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    • Hazel

      by Lavinia Ludlow | 28 May 2010

      It’s been years since I’ve been in contact with either Teresa or Elizabeth, and they catch me off guard at the dinner table with an enthusiastic compliment on how good I look, as if they don’t remember preying on me all throughout high school, so either they’ve genuinely matured or found new victims to suck esteem from.

      “Oh my god, I like totally hit a guy with my car today,” Teresa says. “He like bounced over my hood, hit the wind shield, and plopped off the side. It was freakin’ hilarious. I could barely drive away ‘cause I was laughing so hard.”

      “That’s hilarious,” Elizabeth says. “Was he alright?”

      “Someone ran over to help him up so I figured he was okay.”

      “You just drove off?” I ask, cranking my jaw back into place.

      “He was fine.”

      “I know but–”

      “So, Hazel, are you still like gothic and depressed?” she asks. “I remember in high school you were always dressed like you were going to a funeral.”

      “I…was never gothic…and depressed,” I say.

      “Yeah, remember that one time Winnie came up to you and was like, ‘You’d be better off if you killed yourself’?” Elizabeth asks.

      “I don’t remember that,” I say.

      “You don’t?”

      “No.” I break open my tall menu hoping they’d get the hint to drop the interrogation and open theirs.

      “How can you not remember something like that?”

      “I…just don’t.”

      Or maybe I do, but fuck, enough shit goes down in a teenager’s adolescence like the standard confusion over life on top of the misery brought on by the standard sadistic expectations to excel, in addition to whatever else went down in the 90s that could significantly warp an impressionable young kid like the Gulf War, the Soviet Union Collapse, the Oklahoma, Georgia, and Kaczynski bombings, among other things that capped off that decade like Columbine, and I really want to know how uprooting any of that now, especially the part where Winnie said that I should kill myself, could possibly do anyone any good when we’re all still trying to get over how horrifying our 20s were, much less what went down in our teens.

      “Twenty-two dollars for a salad? It better be garnished with diamonds,” I say, trying to change the subject.

      “You don’t remember her saying that?” Elizabeth asks.

      “No, I remember now,” Teresa says. “Winnie came up to us and was all, ‘Hazel would be better off if she killed herself ‘cause it would do the world a big favor.’ She never said it to her face. Right?” She looks to me for confirmation.

      “Oh,” Elizabeth says. “Hey, but remember how she’d always ask you how the suicidal cult was doing? And she’d chase you around campus screaming, ‘drink the Kool-Aid!’ And everyone would call you Hazel Nut Job.”

      This is why people go into work one day with a shotgun. This explains why people turn to the masses and drink Kool-Aid. This is one of the reasons behind Chuck Palahnuik’s conceptualization of Project Mayhem.

      I scratch at my neck hoping someone will change the subject.

      Photo by Flickr user Pacfolly



      Lavinia Ludlow is a West Coast musician and writer. Alt.punk releases March 1st, 2011 from Casperian Books

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      • 2007-2011

        After four years, Is Greater Than has ceased publishing. Thank you for reading and your support over the years.

        View the full archives, or browse by month, category or search below. View a full list of our contributors with links to their archive pages on the about page.

        Keep up with publisher Paul M. Davis on his personal site and his blog.

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      • COLUMNS

        • Art Can't Hurt You by Laura M. Browning
        • Moony Habitations by Leilani Clark
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