When I Was Twelve, Part I.

When I was twelve, a drunk, older guy at a Jewel concert bumped into me and loudly exclaimed that I looked like Elizabeth Shue. I turned bright red and tried as hard as I could not to smile wide enough to reveal a mouth full of braces—I knew they’d undermine the intellectual, physical, and emotional maturity that he MUST have identified in me. (’Cuz nothing says maturity like scrawling “Eat Shit & Die” on your converse, stuffing your bra, and forcing your mother to sit ten rows behind you at The Wiltern and act like she doesn’t know you…but I digress.)

This man’s attention lit me up like a goddamn FEMA switchboard in a natural disaster, but he also made me feel so uncomfortable and so unsafe. This man didn’t see me. He couldn’t see me. And I knew it.

What I didn’t know and couldn’t have known at twelve was that this brand of cognitive dissonance—a paralyzing, simultaneous ignition of worthiness and worthlessness—would eventually become my emotional calling card. Welcome to womanhood, baby girl. Good luck making sense of anything that’s happening to you.

He asked for my [parents’ home] phone number; I gave it to him.

* * *

Today, as I pumped gas at the Monrovia Shell station, an embarrassingly bad, up-tempo Jewel tune of modest, early-2000s fame—God bless that woman’s second act—blared out of the speakers. And if Big Oil doesn’t believe we should occupy public spaces in silence, then neither do I, so I started singing along at full volume. Just as we hit the bridge (“…sell your sinnn; just cash innnn…”), I looked over my shoulder and caught the gaze of an older, mentally-disheveled lookin’ dude filling up his Mini Cooper.

He looked me up and down, hungrily licked his bottom lip, smiled approvingly, and said, “You remind me of Elizabeth Shue.” I immediately remembered that night in ’96 at the concert. Jewel! Elizabeth Shue! Creepy man! Same shit—how about that? I must have looked confused rather than surprised, because Mini Cooper man cackled—loudly enough to move him from the “mentally disheveled” to “mentally unhinged” category—and added, “Elizabeth Shue is from the 90s. Who knows what you were doing in the 90s.”

“This,” I said. “I was doing exactly this.”

Welcome to womanhood, baby girl. It only took twenty years to make sense of anything that’s happening to you.

He, too, asked for my phone number; I didn’t give it to him.

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Pavement Pantyliners + Other Garbage: A Meditation on Found Objects

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this trash is haunting me. I may forever regret leaving it behind, so I am gonna tell you about it instead. because…look at it. here we have the contents of some lady’s ladylife, strewn across a few square feet of my favorite residential block in northeast l.a., exposed for all to see. there is some kind of weird, silent aggression to this little object-collective. the personal nature of the objects forces the viewer to consider the implied vulnerability of their owner. forced intimacy. which is aggressive and, ultimately, uncomfortable. at the very least, it was uncomfortable enough for me (a snoopy, storytelling weirdo experienced in the dual realms of forced intimacy + hoarding) not to feel right about disturbing the scene and pocketing the evidence. so, instead, I give you this shitty, blown-out photo and the promise/threat of a forthcoming short story. artifacts pictured, clockwise from top: sd cards in pink carrying case, 35mm film in canister (used), pantyliners in factory sealed packaging (unused; 2 pkgs total), + 30 day chip from a 12-step fellowship, most likely the good ol’ A&A. hope you’re all right, baby girl. I bleed, too. a lot of us do. 

* * *

Getting Free, or: Why My Cellulite + I Got Naked + Went Swimming

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Yesterday, I spent the afternoon alone at a nude beach, and I may never be the same. I’ve gotten pretty damn free in the last couple of years, but this was next-level. I’ll can get naked in front of most women fairly easily (thanks, Westridge School for Girls?), but this little bit of beach was populated almost entirely by men, which is a whole different psychological ballgame for me—pun semi-intended.

Anyone who has ever loved me knows that I adore sea-swimming. There are few activities that offer me the kind of simultaneous freedom and connection that being a tiny, splashing speck in ocean does. It’s the best. Just the best. And I almost didn’t swim today. Because…naked. Because…trotting to the shoreline naked!

Then, as barftastically cheesy it sounds, I remembered the woman who I want to be. I want to be a woman whose life reminds other women of their worth. I want to be a woman who doesn’t script vicious monologues about her own body in her head when she catches a stranger looking at her. I want to be a woman who knows that any man who gets this house of cellulite and stretch marks and softness (um, hi, you don’t lose 100 lbs. in a year and come out of it firm or perky…like, in any way whatsoever) is really lucky.

