is Dutch, but its silly because it is very similar to the word ‘Duck’ in French.  
            So there you go, Kassandra Mahea Kanaar is my name, its very mixed in ethnicity, Greek, Polynesian, and Dutch. It’s all over the place, just like me, but I don’t plan on changing it anytime soon. It means a lot to me, its grown with me and is who I am. I am Kassy.