Train

With her foot up on the heater-baseboard which ran along the wall, and her elbow on her raised knee, she cupped her chin in her hand and stared out of the window. The rain was coming down in sheets now, and if it did not stop within the next two hours, she would surely be drenched by the time she got home. Not that she had forgotten an umbrella. That would never happen. But between her overly large suitcase, her bulging cosmetic bag, her laptop bag, the duffel bag with extra shoes, and the shopping bag with gifts and snacks, she would have no hand free for such a contraption. Over the decades, she had tried to constrain the amount of things she took on such trips, but no amount of inconvenience and hassle with her luggage had been able to cure her of her deeply rooted abandonment issues. “Be Prepared!” was a stain on every fiber of her being.

Now she was simply grateful for this window, literally and figuratively: the bracket of time to herself to shift into neutral and coast along for a couple of hours, as well as the cold, grey, square sheet of glass to lean her head against and be lulled by its monotonous stream of scenery. In the same way the fields and buildings and trees could be seen coming gradually toward her from the distance only to rush by and disappear behind her, so too did the events of the week pass review in her tired brain. Just as grey, just as monotonous.

It was the same old refrain. The weeks of frantic and thorough preparation hadn’t positioned her into a state of confidence, only exposed her to the infinite sea of knowledge, skills, and possibilities that she did not yet master. The closer the deadline came, the tighter the knot in her stomach grew, and the more ant-acids she took before going to bed. The migraines that plagued her on the eve of her presentations now only seemed to come when she addressed an entirely new C suit. Not knowing how high this new bar might be always left her feeling wide open to her darkest opposing line-backer with the number, “Who do you think you are?” The end-zone seemed miles away on such projects, and she felt foolish being on the field at all, let alone thinking she could run the ball, or even score.

But she always did. Though the presentations themselves felt like an out-of-body experience, afterwards, she knew she had slain it. She would hit a homer almost every time. Her clients were pleased. She would be invited back. Business was growing. And yet none of these facts managed to stick to her lapel. They ricocheted off of her like a bird flying into a window, with only a thud and a dead bird to show for it. After some polite conversation with her clients, she would excuse herself and return to her room for some rest before she began the arduous logistics of returning her entire wardrobe and kitchen sink to her place of residence. In that hour or so before she checked out, she would wilt into the hotel bed as all the tension and stress would drain out of her. Then with legs now made of rubber and arms that had become mostly useless appendages, she somehow managed to get all of her luggage into the elevator, then onto the street, down the five blocks to the station, and onto the train.

(in 5)

Prompt: Jungle

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She sat down at her desk and turned her computer on. While it was booting up, she made her way inside to see if she could fetch something useful. She always tread carefully, slowly, timidly. There was so much laying around, stacks upon stacks. There were creaky floor boards, and many holes where she had fallen through before and now paid extra attention to avoid. The place was covered in cob-webs and unruly vines criss-crossing and barring her way forward. As soon as she blew dust off of one stack to pick up an idea, another stack would catch her eye and divert her attention. Each one claiming to have been there longer or promising to be more interesting, or for other reasons more deserving of their day in the sun.

Whenever she did manage to pick one up, put it under her arm, and head for the exit, she would always be stopped by two intimidating figures who would interrogate her choice in the most alarming and disrespectful way. And it always happened that she would doubt her choice, lay the idea on a nearby stack, and make her way deeper and deeper into this cognitive over-growth, hoping, without any reason to hope, that one day she would find The Jewel. That one idea that would magically, effortlessly write itself. The Jewel that would be easily waved through by the sentinels at the door and be received by the entire world, without a single exception, with profound critical acclaim. But today was not that day. There was no such Jewel in sight. So, having spent considerable time rummaging around, she felt she had made a concerted effort, done the best she could to tidy-up the jungle in her head, and made her way back out; again empty handed. Exhausted, she turned the computer off and went shopping.