Sunday, July 5, 2020
Folk Punk Good-Bye
The last half of my brotherââ¬â¢s senior year of high school, he was rarely home. Ryan was either running with his track team, dancing at a punk show, or off with his girlfriend taking photos in an overgrown, abandoned greenhouse. At the greenhouse, hidden by the woods near the pool Ryan and I used to swim in, he and his girl would play folk punk songs on unmarked CDs. Inside the frame of the old building, theyââ¬â¢d listen to music, sitting on a floor of broken glass. Heââ¬â¢d talk to me late at night, sharing slivers of his life and pieces of his interests. Our house was an outpost to him ââ¬â a place of sleep, food, and endless stories glorifying his greatness that he filtered for my parents and me. I barely saw Ryan that spring and summer, but his presence, as always, was a dominating force in my life. So in August, when we finally left Ryan in his dorm room at Vassar College, his absence didnââ¬â¢t feel real at first. Eating meals, doing homework, the routine o f my life felt the same ââ¬â just quieter. Only at night, with my dog and parents asleep, did the newfound silence become unsettling. Ryan and I used to meet up at midnight to eat our second dinner and watch cartoons. Now I was alone. And lonely. My whole life, I followed Ryanââ¬â¢s lead. I would try to copy everything he did, but do it better. Iââ¬â¢d try to run faster, be smarter, be funnier. My world was a comparison. With Ryan gone, I continued to try to be him. I joined the cross-country team. I listened to his old music. I took my girlfriend to the same abandoned greenhouse he loved. Despite it all, I never could fill the quiet of our house. Itââ¬â¢s not who I am. Or even what I really want to be. I am a natural-born introvert. I spend hours reading and writing about imaginary worlds. I have friends, but they are not a necessity. With silent ease, I can meditate and be still with myself. I have always been the quiet observer, watching my brother create exciteme nt with everything he did. I envied the life Ryan lived. But when he left, I didnââ¬â¢t suddenly become the loud, attention-seeking narcissist who brought life and stress to the house. I did not replace Ryan. I could not replace Ryan. His departure did not make me a cross-country star or a hopeless extrovert. In the end, nothing really changed. I remained the same. When he went to college and entered his next stage of life, I was stuck waiting. I was left behind in high school, seemingly destined to follow in my brother footsteps. But in my first year without him, I chose to be myself. At home, I blast his folk punk songs through my headphones as I do my homework. I play his music not because I miss him, but because I love it. I hear the yelling and strum of the banjo, and for a moment the house isnââ¬â¢t so quiet
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