static_abyss: (Default)
static_abyss ([personal profile] static_abyss) wrote2018-11-16 01:47 pm
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LJ Idol Week 6: Claudia or Isabel?

You are not the first of my father's children I've met. You're not even the first daughter who has asked him for money. But, unlike them, you are a quivering middle, the foggy transition between your mother and mine. That we share a name just complicates things in ways that have taken me by surprise.

I like to think myself unwavering and strong in the face adversity. You should have been nothing but a ripple as we smoothed over your existence and transition into our lives. You were a pleasant surprise to our brothers, a confusing problem that our father had to figure out, nonexistent to my sister, and you should have been an easy friend to me. Our birthdays are, after all, only a year apart.

I can't quite figure out what it is. My resentment and anger are not your fault. I have been through this every which way, from every distorted angle and jagged edge. I've cut myself on the well honed blade of our father's mistakes and your mother's indifference. My mother played an unknowing hand in this, too, when she named me. So this isn't your fault.

You did me a kindness when you asked me to call you Claudia, or maybe it was luck that you preferred your middle name to our first. Maybe it was that your mother knew of me, through our grandmother or our father. Maybe she wanted to spare you the sudden loss I felt, when I heard our brother calling our name and found out he was speaking to you, not me.

You were born first, so I am the thief and my mother the unknowing accomplice. I have taken what was yours, the family you should have had, the brothers you were entitled to. If father had not doubted your mother, you would be where I am. You would know the quiet nuances of this family, the fragility of our brother's self-esteem, the quiet that means he needs to burrow under our blankets and let my mother comb his hair with her fingers.

That I have your name, letter for letter, makes it easy to slip you into this life. The middle names don't save us. We have the same forehead, the same mouth, the same shade to our eyes. We are our father's daughters. We are each other's sisters. So why can't I bring myself to say it aloud, to acknowledge the part you're to play in the rest of our lives?

I won't be able to shake you because our brothers want you in their lives. They've added you to their phones with my title. I was the contact they edited, the one brushed aside to make room for you. I was the one chosen to be resentful, the one they hid truths from, as though they really thought that of the two of us, I was the Ana who would come out angry.

That I am angry makes it worse.

You should have waited at least a month to ask our brother for money. You do not know how often our brother's been hurt by the people who he thinks are supposed to love him. By your mother. You don't know how he went quiet after you asked him, how when he asked me if he should give you the money, he was really asking if you even cared to speak to him. He didn't really talk to us for a week, after you asked for a loan you would never pay back.

I want you to know that I did not bad mouth you. As you might have already picked up on, this is not my first time in a situation similar to this. We are a large family with secrets that may surprise you. I have the long practiced skill of diplomacy, of being careful with words, because words have so often cut to the deepest parts of me. I am scarce with my criticism. I nudge. I don't push. I have always been able to handle these situations with calm and poise. But, for some reason, you test every bit of my composure.

Most of my anger and resentment are not your fault. I've learned the precise amount of anger to let out, careful always to reign it in, so it doesn't go over the clearly marked line on the sides of my resentment measuring cup. I weigh the marks against you, oh, so carefully. I can't go over the defined line, you see. There is only so much I am allowed to feel towards you, because our name is not our fault, so you don't deserve more than the clearly labeled dose of my ire.

Besides, you and I are connected by more than our father's half-truths, whether we like it or not. No matter how hard I try, when I compare myself to you, I don't see much difference. Is it the same for you? Do you, with my name and my face, look into a mirror just to see my reflection?

Tell me, Ana, have you asked yourself, which middle name is better, Claudia or Isabel?

bsgsix: (Default)

[personal profile] bsgsix 2018-11-16 10:29 pm (UTC)(link)
This really grabbed my heart (especially as a person whose birth father has another daughter - "the one I wanted," he told me the very last time I saw him), and I can feel the pain in this. There's a longing for resolution, or at least settlement.

Anyhow, my words are poor today, but my sentiment is real: this is wonderfully sad and very well told.
adoptedwriter: (Default)

[personal profile] adoptedwriter 2018-11-17 05:22 am (UTC)(link)
Ahhhh...family dynamics....They are never simple. Hugs...
tonithegreat: (Default)

[personal profile] tonithegreat 2018-11-17 10:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Lots of emotions here. I like family as subject matter for entries, especially as the holidays loom. So many things to balance. Cheers to you on a good entry.
jenwithapen: (Default)

[personal profile] jenwithapen 2018-11-18 11:35 am (UTC)(link)
Complicated, to be sure! And sad. The anger in this is really palpable. These read like obsessive thoughts. Thoughts had over and over and over again, read through, scribbled and crossed out. Shouted into the void, maybe. I know anger from that kind of pain (though our pain is different). And I know it's not easy put out. Truly, the only way to extinguish it is to look inward, close your eyes, and see the fire, and knowingly put it out. Now, if that fire is who you are, it can't be done. That anger will eat you until the resentment of it leaves bitterness behind. It did the same for my mother. I only decided to change it because I knew what she became, and it wasn't what I wanted for myself.