Not lucky because I have a “great personality” in spite of my body. And also not lucky because I think I’m better than any of my potential partners or better than any of the women whom they could have chosen to love instead. Just lucky because life is fragile, and connecting is beautiful. It’s everything.

Hate is obviously alive + breeding in our world (see: Orlando Nightclub Massacre, Donald Trump, the Stanford rape case, the countless police killings of unarmed black men nationwide, et al), so you might as well join me in throwing some love out into the universe.

Even if it’s love for your own, imperfect ass.

Why Beyoncé’s LEMONADE is Everything.

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If you haven’t watched (and please watch it—don’t just listen to it) Beyoncé’s LEMONADE yet, read Bené Viera’s piece below first. If you have watched it, read it now.

This album is a big deal. And it’s not a big deal—or a bunch of consumers deluding ourselves into “thinking” it’s a big deal—just because it’s a Beyoncé album. Mark my words, this isn’t a case of an artist’s own hype duping the masses into false reverence.  If you’re convinced that this is only a big deal because its lyrics shovel a new heap of gasoline-soaked coal into the ol’ gossip furnace (“Did he really cheat?!”), you would also be wrong.

LEMONADE is a big deal because it is this exact album and because Beyoncé is the vehicle for it.  You cannot separate one from the other here; as McLuhan told us decades ago, the medium is the message.  It is an album rife with commentary about femininity, masculinity, blackness, betrayal, vulnerability, uncertainty, and spirituality as performed by an international megastar who happens to be as cross-culturally embraced for her beauty, poise, and total reserve as she is for her talent.

LEMONADE is a big deal because it marks a key cultural moment. It tells stories that have been told before, sure—but not told like this.  Not all at once.  Not by Beyoncé.  And, like it or not, this matters.  LEMONADE is pop art that reminds us that, in spite of ourselves, we are living through an important cultural shift.

I could write so much more, but even though I absolutely knew what “call Becky with the good hair” meant without Googling it, I’m gonna go ahead and put my pen down, per Ms. Viera’s request.

ok

I Used to Write Poems

I used to write poems.  

I always thought it was dumb to write poems.

I still think this.

I should probably write poems again.

* * *

Purple.

For almost a decade, I have been searching for a copy of a particular poem I wrote when I was fourteen.  I hadn’t been able to remember if it was actually any good or not, but I remembered everything else about it and around it.  I have been piecing together lost moments of lost years lately, and somehow, finding this poem became critical. An obsession.

I remember writing it.  It still feels so recent and familiar—sitting in the Main Hall computer lab at my all-girls school, eating shitty vanilla-cream sandwich cookies from the snack machine while furiously typing every line that danced out of my achey little heart.  It was a soul dictation.  An angsty, adolescent soul dictation written during the last twenty minutes of a lunch period and due to be placed in Judy Chu’s hot little hands by the end of the day.

Ms. Chu was my 9th grade English teacher.  She loved my writing.  I loved her for loving my writing.

* * *

Jump cut to 10th grade.  Now I’m sixteen.  I’m sixteen, and I’m wearing my skin inside-out.  I’m so raw and exposed that a passing breeze can light my nerves on fire.  I feel everything, and all of it hurts. I don’t show up when I’m supposed to, and I rarely turn in my homework.  Because I fucking can’t.

Instead, I’m drinking and smoking and using and bingeing and starving and crying.  Crying, crying, crying.  All the time.  The Big Feelings had established their roots in my limbic system years ago (7th grade? 8th grade? hard to say), and by 10th grade, they had swallowed me whole.

So when my final poem is due in Ms. Lipschutz’s creative writing class, I dig through my archives.  Because at this point, if I do turn in my homework, you’re either getting copied answers or recycled assignments from brighter days gone by.  Sorry, but what do you want from me?  I’M ON FIRE.  This is the best I can do.

I find the poem.  The 9th-grade-Main-Hall-computer-lab poem.  “Purple,”  I had titled it.  I have no memory of that title or of the poem, but I turn it in and pass it off as new material.  And Ms. Lipschutz likes it.  Her sweet, rubbery face lights up when she reads it aloud a second time for the class.  What a strange lady, I think.  I fall asleep on my desk.

