Alexis Rivera_Essay_Draft Three

I had been sitting with a close friend of mine on our university campus in an outside patio, feeling confident and indignant despite being unprovoked. In a few short minutes, it would be the first time that Madeline (my soon-to-be roommate) and I could spend time together discussing our expectations for the year ahead. I had been carefully preparing, debating how I might best present myself with an aura that could effectively intimidate Madeline.

I had just spent a year living with women who seemed to have a knack for preying on the weaknesses of others, and used them to manipulate and bully. I had spent a year with rumors swirling around my home about my sexuality, receiving the silent treatment, being yelled at, and feeling a constant need to walk on eggshells. Righteously angry and unwilling to compromise, I hoped to show Madeline that intimidating me was impossible, and I was uninterested in the façade of pleasantries. I was determined to never again be taken advantage of, and this seemed like the opportune moment to establish my authority within our relationship.

When Madeline arrived at our table, she was exactly the girl I expected, and the complete opposite of me: bubbly, exuberant, and sweet. We walked together to a popular coffee shop just outside the borders of campus, and her demeanor quickly changed in response to my deliberately hostile tone. As we chatted over coffee and tea about our past and how we hoped to see our future, it became increasingly clear that the year ahead might prove difficult. She was relaxed about her expectations for a roommate, while I had clear and distinct boundaries I demanded her to follow. The contrast between our styles, beliefs, and attitude was stark: we were polar opposites. She left our conversation apprehensive of a friendship with me, and I left knowing that I had accomplished my goal.

However, as time wore on, our relationship began to shift. It was about a month into living together, and Madeline was the last one home. The anniversary of my mother’s passing, September 27, was nearly over. I was sprawled on the couch, tissues crumpled on the floor and my laptop open to a photo album entitled “Mom and I.” All day had been a transition from the bed to the couch and back again. My face was tear-soaked and swollen, and I was having difficulty focusing on anything in front of me. Outside our apartment I could hear Madeline struggling to fit her keys into the lock, and the crash of heavy bags falling to the floor as she worked to open the door. Swinging our front door open, she shouted “Fall Haul!” and bounced over to me on the couch. She embodied everything I wasn’t in that moment, and perfectly provided the light to my darkness, the energy to my lethargy. Out of her bags, she began to describe each item one by one, all pumpkin-flavored, and all for me. First the pumpkin eggnog, then the pumpkin ice cream, pumpkin pop-tarts, pumpkin yogurt…a seemingly endless array of treats that reminded me both of the things I love, and how loved I am.

Madeline’s gesture softened me, and I sobbed violently into her arms. She allowed me the space to cry when I needed to cry, and she brought me joy on a day that might otherwise prove to be the worst of my year. Although uncomfortably new at first, it was our differences that allowed her to see past my walls and care for me in ways that others hadn’t. And in fact, this was not the only time that she had done exactly that.

At this point, Madeline and I were clear and established friends. It was not uncommon for her and I to stay up talking in the middle of the night, or joke with each other while brushing our teeth. But everyone has secrets, parts of their past that hurt more than others. It’s only ever a select few that get to see the vulnerability there, the wound that others or you had left behind, undressed and raw without the layers that normally serve to hide the ugliness. Without meaning to, I showed Madeline the shameful pieces of my past. I had tried to shake the feeling I had that night, a feeling of dread that only comes over you when something, sometimes seemingly out of the blue, reminds you of that thing you wish you could forget. I paced wildly around our living room, ran on the treadmill in our apartment gym, and drank copious amounts of wine. This is the state that Madeline found me in. Pushing open our front door, she looked at me, paused, closed the door behind her and came to sit beside me. She reached out her hand to meet mine, and we sat silently, her palm resting on top. It was a comfortable silence, the type of silence that doesn’t need words or interaction, because it speaks already of what we couldn’t say.

The round, gold clock that sat on the side table ticked, while the fan overheard buzzed and swayed. The cars passed noisily just outside our patio door, and there was music drifting in from our upstairs neighbor.

And we remained silent still. And this was enough. Because what Madeline didn’t say was, “Don’t worry, God’s got this,” or “It’ll all be okay,” or even “I’m sorry.” All I needed in that moment was for someone to sit in the mess and the hurt with me, and she saw that for what it was.

She was never the friend I wanted, expected, or thought I needed. But, it is our differences that create a constant and beautiful tension between the known and the unknown, the familiar and the unfamiliar. Our friendship is dynamic, continuously shifting into territories I haven’t explored in other relationships. She challenges me to view things from a different perspective, and to appreciate the little things in life.

I suppose I’ll always have to expect the unexpected, especially in friendships.

3 thoughts on “Alexis Rivera_Essay_Draft Three

  1. I think you did an excellent job with your personal essay. One part that really stood out to me is when you wrote about Madeline arriving home all bubbly and happy, while you had been having one of the worst days you could possibly have. The juxtaposition of the two of you helped me realized just how two different people who do not think they will need each other, end up being best friends who rely on each other during hard times. You really brought in a lot of pathos, and tugged at my heart multiple times throughout the writing. Some parts when you were speaking about you missing your mom, such as the photo album on your computer, made me feel a little bit of your pain and almost brought me to tears. I love how your main point is about expecting the unexpected, because this is so relevant for everyone. Life will never be how we want it, or expect it to be, and I personally believe that’s the beauty of life. Overall, you did a great job on this personal essay!

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  2. Wow. I am truly impressed by what you have added to this essay since the last time I was able to read it, it was very good then but I think you really crafted something great in this final and third draft. Something that really stood out to me was your ability to transition the tone and mood of your essay. It almost begins “cold” and you seem to have this unchangeable attitude and not much hope in finding a roommate that you would be compatible with. Watching you transition from this to having such a loving and appreciative attitude towards Madeline was something that made this essay so great, there was really a clear change an you were able to capture that. The second story that you added was a great and fitting addition, I loved how you described the silence of the moment and how it was exactly what you needed, I could feel the emotion in your writing. Fantastic Job!!

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  3. I am a little disoriented in the beginning regarding who speaks and from where. I know you are at a college campus and you are about to meet someone (I guess someone you’e never met before.) A few more details about this situation would help orient us as to why you are where you are and who are you?

    And then too, it might help to explain that in the past year you’d attended a different college. And there you had experienced an unappealing situation socially. Now, in this new college setting, you were pretty determined to sidestep, rise above, or avoid any “social” conflicts entirely.

    Later, when you explain the situation where Madeline found you in “a mess” there is a silence, gap or avoidance here regarding the context – what provoked you? Again, the context is missing from this segment.

    Your ending could strengthen with the word “now” included: I suppose now I’ll always expect the unexpected

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