If this is fiction, it's a damn sharp piece, inspired by something most people know nothing about. If it's real.. if there's anyway I can help.. I surely would. =)

[personal profile] bellatrixe 2018-11-18 02:31 pm (UTC)(link)
I could really feel the raw emotion radiating through this. You did an awesome job in getting all those feelings down.

A very emotional and powerful read *hugs*
jenwithapen: (Default)

[personal profile] jenwithapen 2018-11-19 04:45 am (UTC)(link)
I feel like I understand, even if I've never been in this exact situation (I have two sisters, but my mom and dad, despite being INCREDIBLY TOXIC people, continue to stay together (and have been, now, for 43 years)). Earlier, when you wrote (and I read), I thought maybe it _was_ as you've just described. A series of affairs that resulted in siblings that... of course you'd be a little punchy towards! -laughing- But this puts a LOT more emphasis in _other_ places! You said there's anger, but there's a lot less than in the writing! I actually feel like.. and you'll have to forgive me, sweetie, I feel SO presumptuous right now, but I've been reading your writings and your comments, so I feel like I might be able to make this a decent try, anyway! But I feel like what I'm sensing, here, is hope!! Is that possible? Do you feel hopeful about a possible .. maybe loose friendship to start? I mean, this could be another awesome sister out of the deal. -grin- After all, you did say that she was close in age! I mean, worst-to-extremely-worst, you guys just don't hit it off (and it might take a while!), and you go back to avoiding one another! -grin- But.. it could be really amazing for you!

Again, I've never been in this position, so I'm giving you advice out of my butt, but I've also been rolling around this planet for 45 years, now, and I feel like... I don't... maybe just being optimistic is in my DNA. =D Actually, I can say there's no maybe about that. I'm an optimist through and through. But that doesn't mean I'm not also a realist. =D

Seriously, though! If there's EVER anything I can do, listen, if you want to try it out and talk it over, I mean... talking/listening is probably the best I got to offer, but! I'm always happy to help!

Thanks so much for coming back to talk about it. I know, again, it's pretty presumptuous so think you owe any explanations, but it was really great to hear your other thoughts! Be well, you! =D
the_eternal_overthinker: (Default)

[personal profile] the_eternal_overthinker 2018-11-19 02:29 pm (UTC)(link)
*Hugs* This is raw and I am sorry to know its real too. I wouldn't know how to react either if I came to know about another sister who shares my name, it's like "how could you give a part of me without even asking me?" and of course the sibling rivalry is legendary and nothing new. Also, since so many years have passed and you both are grown up it's difficult to adjust to this situation (maybe kids would be more forgiving/ accepting) or maybe as years fly by you both may get used to each others presence in your respective life and maybe/ maybe not things might change.
It's difficult to share personal stuff with everyone...you did a wonderful job here. <3 Fits the prompt!
bleodswean: (Default)

[personal profile] bleodswean 2018-11-19 04:20 pm (UTC)(link)
This is a complicated piece, but your writing wants it to be stark, black and white, easy, and the reader and writer both know that it's anything but. I wish you luck in maintaining your center and finding clarity at the edges.

Great response to the prompt.
bewize: (Default)

[personal profile] bewize 2018-11-19 05:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Sharp piece. This really resonated. It's so hard to not put the sins of the father onto their children - and it's equally hard not to carry the sins of our own fathers (and mothers) forward as we go.

murielle: Me (Default)

[personal profile] murielle 2018-11-20 06:14 am (UTC)(link)
The honesty in this piece resonates.

A difficult subject indeed, but thoroughly examined through profound self examination.

Well done!
wolfden: (Default)

[personal profile] wolfden 2018-11-20 06:23 am (UTC)(link)
My friend’s sister chose not to acknowledge my friend’s daughter and gave her daughter the exact same name first name and middle name. The sister said that my friend’s daughter didn’t count because her parents aren’t married. Like that makes the kid less. Makes me so mad. My friend’s daughter is two or three years older. So her sister knew. She just didn’t care. It confuses the kiddo why this other kid has her exact same name.

It sounds like a complicated situation you have. I suspect you have complicated feelings. I would.
halfshellvenus: (Default)

[personal profile] halfshellvenus 2018-11-21 02:13 am (UTC)(link)
There's such confusion and mourning in this, and it's an unusual situation to be tied so strongly to someone you never consented to know and who is already trying to take advantage of those you love.

It's almost as if sharing so much makes you feel responsible for who she is and what she does, and the anger in part is the helplessness to make her be who she ought to be instead of the person she actually is.