The school year ends, I am stuffed to the gills with SSRIs, and I hate myself more than ever. I am not sober.  I attend all of the end-of-year ceremonies that seem to be de rigueur at girls’ schools.  There is always a piano processional and polite clapping at these ceremonies.  And I always smile and polite-clap for as long as I can, or until I’m swept away by the undertow of my own, ever-present shame and taken elsewhere.

Shame has always done that to me.  My heart races, the abusive thoughts get louder and more intrusive, and then, without warning, all frequencies turn to static, drowning out everything around me and lulling me into a fantasy world.

I’m at one of these end-of-year ceremonies, watching all of the shiny pennies collect their awards and accolades.  The deafening, internal refrain of, ‘You are a total fuck-up; you will never be happy,’ is about to reach fever pitch and give way to the static.  I can feel it.  But I am jolted back into the moment by the Head of School calling Rachel Abelson to the stage to present the latest edition of Outlook, the annual student-run literary journal.

Rachel Abelson is a class-of-2000 senior, the co-editor of Outlook, and the best writer I have ever known in real life.  She is tall and complicated.  She has enviously large breasts and unapologetically cold, blue eyes.  She wears Doc Martins and vintage sweaters with our required school uniform pants.  (We are also allowed to wear uniform skirts, but Rachel always wears pants.)  Her hair is often messy.  She barely speaks, and when she does, she speaks with purpose.  Most importantly, Rachel Abelson is exactly who I want to be.

Rachel’s writing is so sharp and nuanced and original that it makes me sick with jealousy.  Once, in a poem, she described her vagina as “that Saturn sunset just below my dust-bunny navel” or something like that.  I’m sorry, but what 17-year-old comes up with shit that good?  It’s not even fair.

She has probably already had sex, I thought when I heard that line for the first time.  She is just too fucking good.

Anyhow, Rachel takes the stage, thanks the Head of School, and coyly tells the audience that she and the Outlook staff believe that the new millennium is going to mark an incredible epoch in modern literature.

“As evidenced by the works produced by the young writers in Ms. Lipschutz’s classes this  year,” Rachel declares, “the literary world should brace itself for something exciting and incredible.”

A lofty claim, I think to myself.

She continues, “To give you an idea of what we all have to look forward to, the editors of Outlook would like to read one of our favorite submissions this year, written by an extraordinarily gifted and talented member of the class of 2002.  This is ‘Purple’ by Rachel Broderick.”

And with that, Rachel Abelson reads my poem.  What. The. Fuck.  Rachel Abelson—who I worship and who has never spoken a single word to me—reads my poem.

Everyone claps.

My parents are in the audience somewhere.

Maybe they are all just polite-clapping.  I don’t know, and I don’t care. Because for the rest of that afternoon and pieces of the days following, I do not hate myself.

* * *

 

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Broad Highway

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I’m sitting here on my all-too-short lunch break, dreaming of the magical Central Coast. I had such a perfect, peaceful weekend with my lady friends at the Madonna Inn (#bucketlist), dear reader, and I’m feelin’ mighty reflective.

Listen, if you’re reading this right now and happen to be in a dark place, I get it—I’m sure you’re just fucking TICKLED that I had a perfect, peaceful weekend. Delighted, even. I know, and I’m sorry. Even still, this feels important to share. Because I DID have a perfect, peaceful weekend, and feeling peaceful is still pretty darn novel to me.

I’m not trying to get all Anne Lamott on your ass (mad love to you always, Anne), and I certainly don’t think that I’m the first person to emerge from a dark place with a little tale to tell, but I do think that our stories are important. They’re not just important—they’re everything. Sharing our stories of who we are with each other is the most powerful way that we connect as human beings—and as far as I’m concerned, that’s really all we’re doing here on planet Whatever. Connecting. Trying to connect. Failing to connect and then trying again.

I’m not even saying that I’m any good at it. I’m fucking not. I’m still a bit awkward, a bit detached, a bit dissociated, a bit guarded. All of that. I’m all of that. I’m just saying that I’ve been doing the fucking work. I’ve been doing so much schlepping and heavy lifting that, at some point, I stopped realizing that’s what it was. All of it—the writing, the truth-telling, the digging, the rearranging, the discarding—it just became what I do. Somewhere along the line, what started out as a sweaty-palmed, heart-racing scramble to survive (and I swear to God there were days where it felt like my lungs were filling with water) became a steady walk.

Love doesn’t happen when you stop looking for it; love happens when you have made space for it.

***

Grandpa

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My grandfather is gone.

