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lemonpulp

lemonpulp
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writing my way to sanity, one post at a time. you can also find me at pulpyprose.com

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JULY 16, 2010 12:27PM

Night Journeys

Rate: 17 Flag

There's something intoxicating about the darkness. I used to love being outside in the middle of the night, alone with myself and the world. You can hear the quiet. The dark made me feel free and alive.

I used to get in the car and just drive around. No purpose. No destination. Just the freedom to go wherever I wanted, whenever I wanted. Part of me felt like I was on some sort of secret mission. I'd always wanted to be a spy. I think I would've been good at it.

One night after a party, my friend and I decided to go wandering around town. We actually wanted to see if two of our friends were secretly seeing each other. Instead of taking the quickest, shortest route, we strolled along the greenbelt and behind the houses. We snuck through apartment parking lots, sticking to the shadows as much as possible. When we got back to the street, we walked as far from the streetlights as we could.

He was sober and indulging my desire to act like an idiot. I was drunk and enjoying a few moments of silliness, an escape from the seriousness and melancholy that was always hanging over me. Walking past a car with fogged up windows, we realized we were right about our two friends. We thought we had gotten past the car without being seen. Then the horn blared and I jumped straight up in the air. We had been seen. My drunkeness saved us from having our real motive discovered.

 Other times, I found myself driving around my hometown in the middle of the night. I could do this without question, without anyone worrying about where I was. Nobody even knew I was in town. I'd drive past houses of  friends, rivals, ex-boyfriends. Many I hadn't seen or talked to in years. But I wanted to know what they were like, what they were doing. The darkness was the perfect camoflauge. Nobody was expecting me. Nobody would see me. I could be just as invisible to them in the darkness as I was to them in the light.

But the darkness gave me the advantage. I wasn't vulnerable in the dark. If you don't know I'm there, you can't hurt me. Ignoring me in the dark is expected. It was being ignored in the light that hurt. What was I looking for in these expeditions? I honestly have no clue. Maybe I was looking to gain some power. Find out some secret that would make me feel a little less insignificant. I wouldn't use it. But knowing it would put us on equal footing. You aren't better than me. You might act like it, but you are just as flawed, just as insecure.

 More than anything, I wanted the freedom I felt during those nights. I had no responsibility to anyone. I wasn't accountable to anybody. I was free to be my own person, doing whatever I felt I needed to do. No expectations. No limitations. No compromises. No fear.

I was myself in the dark. I didn't have to hide who I was or what I wanted because the curtains of night did it for me. The night offered solace that I could not find in the blinding light of the day. The daylight exposed too much. Insecurities. Fears. Weaknesses. I had expectations piled on me during the day. I could not be myself. I was accountable to people. In the light, I had to make compromises that took small pieces of my soul away. The day was my prison.

I can't take those night journeys now. Too many responsibilities. Too many people I'm accountable to. Too many compromises that take away pieces of my soul. My freedom is gone. The night is now just as oppressing as the day.

Sleep is my solace now. And the only night journeys I can take are in my dreams.

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Great post
"If you don't know I'm there, you can't hurt me. "
I lived like that for years.
Rated with hugs
Darkness as freedom and days as prison.

" In the light, I had to make compromises that took small pieces of my soul away."

I like this very much. And it is so true to life.
I know this feeling . . . and I love the night. Always have.
This was fantastic writing, and while it may be fiction, a lot of it is true, at least to me. Great Post!
the nighttime is when i'm free. much enjoyed.
If the mosquitoes wouldn't suck me dry as a bone in 3 minutes or less, I'd go night journeying myself tonight just because you so deftly reminded me of that exquisite pleasure. Thank you.
linda - thanks:) all too true for me most days.

vanessa - thank you. i suspect many of us feel this way at times.

owl - i still love the night...it just doesn't bring the peace it once did. unless i've gone to bed.

scanner - fiction, truth...the lines are pretty blurry for me these days.

chuck - glad you liked it. enjoy your nighttime freedom:)

linnnn - yeah, mosquitoes would be a problem. but if i could enjoy this kind of freedom again, it would be worth it.
Back before I was married, I used to occasionally drive around at night, aimlessly, with music playing, avoiding any responsibilities. It did feel like freedom.
I remember those days, when I believed the night held some magic. I wonder if we get them back at some point? Or if adult responsibilties take them away forever?
I can still feel that night magic if I'm standing in a field on a summer's night looking up at a starry sky. But how often does one get a chance for that? This is a very nostalgic and touching piece. ~R
Most of the nighttime driving I used to do was solely for the purpose of getting my baby son to go to sleep. He was a night person from his first days--and he hated going to sleep. But he always fell asleep while riding in the car, therefore, either my husband or I would pop him into his car seat and drive around til he was sound asleep--then we'd sneak back home, tippy toe up the stairs and lay him in his little bed. It sometimes worked. And sometimes we both went so one of us could drive and the other could chat to keep the driver awake. Ahh, those were the days.........I like your ideas lots better, LP. Lots better. :o)

Rated. D
The next time I am out at night and have that feeling that I am being watched I'll know you're out there.
There is a comforting anonymity of darkness.
You were recommended. Quite justifiably, I might say.
Rated for "No expectations. No limitations. No compromises. No fear."
a really interesting piece. i've long been both fascinated and repelled by darkness, so this piece has an eerie familiarity.
Night journeys are intoxicating! you CAN take them now. Find the time. These are the moments you'll remember.
I identified completely with this all the way through, pausing at the end to appreciate the irony, and reluctantly agreeing. For me in my youth and well beyond, the night was a time to replace daytime masks with nighttime ones. The nighttime masks more resembled my inner self, which was younger and less constrained. I still have those masks, but the day's are harder to remove and the night's don't fit as easily anymore.