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Shane Sollender

NYC based Artist/Writer

Brooklyn, United States

Maker in a myriad of mediums with eternally busy hands.

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Self Portrait at 28

When I am here-

HERE

Not there,

Here, h e r e,

There is fairy dust everywhere.

I am hyper aware of the fact

That the light

fireflies produce

is created by oxygen

so those green glimmers

is us watching

them breathe.

I think about the antique cabinet

Which now resides

in my home

How long it took

someone to carve

Splinters under

their nails

How it used to be

in a church

Holding prayer books

What did the people

Who took those bibles

Beg god for?

Did they feel less alone

As we all are

In our insular perspectives

That’s what love is

The in between

where our existence

Intersects with another’s

Even just for a moment

When I am there

THERE

I don’t remember this.

What I am aware of

Is the creature

Made of spiraling bones

Eternal jagged teeth

Who sits on my chest

And pours toxins

Down my throat-

Till I ingest them

Willingly.

There are bugs-

Not my beloved fireflies

Something unnamed

Crawling under my flesh

I want to peel away

my skin

Not to hurt

Or die

But to know

That I belong

To this body

And that it doesn’t belong

To them.

For this reason

It is difficult

To create

A self portrait

At 28

Or at any age

At all.

I am

an amalgamation

Of moments

Of my fathers head

Crashing through

A windshield

Of my grandfather

Shivering and sick

In a camp

Nazi blood

Staining his clothes

He never left

Even when

his children

Were born.

I am the needle

once buried

under

My skin.

I am the first photograph

I ever saw

Of the first person

I ever fell

In love with

He was grinning

Naked

And in his chest

He had carved the words

Kill Yourself.

I am ferric acid

Eating away copper

To create

An image

I am

my idols

Connected to

The eternal ether

Of their experience

I am every

advancement

That led

To my ancestors

Surviving

I am a calla lily

Held by a bride

Then thrown

In a casket.

Mirrors only reveal

More questions.

On Social Media

Pandemic: Dissociating in Dystopia

Aug 20, 2021 3 years ago

I can't remember the first time I experienced the cognitive dissonance of looking at my body and knowing logically it was mine yet feeling like it was a completely separate entity from my inner world, but I remember the first time I tried to talk about it with someone. I couldn't have been more than seven or eight. This was before the impending deaths of my father and grandfather, and my grandparents were driving me back home after a weekend spent staring at the opium weights they had purchased on a trip somewhere in South Asia. My gaze remained steady as I listened to my grandfather's stories about his time in a camp in WWII, his voice trembling as he vacillated between dark jokes and terrorized tears. My grandmother always said he never left. It was as sunny as always as we turned down the street in San Diego where I spent most of my childhood, claustrophobically so. I peered out the window at a plastic green lawn then down to my hands and thighs, a familiar dissociation overwhelming me as I flexed my tiny fingers, examining the peeling skin around nails I bit so short that they bled. My wrists were always bleeding too, along with the back of my knees and the tender skin around my chapped lips, symptoms of my eczema. Even with medical creams underneath layers of bandages, I still scratched while I slept, ripping myself open over and over. I wonder now if I was trying to penetrate this flesh in an attempt to find some connection to this mind underneath. I'm reading a book about trauma called The Body Keeps the Score. One scientific study found a correlation between autoimmune disorders and significant past traumatic events. These events set off a fight or flight response, and the body can overcompensate so greatly that it begins attacking itself. Eczema is an autoimmune disorder. My recollections of my childhood are shrouded, vague shapes, but mostly obscured. This memory in the car is one of the few I have. Maybe this can be attributed to it being a key exemplifying moment of the disconnection I always felt between both pieces of myself and between myself and others. As I gazed at my tiny thighs- how strange it was that they were so slight! Microscopic in the scope of this planet- I asked my grandparents if they too looked in the mirror and saw foreign beings staring back. I assumed it must be universal, and I wanted to understand why it happened and how to cope with it. My grandmother said she had no idea what I was talking about. I now understand that this fracture was made sometime during the course of my life and is not an intrinsic state, but it's still hard to fathom the idea that most people have never experienced this sensation. I don't remember a time where it wasn't always occurring to some extent at any given moment whether I'm thinking about it- naming it- or not. Even when I do not give it attention or words, it scuttles around in the background of my consciousness. I've found ways to alleviate some of the most distressing aspects of this reality. Tiny needles filled with ink have penetrated my skin, depicting visions congruent with my inner world, reminders that this body is mine. As they increase, so does the reassurance that I'm connected to these limbs. Still, there have been times when the chasm between here and there have felt deeper, even recently. Last spring I spent exactly seventy days alone. Towards the end of this period I was tormented by a delusion I knew to be intellectually impossible, yet some part of me still felt it was real, like experiencing fear while watching a horror movie. You know it isn't happening, but it doesn't stop the nightmares. It consisted of the idea that if I was to look in the mirror I would see nothing there. If I looked at my limbs, they'd disappear before my eyes. The only thing confirming my existence was the heaving inhalation and exhalation of the walls of my apartment. Weeks of words unspoken can make you wonder if you're real. What is the difference between me alive and me dead if there is no evidence that I'm still here besides my own perception? I've come to the conclusion that seeking this sort of reassurance that I'm real from others is futile. When I think of that moment in the car, I am most struck by how much more isolated I felt when there was no solidarity, even lonelier than the seventy days I spent alone. Now I'm trying to connect the veins that pump blood through my body to the veins where intangible, hidden, ancient parts of my being reside. Just as my body is mine and mine alone, so too are the chasms. I'm the only one who can navigate them. I'm hoping someday that this archeological dig through my consciousness that I've embarked on might make me feel present in this corporeal form. It hasn't happened yet, but I'm starting to become the understanding adult the seven year old inside me still aches for. This body might still feel like a complete stranger sometimes, but she doesn't.

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