This weekend marked the first time I have ever been to Boston and not seen him. The entire city feels amiss. Everything is gray, and all the buttons are in the wrong buttonholes. And since thirty-two years of being greeted on trips back east with a signature Jim Broderick “Ho-ho!” don’t come to a close without some kind of emotional undoing, I’m all choked up and writing this on an airplane.

I’m a crier by nature, but these tears are the kind that I’m not comfortable letting go of. Letting go of these tears just facilitates letting go of my grandfather, and at this point, I’d rather make a burning nest of them in the back of my throat than let them fall.

Dramatic, perhaps, but I can be a dramatic person. I think he enjoyed that about me.

People have been asking me since his passing last month, “Were you close?” It’s a well-meaning question, but it’s also unanswerable. Far is not the opposite of close, I realize, but all I can think to say is, “We were close and we were far.”

My younger brother, Sam, and I grew up in California. My parents are both Bostonians and the oldest of five, and our nuclear family is the only contingent on either side to have made a home outside of New England. Consequently, my grandfather was not a part of my day-to-day existence; he wasn’t someone I ever expected to be at my recitals or school plays (although he and my grandmother did fly out to watch me ham it up as Mame in Auntie Mame when I was in 10th grade), and I never spent a Christmas with him.

But Sam and I did spend every June counting down the days until we would fly to Boston for the summer’s end. We could never sleep the night before a flight to back east, and we would squeal with excitement when the Super Shuttle pulled up to our house in the darkness of 5 a.m. to ferry us to the airport.

My friends would brag about their upcoming family vacations to places like Disneyworld and the San Diego Wild Animal Park, and I just remember smiling and feeling sorry for them. This was partly because my mother was (and remains) exceptionally vocal about the repulsiveness of popular, commercial vacation destinations, but mostly because I knew that Disneyworld couldn’t possibly hold a candle to what we had in New England. And so much of what we had was about Grandpa and his brilliant, hilarious clan of Brodericks.

I loved going back east because I felt special there. Special, wanted, and important. As far back as I can remember, my grandfather—a genius by virtue of his Harvard graduate degree alone in my eyes—seemed genuinely interested what I had to say. He loved dissecting people’s motivations and internal processes. Even as a child, I knew that Grandpa was interested in my experience of the world and that he took me seriously. And I was definitely a little girl who wanted to be taken seriously.

I never had to hustle for my worth with him or prove that my opinions and experiences were worthy of serious consideration; this was a given. As an adult, I’m still trying to figure out what real intimacy actually means, but I’m pretty sure it has something to do with being seen—really and truly seen. Being seen by others is fundamentally all we want as human beings, and Grandpa always made me feel seen. If the speeches at his memorial this weekend were any indication, he made everyone feel this way.

So where do we go from here? What does my grandmother do when she wakes up each morning to an empty space in the bed next to her? How do I accept that the absence I feel isn’t just the result of allowing too much time to lapse between visits, but rather the result of a final, permanent shift?

I have no answers. This is all new to me. Death in the family is, for the most part, new to me—I’m lucky this way. I suppose I should spend some time being grateful that I still have three more grandparents who are alive and kicking…or at least pantomiming some version of kicking. I am grateful for this. I really am. But still, nothing about this feels okay.  We are now in after.  It’s uncomfortable.  Unacceptable.

I’m terrible with endings, conclusions, goodbyes, partings, closing arguments, and letting go as a general practice (ask anyone), so I think I’ll end by saying thank you.

Thank you for making me feel like the most interesting person in the entire world every single time we spoke. Thank you for teaching me to appreciate a well thought-out garden and Eames chairs. Thank you for the childhood games of Keep Away and the force-feedings of classical music. Thank you for telling Grandma that you were struck by how beautiful I grew up to be after our visit last spring. She told me. I cried. Thank you for all of it. To borrow from your own words to my father just before you left us, I’ve enjoyed it all.

We all have.

I love you.

***

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James Henry Broderick, Sr. (1925 – 2016)

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The Blueprint

Hello, Gentlemen.

Issuing a quick bulletin here to see who and what is out there—hope this finds all of you in great health and high spirits. The holidays are almost here, eh?  My, how the year flew by!

Let’s start at the beginning: my name is Rachel, I am 31 years old, and I am looking for a boyfriend.  I think.  That’s the thing—I am dreadful at allowing myself to be vulnerable and don’t necessarily know the difference between codependency and emotional availability, so I just as likely might not be looking for a boyfriend.  Truth be told, it’s hard to say if I will fall in love with you then watch you freeze over and start responding to my texts/pleas for connection with “k” or if you will fall in love with me then feel me slowly lose all respect for you.  It’s a toss-up.  50/50 shot either way—we might as well give it a go.

Friends have suggested that I write out what I’m looking for.  An “ideals” list, if you will.  Hashtag relationship goals.  First, let’s start with the “musts”—the non-negotiables.  You must be an age-inappropriate, cisgendered male whose childhood was heavily taxed by his mother’s emotional neediness.  You were always there to clean up mommy’s emotional spatter, and you now associate a woman’s needs with complete & utter suffocation.  All signs point to “run” with you, and I love that about you—that shit keeps me alert.  

You are funny. You are dangerously funny.  Cutting, observational humor lights me on fire like nothing else.  If you can think of better responses to my own anecdotal quips than I can, I am in trouble.  This basically guarantees that I will follow you around like dopey puppy and metaphorically piss all over the floor every time you look at me.  You will own me.  You will think I’m funny, too, but not funnier than you—and you will never, ever let me know that you admire my humor.  (You won’t let me know most nice things you think about me, so why start there?)

It’s probably of note that you are not a “relationship guy.”  No way.  I don’t like relationship guys.  I like “Let’s just see where this goes” and “I really just try and live in the moment” guys.  Your tribe really gets what life is all about!  Why commit to anything when you can meet your own immediate, surface-level needs right fucking now?  I get it. I get you. Let’s do this.

I’m a quacky little duck in Echo Park Lake, and you’re the guy in the douchey, vintage fedora casually tossing breadcrumbs at me on a Sunday afternoon.  I’ll never know when the crumbs are coming, but when I have to fight with all of the other filthy ‘hood ducks for a stale end-piece, I will feel that much more like a swan when I emerge victorious—soggy, sorry-ass return in beak.**  

(**Actually, I recently learned that ingesting bread crumbs creates irreversible intestinal blockage in water birds, which ultimately leads to a very painful and shit-filled death.  But I mean, whatever—I’m grateful for what you’ve got to give.)

Enough out of me.  The point is this: I love you.  I already love you for everything that you are and, more importantly, for everything that you are not.  

I have been writing your name in the sand for years, and I can’t wait to meet you.

Yours,

Rachel

fire fire

panties

cracked paint

 

Thirteen

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she had no idea.

#TBT to 2/2/97, a.k.a. my 13th birthday, a.k.a. the time in my life when I wore oxblood Doc Martins every day and posted open letters to Courtney Love on my Geocities (or was it Angelfire?) site, which was coyly called “Pigtails for Rachel.”  I can remember feeling pretty damn on top of my game that night. We had just returned to my parents’ house from the “dinner party” I threw myself at Il Fornaio (because what 13-year-old desperately trying to be a 30-year-old wouldn’t want to ring in her teen years with eight of her closest girlfriends and a classy-ass plate of capellini al pomodoro?), and I had on the best outfit I had ever assembled.  Or close to it. Micro-mini vintage polyester slip.  Docs with special-occasion silver shoelaces.  Slightly padded bra that I begged my mother to buy me for an hour straight at Macy’s on Lake.  Urban Decay lipstick & nail polish in “Gash.” Gwen Stefani wore Gash—she said so in Seventeen Magazine.

                                                                     * * * * *

Make a wish, they said.  I mean, because that’s what they say on your birthday.  I’ve always been someone who believes in the power of wishes and candles and concentration and moments of silence (light a candle—any candle— in my face, and I’ll get Fiona-Apple-on-a-rainy-day reflective on you faster than you can say “Shadowboxer”), and I remember running through the feels so hard when this picture was taken.  I had been drinking for one year, bleeding for two, and hating myself for at least ten—all things that I was pretty sure made me a Very Modern Woman in the eyes of the world.  Because women drink and bleed and hate their bodies.  Obviously.  So they told me to make a wish, and I wished for a different body and for a boy to fall in love with me.  And in this moment, the moment captured in this photo, the moment before I blew out my candles, I knew that I was wishing for all the wrong shit.  I have always had enough education and enough self-awareness to know that I am wishing for all. the wrong. shit.  And yet I have held my breath and wished for it all anyway, year after year.  I’ll be 32 in February.  We’ll see.  #throwbackthursday